Judith Kelley
Faculty Fellow in the DeWitt Wallace Center
ITT/Terry Sanford Distinguished Professor of Public Policy
Bass Fellow
OFFICE
240A Sanford
judith.kelley@duke.edu
IN THE NEWS
- Search Committee for Next Dean of Sanford School of Public Policy. Duke Today (8/18/2025)
- Judith Kelley to Step Down as Sanford School Dean. Duke Today (4/5/2024)
- ‘People Are Exhausted by Politics’: Faculty Assess the 2024 Election at Briefing for International Journalists. Duke Today (3/5/2024)
- Leaders in Government, Business, Academia to Examine Results of CHIPS and Science Act. Duke Today (10/30/2023)
- Judith Kelley Reappointed Dean of the Sanford School of Public Policy. (7/5/2022)
BIO
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Judith Kelley is the Terry Sanford Professor of Public Policy and Professor of Political Science at Duke University. She served as the Dean of the Duke Sanford School from 2018-2024, and before that as the senior associate dean since 2014. During Kelley's leadership, the school successfully navigated the Covid-19 pandemic, recruited over 20 top faculty and strengthened research support that increased both research grants and faculty honors. The Master of Public Policy program doubled in size, added new concentrations and joint degrees, and maintained top national rankings. Sanford launched its first new master’s degrees in decades, including the Master of National Security Policy and the Executive Master of Public Affairs. Undergraduate offerings grew with new programs in health policy, media and journalism, and experiential learning. The school entered online and hybrid education with a new AV studio and digital learning director. Alumni engagement and fundraising more than doubled, with significant growth in endowed aid and professorships. Sanford also expanded into technology policy, securing endowed positions and launching a policy lab that has already influenced national policy and trained global officials.
In 2012, Kelley was inducted into the Bass Society of Fellows at Duke, which recognizes faculty for excellence in both teaching and scholarship. Kelley has also been awarded the Susan E. Tifft Undergraduate Teaching and Mentoring Award, and she was the 2016 inaugural recipient of the Brownell-Whetten Award for Diversity and Inclusion. Kelley is also a senior fellow with the Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University. In 2009-2010 she was a visiting fellow at the University of Aarhus, Denmark.
Kelley serves on several boards. She Chaired and still serves on the Editorial Board of International Organization, as well as other journal boards. She also serves or has served on the boards of the Hunt Institute, the Government Accountability Office Board of Academic Advisors, the Electoral Integrity project, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems, the Nicholas Institute, and on the advisory board of the 2023 United Nations Human Development Report. She has served as a consultant to the World Bank and other organizations.Kelley's work focuses on how states, international organizations, and NGOs can promote domestic political reforms in problem states, and how international norms, laws and other governance tools influence state behavior. Her work addresses human rights and democracy, international election observation, and human trafficking. Past work has focused on the International Criminal Court, the European Union, and other international organizations.
Her book, Monitoring Democracy: When International Election Observation Works and Why It Often Fails (Princeton 2012) was "One of Choice's Outstanding Academic Titles for 2013" and also received the Chadwick F. Alger Prize, which is awarded by the International Studies Association to recognize the "best book published in the previous calendar year on the subject of international organization and multilateralism." Details on her election monitoring project are on the web at Project on International Election Monitoring.
Kelley's more recent work focuses on the global fight against human trafficking. Her recent book, Scorecard Diplomacy: Grading States to Influence their Reputation and Behavior (Cambridge University Press, 2017), assesses the US policy on trafficking around the world. More about the book can be found at www.scorecarddiplomacy.org.
Relatedly, the book also examines the rising phenomenon of global ratings and rankings, a topic on which Kelley has worked extensively, editing another book, The Power of Global Performance Indicators from Cambridge University Press. This body of work also covers an assessment of the World Bank's Ease of Doing Business Indicators, as well as a survey of the global emergence of indicator systems.Kelley's work has been published by Princeton University Press, Cambridge University Press, and in journals such as American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, International Organization, International Studies Quarterly, and the Journal of Common Market Studies. Her work has been discussed by media outlets such as the Economist, the BBC, the Washington Post, and US News and World Report. The Smith Richardson Foundation has supported her as a Policy and Strategy Fellow, and her work has been supported extensively by the National Science Foundation.
She served as the host of the Sanford Schools Policy360 podcast from 2018-2024.
Kelley is a native of Copenhagen, Denmark.
GRANTS
- Shaming States: Social Sanction and State Behaviour In World Politics. (Principal Investigator), awarded by Universita Ca' Foscari Venezia, 2019 - 2022
- Financial Aid Support for Minority Ph.D. Students at Sanford School of Public Policy. (Principal Investigator), awarded by Duke Endowment, 2020 - 2021
- Uncovering the effectiveness of strategies of influence: The United States efforts to promote policies to reduce human trafficking. (Principal Investigator), awarded by National Science Foundation, 2014 - 2018
- Mechanisms of Influence: the case of human trafficking. (Principal Investigator), awarded by Smith Richardson Foundation, Inc., 2012 - 2016
- Analyzing the Effects on International Election Monitoring. (Principal Investigator), awarded by National Science Foundation, administered by Trinity College of Arts & Sciences, 2006 - 2009
PUBLICATIONS
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Kelley, Judith, Beth Simmons, and Rush Doshi. “The Competitive Pressures of Rankings: Experimental Evidence of Rankings’ Influence on Domestic Priorities.” In The Complexity of Human Rights From Vernacularization to Quantification, edited by Philip Alston. Hart Publishing, 2024.
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Strezhnev, A., J. G. Kelley, and B. A. Simmons. “Testing for Negative Spillovers: Is Promoting Human Rights Really Part of the Problem?” International Organization 75, no. 1 (December 1, 2021): 71–102. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818320000661.
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Kelley, J. G., and B. A. Simmons. “Governance by other Means: Rankings as regulatory systems.” International Theory 13, no. 1 (March 1, 2021): 169–78. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1752971920000457.
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Kelley, J., and Beth Simmons, eds. The Power of Global Performance Indicators. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2020.
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Kelley, J., and Beth Simmons, eds. The Power of Global Performance Indicators. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2020.


