Furman University Department of Political Science
     
 

 

 

 

Some seek knowledge for the sake of knowledge: that is curiosity;

Others seek knowledge that they may themselves be known: that is vanity;

But there are still others who seek knowledge in order to serve and edify others, and that is charity.

~St. Bernard of Clairvaux

 

 

 

 

 

Brent Nelsen
Professor
 
 

 
office:
hours:
phone:
fax:
email:

Johns Hall 111-R
T, R :: 11:15 - 12:15
(864) 294-3329
(864) 294-3513

brent.nelsen@furman.edu

 
   

 


Brent Nelsen was raised in Wisconsin and earned degrees from Wheaton College (Ill.) and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He received his Ph.D. in political science in 1989 and began teaching at Furman in January 1990.

Dr. Nelsen’s teaching and scholarship focus on Europe. He teaches courses on the politics of Europe and the European Union, as well as a course on the politics of the international economic system. His first book, entitled The State Offshore: Petroleum, Politics, and State Intervention on the British and Norwegian Continental Shelves (Praeger, 1991), explored oil policy in the North Sea. A subsequent edited volume—Norway and the European Community: The Political Economy of Integration (Praeger, 1993)—examined the troubled relationship between Norway and an integrating Europe. More recently Dr. Nelsen has teamed up with one of his former students (Alexander Stubb, now foreign minister of Finland) to publish a textbook on the European Union called The European Union: Readings on the Theory and Practice of European Integration (Lynne Rienner), now in its third edition.

Since 2001 Dr. Nelsen has shifted his research interests to the study of religion and politics in Europe. He and his Furman colleague Jim Guth have published several articles on how religion shapes the attitudes of Europeans toward the European. The two are currently working on a book entitled Religion and the Struggle for Europe: Catholicism, Protestantism and Politics in the European Union to be published by Georgetown University Press.

Dr. Nelsen married his wife Lori in 1981. They have three children: Kirsten, Evan and Derek. The family helped start Redeemer Presbyterian Church in 2001; Dr. Nelsen serves as an elder in the church. He loves to read, run, hike, garden, ski—and take students on travel-study tours to all of his favorite places in Europe!

 

 
 

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