People: Faculty

Kiron Skinner

Associate Professor
Department of Social and Decision Sciences
Department of History

Ph.D.: Harvard University
1999

208 Porter Hall
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
Office: PH 223F
Phone: 412.268.3238
Fax: 412.268.6938
email:kskinner@andrew.cmu.edu


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Research Interests
My substantive focus is the role of the United States in the ending of the Cold War. I examine this issue at several levels. From the "bottom up" I analyze the political activities of conservative foreign policy groups and social movements that sought to recast U.S. grand strategy in the direction of rearmament in the aftermath of the Vietnam War. From the "top down" I examine the Soviet policy of the United States during the 1970s and the 1980s. Relatedly, I examine the strategic interaction of the superpowers on key security issues such as nuclear arms control.

There are several theoretical homes for my work. My bottom up research seeks to contribute to research in social history by providing the field with empirical data on a set of social forces (conservative movements) and issue-areas (such as national security policy) that have received little scholarly attention in the social history arena. To see if there are causal links between conservative foreign policy groups and to U.S. foreign policy and international outcomes more generally, I use some of the analytic tools of theoretical research on group behavior found in the political science sub-field of American politics.

My top down research uses game theoretic lenses and insights from positive political theory to make sense of the strategic interaction of the superpowers during the final decades of the Cold War. My historical research is based on my use of the archives of several members of the Reagan administration. I seek to refine notions in the traditional international relations literature about the conditions under which adversaries cooperate. My work should also point the way for those interested in the possibilities of cross-fertilization between historical research and positive political theory.

Selected Publications
"Reagan's Plan." The National Interest (Summer 1999).

"The Myth of Democratic Pacifism," (coauthored with Thomas Schwartz) Wall Street Journal January 7, 1999.

Linkage and Power: The Demise of Carter's Detente (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, forthcoming).

Turning Points in the Ending of the Cold War (co-edited with Condoleezza Rice. Hoover Institution Press, forthcoming).

In His Own Hand: U.S. Grand Strategy from the View of President Reagan's Private Papers (Hoover Institution Press, in preparation).

"Executive and Congressional Use of Security Linkage During the Late 1970s," Occasional Paper. RAND Corporation, 1994.

"Linkage," in Albert Carnesale and Richard Haass, eds., Superpower Arms Control: Setting the Record Straight (Cambridge: Ballinger Publishing, 1987).