Mayumi Fukushima
Assistant Professor of Politics
Associations
Politics
Asian Studies
About
Mayumi Fukushima is a political scientist specializing in international security, particularly in the areas of security alliances and nuclear weapons. Her teaching interests include international politics of East Asia, nuclear politics, and technology and international conflicts, among others.
She is currently working on a book project on asymmetric international security alliances, in addition to two research projects on nuclear extended deterrence and nonproliferation. Her research has been published in War on the Rocks, International Affairs, The National Interest, and The American Interest, among others, and it has been supported by various funding organizations including the Charles Koch Foundation, the Stanton Foundation, the Smith Richardson Foundation, the Murata Science Foundation, and the Ito Foundation for International Education Exchange. She has also held academic fellowships from the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs of Harvard Kennedy School, the RAND Corporation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Center for International Studies, and Yale University’s International Security Studies Program.
She came to Bates College from Harvard University, where she was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow with the International Security Program of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. She earned her Ph.D. in Political Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Before her academic career, she served as a Japanese career diplomat with responsibilities related to national security issues and U.S.-Japan security cooperation.
Courses:
- PLTC171 International Politics
- PLTC 213 Great Power Politics
- PLTC 261 Nuclear Politics
- PLTC 283 International Politics of East Asia
- PLTC 322 Technology and International Conflicts
Expertise
Current Courses
Winter Semester 2026
International Politics
This course explores some of the structures and processes that organize world politics, including the system of sovereign states, international organizations, global economic forces, and the varied ways religion, gender, and race form nation-states and shape their identities and interactions. To exa…
Technology and International Conflicts
This course aims to examine how technology affects international conflicts at political, economic, and military levels. New dual-use or military technologies can alter the way militaries fight one another in a profound way. New civilian technologies can disrupt trade markets to cause interstate disp…
Senior Thesis
Discussion of methods of research and writing, oral reports, and regular individual consultation with instructors. Students undertake a one-semester thesis by registering for PLTC 458 in the winter semester. Majors writing an honors thesis register for both PLTC 457 and 458. Prerequisite(s): one 300…