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Terry Sullivan,
Associate Professor of Political
Science, received his B.A. (1973) and
Ph.D. (1980) from the University of Texas at Austin. Before joining
the faculty, he served as an APSA Congressional Fellow, taught at the
University of Texas at Austin, and served as a research fellow at the
Graduate School of Industrial Administration, Carnegie-Mellon University.
He is past President of the Presidency Research Group, an international
association of professional scholars interested in the American Presidency.
Recently, Professor Sullivan served as Edwards Professor of Democracy
and Policy at the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy where
he coordinated Institute efforts to prepare the presidential transition
in 2001. He also served as Associate Director of the White House 2001
Project, a multi-institutional project preparing briefing materials
for the presidential transition and lending advice on White House operations
to the new administration. Professor Sullivan teaches graduate and undergraduate
courses on the Congress, the Presidency, and research techniques. His
main research interests currently focus on the nature of presidential
leadership. He has written Procedural
Structure: Success and Influence in Congress
(1984) and co-edited Congress:
Structure and Policy (Cambridge University
Press, 1987) and The White House
World (Texas A&M Press, 2003). Currently,
he is completing Nerve Center:
Managing to Govern from the White House
(Johns Hopkins University Press) and Making
A Difference: LBJ, Persuasion, and Presidential Leadership
(Princeton University Press). He has published research articles in
Presidential Studies Quarterly
(where he is features editor), Public
Choice, The
Journal of Politics, The
American Journal of Political Science,
and The American Political Science
Review.

361 Hamilton Hall • CB# 3265 • UNC at Chapel Hill • Chapel Hill, NC • 27599-3265 • Phone: (919) 962-3041 • Fax: (919) 962-0432 |