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  1. PCPSE 327. Website. Melissa M. Lee is the Klein Family Presidential Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania. She is also the Director of the World House Student Fellows Program at Perry World House. Professor Lee studies the international and domestic politics of statebuilding and state development.

  2. I am the Klein Family Presidential Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania, where I also serve as the Director of the World House Student Fellows program at Perry World House. I study the international and domestic politics of statebuilding, sovereignty, and state development.

  3. The International Politics of Incomplete Sovereignty: How Hostile Neighbors Weaken the State. MM Lee. International Organization 72 (2), 283-315. , 2018. 78. 2018. Aid Externalities: Evidence from PEPFAR in Africa. MM Lee, MP Izama. World Development 67, 281-294.

  4. Melissa M. Lee is the Klein Family Presidential Assistant Professor of Political Science. A specialist in conflict studies as well as the international and domestic politics of statebuilding and state development, Lee comes to Penn from Princeton, where she was Assistant Professor of Politics and International Affairs.

  5. Biography. Ideas. Melissa M. Lee is the Klein Family Presidential Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania. She is also the Director of the World House Student Fellows Program at Perry World House. Professor Lee studies the international and domestic politics of statebuilding and state development.

  6. melissamlee.com › historicalMelissa M. Lee

    “From Pluribus to Unum? The Civil War and Imagined Sovereignty in 19th Century America.” 2023.American Political Science Review. (with Nan Zhang and Tilmann Herchenröder)

  7. Jul 25, 2022 · Melissa M. Lee has joined Penn Arts & Sciences as Klein Family Presidential Assistant Professor of Political Science. A specialist in conflict studies as well as the international and domestic politics of statebuilding and state development, Lee comes to Penn from Princeton, where she was Assistant Professor of Politics and International Affairs.