Short Biography
Bear F. Braumoeller is Professor in the Department of Political Science at The Ohio State University and the holder of the Baronov and Timashev Chair in Data Analytics. He conducts research in the areas of international relations, political methodology, and complexity and human behavior. He received his B.A. from the University of Chicago and his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan, and he held faculty positions at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Harvard University before moving to Ohio State.
His present work focuses on the decline-of-war thesis, the relationship between international order and international conflict, and causal inference based on observational data. He currently co-directs the Computational Social Science community of practice under the Translational Data Analytics Institute at Ohio State. For more information, visit the Computational Social Science CoP page at TDAI.
Employers and Terminal Ranks
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2008-present Ohio State University
Department of Political Science
Professor -
2000-2008 Harvard University
Department of Government
Associate Professor -
1998-2000 University of Illinois
Department of Political Science
Assistant Professor
Selected Awards
Professor Braumoeller’s research and teaching have won numerous awards, both in international relations and in political methodology. He is or has been on the Editorial Boards of five major journals or series, currently serves as Associate Editor for the Journal of Global Security Studies, and is a past Councilor of the Peace Science Society.
AAAS Fellow
Fellow, American Academy
of Arts and Sciences
Nobel Fellow
Norwegian Nobel Institute
Visiting Fellow
Best Book
International Studies Association
Best Book Award
Research Projects
Professor Braumoeller’s recent research revolves around the assessment of the widespread claim that international warfare has been in steady decline for centuries. His skeptical contribution to this literature, titled Only the Dead: The Persistence of War in the Modern Age, is due out from Oxford University Press in 2019. That research led him to launch two related research programs, on the relationship between international order and international conflict and on models of complexity in human behavior.