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Faculty Affiliate Dr. Jason Sharmon

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Professor Jason Sharman graduated with his Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1999, before going on to work at American University in Bulgaria and the University of Sydney.  In 2007 he took up a position at Griffith University in Brisbane, Australia, while in 2017 he becomes the Sir Patrick Sheehy Professor of International Relations at Cambridge.  Sharman's research is currently focused on corruption, money laundering and tax havens, as well as the historical development of the international system in the early modern period. Aside from his academic research, Sharman has also performed consultancy work for a range of international organisations and private sector groups.

In December 2016, Dr. Sharman will join the faculty at Cambridge University in the UK as Professor of Politics.

Dr. Sharman.s website and CV
Email: j.sharman@griffith.edu.au

Selected Recent Publications:
  • J.C. Sharman, Chasing Kleptocrats’ Loot: The International Campaign Against Grand Corruption (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, forthcoming 2016).
  • J.C. Sharman and Andrew Phillips, International Order in Diversity: War, Trade and Rule in the Indian Ocean (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015), 251 pages.
  • J.C. Sharman, Michael Findley and Daniel Nielson, Global Shell Games: Experiments in Transnational Relations, Crime and Terrorism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014), 250 pages.
  • J.C. Sharman and Andrew Phillips, “Explaining Durable Diversity in International Systems: State, Company and Empire in the Indian Ocean,” International Studies Quarterly 59 (September 2015), 436-448.
  • J.C. Sharman and Carolin Liss, “Global Corporate Crime-Fighters: Private Transnational Responses to Piracy and Money Laundering,” Review of International Political Economy 22 (No.4 2015), 693-718.
  • J.C. Sharman, “War, Selection, and Micro-States: Economic and Sociological Perspectives on the International System,”European Journal of International Relations 21 (March 2015), 194-214. 
  • J.C. Sharman, Michael G. Findley and Daniel L. Nielson, “Causes of Non-Compliance with International Law: A Field Experiment in Anonymous Incorporation,” American Journal of Political Science 59 (January 2015), 146-161. 
  • J.C. Sharman and Alexander Cooley, “Blurring the Line between Licit and Illicit: Transnational Corruption Networks in Central Asia and Beyond,” Central Asian Survey 34 (No.1 2015), 11-28.
  • J.C. Sharman and Hun Joon Kim, “Accounts and Accountability: Corruption, Human Rights and Individual Accountability Norms,” International Organization 68 (May 2014), 417-448.
  • J.C. Sharman, Shima Baradaran, Michael G. Findley, and Daniel L. Nielson, “Funding Terror,” University of Pennsylvania Law Review 162 (February 2014), 477-536.

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Innovations for Peace and Development
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