Education Background

Ph.D. - State University of New York at Albany
M.A. - SUNY at Albany & University of Massachusetts at Amherst
B.A. - Siena College

Courses Taught

  • Environmental Law and Policy
  • American Politics
  • Constitutional Law
  • Human Rights Law and Politics
  • Law and Bioethics
  • Political Theory

Research Interests

My research interests cleave in two distinct directions. I am completing a book on Wittgenstein and Political Theory; part of a larger study of contemporary political theory as a series of responses to political trauma (genocide, war, the Holocaust) and ecological catastrophe. My second area of scholarly interest is the politics of sustainable development, where I am formulating a position I call "Political Ecology" that considers the larger political effects of acknowledging the illogic of limitless economic growth on a planet of limited natural resources.

Publications

Books

  • Green Abolitionism: Toward a Planetary Political Theory. (work in progress)
  • John G. Gunnell: Descent, Discourses and Disciplines. Routledge Innovators in Political
    Theory. (November, 2016).
  • Wittgenstein and Political Theory: The View from Somewhere (Edinburgh University
    Press, 2009).

Peer Reviewed Articles

  • “Science Fiction Meets Political Science: A Simulation for Teaching Restorative
    Justice.” Co-authored with Dr. Lisa G. Propst. P.S. (March, 2021).
  • “Green Abolition and Radical Democracy,” In Review.
  • “Theorizing Politics After Camus.” Human Studies 32.1 (March, 2009): pp. 1-18.
  • “Why Wittgenstein is not Conservative: Conventions and Critique.” Theory and Event
    9.3 (2006): 1-25.
  • “Theorizing Sustainability: An Exercise in Political Ecology.” Forum on Public Policy
    1.1 (2005): pp. 173-189.
  • Czech, B., E. Allen, D. Batker, P. Beier, H. Daly, J. Erickson, P. Garrettson, V. Geist, J.
    Gowdy, L. Greenwalt, H. Hands, P. Krausman, P. Magee, C. Miller, K. Novak, G. Pullis,
    C. Robinson, J. Santa-Barbara, J. Teer, D. Trauger, and C. Willer. 2003. The iron
    triangle: why The Wildlife Society needs to take a position on economic growth. Wildlife
    Society Bulletin 31(2):574-577.
  • “Sustainability as Subterfuge.” Co-authored with Baylor Johnson and Anthony Dotson,
    Adirondack Journal of Environmental Studies 9.2 (Fall/Winter 2002), pp. 21-30.

Presentations

  • "Seeing As It Happens: Theorizing Through the Eyes of Wittgenstein," a paper presented at the 2004 Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Political Association, Boston, MA, November 11-13, 2004.
  • Chair and discussant for "Social Criticism and Political Argument Panel," at 2004 Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association, Boston, MA, November 11-13, 2004.
  • "Theorizing Sustainability: An Exercise in Political Ecology," at the Association for Political Theory Conference, October 29-31, 2004, Colorado College Roundtable: Environmental Political Theory: The Art of Politics in a Natural World.
  • Participant at Oxford Round Table on Regulating Sustainable Development: Adapting Globalization in the Twenty-First Century, University of Oxford, England, August 8-13, 2004, in the keynote presentation: "Theorizing Sustainability: An Exercise in Political Ecology."
  • "Political Ecology and Sustainability: A Political Defense of Ecological Economics," at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, April 15-18, 2004.
  • "Sustainability Science in Policymaking: Santa Rosa National Park (Costa Rica) and Adirondack State Park," co-authored with Tom Langen, presented at the Wildlife Society 2003 Annual Conference, Sept. 8, 2003, Burlington, VT, sponsored by the Gund Institute for Ecological Economics.
  • "Theorizing Politics Lost: Hannah Arendt and Herbert Marcuse," presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Assoc., Chicago, IL, April 3-6, 2003.
  • Respondent, Panel on "Jacques Derrida and Political Theory" at the Annual Meeting of Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, April 3-6, 2003.
  • Respondent, "Did Socrates Believe in Democracy?" at the SUNY Potsdam's Legacy of Greece and Rome Conference, March 13, 2003.
  • Chair, "Continental Political Philosophy Panel" at the Association for Political Theory Inaugural Conference, Calvin College, Grand Rapids Michigan, Oct. 17-19, 2003.

Review Essays, Reviews, and Book Chapters

  • Review of John G. Gunnell, Conventional Realism and Political Inquiry: Channeling
    Wittgenstein. In The Review of Politics 83,1 (Winter, 2021).
  • Review of John S. Nelson, Cowboy Politics: Myths and Discourses in Popular Westerns
    from “The Virginian” to “Unforgiven” and “Deadwood.” In VoegelinView (September
    25, 2018), voegelinview.com/10294-2/.
  • Review of Madeline Baer, Stemming the Tide: Human Rights and Water Policy in a
    Neoliberal World (Oxford University Press, 2017) in Human Rights Quarterly 40 (2018):
    pp. 484-88.
  • Introduction and Appendix to John G. Gunnell: History, Discourses and Disciplines
    (Routledge, 2017), pp. 1-9 and 234-245.
  • Review of Sonali Chakrabarti, Sing the Rage: Listening to Anger after Mass Violence
    (Chicago University Press, 2014) in Human Rights Quarterly 37 (2015), 260-64.
  • Review of Enrique Dussel, Ethics of Liberation: In the Age of Globalization and
    Exclusion. Trans by Eduardo Mendieta, Camilio Perez Bustillo, Yolanda Angulo, and
    Nelson Maldonado-Torres (Duke University Press, 2013) in Perspectives on Politics 12.4
    (December, 2014).
  • “Arendt and Intergenerational Justice.” Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College Blog
    “Quote of the Week,” June 16, 2014.
  • “Politics Against the Law: Howard Zinn on Academic Freedom Beyond the Academy,”
    in Agitation With A Smile, edited by Stephen Bird, Joshua Yesnowitz, and Adam Silver,
    (Paradigm Publishers, 2013).
  • Review of Paul B. Thompson, ed., The Ethics of Intensification: Agricultural
    Development and Cultural Change (Dordrecht: Springer, 2009) in Organization and
    Environment.
  • “‘Another World Is Possible’: Theorizing the Radical Politics of Democracy, North and
    South.” New Political Science 31, 3 (September, 2009), 403-12.
  • Review of Hub Zwart, Understanding Nature: Case Studies in Comparative
    Epistemology (Dordrecht: Springer, 2008) in Journal of Agricultural and Environmental
    Ethics 22, 5 (2009), pp. 489-92.
  • Review of “Christopher J. Preston and Wayne Ouderkirk, eds. Nature, Value, Duty: Life
    on Earth with Holmes Rolston, III (Dordrecht: Springer, 2007) in Journal of Agricultural
    and Environmental Ethics 21 (2008): 477-484.
  • “Space and Vision in Language.” Review of Nana Last, Wittgenstein’s House: Language,
    Space, and Architecture (N.Y.: Fordham University Press, 2008) Postmodern Culture
    19.1.
  • Special Advisory Editor for Millennium: Journal of International Studies 36, 2 (2008).
  • Speaking Across Time and Cultures in Bioethics and Environmental Ethics.” Ethics,
    Place and Environment 5.3 (October 2002): pp.271-280.
  • “The Political Philosopher and the City.” Theory and Event 6.2 (Fall 2002): 1-21.
    (http:muse-dev.jhu/journals/theory_and_event/v006/6.2robinson.html)
  • “Democracy in Cyberia.” Theory and Event 5.3 (Fall 2001): pp.1-17. (http:muse-
    dev.jhu/journals/theory_and_event/v005/5.3robinson.html)
  • “How To Do Things With Wittgenstein.” Theory and Event 4.4 (Winter 2000): pp. 1-16.
    (http:muse.jhu.edu/journals/theory_&_event/v005/5.1r_robinson.html).
  • “Genocide and Legality: A Reflection on Legal Positivism.” Chapter Published in The
    Holocaust: Progress and Prognosis, 1934-1994. Holocaust/Genocide Resource Center at
    Rider University 1994 Yearbook, 1-25.
  • “Political Life After the Holocaust.” Chapter Published in Voices: Institutional and
    Individual Responses to the Holocaust. The Holocaust/Genocide Resource Center at
    Rider College 1991 Yearbook, 1-26.

Conference Papers and Participation

  • “Theorizing as Untimely.” A Paper Delivered at the Impossible Projects Symposium,
    Clarkson University, September 18, 2022.
  • Chair, Panel on “The Environment: Destruction, Preservation, Survival.” Association for
    Political Theory Annual Conference. University of California at Irvine, October 24-26,
    2019.
  • Participant, “Workshop on Queering the Demos.” Association for Political Theory
    Annual Conference. University of California at Irvine, October 24-26, 2019.
  • Participant in Roundtable on Diversity and Pedagogy. Annual Meeting of The National
    Conference on Race and Ethnicity. Portland Oregon (NCORE). May 27 – June 1, 2019.
  • Discussant for Panel on “Citizenship and Political Participation.” Association for
    Political Theory Annual Meeting. Ann Arbor, Michigan: October 11-14, 2017
  • Participant in Workshop on “Decolonizing Political Theory.” Association for Political
    Theory Annual Meeting, Ann Arbor, Michigan, October 11-14, 2017.
  • Participant in Faculty Institute for Diversity: Train the Trainer Workshop. Cornell
    University, June 20-23, 2017.
  • “Abolition-Democracy in the Anthropocene.” A Paper Delivered at the Annual Meeting
    of the Association for Political Theory, Panel on The Human and Its Others. Columbus,
    Ohio: October 20-22, 2016.
  • Chair, Panel on “Social Control and Bodily Freedom,” Annual Meeting of the
    Association for Political Theory, Columbus, Ohio, October 20-22, 2016.
  • Participant, Workshop on “Violence and Politics,” Annual Meeting of the Association for
    Political Theory: Boulder, Colorado, October 22-24, 2015.
  • Participant, Workshop on “Neoliberalism, Inequality and the Regulation of Bodies;” and
    Chair, Panel on “Belonging: Immigrants, Foreigners, and Strangers.” Annual Meeting of
    the Association for Political Theory: Madison, Wisconsin, October 16-18, 2014.
  • Participant, Workshop on “A Post-Secular Cinema? Film, Faith, Politics,” by Prof.
    Bennet Schaber. SUNY Oswego, September 16, 2014.
  • Discussant, Panel on “Environmental Policy and Activism in New York.” Annual
    Meeting of the International Political Science Association: Montreal, Canada. July 21-24,
    2014.
  • Participant in the Annual Workshop for Environmental Political Theory; and Chair, Panel
    on “Environmental Empathy and Shares/Sharing,” at the Annual Meeting of the Western
    Political Science Association: Seattle, Washington, April 16-19, 2014.
  • Panelist/Presenter, “Rwanda: Twenty Years Later” for Rwandan Remembrance
    Roundtable, Sponsored by the SUNY Potsdam History Association. April 7, 2014.
  • Discussant, Workshop on “The Courage of Appearance: The Politics of Arendtian
    Judgment and Cosmopolitanism,” by Prof. Jennie Han. SUNY Oswego, March 25, 2014.
  • Participant in Inaugural Meeting of the Political Theory Workshop, SUNY Oswego,
    November 21, 2013.
  • Workshop on Metaethics of Realism and Anti-Realism and Political Theory.”
    Association for Political Theory Annual Meeting. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN.
    October 10-12, 2013.
  • “Resistance and Danger as Modes of Environmental Politics.” A Paper Delivered at the
    Annual Meeting of the Western Political Science Association. Hollywood, CA., March
    2830, 2013.
  • “Radical Democracy and Sustainability.” A Paper Delivered at the 2012 Annual Meeting
    of the Association for Political Theory. University of South Carolina, October 11-13,
    2012.
  • Lecture on “Justice and Ethics.” Literature and the Law Conference. Sponsored by the
    Vermont Bar Association. University of Vermont. Burlington, VT. June 14-15, 2012.
  • Discussant, Panel on “Ethical Land Use or Ethical Land Abuse? A critical Look at
    Ethical Discourse and Current Land Uses.” Symposium on Interdisciplinary Scholarship
    in Land Use and Ethics. SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry’s
    Northern Forest Institute, June 1-3, 2012.
  • “Radical Democracy and Ecological Economics.” A Paper Delivered at the Annual
    Meeting of the Western Political Science Association. March, 2012. Portland, Oregon
  • Participant. The Kim Koo Forum on U.S. – Korea Relations. Korea Institute. Harvard
    University. February 2, 2012.
  • Lecture Series on “Human Rights: Concepts, History and Contemporary Problems.”
    Funded by the Korean Research Institute. December, 2011. Sogang University, Seoul,
    Republic of Korea.
  • Participant, The First World Humanities Forum, Sponsored by UNESCO. November 24 -
    26, 2011. Pusan, Republic of Korea.
  • “Politics Against the Law: Howard Zinn on Academic Freedom Beyond the Academy.”
    A Paper Delivered at the Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Political Science
    Association. November 11-13, 2010. Boston, Massachusetts.
  • “Sustainability and Radical Democracy: The Political Theory of Ecological Economics.”
    A Paper Delivered at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Political Theory.
    October 22-23, 2010. Portland Oregon.
  • “Theorizing Politics Through Literature; The Novels of Albert Camus.” A Paper
    Delivered at the Annual Meeting of the New York Political Science Association. April
    17, 2010. Saratoga Springs, New York.
  • “The Fair Housing Act of 1968: A Political and Moral Reckoning.” A Paper Presented to
    the USDA Rural Development Office of St. Lawrence County, April 14, 2010.
  • Chair and Discussant, “Uncertain Futures: Eco-Anarchist Politics in the 21 st Century”
    Panel at the Annual Meeting of the Western Political Science Association. San Francisco,
    CA: April 1, 2010.
  • “Wittgenstein and Political Theory.” A Presentation to the Philosophy Forum of SUNY
    Potsdam. March 18, 2010.
  • “The Sustainability of Economics.” A.D, Latornell Symposium on The Currency of
    Ecology. Alliston, Ontario. November 18-20, 2009.
  • “Marcuse and the Aesthetics of Ecological Politics.” A Paper Presented at Remembering
    Marcuse: Power and Resistance, a panel discussion held at SUNY Potsdam, November
    11, 2009.
  • “Theorizing Politics Through Literature.” A Paper Presented at the 2009 Annual
    Conference of the Association for Political Theory. Texas A&M University, College
    Park. October 22-24, 2009.
  • “How Political Life Forms and Deforms Citizens.” A Paper Presented at the 2009 Annual
    Meeting of the New York State Political Science Association. New York City, April 24-
    25, 2009.
  • Chair and Discussant, “Postmodernity’s Margins” Panel at the 2009 Annual Metting of
    the New York State Political Science Association Meeting. New York City, April 24-25,
    2009.
  • Truth, Reconciliation, and Environmental Justice.” A Paper Presented at the 2009 Annual
    Meeting of the Western Political Science Association. Vancouver, British Columbia,
    March, 2009.
  • Discussant, “Theorizing Nature” Panel, at the 2009 Annual Meeting of the Western
    Political Science Association. Vancouver, British Columbia, 2009.
  • “Post-Cartesian Citizenship.” A Paper Presented at the 2008 Annual Meeting of the
    Northeastern Political Science Association. Boston, MA: November.
  • “Deforming the Political Subject: Wittgenstein Reads Lucien Freud (along with Samuel
    Beckett, and Francis Bacon).” A Paper Presented at the 2008 Annual Meeting of the
    Association for Political Theory. Wesleyan University: October.
  • “The Language for Torture in Wittgenstein and Beckett.” A Paper Presented at the
    Foundations of Political Theory Workshop on Myth, Rhetoric, and Symbolism. 2008
    Meeting of the Political Science Association. Boston, MA: August, 2008.
  • “Torture and Politics: Language Between Life and Death.” A Paper Presented at the 2008
    Annual Meeting of the New York State Political Science Association. Albany, New
    York, April 25-26.
  • Chair and Discussant, Panel on “Citizenship and Difference,” at the 2008 Annual
    Meeting of the New York State Political Science Association. Albany, N.Y., April 25-26.
  • “Truth, Reconciliation, and Sustainability.” A Paper Presented at the 2008 Annual
    Meeting of the Western Political Science Association. San Diego, CA: March 20-22,
    2008.
  • “Trust in Wittgenstein: Baring the Life of the Theorist.” A Paper Presented at the 2007
    Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association. Philadelphia, PA:
    November 2007.
  • “Bare Life: Comedy, Trust and Language in Wittgenstein and Beckett.” A Paper
    Presented at the 2007 Annual Meeting of the Association for Political Theory. University
    of Western Ontario. London, Ontario: October 2007.
  • Chair and Discussant. Panel on “Global Democracy.” 2007 Annual Meeting of the
    Association for Political Theory. University of Western Ontario. London, Ontario:
    October 2007.
  • Participant and Facilitator, 2007 Foundations of Political Theory Workshop on Myth,
    Rhetoric, and Symbolism. American Political Science Association Annual Meeting.
    Chicago, IL: August 2007.
  • “Restorative Justice and Sustainability.” A Paper Presented at the Faculty Diversity and
    Environmental Justice Research Symposium. University of Michigan at Ann Arbor: June
    2007.
  • Participant, Higher Education Opportunity Program Conference: “Best Practices for
    Teaching Reading and Writing.” Syracuse University, May 4, 2007.
  • “Wittgenstein, the Disaster, and the End of Epic Theorizing.” A Paper Presented at the
    2007 Annual Meeting of the New York State Political Science Association. FDR
    Museum and Library, New Hyde Park: April 2007.
  • Chair and Discussant for Panel on “Discussions of Democracy.” 2007 New York State
    Political Science Association Annual Meeting. FDR Presidential Library and Museum,
    April 2007.
  • “The Politics of Ecological Economics: Democracy, Crisis, and Restoration.” A Paper
    Presented at the 2007 Annual Meeting of the Western Political Science Association. Las
    Vegas, NV: March 2007.
  • “Language, Trust, and Politics after the Disaster.” A Paper Presented at the 2006 Annual
    Meeting of the Northeast Political Science Association. Boston, MA: November 2006.
  • Participant and Facilitator, 2006 Foundations of Political Theory Workshop on Myth,
    Rhetoric, and Symbolism. American Political science Association Annual Meeting.
    Philadelphia, PA: August, 2006.
  • Respondent for a Presentation of James Howard Kunstler’s The Long Emergency, by the
    author. SUNY Potsdam, April 27, 2006.
  • “Political Ecology and Sustainable Development: An Argument for Slowness.” A Paper
    Presented at the 2006 Annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association.
    Albuquerque, N.M.: March 2006.
  • Participant, Workshop on Environmental Political Theory. 2006 Annual Meeting of the
    Western Political Science Association. Albuquerque, N.M.: March 2006.
  • “Wittgenstein and Postmodern Political Theory.” A Paper Presented at the 2005 Annual
    Meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association. Philadelphia, PA: November
    2005.
  • Chair and Discussant for “Constructive Voices, Critical Thinking and Textuality. A Panel
    at the 2005 Annual Meeting of the Northeast Political Science Association. Philadelphia,
    PA: November 2005.
  • “Theorizing as a Wittgensteinian Investigation.” A Paper Presented at the Third Annual
    Association for Political Theory Conference. St. Louis, MI: October 2005.
  • “Medical Ethics and End-of-Life Decisions: The Ethical, Political, and Legal
    Implications of the Terri Schiavo Case.” Presentation to Phi Delta Epsilon, the Society
    for Pre-Med Students, Clarkson University, October 5, 2005.
  • “Multiculturalism, Sexuality, and Campus Life.” A Presentation to Multicultural Students
    United at Clarkson University, September 17, 2005.
  • Participant and Facilitator at the 2005 Foundations of Political Theory Workshop on
    Political Myth, Rhetoric, and Symbolism. American Political Science Association Annual
    Meeting. Washington D.C.: August 2005.
  • “Why Wittgenstein Is Not Conservative: Conventions and Critique.” A Paper Presented
    at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Chicago, IL: April
    2005.
  • “Seeing As It Happens: Theorizing Through the Eyes of Wittgenstein.” A Paper
    Presented at the 2004 Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association.
    Boston, MA: November 11-13, 2004.
  • Chair and Discussant for “Social Criticism and Political Argument Panel.” 2004 Annual
    Meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association. Boston, MA: November 11-
    13, 2004.
  • “Theorizing Sustainability: An Exercise in Political Ecology.” Paper Presented at the
    Association for Political Theory Conference, October 29-31, Colorado College.
    Roundtable: Environmental Political Theory: The Art of Politics in a Natural World.
  • Respondent for “Aristophanes Skewers Socrates!” Presented by Professor Kim Bouchard
    for SUNY Potsdam Legacy of Greece and Rome Learning Community. October 27,
    2004.
  • “After the Presidential Debates.” Presented at Hot Topics at Noon Series. Clarkson
    University, October 15, 2004.
    Participant at Oxford Round Table on Regulating Sustainable Development: Adapting
    Globalization in the Twenty-First Century. University of Oxford, England, August 8-13,
    2004. Keynote Presentation: “Theorizing Sustainability: An Exercise in Political
    Ecology.”
  • “Political Ecology as Strong Sustainability.” Paper Presented at the 2004 Annual
    Conference of the Society for Conservation Biology. July 30 – August 2.
  • “Political Ecology and Sustainability: A Political Defense of Ecological Economics.”
    Paper Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association,
    April 15-18, 2004.
  • “The Ethics and Politics of Cloning.” Presented at the Hot Topics at Noon series.
    Clarkson University, March 23rd , 2004.
  • “Ethical and Legal Challenges of Recent Developments in Bioengineering.” Delivered at
    the 2004 Induction Ceremony of the Clarkson University Biology Honors Society.
    February 28, 2004.
  • “Thinking About Computers: Philosophy, Computer Science, and the Future of
    Thought.” Delivered at the Association for Computing Machinery. Clarkson University,
    February 18, 2004.
  • Chair, “Continental Political Philosophy Panel.” Association for Political Theory
    Inaugural Conference. Calvin College, Grand Rapids Michigan, October 17-19, 2003.
  • “Sustainability Science in Policymaking: Santa Rosa National Park (Costa Rica) and
    Adirondack State Park.” Co-authored with Tom Langen. Presented at The Wildlife
    Society 2003 Annual Conference. September 8, 2003, Burlington Vermont. The Gund
    Institute for Ecological Economics.
  • “Theorizing Politics Lost: Hannah Arendt and Herbert Marcuse.” Presented at the
    Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, April 3-6, 2003.
  • Respondent for panel on “Jacques Derrida and Political Theory.” Annual Meeting of the
    Midwest Political Science Association, April 3-6, 2003.
  • Respondent, “Did Socrates Believe in Democracy?” SUNY Potsdam’s Legacy of Greece
    and Rome, March 13, 2003.
  • “Political Theory as Bad Citizenship: Wittgenstein and the Ethics of Perception.” A
    Paper Presented to the Philosophy Forum, State University of New York at Potsdam,
    March 28, 2002.
  • “The Sustainability Emperor is Naked: Population, Consumption, and Faith in Science.”
    A Paper Presented at the Clarkson University Sustainability Seminar Series, November
    29, 2001.
  • “Sustainability: An Essentially Contested Concept.” A Paper Presented at the Annual
    Meeting of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences. Charleston, S.C. October
    19-21, 2001.
  • Panelist at the Adirondack Research Consortium’s Eighth Annual Conference on the
    Adirondacks. Hotel Saranac. Saranac Lake, New York May 23-24, 2001. 
  • “Democratizing the Classroom.” A workshop given at the 9 th Annual Teaching
    Effectiveness Conference, held at the State University of New York at Canton, November
    4, 2000.
  • “Can A Zombie Pay Attention?” Paper co-authored with Vincent Brown for “Toward a
    Science of Consciousness” Conference. Tucson, Arizona, April 10-15, 2000.
  • Conferee at Conference on Goethean Science in Holistic Perspective. Teacher’s College,
    Columbia University, May 20-22, 1999.
  • “Wittgenstein and the Scene of Contemporary Political Theory.” Paper Series Presented
    to the Department of Political Science at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. August 2-3,
    1996.
  • “Post-Holocaustic Anarchism: On Violence and Statism.” Paper Presented to the
    Institute for Social Ecology, Goddard College, Plainfield, Vermont. July 1, 1996.
  • “Retheorizing Theory: Listening and Community in Buber, Levinas, and Davidson.”
    Paper Presented at the 1994 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science
    Association. New York City, September 1-4, 1994.
  • “Industrial Scientists as Workers: Alienation and Elitism,” co-authored with Roli Varma.
    Paper Presented at the International Symposium on When Science Becomes Culture.
    University of Montreal, Quebec, April, 1994.
  • “Genocide and Legality: A Reflection on Legal Positivism.” Paper Presented at the
    Twenty Fourth Annual Scholar’s Conference on the Holocaust and German Church
    Struggle. The Third Biennial Conference on Christianity and the Holocaust. The Julius
    and Dorothy Koppelman Holocaust/Genocide Resource Center. Princeton, New Jersey,
    March 6-8, 1994.
  • “Political Language and the Bureaucracy of the Final Solution.” Paper Presented at the
    1993 Annual Meeting of the New York State Political Science Association. Hunter
    College, New York City, April 23-24.
  • “Epic Political Theory Confronts the Holocaust: Hannah Arendt and Franz Neumann on
    Seeing and Hearing.” Paper Presented at the 1991 Annual Meeting of the American
    Philosophical Association, Central Division. Symposium Sponsored by the Society for
    the Philosophic Study of Genocide and the Holocaust. Chicago, Illinois. April 5-7,
    1993.
  • “Political Life After the Holocaust.” Paper Presented at the 1991 Conference on Voices:
    Institutional and Individual Responses to the Holocaust. The Holocaust/Genocide
    Resource Center at Rider College, Lawrenceville, New Jersey, April 5-7.
  • “Liberalism and the Moral Subject.” Paper Presented at the 1987 Annual Meeting of the
    Northeastern Political Science Association. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Fall 1987.
  • “The Importance of Max Weber’s Psychology for Contemporary Political Theory.”
    Paper Presented at the Annual Meeting of the New York State Political Science
    Association. Albany, New York, Spring 1986.

Contact

Email:
crobinso@clarkson.edu

Office Phone Number: 315/268-3986

Office Location: 302 Science Center

Clarkson Box Number: CU Box 5750

Zoom ID URL: https://clarkson.zoom.us/j/93305037775?pwd=U3VqbFN3M3hPZysxUzhtMVVhalB1UT09

Office Hours

  • Monday: 4:30 -6:30
  • Wednesday: 4:30 - 6:30
  • Friday: 4:30 - 6:30