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Webinar: Thrills, Chills & Spills: Developments in the Russian Arctic

  • 08/26/2020
  • 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
  • Webinar
  • 47

Registration

  • Free
  • Free
  • Free
  • Use code GST20

Registration is closed

Dr. Thomas Rotnem, Associate Directory & Professor of Political Science at Kennesaw State University, will present a  webinar on:

"Thrills, Chills & Spills: Developments in the Russian Arctic"

The continued warming of the Far North brings with it numerous problems and opportunities for Arctic Ocean littoral states. Russia’s concerns in the Arctic are long-standing and perhaps most developed among those countries. This webinar will focus upon Russia’s most recent endeavors and investments there, while also discussing some of the unique challenges that the warming climate and Covid-19 have posed for Russia’s Arctic regions


About Dr. Rotnem

Dr. Rotnem is a professor of political science in Kennesaw State University's Department of Political Science & International Affairs. Having come to the department in Fall 2015, he teaches courses in comparative politics and international relations.

At his previous university, he received the Teacher of the Year award (2011-2012); before that, he received the Outstanding Faculty Award twice (in 2001 and 2010), was nominated for the award in 2005, and was awarded the Student Government Association’s Faculty of the Year award in 2007.

Dr. Rotnem earned dual B.A. degrees in Political Science and International Studies and an M.A. in Political Science from Ohio University. He received his Ph.D. in Political Science from the Ohio State University, as well as a Graduate Certificate as Specialist in Russian Area Studies. In addition, since coming to Georgia, he has earned a M.B.A. (in Finance) from Georgia State University.

His concentrations within political science are in comparative politics and international political economy, with a specialization in Russian domestic and foreign politics. His research has focused special attention upon the democratization and “resource curse” literatures in comparative politics and international political economy. He has published papers and articles on a variety of subjects, including social welfare policies in transitioning economies, foreign direct investment in emerging markets, and the politics of oil and natural gas in resource-rich petro-states. Dr. Rotnem has most recently published a chapter in an edited volume on Sino-Russian engagement in Northeast Asia, a region of particular and on-going interest in his work.

Receiving grants from a variety of sources has enabled Dr. Rotnem to carry on much of the aforementioned scholarly work. In the past, he has received grants and/or fellowships from the U.S. Department of State, the U.S. Department of Education, the Social Science Research Council, the International Research and Exchanges Board (IREX), the American Council for Collaboration in Education and Language Study/American Council for Teachers of Russian (ACCELS/ACTR), and the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies.

Dr. Rotnem has presented his research at conferences and symposia in the United States and abroad. Two of particular formative significance for him were week-long symposia under the auspices of the Salzburg Seminar that focused upon U.S. foreign policy in Northeast Asia and Russia’s future political development. Another exceptionally formative experience for him was that as a Fulbright Lecturing Award recipient in 2010, an experience that allowed him to engage and interact with international students and scholars in Eastern Europe.

Beyond his teaching and research interests, Dr. Rotnem has recently served as the President of the Georgia Political Science Association (GPSA), the second-largest statewide political science organization in the United States. Dr. Rotnem also served as one of two Editors-in-Chief of Questions in Politics, a refereed publication of the GPSA.