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Podcast
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Last
year, Paul Sum joined us to talk about the possibilities of exporting the
American model of democracy to other countries. He was about to embark on a
one-year trip to Romania to examine their transition to democracy. Now he's back
and ready to share what he learned. Join us for a conversation about what
democracy looks like in Eastern Europe now, at this very moment, and how the
reality compares to our hopes and theories.
Paul Sum is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the
University of North Dakota. His interests were shaped through his experience
during an earlier trip to Romania as a Visiting Scholar and Fellow at
Babeş-Bolyai University in Cluj (1996-1998). He has worked with the Bureau of
Educational and Cultural Affairs in the U.S. Department of State (formerly the
U.S. Information Agency), the Council of Europe, the OSCE, the U.S. Agency for
International Development, the National Democratic Institute for International
Affairs, Democracy International, and the International Research & Exchanges
Board. His work includes monitoring elections and campaigns, assessing pre and
post-election voter surveys, and evaluating the impact of various democracy
assistance programs in Albania, Bulgaria, Kosovo, and Romania among other
locations. He remains on staff as a Visiting Professor at Babeş-Bolyai
University in Romania and has taught at Tulane University and Northwestern
University. He is particularly interested in the background and motivations of
civil society activists in the post-communist world. He has been widely
published, but work in this specific area have appeared in
East European Politics & Societies and the Romanian Journal of Science
and Politics. He is currently completing an edited volume for Lexington
Books titled Romania under
Basescu.
Why?’s host Jack Russell Weinstein says “Paul Sum has a great
mind, and I can think of no better guide to the philosophy of democracy as it
exists in Eastern Europe. I’m anxious to learn how American values and ideals
transfer to other countries and what America, in turn, can learn from others.
It’s always a pleasure to have Paul on the show.”
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