Peter Romaniuk

Peter Romaniuk - Associate Professor -  profile photo

Research Interests

  • Terrorism and counter-terrorism, terrorist financing, and multilateral sanctions

Education

  • Ph.D., Brown University

Contact

Affiliated Campus(es)

  • John Jay College of Criminal Justice

Office Hours

By appointment

Peter Romaniuk currently serves as Deputy Executive Officer of the Ph.D. and M.A. Program in Political Science at The CUNY Graduate Center. He is an Associate Professor of Political Science at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center. He is Director of the Center on Terrorism at John Jay and a Senior Fellow at the Global Center on Cooperative Security. He is the author of Multilateral Counter-terrorism: The Global Politics of Cooperation and Contestation (Routledge, 2010). His articles have appeared in African Security, Conflict, Security and Development, Crime, Law and Social Change, The RUSI Journal, Review of International Studies, the International Studies Encyclopedia and The CPA Journal, as well as in leading volumes on the United Nations, global governance, terrorism and counter-terrorism, terrorist financing, and multilateral sanctions. He is an editor of Global Governance: A Review of Multilateralism and International Organizations, which is the journal of the Academic Council on the UN System. He holds a BA (Hons) and LLB (Hons) from the University of Adelaide, South Australia, and an AM and PhD in Political Science from Brown University.

Read an interview with Dr. Romaniuk here, from the Spring 2017 issue of our department newsletter, Homo Politicus.

Books

Peter Romaniuk, Multilateral Counter-terrorism: The Global Politics of Cooperation and Contestation (New York: Routledge, 2010).

Contemporary terrorism is a global phenomenon requiring a globalized response. In this book Peter Romaniuk aims to assess to what extent states seek multilateral responses to the threats they face from terrorists. Providing a concise history and a clear discussion of current patterns of counter-terrorist co-operation, this book:

  • analyses a wide spectrum of institutions from the United Nations and its various bodies to military, intelligence and law enforcement agencies

  • explains the full range of cooperative counter-terrorist activities and the patterns across them, from the use of intelligence and military force to criminal law measures, financial controls and diplomacy

  • examines under what conditions states cooperate to suppress terrorism

  • evaluates how existing international institutions been affected by the US-led “global war on terror,” launched after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The book contests that the whilst there are several notable examples of successful counterterrorism cooperation, past and present, this work suggests that the broader trend can only be understood if we accept that across the domains of counter-terrorism policy, cooperation often resembles a competition for influence over outcomes.

Multilateral Counter-terrorism is an essential resource for all students and scholars of international politics, criminology and terrorism studies.

Peter Romaniuk - Associate Professor -  profile photo

Contact

Affiliated Campus(es)

  • John Jay College of Criminal Justice

Office Hours

By appointment