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== Selected Articles/Chapters ==
== Selected Articles/Chapters ==
*“All That Glitters: Competing Narratives and Transaction Costs in Complex Collaborative Environments,”<ref>[http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0095399712453828 All That Glitters: Competing Narratives and Transaction Costs in Complex Collaborative Environments] Administration & Society, Vol. 45(4): 420-442, May 2013</ref> <ref>[http://www.example.org Link text]
*“All That Glitters: Competing Narratives and Transaction Costs in Complex Collaborative Environments,”<ref>[http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0095399712453828 All That Glitters: Competing Narratives and Transaction Costs in Complex Collaborative Environments] Administration & Society, Vol. 45(4): 420-442, May 2013</ref>


*“Liberal Economics, Governance, and Official Development Assistance: Empirical Comments on Theoretical Themes,” African Social Science Review: The African Journal of Social Science, Public and International Affairs, Vol. 5(1), Spring 2012, pp. 47-65.
*“Liberal Economics, Governance, and Official Development Assistance: Empirical Comments on Theoretical Themes,”<ref> African Social Science Review: The African Journal of Social Science, Public and International Affairs, Vol. 5(1), Spring 2012, pp. 47-65.


*“Constructing Identities: Alternative Explanations of Conflict and Violence in the Niger Delta, Nigeria,” (with Air Commodore Olutayo T. Oguntoyinbo), Air and Space Power Journal, Vol. 3(1), 1st Quarter 2012, pp. 85-96.
*“Constructing Identities: Alternative Explanations of Conflict and Violence in the Niger Delta, Nigeria,” (with Air Commodore Olutayo T. Oguntoyinbo), Air and Space Power Journal, Vol. 3(1), 1st Quarter 2012, pp. 85-96.

Revision as of 23:56, 24 October 2017


Kalu Ndukwe Kalu
Picture taken at the U.S. Marine Corps Birthday Event, Maxwell Air Force Base, 2011
NationalityNigerian-American
OccupationResearch Professor
Academic background
Alma materAtlanta University, Texas Tech University, Yale University

Kalu Ndukwe Kalu is a Nigerian-born American political scientist specializing in comparative institutional development, national security policy, and organizational systems. He is currently a Distinguished Research Professor of Political Science and National Security Policy at Auburn University Montgomery[1]; and Docent Professor at the University of Tampere, Finland. He is a Fulbright Scholar, and has been a Research Affiliate at The Whitney and Betty Macmillan Center for International and Area Studies (Yale University); FDD Academic Fellow, on Counter-terrorism and Intelligence (Israel); and a Senior Research Fellow at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, Victoria Island, Lagos.

Background and Professional Life:

Kalu earned his B. Sc in International Environmental Studies/Environmental Science from Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, with a second major in Philosophy (Existentialism) in 1980; MBA (Organization Theory & Behavior) from Atlanta University in 1982; and a Ph. D in Political Science from Texas Tech University in 1994. He did post-doctoral studies in political science (democratic theory and institutions, citizenship, and international conflict processes) at Yale University (1996-1999), and post-doctoral graduate coursework (Health Policy & Management) at the Yale School of Medicine (1998-2000). He is also a recipient of two Certificates in Joint Strategic Leadership (2010), and National Security Decision Making (2011) from the Air War College (MAFB). He has taught at several institutions including the University of Connecticut, Storrs/Waterbury; and the University of Tampere, Finland (School of Management/Politics) as a Fulbright Scholar & Visiting Professor, 2013-2014.

Professor Kalu is widely published with articles in leading peer-reviewed journals, and has a combined production of over 65 scholarly works cumulatively in terms of publications in journals, books, edited volumes, and in national and international conference presentations. His research emphasis is in the areas of institutional development and organizational change, citizenship and administrative theory, IT-leadership interface, technology and culture, complex adaptive systems, national security and intelligence policy, and health care politics and policies. He has been invited and participated in several international learned conferences in various countries around the world including Canada, Germany, Italy, Norway, Finland, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, China, Singapore, and India. He has served as a member of the Editorial Board of Public Administration Review, the premier journal in the field.

Philosophy

Kalu draws great inspiration in the areas of philosophy dealing with existentialism, epistemology, and metaphysics. His views are very much influenced by the works of classical thinkers such as Plato, Aristotle, Cicero; and the latter works of the Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard, John Dewey, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jacques Derrida, Hanna Arendt, and Michael Sandel.

Academic publications

  • "State Power, Autarchy and Political Conquest in Nigerian Federalism" Published: 2008 ISBN 978-0-7391-1955-6
  • "Technology, Culture, and Public Policy: Critical Lessons from Finland" Published:2016 ISBN 978-1-48-222344-6
  • "Citizenship: Identity, Institutions, and the Postmodern Challenge" Published: 2016 ISBN 978-1-48-222324-8
  • "Constructing Identities: Political Culture, Value Change, and Security Policy in Nigeria" (forthcoming, 2018).

Selected Articles/Chapters

  • “All That Glitters: Competing Narratives and Transaction Costs in Complex Collaborative Environments,”[2]
  • “Liberal Economics, Governance, and Official Development Assistance: Empirical Comments on Theoretical Themes,”Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). tags, these references will then appear here automatically -->
  1. ^ Kalu Kalu, Political Science and Public Administration http://www.aum.edu/profiles/kalu-kalu
  2. ^ All That Glitters: Competing Narratives and Transaction Costs in Complex Collaborative Environments Administration & Society, Vol. 45(4): 420-442, May 2013