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James W. Clarke (Ph.D., Penn State,
1968), Professor of Political Science and University Distinquished
Professor, has taught courses in the areas of race and public
policy, and violent crime and political order. Professor Clarke's
teaching has been recognized with a number of awards, among them
the Burlington Northern Foundation Award for Excellence in Teaching,
the American Political Science Association and Pi Sigma Alpha
Award for Outstanding Teaching in Political Science, and he has
twice been selected as Outstanding Teacher in the College of Social
and Behavioral Sciences. Additionally, he is the author of five
books on criminal violence:
American Assassins: The Darker Side of Politics (1982;
1990); Last Rampage: The Escape of Gary Tison (1988;
1999);
On Being Mad or Merely Angry: John W. Hinckley, Jr. and Other
Dangerous People (1990); The Lineaments of Wrath:
Race, Violent Crime, and American Culture (1998; 2001);
and Defining Danger: American Assassins and the New Domestic
Terrorists (2006). In 1999, Professor Clarke
taught in Ireland as a Visiting Fulbright Scholar.
Department of Political Science,
The University of Arizona
© 2002 Arizona Board of Regents.
Please send comments or questions about this web site to:
polisci@email.arizona.edu
Page last updated
January 11, 2008
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