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Robert Price, Associate Vice Chancellor for Research
Robert Price
Associate Vice Chancellor for Research
119 California Hall
510-642-7540
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Robert Price
Interim Vice Chancellor for Research |
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Robert M. Price is Associate Vice Chancellor for Research and Professor of
Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. A native of Brooklyn,
New York, in 1963 he undertook his graduate work in political science at UC
Berkeley, where he received M.A. and Ph.D. degrees. He joined the Berkeley faculty
in the Department of Political Science in 1970, and served as Department Chair
from 1996 through 2001.
Professor Prices research and teaching interests include comparative
politics and African affairs, with a special emphasis on the politics of contemporary
South Africa. He is author of Society
and Bureaucracy in Contemporary Ghana (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1975), U.S. Foreign Policy toward Sub-Saharan Africa: National Interest
and Global Strategy (Berkeley: Institute of International Studies, 1979),
The
Apartheid Regime: Political Power and Racial Domination (co-editor,
Berkeley: Institute of International Studies Publications, 1980), and The
Apartheid State in Crisis (New York: Oxford University Press, 1991),
as well as a variety of journal articles and book chapters dealing with the
new African state, U.S. foreign policy towards Africa, and political change
in South Africa. Among latter is Race and Reconciliation in the New South
Africa, Politics
and Society, V. 25, No. 2.
The Apartheid State in Crisis (1991)
The
Apartheid State in Crisis explores the political dynamics that produced
South Africas negotiated transition away from minority racial rule. Focusing
on the movement for black liberation, the policies of the apartheid state, and
the international environment, the process whereby the foundations of white
rule were fundamentally eroded is revealed. The dynamic interactions of government
reform, black insurrection, and international sanctions are shown to have profoundly
altered South Africas political process during the decade of the 1980s,
weakening the white-controlled state and leaving the government with only one
viable option: to negotiate the future of the state with advocates of majority
rule. (Oxford University Press, 1991)
"...Prices book is a stunning accomplishment. It towers over recent
analyses of the South African situation and puts to shame recent historical
sociological treatments of revolution..."
American Political Science Review "...without peer as
the best researched and most authoritative history of this period of reform
now on our bookshelves."
 Copyright 2001-2004 - University of California, Berkeley
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