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Faculty Profile: Joel Westra

Friday, June 21, 2013
Grace Ruiter

17c起草社区 political science professor Joel Westra remembers the receptionist鈥檚 surprise when he came to the chemical engineering office to switch his major to political science.

鈥淲hy are you changing majors?鈥 she asked. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not failing.鈥  

The reasons he offered were boredom with chemical engineering classes and fascination with political science classes.

But Westra鈥檚 interest in political science began long before he took a class in it.

The early years

As a child, Westra was fascinated by maps and militaries. Even back then, he was asking the big questions鈥攚hy did people fight? How did war shape the world?

鈥淚 was a social scientist before I knew what a social scientist was,鈥 he says now.

Yet it was Westra鈥檚 skill in math that drew attention in school. His teachers steered him toward a career in a mathematical field. He planned to become a chemical engineer.

Major changes

He resolved to earn his degree from a school in a major city.

Westra鈥檚 father was a pastor who preferred serving small towns, but country life never appealed to Westra. He saw college as a chance to escape it.

Making his getaway to Houston, Texas, Westra enrolled in the University of Houston honors college.

Although Westra still loved Houston and the university, by sophomore year, he had little affection for his major.

 鈥淚 couldn't continue to work so hard at something I didn't really enjoy,鈥 he explained. 

Realizing he did enjoy his political science classes, Westra became a political science major.

Fulfilling his calling

Westra has no doubt switching majors was the right move.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if I can imagine being anything else. I really feel this is my calling,鈥 he said.

Earning his PhD in 2004, Westra has been fulfilling that calling as a 17c起草社区 professor since 2007. His favorite part of the job is helping students make sense of the complex world around them.

鈥淚鈥檒l often say the world is our lab as social scientists,鈥 he said.

Westra integrates his passion for teaching in his research by using student assistants.

鈥淚鈥檝e enjoyed the assistants; I鈥檝e enjoyed mentoring them, and it鈥檚 good for them to get experience working on a major research project,鈥 he reflected.

Westra loves seeing those students go on to successful careers of their own. He also counts global engagement of his own research a highlight.      

Westra studies the security institutions trying to maintain world order. It鈥檚 a subject that builds on the questions about war and peace he began pondering as a child. He is currently working on a book about attempts to reform post-WWII security institutions. He plans to analyze what makes some efforts succeed and others fail.

A house of maps

While Westra鈥檚 early interest in war is more evident in his scholarship, his love for maps shines in his home d茅cor. Westra鈥檚 collection of map reprints is on display throughout his house.

鈥淭hankfully, my wife finds them aesthetically pleasing,鈥 he laughed.

Westra鈥檚 favorites: a pair of 17th century city fortification maps from the Netherlands.

鈥淚 like them for their intricacy, the history they capture and their relationship to my broader academic interests, but also for their beauty鈥攖hey鈥檙e works of art,鈥 he explained.

Starting a family                                                              

They may be beautiful, but Westra鈥檚 maps offer little guidance in his latest venture: parenthood. He and his wife have a two-year-old son and a daughter on the way.

However, Westra enjoys the uncharted waters: 鈥淚 love seeing the world anew through a child鈥檚 eyes and being reminded constantly to rejoice at the wonders of life.鈥