Assistant Professor, School of Public Policy and
Assistant Research Scholar, Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy
301-405-4755
dhlevine@umd.edu
Expertise
Ethics, political philosophy, philosophy of international law, civil conflict, peacekeeping
Daniel H. Levine is an Assistant Professor in the School of Public Policy and an Assistant Research Scholar in the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy, specializing in moral and philosophical issues surrounding international law, civil conflict, and peacekeeping. He holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy from Georgetown University, where he taught courses on the philosophy of law, and a Master's of Public Policy from the University of Maryland, College Park. Before coming to the University, Dr. Levine was a Program Officer in the US Institute of Peace's Education and Training Center, where he worked with the higher education community in Iraq. He also dabbles in international human rights activism from time to time. Recent publications include “African Civilian Police Capacity for International Peacekeeping Operations” (Henry L. Stimson Center, February 2008) and “Rule of Law, Power Distribution, and the Problem of Faction in Conflict Interventions” (in The Rule of Law in Comparative Perspective, forthcoming from Springer).
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