Allison Stanger
Office
Munroe Hall 303
Tel
(802) 443-5023
Email
stanger@middlebury.edu
Office Hours
Tuesday 3:00 - 5:00, Wednesday 4:15 - 5:30 and by appt.

Allison Stanger is the Russell Leng ’60 Professor of International Politics and Economics at Middlebury College; Co-Director and Principal Investigator, GETTING-Plurality Research Network, Harvard University; Research Scholar, Human-Centered AI Institute, Stanford University (11/23 to 2/24); and External Professor and Science Board member at the Santa Fe Institute. She is the author of Whistleblowers: Honesty in America from Washington to Trump and One Nation Under Contract: The Outsourcing of American Power and the Future of Foreign Policy, both with Yale University Press. Professor Stanger is also the co-editor (with W. Brian Arthur and Eric Beinhocker) of Complexity Economics, co-editor and co-translator (with Michael Kraus) of Irreconcilable Differences? Explaining Czechoslovakia’s Dissolution (foreword by Václav Havel) and the author of numerous articles and essays. Her new book, Who Elected Big Tech?, is forthcoming with Yale University Press. 

Stanger has twice served as visiting professor of Government at Harvard University, where she spent academic year 2019-20 as technology and human values senior fellow at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics. She was a co-author of the center’s April 2020 Roadmap to Pandemic Resilience and is a senior advisor to the Hannah Arendt Humanities Network. Stanger was the 2020 Cary and Ann Maguire Chair in Ethics and American History at the Library of Congress and 2020-21 SAGE Sara Miller McCune Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University.

Stanger’s writing has appeared in the AtlanticForeign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Financial Times, International Herald Tribune, New York Times, USA Today, U.S. News and World Report, and the Washington Post, and she has testified (at the request of both Democrats and Republicans) before the Commission on Wartime Contracting, the Senate Budget Committee, the Congressional Oversight Panel, the Senate HELP Committee, and the House Committee on Government Oversight and Reform. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and was also a contributor to the Booz Allen Hamilton project on the World’s Most Enduring Institutions, the Woodrow Wilson School Task Force on the Changing Nature of Government Service, and the Princeton Project on National Security. Stanger has served as an advisor to Secretary Clinton’s Policy Planning Staff, US Department of State (2009-2011) and was on the writing team that produced the State Department’s December 2010 Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR).

Stanger received her Ph.D. in Political Science from Harvard University. She also holds an AM in Regional Studies-Soviet Union (Harvard), a graduate diploma in Economics (London School of Economics), and a BS in Actuarial Science/Mathematics (Ball State University). She has studied foreign languages and literature at Charles University (Prague), the Sorbonne (Paris), and the Pushkin Institute (Moscow).

Her research has been funded by the International Relations and Exchanges Board, the National Council for Soviet and East European Research, the American Council of Learned Societies, the National Science Foundation, the Institute for the Study of World Politics, and the MacArthur Foundation. In addition to the appointments mentioned above, she has been a research fellow at the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies (Harvard University), Center for Economic Research and Graduate Education (Prague), the Institute for the Study of the USA and Canada (Moscow), New America (Washington, DC), the Brookings Institution (Washington, DC), and the Center for Science and International Affairs (Harvard University). 

Courses Taught

Course Description

Democracy in America Reconsidered
This seminar’s ultimate aim is for students to grasp the evolving relationship between the public controversies in American politics and theoretical writings on liberty and equality that have influenced the course of American political development. Special attention will be paid to the gaps between the principles and practices of US democracy. The course has no doctrine to advance. It seeks to provide the materials and framework for lively and inclusive discussion about the challenges of institutionalizing freedom, democracy, and equality, ideals that inspire other governments around the world. 3 hrs. sem.

Terms Taught

Fall 2021

Requirements

AMR, CW, SOC

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Course Description

Global Security Studies Senior Thesis
(Approval Only)

Terms Taught

Winter 2022, Spring 2022, Winter 2023, Spring 2023, Winter 2024, Spring 2024, Winter 2025, Spring 2025

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Course Description

Independent Project
(Approval Required)

Terms Taught

Spring 2020, Winter 2021, Spring 2021, Winter 2022, Spring 2022, Winter 2023, Spring 2023, Winter 2024, Spring 2024, Winter 2025, Spring 2025

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Course Description

Senior Thesis
(Approval Required)

Terms Taught

Winter 2021, Winter 2022, Winter 2023, Winter 2024, Winter 2025

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Course Description

The Politics of Virtual Realities
How has technology changed our politics? Are those changes all for the good? In this course we will explore the political, legal, and normative implications of the Internet for liberal democracy. We start with the US Constitution and explore arguments that it cannot by itself prevent the Internet from becoming a domain of manipulation rather than of freedom. How can we uphold the ideals of liberty and equality? And, since cyberspace has no country, whose laws should govern it? Cases will include President Obama's campaign and governance strategies, Google's activities abroad, cybersecurity, virtual war, and the WikiLeaks controversy. 3 hrs. lect./disc. (International Relations and Foreign Policy)/

Terms Taught

Spring 2022, Fall 2022, Spring 2024

Requirements

CW, SOC

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Course Description

American Foreign Policy
Does America exercise its power in the world in a distinctive way? If yes, has it always done so? In this course we will examine the evolution of American foreign policy from the time of the founding to the present. As we make our way from the height of the Cold War to the 21st century, we will assess how leaders, institutions, domestic politics, and the actions and inactions of other countries have shaped American international behavior. Topics considered include terrorism, nuclear proliferation, globalization, democracy promotion, whether the rich US has an obligation to help the less fortunate, how much power the Pentagon should have, what role the private sector can and should play in advancing American interests, and the Bush revolution in foreign policy. A central aim of the course is to map competing perspectives so that the student can draw his or her own political conclusions. 3 hrs. lect./disc. (International Relations and Foreign Policy)/

Terms Taught

Fall 2021, Spring 2024

Requirements

AMR, SOC

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Course Description

The Political Development of Western Europe
In what ways are the political systems and politics of France, Germany, Italy, and Britain similar? In what ways do they differ? How might we explain these patterns? This course attempts to answer these questions through comparative investigation of the processes and consequences of economic and political modernization in these nations from the feudal period to the 21st century. 3 hrs. lect./disc. (Comparative Politics)/

Terms Taught

Spring 2022

Requirements

CMP, CW, EUR, SOC

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Course Description

Who Elected Big Tech?
There is public awareness that technology is delivering unprecedented opportunities while simultaneously undermining privacy, equity, and democratic values. An unprecedented shift in the balance of power between multinational industry and national governments has been a necessary condition for these new challenges. How else could a freely elected American president be silenced by Google, Twitter, and Facebook? How else could Facebook’s Instagram be exposed as knowingly causing harm to teenagers without government penalty? How did America reach the point where Big Tech has the capacity to mount foreign policies? What consequences for social justice follow from that transfer of power in a global economy of multinational companies and diverse workforces? By first exploring these questions together, students will be well prepared for pursuing independent research projects. (International Relations and Foreign Policy)/

Terms Taught

Fall 2022

Requirements

AMR, SOC

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Course Description

Independent Projects
A program of independent work designed to meet the individual needs of advanced students. (Approval required)

Terms Taught

Spring 2020, Fall 2020, Spring 2021, Fall 2021, Spring 2022, Fall 2022, Winter 2023, Spring 2023, Fall 2023, Winter 2024, Spring 2024, Fall 2024, Winter 2025, Spring 2025

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Course Description

Honors Thesis
(Approval required)

Terms Taught

Spring 2020, Fall 2020, Spring 2021, Fall 2021, Spring 2022, Fall 2022, Spring 2023, Fall 2023, Spring 2024, Fall 2024, Spring 2025

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Publications

Press Releases

One Nation Under Contract

Whistleblowers

Books and Edited Volumes

In development: Who Elected Big Tech?

Complexity Economics (co-edited with W. Brian Arthur and Eric Beinhocker) (Santa Fe Institute Press, 2020).

Whistleblowers: Honesty in America from Washington to Trump (Yale University Press, 2019; paperback edition, 2021; Chinese translation under contract).

One Nation Under Contract: The Outsourcing of American Power and the Future of Foreign Policy (Yale University Press, 2009; paperback edition, 2011). 

Irreconcilable Differences? Explaining Czechoslovakia’s Dissolution (co-edited and co-translated with Michael Kraus), Foreword by Václav Havel (Rowman and Littlefield, 2000).

Recent Articles and Book Chapters

“Edward Snowden, Donald Trump, and The Paradox of National Security Whistleblowing,” in Lee Bollinger and Geoffrey Stone, eds., National Security, Leaks and Freedom of the Press: The Pentagon Papers Framework Fifty Years On (Oxford, 2021).

Democracy’s Tripwire: Global Corruption and Whistleblowing in Europe and the U.S.,” Center for European Studies Open Forum Series, no. 40, August 7, 2020.

Consumers versus Citizens in Democracy’s Public Sphere,” Communications of the Association for Computing Machinery, Vol. 63, No. 7, July 2020, pp. 29-31.

Co-author, “Roadmap to Pandemic Resilience: Massive Scale Testing, Tracing, and Supported Isolation (TTSI) as the Path to Pandemic Resilience for a Free Society,” Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, April 20, 2020.

“The First Whistleblowers,” Military History Quarterly, Spring 2020.

“Whistleblowing as Civil Disobedience: Leaks in the Era of Trump and the Deep State,” HA: The Journal of the Hannah Arendt Center, volume VII, 2019.

Response to Michael Walzer’s “Just and Unjust Leaks: When to Spill Secrets,” (Foreign Affairs, March/April 2018) in Foreign Affairs, November/December 2018.  

“Lessons from Middlebury,” in Michael Ignatieff and Stefan Roch, eds, Academic Freedom: The Global Challenge (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2018).

“Is Just War Doctrine Still Relevant?” International Studies Review, 2017.

“Hired Guns: How Private Military Contractors Undermine World Order,” Foreign Affairs, July/August 2015.

“The Hidden Costs of Outsourcing Diplomacy and Development,” Foreign Service Journal, February 2013.

“Transparency as a Core Public Value and Mechanism of Compliance,” Criminal Justice Ethics, vol. 31, no. 3, December 2012.

 “Contractors’ Wars and the Commission on Wartime Contracting,” in Christopher Kinsey and Malcolm Patterson, eds., Contractors and War: The Transformation of United States’ Expeditionary Operations (Stanford University Press, 2012). 

  “Prejudice and the Shadow of the Past in the Emergence of Cooperation,” in I. William Zartman, ed., Explaining Cooperation Among States (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010).

 “Guns for Fire,” Foreign Policy, August 18, 2010.

 Foreword to Richard Fontaine and John Nagl, Contracting in Conflicts: The Path to Reform, Center for a New American Security, June 2010.

Congressional Testimony

Testimony before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Hearing on “Challenges to Freedom of Speech on College Campuses, Part II”—May 22, 2018.

Testimony before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pension [HELP] Committee, Hearing on “Exploring Free Speech on College Campuses”—October 26, 2017.

Testimony before the Congressional Oversight Panel, “Hearing on Treasury’s Use of Private Contractors”—September 22, 2010.

Testimony before the Senate Budget Committee, Hearing on “Responsible Contracting: Modernizing the Business of Government”—July 15, 2010.

Testimony before the Commission on Wartime Contracting, Hearing on “Are Private Contractors Performing Inherently Governmental Functions?”—June 18, 2010.