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  • Contact Information
    Department of Political Science or International Relations Program, 1121 AuSable Hall, 1 Campus Drive, Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI 49401-9403, phone 616 331 2320, www.gvsu.edu/polisci
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    Contact Dr. Mark Richards (richardm@gvsu.edu), Dr. Kevin den Dulk (dendulkk@gvsu.edu) or any of the political science department professors (see Political Science Faculty: Contact under GVSU Links)

« Dr. Mark J. Richards | Main | Law Society »

August 08, 2006

Dr. Kevin R. den Dulk

Contact:

  • Mail Address: 1126 AuSable Hall / Dept. of Political Science / Grand Valley State University / Allendale MI 49401
  • Telephone: 616-331-2991 (office); 616-331-3550 (fax)
  • Email address: dendulkk@gvsu.edu
  • Web address: www4.gvsu.edu/dendulkk

Education

  • Ph.D. Political Science, University of Wisconsin - Madison, 2001
  • M.A. Political Science, University of Georgia, 1995
  • B.A. Philosophy, Calvin College, 1992

Courses

  • Democracy and Political Judgment (Honors)
  • Religion and Politics
  • Constitutional Foundations
  • Parties and Interest Groups
  • Judicial Politics

Select Grants and Awards

  • CIVICS Teaching Enhancement Grant (co-leader, $175,000 total grant), 2005-07
  • "Role of Religion in Fostering Civic Responsibility," Bradley Foundation (co-investigator, $100,000 total grant), 2005-06
  • Claiming a Liberal Education Grant, 2005
  • Outstanding Honors Faculty, 2004
  • Student Summer Scholars, 2004

Select Publications

  • “Evangelical ‘Internationalists’ and U.S.Foreign Policy During the Bush Administration.”  In Religion and the Presidency, eds. Mark Rozell and Gleaves Whitney.  New York: Palgrave/Macmillan.  Forthcoming 2007.
  • “In Legal Culture, But Not Of It: The Role of Cause Lawyers in Evangelical Legal Mobilization.” In Cause Lawyering and Social Movements, eds. Austin Sarat and Stuart Scheingold.  Palo Alto: StanfordUniversityPress. 2006.
  • “Religious Advocacy in MichiganPolitics.” In God in the Statehouse, ed. Edward Cleary and Allen Hertzke.  Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. 2005.
  • Religion and Politics in America: Faith, Culture, and Strategic Choices, 3rd ed. (w/ Robert Booth Fowler, Allen D. Hertzke, and Laura R. Olson).  Boulder: Westview Press. 2004.
  • “Bridging the Lawmaking Process: The Effects of Organized Groups on Court-Congress Interaction" (with J. Mitchell Pickerill).  Polity 35 (3): 419-40. 2003.
  • So Help Me God: Explaining the Recent Rise in Religious Group Litigation in the U.S.and Beyond" (with Jay Krishnan).  Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law 30 (2): 233-75.  2002.

Biography

I joined the GVSU faculty as an assistant professor of political science in 2001 after receiving my Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin. I teach a variety of American politics courses in the political science department, as well as a course on "Democracy and Political Judgment" in GVSU's Honors College. My research focuses on both judicial politics and the role of religion in public life.  I've co-authored a book (shameless self-promotion alert!) titled Religion and Politics in America (Westview, 2004) and numerous journal articles, book chapters, and reviews.  For those who wish to take a closer look at my scholarly life, feel free to visit my c.v.

My latest projects are quite varied.  Most notably, I am participating with colleagues at Hope and Calvin College in a grant that explores the role of religion in fostering civic responsibility. A book on the subject is expected soon.  I am also a collaborator on a state-funded grant that seeks to foster better civics teaching in regional public schools.

In my other life, I green the thumb, angle in the mountains, hit the hard court, drink the divine juice of September, and wrassle the brood.  In a past life, I developed eccentric knowledge in the art of egg candling, the irrigation of almond trees (yes, almonds grow on trees), and the containment of rat-like vermin.

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