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<p><b>General Background:</p><b>
<p>University professor of political science with an intellectual focus on Indiana politics, religion and politics, the Presidency and political/social ideas that define the new millenium.</p>
<p>Associate Professor of Political Science, Purdue University Calumet.</p>
<p>Member of the International Board of Governors of the University Center of Ariel, Ariel, Israel.</p>
<p>Past editor of the American Political Science Association’s Religion and Politics Section Newsletter.</p>
<p>2005-06 President of the Indiana Academy of the Social Sciences;</p>
<p>Past President of the Indiana Political Science Association;</p>
<p>Published articles on political theory and thought, public policy and economic development in Indiana; on management of public organizations, e.g. local government. </p>
<p>One of the central concentrations of my teaching is economic development policy, technology, and society.</p>
<p>Born in Israel with the beginning of the legal recognition of the State that is the fulfillment of the return of the Jews to their Biblical Homeland. I completed middle and high school in Logan, Utah (one of the most beautiful valley, Cache Valley, on this earth).</p>
<p><b><u>Selected Publications:</p></b></u>
<p><b>Articles:</p></b>
<p>Maurice M. Eisenstein, "Change and the Public Organization: Is TQM Scientific Management, Organizational Humanism, or Postmodern Management?" <i>The Journal of the Liberal Arts and Sciences</i>, 2006, Volume 10, Number 1.</p>
<p>Maurice M. Eisenstein, "Time and the Life-Cycle of Presidential Approval," <i>The Social Science Journal</i>, Volume 37 No. 3, January 2000. </p>
<p>Maurice M. Eisenstein, “The Indiana Surplus: Fiscal Responsibility or Fiscal Indifference?” <i>Journal of the Indiana Academy of the Social Sciences</i>, Summer 1999.</p>
<p><b>Books:</p></b>
<p>Maurice M. Eisenstein, ed., <i><b>Indiana Politics and Public Policy</i></b>, 2005, 2nd edition (New York, NY: Simon and Schuster Publishing Company).</p>
<p>Maurice M. Eisenstein, <i><b>Phenomenology of Civilization: Reason as a Regulatory Principle in Collingwood and Husserl</i></b>, 1999, (Lanham, MD: University Press of America).</p>
<p>Maurice M. Eisenstein, ed., <i><b>Indiana Politics and Public Policy</i></b>, 1999 (New York, NY: Simon and Schuster Publishing Company).</p>
<p><b>Citations:</p></b>
<p>James Connelly, <i><b>Metaphysics, Method and Politics: The Political Philosophy of R. G. Collingwood</i></b>, 2003, (Exter, UK: Imprint Academic Press). "For an interesting comparison of Collingwood's and Husserl's understanding of civilization, its underpinnings, and threats to it, see, M. Eisenstein, <i><b>Phenomenology of Civilization: Reason as a regulative Principle in Collingwood and Husserl</i></b>" p. 285.</p>
<p><b><u>Educational Background:</p></b></u>
<p>Ph.D. Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana</p>
<p>M.A Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana</p>
<p>B.Sc. Economics and Management, Krannert School of Management, Purdue Univestiy, West Lafayette, Indiana.</p>
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