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James Wilford Garner

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Name
  
James Garner

Role
  
Political Scientist

Education
  
Columbia University


Died
  
December 9, 1938, Urbana, Illinois, United States

Books
  
International law and the world war, Reconstruction in Mississippi, Government in the United St, Studies in Government and Inter, Prize Law During the World Wa

James Wilford Garner (November 22, 1871, Pike County, Mississippi – December 9, 1938) was an American professor of political science.

Contents

Biography

He graduated from the Mississippi Agricultural and Mechanical College in 1892 and studied at the University of Chicago (Ph.M., 1900) and at Columbia University (Ph.D., 1902), where he was a member of the Dunning School. His dissertation, Reconstruction in Mississippi, though critical of Reconstruction, was regarded by W. E. B. Du Bois as the fairest of the works of the Dunning School.

He was professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania in 1902 - 1903 and professor of political science at the University of Illinois, and he was editor in chief of the American Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (1910–1911).

He edited Essays on Southern History and Politics (1914). He was Hyde lecturer in the French universities (1921) and Tagore lecturer in the University of Calcutta (1922).

Works

  • Reconstruction in Mississippi (1901)
  • The History of the United States, with Henry Cabot Lodge (four volumes, 1906)
  • Introduction to Political Science (1910)
  • Government in the United States, National, State, and Local (1911)
  • Civil Government for Indian Students (1920)
  • Idées et Institutions Politiques Américaines (1921)
  • International Law and the World War (1920)
  • References

    James Wilford Garner Wikipedia