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Surveillance
States: Police & Political Transformations in America's Philippine
Empire
Alfred W. McCoy, J.R.W. Smail Professor of History, Department of
History, University of Wisconsin-Madison
(abstract pending)
Alfred W. McCoy is the J.R.W. Smail Professor of History at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison. After earning his Ph.D. in Southeast Asian history
at Yale in 1977, his writing on this dynamic region has focused on two
topics--the political history of the modern Philippines and the politics
of opium in the Golden Triangle.
His first book, The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia (New York, 1972),
sparked controversy at the time of its publication, but is now regarded
as the standard work on the subject of illicit narcotics. It has been
in print for over 30 years, and been translated into nine languages, most
recently Thai and German. His forthcoming book, A Question of Torture:
CIA Interrogation, From the Cold War to the War on Terror (New York, 2006),
continues his exploration of the covert netherworld and its influence
upon U.S. foreign policy and domestic society. Three of his books on Philippine
history have won that country's National Book Award. In March 2001, the
Association for Asian Studies awarded him the Grant Goodman Prize for
his career contributions to the historical study of the Philippines. His
forthcoming book on Philippine police during the 20th Century draws together
these two strands in his research, organized crime and modern Philippine
history, to explore the role of police, information, and scandal in the
shaping of modern states.
For current Yale SEAS Seminars and Events schedule, see: http://www.yale.edu/seas/Seminars.htm
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