Clifford E. Griffin
Clifford E. Griffin is an Associate Professor of Political Science, School of Public and International Affairs, NC State University. He has had more than 25 years of research, teaching, commenting and consulting on all aspects of Caribbean Political Economy, including drug trafficking, money laundering and crime (national and transnational), migration (legal and illegal), and trade and development. He is author of: The Race for Fisheries and Hydrocarbons in the Caribbean Basin: The Barbados-Trinidad and Tobago Maritime Dispute—Regional Delimitation Implications, Ian Randle (2007); and Democracy and Neoliberalism in the Developing World: Lessons From the Anglophone Caribbean, Ashgate (1997); and he is co-authoring the first book on US-Caribbean Relations. Some of his work appears in the following selected journals: Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics, the Journal of Democracy, Journal of Social and Economic Studies, and Journal of Caribbean Studies; and some appear in the following selected volumes: Immigration, Crime and Justice, Emerald Group Publishing (2009); Freedom and Constraint in Caribbean Migration and Diaspora; Ian Randle Publishers (2009); Intervention, Border and Maritime Issues in CARICOM; Ian Randle Publishers (2007); Governance, Conflict Analysis and Conflict Resolution; Ian Randle Publishers (2008); Caribbean Security in the Age of Terror: Challenge and Change; Ian Randle Publishers (2004). He is a Contributing Editor to the Handbook of Latin American Studies, Library of Congress, and Contributing Editor of ARA—Journal of Tourism Research/Revista de Investigación en Turismo. He is Director the Hanghzhou, China-International Relations-Mechanical Engineering-Chinese Language Summer Study Abroad program. His current research involves collaborations with the Institute of the Americas at the University College, London, UK; the Center for the Study of Violence, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil; and the Center for Public Policy Research, at the University of Sao Paulo. |
Event: International Seminar Discusses the Judiciary, the Press and Public Safety