Madison Schramm is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Toronto and a Non-resident Fellow in the Reimagining US Grand Strategy Program at the Stimson Center. Schramm's research focuses on international security, the domestic politics of foreign policy, political psychology, and gender and foreign policy. She has completed works in the subjects of US covert foreign-imposed regime change (forthcoming in the Cambridge Elements Series in International Relations), democratic constitutional systems and international security (in Political Science Quarterly and the Journal of Global Security Studies), gender and conflict initiation (Security Studies), corruption charges against women heads of government (forthcoming Canadian Journal of Political Science), and diversity and inclusion in post-conflict states (in Untapped Power, Oxford University Press 2022). Schramm's commentary and reviews have been published in Foreign Affairs, Perspectives on Politics, the Texas National Security Review, the Atlantic, the Christian Science Monitor, Inkstick, the Duck of Minerva, Stimson.org, and CFR.org.
Scholars and students interested in the connections between domestic politics and international conflict will find this book to be an intriguing contribution. Incorporating psychological dynamics into understanding domestic political sources of conflict is an especially constructive insight, lighting the way for additional research. * Dan Reiter, Journal of Peace Research *