Scott Cooper (professor)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Scott Cooper is a distinguished professor of political science at Brigham Young University. He received his BA in Russian/International Relations from BYU in 1992, his MA in Political Science from Duke University in 1996, and his PHD in Political Science from Duke University in 1999.

He has received numerous awards, among them being a Graduate Research Fellowship from the National Science Foundation.

He has published numerous works, among them being:

  • Power and Regionalism: Explaining Regional Cooperation in the Persian Gulf: 2003,
  • Perspectives on Global Development and Technology:
  • East African Monetary Union:
  • The Domestic Politics of Institutional Survival or Dissolution 2003,
  • Security Studies: State-Centric Balance-of-Threat Theory: Explaining the Misunderstood Gulf Cooperation Council 2004, *EUI Working Papers: Third World Monetary Blocs: Small State Choice or Great Power Hegemony 2004,
  • EUI Working Papers: Defining the Limits of Monetary Power Within Currency Areas 2005,
  • The Limits of Monetary Power: Statecraft Within Currency Areas: 2006.

Citations: BYU Faculty Profile