Patrick MANNING

March 2016

Patrick MANNING CURRICULUM VITAE Andrew W. Mellon Professor of World History Director, Collaborative for Historical Information and Analysis (CHIA) 3904 Posvar Hall University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, PA 15260 (412) 648-7478 e-mail: [email protected]; website: http://manning.pitt.edu (most publications are available online)

Contents: Education 1 Publications 1 Works in Preparation 11 Honors 12 Employment 15 Doctoral Students 16 Professional Service 20 Lectures 25 Reviews: Books/Datasets 28-33

EDUCATION University of Wisconsin – Madison Ph.D. (History), 1969. Major: African History. Minors: Islamic History, Comparative Tropical History Dissertation title: “An Economic History of Southern Dahomey, 1880-1914.” Dissertation director: Philip D. Curtin M.S. (Economics), 1967. Fields: Microeconomic Theory, Development. Certificate in African Studies, 1967. M.S. (History), 1966. Major: African History. California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif. B.S., 1963. Major: Chemistry. Minor: History.

PUBLICATIONS, PRINT & MULTIMEDIA Sole-Authored Books 2013. Big Data in History. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan. Print and electronic. A brief electronic book describing the collaborative project for creating a worldhistorical dataset, with support from the National Science Foundation. 2009. The African Diaspora: A History through Culture. New York: Columbia University Press. A survey of African and the African diaspora since 1400, emphasizing cultural expressions of social conflict and change. Paper and hardcover. 2004. Migration in World History. London: Routledge, 2004. A concise survey of processes of migration in human history from early hominids until today. Paper and hardcover. Second edition, revised and expanded, including a new appendix on migration theory written with Tiffany Trimmer. Paper and hardcover. London: Routledge, 2012. 2003. Navigating World History: Historians Create a Global Past. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. A critical overview of the field of world history. Paper and hardcover. 1

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1990. Slavery and African Life: Occidental, Oriental, and African Slave Trades. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. A study of the impact of slave exports on African demography, economics, society, and ideology. Paper and hardcover. 1988. Francophone Sub-Saharan Africa, 1880-1985. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Paper and hardcover. Second edition, revised and expanded, with a new chapter covering the period 1985 to 1995. Paper and hardcover. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. 1982. Slavery, Colonialism, and Economic Growth in Dahomey, 1640-1960. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982. Finalist for the Herskovits Prize of the African Studies Association. Hardcover. Paperback edition published Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Edited Volumes In press. Social Movements and World-System Transformations. London:Routledge. Coedited with Jackie Smith, Michael Goodhart, and John Markoff. 2016. Global Scientific Practice in an Age of Revolution. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, Forthcoming. The first of three edited volumes on world history of science prepared by the World History Center. Co-edited with Daniel Rood. Hardcover. 2011. Andre Gunder Frank and Global Development: Visions, Remembrances, and Explorations. London: Routledge. An edited collection of essays in honor of Andre Gunder Frank. Co-edited with Barry K. Gills. Paper and hardcover. 2010. Migration History in World History: Multidisciplinary Approaches. Leiden: Brill. An edited collection of multidisciplinary approaches to migration. Co-edited with Jan Lucassen and Leo Lucassen. Paper and hardcover. 2008. Global Practice in World History: Advances Worldwide. Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers. An edited collection of chapters showing the world-historical practice of scholars around the world. Paper. 2006. World History: Global and Local Interactions. Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers. An edited collection with twelve contributions by new scholars in world history. Paper. 1996. Slave Trades, 1500-1800: Globalization of Forced Labour. Aldershot, U.K.: Ashgate Variorium. Volume 15 of An Expanding World, edited by A. J. RussellWood. An edited collection, to which I have written an introduction. Hardcover. 1991. History from South Africa: Alternative Visions and Practices. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. Co-edited with Joshua Brown, Karin Shapiro, Jon Wiener, Belinda Bozzoli and Peter Delius; articles mostly by South African authors. Paper and hardcover. Book Translations Wanderung Flucht Vertreibung: Geschichte der Migration (Essen: Magnus Verlag, 2007). German translation of Migration in World History. “Histoire culturelle de la diaspora africaine” (Paris: Présence africaine). French translation of The African Diaspora: A History through Culture, in press.

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Chinese-language translation of Navigating World History. I understand that this has been published, though I have no specifics. Turkish-language translation of Migration in World History in press. Japanese-language translation of Navigating World History in press.

Articles in Refereed Journals In press. “World History, UNESCO, and the Future of the Global Academy.” Global History Review (Beijing, in Chinese language). In press. “Locating Africans on the World Stage: A Problem in World History.” Journal of World History. In press. “Globalising Migration History and World-Historical Study of Migration.” International Review of Social History. 2015. “Settlement and Resettlement in Asia: Migration vs. Empire in History.” Asian Review of World Histories 3, 2, pp. 171-200. 2014-2015. “Volume and Direction of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1650-1870: Estimates by Markov Chain Monte Carlo Analysis.” Journal of World-Historical Information 2-3, 2. Co-authored with Yun Zhang and Bowen Yi. 2014-2015. “Demographic Models for Projecting Population and Migration: Methods for African Historical Analysis.” Journal of World-Historical Information 2-3, 1, pp. 23-39. Co-authored with Scott Nickleach, Bowen Yi, and Brian McGill. 2014. “Mid-Holocene Migrations: Another view of the rise of Civilization.” World History Connected 11, 3. 45 pars. 11 Oct. 2014 . 2014. “Africa’s Place in Globalization: Africa, Eurasia, and their Borderlands.” Journal of Globalization Studies 5, 1, pp. 65-81. 2013a. “African and World Historiography.” Journal of African History 54, 3, pp. 319330. 2013b. “Global History and Maritime History.” International Journal of Maritime History 15, 1, pp. 1-22. 2013c. “Cross-Disciplinary Theory in Construction of a World-Historical Archive.” Journal of World-Historical Information. 1, 1, pp. 15-39. Co-authored with Sanjana Ravi. 2012. “Historical Datasets on Africa and the African Atlantic.” Journal of Comparative Economics 40, pp. 604-607. 2011. “Expanding Academic and Popular Debate in World History.” World History Connected 8, 1. 2010. “The Global Social Insurance Movement since the 1880s.” Journal of Global History 5, 1, pp. 125-148. Co-authored with Aiqun Hu. 2009. “Frontiers of Family Life: Early Modern Atlantic and Indian Ocean Worlds.” Modern Asian Studies 43, 1, pp. 315-333. 2006a. “Cross-Community Migration: A Distinctive Human Pattern.” Social Evolution and History 5, 2, pp. 24-54. 3

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2006b. “Homo sapiens Populates the Earth: A provisional synthesis, privileging linguistic data.” Journal of World History 17, 2, pp. 115-158. 2006c. “Interactions and Connections: Locating and Managing Historical Complexity.” The History Teacher 39, 2, pp. 1-21. 2006d. “Fostering Global Interactions? An Experiment in Teaching World History across National Boundaries.” Co-authored with Adrian Carton. World History Connected, 4, 2 2005. “1789-1792 and 1989-1992. Global Interactions of Social Movements.” World History Connected 3, 1 . 2003a. “Navigating World History: A Synopsis.” World History Connected November 2003 (20 Nov. 2003). 2003. “Revolution in Education: China and Cuba in Global Context, 1957–1976.” Coauthored with Yinghong Cheng. Journal of World History 14, 3, pp. 359-391. 2002. “Asia and Europe in the World Economy: Introduction.” American Historical Review 107, 2, pp. 419-424. 1999. “Pedagogy and Historiography in the Migration CD-ROM.” The History Teacher 32, 3, pp. 329-343. 1996. “The Problem of Interactions in World History.” American Historical Review 101, 3, pp. 771-782. 1993. “Migrations from Africa to the Americas: Impact on Africans and on the Americas.” The History Teacher 26, 3, pp. 279-296. 1990-91. “African Economic Growth and the Public Sector: Lessons from Historical Statistics of Cameroon.” African Economic History 19, pp. 135-170. 1990. “Slave Trade: The Formal Demography of a Global System.” Social Science History 14, 2, pp. 255-279. 1989. “Coastal Society in Benin Republic: Reproduction of a Regional System.” Cahiers d’Etudes Africaines 29, 114, pp. 239-257. 1988a. “Divining the Unprovable: Simulating the Demography of African Slavery.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History 19, 2, pp. 177-201. Co-authored with William S. Griffiths. 1988b. “The Prospects for African Economic History: Is Today Included in the Long Run?” African Studies Review 30, 2, pp. 49-62. 1988c. “Escravidão e mudança social na Africa.” Novos Estudos CEBRAP, 21, pp. 8-29. This Portuguese translation of my “Contours of Slavery and Social Change in Africa” (1983) appeared in a leading Brazilian journal. 1985. “Primitive Art and Modern Times.” Radical History Review 33, pp. 165-181. 1983. “Contours of Slavery and Social Change in Africa.” American Historical Review 88, 4, pp. 835-57 1981. “The Enslavement of Africans: A Demographic Model.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 15, 3, pp. 499-526. 1980a. “The Technology of Production in Southern Dahomey, c. 1900.” African Economic History 9, pp. 49-67. 1980b. “Public Finance and Capital Investment: A National Perspective on Colonial Dahomey.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 14, 3, pp. 519-524. 1974. “Notes Toward a Theory of Ideology in Historical Writing on Modern Africa.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 8, 2, pp. 235-253.

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1969. “Slaves, Palm Oil, and Political Power on the West African Coast.” African Historical Studies 2, 2, pp. 279-288. 1967. “Some Export Statistics for Nigeria, 1880-1905.” Nigerian Journal of Economic and Social Studies 9, 2, pp. 229-234.

Chapters in Books In press. “North Africa and Arabia: The ‘Near Diaspora’ from Sub-Saharan Africa.” Global PerspectivesChouki El Hamel and Paul E. Lovejoy, eds., Slavery, Race and Gender in Islamic Societies: A Comparative Perspective (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 131-150. In press. “Linking Social Movement Networks, 1989 to 1992: Southeast Asia, Africa, and South America” In Jackie Smith, Michael Goodhart, Patrick Manning, and John Markoff, eds., Social Movements and World-System Transformation (London: Routledge). 2016. “Building Global Perspectives in History of Science: The Era from 1750 to 1850.” Patrick Manning and Daniel Rood, eds., Global Scientific Practice in an Age of Revolutions (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, Forthcoming). 2015. “Migration in human history.” David Christian, ed., Cambridge World History, vol. 1 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 277-310. 2015. “African Economic History.” Pat Hudson and Francesco Boldizzini, eds., Routledge Handbook of Global Economic History (London: Routledge), 409-428. 2014. “Global Studies: A Historical Approach.” Isabella Lohr, ed., Potentials and Challenges of Global Studies for the 21st Century, (Global Europe: Basel Papers on Europe in a Global Perspective, No. 105), pp. 17-26. Online at https://europe.unibas.ch/fileadmin/europe/redaktion/PDF_Vasler_Schrifte n/BS105.pdf. 2014. “African Population, 1650-2000: Comparisons and Implications of New Estimates.” Emmanuel Akyeampong, Robert Bates, Nathan Nunn, and James Robinson, eds., Africa’s Development in Historical Perspective (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 131-152. 2011a. “Epistemology.” Jerry H. Bentley, ed., Oxford History Handbook: World History. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 105-121. 2011b. “The World Economy in Theory and Practice: The contributions of Andre Gunder Frank in the era of underdevelopment and ‘globalization’.” Patrick Manning and Barry K. Gills, eds., Andre Gunder Frank and Global Development: Visions, remembrances, and explorations (London: Routledge), 1-22. 2011c. “Conclusion: Preparing for future analysis.” Ibid., 258-267. 2011d. “African Empires in the Twentieth Century: Designing Assessments at Global, Imperial, and National Levels.” Toyin Falola and Emily Brownell, eds., Africa, Empire and Globalization. Essays in Honor of A. G. Hopkins (Carolina Academic Press), pp. 589-607.

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2010. “African Population: Projections, 1851-1961.” Karl Ittmann, Dennis D. Cordell, and Gregory Maddox, eds., The Demographics of Empire: The Colonial Order and the Creation of Knowledge (Athens: Ohio University Press), pp. 245-275. 2008. “Les gens d’origine africaine en Europe : leurs contributions à la grande diaspora africaine.” Dieudonné Gnammankou and Yao Modzinou, eds., Les Africains et leurs descendants en Europe avant le Xxe siècle (Toulouse : MAT Editions), pp. 309-315. 2007a. “Nordamerikanische Ansätze sur Globalgeschichte” [“North American Approaches to World History”], trans. Tilman Lüdke. Birgit Schäbler, ed., Area Studies und die Welt: Weltregionen und neue Globalgeschichte (Vienna: Mandelbaum Verlag), pp. 59-89. 2007b. “Legacies of Slavery: Comparisons of Labour and Culture.” Maria-Suzette DiasFernandes, ed., Legacies of Slavery: Comparative Perspectives (Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing), pp. 16-34. 2006a. “Slavery and Slave Trade in West Africa, 1450-1930.” Emmanuel Akyeampong, ed, Themes in West Africa’s History (Oxford: James Currey), pp. 99-117. 2006b. “African Connections with American Colonization, 1400-1850.” Victor BulmerThomas and John Coatsworth, eds., The Cambridge Economic History of Latin America (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 43-71. 2006c. “Diasporic Streams in PanAfricanism, Capitalism, and Marxism: The Social Sources of Ideology.” William A. Little et al., eds., The Borders in All of Us: New Approaches to Global Diasporic Societies (Northridge, CA: New World African Press, 2006), pp. 182-200. 2006d. “Concepts and Institutions for World History: The Next Ten Years.” Patrick Manning, ed., World History: Global and Local Interactions (Princeton: Markus Wiener), pp. 229-258. 2004a. “Methods and Materials.” Marnie Hughes-Warrington, ed., Palgrave Guide to World Histories (London: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. 44-63. 2004b. “Gender in the African Diaspora: Electronic Research Materials.” Sandra Gunning, Tera W. Hunter, and Michele Mitchell, eds., Dialogues of Dispersal: Gender, Sexuality and African Diasporas (Oxford: Blackwell), 179-191. 1998. “La traite négrière et l’évolution démographique de l’Afrique.” Doudou Diène, ed., La chaine et le lien : Une vision de la traite négrière (Paris : UNESCO), pp. 153-173. 1997. “The Advantages and Limitations of Simulation in Analysing the Slave Trade.” Robin Law, ed., Source Material for Studying the Slave Trade and the African Diaspora (Centre of Commonwealth Studies, University of Stirling, Occasional Paper Number 5, December), pp. 69-78. 1996a. “Introduction.” Patrick Manning, ed., Slave Trades, 1500-1800: Globalization of Forced Labour (Ashgate: Variorum), xv-xxxiv. 1996b. “History in the Era of Theory, Methodology, and Multiculturalism: New Configurations for the Discipline.” Lawrence Dowler, ed., Gateways to Knowledge: the Role of Academic Libraries in Teaching, Learning and Research (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), 19-34.

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1994a. “The Impact of the Slave Trade on the Societies of West and Central Africa.” Anthony Tibbles, ed., Transatlantic Slavery: Against Human Dignity (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press), 97-104. 1994b. “Cultural History: Paths in Academic Forests.” Joseph C. Miller and David Newbury, eds., Paths Toward the Past: African Historical Essays in Honor of Jan Vansina (Atlanta: African Studies Association Press), 439-454. 1994c. “The Place of Africa and African Scholars in Global Studies.” Merrick Posnansky, ed., Proceedings: Japanese/American Workshop for Cooperation in Africa (Los Angeles: UCLA), 1-11. 1990. “Slave Trade: The Formal Demography of a Global System.” Joseph E. Inikori and Stanley L. Engerman, eds., Slavery in the Atlantic (Durham: Duke University Press, 1990), 117-141. 1988. “The Impact of Slave Trade Exports on the Population of the Western Coast of Africa, 1700-1850.” Serge Daget, ed., De la Traite a l’esclavage, 2 vols. (Paris, Societe francaise d’histoire d’Outre-Mer), II :111-34. 1987. “Local versus Regional Impact of Slave Exports on Africa.” Dennis D. Cordell and Joel W. Gregory, eds., African Population and Capitalism: Historical Perspectives (Boulder, CO: Westview), 35-49. 1986. “Slave Trade, ‘Legitimate’ Trade, and Imperialism Revisited: The Control of Wealth in the Bights of Benin and Biafra.” Paul E. Lovejoy, ed., Africans in Bondage: Essays in Honor of Philip D. Curtin (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press), 203-233. 1985. “Merchants, Porters, and Canoemen in the Bight of Benin: Links in the West African Trade Network.” Paul E. Lovejoy and Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch, eds., The Workers of African Trade (Beverly Hills: Sage), 51-74. 1983. « L’Affaire Adjovi : la bourgeoisie foncière naissante au Dahomey, face à l’administration. » Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch, ed., Entreprises et entrepreneurs en Afrique, 2 vols. (Paris: Harmattan), I:241-262. 1982. “A Demographic Model of African Slavery.” Christopher Fyfe and David McMaster, eds., African Historical Demography, Vol. 2 (Edinburgh: African Studies Centre), 371-384. 1981. « Le Mouvement national au Dahomey. » Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch, ed., Mutations économiques et sociales à la campagne et à la ville (Paris : Laboratoire Connaissance du Tiers-Monde). 1979. “The Slave Trade in Southern Dahomey, 1640-1890.” Henry A. Gemery and Jan S. Hogendorn, eds., The Uncommon Market: Essays in the Economic History of the Atlantic Slave Trade (New York: Academic Press), 109-141. 1978. “The Economy of Early Colonial Dahomey.” Joseph Smaldone, ed., Explorations in Quantitative African History (Syracuse, NY: Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University), 25-52. Review Articles 2007. “William H. McNeill: Lucretius and Moses in World History.” History and Theory 46, 3, pp. 428-445. 2005. “A New Compendium of the African Past.” South African Historical Journal 54, pp. 127-136. Published July 2006. 7

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2004. “Gutenberg-e: Electronic Entry to the Historical Professoriate.” American Historical Review 109, 5, pp. 1505-1526. 2003a. “Africa and the African Diaspora: New Directions of Study.” Journal of African History 44, 3, pp. 487-506. 2003b. “Gender in the African Diaspora: Electronic Research Materials.” Gender and History 15, 3, pp. 575-587. 1996. “African Economic History, A View from the Continent.” Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 16, 1, pp. 117-121. 1990. “Slavery and the Slave Trade in Colonial Africa.” Journal of African History 31, 1, pp. 135-140. 1988. “The Anthropology of Slavery.” African Economic History 17, pp. 147-152. 1986. “Hegelian Dialectics in Benin Kingdom Historiography.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 20, 3, pp. 431-435. 1985. “Religion and Factionalism in the Asante Hinterland: The Non-Peasant Politics of a Peasant Society.” Peasant Studies 12, 2, pp. 137-149. 1976. “Problems of Ineffective Government in Post-Colonial Dahomey.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 10, 3, pp. 525-528. Curriculum Materials 2014. “Standards in World History.” I am co-editor of these standards of the Alliance for Learning in History, which address curriculum, professional development, and educational research: http://www.alliance.pitt.edu. 2003. AP World History Teaching Units. Published on demand by the College Board. I am general editor, with Deborah Smith Johnston, of this set of thirteen teaching units for the AP World History course. Each unit averages 60 pages in length. 2002a. AP World History Best Practices Guide. New York: College Board. I am coeditor, along with Deborah Smith Johnston, and principal author of this 150-page pamphlet. 2002b. “AP World History Web Guide.” Published on-line by the College Board. I am supervising editor of this guide to 500 web sites, written by Marc Jason Gilbert and Peggy McKee. Interviews 2012. “Pour une histoire mondiale de la diaspora africaine. Entretien avec Patrick Manning.” Interview with Stéphane Dufoix. Tracés: Revue de Sciences Humaines 23, pp. 199-220. 2010. Marshall Poe and Patrick Manning. “Patrick Manning, “The African Diaspora: A History Through Culture”” New Books in History (2010). Available at: http://works.bepress.com/marshall_poe/225 2009. The Page 99 Test, Tuesday, June 30, 2009, on The African Diaspora: A History through Culture < http://page99test.blogspot.com/2009/06/patrick-manningsafrican-diaspora.html > 2009. “Migration.” Video production prepared for television by Thomas Gonschior (Thomas Gonschior Productions, Munich). I am the principal person interviewed

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in this half-hour video on migration in world history, along with Klaus Bade. It was broadcast on German television in 2009. Multimedia Publication I have directed the construction and update of these electronic resources: 2006 – 2014 These websites are administered by CSSD at the University of Pittsburgh, and are maintained by the staff of the University Library System. Website: “Alliance for Learning in World History” www.alliance.pitt.edu (2014) Website: Patrick Manning manning.pitt.edu (2013). Personal website Website: “Journal of World-Historical Information.” http://www.jwhi.pitt.edu (2013). Journal of the Collaborative for Historical Information and Analysis. Website: “Collaborative for Historical Information and Analysis (CHIA)” chia.pitt.edu (2012). Site of the collaborative project for creation of a worldhistorical archive. Website: “World-Historical Dataverse—the universe of world-historical data,” www.dataverse.pitt.edu (2009). Website of the University of Pittsburgh group working to prepare global historical statistics for the period since 1600. Website: “World History Center.” www.worldhistory.pitt.edu (2008). Official site of the World History Center at the University of Pittsburgh. Prior to 2006 CD-ROM: Migration in Modern World History (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Thomson Learning, 2000). An educational CD-ROM, for which I was project director. It contains 400 documents, 60,000 words of narrative, and 1001 questions. Website: “World History Network,” www.worldhistorynetwork.org (2004-2013). I directed the production and maintenance of materials for this comprehensive gateway to world history on the Internet, supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Website: “Demographic Simulation of Migration,” www.worldhistorynetwork.migrationsim . I directed work on this site from 1997 to 2008. It displayed simulation of the demography of the Atlantic slave trade, comparing it with the demography of European trans-Atlantic migration. Website: “World History Center,” www.worldhistorycenter.org. I directed work on this large site 1996-2004; it remains online as an archive. Its focus is on research, multimedia production, curriculum development, and professional development in world history. Shorter Publications 2016. “UNESCO and Scholarly Communciation.” Perspectives in History (April). 2016. “Historians Worldwide: Global Links among Historians, Past and Present.” Perspectives in History (March). 2016. “A Strong and Diverse Historical Profession, a Strong AHA” Perspectives in History (February).

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2016. “Scale in History.” Perspectives in History (January). 2015. “In Memoriam: Ji-Hyung Cho, 1663-2015.” Asian Review of World Histories, 3, 2, pp. 167-170. 2014-15. “A World-Historical Data Resource: The Need is Now.” Journal of WorldHistorical Information 2-3, 2, pp. iv-x. 2014-15. “Summary of work on silver production data 1870–1900.”Journal of WorldHistorical Information 2-3, 2, pp. 160-162. 2014-15. “Editorial: Where have we been?” Journal of World-Historical Information 2-3, 1, pp. v-vii. 2014-15. “Research Report: World-Historical Gazetteer.” Journal of World-Historical Information 2-3, 1, pp. 110-111. 2014. “City States: A Continuing Global Phenomenon.” Occasional Papers No. 3, New York University Abu Dhabi History Program (June 2014). http://nyuad.nyu.edu/content/dam/nyuad/departments/artshumanities/documents/history-occasional-papers/nyuad-op-03-Manning.pdf . 2014. “Introduction to the Forum on Studies in Migration Worldwide.” World History Connected 11, 3. (5 paragraphs) http://worldhistoryconnected.press.illinois.edu/ 11.3/ forum_manning_introduction.html 2012. “Jerry H. Bentley: In Memoriam.” Perspectives [American Historical Association] 50, 6 (September). 2011. “World History Center.” Global History Review, Beijing (in Chinese). 2011. “Migration.” Encyclopedia of World History. Alfred J. Andrea, ed. ABC-CLIO. 2010. “World Historians Launch New Global Organization.” Perspectives 48, 6 (September) 20. 2009. “Forced Migration.” Palgrave Dictionary of Transnational History. Akira Iriye and Pierre-Yves Saunier, eds. 2009. “African Spirituality: Transformations and conflicts in the twentieth century.” History Matters! (Fall). 2009. “Migration.” Oxford Encyclopedia of World History. 2009. “Philip Curtin and History, Broadly Conceived.” History in Africa 36, pp. 11-13. 2008. “Africa in World History and Historiography.” Donald A. Yerxa, ed., Recent Themes in the History of Africa and the Atlantic World: Historians in Conversation (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2008), 25-28. 2007. “Teaching Digital World History.” Historically Speaking 8, pp. 37-38. 2006b. “Commentary: A Comparison of Comparisons.” Afrika Zamani, nos. 11 & 12 (2003-2004), pp. 162-168. 2006a. “Presenting History to Policymakers: Three Position Papers.” Perspectives 44, 3 (March). 2005. “History Doctoral Programs Web Site Updated to Provide Improved Information for Applicants.” Perspectives 43, 6 (September). 2004a. “AHA Opens Pilot Web Pages on History Doctoral Programs.” Perspectives 42, 7 (November). 2004b. “Africa in World History and Historiography.” Historically Speaking 6, pp. 14-15. 2004c. “Slavery, Historical.” Dinah L. Shelton, ed., Encyclopedia of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity (Macmillan Reference).

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2004d. “The Past is Another Planet: The Absence of Funding for Global Historical Research.” World History Connected 1, 2, 12 pars. . 2003a. “Slavery, Demography of.” Paul Demeny and Geoffrey McNicoll, eds., Encyclopedia of Demography, 2 vols. (New York: Gale), II:895-898. 2003b. “Preaching and Practicing Global (Contemporary) History.” Erwägen Wissen Ethik, 14, pp. 101-102. 1999a. “Doctoral Training in World History: The Northeastern University Experience.” Perspectives 37, 3 (March), pp. 35-37. 1999b. “Slavery in Africa.” Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., eds. Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience (New York: Basic Books), pp. 1720-1722. 1999c. “The Monograph in World History: Philip Curtin’s Comparative Approach.” World History Bulletin (Spring), 12-17. 1999d. “African Kingdoms During the Middle Ages.” Footsteps: African-American History (September/October 1999), 34-37. 1998. “Demographic Analysis of Slaves and Slavery.” Paul Finkelman and Joseph C. Miller, eds., Macmillan Encyclopedia of World Slavery (New York: Macmillan Reference USA), I:241-248. 1998. “Preparing Your Proposal for the Year 2000 Annual Meeting.” Perspectives (September). 1996. “Preparing your proposal for the 1998 annual meeting.” Perspectives (September). 1995. “Preparing your proposal for the 1997 annual meeting.” Perspectives (September), p. 12. 1992a. “Methodology and World History in a Ph.D. Program.” Perspectives (April), pp. 23, 25. 1992b. « Francophone Africa. » Entry in the Oxford Companion to World Politics 1990-91. “The Warp and Woof of Precolonial African Industry.” African Economic History 19, pp. 25-30. Response to an article by John Thornton. 1990a. “Editors’ Introduction.” Radical History Review 46-47, pp. 3-15. Co-authored with Joshua Brown, Karin Shapiro and Jon Wiener. 1990b. “African Studies.” Paul Buhle, ed., The Encyclopedia of the American Left (London: St. James Press) 1989. “Joel Gregory: An Appreciation.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 23, 1, pp. 1-4. 1987. “Editors’ Introduction.” Radical History Review 39, pp. 3-10. Co-authored with Allen Howard and Peter Weiler. 1987. “South African History: A Radical’s Introduction.” Radical History Newsletter 52, p. 3. 1985. “History of Three Worlds—Africa, America, Europe,” course syllabus in Kevin Reilly, ed., World History: Selected Reading Lists and Course Outlines from American Colleges and Universities (New York), 167-171. Co-authored with Arthur P. Dudden. 1984. “Editors’ Introduction.” Radical History Review 31, pp. 2-4. Co-authored with Richard Yeselson.

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1982. “Response to Comments by Caldwell and Inikori.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 16, 1, pp. 138-139. 1980. “Things Fall Together: The Use of Literature in Teaching African History.” Bulletin of the Southern Association of Africanists 8, 3, pp. 24-31. 1975. « Un Document sur la fin de l’esclavage au Dahomey. » Notes africaines 147, pp. 88-92. 1974. “Analyzing the Costs and Benefits of Colonialism.” African Economic History Review 1, 2, pp. 15-22. Reviews of Books and Datasets: Listed at the conclusion of this curriculum vitae

WORKS IN PREPARATION Works near publication “African Population, 1650-1950: The Eras of Enslavement and Colonial Rule.” Detailed demographic analysis of the impact of slavery on populations in Africa and abroad; expected to appear in 2015. Co-authored with Scott Nickleach. Under consideration by Cambridge University Press “Works of Nature.” Edited collection of essays on world history of science, 1750-1850, co-edited with Daniel Rood. In press at University of Pittsburgh Press. “The Life Sciences after World War II.” Edited collection of essays the life sciences, 1945-1980, co-edited with Mathew Savelli. Under consideration at University of Pittsburgh Press. “Social Movements and World-System Transformation.” Edited collection of essays on social movements, based on PEWS conference at Pitt. Co-editors: Jackie Smith, Michael Goodhart, Patrick Manning, and John Markoff. “Linking Social Movement Networks, 1989 to 1992: Southeast Asia, Africa, and South America.” In Jackie Smith, Michael Goodhart, Patrick Manning, and John Markoff, eds., “Social Movements and World-System Transformation.” Ready for submission. “African Implications of the Piketty Thesis.” Patricia Hudson and Keith Tribe, eds., in a volume on global implications of Thomas Piketty’s thesis on capital and inequality. Co-authored with Matt Drwenski. Other works in preparation “African Diaspora Curriculum.” Curriculum for an AP Capstone course, prepared in association with the African Diaspora Consortium, with the support of the College Board. Co-authored with Ernest Morrell. “History of the Human System: Humanity in Movement.” An interpretive overview of world history from the rise of Homo sapiens to the present, with thematic approach and chronological organization. Written for advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and general readers. In discussion with E. J. Brill. “1989-1991: A World History of Democracy in Our Time.” A global and interactive interpretation of democratization movements. A detailed narrative of the democratization movements of 1989-91, based on field research in the U.S., Haiti,

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Brazil, South Africa, Congo, Benin, Czechoslovakia, Germany and France. In preparation. “Africans in French, Spanish, and early American Louisiana.” Demographic and social analysis of African-descended populations, based on two major databases. In preparation.

HONORS AND AWARDS 2014. American Historical Association. Elected as President-Elect of this 14,000-member professional association in July 2014. To serve as President-Elect (calendar 2015), President (calendar 2016), and Past President (calendar 2017). 2014. Researching World History in the Schools: Nationwide and Worldwide. Project director (along with co-directors Ashley Woodson and Michael Lovorn) for an international conference to be held in May 2015, focusing on the development of educational research on the learning of world history in schools of the U.S., Japan, England, and the Middle East. Supported by an award of $20,000 from the Global Academic Partnership program of the Global Studies Center at Pitt, with additional support from the Japan Iron and Steel Foundation. 2014. World-Historical Gazetteer. Co-project director, along with Ruth Mostern of Univ. of California – Merced, of a project supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities Digital Humanities Start-up Initiative. The award provides $28,300 for an international conference in 2014 to launch a world-historical gazetteer. 2013. Pioneer in World History 2013 Award, World History Association. 2012. Collaborative Research: Center for Historical Information and Analysis (CHIA). Principal investigator for a set of five institutional awards from the National Science Foundation (to Harvard Univ., Boston Univ., Michigan State Univ., Univ. of California – Merced, and Univ. of Pittsburgh). The award provides $606,000 in total ($285,000 for Univ. of Pittsburgh) for the calendar years 2013 – 2015, for development of numerous aspect of a world-historical archive to document human society for the past four centuries. 2012. Alliance for Curriculum and Professional Development in World History (later Alliance for Learning in World History). Co-principal investigator, along with Tobias Higbie (UCLA), Ross Dunn (San Diego State University), and Tim Keirn (California State University – Long Beach), of a project supported by the Social Science Research Council for creating a national alliance to facilitate professional development for secondary teachers of world history. $75,000 for a project from September 2012 through August 2013. 2009. World History of Science. Co-principal investigator, along with James Lennox of History and Philosophy of Science, of a project supported by Andrew Mellon Foundation for conferences and publication (through University of Pittsburgh Press) of works on history of science and world history of science. Total award $746,000; World History Center allocation $179,000. 2007. Visiting Research Scholar. Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, Canberra. 2005. Visiting Research Scholar. Macquarie University, Sydney.

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2004. Selected as president and chair of the board of the World History Network, Inc., an independent nonprofit corporation dedicated to advancing research in world history through worldwide connections. 2004. Global Economic History Network. Participation in a worldwide network of economic historians, based at London School of Economics, with funding from the Leverhulme Foundation. 2003. Elected Vice President (Teaching) of the American Historical Association, to serve a three-year term from 2004 through 2006. 2002. College Board. AP World History Curriculum. Supplementary grant, to cover additional costs of developing curricular materials for AP World History. $11,000. 2001a. College Board. AP World History Curriculum Workshop, to prepare materials for publication by the College Board. $88,000. 2001b. National Endowment for the Humanities. “World History Network” website for research and teaching. $240,000. 2001c. National Endowment for the Humanities. Ten national teaching workshops in world history. $156,000. 2001d. Leften Stavrianos Fund. Seven national teaching workshops in world history. $25,000. 2001e. Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities. “World History Symposium III,” a collaborative teaching conference. $15,000. 2001f. Boston Public Schools. Prototype grant for preparation of world history “kits” for classroom use. $10,000. (This award was declined.) 2000a. College Board. AP World History National Training Workshop, to train 36 nationally-selected teacher-presenters. $70,000. 2000b. Massachusetts Department of Education. Summer institute for teaching World History, in association with Georgetown Public Schools. $25,000. 1999a. Wadsworth Thomson Learning. Programming and production of the Migration in Modern World History CD-ROM. $90,000. 1999b. Massachusetts Department of Education. Summer institute for teaching World History, in association with Boston Public Schools. $35,000. 1998a. Boston-Annenberg Challenge. Professional development for teachers at Dorchester High School in Boston. $25,000. 1998b. Mass. Dept. of Education. Summer institute for teaching World History: $45,000. 1997. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Design of World History Timeline: $15,000. 1996. Annenberg/CPB. $620,000 for production of “Migration in Modern World History,” a CD-ROM for a comprehensive, semester-long, introductory college course in world history. 1995. Annenberg/CPB Prototype grant. $72,800 for preparation of a World Wide Web prototype, “Migration: The Americas, 1500-1800.” 1994. National Endowment for the Humanities, Higher Education Division, award for a 1994-96 lecture-workshop series entitled “Mainstreaming Methodology and World History for Undergraduates in History.” $130,000. 1993-1996. College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor, Northeastern University. This award includes a stipend and research funds for work on revising the undergraduate curriculum in history.

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1993. National Endowment for the Humanities Research Award. A two-year award for research on Africans in Spanish and Early American Louisiana, renewing the grant initially awarded in 1991. Principal investigator is Gwendolyn M. Hall of Rutgers University; I am co-investigator. 1991. National Endowment for the Humanities Research Award. A two-year award for research on Africans in Spanish and Early American Louisiana. Principal investigator is Gwendolyn M. Hall of Rutgers University; I am co-investigator. 1991. Research and Scholarship Development Fund, Northeastern University. For travel and research in ten countries on democratization movements of 1989-90. 1989. Academic Specialist, U.S. Information Agency. Presented seven lectures on historical method and history of Benin at the American Cultural Center, Cotonou, Benin. 1988. ACLS Travel Award Recipient. To present a paper on Benin economic history, and to make plans for a 1990 international conference on Benin history. 1986-1987. John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship. For a year’s research on the demography of slavery in Africa, 1740-1850, at the Population Studies Center, University of Pennsylvania. 1986. Instructional Development Fund Grant, Northeastern University. Support for writing a textbook on Francophone Africa, including travel to Central Africa. 1985. Research and Scholarship Development Fund Grant, Northeastern University. For six weeks of research in Europe and West Africa on the economics of slave supply in Africa. 1983. National Endowment for the Humanities Feasibility Grant. For one month of work in preparing a new introductory history course, entitled “History of Three Worlds: Africa, America, Europe.” 1981a. American Council of Learned Societies Travel Grant. To present paper on Adjovi family of Dahomey at Paris conference. 1981b. Social Science Research Council Grant. For six months of research in Baltimore on the political economy of African slavery. 1980. Social Science Research Council Grant. For six months of research in France on the public finance of French West Africa. 1973-1974. African Economic History Research Grant (Ford Foundation). For research in West Africa, 1973, and participation in African Economic History Workshop, University of Wisconsin-Madison, summer 1974. 1968. Hoover Institution Research Grant. For bibliography of African economic history. 1966-1967. Foreign Area Fellow. For dissertation research in France and West Africa. 1965-1966. NDFL Fellow. University of Wisconsin – Madison. 1963-1965. Carnegie Fellow. University of Wisconsin – Madison.

EMPLOYMENT AND AFFILIATIONS University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA. (Andrew W. Mellon Professor of World History, 2006-; Director, World History Center, 2008-2015; Director, World-Historical Dataverse, 2008-; Director, Collaborative for Historical Information and Analysis, 2011-)

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Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. (Visiting Research Fellow at the Humanities Research Centre, July-August 2007.) Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia. (Visiting Research Fellow, July-August 2005.) Northeastern University, Boston, MA. (Director of the World History Center, 1997-2004. College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of History and AfricanAmerican Studies, 1993-96. Interim Chair of African-American Studies Department, 1994-96, 1986-87. Professor, 1989-2006; Associate Professor, 1987-89; Assistant Professor, 1984-87.) École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris. (Professeur affilié, through election by the faculty, April-May 1996.) University of Pennsylvania. (Guggenheim Fellow, affiliated with the Population Studies Center, 1987-88. Columbia University. (Adjunct Professor of History, Spring 1988, teaching a graduate course in African history.) The New School of Music, Philadelphia, PA. (Visiting Associate Professor of History, Winter 1984 and Spring 1985.) Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, PA. (Lecturer in History, 1982-84). Newberry Library, Chicago. (Fellow and Instructor, Summer 1981 and Summer 1982.) Cañada College, Redwood City, CA. (Instructor of History and Economics, 1968-82, with leaves as indicated by other entries here.) The Johns Hopkins University. (Visiting Fellow, Fall 1981.) Université – Paris VII. (Chercheur affilié, Spring 1980.) University of California, Berkeley. (Visiting Scholar, 1978-79.) California Federation of Teachers, Burbank, CA. (Staff Representative, 1973-74. McGill University, Montreal, Quebec. (Visiting Assistant Professor of History, 1972-73.) University of California, Berkeley. (Visiting Assistant Professor of History, Winter 196869.) Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA. (Visiting Acting Assistant Professor of History, 1967-69.)

DOCTORAL STUDENTS SUPERVISED Students supervised 2006 to present Doctoral students at the University of Pittsburgh for whom I serve or served as major professor:

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Rachel Miller. Ph.D. 2016. Specialization in Global Art and Art History. “Patron Saint of a World in Crisis: Early Modern Representations of St. Francis Xavier in Europe and Asia.” I was a member of this committee, directed by Kirk Savage and Ann Sutherland Harris of History and Art and Architecture, University of Pittsburgh. Madalina Veres. Ph.D.2015. Specialization in European and World History. Codirector Pinar Emiralioglu. Dissertation, “Constructing Imperial Spaces: Habsburg Cartography in the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century.” Focus in European history, history of science, and world history. Ahmet Izmirlioglu. Ph.D. 2015. Dissertation, “Clashes of Imperial Authority: Commercial Tribunals in the Ottoman Provinces and Istanbul, 1847-1880.” Specialization in World History with focus on empires in history. Bennett Sherry, MA, University of Montana, 2012. ABD 2015. Matriculated at Pitt 2013. Specialization in World History with interest in 20th-century refugee populations and their governance under League of Nations and United Nations. Matt Drwenski, Matriculated at Pitt 2013. Specialization in World History with interest in world-historical data, including historical silver flows and global economic inequality. MA supervisor at University of Pittsburgh. Daniel Bisbee. Matriculated 2009, MA 2011 in Empires in World History. Now ABD in Pitt Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. Doctoral students on whose committees I now serve, working under the direction of other faculty members, at the University of Pittsburgh except as noted. Jack Bouchard, Atlantic History. Major professor Marcus Rediker. Research interest: North Atlantic maritime history, fifteenth to seventeenth centuries. Yevan Terrien. Atlantic History. Major professor Marcus Rediker. Dissertation project, “Forced migrants, displaced people, and refugees in Lower Louisiana (1710s1810s).” Christopher Myers. European History. Major professor Seymour Drescher. Dissertation project, “Implementing ‘Professional Nationality’: Scottish Education, Tropical Medicine and Scientific Reform of the Royal Navy, 1815-1860.”

Rachel Miller. History of Art & Architecture. Major professor Ann Sutherland Harris. Dissertation project, “Apostle to the Indies: The Global Iconography and Dissemination of Images of St. Francis Xavier.” Titas Chakraborty. Indian Ocean History. Major professor Marcus Rediker. Dissertation project, “Trade, Work, and Society in the Factory Towns and Port Citiesof the Northern Bay of Bengal, 1632-1710.” Isaac Curtis. Atlantic and Latin American History. Major professor Marcus Rediker. Dissertation project, “The Common Sea: Masterless People and the Making of the Colonial Caribbean, 1620-1713.” In addition, I served as a member of the doctoral committee of students working under the direction of other faculty members, at University of Pittsburgh except as noted.

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Steven Pitt. Atlantic History. Ph.D. 2015. Major professor Marcus Rediker. Dissertation project, “Seafarers, Commerce, and War: The Rise and Decline of Boston as an Atlantic Port City, 1689 -1763.” James Hommes. Japanese History. Ph.D. 2014. Major professor Richard Smethurst. Dissertation project, “Verbeck of Japan: Guido F. Verbeck as Missionary, oyatoi, and Hero.” Nicole Magie (History, Michigan State University). Ph.D. 2014. Major professor Leslie Moch. Dissertation, “Italians and Brazilians in a World on the Move: Caxias, Brazil, 1870 – 1910.” Assistant Professor of History at Olivet College. Tamara Meisner. Ph.D. 2014. Geology & Planetary Science. Major professor Daniel Bain. Dissertation, “Geochemical and lithologic response of an upland watershed over the past 800 years to landscape changes in Saône-et-Loire, France.” Instructor of Geology at Community College of Allegheny County. Lars Peterson. Ph.D. 2014. Latin American History. Major professor George Reid Andrews. Dissertation, “In the Shadow of Batlle: Workers, State Officials, and the Creation of the Welfare State in Uruguay, 1900-1920.” Fan, Xin. Ph.D. 2013. History. Indiana University. Dissertation, “The Value of the Alienated Past: The Study of Ancient World History in Twentieth-Century China.” Assistant Professor of History, State University of New York at Fredonia. Sardana Nikolaeva, Ph.D. 2013. Education. Major professor John Weideman. Dissertation, ““Not Tainted By The Past”: Re-Constructions and Negotiations of Coloured Identities Among Coloured University Students in Post-Apartheid South Africa.” Kenyon Zimmer. Ph.D. 2010. U.S. History. Major Professor Richard Oestreicher. Assistant Professor of History, University of Texas – Arlington. Students supervised prior to 2007 Doctoral students at Northeastern University. From 1994 to 2006, I served as major professor for the Northeastern doctoral candidates in World History listed below. Joshua Weiner. Admitted 2000; MA thesis 2003; PhD 2009. Advanced to candidacy in July 2003, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “‘Discoveries are not to be called Conquests’: Narrative, Empire, and the Ambiguity of Conquest in Spain’s American Empire.” Instructor of History at American River College. Aiqun Hu. Admitted 2000, matriculated 2001; PhD 2007. Advanced to candidacy in November 2003, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “Social Insurance: Modern China in Global Context.” I became her major professor in June 2004. Assistant Professor of History at Arkansas State University. Tiffany Trimmer. Admitted 1998, completed MA degree 2000; PhD 2007. Took leave in 2000, and returned to doctoral study in 2002. Advanced to candidacy in July 2003, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “‘Hubs’ of Migration Traffic.” Assistant Professor of History at University of Wisconsin La Crosse. Stacy Tweedy. Admitted 2000; MA thesis May 2002, degree awarded 2004. Advanced to candidacy in January 2003, with passage of comprehensive exams 18

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and approval of dissertation topic: “Staging the Nation, Engaging the World: The Making of a Prism Place in the African Diaspora. Sophiatown in TwentiethCentury South African Politics and Popular Thought.” Law degree (2007) Washington University of St. Louis. Now employed as an educational consultant in Baltimore. Whitney Howarth. Admitted 1997, degree awarded 2004. Advanced to candidacy in June 1999, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “Communalism in South Asia in Global Context.” Now Associate Professor of History at Plymouth State University. Hector E. Melo. Admitted 1997. Advanced to candidacy in October 1998, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “Latin American Migrations in the Twentieth Century: A Survey of Trends, Relationships, and Development.” Deceased in August 1999. Deborah S. Johnston. Admitted 1997, degree awarded 2003. Advanced to candidacy in October 2000, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “Reconceptualizing World History: A Curriculum for Secondary and College Students.” Now teacher of history at Lakeside School, Seattle. Jeffrey Sommers. Admitted 1996, degree awarded 2001. Advanced to candidacy in June 1998, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “‘The Business Point of View’: Democracy and Hegemony in the World System, Capital’s Public Relations and Propaganda Agenda.” Now Associate Professor of Africology at University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee. Eric L. Martin. Admitted 1996, degree awarded 2001. Advanced to candidacy in August 1996, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “Twentieth-century Decolonization: A Connected Global Process.” Now Associate Professor of History at Lewis and Clark State University. David Kalivas. Admitted 1996, degree awarded 2000. Advanced to candidacy in August 1996, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “Global Perceptions, Eurasian Realities: The World of Owen Lattimore.” Now Professor of History at Middlesex Community College Desiree Evans. Admitted 1995. Two years of course work, with focus on Caribbean history. Took leave from the program. Yinghong Cheng. Admitted 1994, degree awarded 2001. Advanced to candidacy in June 1996, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “Western Intellectuals and Eastern ‘New People’ – Western Left-Wing Intellectuals’ Response to the Emergence of the Communist ‘New Man’.” Now Associate Professor of History at Delaware State University. Pamela E. Brooks. Admitted 1994, degree awarded 2000. Advanced to candidacy in August 1996, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic: “Boycotts, Buses, and Passes: Black Women’s Resistance in Montgomery, Alabama and Johannesburg, South Africa, 1946-1960.” Now Associate Professor of African-American Studies at Oberlin College In addition, I served as a member of the doctoral committee of students working under the direction of other faculty members, at Northeastern University except as noted.

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Armand Garcia (Washington State University). Admitted 2000, major professor John Kicza; dissertation completed December 2006. Now Assistant Professor at University of the West Indies, St. Augustine. Linda Black (Texas A&M University). Admitted to doctoral program in Education in 2002 for dissertation work on learning in world history classrooms; major professor Lynn Burlbaw. Degree completed 2008. Now Associate Professor of Education at Stephen F. Austin University. George Dehner. Admitted 1998, major professor Anthony Penna. Degree completed 2004. Advanced to candidacy in May 2001, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic. Now Associate Professor of History at Wichita State University. Jeremy Neill. Admitted 1998, major professor Laura Frader. Degree completed 2004. Advanced to candidacy in May 2001, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic. Now a member of the professional staff at Educational Testing Service. Bin Yang. Admitted 1998, major professor Christina Gilmartin. Degree completed 2004. Advanced to candidacy in May 2001, with passage of comprehensive exams and approval of dissertation topic. Winner of a Gutenberg-e award in 2005 for his dissertation. Now Associate Professor of History at the National University of Singapore. George Reklaitis. Admitted 1998, major professor Jeffrey Burds; dissertation completed May 2003. Now Assistant Professor and Chair of History at Brookdale Community College. John Bernhart (Temple University). Ph.D. awarded 2001 at Temple University, under the direction of Peter Gran. H. Parker James (Tufts University). Ph.D. awarded 2001 at Tufts University, under the direction of Lynda N. Shaffer. He served as Associate Director of the World History Center, 2002-2004. Rosalie Haines (Bryn Mawr College). Ph.D. in Anthropology awarded 1990 at Bryn Mawr College, under the direction of Judith Shapiro. Further, I have advised numerous M.A. students in History, several of whom have gone on to do doctoral work at major universities. In years before 1994, at various times I have had primary or secondary responsibility for supervising the work of doctoral students in History at Stanford University, McGill University, and Columbia University.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE Professional Organizational Service 2016. President of the American Historical Association for calendar 2016. 2015. President-Elect of the American Historical Association. 2010-2016. Member of the Steering Committee of NOGWHISTO, the Network of Global and World History Organizations.

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2013-2016. Executive Secretary of the African Network in Global History / Réseau africain d’histoire mondiale. This continental organization of world historians based in Africa is one of six affiliates in the Network of Global and World History Organizations. 2011-2016. Director, Collaborative for Information and Analysis in History. This multiinstitutional collaborative is building a World-Historical Archive. 2012-2016. Co-principal investigator and Chair of Steering Committee, Alliance for Learning in World History. This collaborative group, supported by an award from the Social Science Research Council and British Council, facilitates professional development and curriculum development in world history for middle and high schools. 2011-2016. Member of the Board of Directors, Asian Association of World Historians. This continental organization of world historians based in Asia is one of six affiliates in the Network of Global and World History Organizations. 2004-2016. President and chair of the board of World History Network, Inc., an independent nonprofit corporation dedicated to advancing research in world history through worldwide connections. 2009-2014. Member of the Board of Trustees, National Council for History Education. 2009-2013. Member of the Board, Association for the Worldwide Study of the African Diaspora (ASWAD). 2007-2008. Program Chair, 50th annual meeting of the African Studies Association (Chicago, November 2008). 2004-2007. Vice President of the American Historical Association for the Teaching Division. 1996-1997. Evaluator, Social Science Research Council International Dissertation Research Fellowship. 1995. Panelist, National Endowment for the Humanities program in Education Development and Dissemination. 1986-1988. Member, African History Advisory Committee for the Fulbright Scholar Program. Conferences Directed and Co-Directed, since 2010 These are conferences I directed or, where noted, co-directed. They are also mentioned separately in cases where I presented a paper. “Found in Translation: World History of Science, 1200 – 1600 CE.” Oct. 9-12, 2015, University of Pittsburgh. Third conference on world history of science, supported by Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Co-directed with Abigail Owen. “Researching World History in the Schools; Nationwide and Worldwide” Supported by GAP award from Global Studies Center and the Japan Iron and Steel Foundation. Codirected with Ashley Woodson and Michael Lovorn. “World-Historical Gazetteer.” Sept. 4-5, 2014, University of Pittsburgh. Supported by National Endowment for the Humanities Digital Humanities Start-up Award. “Flying University of Transnational Humanities: Globalization and Health in East and West.” June 22-26, 2014. The Fifth Flying University summer school for graduate students and young scholars. Co-directed with Urmi Engineer.

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“The Life Sciences after World War II: Institutional Change and International Connections.” May 15-17, 2014, University of Pittsburgh. Second conference on world history of science, supported by Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Co-directed with Mat Savelli. “Red Latinoamericana de Historia Global.” August 19-20, 2013, Universidad San Andrés, Buenos Aires. Founding meeting of the Latin American affiliate of NOGWHISTO. Co-directed with Diego Holstein, Sergio Serulnikov, and Andrea Lluch. “African Network in World History / Réseau africain d’histoire mondiale.” August 11-13, 2013, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. Second congress of the African affiliate of NOGWHISTO. Co-directed with Lazare Ki-Zerbo. Alliance for Curriculum and Professional Development in World History. May 31 – June 1, 2013, Pittsburgh. Supported by the Social Science Research Council and the British Council. Alliance for Curriculum and Professional Development in World History. November 910, 2012, at UCLA. Supported by the Social Science Research Council and the British Council. Co-directed with Kelly Hernandez of UCLA. “Linnaean Worlds: Global Scientific Practice during the Great Divergence.” May 4-5, 2012, University of Pittsburgh. First conference on world history of science, supported by Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Co-directed with Daniel Rood. Association for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora (ASWAD). November 4-6, 2011, Pittsburgh. I was principal organizer of this sixth biennial conference. World History Dissertation Workshop, June 13-25, 2011, Pittsburgh. A week-long workshop for six world history doctoral students. Co-directed with Adam McKeown and Heather Streets-Salter. World History Dissertation Workshop. June 7-19, 2010, Pittsburgh. A week-long workshop for ten world history doctoral students. Co-directed with Adam McKeown and Heather Streets-Salter. Editorial Boards Member, editorial board of the Asian Review of World Histories, from 2013. Co-editor, Journal of World-Historical Information, from 2013 (with Ruth Mostern, University of California – Merced; Vladimir Zadorozhny, University of Pittsburgh; Ahmet Izmirlioglu, University of Utah; Tonia Sutherland, University of Alabama; and David Ruvolo, University of Pittsburgh). This electronic journal, published by the University Library Service at the University of Pittsburgh, entered publication in January 2013. Its cross-disciplinary articles address worldhistorical data from the perspective of information science, history, and social sciences. Co-moderator, H-WORLD, 1994-2002 (with Daniel Segal, Pitzer College, Kenneth Pomeranz, University of California - Irvine, Whitney Howarth, Northeastern University, Patricia O’Neill, College of Central Oregon; and David Kalivas, Middlesex Community College). H-WORLD is an electronic discussion list on the Internet; it is one of 130 such lists in the H-NET group of lists centered at Michigan State. H-WORLD had roughly 1500 subscribers in this era; the number of subscribers has now grown to 2500.

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Co-editor, "The World History of Slavery, Abolition and Emancipation," 1994-1996 (with John Saillant, Western Michigan University, and Anthony HendersonWhyte, Princeton University). This electronic journal, distributed via the Internet, was oriented toward scholars all around the Atlantic, with particular emphasis on Africa and Latin America. Member, editorial board of the American Historical Review, 2000-2004. Reviewing especially in world history. Member editorial board of the African Studies series, Cambridge University Press, 19922003. From 1999 to 2003 I served as chair of the editorial board of this major series, which has published over seventy volumes. Member, editorial board, Northeastern University Press, 1992-1994. Member, editorial board, Social Science History, 1989-1993. Member, editorial board, African Studies Review, 1981-1988. Member, editorial collective, Radical History Review, 1983-1992. Issue Coordinator for Issue No. 31 (1984), Issue No. 39 (1987), Issues No. 46-47 (1990). Review editor, African Economic History Review, 1974-1976. Contributing Editor, The Marcus Garvey and UNIA Papers (Robert A. Hill, General Editor). Manuscript Review Reviews of scholarly manuscripts for American Historical Review, Journal of Economic History, Economic History Review, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Journal of African History, International Journal of African Historical Studies, Canadian Journal of African Studies, African Economic History, Agricultural History, African Studies Review, Africana Journal, Comparative Politics, Canadian Social Science Research Council, Cambridge University Press, Routledge, University Press of Virginia, University of Wisconsin Press, University Presses of Florida, University of Rochester Press, Bloomsbury Press, Cornell University Press, and Lynne Rienner Press. Reviews of multimedia and textbook manuscripts for Wadsworth, McGraw-Hill, D. C. Heath, West Publishing, Pearson, McDougal-Little, and Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Consulting 2013. Central Connecticut State University. Consulting on undergraduate education in world history. 2008. The College of New Jersey. Consulting on undergraduate education in world history. 2007. College of William & Mary. Consulting on graduate education in world history. 2005. University of California, Riverside. External review of the graduate program in history. 2004. Salem State University. External review of the Department of History. 2003. Delaware State University. Consulting on undergraduate education in world history. 2003. University of Pittsburgh. Consulting on graduate education in world history. 2003. Concordia University, Montreal. Consulting on undergraduate education in world history.

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2003. 2003. 2003. 2003.

Reader of AP World History exams for College Board in Lincoln, Nebraska. University of Tennessee. Consulting on graduate education in world history. Arizona State University. Consulting on graduate education in world history. University of Florida – Gainesville. Consulting on graduate education in world history. 2003. University of Massachusetts – Amherst. Program review. 2003. Wabash College. Program review. 2002. Salem State College. Consulting on undergraduate study and teacher preparation in world history. 2002. Georgia State University. Consulting on graduate education in world history. 2002. University of Kentucky. Consulting on graduate education in world history. 2002. Howard University. Consulting on graduate education in world history. 2002. Florida International University. With the AHA Committee on Graduate education 2002. Rice University. Consulting on graduate education in world history. 2001-2002. Miles College. Program review. 2001. California State University, Northridge. Consultation on undergraduate and graduate study in world history; lecture. 2000-2001. Digital Learning Interactive. Preparation of web modules in world history. 2000-2002. College Board. Direction of workshop for teacher-presenters, preparation of curriculum on AP World History for publication by College Board. 1999-2002. Member of AP World History Development Committee, supported by Educational Testing Service. 2000. Hawaii Pacific University. Program review. 1999. Brooklyn College. Program review. 1997. Southwestern University. Program review. 1996. University of Virginia. Presentation on graduate study in world history. 1996. College of Charleston. Program review. 1996. James Madison University. Program review. 1996-1997. Houghton-Mifflin Co. and WGBH. Advisory Board member for historical video series, “The People’s Century.” 1992-1994. Merseyside Maritime Museum, Liverpool, England. Preparation an exhibit on the Atlantic slave trade at the museum, opening October 1994. 1992-1993. WGBH-TV, Boston. Advice on script and graphics for programming in proposed "Africans in America" series.

World History Activities prior to 2006 2001-2004. Project director, “World History Network,” supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities. With co-director Heidi Roupp, I developed a comprehensive gateway for research, teaching, and curriculum in world history on the Internet (http://www.worldhistorynetwork.org). 1999-2003. "World History Databank." A collaborative effort to collect data on issues in economic, demographic, and social history on a global basis for the past four

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centuries. Initial proposals for support were submitted to the National Science Foundation in 1999 and 2000. 1994-2004. Director of the World History Center at Northeastern University. This center supported research, curriculum development, and instructional outreach in world history. Its Web site (http://www.whc.neu.edu, online as an archive) includes significant resources in world history, and links to other resources. 1998-2002. Director of the World History Resource Center. The Resource Center included a unique library of world-historical teaching materials. It directed over thirty multi-day teacher workshops on world history in Massachusetts from 1998 to 2001, and administered fifty multi-day workshops nationally in 2001 and 2002. 1994-2002. Co-editor of H-WORLD (with Kenneth Pomeranz and Whitney Howarth), the H-Net electronic discussion group in world history. Provides daily postings to over 1500 subscribers, and includes a substantial Web site. 1995-2000. Project director, “Migration in Modern World History CD-ROM,” supported by The Annenberg/CPB Project. This instructional CD-ROM, intended for use as the base of a survey course in modern world history, was published in 2000 by Wadsworth Publishing Co. 1994-1997. Member of steering committee of Globalizing Regional Histories initiative, sponsored by the American Historical Association. This initiative, headed by Renate Bridenthal and Sandria Freitag, launched an attempt to link historians working in various area-studies traditions, and to elicit a wider dialogue on global themes in history. It resulted in research conferences in 2001 and 2003 at the Library of Congress, and conferences of community college faculty at the Library of Congress in 2001-2003. 1994-1996. Graduate Coordinator, Department of History. Primary responsibility for the graduate program as the Ph.D. program was established. 1989-1993. I was active in the Northeastern History Department's efforts to establish a Ph.D. program, with particular interest in the proposed program's innovations in methodology and world history. The program was approved in 1993, and I became Graduate Coordinator. Memberships in Professional Organizations American Historical Association, World History Association, African Studies Association, Economic History Association, Social Science History Association, African Network in World History, Asian Association of World History, European Network In Universal and Global History, Red Latinoamericana de Historia Global.

UNPUBLISHED LECTURES, CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS, and STUDIES, SINCE 2009 2015 Participant, “Big Ideas, Big Data.” International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam. November 5-6, 2015.

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Invited Lecture. “‘Rerum novarum’: Leo XIII and global social change.” Department of History, Catholic University, Washington DC. October 14, 2014. Seminar Presentation. “Language in History.” World History Seminar, University of Pittsburgh. September 30, 2015. The second of my 6-lecture series. Seminar Presentation. “Synthesis: the Human System.” World History Seminar, University of Pittsburgh. September 16, 2015. The first of my 6-lecture series. Participant, American Council of Learned Societies, conference for income organizational presidents, New York, September 11, 2015. Presenter. African Diaspora Consortium second organizational meeting. I am the codeveloper of a curriculum for a College Board-supported AP course. New York, September 10, 2015. Discussant on “History and Ethics” lecture by Matthias Middell. International Committee of Historical Sciences, Jinan, China, August 28, 2015. Commentator of Poster Session, Internatinal Committee of Historical Sciences, Jinan, China, August 27, 2015. Chair, NOGWHISTO General Assembly, International Committee of Historical Sciences, Jinan, China, August 28, 2015. Discussant on “History and Ethics” lecture by Matthias Middell. International Committee of Historical Sciences, Jinan, China, August 28, 2015. Conference Paper. “Datasets on the History of Slavery: Creating, Exchanging, and Preserving an Electronic Record for Study Worldwide.” International Committee of Historical Sciences, Jinan, China, August 26, 2015. Conference Paper. “Approaching Empires: Towards a World Historical Perspective on Researching Empires.” World History Association, Savanna Georgia. Copresented with Dan Bisbee. Invited Keynote Address. “World History, Civilizational History, and Social History in Asia.” Keynote address, Asian Association of World Historians, Singapore, 31 May 2015. Conference Presentation. “Introduction: in memoriam, Ji-Hyung Cho.” Asian Association of World Historians, Singapore, 29 May 2015. Invited Lecture. “African Diaspora as a Metaphor for the World.” Annual Lecture, African Studies Program, University of Leeds. May 14, 2015. Invited Lecture. “Locating Africans on the World Stage: A Problem in World History.” Invited keynote at the New England Regional World History Association, Northeastern University, Boston, March 28, 2015. Conference Paper. “Economic Divergence: Global Interconnections, African Consequnces,” International Studies Association, New Orleans. February 18, 2015. Commentary. Gavin Steingo, “Kwaito’s Promise: Freedom and Aesthetic Experience in Post-Apartheid South Africa.” Humanities Center. February 12, 2015. 2014 Conference Paper. “Dennis Cordell and Population History in Africa.” African Studies Association, Indianapolis, November 21, 2014. Conference Paper. Commentary on Broad is my Native Land (on Russian migration). Social Science History Association, Toronto. November 6, 2014.

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Conference Paper. “A World-Historical Archive: The CHIA Project.” Social Science History Association, Toronto. November 6, 2014. Project Directors Meeting. “World-Historical Gazetteer.” National Endowment for the Humanities Digital History Project Directors Meeting. Washington, DC. September 5, 2014. Invited Lecture. “Big Data in History.” Warwick, UK, 23 May 2014. International Workshop, “The Future of World and Global History,” Global History & Culture Centre. Conference Paper. “Linking Social Movement Networks, 1989 to 1992: Southeast Asia, Africa, and South America.” Political Economy of World-Systems (PEWS) 38th Annual Conference, Pittsburgh, 12 April 2014. Invited Lecture. “A Global History of the African Diaspora.” Abu Dhabi, 9 March 2014. Public lecture in the New York University Abu Dhabi “Globalizing Histories” lecture series. Invited Lecture. “A World-Historical Archive: A means to link humanities and socialscience disciplines.” Keynote address at conference, “Interdisciplinarity in History: An Old Method in a New World Context,” Qatar University, 6 March 2014. Invited Lecture. “Jerry Bentley and the Institutions for Study of World History.” Keynote address at joint conference of California and Northwest World History Associations, Berkeley, 1 March 2014. Conference Paper. “African Diasporas, Old and New: Materiality and Vision.” Materialities: Santa Barbara Global Studies Conference 2014, 28 February 2014. 2013 Invited Lecture. “Diasporas and Nations in Explaining the Modern World.” Keynote address, Southeast World History Association, Norfolk, VA, 18 October 2013. Conference Paper. “African Population, 150-1950: Methods for New Estimates by Region.” Global Historical Population Conference, International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam, 25 October 2013. Invited Lecture. “Hommage à Joseph Ki-Zerbo: l’Histoire générale de l’Afrique et l’histoire mondiale.” Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, 19 August 2013. Plenary address at the Réseau Africain d’Histoire Mondiale. Inaugural Lecture. “Historical Studies and UNESCO: Gradual Progress.” Buenos Aires, 8 August 2013. Coloquio Internacional: Lationoamérica y la Historia Global, Universidad San Andres. Conference Paper. “Collaborative for Historical Information and Analysis: Framework for a World-Historical Data Repository.” 17 July 2013. Digital Humanities Annual Conference, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NB. Invited Lecture. “Empire: The new literature on an old topic.” 8 July 2013, Free University of Berlin, History Seminar. Conference Paper. “Alliance for Curriculum and Professional Development in World History.” 28 June 2013. World History Association, Minneapolis. Conference Paper. “Advanced Graduate Course: Interdisciplinary Methodology.” 21 June 2013, Global Studies Consortium annual meeting, Lomonsov Moscow State University, Moscow.

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Conference Paper. “Global Studies: A Historical Approach.” 21 June 2013, Global Studies Consortium annual meeting, Lomonsov Moscow State University, Moscow. Invited Lecture. “Global History of Africa and the Diaspora: Advances in Conceptualization and Research.” 10 April 2013, African Diaspora Forum, New York University. Conference Paper. “African Population, 1650 – 1950: Methods for New Estimates by Region.” 20 April 2013. African Economic Development Conference, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, BC. Conference Paper. “Alliance for Curriculum and Professional Development in World History.” 22 March 2013. National Council for History Education annual conference, Richmond, VA. Conference Paper. “Climate as a Factor in Migration and Social Change, 200,000 to 5000 years ago.” 5 January 2013. American Historical Association annual meeting, New Orleans. Presented jointly with Aubrey Hillman. 2012 Invited Lecture. “Global History and Maritime History,” Ghent, Belgium, 4 July 2012. Plenary address at the International Maritime Economic History Congress. Conference Paper. “The Center for Historical Information and Analysis: Framework for Creating a World-Historical Data Repository.” World History Association annual meeting, Albuquerque, New Mexico, 29 June 2012. Conference Paper. “Global Studies Center and World History Center at the University of Pittsburgh.” 15 June 2012, Global Studies Consortium annual meeting, RMIT University, Melbourne. Invited Lecture. “Global History and Migration History: Interacting trajectories on land and sea.” 24 May 2012, Posthumus Institute Annual Conference, Amsterdam. Conference Paper. “Enslavement-related migration within nineteenth-century Africa: methods and initial estimates.” 19 May 2012, Fourth Global Migration History Conference, Rabat. Invited Lecture. Plenary address at the Annual Conference of the N.W. Posthumus Institute, Amsterdam. “Global History and Migration History: interacting trajectories on land and sea,” delivered 24 May 2012. 2011 “Confluence of Cultures or Convergence of Diasporas: an International Symposium,” Marrakech, Morocco, 20-22 May 2011. Paper: “The Old World African Diaspora: Parallels and Divergences.” Keynote Address, ConIH: 11th Graduate Student Conference on International History, Harvard University, 10-11 March 2011. "Connections and Systems in the African Diaspora," delivered March 10. Invited Lecture. “The African Diaspora & Modernity: The Black Experience and History from Below.” Department of Africology, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee. 9 February 2011. 2010 Sivert O. and Marjorie A. Skotheim Lecture, “The African Diaspora and the Emergence of the Modern World,” Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA, 29 October 2010. 28

Patrick MANNING

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Invited Lecture, “The African Diaspora and the Emergence of the Modern World.” Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario. October 21, 2010. Invited Lecture, “Cross-cultural Migration in Theory and Practice.” Presented to the Late Lessons from Early History Initiative, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, October 8, 2010. Invited Lecture, “Africa and the World.” Presented to the African Diaspora Research Cluster, Arizona State University, October 7, 2010. Paper, “UNESCO and the Global Organization of Knowledge.” The Global Turn: How the Global Perspective Transformed Human and Social Sciences. Paris, 23-25 September 2010. Paper, “A Decolonizing World, 1955 – 1965.” Film and the End of Empire, University of Pittsburgh, 24-26 September 2010. Keynote address, “The African Diaspora in World History.” Pennsylvania Council of History Education annual conference, Cranberry, PA, Aug. 30. 2010. Paper, “Research Perspective in World and Global History: Migration.” International Congress of Historical Sciences, Amsterdam, 22-28 August 2010. Second Conference of the Network of Global and World History Organizations. Keynote address, “Securing Our Future in Turbulent Times,” National Association for the Empowerment of African People, Centre of Excellence, Macoya, Trinidad & Tobago, 31 July 2010. Paper, with Scott C. Nickleach, “Retrospective Estimates of African Population, 1950 – 1650.” International Conference on Understanding African Poverty over the Longue Durée, Accra, 15-17 July 2010. Paper, “Expanding Academic and Popular Debate in World History.” 24-27 June 2010. World History Association, San Diego, CA. Keynote address, “Teaching and Researching Global History in a World of Nations,” Japan Society for Western History, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacitic University, Beppu, Japan, 30 May 2010. Keynote address, “World History and the Disciplines in the Twentieth Century,” at a congress celebrating creation of the Global and European Studies Institute, Leipzig University, May 14, 2010.

REVIEWS OF BOOKS AND DATASETS I have published over eighty book reviews in journals including American Historical Review, Journal of Economic History, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Journal of African History, International Journal of African Historical Studies, Population and Development Review, Journal of World History, Journal of World-Historical Information, International Journal of Maritime History, The History Teacher, Journal of World Systems Research, Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, Canadian Journal of African Studies, African Studies Review, African Economic History, Journal of Caribbean History, Journal of Asian and African Studies, and Africana Journal. In press. Lincoln Paine, The Sea and Civilization: A Maritime History of the World. Reviewed for International Journal of Maritime History.

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2015. “Large-scale data on U.S. disease, 1887 – 2014.” A review of “Project Tycho: Data for Health,” compiled by Wilbert van Panhuis et al., www.tycho.pitt.edu. Reviewed for Journal of World-Historical Information 2-3, 1, pp. 118-122. 2014a. Michael H. Fisher, Migration: A World History. Reviewed for The History Teacher 47, 4, pp. 619-20. 2014b. Toyin Falola, The African Diaspora: Slavery, Modernity, and Globalization. Reviewed for International Journal of African Historical Studies 47, p. 147-148 2014c. Donna R. Gabaccia, Foreign Relations: American Immigration in Global Perspective. Reviewed for Journal of Social History 48, pp. 212-213. 2013a. Eric Vanhaute, trans. Linda Weix, World History: An Introduction. Reviewed for New Global Studies 7, pp. 99-101. 2013b. Rila Mukherjee, ed. Networks in the First Global Age 1400 – 1800. Reviewed for the Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 56, pp. 557-559. 2013c. Christine Sears. American Slaves and African Masters. Algiers and the Western Sahara, 1776-1820. Reviewed for American Historical Review 118, p. 1645. 2012. Ruth Mostern, “Dividing the Realm in Order to Govern”: The Spatial Organization of the Song State (960 – 1276 CE). Reviewed for Journal of World System Research 18, pp. 132-135. 2011a. Maria Fusaro and Amélia Polónia, eds., Maritime History as Global History. Reviewed for International Journal of Maritime History 23, pp. 366 – 369. 2011b. Alexander X. Byrd, Captives and Voyagers: Black Migrants Across the Eighteenth-century British Atlantic World. Reviewed for Journal of Southern History 77, p. 417. 2011c. Christiane Harzig and Dirk Hoerder with Donna Gabaccia, What is Migration History?. Reviewed for Journal of World History 22, pp. 577-579. 2011d. Tejumola Olaniyan and James Sweet, eds. The African Diaspora and the Disciplines. Reviewed for Journal of African History 52, pp. 252-254. 2010. W. M. Spellman, Uncertain Identity: International Migration Since 1945. Published online in Geschichte.transnational, 16 April 2010. 2009. Gwyn Campbell, Suzanne Miers, and Joseph C. Miller, Women and Slavery, 2 vols. Reviewed in Journal of African History 50, pp. 293-295. 2008. Emma Christopher, Slave Ship Sailors and their Captive Cargoes, 1730-1807. Reviewed in Journal of Interdisciplinary History 38, pp. 445-446. 2006a. Frederick Cooper, Colonialism in Question: Theory, Knowledge, History. Reviewed in American Historical Review 111, p. 431. 2006b. James C. Rawley, with Stephen D. Behrendt, The Transatlantic Slave Trade: A History, rev. ed. Reviewed in Journal of African History 47, p. 529. 2006c. Maura I. Toro-Morn and Marixsa Alicea, eds., Migration and Immigration: A Global View. Reviewed in Journal of Social History 40, pp. 520-522. 2006d. José C. Curto and Paul E. Lovejoy, eds., Enslaving Connections: Changing Cultures of Africa and Brazil during the Era of Slavery. Reviewed in Africa Today 52, pp. 120-121. 2005. Sylviane Diouf, ed., Fighting the Slave Trade: West African Strategies. Reviewed in Journal of African History 46, pp. 514-515. 2004a. Review of David Christian, Maps of Time: An Introduction to Big History. Reviewed online for H-WORLD

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2004b. Review of Dirk Hoerder, Cultures in Contact: World Migrations in the Second Millennium; Donna R. Gabaccia, Italy’s Many Diasporas; and Adam McKeown, Chinese Migrant Networks and Cultural Change: Peru, Chicago, Hawaii, 19001936. Reviewed in Population and Development Review 30 (2004), 352-356. 2004c. “Migration: A Millennium of Mesolevel Analysis.” Review of Dirk Hoerder, Cultures in Contact: World Migrations in the Second Millennium. Reviewed in International Review of Social History 49, pp. 500-504. 2004d. William B. Cohen, The French Encounter with Africans: White Response to Blacks, 1530-1880, 2nd ed. Reviewed in Research in African Literatures 35, 4, pp. 172-173. 2004e. Christopher Ehret, The Civilizations of Africa: A History to 1800. Reviewed in Journal of World History 15, 1, pp. 243-246. 2002a. Robin Law and Paul E. Lovejoy, eds. The Biography of Mahommah Gardo Baquaqua: His Passage from Slavery to Freedom in Africa and America. Reviewed in International Journal of African Historical Studies 35, 2-3, pp. 616617. 2002b. David B. Abernethy, The Dynamics of Global Dominance: European Overseas Empires, 1415-1980. Reviewed in African Studies Review. 2002c. David Eltis et al, The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade: A Database on CD-ROM. Reviewed in Journal of African History 43, 3, pp. 512-513. 2001a. Alice Conklin, A Mission to Civilize: The Republican Idea of Empire in France and West Africa, 1895-1930. Reviewed in Journal of African History 40, pp. 491492. 2001b. David Eltis and David Richardson, Routes to Slavery. Reviewed in Journal of African History 40, p. 514. 2001c. Saul S. Friedman, Jews and the American Slave Trade. Reviewed in Shofar. 1999. Hugh Thomas, The Slave Trade: The Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 14401980. Reviewed in Journal of Interdisciplinary History 30, 1, p. 111. 1995a. Paul Tiyambe Zeleza, A Modern Economic History of Africa. Reviewed in Journal of African History 36, 1, pp. 145-147. 1995b. Paul Lovejoy and Jan Hogendorn, Slow Death for Slavery: The Course of Abolition in Northern Nigeria, 1897- 1936. Reviewed in American Historical Review 100, 1, pp. 206-207. 1995c. Roderick McDonald, The Economy and Material Culture of Slaves. Reviewed in International Journal of African Historical Studies 28, 2, pp. 379-380. 1994. Frederick Cooper, et al., Confronting Historical Paradigms. Reviewed in Agricultural History 68, 2, pp. 267-268. 1993a. John Thornton, Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World. Reviewed in American Historical Review 98, 2, pp. 469-470. 1993b. Claude Meillassoux, Anthropology of Slavery. Reviewed Journal of Interdisciplinary History 24, 2, pp. 399-400. 1992. Robin Law, The Slave Coast of West Africa 1550-1750. Reviewed in Journal of African History 34, pp. 323-324. 1991. Sophie Dulucq and Odile Goerg, editors, Les Investissements publics dans les villes africaines. Habitat et transports. Reviewed in International Journal of African Historical Studies 24, 2, pp. 424-425.

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1991. Johannes Postma, The Dutch in the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1600-1815. Reviewed in Journal of Interdisciplinary History 22, 1, p. 131. 1990a. Joseph C. Miller, Way of Death: Merchant Capitalism and the Angolan Slave Trade, 1730-1830. Reviewed in Slavery and Abolition. 1990b. W. G. Clarence-Smith, ed., The Economics of the Indian Ocean Slave Trade in the 19th Century. Reviewed in Journal of African History 32, 1, pp. 153-155. 1990c. Robert Harms, Games Against Nature: An Eco-Cultural History of the Nunu of Equatorial Africa. Reviewed in American Historical Review 95, 5, pp. 13981399. 1990d. John Iliffe, The African Poor: A History. Reviewed in Journal of Economic History 50, 1, pp. 204-205. 1990e. Mary McCarthy, Social Change and the Growth of British Power in the Gold Coast: The Fante States 1807-1874. Reviewed in Africana Journal 15, pp. 398399. 1989. G. Liesegang, H. Pasch, and A. Jones, eds., Figuring African Trade. Reviewed in African Economic History 18, pp. 178-179. 1988a. Richard Roberts, Warriors, Merchants and Slaves: The State and the Economy in the Middle Niger Valley, 1700-1914. Reviewed in Journal of Economic History 48, 4, pp. 952-53. 1988b. Jan Hogendorn and Marion Johnson, The Shell Money of the Slave Trade. Reviewed in International Journal of African Historical Studies 21, 1, pp. 119-20. 1988c. Tony Martin, Marcus Garvey, Hero: A First Biography. Reviewed in Journal of Caribbean History. 1987. A. D. Roberts, ed., The Cambridge History of Africa. Vol. 7. From c. 1905 to c. 1940. Reviewed in Journal of Economic History 47, 4, pp. 1027-1028. 1986a. Jane I. Guyer, Family and Farm in Southern Cameroon. Reviewed in African Economic History 14, pp. 217-219. 1986b. Peter Duignan and L. H. Gann, The United States and Africa: A History. Reviewed in Journal of Economic History 46, 1, pp. 312-313. 1985a. Claire C. Robertson and Martin Klein, eds., Women and Slavery in Africa. Reviewed in Journal of Interdisciplinary History 16, 2, pp. 367-369. 1985b. David Birmingham and Phyllis M. Martin, eds., History of Central Africa, 2 vols. Reviewed in International Journal of African Historical Studies 18, 2, pp. 325326. 1985c. Terence K. Hopkins, Immanuel Wallerstein, and associates, World-Systems Analysis: Theory and Methodology. Reviewed in African Economic History 13, pp. 222-224. 1985d. Boniface I. Obichere, ed., Studies in Southern Nigerian History. Reviewed in African Economic History 13, p. 224. 1985e. Josephine F. Milburn, British Business and Ghanaian Independence. Reviewed in African Economic History 13, pp. 221-222. 1984a. Ray Kea, Settlements, Trade and Politics in the Seventeenth-Century Gold Coast. Reviewed in American Historical Review 89, 3, pp. 823-824. 1984b. Elias Saad, Social History of Timbuktu: The Role of Muslim Scholars and Notables, 1400-1900. Reviewed in American Historical Review 89, 5, pp. 1371-1372.

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1984c. Robert H. Bates, Essays on the Political Economy of Rural Africa. Reviewed in International Journal of African Historical Studies 17, 3, pp. 562-564. 1983a. J. E. Inikori, ed., Forced Migration: The Impact of the Export Slave Trade on African Societies. Reviewed in Journal of African History 24, 3, p. 416. 1983b. Victor C. Uchendu, ed., Dependency and Underdevelopment in West Africa. Reviewed in International Journal of African Historical Studies 16, 1, p. 146. 1983c. Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch, ed., Societes paysannes du Tiers-Monde. Reviewed in International Journal of African Historical Studies 16, 2, p. 305. 1982. Stephen Baier, An Economic History of Central Niger. Reviewed in International Journal of African Historical Studies 15, 1, pp. 93-96. 1980a. Mahdi Adamu, The Hausa Factor in West African History. Reviewed in American Historical Review 85, 3, pp. 689-690. 1980b. Werner Peukert, Der atlantische Sklavenhandel von Dahomey (17401797). Reviewed in African Economic History 9, pp. 131-133. 1979a. Clive Dewey and A. G. Hopkins, ed., The Imperial Impact: Studies in the Economic History of Africa and India. Reviewed in African Economic History 8, pp. 274-276. 1979b. Robin Law, The Oyo Empire, c. 1600 - c. 1836. Reviewed in Journal of African History 20, 1, pp. 137-138. 1978. Alain Auger, L'Afrique historique et geographique. Reviewed in African Economic History 6, p. 197. 1977a. J. Forbes Munro, Africa and the International Economy, 1800-1960. Reviewed in American Historical Review 82, 4, p. 1032. 1977b. Robert July, Precolonial Africa: An Economic and Social History. Reviewed in African Economic History, No. 3, pp. 57-58. 1975a. R. O. Ekundare, An Economic History of Nigeria, 1860- 1960. Reviewed in African Historical Studies 8, 2, pp. 314-317. 1975b. Giovanni Arrighi and John S. Saul, Essays on the Political Economy of Africa. Reviewed in African Economic History Review 2, 1, pp. 24-27. 1974a. A. G. Hopkins, An Economic History of West Africa. Reviewed in Canadian Journal of African Studies 8, 1, pp. 177-179; reprinted in African Economic History Review 1, 1, pp. 12-14. 1974b. A. E. Afigbo, The Warrant Chiefs. Reviewed in Journal of Asian and African Studies 9, 1-2, pp. 125-127. 1973a. Claude Meillassoux, ed., The Development of Indigenous Trade and Markets in West Africa. Reviewed in African Historical Studies 6, 1, pp. 139-141. 1973b. George Brooks, The Kru Mariner in the Nineteenth Century. Reviewed in African Historical Studies 6, 3, pp. 498-499. 1972a. Abner Cohen, Custom and Politics in Urban Africa. Reviewed in African Historical Studies 5, 1, pp. 136-137. 1972b. Samir Amin, L'Afrique de l'Ouest bloquee : L'Economie politique de la colonisation, 1880-1970. Reviewed in African Historical Studies 5, 1, pp. 121-125. 1971. Polly Hill, Studies in Rural Capitalism in West Africa. Reviewed in African Historical Studies 4, 1, pp. 156-157.

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