Theme, Division and Related Group Panels

Transcription

Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
The following groups organize and sponsor panels, roundtables and plenaries at the APSA Annual Meeting.
Theme panels: Organized by Annual Meeting program chairs, focusing on broad topics related to the meeting theme or issues of wide interest
to the Association. A “T” precedes the title of theme panels in this program.
Division panels: Organized and overseen by Annual Meeting division chairs who also serve as members of the program committee. APSA
organizes the annual meeting into 49 divisions, 41 of which align with APSA Organized Sections. APSA allocates panels to each division according
to a formula based on prior year attendance and proposal submission rates. The following pages list division panels ordered by division number.
Related group panels: Organized by independent professional groups, called “Related Groups,” and invited by APSA to organize scholarly panels
during the annual meeting. Several Some related groups only meet at the APSA Annual Meeting (e.g. conference groups) and some are independent
associations. Related groups must demonstrate to APSA that they have a persistent organizational structure and membership threshold to be
eligible to host panels at the meeting. The following pages list related group panels ordered by related group name.
Committee panels: Organized by APSA committees to address professional issues in the discipline and related to the committee’s responsibilities.
See the “Committee Sponsored Panels Events” entry in the Table of Contents for the location of the committee panel listings.
190
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
Association of Chinese Political Studies
Related Groups
African Politics Conference Group
Chair:
Panel 1
Peter A. VonDoepp, University of Vermont
Susanna D. Wing, Haverford College
Alice Kang, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Mi Yung Yoon, Hanover College
DEMOCRATIZATION, STATE
STRENGTH AND ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN
AFRICA: NEW EMPIRICAL AND
CONCEPTUAL HORIZONS
Co-sponsored by 12-40
AFRICAN LEADERSHIP ROLES AND
THE ROLE OF THE CIVIC IN A
CONTEXT OF POLITICAL CHANGE
Panel 3
ETHNICITY, RELIGION AND
TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY IN
AFRICAN POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 12-52
Fri 10:15 am
Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago
Panel 1
CHINA, THE UNITED STATES, AND
GLOBAL ORDER
Sat 8:00 am
Panel 2
GLOBALIZATION AND THE
CHINESE REGULATORY STATE
Fri 2:00 pm
Association of Korean Political Studies in North America
Chair:
Jae-Jung Suh, Johns Hopkins University
Panel 1
IDENTIFYING KOREA, OTHERING
NEIGHBORS
Panel 2
KOREA’S RESPONSES TO
GLOBALIZATION
Fri 8:00 am
Panel 3
CONSOLIDATING DEMOCRACY IN
SOUTH KOREA?
Sat 4:15 pm
Sat 2:00 pm
Walter Bagehot Research Council on National Sovereignty
Chair:
Frank P. Le Veness, St. John’s University
Matthew A. Pauley, Manhattanville College
Joseph Prud’homme, Christopher Newport University
Panel 1
CONSTITUTIONAL POWERS OF
THE PRESIDENCY: HISTORICAL
AND THEORETICAL
EXPLORATIONS
Aging Policy and Politics Group
Chair:
Panel 1
Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institue of Technology
Cynthia Massie Mara, Penn State
CROSSNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
ON AGING POLITICS
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 10:15 am
Sun 10:15 am
American Public Philosophy Institute
Brazilian Political Science Association
Chair:
Christopher Wolfe, Marquette University
Chair:
Panel 1
ROUNDTABLE: STANDING
FREEDOM ON ITS HEAD:
‘EQUALITY’ AND
‘NONDISCRIMINATION’ AND THE
SUPPRESSION OF DEMOCRATIC
LIBERTIES
Fabiano Guilherme M. Santos, Rio de Janeiro Graduate
Research Institute
Amâncio Jorge Oliveira, University of Sao Paulo
Panel 1
EMERGING POWERS AND GLOBAL
GOVERNANCE
Thu 2:00 pm
British Politics Group
Asian Pacific American Caucus
Chair:
Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay
Natalie Masuoka, Tufts University
Panel 1
ASIAN AMERICANS AND
IMMIGRANT POLITICAL
INCORPORATION
Fri 8:00 am
Chair:
Mark P. Shephard, University of Strathclyde
Panel 1
ROUNDTABLE ON PRESSURE
GROUPS AND THE POLICY
PROCESS
Thu 2:00 pm
Panel 2
POLITICS IN SCOTLAND AND
QUEBEC
Fri 10:15 am
Panel 3
MEASUREMENT AND ELECTORAL
BEHAVIOUR IN THE UK
Sat 8:00 am
Panel 4
BRITISH POLITICS GROUP
ROUNDTABLE- YEAR IN REVIEW
Fri 2:00 pm
Association for Israel Studies
Chair:
Menachem Hofnung, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Panel 1
ELECTIONS IN ISRAEL, 2009:
CONTINUITY OR CHANGE
Fri 2:00 pm
Campaign Finance Research Group
Association for Politics and the Life Sciences
Chair:
Panel 1
Albert Somit, Southern Illinois University
Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg
EVOLUTION AND POLITICS
Sat 4:15 pm
Thu 8:00 am
Chair:
Michael J. Malbin, Campaign Finance Institute
Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico
Panel 1
SMALL DONORS AND LARGE IN
U.S. FEDERAL AND STATE
ELECTIONS
Thu 10:15 am
Association for the Study of Nationalities
Chair:
Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University
Panel 1
UKRAINE: LOOKING WEST ... AND
EAST
Sun 8:00 am
191
Related Group Panels
Panel 2
Sat 8:00 am
Chair:
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
Cato Institute
Chair:
Christopher Preble, The Cato Institute
John Samples, The Cato Institute
Panel 1
ROUNDTABLE: AMERICAN
FOREIGN POLICY AND THE
POLITICS OF FEAR: THREAT
INFLATION SINCE 9/11
Panel 6
THE PLACE OF NOBILITY IN THE
THOUGHT OF ARISTOTLE,
ARISTOPHANES, AND XENOPHON
Sun 8:00 am
Panel 7
LIBERTY AND HUMAN NATURE IN
MODERN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Sat 4:15 pm
Panel 8
ABRAHAM LINCOLN: THE 200TH
ANNIVERSARY OF HIS BIRTH
Fri 8:00 am
Panel 9
THE CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT
AND THE LEGACY OF WILLIAM F.
BUCKLEY, JR.
Panel 10
LEO STRAUSS’S ‘WHAT IS
POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY?’: 50TH
ANNIVERSARY
Fri 10:15 am
Panel 11
THE AMERICAN FOUNDERS AND
FREE SPEECH
Sat 10:15 am
Panel 12
THE RECENT TERM OF THE U.S.
SUPREME COURT
Sat 8:00 am
Panel 13
THE NEW DEAL AND ITS LEGACY
Panel 14
CICERO’S POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Fri 2:00 pm
Panel 15
TOCQUEVILLE AFTER 150 YEARS:
WHAT IS ALIVE AND WHAT IS
DEAD IN THE POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY OF ALEXIS DE
TOCQUEVILLE?
Sat 2:00 pm
Sun 8:00 am
Center for the Study of Federalism
Chair:
John Kincaid, Lafayette College
Panel 1
DO WE NEED A NEW ACIR:
REFLECTIONS ON THE 50TH
ANNIVERSARY OF THE U.S. ACIR
Co-sponsored by 28-9
Fri 10:15 am
Center for the Study of the Constitution
Chair:
Warner R. Winborne, Hampden-Sydney College
Panel 1
JUDICIAL RESTRAINT AND
POLITICAL CHANGE: FIERCE
OPPONENTS OR FELLOW
TRAVELERS?
Fri 10:15 am
Christians in Political Science
Chair:
Kevin J. Cooney, Northwest University
Mark David Hall, George Fox University
Panel 1
EVANGELICAL POLITICAL
THOUGHT AND NATURAL LAW
Co-sponsored by 33-2
Sat 8:00 am
Panel 2
THE DISAPPEARING GOD GAP?
RELIGION IN THE 2008
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
Co-sponsored by 33-3
Thu 4:15 pm
Panel 3
RELIGION AND GLOBAL POLITICS
Chair:
James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage
Panel 1
CHURCHILL AND CANADA
Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy
Chair:
Jason Lyall, Princeton University
Panel 1
COERCION AND RECONCILIATION
IN COUNTERINSURGENCY
OPERATIONS
Chair:
Florence Faucher-King, Sciences Po
Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna
Panel 1
PARTY ORGANIZATIONS AND THE
CHALLENGE OF
“DEMOCRATIZATION”
Thu 2:00 pm
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy
Thomas Karako, Kenyon College
Ronald J. Pestritto, Jr., Hillsdale College
Panel 1
ROUNDTABLE: SAME-SEX
‘MARRIAGE’ IN THE U.S. AND
CANADA: LEGAL CONTROVERSIES
AND EVOLVING PARADIGMS
Panel 2
ROUNDTABLE: THE STATE OF
ACADEMIC FREE SPEECH IN
CANADA AND THE U.S.
Panel 3
ROUNDTABLE: ISLAM AND THE
WEST
Thu 2:00 pm
Panel 4
ROUNDTABLE: THE OBAMA
ADMINISTRATION: FIRST SEVEN
MONTHS
Fri 4:15 pm
Panel 5
ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND THE
AMERICAN PROGRESSIVE
MOVEMENT
192
Thu 2:00 pm
Fri 8:00 am
Committee on Political Sociology
Fri 4:15 pm
The Churchill Centre
Chair:
Sun 10:15 am
Committee on the Political Economy of the Good Society
Chair:
Stephen L. Elkin, University of Maryland
Jeremy A. Janow, University of Maryland, College Park
Panel 1
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JAMES
FISHKIN, WHEN THE PEOPLE
SPEAK: DELIBERATIVE
DEMOCRACY AND PUBLIC
CONSULTATION
Co-sponsored by 2-50
Thu 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 4:15 pm
Fri 10:15 am
Fri 8:00 am
Comparative Urban Politics
Chair:
Ronald K. Vogel, University of Louisville
Panel 1
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
AND THE STIMULUS PACKAGES IN
THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Co-sponsored by 28-10
Fri 8:00 am
Panel 2
DECENTRALIZED GOVERNANCE
AND SOCIAL INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 11-76
Fri 4:15 pm
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society
Chair:
Maurizio Carbone, University of Glasgow
Panel 1
ITALIAN POLITICS BETWEEN
REFORMS AND REVIVAL
Thu 2:00 pm
Panel 9
THEORISTS, THEOLOGIANS, AND
LITTÉRATEURS: EVIL AND
MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Sat 2:00 pm
Panel 10
VOEGELIN IN TORONTO, THE DVD:
REFLECTIONS ON THE 1978 YORK
UNIVERSITY “HERMENEUTICS AND
STRUCTURALISM” CONFERENCE
Sat 4:15 pm
Panel 11
THE PRIMACY OF PERSONS IN
POLITICS: EMPIRICISM AND
THEORY
Thu 4:15 pm
Panel 12
THE LANGUAGES OF POLITICAL
ORDER: EXPERIENCE AND
SYMBOLIZATION IN NON-WESTERN
MODES OF THOUGHT
Sun 8:00 am
Panel 13
ROUNDTABLE: THE MODERN
PHILOSOPHICAL REVOLUTION:
THE LUMINOSITY OF EXISTENCE
Conference Group on Jurisprudence and Public Law
Chair:
David Fagelson, American University
Panel 1
ACCOUNTABILITY AND THE
ETHICS OF RESPONSIBILITY
Thu 8:00 am
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies
Joseph Wong, University of Toronto
Panel 1
GOVERNING TAIWAN
Panel 2
CHOICE AND DEMOCRACY IN
TAIWAN
Fri 2:00 pm
Panel 3
TRANSNATIONALISM AND
TAIWAN’S ROLE IN THE WORLD
Sat 8:00 am
Panel 4
Thu 4:15 pm
RE-CONSIDERING THE
DEVELOPMENTAL STATE
Chair:
Augustus Richard Norton, Boston University
Panel 1
POLITICAL REFORM IN THE
MIDDLE EAST: CONTEXTS,
DILEMMAS, CASES
European Consortium for Political Research
Chair:
Luciano Bardi, Università di Pisa
Louise Hawkridge, European Consortium for Political Research
Panel 1
THE AMERICANISATION OF
EUROPEAN EXECUTIVES
Panel 2
ENERGY POLICY AND GLOBAL
WARMING: AMERICAN AND
EUROPEAN APPROACHES
Panel 3
TERRORS IN TRANSATLANTIASTILL? EUROPE AND THE UNITED
STATES FROM BUSH TO OBAMA
Sun 10:15 am
Conference Group on the Middle East
Fri 10:15 am
Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and Society
Fri 8:00 am
Fri 8:00 am
Sat 10:15 am
Sat 4:15 pm
French Politics Group
Chair:
Frank Fischer, Rutgers University, Newark
Dvora Yanow, Vrije Universiteit
Panel 1
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND
CIVIL SOCIETY: INTERPRETIVE
APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by 25-28
Sat 10:15 am
Panel 2
EXPERTISE AND PUBLIC POLICY
Sun 10:15 am
Eric Voegelin Society
Chair:
Ellis Sandoz, Louisiana State University
Panel 1
MYSTICISM AND POLITICS IN
VOEGELIN’S PHILOSOPHY
Panel 2
CONSCIENCE, EXPRESSION &
LIBERTY: PITFALLS OF POLITICAL
CORRECTNESS
Fri 2:00 pm
Panel 3
VOEGELIN AND THE ANCIENTS
Sat 8:00 am
Panel 4
VOEGELIN’S THE FORM OF THE
AMERICAN MIND AND AMERICAN
PRAGMATISM AS A SIGNIFICANT
CONTRIBUTION TO WORLD
PHILOSOPHY
Thu 8:00 am
Panel 5
VOEGELIN’S THE POLITICAL
RELIGIONS AFTER 70 YEARS
Panel 6
ASSESSING VOEGELIN’S CRITIQUE
OF HEGEL
Panel 7
REVISITING REINHOLD NIEBUHR
IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Panel 8
ANAMNETIC LITERATURE
Fri 10:15 am
Chair:
Andrew M. Appleton, Washington State University
Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University
Panel 1
THEME PANEL: THE
GLOBALIZATION OF THE ‘FRENCH
MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN
ETHNIC AND RACIAL POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 32-10 and T-14
Panel 2
POLITICAL RADICALISM IN
FRANCE: RIGHT, LEFT, AND
CENTER
Thu 4:15 pm
Panel 3
FRANCE AND EUROPE: A
REKINDLED AFFECTION?
Co-sponsored by 15-7
Sat 10:15 am
Panel 4
UNDERSTANDING RECORD VOTER
PARTICIPATION IN THE FRENCH
ELECTIONS OF 2007 AND THE U.S.
ELECTIONS OF 2008
Co-sponsored by 36-32
Fri 2:00 pm
Fri 4:15 pm
Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists
Chair:
Guoli Liu, College of Charleston
Quansheng Zhao, American University
Sat 10:15 am
Panel 1
NEW TRENDS IN CROSS-TAIWAN
STRAIT RELATIONS
Fri 4:15 pm
Panel 2
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT UNDER
AN AUTHORITARIAN REGIME:
FINDINGS FROM RECENT SURVEY
RESEARCH ON CHINA
Panel 3
NEW TRENDS IN CHINESE
FOREIGN POLICY
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 10:15 am
Fri 4:15 pm
193
Related Group Panels
Chair:
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
Panel 4
CHINESE DEMOCRATIZATION IN
TIMES OF CHANGE
Sat 2:00 pm
Panel 3
Green Politics and Theory
Chair:
Joel J. Kassiola, San Francisco State University
David Whiteman, University of South Carolina
Panel 1
NEW APPROACHES TO GREEN
RESEARCH
Panel 2
ECOLOGY, EQUITY, AND
DEMOCRACY
Thu 4:15 pm
Sat 8:00 am
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
Panel 1
A ‘SECOND TRANSITION’ IN SPAIN?
THE SOCIALIST GOVERNMENT OF
JOSÉ LUIS RODRÍGUEZ ZAPATERO
(2004-08)
Co-sponsored by 15-10
Fri 8:00 am
Indigenous Studies Network
Fri 8:00 am
IPSA Research Committee 12 (Biology and Politics)
Chair:
Steven A Peterson, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg
Albert Somit
Panel 1
RECENT RESEARCH IN BIOLOGY
AND POLITICS
Iberian Studies Group
Chair:
UNDERSTANDING EXPERIENCES
ACROSS THE SUBFIELDS:
RHETORIC, PHENOMENOLOGY,
FIELDWORK, FRAMING/
NARRATIVES, AND TEXTUAL
ETHNOGRAPHY
Co-sponsored by 46-26
Sun 8:00 am
IPSA Research Committee 36 (Power)
Chair:
Mark Haugaard, National University of Ireland, Galway
Panel 1
POWER, GOVERNMENTALITY AND
SOCIAL CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 2-51
Sat 2:00 pm
Japan Political Studies Group
Chair:
Stephanie J. Di Alto, University of California, Irvine
Paula Mohan, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater
Chair:
Deborah J. Milly, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
Panel 1
EXAMINING INDIGENOUS RIGHTS,
IDENTITIES, AND GOVERNANCE
THROUGH NATIVE AND NONNATIVE FRAMEWORKS
Panel 1
WOMEN, IMMIGRANTS AND LABOR
MARKETS: UNDERSTANDING AND
RESPONDING TO LABOR
SHORTAGES AND LOW FERTILITY
IN AGING SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by 11-2
Fri 2:00 pm
Panel 2
THE NEW POLITICS OF ECONOMIC
POLICY MAKING IN JAPAN
Co-sponsored by 6-21
Fri 10:15 am
Panel 3
THE INTERACTION OF DOMESTIC
AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL
ECONOMY IN JAPAN
Fri 2:00 pm
Institute for Constitutional Studies
Chair:
Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland
Maeva Marcus, George Washington University
Panel 1
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD:
LAW AND COURTS
Thu 4:15 pm
Panel 2
AUTHOR MEETS READERS,
GORDON SILVERSTEIN’S LAW’S
ALLURE: HOW LAW SHAPES,
CONSTRAINS, SAVES, AND KILLS
POLITICS
Sat 10:15 am
Labor Project
Intelligence Studies Group
Chair:
Loch K. Johnson, University of Georgia
Panel 1
NATIONAL SECURITY
INTELLIGENCE: A RESEARCH
AGENDA
Sat 4:15 pm
International Association for the Study of German Politics
Chair:
Dan Hough, University of Sussex
Panel 1
THE PARTY POLITICS OF THE 2009
GERMAN ELECTION
Chair:
Susan E. Orr, SUNY, Brockport
Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota
Panel 1
VARIETIES OF ECONOMIC
CHANGE?
Co-sponsored by 11-9
Panel 2
REVERSING THE TIDE? THE
ELECTION OF BARACK OBAMA
AND THE FUTURE OF ORGANIZED
LABOR IN THE US
Thu 4:15 pm
Panel 3
ROUNDTABLE: 40 YEARS SINCE J
DAVID GREENSTONE’S “LABOR IN
AMERICAN POLITICS”:
REFLECTIONS ON WHERE WE’VE
BEEN, WHERE WE ARE, AND
WHERE WE SHOULD GO
Co-sponsored by 42-10
Fri 2:00 pm
Thu 8:00 am
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Chair:
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Panel 1
DEBATING RESEARCH DESIGNS:
DO QUALITATIVE AND
INTERPRETIVE LOGICS OF
INQUIRY DIFFER? SHOULD THEY?
Co-sponsored by 46-24
Thu 10:15 am
METHODS CAFE
Co-sponsored by 46-25
Thu 12:15 pm
Panel 2
194
Sat 8:00 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Latin American Studies Association
Chair:
Cynthia McClintock, George Washington University
Panel 1
THE POLITICS OF
REDISTRIBUTION IN LATIN
AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 12-34
Sat 4:15 pm
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
Panel 2
THE PUZZLE OF POPULAR
LEGITIMACY
Co-sponsored by 37-14
Sat 2:00 pm
Panel 2
Panel 3
FREE TRADE, SOCIAL REFORM,
AND POLITICS IN LATIN AMERICA
Fri 8:00 am
Publius: The Journal of Federalism
Latino Caucus in Political Science
Chair:
Tony Affigne, Providence College
Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas
Panel 1
ROUNDTABLE: COMPLEX MODELS
FOR LATINO POLITICS:
QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE
INNOVATIONS
Dawn Carsey, Publius: The Journal of Federalism
Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University
Panel 1
UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION
OF FEDERATIONS: COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVES ON INSTITUTIONAL
CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 28-2
Fri 2:00 pm
Panel 2
NON-METROPOLITAN POLICY AND
GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 28-11
Sun 8:00 am
Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los Angeles
Panel 1
ELECTION LAW ISSUES FROM THE
2008 ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 34-12
Society for Greek Political Thought
Chair:
Leslie G. Rubin, Duquesne University
Panel 1
PLATONIC DIALOGUES ON
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND
POLITICAL VIRTUE
Co-sponsored by 1-31
Panel 2
JUSTICE, PASSION, AND SELFKNOWLEDGE IN PLATO AND
ARISTOPHANES
Co-sponsored by 41-8
Sat 2:00 pm
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus
Chair:
Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine
Meredith L. Weiss, SUNY, Albany
Panel 1
EMERGING RIGHTS BATTLES:
LGBT POLITICS TODAY
Fri 4:15 pm
Thu 4:15 pm
Fri 2:00 pm
Society for Romanian Studies
National Humanities Institute
Chair:
Gregory S. Butler, New Mexico State University
Panel 1
THEORY AND PRACTICE IN THE
AMERICAN FOUNDING
Panel 2
LITERATURE AND THE STUDY OF
POLITICS
Hank C. Jenkins-Smith, University of Oklahoma
Panel 1
’AS IF THERE REALLY WAS A
WORLD OUT THERE’:
APPLICATIONS OF POLITICAL
THEORY TO GLOBAL CHALLENGES
Steven D. Roper, Eastern Illinois University
Panel 1
VOTER, CANDIDATE AND PARTY
STRATEGIC DECISION-MAKING:
CASES FROM THE ROMANIAN
EXPERIENCE
Sun 10:15 am
Society of Catholic Social Scientists
Chair:
Kenneth L. Grasso, Texas State University
Panel 1
JOHN PAUL II AND LIBERAL
MODERNITY
Gerson Moreno-Riano, Regent University
Panel 1
OBEDIENCE, HIERARCHY, AND
AUTHORITY IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Theme Panels
Sat 8:00 am
Political Forecasting Group
Chair:
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa
Patrick James, University of Southern California
Panel 1
FORECASTING CANADIAN
FEDERAL ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 49-4
T-1
THEME PANEL: HOW
CONSTITUTIONS WORK:
DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHES
TO CONSTITUTIONAL FUNCTION
Co-sponsored by 27-7
Thu 8:00 am
T-2
THEME PANEL: THE IDEA OF
CHANGE AND THE PROBLEM OF
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 1-22
Thu 10:15 am
T-3
THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND
SECURITY: THE POLITICS OF
POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE
OF TURBULENCE
Co-sponsored by 11-39 and 18-2
Thu 10:15 am
T-4
THEME PANEL: ALEKSANDR
SOLZHENITSYN 1918-2008:
REMEMBRANCE AND LEGACY
Co-sponsored by 41-6
Thu 2:00 pm
T-5
THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE
STATE REACTIONS TO LGBT
RIGHTS CLAIMS
Co-sponsored by 47-5 and 29-15
Thu 2:00 pm
Fri 2:00 pm
Political Studies Association
Chair:
Terrell Carver, University of Bristol
Panel 1
CHINA’S WELFARE POLITICS IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Sat 4:15 pm
Fri 10:15 am
Politica: Study of Medieval Political Thought
Chair:
Fri 8:00 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Policy Studies Organization
Chair:
Chair:
Sat 2:00 pm
195
Related Group Panels
Chair:
Fri 4:15 pm
Chair:
Fri 8:00 am
Law and Political Process Study Group
CHILDREN, JUSTICE, AND
DEMOCRACY
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
T-6
THEME PANEL: CHANGE AND
COMPLEXITY IN INTERNATIONAL
MIGRATION
Co-sponsored by 16-10
Thu 4:15 pm
T-7
THEME ROUNDTABLE: DOES
POSTCOMMUNISM STILL MAKE
SENSE AS AN ANALYTICAL
FRAMEWORK?
Co-sponsored by 13-2
Thu 4:15 pm
T-8
T-9
T-10
T-11
T-12
THEME PANEL: UNDERSTANDING A
COMPLEX WORLD: COMPLEXITY
THEORY AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE?
Co-sponsored by 14-7
Fri 8:00 am
THEME PANEL: HEALTH SYSTEM
COMPLEXITY AND CHANGE:
MEASURING THE POLITICS OF
DELIVERING CARE
Co-sponsored by 48-2
Fri 8:00 am
THEME ROUNDTABLE:
INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE
AND GLOBAL DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by 3-23
Fri 10:15 am
THEME ROUNDTABLE: JUST HOW
DIFFERENT? SEXUAL POLITICS IN
CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES
Co-sponsored by 47-7
Fri 10:15 am
THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE
PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE
ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES
Co-sponsored by 3-24 and 2-48
Fri 10:15 am
T-14
THEME PANEL: THE
Fri 2:00 pm
GLOBALIZATION OF THE ‘FRENCH
MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN
ETHNIC AND RACIAL POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 1 and 32-10
T-15
THEME PANEL: RETHINKING
STATE POLICY DIFFUSION
Co-sponsored by 29-2 and 25-19
Fri 2:00 pm
T-16
THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL
ANALYSIS OF COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 31-9 and 32-18
Fri 2:00 pm
T-17
THEME ROUNDTABLE: 2008 AND
THE FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN
PARTY COALITIONS
Co-sponsored by 35-9
Fri 4:15 pm
T-18
THEME PANEL: WEB 2.0 AND
SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE 2008
ELECTIONS AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 40-2
Fri 4:15 pm
T-19
THEME PANEL:
NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Fri 4:15 pm
T-20
THEME ROUNDTABLE: NEW WAVES
IN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Co-sponsored by 2-44
Sat 8:00 am
T-21
THEME PANEL: CITIZENS’
ASSEMBLIES AND DELIBERATIVE
DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by 34-7
Sat 8:00 am
196
T-22
THEME PANEL: “FORGOTTEN
PARTNERSHIP” REMEMBERED:
U.S.-CANADA RELATIONS 25 YEARS
LATER
Co-sponsored by 49-8
Sat 8:00 am
T-23
THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA
AND THE CITIES
Co-sponsored by 30-14 and 28-7
T-24
THEME PANEL: CANADIAN HUMAN
RIGHTS COMMISSIONS
Co-sponsored by 45-10
Sat 2:00 pm
T-25
THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL
SCIENCE AND THE SHIFTING
STUDY OF ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 6-24 and 12-14
Sat 2:00 pm
T-26
THEME PANEL: EDUCATING
STUDENTS TO BE GLOBAL
CITIZENS
Co-sponsored by 9-5 and 10-4
Sat 4:15 pm
T-27
THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES
OF CAPITALISM AND VARIETIES OF
CRISIS?
Co-sponsored by 14-8 and 13-15
Sat 4:15 pm
T-28
THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS AND
GOVERNANCE OF
MULTICULTURALISM IN TORONTO
Co-sponsored by 30-13
Sun 8:00 am
T-29
THEME PANEL: HISTORY,
IDENTITY, POLITICAL VIOLENCE:
THE RELATIVE MERITS OF
QUALITATIVE METHODS TO
EXPLAIN COMPLEX AND DYNAMIC
PHENOMENA
Co-sponsored by 46-8
Sun 10:15 am
1
Political Thought and Philosophy
Division
Chair:
Duncan Ivison, University of Sydney
1-1
ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES TULLY’S
‘PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW
KEY’
Co-sponsored by 2-1
Sat 10:15 am
1-2
ROUNDTABLE: MOTIVATING
POLITICS: ANCIENT AND MODERN
PERSPECTIVES ON REASON AND
DESIRE
Sat 4:15 pm
1-3
RELIGION AND MODERN POLITICS
IN SPINOZA AND ROUSSEAU
Thu 2:00 pm
1-4
THE POLITICS OF HUNGER
Fri 10:15 am
1-5
ROUNDTABLE: AFTER THE
CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL AND
POSTMODERNISM: RETHINKING
APPROACHES TO THE HISTORY OF
POLITICAL THOUGHT
Co-sponsored by 2-2
Fri 8:00 am
1-6
TOCQUEVILLE’S VIEWS ON
AMERICA AFTER 1840: WHAT
WOULD THE THIRD VOLUME OF
“DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA” HAVE
LOOKED LIKE HAD IT EVER BEEN
WRITTEN?
Co-sponsored by 2-3
Fri 2:00 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
1-7
ROUNDTABLE: CLINTON
ROSSITER’S CONSTITUTIONAL
DICTATORSHIP: CRISIS
GOVERNMENT IN THE MODERN
DEMOCRACIES: STILL RELEVANT?
Co-sponsored by 27-1
Sun 8:00 am
1-8
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
GLOBAL DEMOCRACY AND
COSMOPOLITAN CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by 3-1
Sat 4:15 pm
1-9
FOUNDINGS AND THE HISTORY OF
POLITICAL THOUGHT
1-10
RAWLS AND THE HISTORY OF
POLITICAL LIBERALISM
1-11
Sat 8:00 am
Thu 4:15 pm
THE USES AND ABUSES OF
GEORGE ORWELL IN THE
TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
Fri 10:15 am
1-13
ROUNDTABLE: “THE WEST” AS
CATEGORY AND CONCEPT
Fri 2:00 pm
1-14
RHETORIC, REPRESENTATION,
AUTHORIZATION
Fri 4:15 pm
1-15
GLOBAL JUSTICE AND
TRANSNATIONAL POLITICS
Sat 4:15 pm
1-16
NATURE, TECHNOLOGY AND
BIOPOLITICS
1-17
RETHINKING TELEOLOGY AND
LIBERALISM
Fri 8:00 am
1-18
DEMOCRACY, AGONISM AND
POWER
Sat 2:00 pm
1-19
RIGHTS, SELF-DETERMINATION
AND DIFFERENCE
Thu 4:15 pm
1-20
MACHIAVELLI’S METHODS FOR
ADDRESSING “POLITICS IN
MOTION”
Sat 10:15 am
1-21
TOCQUEVILLE AND THE ANALYSIS
OF DEMOCRATIC POLITICS
Thu 2:00 pm
1-22
THEME PANEL: THE IDEA OF
CHANGE AND THE PROBLEM OF
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by T-2
1-23
HISTORIES OF LIBERTY
Sat 4:15 pm
1-24
POLITICAL INHERITANCE AND
CRITIQUE
Sun 8:00 am
1-25
CULTIVATING AGENCY IN LOCKE,
ROUSSEAU AND MILL
Fri 10:15 am
1-26
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL
THOUGHT: PERSPECTIVES ON THE
STATE OF NATURE
Sat 8:00 am
RECOGNITION, CIVILITY AND
POLITICAL DISCOURSE
1-28
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY APPLIED: CHANGE AND
HYBRIDITY IN THE STUDY OF
POLITICAL THOUGHT
1-30
POLITICAL THEORY AND
TEACHING
Co-sponsored by 10-5
1-31
PLATONIC DIALOGUES ON
Thu 4:15 pm
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND
POLITICAL VIRTUE
Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel
1
2
Foundations of Political Theory
Division
Chair:
Leslie Paul Thiele, University of Florida
2-1
ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES TULLY’S
‘PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW
KEY’
Co-sponsored by 1-1
2-2
ROUNDTABLE: AFTER THE
CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL AND
POSTMODERNISM: RETHINKING
APPROACHES TO THE HISTORY OF
POLITICAL THOUGHT
Co-sponsored by 1-5
Fri 8:00 am
2-3
TOCQUEVILLE’S VIEWS ON
AMERICA AFTER 1840: WHAT
WOULD THE THIRD VOLUME OF
“DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA” HAVE
LOOKED LIKE HAD IT EVER BEEN
WRITTEN?
Co-sponsored by 1-6
Fri 2:00 pm
2-4
ATHENS WITHIN JERUSALEM:
CONTEMPORARY RE-READINGS OF
LEO STRAUSS
Thu 8:00 am
2-5
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL
THEORY PLENARY: CHARLES
TAYLOR, “THE MANY FORMS OF
SECULARISM”
Fri 4:15 pm
2-6
THE POLITICAL THOUGHT OF
ISAIAH BERLIN: NEGLECTED
DIMENSIONS AND CONTINUING
LEGACIES
Fri 10:15 am
2-7
FORM, CONTENT, AND
CONTINGENCY: THE CONTOURS
OF POLITICAL THEORY
Thu 10:15 am
2-8
POLITICS AND/AS DRIVE
2-9
”WE ARE ALL DEMOCRATS NOW...”
Fri 10:15 am
2-10
ROUNDTABLE ON STEPHEN K.
WHITE’S “THE ETHOS OF A LATEMODERN CITIZEN”
Fri 8:00 am
2-11
POLITICAL THEORY AS SUBFIELD
AND PROFESSION?
Thu 4:15 pm
2-12
POLITICAL THEORY TODAY:
RESULTS AND IMPLICATIONS OF A
NATIONAL SURVEY
Fri 2:00 pm
2-13
THE PEOPLE JUDGE
Co-sponsored by 3-2
2-14
FOCUS ON METAPHOR: NEW
PERSPECTIVES ON LANGUAGE
AND DISCOURSE
Co-sponsored by 46-2
Thu 10:15 am
LIBERTY, COMMERCE AND
VIRTUE: HISTORICAL AND
THEORETICAL REFLECTIONS ON
THE SCOTTISH ENLIGHTENMENT
1-27
TERRITORIAL RIGHT AND GLOBAL
JUSTICE
Co-sponsored by 3-25
Thu 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
Sun 10:15 am
Fri 2:00 pm
Sun 10:15 am
Fri 4:15 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Sat 2:00 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Sat 2:00 pm
197
Related Group Panels
1-12
1-29
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
2-15
THE POLITICS OF GOOD
INTENTIONS
Sun 8:00 am
2-16
”CAPITALISM AND CHRISTIANITY,
AMERICAN STYLE” BY WILLIAM E.
CONNOLLY
Sat 4:15 pm
2-17
MACHIAVELLI AND DEMOCRACY
Fri 10:15 am
2-18
FEAR OF IMAGES? ROUNDTABLE
ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE
EVASION OF VISUAL CULTURE
Co-sponsored by 41-1
Thu 10:15 am
CRITICAL THEORY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS IN
THE 21ST CENTURY: A LOOK INTO
THE FUTURE WITH AN EYE ON
THE PAST
Fri 4:15 pm
2-19
2-44
THEME ROUNDTABLE: NEW WAVES
IN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Co-sponsored by T-20
Sat 8:00 am
2-45
USES OF RANCIERE
Sun 8:00 am
2-46
SPINOZA AND CRITICAL THEORY
Fri 4:15 pm
2-47
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND
MASS SOCIETY
Co-sponsored by 3-13
Fri 10:15 am
2-48
THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE
PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE
ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES
Co-sponsored by 3-24 and T-12
Fri 10:15 am
2-49
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS:
ROUNDTABLE ON STANLEY
HAUERWAS AND ROMAND COLES,
CHRISTIANITY, DEMOCRACY, AND
THE RADICAL ORDINARY
Co-sponsored by 33-4
Sat 10:15 am
2-50
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JAMES
Fri 8:00 am
FISHKIN, WHEN THE PEOPLE
SPEAK: DELIBERATIVE
DEMOCRACY AND PUBLIC
CONSULTATION
Co-sponsored by Committee on the Political Economy of
the Good Society, Panel 1
2-51
POWER, GOVERNMENTALITY AND
Sat 2:00 pm
SOCIAL CHANGE
Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee ‘36 (Power),
Panel 1
3
Normative Political Theory
Jeff Spinner-Halev, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
2-20
DECOLONIZING MENTAL SPACE:
THE INTERIOR STRUGGLE FOR
CHANGE AND LIBERATION
Thu 2:00 pm
2-21
POLITICS AND THE FORCE OF
HABIT
Thu 8:00 am
2-22
CONTESTING SECULAR
MODERNITIES
Co-sponsored by 3-3
Thu 4:15 pm
2-23
NIETZSCHE
Sat 8:00 am
2-24
BODIES, PASSIONS, DE BEAUVOIR
Sat 2:00 pm
2-25
POLITICS, ECOLOGY, AND EQUITY
2-26
GOVERNMENTALITY AND
BIOPOLITICS
2-27
ENCOUNTERING THE OTHER
Fri 2:00 pm
2-28
DEPLOYING ARENDT
Fri 4:15 pm
Division
Chair:
2-29
THEORIZING THE SOCIAL
SCIENCES
Sun 8:00 am
3-1
2-30
JUDGMENT AND POLITICS
Sat 2:00 pm
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
GLOBAL DEMOCRACY AND
COSMOPOLITAN CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by 1-8
2-31
DEMOCRACY IN MOTION
3-2
ABOUT SCHMITT
THE PEOPLE JUDGE
Co-sponsored by 2-13
Sat 10:15 am
2-32
2-33
CONCEPTS OF THE POLITICAL
3-3
Thu 4:15 pm
2-34
VISION, NARRATIVE AND POLITICS
CONTESTING SECULAR
MODERNITIES
Co-sponsored by 2-22
2-35
LIBERALISM, ETHICS AND
CULTURE
Thu 4:15 pm
3-4
Sat 4:15 pm
2-36
CITIZENSHIP AND CIVIC CULTURE
Sat 10:15 am
MISUNDERSTANDING HISTORICAL
INJUSTICE
Co-sponsored by 2-43
2-37
TOCQUEVILLE CONFRONTS THE
DEMOCRATIC MIND
3-5
WHEN ARE CITIZENS
RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACTIONS
OF THE STATE?
Fri 2:00 pm
2-38
PLATO AND POLITICAL LIFE
3-6
THE AUTHORITY OF DEMOCRACY
Fri 8:00 am
2-39
PSYCHOLOGIES OF DEMOCRATIC
CONTESTATION
Thu 8:00 am
3-7
ISAIAH BERLIN’S “TWO CONCEPTS
OF LIBERTY” AFTER 50 YEARS
Sat 4:15 pm
2-40
NATURE, SCIENCE, AND
DEMOCRACY AFTER BRUNO
LATOUR
Sat 10:15 am
3-8
UNCONVENTIONAL CONVENTIONS
IN JUST WAR THEORY
Sat 2:00 pm
2-41
POLITICAL POSSIBILITY IN THE
NOVELS OF JOSE SARAMAGO
Co-sponsored by 41-2
Sat 2:00 pm
3-9
DEMOCRACY AND COLLECTIVE
WISDOM
Sat 8:00 am
3-10
THE RULE OF LAW IN TIMES OF
EMERGENCY
Fri 2:00 pm
INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN AND
DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY
Thu 2:00 pm
2-42
3-11
MISUNDERSTANDING HISTORICAL
INJUSTICE
Co-sponsored by 3-4
Sat 4:15 pm
TOLERATION, SECULARISM, AND
THE NEW RELIGIOUS PLURALISM
Thu 8:00 am
2-43
198
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 2:00 pm
Thu 4:15 pm
Sun 10:15 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 8:00 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
3-12
3-13
SOCIAL JUSTICE, THE PUBLIC, AND
THE CITY
Fri 4:15 pm
Fri 10:15 am
3-14
SHOULD CITIZENS THINK?
Fri 10:15 am
3-15
CAN COSMOPOLITANISM CO-EXIST
WITH THE NATION-STATE?
3-16
CREATING THE CONDITIONS FOR
A DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY
3-17
IMMIGRANTS AND EMIGRANTS
3-18
THE MORAL PSYCHOLOGY OF
CHOICE AND COERCION
Thu 10:15 am
3-19
FREE MARKET LIBERTARIANISM:
IS THERE A MORAL DEFENSE?
Thu 10:15 am
3-20
TAKING INJUSTICE SERIOUSLY
Sun 10:15 am
3-21
CHALLENGES TO
MULTICULTURALISM
3-22
IS EQUALITY POSSIBLE?
3-23
THEME ROUNDTABLE:
INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE
AND GLOBAL DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by T-10
Fri 10:15 am
THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE
PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE
ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES
Co-sponsored by 2-48 and T-12
Fri 10:15 am
3-25
TERRITORIAL RIGHT AND GLOBAL
JUSTICE
Co-sponsored by 1-29
Sun 10:15 am
3-26
KANT AND RAWLS
Sat 2:00 pm
3-27
THE COMPLEXITIES OF SECURING
RIGHTS AND DEMOCRACY: A
ROUND TABLE ON COREY
BRETTSCHNEIDER’S
Sat 8:00 am
3-28
THE STATUS OF PARTY PRIMARIES
Sun 8:00 am
3-29
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: PETER
A. MEYERS, CIVIC WAR AND THE
CORRUPTION OF THE CITIZEN,
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS,
2008
Thu 4:15 pm
RESPONSIBILITIES OF CARE AND
DILEMMAS OF FREEDOM
Thu 8:00 am
ON CHAIM GANS’ BOOK “A JUST
ZIONISM: ON THE MORALITY OF
THE JEWISH STATE” (OUP 2008)
Thu 4:15 pm
3-24
3-30
3-31
Fri 2:00 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Sun 8:00 am
MODELS OF ELECTIONS
4-3
BARGAINING THEORY IN VARIOUS
POLITICAL ARENAS
Sun 8:00 am
4-4
CONNECTING THE BRANCHES
Sat 2:00 pm
4-5
MODELING AUTHORITARIAN
POLITICS
Fri 4:15 pm
4-6
WARFIGHTING WITHIN AND
ACROSS NATIONS
Sat 10:15 am
4-7
MODELING REPLACEMENT IN
DEMOCRACY
Thu 4:15 pm
4-8
AGGREGATION OF PREFERENCES
AND INFORMATION
Sat 8:00 am
4-9
STRUCTURAL ESTIMATION OF
FORMAL MODELS
Co-sponsored by 8-4
Fri 2:00 pm
4-10
REPUTATION IN INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 21-7
5
Political Psychology
Division
Chair:
Thomas J. Rudolph, University of Illinois
5-1
RACE, RACISMS, XENOPHOBIA AND
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 32-1
Fri 10:15 am
5-2
CANDIDATE EVALUATIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-1
Thu 8:00 am
5-3
FRAMING
Co-sponsored by 37-1
Sun 8:00 am
5-4
VALUES
Co-sponsored by 37-2
Fri 4:15 pm
5-5
POLITICAL INFORMATION
Co-sponsored by 37-3
Fri 2:00 pm
5-6
DELIBERATION AND SOCIAL
NETWORKS
Co-sponsored by 37-4
Sat 4:15 pm
5-7
MOTIVATED REASONING
5-8
INFORMATION PROCESSING
5-9
RISK
Thu 2:00 pm
Fri 8:00 am
3-32
THEORIZING DIMENSIONS OF
WOMEN’S EQUAL CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by 31-11
Fri 4:15 pm
3-33
DEMOCRACY AND THE
DISTRIBUTION OF CAREWORK
Co-sponsored by 31-18
Fri 8:00 am
4
Formal Political Theory
Division
Chair:
Adam H. Meirowitz, Princeton University
4-1
AGENCY MODELS AND THE
POLITICS OF AGENCIES
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 2:00 pm
Sun 10:15 am
Sat 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
5-10
AFFECT AND EMOTIONS
5-11
PERSONALITY AND POLITICS
Fri 10:15 am
Fri 2:00 pm
5-12
ATTRIBUTIONS AND JUDGMENTS
Sat 2:00 pm
5-13
CORRECT VOTING
Co-sponsored by 36-25
5-14
BIOLOGY, GENETICS, AND
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 37-12
Sat 8:00 am
5-15
IDEOLOGY
Co-sponsored by 37-17
Fri 2:00 pm
5-16
POLITICAL TRUST
Co-sponsored by 37-18
Sat 10:15 am
Thu 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
199
Related Group Panels
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND
MASS SOCIETY
Co-sponsored by 2-47
4-2
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
6
Political Economy
Division
Chair:
Cheryl M. Schonhardt-Bailey, London School of Economics
6-1
CORRUPTION AND THE SOURCES
OF DEMOCRATIC SUCCESS AND
FAILURE
Co-sponsored by 11-11
6-2
COMPARATIVE SUBNATIONAL
POLITICS AND POLITICAL
ECONOMY IN ASIA
Co-sponsored by 11-12
Thu 8:00 am
6-4
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
AND DOMESTIC POLICY CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 16-2
Fri 10:15 am
6-5
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
TRADE AGREEMENTS AND TRADE
INSTRUMENTS: NEW INSIGHTS
INTO CAUSES AND EFFECTS
Co-sponsored by 16-3
Sat 8:00 am
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
CORRUPTION
Co-sponsored by 16-7
Fri 8:00 am
6-7
DELIBERATION AND DECISIONMAKING IN MONETARY POLICY
COMMITTEES
6-8
THE GOVERNANCE AND CRISIS OF
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
Co-sponsored by 14-2
Fri 8:00 am
6-9
THE POLITICS OF FINANCIAL
CRISES: RESPONSES TO THE 20072009 CRISIS IN COMPARATIVE AND
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 16-24
Sat 10:15 am
6-11
6-12
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
MIGRANTS’ FINANCIAL FLOWS
Co-sponsored by 16-25
6-21
THE NEW POLITICS OF ECONOMIC
Fri 10:15 am
POLICY MAKING IN JAPAN
Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group, Panel 2
6-22
LEADERSHIP AND RHETORIC
6-23
TRADE AND PARTISANSHIP
Co-sponsored by 16-27
Sun 8:00 am
6-24
THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL
SCIENCE AND THE SHIFTING
STUDY OF ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 12-14 and T-25
Sat 2:00 pm
6-25
VARIETIES OF CHANGE IN
EUROPEAN POLITICAL ECONOMY
Co-sponsored by 15-12
Sat 4:15 pm
7
Politics and History
Division
Chair:
Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University
Julian E. Zelizer, Princeton University
7-1
NORTH, WALLIS AND WEINGAST’S
“VIOLENCE AND SOCIAL ORDERS”
Co-sponsored by 11-10
7-2
THE PERSISTENCE OF
NATIONALISM AND NATIONBUILDING IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 11-25
Thu 2:00 pm
7-3
BRINGING SEXUAL ORIENTATION
IN: GAY CITIZENSHIP AND
AMERICAN POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
Fri 4:15 pm
7-4
THE LIFE AND SCHOLARSHIP OF
CHARLES TILLY
Thu 4:15 pm
7-5
RETHINKING THE AMERICAN
STATE: HISTORIANS AND
POLITICAL SCIENTISTS CONVERSE
7-6
STANDARDIZING THE AMERICAN
STATE: HISTORICAL AND
THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES
Thu 8:00 am
7-7
FRESH DEBATES IN SOUTHERN
POLITICS: RACE, CLASS,
RELIGION, AND PARTISANSHIP IN
A CHANGING AMERICAN SOUTH
Sat 4:15 pm
7-8
AUTHOR MEETS READERS:
SHELDON POLLACK’S “WAR,
REVENUE, AND STATE BUILDING:
FINANCING THE DEVELOPMENT
OF THE AMERICAN STATE.”
Sun 8:00 am
Sat 8:00 am
THE POLITICS AND GEOGRAPHY
OF DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 11-19
6-10
THE ECONOMICS OF VOTING
BEHAVIOR
Sun 10:15 am
6-3
6-6
6-20
Thu 2:00 pm
Fri 4:15 pm
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
GLOBALIZATION IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 16-26
Thu 10:15 am
NEW APPROACHES TO REGIME
PERFORMANCE AND TRANSITION
Co-sponsored by 11-55
Sat 2:00 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 2:00 pm
6-13
PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES OF
TRADE
Thu 8:00 am
6-14
THE LOBBYING OF BUSINESSES,
BANKERS AND AGENCIES
Sat 8:00 am
7-9
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONGRESS
AND HISTORY
6-15
INSTITUTIONS OF MONETARY
POLICY
Sat 4:15 pm
7-10
THE POLITICAL ANALYSIS OF
POLICY DEVELOPMENT
Sat 10:15 am
6-16
THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: CAUSES
AND CONSEQUENCES
Thu 4:15 pm
7-11
Fri 10:15 am
6-17
DEMOCRATIC REPRESENTATION
AND POLICYMAKING
Thu 10:15 am
SHIFTING MODES OF
GOVERNANCE: A PUNITIVE TURN
IN AMERICAN SOCIAL POLICY?
7-12
POLITICS OF FISCAL POLICY
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND THEIR
TACTICS
Sat 8:00 am
6-18
6-19
INEQUALITY AND
REDISTRIBUTION
7-13
ENGINES OF CHANGE? AMERICAN
POLITICAL PARTIES IN
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
200
Fri 2:00 pm
Thu 2:00 pm
Fri 8:00 am
Sun 10:15 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
7-14
EXPERTS IN THE AMERICAN
POLITY
7-15
THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL POLICY:
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
Co-sponsored by 25-3
7-16
Thu 2:00 pm
Sat 10:15 am
8-16
ESTIMATING IDEAL POINTS IN THE
U.S. CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 22-7
Sat 8:00 am
8-17
NETWORKS OF ADVOCATES AND
ACTIVISTS
Co-sponsored by 35-13
Sat 2:00 pm
INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE
COURTS
Fri 2:00 pm
8-18
STATISTICAL MODELS AND
CAUSAL INFERENCE: DAVID
FREEDMAN’S DIALOGUE WITH
THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
Co-sponsored by 46-7
Thu 4:15 pm
7-18
ECONOMIC REGULATION IN
HISTORICAL AND COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Fri 4:15 pm
7-19
PRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT IN
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 23-2
Sat 10:15 am
8-19
CONSTRUCTING CROSS-NATIONAL
DATASETS: CHALLENGES AND
LESSONS
Co-sponsored by 46-23
Fri 10:15 am
7-20
THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF
NELSON W. POLSBY
Co-sponsored by 35-8
Fri 10:15 am
9
Teaching and Learning in Political Science
Division
Chair:
8
Political Methodology
Vicki L. Golich, California State University, San Marcos
Division
Chair:
Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young University
9-1
A NEW WORLD OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE PEDAGOGY
Co-sponsored by 10-1
8-1
EXPERIMENTS IN THE STUDY OF
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 11-40
Thu 10:15 am
9-2
CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN
TEACHING CRITICAL THINKING IN
THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
COURSE
Co-sponsored by 10-2
HOW BAYESIAN METHODS MAKE
THE STUDY OF LATIN AMERICAN
POLITICS SUBSTANTIALLY
BETTER.
Co-sponsored by 12-15
Sat 4:15 pm
9-3
BEAUTIFUL SOULS AND JUST
WARRIORS: GENDER, THE
MILITARY, AND PEDAGOGY
Co-sponsored by 19-1
Fri 8:00 am
8-3
COMPUTATIONAL MODELS OF
POLITICS
Fri 8:00 am
8-4
STRUCTURAL ESTIMATION OF
FORMAL MODELS
Co-sponsored by 4-9
Fri 2:00 pm
9-4
ENHANCING & CONNECTING
EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION &
CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
Co-sponsored by 10-3
Fri 4:15 pm
8-5
NEW APPROACHES TO STUDYING
PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-5
Fri 10:15 am
9-5
THEME PANEL: EDUCATING
STUDENTS TO BE GLOBAL
CITIZENS
Co-sponsored by 10-4 and T-26
Sat 4:15 pm
8-6
QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO
HUMAN RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 45-1
Sat 10:15 am
9-6
EDUCATING FOR CIVIC
ENGAGEMENT: PAST, PRESENT,
AND FUTURE
Co-sponsored by 10-6
8-7
ESTIMATING CAUSAL EFFECTS
Sat 2:00 pm
8-8
ADVANCES IN PANEL/TSCS/
MULTILEVEL MODELS
Sat 8:00 am
9-7
IMPROVING STUDENT LEARNING
IN POLITICAL SCIENCE COURSES
Co-sponsored by 10-7
8-9
ADVANCES IN EVENT HISTORY
MODELS
Sun 8:00 am
8-10
ADVANCES IN QUANTITATIVE
TEXTUAL ANALYSIS
Fri 4:15 pm
10
Political Science Education
Division
Chair:
8-11
ADVANCES IN IDEAL POINT
ESTIMATION
Thu 2:00 pm
Johnny Goldfinger, Marian University
8-12
ADVANCES IN STUDYING
REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL RULES
Thu 10:15 am
10-1
A NEW WORLD OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE PEDAGOGY
Co-sponsored by 9-1
8-13
ADVANCES IN STUDYING
ELECTIONS
Fri 4:15 pm
10-2
CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN
TEACHING CRITICAL THINKING IN
THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
COURSE
Co-sponsored by 9-2
8-14
USING NETWORK ANALYSIS
Fri 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 4:15 pm
Thu 2:00 pm
Sat 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 4:15 pm
201
Related Group Panels
Sun 8:00 am
8-2
NEW APPROACHES TO THE STUDY
OF INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 21-17
Thu 10:15 am
RACE AND AMERICAN POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 32-11
7-17
8-15
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
10-3
ENHANCING & CONNECTING
EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION &
CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
Co-sponsored by 9-4
Fri 4:15 pm
11-11
CORRUPTION AND THE SOURCES
OF DEMOCRATIC SUCCESS AND
FAILURE
Co-sponsored by 6-1
10-4
THEME PANEL: EDUCATING
STUDENTS TO BE GLOBAL
CITIZENS
Co-sponsored by 9-5 and T-26
Sat 4:15 pm
11-12
COMPARATIVE SUBNATIONAL
POLITICS AND POLITICAL
ECONOMY IN ASIA
Co-sponsored by 6-2
Sat 8:00 am
10-5
POLITICAL THEORY AND
TEACHING
Co-sponsored by 1-30
Fri 4:15 pm
11-13
INSTITUTIONAL ORIGINS OF
CAPITALISM
Co-sponsored by 15-1
Fri 8:00 am
10-6
EDUCATING FOR CIVIC
ENGAGEMENT: PAST, PRESENT,
AND FUTURE
Co-sponsored by 9-6
Thu 2:00 pm
11-14
ILLIBERAL POLITICS IN LIBERAL
STATES: STUDYING THE ‘ROUGH
EDGES OF DEMOCRACY’
Co-sponsored by 46-1
Sat 2:00 pm
10-7
IMPROVING STUDENT LEARNING
IN POLITICAL SCIENCE COURSES
Co-sponsored by 9-7
Sat 8:00 am
11-15
MORE FREEDOM, LESS TERROR?
LIBERALIZATION AND POLITICAL
VIOLENCE IN THE ARAB WORLD
Co-sponsored by 18-1
Thu 4:15 pm
11-16
DEMOCRACY, DICTATORSHIP, AND
POLITICAL SUCCESSION
Co-sponsored by 12-1
Fri 4:15 pm
11-17
CIVILIAN TARGETING DURING
CIVIL WAR: EXPLORING SUBNATIONAL VARIATION
Co-sponsored by 12-2
Sat 10:15 am
11-18
DIFFUSION DYNAMICS IN
DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES
Co-sponsored by 12-3
Sun 8:00 am
11-19
THE POLITICS AND GEOGRAPHY
OF DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 6-3
Thu 8:00 am
11
Comparative Politics
Division
Chair:
Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University
Yoshiko M. Herrera, University of Wisconsin, Madison
11-1
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
CONTENTION AND REPRESSION IN
RURAL AND URBAN CHINA
Co-sponsored by 13-1
11-2
WOMEN, IMMIGRANTS AND LABOR
Fri 2:00 pm
MARKETS: UNDERSTANDING AND
RESPONDING TO LABOR
SHORTAGES AND LOW FERTILITY
IN AGING SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group, Panel 1
Thu 8:00 am
Sun 10:15 am
11-3
STUDYING INTERESTS AND
DISTRIBUTION
Thu 2:00 pm
11-20
CIVILIAN AGENCY IN CIVIL WARS
Co-sponsored by 12-4
Sun 10:15 am
11-4
MODES OF DEMOCRATIC
PARTISAN ACCOUNTABILITY AND
ELECTORAL COMPETITION.
PROGRAMMATIC AND/OR
CLIENTELISTIC CITIZENPOLITICIAN LINKAGES?
Sun 8:00 am
11-21
COMPLEXITY AND CLIENTELISM:
THE ROLE OF MOBILIZATION AND
REGIME TYPE
Co-sponsored by 12-5
Sat 2:00 pm
11-22
Thu 10:15 am
11-5
THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL
MIGRATION
Co-sponsored by 16-1
Sat 10:15 am
THE POLITICS OF SETTLERS AND
SETTLEMENTS IN CONTESTED
TERRITORIES
Co-sponsored by 43-1
11-23
FINANCIAL CRISIS AND
CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM
Thu 4:15 pm
11-7
VIOLENCE: WHAT DOES
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
CONTRIBUTE TODAY TO
UNDERSTANDING AND
ADDRESSING GENOCIDE AND
CIVIL WAR?
Fri 10:15 am
INTER-ETHNIC CONTACT AND
VIOLENCE: FROM POGROMS AND
RIOTS TO WAR AND GENOCIDE
Co-sponsored by 43-2
Sat 8:00 am
11-6
11-24
THE POLITICS OF DEMOCRATIC
REVERSAL
Co-sponsored by 44-1
Fri 8:00 am
11-25
Thu 2:00 pm
COMPARATIVE POLITICS IN A
GLOBALIZED WORLD: WHAT
PROBLEMS OUGHT IT BE
ADDRESSING
Fri 4:15 pm
THE PERSISTENCE OF
NATIONALISM AND NATIONBUILDING IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 7-2
11-26
Fri 2:00 pm
11-9
VARIETIES OF ECONOMIC
CHANGE?
Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 1
Sat 4:15 pm
THE NEW COMPARATIVE
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF LATIN
AMERICA: ECONOMIC
LIBERALIZATION AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 12-6
11-10
NORTH, WALLIS AND WEINGAST’S
“VIOLENCE AND SOCIAL ORDERS”
Co-sponsored by 7-1
Thu 10:15 am
11-27
ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 12-7
Fri 2:00 pm
11-8
202
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON
DEMOCRACY IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 12-8
Sat 4:15 pm
11-47
THE REMAINS OF THE STATE –
GOVERNANCE WITH(OUT)
GOVERNMENT
Co-sponsored by 12-12
11-29
COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF
ADMINISTRATIVE POLITICS,
DELEGATION AND OVERSIGHT
Thu 4:15 pm
11-48
MODELING PARTY PERFORMANCE
OVER TIME AND SPACE
Sat 10:15 am
11-49
INSURGENT GOVERNANCE OF
CIVILIANS DURING CIVIL WAR
Co-sponsored by 12-9
Sat 2:00 pm
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE,
EQUALITY, AND RECONCILIATION
Thu 8:00 am
11-30
11-50
Thu 2:00 pm
11-31
PARTY CHANGE: NEW
APPROACHES TO OLD QUESTIONS
Fri 2:00 pm
11-32
TRANSFORMATIONS OF BUSINESSGOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN
DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION
ECONOMIES
Co-sponsored by 12-10
Fri 10:15 am
DECENTRALIZATION,
DEMOCRATIZATION AND
GOVERNANCE: DOES DEMOCRACY
IMPROVE LOCAL GOVERNANCE IN
DECENTRALIZED SETTINGS?
11-51
LEADERSHIP AND POLICY CHANGE
IN THE ERA OF COMPLEXITY
Co-sponsored by 25-1
Thu 10:15 am
11-52
11-33
GLOBAL POLITICAL CITY AND
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
Thu 8:00 am
DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY
Co-sponsored by 16-11
11-34
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL
ECONOMY OF HEALTH
Co-sponsored by 48-1
Sat 10:15 am
11-53
POLITICS AND NON-TAX REVENUE:
EXAMINING CAUSAL MECHANISMS
Co-sponsored by 16-21
11-35
THE CHANGING POLITICAL
ECONOMY OF HUMAN CAPITAL
FORMATION
Co-sponsored by 14-1
Sun 8:00 am
11-54
HEALTH POLICY, CROSSING
NATIONAL BOUNDARIES, AND
IDEOLOGICAL PARADIGMS
Co-sponsored by 48-4
Fri 4:15 pm
11-36
POLITICAL PARTIES AND
ELECTIONS IN DIVIDED SOCIETIES
Fri 8:00 am
11-55
Sat 2:00 pm
11-37
THE ARMED FORCES IN BUSINESS:
MILITARY ENTREPRENEURIAL
WORK IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 12-11
Thu 10:15 am
NEW APPROACHES TO REGIME
PERFORMANCE AND TRANSITION
Co-sponsored by 6-12
11-56
THE NEW BUSINESS POLITICS IN
DEVELOPING AND POST-SOCIALIST
COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 12-24
Sat 10:15 am
11-57
POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT AND
GOVERNANCE IN DEVELOPING
DEMOCRACIES: NEW
EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE
Co-sponsored by 12-25
Fri 10:15 am
11-58
THE POLITICS OF TARGETED
SOCIAL POLICY AND CLIENTELISM
IN LATIN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 12-32
Fri 10:15 am
11-59
CHANGING BUSINESS - STATE
RELATIONS IN THE EXTRACTIVE
INDUSTRIES IN DEVELOPING
ECONOMIES
Co-sponsored by 12-35
Sat 8:00 am
11-60
COLONIALISM, DEMOCRACY, AND
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 12-36
Fri 4:15 pm
11-61
CHINA AND INDIA AS
DEVELOPMENTAL MODELS?: THE
CONCEPTUAL CHALLENGES AND
POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF THE
CHINESE AND INDIAN
DEVELOPMENTAL PATHS
Co-sponsored by 12-37
Sat 10:15 am
11-62
INEQUALITY AND CITIZENSHIP IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 12-38
Fri 8:00 am
11-38
RESACRALIZING IMAGINED
COMMUNITIES: RETHINKING
RELIGION AND NATIONALISM
11-39
THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND
SECURITY: THE POLITICS OF
POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE
OF TURBULENCE
Co-sponsored by 18-2 and T-3
Thu 10:15 am
EXPERIMENTS IN THE STUDY OF
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 8-1
Thu 10:15 am
DEMOCRATIZATION AND ETHNIC
MINORITIES: CONFLICT,
PROTECTION, AND
ACCOMMODATION
Co-sponsored by 44-2
Fri 10:15 am
11-42
MIGRATION AND DEMOCRACY
Thu 4:15 pm
11-43
COORDINATED MARKET
ECONOMIES UNDER PRESSURE
Sat 4:15 pm
11-44
NEW METHODOLOGICAL
APPROACHES TO ETHNICITY AND
NATIONAL IDENTITY
Sat 4:15 pm
11-45
TRANSPARENCY, INFORMATION
AND GOVERNANCE
Sat 8:00 am
11-46
DEMOCRACY, ELECTIONS, AND
POLITICAL (IN)STABILITY
Co-sponsored by 44-3
Sat 2:00 pm
11-40
11-41
Sat 8:00 am
Fri 8:00 am
Sat 2:00 pm
Thu 4:15 pm
203
Related Group Panels
11-28
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
12-2
CIVILIAN TARGETING DURING
CIVIL WAR: EXPLORING SUBNATIONAL VARIATION
Co-sponsored by 11-17
Sat 10:15 am
12-3
DIFFUSION DYNAMICS IN
DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES
Co-sponsored by 11-18
Sun 8:00 am
12-4
CIVILIAN AGENCY IN CIVIL WARS
Co-sponsored by 11-20
Sun 10:15 am
Fri 8:00 am
12-5
COMPLEXITY AND CLIENTELISM:
THE ROLE OF MOBILIZATION AND
REGIME TYPE
Co-sponsored by 11-21
Sat 2:00 pm
THE POLITICS OF INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 14-10
Sat 10:15 am
12-6
Fri 2:00 pm
THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF
REDISTRIBUTION IN DIVERSE
WELFARE STATES
Co-sponsored by 14-11
Thu 4:15 pm
THE NEW COMPARATIVE
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF LATIN
AMERICA: ECONOMIC
LIBERALIZATION AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 11-26
12-7
Fri 2:00 pm
ACTOR FRAGMENTATION AND
CIVIL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 21-11
Fri 4:15 pm
ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 11-27
12-8
Sat 4:15 pm
11-69
PARTY UNITY AND DEFECTION
Co-sponsored by 22-3
Sat 2:00 pm
FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON
DEMOCRACY IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 11-28
11-70
MEASURING QUALITY OF
GOVERNMENT: IS THERE ROOM
FOR IMPROVEMENT?
Co-sponsored by 24-6
Sat 4:15 pm
12-9
INSURGENT GOVERNANCE OF
CIVILIANS DURING CIVIL WAR
Co-sponsored by 11-30
Sat 2:00 pm
12-10
TERRITORIAL AUTONOMIES AND
MULTINATIONAL FEDERATIONS:
INNOVATION AND COMPLEXITY IN
THE INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN OF
MULTINATIONAL STATES
Co-sponsored by 28-1
Thu 8:00 am
TRANSFORMATIONS OF BUSINESSGOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN
DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION
ECONOMIES
Co-sponsored by 11-32
Fri 10:15 am
11-71
12-11
Thu 10:15 am
11-72
THE STATE AND GENDER
EQUALITY: INSTITUTIONS,
POLICIES AND MOVEMENTS
Co-sponsored by 31-12
Thu 2:00 pm
THE ARMED FORCES IN BUSINESS:
MILITARY ENTREPRENEURIAL
WORK IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 11-37
12-12
11-73
SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE
REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN :
NEW APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by 31-14
THE REMAINS OF THE STATE –
GOVERNANCE WITH(OUT)
GOVERNMENT
Co-sponsored by 11-47
12-13
ISLAM, SECULARISM, AND SEXUAL
EQUALITY: RESISTANCE AND
CHANGE IN MUSLIM SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by 31-20
Sun 8:00 am
THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL
FINANCE: CAPITAL MARKETS AND
ELECTIONS IN THE DEVELOPING
WORLD
Co-sponsored by 16-12
Thu 8:00 am
11-74
11-75
IS THERE A MULTIMETHOD
CONSENSUS IN COMPARATIVE
POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 46-5
Sat 8:00 am
12-14
Sat 2:00 pm
11-76
DECENTRALIZED GOVERNANCE
Fri 4:15 pm
AND SOCIAL INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics, Panel 2
THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL
SCIENCE AND THE SHIFTING
STUDY OF ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 6-24 and T-25
12-15
HOW BAYESIAN METHODS MAKE
THE STUDY OF LATIN AMERICAN
POLITICS SUBSTANTIALLY
BETTER.
Co-sponsored by 8-2
Sat 4:15 pm
12-16
INTERNATIONAL DO-GOODERS
AND DOMESTIC POLITICAL
ECONOMIES
12-17
STATE RESPONSES TO
LIBERALIZING GLOBAL
PRESSURES
11-63
TAX ME IF YOU CAN: RENEWED
STATE-BUILDING AND REVENUE
EXTRACTION IN POST-COMMUNIST
EUROPE
Co-sponsored by 13-6
11-64
POSTCOMMUNIST PARTY
POLITICS: COMPARING CENTRAL
EUROPE AND THE FORMER
SOVIET UNION
Co-sponsored by 13-10
Fri 4:15 pm
11-65
POLITICAL TRUST, SATISFACTION,
AND PARTICIPATION IN TODAY’S
CHINA
Co-sponsored by 13-14
11-66
11-67
11-68
Sat 10:15 am
Sun 10:15 am
12
Comparative Politics of Developing Countries
Division
Chair:
Ana Maria Bejarano, University of Toronto
Antoinette Handley, University of Toronto
Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University
12-1
DEMOCRACY, DICTATORSHIP, AND
POLITICAL SUCCESSION
Co-sponsored by 11-16
204
Fri 4:15 pm
Fri 8:00 am
Sun 10:15 am
Thu 4:15 pm
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
EFFECTING SOCIAL CHANGE IN A
GLOBALIZED ERA: SOCIAL
DEMOCRACY, INEQUALITY AND
PRO-POOR POLICIES
12-19
FDI AND THE CHANGING
CONTOURS OF DOMESTIC
MARKETS
Co-sponsored by 16-28
Thu 2:00 pm
12-20
URBANIZATION AND THE POLITICS
OF THE CITY IN THE DEVELOPING
WORLD
Co-sponsored by 30-2
Fri 10:15 am
WHO/WHAT ARE ELECTIONS GOOD
FOR? ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION,
CHANGE AND VOTER
MOTIVATIONS IN SELECT
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 44-5
Thu 8:00 am
12-21
Fri 2:00 pm
12-22
MOBILIZING ETHNIC AND CLASS
IDENTITIES
Co-sponsored by 32-12
Fri 8:00 am
12-23
DISAGGREGATING CIVIL WARS
Co-sponsored by 18-27
Sat 4:15 pm
12-24
THE NEW BUSINESS POLITICS IN
DEVELOPING AND POST-SOCIALIST
COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 11-56
Sat 10:15 am
12-25
POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT AND
GOVERNANCE IN DEVELOPING
DEMOCRACIES: NEW
EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE
Co-sponsored by 11-57
Fri 10:15 am
12-26
ISLAM AND POLITICAL
MOBILIZATION IN SOUTHEAST
ASIA
Sat 2:00 pm
MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP:
NATIONAL IDENTITIES IN A
TRANSNATIONAL WORLD
Thu 10:15 am
12-27
12-28
MIGRANTS: AGENTS OF CHANGE?
Fri 4:15 pm
12-29
STATE CAPACITY AND CHANGE:
NATIONAL AND LOCAL LEVELS
Sat 8:00 am
12-30
GOVERNING DIVERSITY:
INCLUSIONS AND EXCLUSIONS
Thu 2:00 pm
12-31
THE POLITICS OF ETHNICITY,
SECTARIANISM AND THE STATE
Fri 2:00 pm
12-32
THE POLITICS OF TARGETED
SOCIAL POLICY AND CLIENTELISM
IN LATIN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 11-58
Fri 10:15 am
12-33
TOWARDS A NEW POLITICAL
ECONOMY OF RENTS: LATE
DEVELOPMENT IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Sun 8:00 am
12-34
THE POLITICS OF
Sat 4:15 pm
REDISTRIBUTION IN LATIN
AMERICA
Co-sponsored by Latin American Studies Association, Panel
1
12-35
CHANGING BUSINESS - STATE
RELATIONS IN THE EXTRACTIVE
INDUSTRIES IN DEVELOPING
ECONOMIES
Co-sponsored by 11-59
Sat 8:00 am
12-36
COLONIALISM, DEMOCRACY, AND
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 11-60
Fri 4:15 pm
12-37
CHINA AND INDIA AS
DEVELOPMENTAL MODELS?: THE
CONCEPTUAL CHALLENGES AND
POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF THE
CHINESE AND INDIAN
DEVELOPMENTAL PATHS
Co-sponsored by 11-61
Sat 10:15 am
12-38
INEQUALITY AND CITIZENSHIP IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 11-62
Fri 8:00 am
12-39
LOCAL POLITICS IN NEW
DEMOCRACIES: PATTERNS OF
DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE
MEXICAN STATES
Co-sponsored by 44-6
12-40
DEMOCRATIZATION, STATE
Sat 8:00 am
STRENGTH AND ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN
AFRICA: NEW EMPIRICAL AND
CONCEPTUAL HORIZONS
Co-sponsored by African Politics Conference Group, Panel
1
12-41
DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN
AMERICA: CHANGES AND
CHALLENGES
Thu 2:00 pm
12-42
FROM REBELS TO SOLDIERS:
LEGITIMIZING REBELS AND
MILITARIES
Fri 2:00 pm
12-43
CONFLICTED: VIOLENCE, COUPS
AND THEIR AMBIGUOUS
CONSEQUENCES
Thu 8:00 am
12-44
SOCIAL ORIGINS OF PARTY
SYSTEMS AND PARTY-SYSTEM
CHANGE
Sun 8:00 am
12-45
THE NEW ROLE OF COURTS IN
LATIN AMERICA: ARBITERS OF
POLITICAL CONFLICTS OR ACTIVE
DEFENDERS OF RIGHTS?
Co-sponsored by 26-3
Sat 10:15 am
12-46
FEDERALISM IN GLOBAL
PERSPECTIVE: FOUNDINGS AND
FINANCING
Co-sponsored by 28-4
Thu 4:15 pm
12-47
MASS MEDIA AND NATIONAL
IDENTITY
Co-sponsored by 38-14
Sun 8:00 am
12-48
IT’S NOT EASY GOING GREEN
Co-sponsored by 39-8
Sat 10:15 am
12-49
PROTEST AND DEMOCRATIZATION
IN LATIN AMERICA AND EAST ASIA
Co-sponsored by 44-17
12-50
VARIETIES OF PRESIDENTIALISM
IN LATIN AMERICA: ORIGINS,
SCOPE AND CONSEQUENCES
Co-sponsored by 44-18
12-51
AGENCY UNDER
AUTHORITARIANISM
Co-sponsored by 44-23
Thu 8:00 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Sat 4:15 pm
205
Related Group Panels
12-18
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
12-52
ETHNICITY, RELIGION AND
Sat 2:00 pm
TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY IN
AFRICAN POLITICS
Co-sponsored by African Politics Conference Group, Panel
3
13
The Politics of Communist and Former Communist
Countries
Division
Chair:
Michael Bernhard, University of Florida
13-1
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
CONTENTION AND REPRESSION IN
RURAL AND URBAN CHINA
Co-sponsored by 11-1
Thu 8:00 am
THEME ROUNDTABLE: DOES
POSTCOMMUNISM STILL MAKE
SENSE AS AN ANALYTICAL
FRAMEWORK?
Co-sponsored by T-7
Thu 4:15 pm
ROUNDTABLE: WHERE IS EUROPE
AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE
EUROPEAN?
Co-sponsored by 15-2
Thu 2:00 pm
ENERGY AS AN INSTRUMENT OF
RUSSIAN FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 16-29
Sun 8:00 am
13-2
13-3
13-4
13-5
13-6
13-7
PECULARITIES OF
POSTCOMMUNIST ELECTORAL
BEHAVIOR
Co-sponsored by 36-2
Fri 8:00 am
TAX ME IF YOU CAN: RENEWED
STATE-BUILDING AND REVENUE
EXTRACTION IN POST-COMMUNIST
EUROPE
Co-sponsored by 11-63
Sat 10:15 am
AUTHORITARIAN REGIME
BUILDING AND BREAKDOWN IN
POST-SOVIET EURASIA
Co-sponsored by 44-7
Fri 10:15 am
13-8
POLITICAL PARTIES IN CENTRAL
AND EASTERN EUROPE: 20 YEARS
AFTER THE FALL OF COMMUNISM
Co-sponsored by 35-1
Thu 10:15 am
13-9
THE POSTCOMMUNIST
DEMOCRATIC EXPERIMENT
TWENTY YEARS AFTER 1989:
TRAJECTORIES AND ASSESSMENTS
Sat 8:00 am
13-10
POSTCOMMUNIST PARTY
POLITICS: COMPARING CENTRAL
EUROPE AND THE FORMER
SOVIET UNION
Co-sponsored by 11-64
Fri 4:15 pm
13-11
POSTCOMMUNIST IDENTITY
POLITICS
13-12
LOCAL GOVERNANCE, POLICY
IMPLEMENTATION, AND
AUTHORITARIAN RULE IN CHINA
THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES
OF CAPITALISM AND VARIETIES OF
CRISIS?
Co-sponsored by 14-8 and T-27
Sat 4:15 pm
13-16
THE AMBIGUOUS POLITICAL
LEGACIES OF EU ENLARGMENT
Co-sponsored by 15-11
Sat 2:00 pm
14
Advanced Industrial Societies
Division
Chair:
Mark Blyth, Brown University
14-1
THE CHANGING POLITICAL
ECONOMY OF HUMAN CAPITAL
FORMATION
Co-sponsored by 11-35
14-2
THE GOVERNANCE AND CRISIS OF
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
Co-sponsored by 6-8
Fri 8:00 am
14-3
IDEAS AND NORMS IN COMPLEX
POLITICAL ORDERS
Fri 2:00 pm
14-4
TAXATION AND INSTITUTIONAL
CHANGE IN ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL STATES
Thu 2:00 pm
14-5
MODELING COMPLEX POLITICAL
ENVIRONMENTS
14-6
THE NEW POLITICS OF LABOR
14-7
THEME PANEL: UNDERSTANDING A
COMPLEX WORLD: COMPLEXITY
THEORY AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE?
Co-sponsored by T-8
Fri 8:00 am
14-8
THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES
OF CAPITALISM AND VARIETIES OF
CRISIS?
Co-sponsored by 13-15 and T-27
Sat 4:15 pm
14-9
THE FINANCIAL CRISIS - THE
RETURN OF THE MIXED
ECONOMY?
Fri 4:15 pm
14-10
THE POLITICS OF INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 11-66
Sat 10:15 am
14-11
THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF
REDISTRIBUTION IN DIVERSE
WELFARE STATES
Co-sponsored by 11-67
Thu 4:15 pm
14-12
CONDITIONS FOR CHANGE:
REFORMING ADVANCED WELFARE
STATES
Co-sponsored by 15-3
14-13
RESPONSES TO NEW
IMMIGRATION: THE EUROPEAN
UNION IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 15-4
14-14
ANTI-AMERICANISM
Sat 8:00 am
14-15
WELFARE PREFERENCES IN A
POST-INDUSTRIAL ERA
Co-sponsored by 15-5
Fri 2:00 pm
14-16
WELFARE STATE AND INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 15-8
Sat 10:15 am
14-17
WHERE IS THE LEFT?
Co-sponsored by 15-14
Sun 8:00 am
Thu 4:15 pm
Sun 10:15 am
13-13
INTELLECTUALS IN POLITICS
Fri 2:00 pm
13-14
POLITICAL TRUST, SATISFACTION,
AND PARTICIPATION IN TODAY’S
CHINA
Co-sponsored by 11-65
Fri 8:00 am
206
13-15
Sun 8:00 am
Sat 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Fri 10:15 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
14-18
YOUTH, CULTURE AND FOOTBALL:
VARIETIES OF NATIONALISM IN
ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES
Co-sponsored by 15-15
Thu 10:15 am
15-16
THE HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME IN
EUROPE: ISSUES AND
CHALLENGES
Co-sponsored by 45-2
14-19
THE COMPLEXITY OF ELECTORAL
SYSTEM CHANGE: THE ROLE OF
VALUES
Co-sponsored by 34-3
Thu 2:00 pm
15-17
IMMIGRANTS VS. NATIONAL
IDENTITY? THE PROBLEM OF
INTEGRATION IN EUROPE
15-18
RETHINKING PARTY POLITICS IN
COMPARATIVE WELFARE STATE
RESEARCH
Sat 8:00 am
15-19
JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE
EUROPEAN UNION
Co-sponsored by 26-7
Fri 4:15 pm
15-20
FACING A RELIGIOUS DIVIDE?
EUROPE IN THE TWENTY-FIRST
CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 33-7
15-21
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF
PARTY POSITIONS IN EUROPEAN
DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 35-14
15-22
EUROPE AND ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-23
16
International Political Economy
Division
Chair:
H. Richard Friman, Marquette University
15
European Politics and Society
Division
Chair:
Sven Steinmo, European University Institute
15-1
INSTITUTIONAL ORIGINS OF
CAPITALISM
Co-sponsored by 11-13
15-2
15-4
ROUNDTABLE: WHERE IS EUROPE
AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE
EUROPEAN?
Co-sponsored by 13-3
Thu 2:00 pm
CONDITIONS FOR CHANGE:
REFORMING ADVANCED WELFARE
STATES
Co-sponsored by 14-12
Sat 4:15 pm
RESPONSES TO NEW
IMMIGRATION: THE EUROPEAN
UNION IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 14-13
Thu 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 10:15 am
Fri 4:15 pm
Fri 10:15 am
15-5
WELFARE PREFERENCES IN A
POST-INDUSTRIAL ERA
Co-sponsored by 14-15
Fri 2:00 pm
16-1
THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL
MIGRATION
Co-sponsored by 11-5
Sat 10:15 am
15-6
THE HISTORICAL TURN IN
DEMOCRATIZATION STUDIES:
LESSONS FROM EUROPE
Co-sponsored by 44-8
Sat 8:00 am
16-2
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
AND DOMESTIC POLICY CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 6-4
Fri 10:15 am
16-3
FRANCE AND EUROPE: A
Sat 10:15 am
REKINDLED AFFECTION?
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 3
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
TRADE AGREEMENTS AND TRADE
INSTRUMENTS: NEW INSIGHTS
INTO CAUSES AND EFFECTS
Co-sponsored by 6-5
Sat 8:00 am
15-7
15-8
WELFARE STATE AND INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 14-16
16-4
CONSTRUCTING US TRADE POLICY
Thu 4:15 pm
MIGRATION REGIMES:
INTERNATIONAL PROSPECTS AND
NATIONAL VARIATIONS
Sat 4:15 pm
Sat 10:15 am
15-9
EXTREME POLITICS
Fri 2:00 pm
16-5
15-10
A ‘SECOND TRANSITION’ IN SPAIN?
Fri 8:00 am
THE SOCIALIST GOVERNMENT OF
JOSÉ LUIS RODRÍGUEZ ZAPATERO
(2004-08)
Co-sponsored by Iberian Studies Group, Panel 1
16-6
ILLICIT FLOWS AND CONTROLS
Co-sponsored by 18-3
Fri 4:15 pm
16-7
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
CORRUPTION
Co-sponsored by 6-6
Fri 8:00 am
16-8
THE POLITICAL RAMIFICATIONS
OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL
CRISIS
Co-sponsored by 17-1
Fri 10:15 am
15-11
THE AMBIGUOUS POLITICAL
LEGACIES OF EU ENLARGMENT
Co-sponsored by 13-16
Sat 2:00 pm
15-12
VARIETIES OF CHANGE IN
EUROPEAN POLITICAL ECONOMY
Co-sponsored by 6-25
Sat 4:15 pm
15-13
ELITES VS CITIZENS: WHO WANTS
THE EUROPEAN UNION, WHO
DOESN’T AND WHY
Thu 4:15 pm
16-9
THE CONTENTIOUS POLITICS OF
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Co-sponsored by 42-1
Thu 8:00 am
15-14
WHERE IS THE LEFT?
Co-sponsored by 14-17
Sun 8:00 am
16-10
Thu 4:15 pm
15-15
YOUTH, CULTURE AND FOOTBALL:
VARIETIES OF NATIONALISM IN
ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES
Co-sponsored by 14-18
THEME PANEL: CHANGE AND
COMPLEXITY IN INTERNATIONAL
MIGRATION
Co-sponsored by T-6
16-11
DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY
Co-sponsored by 11-52
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 2:00 pm
207
Related Group Panels
15-3
Fri 8:00 am
Sun 10:15 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
16-31
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE:
THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND
CURRENT ISSUES
Co-sponsored by 17-16
Sat 4:15 pm
16-32
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
INTERNATIONAL REGIMES
Co-sponsored by 17-18
Fri 8:00 am
17
International Collaboration
Division
Chair:
Fen Hampson, Carleton University
17-1
THE POLITICAL RAMIFICATIONS
OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL
CRISIS
Co-sponsored by 16-8
17-2
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
BILATERAL INVESTMENT
TREATIES: A DISAGGREGATED
ANALYTICAL APPROACH
Co-sponsored by 16-14
Sat 8:00 am
17-3
CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN
FINANCIAL AND OTHER
INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 16-16
Fri 2:00 pm
17-4
CREATING A DIALOGUE BETWEEN
QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE
APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS
Thu 4:15 pm
17-5
EUROPE’S TRANSFORMATIVE
POWER AND MECHANISMS OF
SOCIAL INFLUENCE IN
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Sat 10:15 am
Thu 2:00 pm
17-6
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF
TRANSGOVERNMENTAL POLITICS
Thu 8:00 am
Sat 2:00 pm
17-7
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
INTERNATIONAL LAW
Co-sponsored by 18-28
17-8
THE ENFORCEMENT OF
INTERNATIONAL COMMITMENTS
17-9
INTERNATIONAL POLICY
DIFFUSION: FURTHER
INVESTIGATION ON DOMESTICINTERNATIONAL LINKAGE
Fri 4:15 pm
17-10
INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE
AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
Fri 10:15 am
17-11
THE ROLE OF DOMESTIC COURTS
IN INTERNATIONAL AND
TRANSNATIONAL POLITICAL AND
ECONOMIC PROCESSES
Sat 2:00 pm
17-12
COMPLEXITY AND
ORGANIZATIONAL ADAPTATION IN
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Sun 8:00 am
17-13
TRANSFORMING THE FRAGILE
STATE: THE ROLE OF
INTERNATIONAL BUREAUCRACIES
IN MODERN STATE FORMATION
Co-sponsored by 18-29
Fri 4:15 pm
17-14
ACCOUNTABILITY, CREDIBILITY,
AND CAPTURE OF NGOS IN
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 16-30
Sat 8:00 am
16-12
THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL
FINANCE: CAPITAL MARKETS AND
ELECTIONS IN THE DEVELOPING
WORLD
Co-sponsored by 12-13
16-13
CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN
EXCHANGE RATE POLICIES
Thu 10:15 am
16-14
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
BILATERAL INVESTMENT
TREATIES: A DISAGGREGATED
ANALYTICAL APPROACH
Co-sponsored by 17-2
Sat 8:00 am
16-15
RESPONDING TO INTERNATIONAL
ECONOMIC CRISES
Sat 4:15 pm
16-16
CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN
FINANCIAL AND OTHER
INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 17-3
Fri 2:00 pm
16-17
PUBLIC/PRIVATE INTERACTION
AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
Fri 4:15 pm
16-18
HEATH, ENVIRONMENT, AND
INTERNATIONAL OPENNESS
Sun 10:15 am
16-19
STATES, MULTINATIONALS, AND
EMERGING POWERS
Sat 10:15 am
16-20
DYNAMICS OF REGIONAL
INTEGRATION
Sun 8:00 am
16-21
POLITICS AND NON-TAX REVENUE:
EXAMINING CAUSAL MECHANISMS
Co-sponsored by 11-53
Thu 4:15 pm
16-22
RETHINKING THE NECESSITY OF
THE STATE FOR
16-23
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
ROUNDTABLE: DAVID LAKE’S
HIERARCHY IN INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Co-sponsored by 18-4
16-24
THE POLITICS OF FINANCIAL
CRISES: RESPONSES TO THE 20072009 CRISIS IN COMPARATIVE AND
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 6-9
Thu 8:00 am
Sat 10:15 am
16-25
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
MIGRANTS’ FINANCIAL FLOWS
Co-sponsored by 6-10
16-26
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
GLOBALIZATION IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 6-11
16-27
TRADE AND PARTISANSHIP
Co-sponsored by 6-23
Sun 8:00 am
16-28
FDI AND THE CHANGING
CONTOURS OF DOMESTIC
MARKETS
Co-sponsored by 12-19
Thu 2:00 pm
16-29
ENERGY AS AN INSTRUMENT OF
RUSSIAN FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 13-4
Sun 8:00 am
ACCOUNTABILITY, CREDIBILITY,
AND CAPTURE OF NGOS IN
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 17-14
Sat 8:00 am
16-30
208
Fri 4:15 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Fri 10:15 am
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 2:00 pm
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
17-15
PRIVATE STANDARDS, PUBLIC
GOALS: NON-STATE ACTORS AS
STANDARD-SETTERS
17-16
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE:
THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND
CURRENT ISSUES
Co-sponsored by 16-31
17-17
ROUNDTABLE ON BETH SIMMONS,
MOBILIZING FOR HUMAN RIGHTS:
INTERNATIONAL LAW IN
DOMESTIC POLITICS, CAMBRIDGE
2009
Co-sponsored by 45-3
Sun 10:15 am
THE NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION
CHALLENGE IN THE MIDDLE EAST:
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Co-sponsored by 19-3
18-11
TO INTERVENE OR NOT TO
INTERVENE? ASSESSING THE
IMPACT OF FOREIGN MILITARY
INTERVENTION AND OCCUPATION
Sun 8:00 am
18-12
HOSTILE TERRITORY? IN SEARCH
OF COMMON GROUND IN THE
THEORETICAL AND POLICY
DEBATES ON MILITARY
PRIVATIZATION
Sat 8:00 am
18-13
SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT
REVISITED: THEORIES AND
PRACTICES
Co-sponsored by 19-4
Sat 4:15 pm
18-14
THREAT AS A THEORETICAL
QUESTION: MICROFOUNDATIONS
IN EMOTION, COGNITION, AND
CONSTRUCTION OF COLLECTIVE
EXPERIENCE IN DEMOCRATIC
CONDITIONS
18-15
CROSS-BORDER THREATS
18-16
CONCEPTUALIZING TERRORISM
Co-sponsored by 19-5
Fri 10:15 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Thu 10:15 am
17-18
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
INTERNATIONAL REGIMES
Co-sponsored by 16-32
Fri 8:00 am
17-19
SOFT POWER AND SMART POWER
Co-sponsored by 19-16
Thu 2:00 pm
17-20
CHANGING CONCEPTUALIZATIONS
OF SECURITY
Co-sponsored by 19-17
Sun 10:15 am
17-21
WHERE’S TRUTH AND JUSTICE?
TRACKING CHANGES IN
INTERNATIONAL LAW
Co-sponsored by 43-6
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 2:00 pm
Sun 10:15 am
18
International Security
18-17
CREATING DURABLE ALLIANCES
Thu 4:15 pm
Division
Chair:
Deborah Avant, University of California, Irvine
Dalia Dassa Kaye, RAND Corporation
18-18
Sat 10:15 am
18-1
MORE FREEDOM, LESS TERROR?
LIBERALIZATION AND POLITICAL
VIOLENCE IN THE ARAB WORLD
Co-sponsored by 11-15
THE MOTIVES BEHIND
INTERVENTIONS
Co-sponsored by 20-1
18-19
TESTING SECURITIZATION
THEORY BEYOND THE EUROPEAN
UNION
Fri 2:00 pm
18-20
POWER AND PRESTIGE IN A
CHANGING WORLD: CHINA,
RUSSIA, AND THE DILEMMAS OF
BECOMING A GREAT POWER
Fri 8:00 am
18-21
DILEMMAS IN PRIVATE SECURITY,
PAST AND PRESENT
18-22
NEW CHALLENGES IN ASIAN
REGIONAL SECURITY
Co-sponsored by 19-6
18-23
THE ENVIRONMENT AND
SECURITY: CONCEPTUALIZATIONS,
PROBLEMS AND STRATEGIES
Sat 10:15 am
18-24
NEW CASES AND IDEAS ON
INTERNATIONAL PEACE BUILDING
Sat 4:15 pm
18-25
COUNTERINSURGENCY
STRATEGIES
Co-sponsored by 19-7
18-27
DISAGGREGATING CIVIL WARS
Co-sponsored by 12-23
Sat 4:15 pm
18-28
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
INTERNATIONAL LAW
Co-sponsored by 17-7
Fri 8:00 am
18-29
TRANSFORMING THE FRAGILE
STATE: THE ROLE OF
INTERNATIONAL BUREAUCRACIES
IN MODERN STATE FORMATION
Co-sponsored by 17-13
Fri 4:15 pm
Thu 4:15 pm
18-2
THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND
SECURITY: THE POLITICS OF
POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE
OF TURBULENCE
Co-sponsored by 11-39 and T-3
Thu 10:15 am
18-3
ILLICIT FLOWS AND CONTROLS
Co-sponsored by 16-6
Fri 4:15 pm
18-4
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
ROUNDTABLE: DAVID LAKE’S
HIERARCHY IN INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Co-sponsored by 16-23
Sat 2:00 pm
18-5
POST-CIVIL WAR PROCESSES
Co-sponsored by 44-4
Fri 2:00 pm
18-6
TRANSATLANTIC HOMELAND
SECURITY COOPERATION:
BETWEEN POLICY AND POLITICS
18-7
NEW APPROACHES TO
UNDERSTANDING NUCLEAR
NONPROLIFERATION
Co-sponsored by 19-2
18-8
IMMIGRATION, SECURITY AND
THE BORDERLANDS IN THE POSTGLOBAL AGE
18-9
RECONSIDERING THE ROLE OF
UNCERTAINTY IN IR
Thu 8:00 am
Fri 8:00 am
Sat 10:15 am
Fri 4:15 pm
Thu 4:15 pm
Fri 4:15 pm
Thu 8:00 am
209
Related Group Panels
18-10
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
18-30
ROUNDTABLE ON ATOMIC
OBSESSION (OXFORD UP, 2009), BY
JOHN MUELLER
Co-sponsored by 19-8
Sat 10:15 am
19-4
SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT
REVISITED: THEORIES AND
PRACTICES
Co-sponsored by 18-13
18-31
UNIPOLARITY AND WAR IN
TODAY’S WORLD
Co-sponsored by 19-9
Thu 4:15 pm
19-5
CONCEPTUALIZING TERRORISM
Co-sponsored by 18-16
19-6
18-32
THE NPT AT WORK
Co-sponsored by 19-10
Sat 8:00 am
NEW CHALLENGES IN ASIAN
REGIONAL SECURITY
Co-sponsored by 18-22
18-33
UNIFYING ANALYSES OF CIVIL
AND INTERSTATE WAR
Co-sponsored by 21-6
Sat 8:00 am
19-7
COUNTERINSURGENCY
STRATEGIES
Co-sponsored by 18-25
Thu 8:00 am
18-34
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: AN
ASSESSMENT OF R. HARRISON
WAGNER’S “WAR AND THE STATE”
Co-sponsored by 21-8
Fri 10:15 am
19-8
ROUNDTABLE ON ATOMIC
OBSESSION (OXFORD UP, 2009), BY
JOHN MUELLER
Co-sponsored by 18-30
Sat 10:15 am
18-35
TERRITORIAL DISPUTES:
CONFLICT AND RESOLUTION
Co-sponsored by 21-9
Sat 4:15 pm
19-9
UNIPOLARITY AND WAR IN
TODAY’S WORLD
Co-sponsored by 18-31
Thu 4:15 pm
18-36
ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF
PEACEKEEPING AND
PEACEMAKING
Co-sponsored by 21-10
Sun 10:15 am
19-10
THE NPT AT WORK
Co-sponsored by 18-32
Sat 8:00 am
19-11
US FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 20-2
Fri 2:00 pm
HUMAN RIGHTS, WOMEN’S RIGHTS
AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS:
THE BODY IN IR THEORY
Co-sponsored by 31-10
Thu 10:15 am
19-12
FUTURE OF WARFARE
19-13
THE END OF AMERICAN
HEGEMONY? RISING POWERS AND
WORLD ORDER
Co-sponsored by 43-3
Sat 2:00 pm
19-14
NATO AT 60: WHAT IS THE FUTURE
FOR ALLIANCES
Co-sponsored by 20-3
Thu 2:00 pm
19-15
PREPARING FOR THE FUTURE
WHILST CONFRONTING THE
PRESENT: BRITISH DEFENCE AND
SECURITY POLICY IN AN
UNSTABLE WORLD
Sat 4:15 pm
19-16
SOFT POWER AND SMART POWER
Co-sponsored by 17-19
Thu 2:00 pm
19-17
CHANGING CONCEPTUALIZATIONS
OF SECURITY
Co-sponsored by 17-20
Sun 10:15 am
19-18
DEVELOPING MILITARY
CAPACITIES
19-19
THE BALANCE OF POWER IN
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS:
THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND
HISTORICAL ANALYSIS
Co-sponsored by 43-7
20
Foreign Policy
Division
Chair:
Christopher Sprecher, Texas A&M University
20-1
THE MOTIVES BEHIND
INTERVENTIONS
Co-sponsored by 18-18
20-2
US FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 19-11
20-3
NATO AT 60: WHAT IS THE FUTURE
FOR ALLIANCES
Co-sponsored by 19-14
18-37
18-38
LESSONS IN WAR, LESSONS FROM
WAR
Co-sponsored by 43-5
Fri 2:00 pm
18-39
ROUNDTABLE: UNDERSTANDING
POLITICAL EXTREMISM
Co-sponsored by 43-8
Fri 8:00 am
18-40
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT AND
THE FATE OF LIBERAL
DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by 43-10
Fri 10:15 am
18-41
GRAND STRATEGY BETWEEN THE
WARS
Co-sponsored by 43-11
Sat 2:00 pm
18-42
IDENTITY POLITICS AND
NATIONALISM IN CHINA:
Co-sponsored by 43-18
Sun 8:00 am
19
International Security and Arms Control
Division
Chair:
Andrew M. Dorman, University of London, Kings College
19-1
BEAUTIFUL SOULS AND JUST
WARRIORS: GENDER, THE
MILITARY, AND PEDAGOGY
Co-sponsored by 9-3
19-2
19-3
210
NEW APPROACHES TO
UNDERSTANDING NUCLEAR
NONPROLIFERATION
Co-sponsored by 18-7
THE NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION
CHALLENGE IN THE MIDDLE EAST:
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Co-sponsored by 18-10
Fri 8:00 am
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Fri 10:15 am
Fri 4:15 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Sat 8:00 am
Thu 4:15 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Fri 2:00 pm
Thu 2:00 pm
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
20-4
BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN
(1): THEORY
Co-sponsored by 21-1
Sat 2:00 pm
21-6
UNIFYING ANALYSES OF CIVIL
AND INTERSTATE WAR
Co-sponsored by 18-33
20-5
BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (2)
EMPIRICS
Co-sponsored by 21-2
Sat 4:15 pm
21-7
REPUTATION IN INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 4-10
Thu 2:00 pm
20-6
FOREIGN POLICY CHALLENGES
FOR THE OBAMA
ADMINISTRATION
Fri 10:15 am
21-8
Fri 10:15 am
20-7
THE CAUSES, CONDUCT AND
CONSEQUENCES OF NUCLEAR
PROLIFERATION AND
NONPROLIFERATION
Co-sponsored by 21-3
Thu 4:15 pm
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: AN
ASSESSMENT OF R. HARRISON
WAGNER’S “WAR AND THE STATE”
Co-sponsored by 18-34
21-9
TERRITORIAL DISPUTES:
CONFLICT AND RESOLUTION
Co-sponsored by 18-35
Sat 4:15 pm
21-10
ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF
PEACEKEEPING AND
PEACEMAKING
Co-sponsored by 18-36
Sun 10:15 am
21-11
ACTOR FRAGMENTATION AND
CIVIL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 11-68
Fri 4:15 pm
21-12
MEDIATION AND CONFLICT
MANAGEMENT
Fri 8:00 am
21-13
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
Thu 10:15 am
21-14
FORMAL THEORY APPROACHES
TO INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Sun 8:00 am
21-15
POST CIVIL CONFLICT
Sat 2:00 pm
21-16
CIVIL WAR ONSET
Fri 2:00 pm
21-17
NEW APPROACHES TO THE STUDY
OF INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 8-15
Sat 10:15 am
THE ISRAEL LOBBY AT 2.
Co-sponsored by 43-4
20-9
CORE VALUES AND PREFERENCES
FOR DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN
POLICIES
Thu 8:00 am
ADVANCES IN TURKISH FOREIGN
POLICY
Sun 10:15 am
HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN
FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS
Fri 4:15 pm
TOOLS OF STATECRAFT: FOREIGN
AID
Sat 2:00 pm
TOOLS OF STATECRAFT:
SANCTIONS AND FORCE
Fri 8:00 am
20-10
20-11
20-12
20-13
Sat 8:00 am
20-14
ELECTIONS AND ATTITUDES IN
FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS
Thu 10:15 am
20-15
METHODS, MODELS AND THEORY
IN FOREIGN POLICY
Fri 2:00 pm
20-16
ASIAN FOREIGN POLICY
CONCERNS
Sun 8:00 am
21-18
DOMESTIC CONSTRAINTS AND
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Fri 10:15 am
20-17
DOMESTIC POLITICAL STRUCTURE
AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 21-5
Thu 2:00 pm
21-19
DOMESTIC POLITICS AND
FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 20-18
Thu 4:15 pm
20-18
DOMESTIC POLITICS AND
FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 21-19
Thu 4:15 pm
21-20
DOMESTIC INSTITUTIONS AND
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Sat 8:00 am
21-21
ELECTIONS AND INTERNATIONAL
VIOLENCE
Fri 8:00 am
21-22
ALLIANCES: FORMATION AND
INFLUENCE
Fri 2:00 pm
21-23
CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
22
Legislative Studies
Division
Chair:
Patrick J. Sellers, Davidson College
22-1
THE BALANCE OF POWER
BETWEEN CONGRESS AND THE
PRESIDENT
Co-sponsored by 23-1
22-2
PARTISANSHIP AND
BIPARTISANSHIP IN THE U.S.
CONGRESS
22-3
PARTY UNITY AND DEFECTION
Co-sponsored by 11-69
Sat 2:00 pm
22-4
LEGISLATIVE PRODUCTIVITY
Fri 8:00 am
21
Conflict Processes
Division
Chair:
Daniel S. Morey, University of Kentucky
Megan Shannon, University of Mississippi
21-1
BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN
(1): THEORY
Co-sponsored by 20-4
Sat 2:00 pm
21-2
BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (2)
EMPIRICS
Co-sponsored by 20-5
Sat 4:15 pm
21-3
THE CAUSES, CONDUCT AND
CONSEQUENCES OF NUCLEAR
PROLIFERATION AND
NONPROLIFERATION
Co-sponsored by 20-7
Thu 4:15 pm
21-4
ALLIANCE FORMATION &
OUTCOMES
Thu 8:00 am
21-5
DOMESTIC POLITICAL STRUCTURE
AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 20-17
Thu 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
211
Related Group Panels
20-8
Sat 8:00 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
23-5
CHECKING AND BALANCING?
INSTITUTIONAL INTERACTIONS
AND THE (IN)OPERATION OF THE
SEPARATION OF POWERS IN THE
‘WAR ON TERROR’
Co-sponsored by 27-2
Sat 4:15 pm
23-6
PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by 38-1
Sat 2:00 pm
Fri 10:15 am
23-7
GOING PUBLIC AND THE
RHETORICAL PRESIDENCY
Fri 8:00 am
ROUNDTABLE: CONGRESS AND
THE 21ST CENTURY: FUTURE
CHALLENGES AND DEVELOPMENT
Fri 4:15 pm
23-8
ASSESSING EXECUTIVE POWER
BEFORE, DURING, AND AFTER THE
BUSH PRESIDENCY
Sun 8:00 am
22-10
LEGISLATORS’ PREFERENCES AND
VOTING ACROSS LEGISLATURES
Sat 4:15 pm
23-9
PERSONALITY, PERFORMANCE,
AND THE PRESIDENT’S LEGACY
Thu 2:00 pm
22-11
CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES
Thu 4:15 pm
23-10
CONSTITUTENT CONNECTIONS
Sat 10:15 am
CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND
THE PARTIES
Fri 2:00 pm
22-12
22-13
COMMITTEES OUTSIDE THE U.S.
CONGRESS
23-11
PRESIDENTIAL LEADERSHIP, THE
NEWS MEDIA, AND PUBLIC
OPINION
Fri 4:15 pm
22-14
WHAT HAPPENED TO
INCUMBENCY ADVANTAGE?
23-12
THE PRESIDENT IN FOREIGN AND
DEFENSE POLICY-MAKING
Sat 10:15 am
22-15
CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND
THE POLITICS OF SIGNING
STATEMENTS
Co-sponsored by 23-15
Sun 10:15 am
23-13
THE PRESIDENT AND THE
BUREAUCRACY
Sat 8:00 am
23-14
STAFFING THE WHITE HOUSE
Sat 2:00 pm
22-16
PARTIES AND PARTY CONTROL IN
U.S. STATE LEGISLATURES
Co-sponsored by 29-6
Thu 8:00 am
23-15
22-17
EXPLAINING PARTY
POLARIZATION IN THE U.S.
CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 35-16
Fri 2:00 pm
CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND
THE POLITICS OF SIGNING
STATEMENTS
Co-sponsored by 22-15
23-16
GENDER, RACE AND THE
PRESIDENCY
Co-sponsored by 31-3
Thu 4:15 pm
22-18
POLITICAL PARTIES AND POLICY
MAKING IN THE U.S. CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 35-17
Sat 4:15 pm
23-17
PRESIDENCY AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-13
Fri 10:15 am
22-19
CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS AND
ACCOUNTABILITY
Co-sponsored by 36-28
Sat 10:15 am
24
Public Administration
Division
Chair:
Sally Coleman Selden, Lynchburg College
24-1
REFLECTIONS ON PRESIDENTIAL
TRANSITIONS - THE ROLE OF
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION
Co-sponsored by 23-4
24-2
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
AND CHANGE
Thu 4:15 pm
24-3
LABOR RELATIONS IN THE PUBLIC
SECTOR: CHANGING PARADIGMS,
STRUCTURES, AND MEASUREMENT
Sun 8:00 am
24-4
GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: AN
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE ON
THE ROLE OF PUBLIC
MANAGEMENT AND POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-4
Fri 8:00 am
24-5
CRISIS GOVERNANCE: THE
ORGANIZATIONAL AND POLITICAL
CHALLENGES OF HEALTH
EPIDEMIC POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-5
Fri 2:00 pm
22-5
LEGISLATORS’ SPEECH AND ITS
DETERMINANTS
Sun 8:00 am
22-6
POLITICAL CAREERS AND
AMBITION
Thu 2:00 pm
22-7
ESTIMATING IDEAL POINTS IN THE
U.S. CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 8-16
Sat 8:00 am
22-8
LEGISLATIVE POLICY BARGAINING
AND CHANGE
22-9
Fri 4:15 pm
Thu 2:00 pm
23
Presidency Research
Division
Chair:
Randall E. Adkins, University of Nebraska, Omaha
23-1
THE BALANCE OF POWER
BETWEEN CONGRESS AND THE
PRESIDENT
Co-sponsored by 22-1
Thu 8:00 am
23-2
PRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT IN
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 7-19
Sat 10:15 am
23-3
NEWLY EMERGING QUESTIONS
AND TRENDS IN PRESIDENTIAL
ELECTIONS
Thu 4:15 pm
23-4
REFLECTIONS ON PRESIDENTIAL
TRANSITIONS - THE ROLE OF
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION
Co-sponsored by 24-1
212
Thu 10:15 am
Sun 10:15 am
Thu 10:15 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
25-10
PUBLIC PARTICIPATION,
DEMOCRATIC THEORY, AND
POLICYMAKING
25-11
AGENDA SETTING AND POLICY
CHANGE IN NEW CONTEXTS
Fri 4:15 pm
25-12
RAISING THE TEMPERATURE ON
CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY
Co-sponsored by 39-2
Sat 4:15 pm
25-13
FACTORS THAT DRIVE POLICY
FORMATION AND
IMPLEMENTATION: WHAT DRIVES
THE SCIENCE THAT DRIVES
POLICY?
Co-sponsored by 39-3
25-14
EXPLOITING NATURAL
RESOURCES LIKE THERE IS NO
TOMORROW
Sat 2:00 pm
Sun 10:15 am
25-15
’INTEREST GROUPS AND
TRANSPARENCY IN THE
Fri 4:15 pm
Sat 8:00 am
25-16
THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF
CARBON PRICING IN THE OECD
Thu 2:00 pm
25-17
OPPORTUNITIES AND TENSIONS
SURROUNDING PUBLIC
PARTNERSHIPS WITH FAITH-BASED
AND COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS
AT THE CLOSE OF THE BUSH ERA
Sun 8:00 am
25-18
NEOLIBERAL PENALITY AND
SHIFTING INSTITUTIONAL NORMS
OF RESPONSIBILITY
Co-sponsored by 27-11
Sat 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
25-19
THEME PANEL: RETHINKING
STATE POLICY DIFFUSION
Co-sponsored by 29-2 and T-15
Fri 2:00 pm
Sat 2:00 pm
25-20
CITIES AND PUBLIC POLICY
Co-sponsored by 30-7
25-21
LEADERSHIP IN CITY
GOVERNMENT AND SCHOOLS:
POLICY PROCESSES AND
OUTCOMES
Co-sponsored by 30-9
Fri 8:00 am
25-22
EXPLAINING SEX EQUALITY
POLICY: RELIGION, ECONOMICS,
MOVEMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 31-13
Sat 8:00 am
25-23
TACTICAL CHOICES AND
ORGANIZATIONAL SUCCESS
Co-sponsored by 35-12
Thu 4:15 pm
25-24
ADAPTING TO OR AVOIDING
DOOMSDAY: DEALING WITH
CLIMATE CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 39-4
Fri 10:15 am
25-25
POLICY CHANGE AND THE
GOVERNANCE OF
CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE
Co-sponsored by 39-5
Thu 8:00 am
25-26
TODAY’S SCIENCE FICTION,
TOMORROW’S POLICY?
Co-sponsored by 39-6
Sun 8:00 am
25-27
CRITICAL PUBLIC POLICY
QUESTIONS IN CANADA AND THE
US
Co-sponsored by 49-6
Sat 4:15 pm
MEASURING QUALITY OF
GOVERNMENT: IS THERE ROOM
FOR IMPROVEMENT?
Co-sponsored by 11-70
Sat 4:15 pm
24-7
CHANGING PATTERNS OF
GOVERNANCE AND
ACCOUNTABILITY
Thu 2:00 pm
24-8
BEYOND THE HOLLOW STATE:
MULTISECTOR GOVERNANCE
Fri 10:15 am
24-9
PERFORMANCE SYSTEMS IN
MOTION
Thu 8:00 am
24-10
WORKFORCE ISSUES IN MOTION
Sat 10:15 am
24-11
GENDER AND PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION: NEW
APPROACHS AND TOOLS
Co-sponsored by 31-1
Fri 4:15 pm
24-12
GOVERNING AT THE LOCAL LEVEL
Co-sponsored by 30-3
24-13
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND
URBAN GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 30-16
24-14
DIGITAL GOVERNANCE: POLICY
DEVELOPMENT AND
ADMINISTRATIVE STRATEGIES
Co-sponsored by 40-7
25
Public Policy
Division
Chair:
Sheldon Kamieniecki, University of California, Santa Cruz
25-1
LEADERSHIP AND POLICY CHANGE
IN THE ERA OF COMPLEXITY
Co-sponsored by 11-51
25-2
SYSTEM EFFECTS, PATH
DEPENDENCE, AND HEALTH
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 48-3
Thu 4:15 pm
25-3
THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL POLICY:
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
Co-sponsored by 7-15
Thu 10:15 am
25-4
GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: AN
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE ON
THE ROLE OF PUBLIC
MANAGEMENT AND POLICY
Co-sponsored by 24-4
Fri 8:00 am
25-5
CRISIS GOVERNANCE: THE
ORGANIZATIONAL AND POLITICAL
CHALLENGES OF HEALTH
EPIDEMIC POLICY
Co-sponsored by 24-5
Fri 2:00 pm
POLITICAL BRANDING: A NEW
APPROACH TO MOBILIZATION AND
POLICY MAKING
Thu 8:00 am
25-6
25-7
GEOENGINEERING AND GLOBAL
ORDER
Co-sponsored by 39-1
Thu 10:15 am
25-8
EXPLAINING THE SUCCESS AND
FAILURE OF CERTAIN HEALTH
POLICIES
Co-sponsored by 48-6
Thu 4:15 pm
IS EDUCATION POLICY SERVING
THE DISADVANTAGED?
Co-sponsored by 32-13
Sat 2:00 pm
25-9
Thu 2:00 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Thu 10:15 am
213
Related Group Panels
24-6
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND
Sat 10:15 am
CIVIL SOCIETY: INTERPRETIVE
APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and
Society, Panel 1
27-2
CHECKING AND BALANCING?
INSTITUTIONAL INTERACTIONS
AND THE (IN)OPERATION OF THE
SEPARATION OF POWERS IN THE
‘WAR ON TERROR’
Co-sponsored by 23-5
26
Law and Courts
27-3
CONSTITUTIONAL EMPIRE
Division
Chair:
Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
27-4
ROUNDTABLE: CONSTITUTIONAL
IDENTITY
Fri 4:15 pm
26-1
COURTS IN THE POLITICAL
ENVIRONMENT
Sat 2:00 pm
27-5
Fri 8:00 am
26-2
COURTS IN CRISIS AND
TRANSITION: LATIN AMERICAN
AND POST-COMMUNIST STATES IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Sat 8:00 am
ROUNDTABLE: SAME-SEX
MARRIAGE, COURTS, AND DIRECT
DEMOCRACY
27-6
Thu 2:00 pm
THE NEW ROLE OF COURTS IN
LATIN AMERICA: ARBITERS OF
POLITICAL CONFLICTS OR ACTIVE
DEFENDERS OF RIGHTS?
Co-sponsored by 12-45
Sat 10:15 am
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS:
MAVEETY AND KNOWLES ON
JUSTICES O’CONNOR AND
KENNEDY
27-7
Thu 8:00 am
26-4
JUDICIAL BEHAVIOR IN THE
COURTS OF APPEALS
Thu 4:15 pm
THEME PANEL: HOW
CONSTITUTIONS WORK:
DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHES
TO CONSTITUTIONAL FUNCTION
Co-sponsored by T-1
27-8
COURTS AND PUBLIC OPINION IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Sun 8:00 am
POPULAR CONSTITUTIONALISM IN
GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE
Sat 2:00 pm
26-5
27-9
JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-1
RELIGION AND CONSTITUTIONAL
CONFLICT
Thu 2:00 pm
26-6
27-10
JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE
EUROPEAN UNION
Co-sponsored by 15-19
Fri 4:15 pm
LAWYERING, ADVOCACY, AND
INTERESTS
Thu 4:15 pm
26-7
27-11
26-8
METHODS IN JUDICIAL POLITICS
Fri 8:00 am
NEOLIBERAL PENALITY AND
SHIFTING INSTITUTIONAL NORMS
OF RESPONSIBILITY
Co-sponsored by 25-18
26-9
JUDICIAL SELECTION AND
JUDICIAL RETIREMENT
Fri 2:00 pm
28
Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations
26-10
STRATEGIC INFLUENCES ON
JUDICIAL DECISION-MAKING
Sat 4:15 pm
Division
Chair:
Robert Vipond, University of Toronto
26-11
JUDICIAL OPINION WRITING IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Thu 8:00 am
28-1
26-12
CANADIAN COURTS IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 49-1
Fri 10:15 am
TERRITORIAL AUTONOMIES AND
MULTINATIONAL FEDERATIONS:
INNOVATION AND COMPLEXITY IN
THE INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN OF
MULTINATIONAL STATES
Co-sponsored by 11-71
26-13
JUDICIAL POLITICS AND THE
EXECUTIVE BRANCH
Thu 2:00 pm
28-2
26-14
SOCIAL IMPACTS OF THE COURTS
26-15
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: SAUL
BRENNER AND JOSEPH
WHITMEYER, STRATEGY ON THE
UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT
UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION
Fri 2:00 pm
OF FEDERATIONS: COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVES ON INSTITUTIONAL
CHANGE
Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Panel
1
28-3
FEDERALISM, NATIONALISM, AND
DEMOCRACY: A ROUNDTABLE
HONORING SAMUEL H. BEER’S
CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE STUDY
OF FEDERALISM
Co-sponsored by APSA
28-4
FEDERALISM IN GLOBAL
PERSPECTIVE: FOUNDINGS AND
FINANCING
Co-sponsored by 12-46
28-5
FEDERALISM, MEDICAID, AND
CHANGING MODES OF SOCIAL
SERVICE DELIVERY
25-28
26-3
27
Constitutional Law and Jurisprudence
Division
Chair:
Mark E. Brandon, Vanderbilt Law School
Pamela Brandwein, University of Michigan
27-1
ROUNDTABLE: CLINTON
ROSSITER’S CONSTITUTIONAL
DICTATORSHIP: CRISIS
GOVERNMENT IN THE MODERN
DEMOCRACIES: STILL RELEVANT?
Co-sponsored by 1-7
214
Thu 10:15 am
Fri 8:00 am
Sun 10:15 am
Sun 8:00 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Sat 8:00 am
Thu 8:00 am
Sat 2:00 pm
Thu 4:15 pm
Sat 8:00 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
28-6
FEDERAL MANDATES IN THE
STATES: IMPLEMENTATION AND
RESISTANCE
Co-sponsored by 29-14
28-7
THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA
AND THE CITIES
Co-sponsored by 30-14 and T-23
28-8
28-9
28-11
POLICY RESPONSIVENESS IN THE
STATES
Co-sponsored by 37-6
29-12
KEY CONCEPTS IN STATE POLITICS
AND POLICY RESEARCH
29-13
GUBERNATORIAL POLITICS
Fri 4:15 pm
29-14
FEDERAL MANDATES IN THE
STATES: IMPLEMENTATION AND
RESISTANCE
Co-sponsored by 28-6
Sat 4:15 pm
29-15
THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE
STATE REACTIONS TO LGBT
RIGHTS CLAIMS
Co-sponsored by 47-5 and T-5
30
Urban Politics
Division
Chair:
Peter F. Burns, Loyola University New Orleans
Kristin Ruth Good, Dalhousie University
30-1
POLITICS, RACE AND THE CITY
Co-sponsored by 32-2
Thu 2:00 pm
30-2
URBANIZATION AND THE POLITICS
OF THE CITY IN THE DEVELOPING
WORLD
Co-sponsored by 12-20
Fri 10:15 am
30-3
GOVERNING AT THE LOCAL LEVEL
Co-sponsored by 24-12
Sun 10:15 am
30-4
THE ONCE AND FUTURE STUDY OF
CITY POLITICS: OVERCOMING THE
MALAISE ABOUT THEORY
Fri 10:15 am
30-5
ROUNDTABLE: A REEXAMINATION
ON THE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF
CLARENCE STONE’S REGIME
POLITICS: GOVERNING ATLANTA:
1946-1988
Fri 2:00 pm
30-6
URBAN CAMPAIGNS, VOTING, AND
ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-4
Thu 8:00 am
30-7
CITIES AND PUBLIC POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-20
Thu 10:15 am
30-8
RAINBOW’S END? AN
EXAMINATION OF AN URBAN
CLASSIC
Co-sponsored by 32-15
Thu 4:15 pm
30-9
LEADERSHIP IN CITY
GOVERNMENT AND SCHOOLS:
POLICY PROCESSES AND
OUTCOMES
Co-sponsored by 25-21
Fri 8:00 am
30-10
ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN
CITIES
Co-sponsored by 42-3
Fri 4:15 pm
30-11
NEW DIRECTIONS IN URBAN/
LOCAL POLITICS RESEARCH
Fri 10:15 am
30-12
ROUNDTABLE: STUDYING
CANADIAN CITIES: A SUB-FIELD IN
MOTION
Co-sponsored by 49-2
Thu 2:00 pm
30-13
THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS AND
GOVERNANCE OF
MULTICULTURALISM IN TORONTO
Co-sponsored by T-28
Sun 8:00 am
Sat 10:15 am
Sat 4:15 pm
DO WE NEED A NEW ACIR:
Fri 10:15 am
REFLECTIONS ON THE 50TH
ANNIVERSARY OF THE U.S. ACIR
Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism, Panel
1
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
Fri 8:00 am
AND THE STIMULUS PACKAGES IN
THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics, Panel 1
NON-METROPOLITAN POLICY AND
Sun 8:00 am
GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Panel
2
29
State Politics and Policy Section
Division
Chair:
Beth Reingold, Emory University
29-1
JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 26-6
29-2
THEME PANEL: RETHINKING
STATE POLICY DIFFUSION
Co-sponsored by 25-19 and T-15
Fri 2:00 pm
29-3
ELECTING WOMEN TO STATE AND
LOCAL OFFICE
Co-sponsored by 31-2
Fri 4:15 pm
29-4
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND
REPRESENTATION IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 32-14
Fri 8:00 am
29-5
POLITICS AND PUNISHMENT IN
THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 42-2
Sun 8:00 am
29-6
PARTIES AND PARTY CONTROL IN
U.S. STATE LEGISLATURES
Co-sponsored by 22-16
Thu 8:00 am
29-7
SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY IN THE
STATES
Sun 10:15 am
29-8
ELECTORAL REFORM, VOTING
TECHNOLOGY, AND EQUAL
ACCESS
Co-sponsored by 36-3
Fri 10:15 am
29-9
PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE
STATES
Co-sponsored by 35-2
Sat 8:00 am
CONNECTICUT’S NEW PUBLIC
FINANCING SYSTEM: A FIRST
LOOK
Sat 2:00 pm
29-10
29-11
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 4:15 pm
Thu 2:00 pm
215
Related Group Panels
28-10
ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE
KNOW ABOUT TERRITORIAL
RESCALING, HOW DO WE KNOW IT
AND WHY SHOULD WE STUDY IT:
PERSPECTIVES FROM THE UNITED
STATES AND CANADA
Co-sponsored by 30-15
Sat 4:15 pm
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
30-14
THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA
AND THE CITIES
Co-sponsored by 28-7 and T-23
Sat 10:15 am
30-15
ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE
KNOW ABOUT TERRITORIAL
RESCALING, HOW DO WE KNOW IT
AND WHY SHOULD WE STUDY IT:
PERSPECTIVES FROM THE UNITED
STATES AND CANADA
Co-sponsored by 28-8
Sat 4:15 pm
30-16
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND
URBAN GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 24-13
Sat 8:00 am
30-17
ORGANIZING DIVERSE
COMMUNITIES: NEW STRATEGIES
FOR A NEW CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 42-5
Women and Politics Research Section
Division
Chair:
S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University
31-1
GENDER AND PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION: NEW
APPROACHS AND TOOLS
Co-sponsored by 24-11
Fri 4:15 pm
31-2
ELECTING WOMEN TO STATE AND
LOCAL OFFICE
Co-sponsored by 29-3
Fri 4:15 pm
31-3
GENDER, RACE AND THE
PRESIDENCY
Co-sponsored by 23-16
Thu 4:15 pm
31-4
ELECTED OFFICIALS AT THE
INTERSECTION OF GENDER AND
RACE
Co-sponsored by 32-16
Fri 10:15 am
BETWEEN MINORITY INCLUSION
AND GENDER EQUALITY?
ANALYZING IDENTITIES AND
INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 32-17
Sat 4:15 pm
GENDER IN CANADIAN POLITICS
AND POLICY
Co-sponsored by 49-3
Thu 8:00 am
GENDERING POLITICAL
ORGANIZING: WOMEN, MEN AND
ACTIVISM IN THE US
Co-sponsored by 35-3
Sun 8:00 am
SELLING SEX, SELLING SELVES?
GENDER, THE SEX TRADE AND
THE STATE
Co-sponsored by 47-1
Sat 10:15 am
31-6
31-7
31-8
31-9
31-10
31-11
216
THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL
ANALYSIS OF COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 32-18 and T-16
HUMAN RIGHTS, WOMEN’S RIGHTS
AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS:
THE BODY IN IR THEORY
Co-sponsored by 18-37
THEORIZING DIMENSIONS OF
WOMEN’S EQUAL CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by 3-32
THE STATE AND GENDER
EQUALITY: INSTITUTIONS,
POLICIES AND MOVEMENTS
Co-sponsored by 11-72
31-13
EXPLAINING SEX EQUALITY
POLICY: RELIGION, ECONOMICS,
MOVEMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 25-22
31-14
SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE
REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN :
NEW APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by 11-73
31-15
WOMEN IN MOTION: ADVANCES
AND SETBACKS IN IMPLEMENTING
WOMEN’S RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 45-4
Fri 10:15 am
31-16
THE POLITICS OF BACKLASH:
THEORY AND CASE STUDIES IN
DYNAMIC RESISTANCE
Co-sponsored by 42-4
Thu 4:15 pm
31-17
THE IMPACT OF GENDER QUOTAS:
DESCRIPTIVE, SUBSTANTIVE, AND
SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATION
Co-sponsored by 34-1
Sat 2:00 pm
31-18
DEMOCRACY AND THE
DISTRIBUTION OF CAREWORK
Co-sponsored by 3-33
Fri 8:00 am
31-19
BLACK FEMINIST
INTERSECTIONALITY IN ACTION:
A ROUNDTABLE ON BLACK
WOMEN, CULTURAL IMAGES, AND
SOCIAL POLICY
Co-sponsored by 32-19
Sat 10:15 am
31-20
ISLAM, SECULARISM, AND SEXUAL
EQUALITY: RESISTANCE AND
CHANGE IN MUSLIM SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by 11-74
Sun 8:00 am
31-21
THE BEST WOMEN FOR THE JOB:
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON
FEMALE POLITICIANS’ PATHWAYS
TO POWER
Co-sponsored by 34-9
Thu 8:00 am
31-22
GENDER AND VOTER BEHAVIOR:
2008 AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 36-22
Fri 8:00 am
31-23
GENDER AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-20
Sat 8:00 am
31-24
GENDERED POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by 38-16
Sat 2:00 pm
31-25
THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND
WOMEN
Co-sponsored by 41-5
Fri 4:15 pm
31-26
STATES OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE:
WHAT ELSE IS AT STAKE?
Co-sponsored by 47-2
Fri 2:00 pm
31-27
GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 47-4
Fri 4:15 pm
Thu 8:00 am
31
31-5
31-12
Fri 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Fri 4:15 pm
Thu 2:00 pm
Sat 8:00 am
Sun 10:15 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Division
Chair:
Diane-Michele Prindeville, New Mexico State University
Mark Q. Sawyer, University of California, Los Angeles
32-1
RACE, RACISMS, XENOPHOBIA AND
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 5-1
Fri 10:15 am
32-2
POLITICS, RACE AND THE CITY
Co-sponsored by 30-1
Thu 2:00 pm
32-3
PAN-ETHNICITY, EXPLORING NEW
HORIZONS IN IDENTITY
32-4
COMPARATIVE RACIAL AND
ETHNIC POLITICS
Thu 4:15 pm
32-5
COALITIONS, AND MINORITY
POLITICS
Sat 2:00 pm
32-6
RACE, ETHNICITY, POPULAR
CULTURE AND POLITICS
Fri 4:15 pm
Sat 8:00 am
32-7
ASSIMILATION, INCORPORATION
OR RACIALIZATION?
Sat 4:15 pm
32-8
GENDER, RACE AND SEXUALITY
Thu 10:15 am
32-9
POLICY FOCUS ON FAT POOR
MINORITIES: FROM WELFARE
REFORM TO FRESH FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES
Thu 8:00 am
32-10
THEME PANEL: THE
Fri 2:00 pm
GLOBALIZATION OF THE ‘FRENCH
MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN
ETHNIC AND RACIAL POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 1 and T-14
32-11
RACE AND AMERICAN POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 7-16
Sun 8:00 am
32-12
MOBILIZING ETHNIC AND CLASS
IDENTITIES
Co-sponsored by 12-22
Fri 8:00 am
32-13
IS EDUCATION POLICY SERVING
THE DISADVANTAGED?
Co-sponsored by 25-9
Sat 2:00 pm
32-14
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND
REPRESENTATION IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-4
Fri 8:00 am
32-15
32-16
32-17
32-18
RAINBOW’S END? AN
EXAMINATION OF AN URBAN
CLASSIC
Co-sponsored by 30-8
Thu 4:15 pm
ELECTED OFFICIALS AT THE
INTERSECTION OF GENDER AND
RACE
Co-sponsored by 31-4
Fri 10:15 am
BETWEEN MINORITY INCLUSION
AND GENDER EQUALITY?
ANALYZING IDENTITIES AND
INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 31-5
Sat 4:15 pm
THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL
ANALYSIS OF COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 31-9 and T-16
Fri 2:00 pm
32-19
BLACK FEMINIST
INTERSECTIONALITY IN ACTION:
A ROUNDTABLE ON BLACK
WOMEN, CULTURAL IMAGES, AND
SOCIAL POLICY
Co-sponsored by 31-19
Sat 10:15 am
32-20
RACE AND ELECTORAL POLITICS
IN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 36-15
Thu 4:15 pm
32-21
PREJUDICE, RACISM, RACIAL
THREAT, AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-22
Fri 4:15 pm
32-22
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE
POLITICS OF SAME-SEX
MARRIAGE
Co-sponsored by 47-3
Sat 2:00 pm
33
Religion and Politics
Division
Chair:
James Matthew Wilson, Southern Methodist University
33-1
RELIGION AND AMERICAN
PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 36-5
33-2
EVANGELICAL POLITICAL
Sat 8:00 am
THOUGHT AND NATURAL LAW
Co-sponsored by Christians in Political Science, Panel 1
33-3
THE DISAPPEARING GOD GAP?
Thu 4:15 pm
RELIGION IN THE 2008
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
Co-sponsored by Christians in Political Science, Panel 2
33-4
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS:
ROUNDTABLE ON STANLEY
HAUERWAS AND ROMAND COLES,
CHRISTIANITY, DEMOCRACY, AND
THE RADICAL ORDINARY
Co-sponsored by 2-49
Sat 10:15 am
33-5
RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN
DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES:
EVIDENCE FROM FIVE MUSLIM
DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 44-9
Sun 8:00 am
33-6
RELIGIOUS POLITICAL PARTIES IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 35-4
33-7
FACING A RELIGIOUS DIVIDE?
EUROPE IN THE TWENTY-FIRST
CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 15-20
33-8
RELIGION AND EUROPEAN
POLITICS
Thu 8:00 am
33-9
POLITICS AND RELIGION IN THE
AMERICAN FOUNDING ERA
Thu 2:00 pm
33-10
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS:
ROUNDTABLE ON MELISSA
DECKMAN’S SCHOOL BOARD
BATTLES
Sat 2:00 pm
33-11
RELIGION AND POLITICS IN
CANADA
Co-sponsored by 49-5
Sat 10:15 am
Fri 2:00 pm
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 10:15 am
217
Related Group Panels
32
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
35-4
RELIGIOUS POLITICAL PARTIES IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 33-6
Fri 8:00 am
35-5
PARTY LINKAGE AND PARTY
GOVERNMENT IN CONTEMPORARY
DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 34-10
Fri 8:00 am
35-6
THE POLITICS OF PRESIDENTIAL
NOMINATIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-7
Sat 8:00 am
35-7
STABILITY AND CHANGE IN
AMERICAN PARTISANSHIP
Co-sponsored by 36-8
Sat 10:15 am
35-8
THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF
NELSON W. POLSBY
Co-sponsored by 7-20
Fri 10:15 am
35-9
THEME ROUNDTABLE: 2008 AND
THE FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN
PARTY COALITIONS
Co-sponsored by T-17
Thu 10:15 am
35-10
AUTHOR MEETS READERS: LARRY
BARTELS’ ‘UNEQUAL
DEMOCRACY’
Sat 8:00 am
35-11
ADVOCACY AND LEGISLATIVE
ACTIVITY
35-12
TACTICAL CHOICES AND
ORGANIZATIONAL SUCCESS
Co-sponsored by 25-23
35-13
NETWORKS OF ADVOCATES AND
ACTIVISTS
Co-sponsored by 8-17
Sat 2:00 pm
35-14
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF
PARTY POSITIONS IN EUROPEAN
DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 15-21
Sat 10:15 am
35-15
PARTY POLITICS AND
LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS
Fri 8:00 am
35-16
EXPLAINING PARTY
POLARIZATION IN THE U.S.
CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 22-17
Fri 2:00 pm
35-17
POLITICAL PARTIES AND POLICY
MAKING IN THE U.S. CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 22-18
Sat 4:15 pm
34
Representation and Electoral Systems
Division
Chair:
Jack Vowles, University of Exeter
34-1
THE IMPACT OF GENDER QUOTAS:
DESCRIPTIVE, SUBSTANTIVE, AND
SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATION
Co-sponsored by 31-17
Sat 2:00 pm
34-2
TURNOUT AND ELECTORAL
INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-6
Sat 2:00 pm
34-3
THE COMPLEXITY OF ELECTORAL
SYSTEM CHANGE: THE ROLE OF
VALUES
Co-sponsored by 14-19
Thu 2:00 pm
34-4
MINORITY AND DESCRIPTIVE
REPRESENTATION
Sat 4:15 pm
34-5
COMPARING THE
REPRESENTATIVE OUTCOMES OF
INSTITUTIONAL DIFFERENCES
Fri 4:15 pm
34-6
BEYOND THE BALLOT BOX:
INSTITUTIONS, PARTICIPATION
AND REPRESENTATION
34-7
THEME PANEL: CITIZENS’
ASSEMBLIES AND DELIBERATIVE
DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by T-21
Fri 4:15 pm
Thu 2:00 pm
Sat 2:00 pm
Thu 4:15 pm
34-8
REPRESENTATION AND
LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR
Fri 10:15 am
34-9
THE BEST WOMEN FOR THE JOB:
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON
FEMALE POLITICIANS’ PATHWAYS
TO POWER
Co-sponsored by 31-21
Thu 8:00 am
PARTY LINKAGE AND PARTY
GOVERNMENT IN CONTEMPORARY
DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 35-5
Fri 8:00 am
34-11
BIAS AND RESPONSIVENESS IN
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
Co-sponsored by 36-34
Fri 2:00 pm
34-12
ELECTION LAW ISSUES FROM THE
Sat 2:00 pm
2008 ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by Law and Political Process Study Group,
Panel 1
35
Political Organizations and Parties
36
Elections and Voting Behavior
Division
Chair:
Marie Hojnacki, Pennsylvania State University
Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame
Division
Chair:
Christopher J. Anderson, Cornell University
35-1
POLITICAL PARTIES IN CENTRAL
AND EASTERN EUROPE: 20 YEARS
AFTER THE FALL OF COMMUNISM
Co-sponsored by 13-8
36-1
CANDIDATE EVALUATIONS
Co-sponsored by 5-2
36-2
PECULARITIES OF
POSTCOMMUNIST ELECTORAL
BEHAVIOR
Co-sponsored by 13-5
Fri 8:00 am
36-3
ELECTORAL REFORM, VOTING
TECHNOLOGY, AND EQUAL
ACCESS
Co-sponsored by 29-8
Fri 10:15 am
36-4
URBAN CAMPAIGNS, VOTING, AND
ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 30-6
Thu 8:00 am
34-10
Thu 10:15 am
35-2
PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE
STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-9
Sat 8:00 am
35-3
GENDERING POLITICAL
ORGANIZING: WOMEN, MEN AND
ACTIVISM IN THE US
Co-sponsored by 31-7
Sun 8:00 am
218
Thu 8:00 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
36-5
RELIGION AND AMERICAN
PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 33-1
Fri 2:00 pm
36-6
TURNOUT AND ELECTORAL
INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 34-2
Sat 2:00 pm
36-7
THE POLITICS OF PRESIDENTIAL
NOMINATIONS
Co-sponsored by 35-6
Sat 8:00 am
36-8
STABILITY AND CHANGE IN
AMERICAN PARTISANSHIP
Co-sponsored by 35-7
LEARNING, PERSISTENCE, AND
HABITS IN VOTING
36-31
REVISITING THE AMERICAN
VOTER
Co-sponsored by 37-10
36-32
UNDERSTANDING RECORD VOTER
Fri 4:15 pm
PARTICIPATION IN THE FRENCH
ELECTIONS OF 2007 AND THE U.S.
ELECTIONS OF 2008
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 4
36-33
WHAT’S NOW AND WHAT’S NEXT:
THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF
THE AMERICAN NATIONAL
ELECTION STUDIES
Co-sponsored by 37-11
Sat 4:15 pm
36-34
BIAS AND RESPONSIVENESS IN
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
Co-sponsored by 34-11
Fri 2:00 pm
36-35
A TASTE FOR POLITICS: THE
ROOTS AND DYNAMICS OF
POLITICAL INTEREST
37
Public Opinion
Division
Chair:
Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University
37-1
FRAMING
Co-sponsored by 5-3
Sun 8:00 am
37-2
VALUES
Co-sponsored by 5-4
Fri 4:15 pm
37-3
POLITICAL INFORMATION
Co-sponsored by 5-5
Fri 2:00 pm
37-4
DELIBERATION AND SOCIAL
NETWORKS
Co-sponsored by 5-6
Sat 4:15 pm
37-5
NEW APPROACHES TO STUDYING
PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 8-5
Fri 10:15 am
37-6
POLICY RESPONSIVENESS IN THE
STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-11
Thu 10:15 am
37-7
ELECTIONS AND THE ECONOMY:
NEW DIRECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-9
Fri 8:00 am
37-8
THE 2008 ELECTION AND THE
FUTURE OF AMERICAN POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 36-10
Fri 2:00 pm
37-9
POLARIZATION
Co-sponsored by 36-12
Sun 8:00 am
37-10
REVISITING THE AMERICAN
VOTER
Co-sponsored by 36-31
37-11
WHAT’S NOW AND WHAT’S NEXT:
THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF
THE AMERICAN NATIONAL
ELECTION STUDIES
Co-sponsored by 36-33
Sat 4:15 pm
Sat 8:00 am
Sat 10:15 am
ELECTIONS AND THE ECONOMY:
NEW DIRECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 37-7
Fri 8:00 am
36-10
THE 2008 ELECTION AND THE
FUTURE OF AMERICAN POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 37-8
Fri 2:00 pm
36-11
FIELD EXPERIMENTS AND
MOBILIZATION
Fri 8:00 am
36-12
POLARIZATION
Co-sponsored by 37-9
Sun 8:00 am
36-13
MONEY IN AMERICAN ELECTIONS
Fri 10:15 am
36-14
VOTERS AND CANDIDATES
Sat 10:15 am
36-15
RACE AND ELECTORAL POLITICS
IN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 32-20
Thu 4:15 pm
THE AMERICAN VOTER IN
CONTEXT: NEIGHBORHOODS,
SOCIAL ENVIRONMENTS, AND THE
VOTE
Fri 4:15 pm
36-17
VOTERS, ELECTIONS, AND THE
INTERNET
Sun 10:15 am
36-18
EXPLAINING TURNOUT IN
AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTIONS
36-19
VOTERS AND WELFARE STATES
36-20
HOW ELECTION RULES AND
ADMINISTRATION AFFECT VOTERS
36-21
LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS AND
REPRESENTATION
Sat 4:15 pm
36-22
GENDER AND VOTER BEHAVIOR:
2008 AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 31-22
Fri 8:00 am
36-23
EUROPE AND ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 15-22
Fri 4:15 pm
36-24
ECONOMIC SELF-INTEREST AND
THE VOTE
Thu 4:15 pm
36-25
CORRECT VOTING
Co-sponsored by 5-13
Thu 2:00 pm
36-26
ELECTORAL VOLATILITY
36-27
VOTERS IN SPACE: SPATIAL
MODELS OF VOTING AND
ELECTIONS
Fri 10:15 am
36-28
CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS AND
ACCOUNTABILITY
Co-sponsored by 22-19
Sat 10:15 am
37-12
BIOLOGY, GENETICS, AND
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 5-14
36-29
SOCIAL PROCESSES AND VOTING
Sat 2:00 pm
37-13
PRESIDENCY AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 23-17
Thu 8:00 am
Sat 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 8:00 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Fri 10:15 am
219
Related Group Panels
36-9
36-16
36-30
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
37-14
THE PUZZLE OF POPULAR
Sat 2:00 pm
LEGITIMACY
Co-sponsored by Latin American Studies Association, Panel
2
38-9
GOVERNMENTAL NEWS
MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES:
EXAMINING THE INTERNATIONAL
EVIDENCE
37-15
RELIGION, PUBLIC OPINION, AND
POLITICS
38-10
37-16
REPRESENTATION
Thu 4:15 pm
DELIBERATION, SOCIAL
NETWORKS AND THE FRAMING OF
DISCOURSE
37-17
IDEOLOGY
Co-sponsored by 5-15
Fri 2:00 pm
38-11
CAMPAIGN MESSAGES: IMPACTS
OF INFORMATION QUALITY AND
TONE
Sat 10:15 am
37-18
POLITICAL TRUST
Co-sponsored by 5-16
Sat 10:15 am
38-12
MEDIA PREFERENCES AND
POLITICAL LEARNING
Thu 8:00 am
37-19
IMMIGRATION
Thu 8:00 am
38-13
GENDER AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 31-23
Sat 8:00 am
NEWS, INFORMATION AND
MOBILIZATION
Thu 2:00 pm
37-20
38-14
MASS MEDIA AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 38-2
Sat 4:15 pm
MASS MEDIA AND NATIONAL
IDENTITY
Co-sponsored by 12-47
Sun 8:00 am
37-21
37-22
PREJUDICE, RACISM, RACIAL
THREAT, AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 32-21
Fri 4:15 pm
38-15
COMMUNICATING AND FRAMING
POLITICAL IDENTITIES
Sat 8:00 am
38-16
COMPARATIVE PUBLIC OPINION
Fri 4:15 pm
GENDERED POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by 31-24
Sat 2:00 pm
37-23
37-24
PUBLIC OPINION AND THE WAR ON
TERRORISM
38-17
Sat 4:15 pm
37-25
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS:
TALKING TOGETHER: PUBLIC
DELIBERATION AND POLITICAL
PARTICIPATION IN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 38-6
LEGISLATURES AND INTERNET
USE: GOVERNING AND
CAMPAIGNING
Co-sponsored by 40-3
38-18
INTERNET: COLLECTIVE ACTION,
SOCIAL MOBILIZATION, AND CIVIC
ENGAGEMENT
Co-sponsored by 40-4
38-19
NEW STRATEGIES OF POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION IN CANADA
Co-sponsored by 49-7
39
Science, Technology and Environmental Politics
Division
Chair:
Mark Zachary Taylor, Georgia Institute of Technology
Patricia S. Wrightson, The National Academies
39-1
GEOENGINEERING AND GLOBAL
ORDER
Co-sponsored by 25-7
Thu 10:15 am
39-2
RAISING THE TEMPERATURE ON
CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-12
Sat 4:15 pm
39-3
FACTORS THAT DRIVE POLICY
FORMATION AND
IMPLEMENTATION: WHAT DRIVES
THE SCIENCE THAT DRIVES
POLICY?
Co-sponsored by 25-13
Sat 10:15 am
39-4
ADAPTING TO OR AVOIDING
DOOMSDAY: DEALING WITH
CLIMATE CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 25-24
Fri 10:15 am
39-5
POLICY CHANGE AND THE
GOVERNANCE OF
CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE
Co-sponsored by 25-25
Thu 8:00 am
39-6
TODAY’S SCIENCE FICTION,
TOMORROW’S POLICY?
Co-sponsored by 25-26
Sun 8:00 am
39-7
WHEN SCIENCE BEGETS VALUES
AND VICE VERSA
Fri 4:15 pm
37-26
37-27
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 8:00 am
Sat 8:00 am
COMMUNICATION AND POLITICAL
SUPPORT
Co-sponsored by 38-8
Fri 10:15 am
EXAMINING ATTITUDES ABOUT
GAY RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 47-6
Sun 8:00 am
38
Political Communication
Division
Chair:
Stephen J. Farnsworth, George Mason University
38-1
PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by 23-6
Sat 2:00 pm
38-2
MASS MEDIA AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-21
Sat 4:15 pm
38-3
MEDIA, PARTIES, AND THE 2008
ELECTIONS: CANADA AND THE
UNITED STATES COMPARED
Fri 8:00 am
38-4
FRAMING EXPERIMENTS IN THE
2008 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN
38-5
NEW MEDIA, NEW POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 40-1
Fri 2:00 pm
38-6
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS:
TALKING TOGETHER: PUBLIC
DELIBERATION AND POLITICAL
PARTICIPATION IN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 37-25
Sat 8:00 am
Fri 10:15 am
38-7
NEWS ACROSS BORDERS
Thu 4:15 pm
38-8
COMMUNICATION AND POLITICAL
SUPPORT
Co-sponsored by 37-26
Fri 10:15 am
220
Fri 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 10:15 am
Fri 8:00 am
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
39-8
IT’S NOT EASY GOING GREEN
Co-sponsored by 12-48
Sat 10:15 am
41-8
JUSTICE, PASSION, AND SELFFri 2:00 pm
KNOWLEDGE IN PLATO AND
ARISTOPHANES
Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel
2
Information Technology and Politics
Division
Chair:
Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
42
New Political Science
40-1
NEW MEDIA, NEW POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 38-5
Fri 2:00 pm
Division
Chair:
Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University
40-2
THEME PANEL: WEB 2.0 AND
SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE 2008
ELECTIONS AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by T-18
Fri 4:15 pm
42-1
THE CONTENTIOUS POLITICS OF
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Co-sponsored by 16-9
Thu 8:00 am
40-3
LEGISLATURES AND INTERNET
USE: GOVERNING AND
CAMPAIGNING
Co-sponsored by 38-17
Sat 4:15 pm
42-2
POLITICS AND PUNISHMENT IN
THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-5
Sun 8:00 am
42-3
ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN
CITIES
Co-sponsored by 30-10
Fri 4:15 pm
42-4
THE POLITICS OF BACKLASH:
THEORY AND CASE STUDIES IN
DYNAMIC RESISTANCE
Co-sponsored by 31-16
Thu 4:15 pm
Thu 10:15 am
42-5
ORGANIZING DIVERSE
COMMUNITIES: NEW STRATEGIES
FOR A NEW CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 30-17
Thu 8:00 am
Thu 4:15 pm
42-6
ARE THESE TIMES A CHANGIN’?
PARTY POLITICS IN THE OBAMA
ERA
Fri 2:00 pm
42-7
RECONSIDERING RESISTANCE:
CONTESTED SITES FOR POLITICAL
CHANGE
Sat 8:00 am
42-8
ANALYZING RELIGION AND
SOCIAL RELATIONS IN AN AGE OF
GLOBALIZATION
Sat 2:00 pm
42-9
MARX AND THE CURRENT CRISIS
Fri 10:15 am
42-10
ROUNDTABLE: 40 YEARS SINCE J
DAVID GREENSTONE’S “LABOR IN
AMERICAN POLITICS”:
REFLECTIONS ON WHERE WE’VE
BEEN, WHERE WE ARE, AND
WHERE WE SHOULD GO
Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 3
Fri 2:00 pm
42-11
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
PLENARY ADDRESS, DELIVERED
BY TOM HAYDEN: MOVEMENTS
AGAINST MACHIAVELLIANS, THE
THEORY AND PRACTICE OF
SOCIAL CHANGE
Reception (gratis) & Book Signing to Follow
Sat 8:30 pm
43
International History and Politics
Division
Chair:
Dan Lindley, University of Notre Dame
43-1
THE POLITICS OF SETTLERS AND
SETTLEMENTS IN CONTESTED
TERRITORIES
Co-sponsored by 11-22
Thu 10:15 am
43-2
INTER-ETHNIC CONTACT AND
VIOLENCE: FROM POGROMS AND
RIOTS TO WAR AND GENOCIDE
Co-sponsored by 11-23
Sat 8:00 am
40-4
INTERNET: COLLECTIVE ACTION,
SOCIAL MOBILIZATION, AND CIVIC
ENGAGEMENT
Co-sponsored by 38-18
40-5
INTERNET GOVERNANCE:
STRUCTURES AND ISSUES
40-6
COMPARATIVE EXPERIENCES IN
ONLINE POLITICAL ORGANIZING,
DELIBERATING AND
PARTICIPATING
40-7
DIGITAL GOVERNANCE: POLICY
DEVELOPMENT AND
ADMINISTRATIVE STRATEGIES
Co-sponsored by 24-14
40-8
ROUNDTABLE ON CONNECTING
DEMOCRACY: ONLINE
CONSULTATION AND THE FUTURE
OF DEMOCRATIC DISCOURSE
Sat 10:15 am
Sat 2:00 pm
Sun 10:15 am
41
Politics, Literature and Film Section
Division
Chair:
Charles T. Rubin, Duquesne University
41-1
FEAR OF IMAGES? ROUNDTABLE
ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE
EVASION OF VISUAL CULTURE
Co-sponsored by 2-18
41-2
POLITICAL POSSIBILITY IN THE
NOVELS OF JOSE SARAMAGO
Co-sponsored by 2-41
Sat 2:00 pm
41-3
ART AND POLITICS IN FLORIAN
HENCKEL VON DONNERSMARCK’S
THE LIVES OF OTHERS
Fri 8:00 am
41-4
THEY’VE ALL GONE TO LOOK FOR
AMERICA
Sun 8:00 am
41-5
THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND
WOMEN
Co-sponsored by 31-25
Fri 4:15 pm
41-6
THEME PANEL: ALEKSANDR
SOLZHENITSYN 1918-2008:
REMEMBRANCE AND LEGACY
Co-sponsored by T-4
Thu 2:00 pm
41-7
BEYOND ‘SELF-RELIANCE’:
EMERSON’S POLITICS IN MOTION
Sat 10:15 am
Thu 10:15 am
221
Related Group Panels
40
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
43-3
THE END OF AMERICAN
HEGEMONY? RISING POWERS AND
WORLD ORDER
Co-sponsored by 19-13
Sat 2:00 pm
43-4
THE ISRAEL LOBBY AT 2.
Co-sponsored by 20-8
Sat 8:00 am
43-5
LESSONS IN WAR, LESSONS FROM
WAR
Co-sponsored by 18-38
Fri 2:00 pm
43-6
WHERE’S TRUTH AND JUSTICE?
TRACKING CHANGES IN
INTERNATIONAL LAW
Co-sponsored by 17-21
Fri 8:00 am
43-7
THE BALANCE OF POWER IN
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS:
THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND
HISTORICAL ANALYSIS
Co-sponsored by 19-19
ROUNDTABLE: UNDERSTANDING
POLITICAL EXTREMISM
Co-sponsored by 18-39
43-9
PROCESS TRACING IN
INTERNATIONAL AND
COMPARATIVE POLITICS:
ACHIEVEMENTS AND
CHALLENGES
Co-sponsored by 46-3
Sat 10:15 am
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT AND
THE FATE OF LIBERAL
DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by 18-40
Fri 10:15 am
GRAND STRATEGY BETWEEN THE
WARS
Co-sponsored by 18-41
Sat 2:00 pm
43-12
SHAPING REALITY WITH
INFORMATION OPERATIONS,
PROPAGANDA, AND SPIN
Sat 4:15 pm
NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND THE
COLD WAR
Fri 4:15 pm
43-14
44-3
DEMOCRACY, ELECTIONS, AND
POLITICAL (IN)STABILITY
Co-sponsored by 11-46
Sat 2:00 pm
44-4
POST-CIVIL WAR PROCESSES
Co-sponsored by 18-5
Fri 2:00 pm
44-5
WHO/WHAT ARE ELECTIONS GOOD
FOR? ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION,
CHANGE AND VOTER
MOTIVATIONS IN SELECT
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 12-21
Thu 8:00 am
44-6
LOCAL POLITICS IN NEW
DEMOCRACIES: PATTERNS OF
DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE
MEXICAN STATES
Co-sponsored by 12-39
Thu 8:00 am
44-7
AUTHORITARIAN REGIME
BUILDING AND BREAKDOWN IN
POST-SOVIET EURASIA
Co-sponsored by 13-7
Fri 10:15 am
44-8
THE HISTORICAL TURN IN
DEMOCRATIZATION STUDIES:
LESSONS FROM EUROPE
Co-sponsored by 15-6
Sat 8:00 am
44-9
RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN
DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES:
EVIDENCE FROM FIVE MUSLIM
DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 33-5
Sun 8:00 am
44-10
VIOLENCE, UNCIVIL POLITICS AND
DEMOCRATIZATION
Thu 2:00 pm
44-11
CHINA’S THIRD SECTOR:
DYNAMICS AND CONSEQUENCES
Thu 4:15 pm
44-12
REVISITING REGIME CHANGE:
CROSS-REGIONAL PERSPECTIVES
Sun 8:00 am
44-13
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
DEMOCRATIZATION
Fri 8:00 am
43-11
43-13
DEMOCRATIZATION AND ETHNIC
MINORITIES: CONFLICT,
PROTECTION, AND
ACCOMMODATION
Co-sponsored by 11-41
Thu 4:15 pm
43-8
43-10
44-2
Fri 10:15 am
SHOCKING! SHOCKS AND OTHER
EXTERNAL SOURCES OF FOREIGN
POLICY
Thu 2:00 pm
43-15
PROGRESS AND CHANGE IN THE
INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM
Thu 8:00 am
44-14
CIVIL SOCIETY, CITIZENSHIP AND
PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY
Fri 2:00 pm
43-16
THE SWEEP OF HISTORY:
CLEANING UP ON HISTORICAL
LESSONS
Sat 10:15 am
44-15
”NEW” SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND
DEMOCRATIZATION
Fri 4:15 pm
44-16
43-17
CHINA, WORLD ORDER, AND
SECURITY ISSUES IN ASIA
Fri 2:00 pm
DEMOCRACY, TRANSITIONAL
JUSTICE, AND THE MEMORY OF
DICTATORSHIP
43-18
IDENTITY POLITICS AND
NATIONALISM IN CHINA:
Co-sponsored by 18-42
Sun 8:00 am
44-17
PROTEST AND DEMOCRATIZATION
IN LATIN AMERICA AND EAST ASIA
Co-sponsored by 12-49
44
Comparative Democratization
44-18
Sat 10:15 am
Division
Chair:
Omar G. Encarnacion, Bard College
VARIETIES OF PRESIDENTIALISM
IN LATIN AMERICA: ORIGINS,
SCOPE AND CONSEQUENCES
Co-sponsored by 12-50
44-1
THE POLITICS OF DEMOCRATIC
REVERSAL
Co-sponsored by 11-24
44-19
ROUNDTABLE: GEORGE W. BUSH’S
DEMOCRATIC PROMOTION
LEGACY
Thu 4:15 pm
44-20
POST-WAR DEMOCRATIZATION
Sat 10:15 am
44-21
RELIGION AND DEMOCRACY IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
Thu 2:00 pm
222
Fri 8:00 am
Sun 10:15 am
Thu 10:15 am
Sat 4:15 pm
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
44-22
AUTHORITARIAN REGIME
CONSOLIDATION
44-23
AGENCY UNDER
AUTHORITARIANISM
Co-sponsored by 12-51
Thu 10:15 am
Todd Landman, University of Essex
45-1
QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO
HUMAN RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 8-6
Sat 10:15 am
45-2
THE HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME IN
EUROPE: ISSUES AND
CHALLENGES
Co-sponsored by 15-16
Sun 10:15 am
45-3
ROUNDTABLE ON BETH SIMMONS,
MOBILIZING FOR HUMAN RIGHTS:
INTERNATIONAL LAW IN
DOMESTIC POLITICS, CAMBRIDGE
2009
Co-sponsored by 17-17
Thu 10:15 am
45-4
WOMEN IN MOTION: ADVANCES
AND SETBACKS IN IMPLEMENTING
WOMEN’S RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 31-15
Fri 10:15 am
45-5
ANALYSING COMPLEXITY AND
CHANGE IN HUMAN RIGHTS
RESEARCH
Fri 2:00 pm
45-6
CONCEPTUAL INNOVATIONS IN
HUMAN RIGHTS THEORIZING
Sat 8:00 am
45-7
ISLAM AND HUMAN RIGHTS:
THEORY, LAW, AND PRACTICE
Thu 8:00 am
45-8
THE UNITED STATES AND HUMAN
RIGHTS
Thu 2:00 pm
45-9
NORMATIVE DIMENSIONS OF
HUMAN RIGHTS
Fri 4:15 pm
45-10
THEME PANEL: CANADIAN HUMAN
RIGHTS COMMISSIONS
Co-sponsored by T-24
Sat 2:00 pm
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS AND
HUMAN RIGHTS
Fri 8:00 am
46
Qualitative Methods
Division
Chair:
Colin Elman, Syracuse University
Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania
46-1
ILLIBERAL POLITICS IN LIBERAL
STATES: STUDYING THE ‘ROUGH
EDGES OF DEMOCRACY’
Co-sponsored by 11-14
Sat 2:00 pm
FOCUS ON METAPHOR: NEW
PERSPECTIVES ON LANGUAGE
AND DISCOURSE
Co-sponsored by 2-14
Sat 2:00 pm
46-3
PROCESS TRACING IN
INTERNATIONAL AND
COMPARATIVE POLITICS:
ACHIEVEMENTS AND
CHALLENGES
Co-sponsored by 43-9
46-5
IS THERE A MULTIMETHOD
CONSENSUS IN COMPARATIVE
POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 11-75
46-6
THE EPISTEMOLOGICAL
FOUNDATIONS OF MIXED-METHOD
RESEARCH
46-7
STATISTICAL MODELS AND
CAUSAL INFERENCE: DAVID
FREEDMAN’S DIALOGUE WITH
THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
Co-sponsored by 8-18
46-8
THEME PANEL: HISTORY,
IDENTITY, POLITICAL VIOLENCE:
THE RELATIVE MERITS OF
QUALITATIVE METHODS TO
EXPLAIN COMPLEX AND DYNAMIC
PHENOMENA
Co-sponsored by T-29
Sun 10:15 am
46-9
TAKING RESEARCH DESIGN
SERIOUSLY IN IDEATIONAL
APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Fri 8:00 am
46-10
CASE STUDY META-ANALYSIS:
METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES
AND APPLICATIONS IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE
Sat 4:15 pm
46-11
QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO
INSTITUTIONAL AND POLICY
CHANGE IN AMERICAN POLITICS
Thu 8:00 am
46-12
VIRTUES AND LIMITS OF MIXEDMETHOD RESEARCH IN DIVERSE
CONTEXTS
Sun 8:00 am
46-13
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN POSTCOMMUNIST SPACE
Sat 4:15 pm
46-14
REPRESSION AND PROTEST IN
NON-DEMOCRATIC REGIMES
Fri 4:15 pm
46-15
CHALLENGES AND ADVANCES IN
HISTORICALLY-ORIENTED
RESEARCH
46-16
REFINEMENTS IN RESEARCH
DESIGN: CASES, CONCEPTS,
VARIABLES
Fri 8:00 am
46-17
EVERYDAY POLITICS IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES:
QUALITATIVE APPROACHES
Fri 2:00 pm
46-18
MEANING, DISCOURSE AND
AGENCY IN POLITICAL LIFE
Sat 8:00 am
46-19
QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO
STUDYING THE EMERGENCE AND
PRACTICE OF DEMOCRACY
46-20
CONSTRUCTIVISM AND
TRADITIONAL IR THEORY:
PLURALISM, CONFLICT OR
ECLECTICISM?
46-21
COMPLEXITY AND
INTERDEPENDENCE IN WORLD
POLITICS: NEW QUALITATIVE
APPROACHES
Sat 10:15 am
Fri 10:15 am
Sat 8:00 am
Sun 10:15 am
Thu 4:15 pm
Sat 10:15 am
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 2:00 pm
Sat 2:00 pm
223
Related Group Panels
Human Rights
Division
Chair:
46-2
ETHNOGRAPHIC METHODS IN
POLITICAL SCIENCE: WHAT
DIFFERENCE CAN THEY MAKE?
Sat 4:15 pm
45
45-11
46-4
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
46-22
RESEARCH DESIGN, METHODS,
AND THEORY-BUILDING IN
COMPARATIVE JUDICIAL POLITICS
Thu 4:15 pm
46-23
CONSTRUCTING CROSS-NATIONAL
DATASETS: CHALLENGES AND
LESSONS
Co-sponsored by 8-19
Fri 10:15 am
46-24
DEBATING RESEARCH DESIGNS:
Thu 10:15 am
DO QUALITATIVE AND
INTERPRETIVE LOGICS OF
INQUIRY DIFFER? SHOULD THEY?
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods,
Panel 1
46-25
METHODS CAFE
Thu 12:15 pm
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods,
Panel 2
46-26
UNDERSTANDING EXPERIENCES
Fri 8:00 am
ACROSS THE SUBFIELDS:
RHETORIC, PHENOMENOLOGY,
FIELDWORK, FRAMING/
NARRATIVES, AND TEXTUAL
ETHNOGRAPHY
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods,
Panel 3
48-2
THEME PANEL: HEALTH SYSTEM
COMPLEXITY AND CHANGE:
MEASURING THE POLITICS OF
DELIVERING CARE
Co-sponsored by T-9
Fri 8:00 am
48-3
SYSTEM EFFECTS, PATH
DEPENDENCE, AND HEALTH
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-2
Sat 2:00 pm
48-4
HEALTH POLICY, CROSSING
NATIONAL BOUNDARIES, AND
IDEOLOGICAL PARADIGMS
Co-sponsored by 11-54
Fri 4:15 pm
48-5
HEALTH PRIORITIES, AGENDASETTING, AND POLITICAL
TENSIONS: DEFINING THE PUBLIC
INTEREST IN HEALTH
Thu 2:00 pm
48-6
EXPLAINING THE SUCCESS AND
FAILURE OF CERTAIN HEALTH
POLICIES
Co-sponsored by 25-8
Thu 4:15 pm
49
Canadian Politics
Division
Chair:
Melissa A. Haussman, Carleton University
49-1
CANADIAN COURTS IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 26-12
Fri 10:15 am
49-2
ROUNDTABLE: STUDYING
CANADIAN CITIES: A SUB-FIELD IN
MOTION
Co-sponsored by 30-12
Thu 2:00 pm
49-3
GENDER IN CANADIAN POLITICS
AND POLICY
Co-sponsored by 31-6
Thu 8:00 am
49-4
FORECASTING CANADIAN
Fri 2:00 pm
FEDERAL ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by Political Forecasting Group, Panel 1
47
Sexuality and Politics
Division
Chair:
Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont
47-1
SELLING SEX, SELLING SELVES?
GENDER, THE SEX TRADE AND
THE STATE
Co-sponsored by 31-8
47-2
STATES OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE:
WHAT ELSE IS AT STAKE?
Co-sponsored by 31-26
Fri 2:00 pm
47-3
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE
POLITICS OF SAME-SEX
MARRIAGE
Co-sponsored by 32-22
Sat 2:00 pm
47-4
GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 31-27
Fri 4:15 pm
49-5
RELIGION AND POLITICS IN
CANADA
Co-sponsored by 33-11
47-5
THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE
STATE REACTIONS TO LGBT
RIGHTS CLAIMS
Co-sponsored by 29-15 and T-5
Thu 2:00 pm
49-6
CRITICAL PUBLIC POLICY
QUESTIONS IN CANADA AND THE
US
Co-sponsored by 25-27
Sat 4:15 pm
47-6
EXAMINING ATTITUDES ABOUT
GAY RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 37-27
Sun 8:00 am
49-7
NEW STRATEGIES OF POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION IN CANADA
Co-sponsored by 38-19
Fri 8:00 am
47-7
THEME ROUNDTABLE: JUST HOW
DIFFERENT? SEXUAL POLITICS IN
CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES
Co-sponsored by T-11
Fri 10:15 am
49-8
THEME PANEL: “FORGOTTEN
PARTNERSHIP” REMEMBERED:
U.S.-CANADA RELATIONS 25 YEARS
LATER
Co-sponsored by T-22
Sat 8:00 am
Sat 10:15 am
48
Health Politics and Health Policy
Division
Chair:
James M. Brasfield, Webster University
Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, The University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
48-1
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL
ECONOMY OF HEALTH
Co-sponsored by 11-34
224
Sat 10:15 am
Sat 10:15 am
Poster Sessions
POSTER SESSION 1
Fri 2:00 pm
Divisions 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, and 33
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 1
Co-sponsored by Divisions 29 and 36
Fri 2:00 pm
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 2
Sponsored by Division 29
Fri 2:00 pm
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 3
Co-sponsored by Division 26 and 29
Fri 2:00 pm
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 4
Sponsored by Division 29
Fri 2:00 pm
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 5
Sponsored by Division 29
Fri 2:00 pm
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 6
Sponsored by Division 29
Fri 2:00 pm
Sat 10:15 am
POSTER SESSION 2: NEW FRONTIERS IN
AMERICAN PARTY RESEARCH
Sponsored by Division 35
Sat 10:15 am
POSTER SESSION 2: EXPLAINING ORGANIZED
POLITICAL ACTION
Sponsored by Division 35
Sat 10:15 am
POSTER SESSION 2: INTRA-PARTY
DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Sponsored by Division 35
Sat 10:15 am
POSTER SESSION 3
Divisions 1, 2, 3, and 4
Thu 2:00 pm
POSTER SESSION 4: QUANTITATIVE AND
QUALITATIVE METHODS
Divisions 8 and 46
Sat 10:15 am
POSTER SESSION 5
Divisions 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 44
Thu 10:15 am
POSTER SESSION 6
Divisions 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 45, and 49
Fri 10:15 am
POSTER SESSION 7
Divisions 9 and 10
Fri 2:00 pm
POSTER SESSION 8
Divisions 5, 6, 7, 38, 41, and 47
Sat 2:00 pm
POSTER SESSION 2: RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER
INSTITUTE
Related Group Panels
POSTER SESSION 2
Divisions 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 42, 43, 48
Sat 10:15 am
225
MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS
BUSINESS MEETINGS:
Many groups hold meetings and receptions at the APSA Annual Meeting, and most are open to all members. Business meetings are general
member meetings that are open to all Association members unless the title clearly indicates that the meeting is for a specific group (e.g.
editorial board).
APSA Organized Section: All attendees regardless of membership in a section are invited to attend section business meetings and to learn more
about the work of sections.
Related Group: Independent professional groups with persistent organizational structure and minimum membership can organize a business
meeting.
APSA Committee Meetings: Generally working meetings of committees are considered closed to attendees. Attendees should first consult with
a committee chair about the possibility of attending.
RECEPTIONS:
All receptions are open to all APSA members unless the title clearly indicates otherwise (e.g. editorial board reception).
APSA Meetings and Receptions
APSA Committee on the Status of Women in the Profession
Committee Meeting
Sat 12:00 pm
APSA Meetings
APSA Receptions
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession
Committee Meeting
Sat 12:00 pm
APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the
Profession
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Asian Pacific American Caucus, the Race, Ethnicity,
and Politics Organized Section, and the APSA Committee on the Status of
Blacks in the Profession
APSA Civic Education and Engagement Committee
Committee Meeting
Fri 10:00 am
APSA Departmental Services Committee
Committee Meeting
Fri 9:00 am
APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the
Transgendered in the Profession
Committee Meeting
Sat 4:00 pm
Fri 4:00 pm
International Committee
Committee Meeting
Fri 4:00 pm
APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession
Committee Meeting
Sat 4:00 pm
General Membership Meeting
Sat 6:15 pm
APSA Council Meeting
Wed 9:00 am
Meet the APSA Officers and 2010 Council Nominees Fri 12:00 pm
Journal Editors' Breakfast
Sat 7:30 am
Related Group Organizer Meeting
Sat 7:30 am
2010 APSA Program Committee Meeting
Sat 12:00 pm
Perspectives on Politics Editorial Board Meeting
Private event for the Perspectives Editorial Board.
Fri 12:00 pm
Organized Sections Breakfast
Thu 7:00 am
Associations Breakfast
Fri 7:30 am
Academic Administrators Meeting
Fri 3:15 pm
Minority Student Recruitment Program Meeting
Fri 1:00 pm
APSR Executive Committee Meeting
Fri 2:00 pm
APSA Task Force on Political Science in the 21st Century
Committee Meeting
Thu 1:00 pm
APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning
Committee Meeting
Thu 1:00 pm
APSA Task Force on Political Science in the 21st Century
Meeting
Thu 8:00 am
APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning
Meeting
Meetings and Receptions
In Memoriam
Committee Meeting
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized Section, the
Asian Pacific American Caucus, and the APSA Committee on the Status of
Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession
APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the
Transgendered in the Profession
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Sexuality and Politics Organized Section and the
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus
APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Latino Caucus in Political Science
Reception Honoring Teaching
Sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha
Fri 7:00 pm
Awards Ceremony
Thu 12:45 pm
Award Luncheon—By Invitation Only
Thu 12:00 pm
APSA Graduate Student Happy Hour
Thu 6:30 pm
APSA 105th Annual Meeting Opening Reception
Sponsored by Cambridge University Press
Thu 9:00 pm
International Attendee Welcome Reception
Thu 6:00 pm
APSA Mentor Program Networking Reception
Thu 5:30 pm
APSA Minority Fellowship Program 40th Anniversary Sat 6:00 pm
Reception
Perspectives on Politics Public Reception and Open
Dialogue with New Editor
Sat 12:00 pm
Ralph Bunche Summer Institute, Minority Fellowship Sat 2:00 pm
Program, and Minority Student Recruitment Program
Coffee Hour
APSR Editorial Board Reception
Fri 6:30 pm
Private reception for the members of the American Political Science Review
Editorial Board.
Thu 8:00 am
227
Meetings and Receptions
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Working Groups
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Citizenship and Migration
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Thu 6:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Democratic Policy Processes
eLearning in Political Science
The Future of Political Leadership
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Political Ethics
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Policy Network Analysis
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Citizenship and Migration
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Comparative Political Theory
Democratic Policy Processes
eLearning in Political Science
The Future of Political Leadership
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Political Ethics
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Thu 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Policy Network Analysis
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Thu 6:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Political Ethics
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
228
Meetings and Receptions
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Thu 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Thu 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Thu 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Thu 10:00 am
Thu 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Thu 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
229
Meetings and Receptions
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Thu 12:00 pm
Meetings and Receptions
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Thu 6:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Thu 6:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Thu 6:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Fri 6:30 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
230
Fri 12:00 pm
Meetings and Receptions
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 1:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 1:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Fri 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 1
Fri 1:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 1
Meetings and Receptions
Fri 1:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 1
Fri 12:15 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 1
Political Ethics
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 1:00 pm
Fri 12:15 pm
231
Meetings and Receptions
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Fri 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Fri 5:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Fri 5:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Fri 5:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Fri 5:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Fri 5:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Fri 5:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Fri 5:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Fri 5:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Fri 5:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Fri 5:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Fri 5:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Political Ethics
Session 2
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Fri 5:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Fri 5:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Fri 5:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Fri 6:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Sat 6:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Fri 6:15 pm
232
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Meetings and Receptions
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Sat 6:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Sat 12:15 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Sat 12:15 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
233
Meetings and Receptions
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Meetings and Receptions
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 1:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 1:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Sun 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Sat 1:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 2
Sun 12:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 2
Sat 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
234
Sat 12:00 pm
Meetings and Receptions
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
11
Comparative Politics
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
15
European Politics and Society
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Sat 4:00 pm
19
International Security and Arms Control
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Sat 4:00 pm
20
Foreign Policy
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
21
Conflict Processes
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
22
Legislative Studies
Business Meeting
Council Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Fri 4:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 3
23
Presidency Research
Business Meeting
Editorial Board Meeting
Sat 12:15 pm
Thu 6:15 pm
24
Public Administration
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 3
Political Ethics
Session 3
Sat 4:00 pm
Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government
Session 3
Sat 12:00 pm
Citizenship and Migration
Session 3
Sat 12:00 pm
Civic Engagement and Political Science
Session 3
25
Public Policy
Business Meeting
Sat 12:15 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
26
Law and Courts
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Comparative Political Theory
Session 3
Sat 12:00 pm
Democratic Policy Processes
Session 3
28
Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations
Business Meeting
Thu 6:15 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
29
State Politics and Policy Section
Business Meeting
Thu 6:15 pm
eLearning in Political Science
Session 3
Sat 12:00 pm
The Future of Political Leadership
Session 3
30
Urban Politics
Business Meeting
Thu 6:15 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
31
Women and Politics Research Section
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
32
Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Session 3
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship
Session 3
33
Religion and Politics
Business Meeting
Thu 6:15 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Political Ethics
Session 3
34
Representation and Electoral Systems
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
35
Political Organizations and Parties
Executive Council Meeting
Business Meeting
Thu 12:15 pm
Fri 12:15 pm
36
Elections and Voting Behavior
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
37
Public Opinion
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
38
Political Communication
Business Meeting
Mentoring Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Fri 6:00 pm
Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics
Session 3
Sat 12:00 pm
Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to
Global
Session 3
Sat 12:00 pm
Policy Network Analysis
Session 3
Sat 12:00 pm
Division Meetings and Receptions
39
Science, Technology and Environmental Politics
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Section Meetings
40
Information Technology and Politics
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
2
Foundations of Political Theory
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
5
Political Psychology
Business Meeting
41
Politics, Literature and Film Section
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Fri 6:15 pm
6
Political Economy
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
42
New Political Science
Editorial Board Meeting
Publications Executive Committee Meeting
Business Meeting
Fri 7:30 am
Thu 12:15 pm
Thu 6:15 pm
7
Politics and History
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
43
International History and Politics
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
8
Political Methodology
Business Meeting
Thu 6:15 pm
44
Comparative Democratization
Business Meeting
Sat 6:15 pm
Sat 6:15 pm
45
Human Rights
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
10
Political Science Education
Business Meeting
Meetings and Receptions
Immigration and U.S. Politics
Session 3
235
Meetings and Receptions
46
Qualitative Methods
Business Meeting
Thu 6:15 pm
47
Sexuality and Politics
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
37
Public Opinion
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Political Psychology Organized Section
48
Health Politics and Health Policy
Business Meeting
Sat 12:15 pm
38
Political Communication
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Thu 12:15 pm
40
Information Technology and Politics
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
49
Canadian Politics
Business Meeting
Co-sponsored by the Political Psychology Organized Section
42
New Political Science
New Political Science Reception Honoring Tom
Hayden
Section Receptions
2
Foundations of Political Theory
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
5
Political Psychology
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior
Organized Section
7
Politics and History
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
10
Political Science Education
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
11
Comparative Politics
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Sat 10:00 pm
43
International History and Politics
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Organized
Section
44
Comparative Democratization
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
45
Human Rights
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
46
Qualitative Methods
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the International History and Politics Organized Section
19
International Security and Arms Control
Reception
Co-sponsored by CAMOS
Fri 7:30 pm
20
Foreign Policy
Reception
Co-sponsored with Conflict Processes
Fri 7:30 pm
47
Sexuality and Politics
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus
and the APSA Committee on Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the
Transgendered (LGBT)
21
Conflict Processes
Reception
Co-sponsored with Foreign Policy
Fri 7:30 pm
Related Group Meetings and Receptions
Related Group Meetings
22
Legislative Studies
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
23
Presidency Research
Reception
African Politics Conference Group
Business Meeting
Thu 7:30 pm
24
Public Administration
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
26
Law and Courts
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Aging Policy and Politics Group
Aging Politics and Policy Group Dutch-treat Business Fri 12:30 pm
Luncheon
Luncheon will be held at Azure Restaurant, located in the InterContinental
Hotel
29
State Politics and Policy Section
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
30
Urban Politics
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
31
Women and Politics Research Section
Women of Color Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the National Conference of Black Political Scientists, the
Women's Caucus for Political Science, APSA Council, Cambridge
University Press-Politics & Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for
Political Science
Reception for Women in the Profession
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Women's Caucus for Political Science and the
Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal
32
Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Asian Pacific American Caucus, the APSA Committee
on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession, and the APSA
Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession
33
Religion and Politics
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
35
Political Organizations and Parties
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by Representation and Journal of Elections, Public Opinion
and Parties
36
Elections and Voting Behavior
Reception
236
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 12:15 pm
Asian Pacific American Caucus
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Christians in Political Science
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society
Business Meeting
Thu 6:15 pm
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies
Business Meeting
Sat 6:15 pm
Eric Voegelin Society
Business Meeting
Sat 6:00 pm
French Politics Group
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Green Politics and Theory
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Indigenous Studies Network
Business Meeting
Thu 12:15 pm
Intelligence Studies Group
Business Meeting
Thu 12:15 pm
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Business Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Labor Project
Business Meeting
Sat 12:15 pm
Meetings and Receptions
Latino Caucus in Political Science
Business Meeting
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus
Business Meeting
Political Forecasting Group
Business Meeting
Women's Caucus for Political Science
Meeting 1
Meeting 2
Cooperative Congressional Election Study
Business Meeting
Sat 12:15 pm
Fri 6:15 pm
International Organization (Journal)
Meeting
Sat 6:15 pm
Sat 12:15 pm
Journal of Democracy
Editorial Board Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Journal of Electoral Studies
Editorial Board Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law
Board Meeting
Sat 5:15 pm
Journal of Political Science Education
Editorial Board Meeting
Sat 12:15 pm
Journal of Politics
Editorial Board Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Journal of Theoretical Politics
Meeting
Thu 6:15 pm
Legislative Studies Quarterly
Meeting
Fri 8:00 am
McGraw-Hill
Business Meeting 1
Business Meeting 2
Thu 10:00 am
Thu 2:30 pm
Midwest Political Science Association
Program Committee Meeting
Fri 4:15 pm
Sat 7:30 pm
National Conference of Black Political Scientists
Meeting
Fri 12:00 pm
Sat 7:00 pm
Pi Sigma Alpha
Executive Council Meeting
Thu 12:15 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Political Networks
Business Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Politics & Policy Journal
Board Meeting
Fri 6:15 pm
Politics and Gender
Editorial Search Committee
Thu 6:30 pm
Polity
Editorial Board Meeting
Sat 7:30 am
Publius: The Journal of Federalism
Meeting of Editorial Board and Advisory Council
Fri 7:00 am
Thu 12:15 pm
Fri 6:15 pm
Related Group Receptions
Asian Pacific American Caucus
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific
Americans in the Profession, the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized
Section, and the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession
British Politics Group
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Christians in Political Science
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the International Security and Arms Control Organized
Section
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies
Reception
Eric Voegelin Society
Reception
European Consortium for Political Research
Reception
French Politics Group
Reception
Fri 10:00 pm
Co-sponsored by the French Embassy, CEVIPOF, AFSP, Sciences Po
Bordeaux, and PSA-UK
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Latino Caucus in Political Science
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Latino/as
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Sexuality and Politics Organized Section and the
APSA Committee on Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered
(LGBT)
Political Studies Association
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Women's Caucus for Political Science
Women of Color Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the National Conference of Black Political Scientists, the
Women and Politics Research Organized Section, APSA Council,
Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal, and the Latino
Caucus for Political Science
Reception for Women in the Profession
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Women and Politics Research Organized Section and
the Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal
Soomo Publishing
Sponsored Lunch
Sat 12:00 pm
Featuring a presentation by David Lindrum entitled "Ten Things You
Couldn't Do Ten Years Ago"
Southern Political Science Association
Council Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Theory and Event
Editorial Board Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Western Political Science Association
2010 Program Committee Meeting
Executive Council Meeting
Fri 12:15 pm
Thu 6:15 pm
Affiliate Group Receptions
American University
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Brookings Institution
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Affiliate Group Meetings and Receptions
Cengage-Wadsworth
Reception
Thu 5:00 pm
Affiliate Group Meetings
Columbia University
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Conference for the Study of Political Thought
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Cornell University Government Department
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
American National Election Studies
Public Meeting
American Politics Research
Business Meeting
Sat 10:00 am
Fri 12:15 pm
Meetings and Receptions
Fri 6:15 pm
237
Meetings and Receptions
Harvard University Department of Government
Reception
Fri 10:00 pm
Indiana University Department of Political Science
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Institute for Humane Studies
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
University of Houston
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by Rice University, Texas A&M University, and University of
Texas at Austin
Intercollegiate Studies Institute
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
University of Maryland Government and Politics
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
University of Massachusetts
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm
University of Michigan
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
University of Minnesota
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Jack Miller Center
Reception
London School of Economics
Reception
Co-sponsored by the Global Policy Journal
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Political Science
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
National Conference of Black Political Scientists
Women of Color Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Women and Politics Research Organized Section, the
Women's Caucus for Political Science, APSA Council, Cambridge
University Press-Politics & Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for
Political Science
New York University Wilf Family Department of Politics
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Pi Sigma Alpha
Reception Honoring Teaching Sponsored by Pi Sigma Fri 7:00 pm
Alpha
Political Research Quarterly
Reception
Co-sponsored by Washington State University
Thu 10:00 pm
Princeton University Department of Politics
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Quarterly Journal of Political Science
Reception
Fri 10:00 pm
Representation and Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by the Political Organizations and Parties Organized Section
Rice University
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by University of Texas at Austin, University of Houston, and
Texas A&M University
Routledge
Reception to Celebrate the Publication of THE
FUTURE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE and Our Other
New Titles
Fri 7:30 pm
Rutgers University
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
RWJF Scholars in Health Policy Research Program
Reception
Sat 7:00 am
Stanford University
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Syracuse University
Reception
Fri 10:00 pm
Texas A&M University
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by Rice University, University of Texas at Austin, and
University of Houston
The Review of Politics
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
University of California, Berkeley
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
University of California, San Diego
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
University of Chicago Political Science Department
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
238
University of Georgia School of Public & International Affairs (SPIA)
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
University of Pennsylvania Political Science Department
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
University of Rochester Department of Political Science
Reception
Sat 7:30 pm
University of Texas at Austin
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by Rice University, University of Houston, and Texas A&M
University
University of Toronto
Reception
Thu 10:00 pm
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Reception
Fri 7:30 pm
Vanderbilt University
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Washington State University
Reception
Co-sponsored by Political Research Quarterly
Yale University
Reception
Thu 10:00 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
York University Department of Political Science
Reception
Thu 7:30 pm
Co-sponsored by Palgrave Macmillan and Caucus for a New Political
Science
Meetings and Receptions
DAILY SCHEDULE
, 0, 0
, 9:30 AM to 5:00 PM
APSA Short Course
Short Courses
APPLIED POLITICAL NETWORK ANALYSIS
Instructors: David Collier, University of California, Berkeley
Part:
Colin Elman, Syracuse University
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Wednesday, 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM
APSA Short Course
Short Courses
CODING THE BLOGOSPHERE: INTRODUCING THE CODING
AND BLOG ANALYSIS TOOLKITS
THE TORONTO TEA PARTY: LGBT CHALLENGES AND
STRATEGIES IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
LIBRARY 2.0: KNOWLEDGE, POWER, AND PEDAGOGY IN NET
SPACE -- EVOLVING COLLABORATIONS AND ROLES
A TASTE FOR SOVEREIGNTY: GLOBAL AND LOCAL CHANGE
IN THE NEW POLITICS OF FOOD
LATINO POLITICS WORKSHOP
Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM
GETTING A JOB AT A TEACHING INSTITUTION -- AND
SUCCEEDING!
APSA Short Course
STUDYING GOVERNANCE ON THE GROUND: THE POLICE
BORDERS OF DEMOCRACY
Short Courses
MULTI-METHOD RESEARCH
Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 7:00 PM
Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM
APSA Short Course
APSA Short Course
Short Courses
Short Courses
DESIGNING AND CONDUCTING FIELD RESEARCH
APPROACHING VISUAL IMAGES: PHOTOGRAPHY, POLITICS, &
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Wednesday, 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
APSA Meetings
APSA Events
APSA Short Course
Short Courses
POLITICAL SCIENTISTS AND THE FULBRIGHT SCHOLAR
PROGRAM
APSA COUNCIL MEETING
APSA Short Course
Short Courses
Thursday, September 3, 2009
CANADIAN AND U.S. FEDERALISM WORKSHOP
Thursday, 7:00 AM to 9:00 AM
Wednesday, 9:30 AM to 1:00 PM
APSA Meetings
APSA Short Course
ORGANIZED SECTIONS BREAKFAST
APSA Events
Short Courses
ADDRESSING CHALLENGES IN TEACHING TRADITIONAL,
HYBRID, AND ONLINE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT COURSES
THE FUNDAMENTALS OF POLITICAL FORECASTING
CREATING AND TEACHING AMERICAN POLITICS COURSES IN
A GLOBALIZED CONTEXT AND CURRICULUM
Wednesday, 9:30 AM to 5:00 PM
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
APSA Panel
APSA Civic Education and Engagement Committee
Panel 1
Chair:
GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP
Larry W. Chappell, Mississippi Valley State University
Part:
Christine Ingebritsen, University of Washington
Tommy Wong, University of California, Riverside
Dan Avnon, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
APSA Short Course
Short Courses
TOOLS FOR MIDDLE-SIZED DATA PROJECTS
NEW CHALLENGES, NEW OPPORTUNITIES: THE CSES AND
EES DATA SETS
Division Panels
THEME PANEL: HOW CONSTITUTIONS WORK:
DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHES TO
CONSTITUTIONAL FUNCTION
Co-sponsored by 27-7
1-16
Chair:
NATURE, TECHNOLOGY AND BIOPOLITICS
Charles T. Rubin, Duquesne University
Papers:
Eroding Anthropological Foundations
Anja Karnein, Goethe Universitaet
Wednesday, 10:30 AM to 5:00 PM
APSA Short Course
Short Courses
CITIES, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE
Daily Schedule
T-1
239
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
The Parent in Biopolitics
Brian Duff, University of New England
Equal Respect, Toleration and Identity Recognition
Anna Elisabetta Galeotti, Università del Piemonte Orientale
POLITICAL CONSERVATISM AND DARWINIAN SCIENCE:
Does Conservatism have a future?
Stephen C. Dilley, St. Edward’s University
Transformative Toleration
Zachary White, Columbia University
Beyond Bioethics; a Phenomenological Approach to Thinking
Reprogenetics
Ashley Biser, Ohio Wesleyan University
Disc:
2-4
Chair:
Papers:
Daily Schedule
Charles T. Rubin, Duquesne University
Frank Vander Valk, Empire State College
ATHENS WITHIN JERUSALEM: CONTEMPORARY REREADINGS OF LEO STRAUSS
William Clare Roberts, McGill University
Disc:
Corey L. Brettschneider, Brown University
Ingrid Creppell, George Washington University
3-30
RESPONSIBILITIES OF CARE AND DILEMMAS OF
FREEDOM
Tamara Metz, Reed College
Chair:
Papers:
Non-Sovereign Agency and a Responsibility to Care
Tamara Metz, Reed College
Pausing for Breath: The Politics of Esotericism and Philosophical
Form in Leo Strauss and Walter Benjamin
Nicholas Xenos, University of Massachusetts
Rethinking the Feminist Position on Care and the Family
Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania
Why We Remain Jews
Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania
Do Famliy Policy Regimes Matter for Chile Well-Being?
Dan Engster, University of Texas, San Antonio
Helena Olofsdotter Stensöta, Goteborg University
The Two Cadavers of Political Philosophy: Leo Strauss and the
Strategy of Esoteric Writing
Sean Noah Walsh, University of Florida
Dirty Politics
Shadia B. Drury, University of Regina
Disc:
Jennifer Nedelsky, University of Toronto
5-2
CANDIDATE EVALUATIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-1
Philip Habel, Southern Illinois University
Chair:
2-21
Papers:
The Right to a Family Relationship
Mary L. (Molly) Shanley, Vassar College
POLITICS AND THE FORCE OF HABIT
Brief Habits for a Fast-Paced World
Jonathan Kam Shapiro, Illinois State University
Papers:
Towards a Creative Belonging: Merleau-Ponty and
theTemporality of Habituation
Mabel Wong, Johns Hopkins University
Will Barack Obama be Black in 2012? Stereotypes, Strategies,
and Changing Views of a President
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan
In-Group and Out-Group Differences in Information About
Political Candidates
Philip Paolino, University of North Texas
Ethos, Habit and Democratic Action
Alex Livingston, University of Toronto
Disc:
Nikolas Kompridis, University of Toronto
The Dynamics of Candidate Evaluation During Presidential
Election Campaigns: Online Versus Memory-Based Processing
Bryce Corrigan, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
2-39
Chair:
PSYCHOLOGIES OF DEMOCRATIC CONTESTATION
Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia
Competence, Schmompetence: Voter Preferences for Inept
Legislators
Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University
Papers:
On Grounding Dissent: Doubt, Certainty and Identity
Simona Goi, Calvin College
Recognition and Reification: Honneth and Interpersonal
Psychology
Emily Howden Hoechst, Georgetown University
Questioning, Authority, and Questioning Authority
Alisa Kessel, University of Puget Sound
Why Can’t We All Just Get Along? Agonism, Deliberation, and
Empathy
Michael E. Morrell, University of Connecticut
Disc:
William R. Caspary, New York University
3-11
TOLERATION, SECULARISM, AND THE NEW
RELIGIOUS PLURALISM
Corey L. Brettschneider, Brown University
Chair:
Papers:
David A. M. Peterson, Iowa State University
6-3
THE POLITICS AND GEOGRAPHY OF DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 11-19
6-13
Chair:
PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES OF TRADE
Mark R. Brawley, McGill University
Papers:
Anti-dumping: Economic Remedy or Political Protection?
Youngchae Lee, University of Rochester
Imagined Commodities: Non-trade Policies in the Doha Round
Holly Jarman, SUNY, University at Albany
Rally-Round-the-Flag and Fifth-Column Effects in Trade
Sanctions: A Model and a Test
Daniel Verdier, Ohio State University
Byungwon Woo, Ohio State University
Trade and Coalitions Revisited: Political Networks under
Changing Trade Policy Environments
Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Houston
Aldo Fernando Ponce, University of Houston
(Not) Just a Piece of Cloth: Begum, Recognition and the Politics
of Representation
Lasse Thomassen, Queen Mary, University of London
Is Modern Religious Freedom Sufficient for the Islamic Legal
Maqsad of Hifz al-din?
Andrew F. March, Yale University
Religious Pluralism: A Rawlsian Approach
Daniel A. Dombrowski, Seattle University
240
Disc:
Disc:
Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University
7-6
STANDARDIZING THE AMERICAN STATE:
HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES
Robert C. Lieberman, Columbia University
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Bioequivalence: The Regulatory Career of a Medical Concept
Daniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Papers:
New York as a Global Political City
Eunjung Lim, Johns Hopkins University
The American State and Imperial Standardization: Western
Expansion and Native American Removal
Paul Frymer, Princeton University
Comparative Global Political Cities: Brussel and Paris
Mariko Defreytas, Ms, SAIS, Johsn Hopkins University
Failed Standardization: Social Capital and Political Participation
in the Jim Crow South
Kimberley S. Johnson, Barnard College
Beijing as an International Metropolis
Min Ye, Boston University
Standardization and the American State: A Theoretical
Framework
Desmond King, Oxford University
Marc Stears, University of Oxford
Disc:
Margaret Weir, University of California, Berkeley
11-1
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONTENTION AND
REPRESSION IN RURAL AND URBAN CHINA
Co-sponsored by 13-1
Kellee S. Tsai, Johns Hopkins University
Chair:
Papers:
Dynamics of Virtual Representation: Popular Contention and
State Corporatism in China
Xi Chen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
The Fragmented City: Politics of Urban Preservation in Beijing,
Paris, and Chicago
Yue Zhang, University of Illinois, Chicago
Disc:
Kent E. Calder, Johns Hopkins University
Saskia Sassen, Columbia University
11-49
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE, EQUALITY, AND
RECONCILIATION
Monika Nalepa, University of Notre Dame
Chair:
Papers:
Reassessing the Roles of History, Resources, and Civil Society in
Rural Chinese Contention
William Hurst, Univ. of Texas at Austin
Mingxing Liu, Peking University
Ran Tao, University of Oxford
Land Reform and Transitional Justice
Monika Nalepa, University of Notre Dame
Domestic Institutions and Supranational Human Rights
Adjudication: The ECHR and the IACHR Compared
Druscilla L. Scribner, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
Tracy H. Slagter, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
Coping with Petition: The Perspective of a Township Level
Government
Juan Wang, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
Andrew Mertha, Cornell University
11-19
THE POLITICS AND GEOGRAPHY OF DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 6-3
Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University
Chair:
Papers:
Credit Claiming and Votes in Multi-level Governments: Evidence
from an Infrastructure Program in Mexico
Ana Lorena De La O Torres, Yale University
Miriam Bruhn, The World Bank
Disc:
Cyrus Dara Samii, Columbia University
Brian K. Grodsky, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
11-71
TERRITORIAL AUTONOMIES AND MULTINATIONAL
FEDERATIONS: INNOVATION AND COMPLEXITY IN
THE INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN OF MULTINATIONAL
STATES
Co-sponsored by 28-1
12-13
THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE:
CAPITAL MARKETS AND ELECTIONS IN THE
DEVELOPING WORLD
Co-sponsored by 16-12
12-21
WHO/WHAT ARE ELECTIONS GOOD FOR?
ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION, CHANGE AND VOTER
MOTIVATIONS IN SELECT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 44-5
Anirudh Krishna, Duke University
Partisan Representation of the Poor
Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University
Distributive Politics and Power in India: Evidence from Satellite
Imagery
Brian K. Min, University of California, Los Angeles
The Electoral Impact of Infrastructure Investment in Japan
Jun Saito, Yale University
Disc:
Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University
11-33
GLOBAL POLITICAL CITY AND INTERNATIONAL
AFFAIRS
Kent E. Calder, Johns Hopkins University
Chair:
Chair:
Papers:
Explaining the African Vote
Barak Hoffman, Georgetown University
Clark C. Gibson, University of California, San Diego
Karen E. Ferree, University of California, San Diego
James D. Long, University of California, San Diego
Daily Schedule
Subsidizing the Counties and Stabilizing the Cities of China
Jeremy L. Wallace, Ohio State University
Trauma and Efficacy: The Impact of Transitional Justice
Interventions on Post-Conflict Development Processes in West
Africa
David Backer, College of William & Mary
Anupma L. Kulkarni, Arizona State University
Exploring the Schelling Conjecture in Reverse: ‘International
Constraints’ and Cooperation with the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
Brian K. Grodsky, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
The Politics of Petitioning in Beijing
Lianjiang Li, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Kevin J. O’Brien, University of California, Berkeley
Career Incentives and Political Control Under Authoritarianism:
Explaining the Political Fortunes of Subnational Leaders in
China, 1978-2005
Yumin Sheng, Wayne State University
Washington DC as a Global Political City
Kent E. Calder, Johns Hopkins University
Elections in Africa: Are They “Instruments of Democracy?”
Wonbin Cho, University of Kentucky
Do Africans Vote Retrospectively? Job Performance, the
Economy, and Voting Behavior in Five Countries
Daniel J. Young, Michigan State/Afrobarometer
Political Opportunities and Political Participation in Mexico
Claudio A Holzner, University of Utah
241
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Daily Schedule
The New Development Agenda and Bottom-Up Activism
Peter K. Yu, Drake University Law School
Why Political Competition Matters: Leftist Parties and Social
Development Indian
Rani D. Mullen, College of William & Mary
Disc:
Anirudh Krishna, Duke University
12-39
LOCAL POLITICS IN NEW DEMOCRACIES: PATTERNS
OF DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE MEXICAN STATES
Co-sponsored by 44-6
Matthew R. Cleary, University of Chicago
Chair:
Papers:
Women’s Participation in Mexican State Legislatures
Caroline C. Beer, University of Vermont
Disc:
Kenneth Shadlen, London School of Economics
16-12
THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE:
CAPITAL MARKETS AND ELECTIONS IN THE
DEVELOPING WORLD
Co-sponsored by 12-13
Daniela Campello, Princeton University
Chair:
Papers:
Corporatism and Democracy: Consequences of Electoral
Competition for Government vs. Teacher Union Relations in the
Mexican States
Douglas Hecock, Bucknell University
Pink Floods and Moody’s Blues in Latin American Electoral
Politics
Paul M. Vaaler, University of Minnesota
Bonds, Stocks or Dollars? Do Voters Care about Capital Markets
in Brazil and Mexico
Tony P Spanakos, Montclair State University
Lucio R. Renno, University of Brasilia
Governors, Legislators, and Mayors: Particularism in the
Provision of Local Public Goods in the Mexican States
Alejandra Armesto, University of Notre Dame
Elections, Ideology, or Opposition? Assessing Competing
Explanations of Judicial Change in the Mexican States
Matthew C. Ingram, University of New Mexico
Disc:
Matthew R. Cleary, University of Chicago
12-43
CONFLICTED: VIOLENCE, COUPS AND THEIR
AMBIGUOUS CONSEQUENCES
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex
Chair:
Papers:
Wall Street and Elections in Latin American Emerging
Democracies
Javier Santiso, OECD
International Constituents: Investigating the Policy Constraint
Imposed on Governments by International Investors
Heather Bergman, University of California, Los Angeles
Presidential Elections, Country-Risk, and Governments’ ’’Room
to Maneuver’ in Latin America
Daniela Campello, Princeton University
Disc:
Matias Vernengo, University of Utah/UFRJ
Modeling Trans-National Ethnic Linkages and Civil War
Ravi Bhavnani, Michigan State University
Rick Riolo, University of Michigan
Petra Hendrickson, Michigan State University
17-6
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF TRANSGOVERNMENTAL
POLITICS
Paul W. Thurner, University of Mannheim
The Post Cold War Reestablishment of Effective State Authority
in Latin America: Can ‘Colombianization’ Tame Mexico’s
Security Crisis?
Patricia Olney, Southern Connecticut State University
Papers:
Chair:
Transgovernmental Coordination: Power or Capacity
Abraham Newman, Georgetown University
David Bach, IE Business School
Long-Term Causes and Short-Term Triggers of Coups d’état
Taeko Hiroi, The University of Texas at El Paso
Sawa Omori, International Christian University
Transgovernmental politics and policy diffusion: Evidence from
Switzerland
Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich
Fabio Wasserfallen, University of Zurich
The Coup d’Etat as a Force for Democratization: The
International Community and the Seizure of Executive Power
Nikolay V. Marinov, Yale University
The Comparative Value of Domestic and Transgovernmental
Networking
Paul W. Thurner, University of Mannheim
Seizure of Power: Why Some Military Coup Attempts Fail
While Others Succeed
Naunihal Singh, University of Notre Dame
Why Do Some Transgovernmental Networks Succeed While
Others Fail?
David Zaring, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex
Disc:
David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
13-1
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONTENTION AND
REPRESSION IN RURAL AND URBAN CHINA
Co-sponsored by 11-1
18-6
TRANSATLANTIC HOMELAND SECURITY
COOPERATION: BETWEEN POLICY AND POLITICS
Brett V. Kubicek, Government of Canada
16-9
THE CONTENTIOUS POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
Co-sponsored by 42-1
Sebastian Haunss, University of Konstanz
Chair:
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
Aviation Security and Transatlantic Cooperation
Mark B. Salter, University of Ottawa
Cat and Mouse: Industries’ and NGOs’ Forum-Shifting in the
Battle Over Intellectual Property Enforcement
Susan K. Sell, George Washington University
The Invisible American Hand: Helping, Tiding, and
Compromising? Impact of Transatlantic Networks on Homeland
Security Policies of the European Union
Patryk Pawlak, European University Institute
Illicit Seeds: Intellectual Property and the Underground
Proliferation of Agricultural Biotechnologies
Ronald J. Herring, Cornell University
Indigenous Non-state Actors: A Special Case?
Patricia Goff, Wilfrid Laurier University
242
Transatlantic Visa Politics
Rey Koslowski, SUNY, University at Albany
Security Practices and Their Spread: From Transatlantic
Homeland Security to ‘Smart Borders’
Ruben Zaiotti, University of Toronto
Disc:
Brett V. Kubicek, Government of Canada
Daily Schedule
18-25
Chair:
Papers:
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
COUNTERINSURGENCY STRATEGIES
Co-sponsored by 19-7
Robert Rauchhaus, University of California, Santa Barbara
How Elite Opinion Explains Persistent Inter-branch Policy
Disagreement
David Karol, University of California, Berkeley
Running Ahead: Presidential Popularity and Congressional
Loyalty
Henry A. Kim, University of Arizona
Nathan F. Batto, University of the Pacific
The Vanguard’s Dilemma: Understanding and Exploiting
Insurgency Strategies
Jerome Thomas Moriarty, II, University of Virginia
Revisiting the Cannon Revolt: How the Senate and the President
Affect the Balance of Power in the House
Gisela Sin, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Regime Type and Counterinsurgency Operations: Are
Democracies More Effective at “Winning the Hearts and
Minds”?
Jack Porter, The Citadel
Who Takes the Blame? The Strategic Effects of Collateral
Damage
Luke N Condra, Stanford University
Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University
Military Recruitment and Counterinsurgent Effectiveness
Nathan Toronto, US Army/USMC Counterinsurgency Center
The Evolution of Congressional Support for the President: 19532006
Andrew B. Whitford, University of Georgia
Christopher B. Goodman, University of Georgia
Disc:
Russell D. Renka, Southeast Missouri State University
Andrew J. Dowdle, University of Arkansas
Disc:
Brendan R. Green, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Kelly A. Grieco, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
22-16
PARTIES AND PARTY CONTROL IN U.S. STATE
LEGISLATURES
Co-sponsored by 29-6
19-7
COUNTERINSURGENCY STRATEGIES
Co-sponsored by 18-25
23-1
20-9
CORE VALUES AND PREFERENCES FOR DOMESTIC
AND FOREIGN POLICIES
William O. Chittick, University of Georgia
THE BALANCE OF POWER BETWEEN CONGRESS AND
THE PRESIDENT
Co-sponsored by 22-1
24-9
Chair:
PERFORMANCE SYSTEMS IN MOTION
Barry M. Mitnick, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
Rowing in the Same Direction: The Impact of Managerial
Consensus on Program Performance
Laurence J. O’Toole, University of Georgia
Alisa Hicklin, University of Oklahoma
Kenneth J. Meier, Texas A&M University
Chair:
Papers:
Ideology, Patriotism and Foreign Policy Attitudes
Jennifer Ramos, Loyola Marymount University
Miroslav Nincic, University of California, Davis
Popular Support for Multilateralism: How Nationalism and
Ideology Shape Preferences in the United States
Richard K. Herrmann, Ohio State University
Paul M. Sniderman, Stanford University
Policy and Organizational Change in the Federal Aviation
Administration: The Ontogenesis of a High Reliability
Organization
Dale A. Krane, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Patrick O’Neil, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Morality and Preferences for Domestic and Foreign Policies
Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California
Core Values and Preferences for Domestic and Foreign Policies
Harald Schoen, University of Bamberg
Disc:
Peter John Liberman, CUNY, Queens
21-4
Chair:
ALLIANCE FORMATION & OUTCOMES
Andrew G. Long, Kansas State University
Papers:
Too Many Cooks: Coalitions and the Outcome and Duration of
Interstate War
Daniel S. Morey, University of Kentucky
Reliability, Reputation, and Alliance Formation
Mark J.C. Crescenzi, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Jacob Daniel Kathman, University of Mississippi
Katja B. Kleinberg, SUNY, Binghamton University
Towards a More Democratic Performance Measurement
Hindy Lauer Schachter, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Empowering Employees to Improve Performance: Does it Work?
Sergio Fernandez, Indiana University
Disc:
Patrick S. Roberts, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State
University
25-6
POLITICAL BRANDING: A NEW APPROACH TO
MOBILIZATION AND POLICY MAKING
Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago
Chair:
Papers:
Cultural Policy and Political Branding
Daniel Silver, University of Toronto, Scarborough
Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago
Winning Wars With Coalitions: The Effects of Community
Partners, Selection, and Targeting
Kelly M. Kadera, University of Iowa
Andrew G. Long, Kansas State University
22-1
THE BALANCE OF POWER BETWEEN CONGRESS AND
THE PRESIDENT
Co-sponsored by 23-1
Russell D. Renka, Southeast Missouri State University
Chair:
Papers:
Incorporating Public Opinion and the Consequences of Gridlock
in Models of Veto Bargaining
Cari Lynn Hennessy, Northwestern University
Culture, Policy and Politics in Southern Europe: The Cases of
Lisbon and Seville
Filipe Carreira Da Silva, Universidade de Lisboa
Clemente Navarro, Universidad Pablo de Olavide
Political Branding and Public Policy in Naples, Bogota and
Chicago
Eleonora Pasotti, University of California, Santa Cruz
Disc:
Jefferey M. Sellers, University of Southern California
243
Daily Schedule
Disc:
The CEO Mayor: Michael Bloomberg and the Rebranding of
New York
Miriam Greenberg, University of California, Santa Cruz
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Daily Schedule
25-25
POLICY CHANGE AND THE GOVERNANCE OF
CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE
Co-sponsored by 39-5
Disc:
Wayne Norman, Université de Montréal
André Lecours, University of Ottawa
26-11
JUDICIAL OPINION WRITING IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Tom Clark, Emory University
29-6
PARTIES AND PARTY CONTROL IN U.S. STATE
LEGISLATURES
Co-sponsored by 22-16
Nancy Martorano, University of Dayton
Chair:
Chair:
Papers:
The Evolution of Legal Constraint and the U.S. Supreme Court
Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina
Richard W. Waterman, University of Kentucky
Andrew Martin, University of Kentucky
Papers:
Inter-institutional Bargaining, Partisanship, and Control of the
Appropriations Process in American Government
William Ewell, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Do Litigants’ Briefs Influence Supreme Court Justices? Applying
Computer-Assisted Content Analysis to the Problem
Joseph L. Smith, University of Alabama
Robert M. Howard, Georgia State University
Does Power Pay? Party Control and PAC Contributions in the
American States
Justin Kirkland, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Virginia H. Gray, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
David Lowery, University of Leiden
The Citation of Precedent in the European Court of Justice
James F. Spriggs, II, Washington University, St. Louis
Matthew Gabel, Washington University, St. Louis
Citation Behavior on State High Courts: Applying Models of
Judicial Behavior to the Opinion-Writing Stage
Meghan E. Leonard, University of Arizona
Disc:
Chad Westerland, University of Arizona
27-7
THEME PANEL: HOW CONSTITUTIONS WORK:
DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHES TO
CONSTITUTIONAL FUNCTION
Co-sponsored by T-1
Keith E. Whittington, Princeton University
Chair:
Examining the Consequences of Instability in State Government
Partisan Composition
Carl E. Klarner, Indiana State University
Disc:
Kathleen A. Bratton, Louisiana State University
30-6
URBAN CAMPAIGNS, VOTING, AND ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-4
Joel A. Lieske, Cleveland State University
Chair:
How Constitutions Work
Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland
Television Advertising in Mayoral Campaigns
Timothy B. Krebs, University of New Mexico
David B. Holian, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
The Permanent Crisis of the Presidency
Stephen M. Griffin, Tulane University
Did Patio Man Turn Blue? Exurban Voters and the 2008 Election
Ian McDonald, Duke University
What Constitutions Do: The Case of Conservative Constitutional
Politics, 1954-1980
Ken I. Kersch, Boston College
Electoral Ambition, Party, and the Rewards of Intergovernmental
Cooperation
Kenneth N. Bickers, University of Colorado, Boulder
Robert M. Stein, Rice University
Papers:
Papers:
The Colombian Constitutional Court and the Spread of
Constitutional Values
David Landau, Harvard University
Disc:
Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, Albany
28-1
TERRITORIAL AUTONOMIES AND MULTINATIONAL
FEDERATIONS: INNOVATION AND COMPLEXITY IN
THE INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN OF MULTINATIONAL
STATES
Co-sponsored by 11-71
André Lecours, University of Ottawa
Chair:
Papers:
Territorial Autonomies and Federalism: Towards a Theory of
Autonomy
Jaime Gerardo Lluch, European University Institute
The Federalist Answer to Secessionism – Comparing Canada and
Spain
Enric Martinez Herrera, European University Institute
Change and Continuity in Multinational Democracies:
Theoretical and Methodological Reflections on Canadian
Federalism
Raffaele Iacovino, Queen’s University
New Regionalism in Central and Eastern Europe: Territory and
Autonomy
Dejan Stjepanovic, European University Institute
Decentralization: An Institutional Strategy of Appeasement
across Western Europe
Bonnie M. Meguid, University of Rochester
244
Votes, Preference Estimates, and Party Power
James S.C. Battista, SUNY, University at Buffalo
Jesse T. Richman, Old Dominion University
Mobilizing Urban Constituents: Nonprofits and the Pursuit of
Group Interests in Local Elections
Kelly M. LeRoux, University of Kansas
Disc:
Karen M. Kaufmann, University of Maryland, College Park
Stephen C. Brooks, University of Akron
30-17
ORGANIZING DIVERSE COMMUNITIES: NEW
STRATEGIES FOR A NEW CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 42-5
31-6
GENDER IN CANADIAN POLITICS AND POLICY
Co-sponsored by 49-3
Melissa A. Haussman, Carleton University
Chair:
Papers:
Contemporary Canadian Feminists
Brenda O’Neill, University of Calgary
The Political Contradictions of Safe Motherhood and “Natural”
Childbirth
Candace Johnson, University of Guelph
Women’s Electoral Presence: Refuting the Notion of a Municipal
Advantage
Erin Tolley, Queen’s University
Between Legitimacy and Quackery: (De)Constructing Midwives
in Ontario, Canada
Stephanie Paterson, Concordia University
Under the Radar: Feminist Activism, Institutions and the Politics
of the Possible in Impossible Times
L. Pauline Rankin, Carleton University
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Linda A. White, University of Toronto
31-21
THE BEST WOMEN FOR THE JOB: COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVES ON FEMALE POLITICIANS’
PATHWAYS TO POWER
Co-sponsored by 34-9
32-9
Chair:
Papers:
POLICY FOCUS ON FAT POOR MINORITIES: FROM
WELFARE REFORM TO FRESH FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES
Anna R. Kirkland, University of Michigan
What’s Wrong with the Environmental Approach to Anti-Obesity
Policy?
Anna R. Kirkland, University of Michigan
Food Politics: Race, Gender, and the Politics of Food Access
Melissa V. Harris-Lacewell, Princeton University
The Recovery Model Comes to Welfare: Success Stories,
Oblates, and the Medicalization of Welfare Reform
Sanford F. Schram, Bryn Mawr College
Linda Houser, Bryn Mawr College
Joe Soss, University of Minnesota
Richard C. Fording, University of Kentucky
Tatiana Winterbottom, Bryn Mawr College
Paul Rosenstein, Bryn Mawr College
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Gendered Competitive Interaction and Women’s Executive
Electoral Success
Karen Beckwith, Case Western Reserve University
Women National Leaders- No Less Prepared to Rule
Farida Jalalzai, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Disc:
Aili Mari Tripp, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Melanie M. Hughes, University of Pittsburgh
36-1
CANDIDATE EVALUATIONS
Co-sponsored by 5-2
36-4
URBAN CAMPAIGNS, VOTING, AND ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 30-6
36-18
EXPLAINING TURNOUT IN AMERICAN NATIONAL
ELECTIONS
Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida
Chair:
Papers:
Maligned Youth? How Exit Polls Systematically Misrepresent
Youth Turnout
Josh Pasek, Stanford University
Who Votes? How and When Negativity Affects Turnout
Yanna Krupnikov, University of Michigan
The Influence of Calorie Labeling on Food Choice: Initial
Evidence from NYC’s Low-Income Communities
Rogan Kersh, New York University
Victoria Brescoll, Yale University
Brian Elbel, New York University
L. Beth Dixon, New York University
33-8
Chair:
RELIGION AND EUROPEAN POLITICS
John Francis Burke, University of St. Thomas
Papers:
Religious Voting in Belgium: Prevalence and Contextual Effects
Sarah Botterman, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Redistricting’s Effects on Political Participation: The Role of
Race and Campaign Activity
Danny Hayes, Syracuse University
Seth C. McKee, University of South Florida St. Petersburg
Michael P. McDonald, George Mason University
37-19
Chair:
IMMIGRATION
Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University
Papers:
Religion and Preferences for Welfare State Spending in Europe
Daniel Stegmueller, University of Nijmegen
Amnesty, Guest Workers, Fences! Oh My! Public Opinion about
“Comprehensive Immigration Reform”
Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University
Religion’s Place in Democratic Life: Lessons from Europe’s
Culture Wars
Bryan T. McGraw, Wheaton College
A Multi-Level Analysis of Immigration Patterns and Welfare
Attitudes, 1972-2006.
Jason Kehrberg, University of Kentucky
Disc:
Joseph Tyler Amodeo, University at Albany
34-9
THE BEST WOMEN FOR THE JOB: COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVES ON FEMALE POLITICIANS’
PATHWAYS TO POWER
Co-sponsored by 31-21
Jennifer Marie Piscopo, University of California, San Diego
Papers:
Who Votes Now?
Jan E. Leighley, University of Arizona
Jonathan Nagler, New York University
Disc:
Religion, State Regulation and Political Context: A Comparative
Analysis from France and Italy
Michael Driessen, University of Notre Dame
Chair:
Policy Feedback and Voter Turnout
Tetsuya Matsubayashi, University of North Texas
Media Exposure and IIlegal Immigration: Evidence on Attitudes
from the US
Riccardo Puglisi, Université Libre de Bruxelles
Giovanni Facchini, University of Exeter
Anna Maria Mayda, Georgetown University
A Backlash Against Immigration: State Immigrant Context and
the Political Leanings of White Americans
Zoltan L. Hajnal, University of California, San Diego
Marisa Abrajano, University of California, San Diego
Nicholas Warner, University of California, San Diego
Different Paths, Different Perspectives? An Examination of
Whether Men’s and Women’s Parliamentary Career Trajectories
Translate into Policy Outcomes in France
Rainbow Murray, University of London, Queen Mary
Pathways to Power in Presidential Cabinets: What are the Norms
for Different Cabinet Portfolios and Do Female Appointees
Conform to the Norm? A Study of 5 Presidential Democracies
Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University
Disc:
David L. Leal, University of Texas, Austin
Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University
37-24
Chair:
PUBLIC OPINION AND THE WAR ON TERRORISM
Mark Peffley, University of Kentucky
245
Daily Schedule
Understanding What Types of Women are Elected: Comparing
Male and Female Legislators’ Descriptive Characteristics in the
Argentine Congress
Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary
Jennifer Marie Piscopo, University of California, San Diego
Steady or Influx? Attitudinal Responses to Immigration Policy
from 1990-2007
Jillian Medeiros, University of Southern California
Dino N. Bozonelos, University of California, Riverside
Marika Dunn, Rutgers University
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Papers:
Fear or Rage?: Assessing Public Opinion Responses to Terrorist
Attacks
Gabriel Rubin, Montclair State University
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Accountability through Diversity: Challenges for CongregationBased Organizing in Detroit
Lara Rusch, University of Michigan, Dearborn
Political Attitudes and the Aftermath of Terrorism: Evidence
from the London 2005 Bombings
Alex Street, University of California, Berkeley
Andrew P. Kelly, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Mark Peffley, University of Kentucky
38-12
Chair:
MEDIA PREFERENCES AND POLITICAL LEARNING
Ivan Katchanovski, SUNY-Potsdam
Papers:
Jon Stewart versus the Government: The Daily Show and
Political Cynicism
Xiaoxia Cao, University of Pennsylvania
Paul R. Brewer, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Pod Casts, Ramadan Soaps and Talk Shows: Religious and
Secular Identity in Syria and Morocco
Evelyn A. Early, Air War College
Thematic Framing in Entertainment Film and its Effects on
Political Attitudes, Beliefs, and Values
Ken Mulligan, Southern Illinois University
Immigrant Organizing in the Neoliberal City
M. Victoria Quiroz-Becerra, New School University
The Limits of Civil Society: Community Based Organizations in
Good Economic Times and Bad
Tracy L. Steffy, CUNY Graduate Center
Creating Community: An Examination of Creative Class Cities
and Their Residents’ Social Capital
Emily Farris, Brown University
Disc:
Jyl Josephson, Rutgers University, Newark
43-15
PROGRESS AND CHANGE IN THE INTERNATIONAL
SYSTEM
Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware
Chair:
Papers:
Progress in International Politics
Dane K. Imerman, Ohio State University
Globalization and Accountability
Valerie Sperling, Clark University
An Experimental Exploration of Political Knowledge Acquisition
from The Daily Show Versus CNN Student News
Dannagal G Young, University of Delaware
Lindsay Hoffman, University of Delaware
Ivan Katchanovski, SUNY-Potsdam
39-5
POLICY CHANGE AND THE GOVERNANCE OF
CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE
Co-sponsored by 25-25
Alanna Krolikowski, University of Toronto
Chair:
Papers:
Public Opinion and Climate Change Governance
Christopher P. Borick, Muhlenberg College
Barry G. Rabe, University of Michigan
Synthetic Biology: Identification of Policy Problems and Options
Jennifer Kuzma, University of MN
Managing Dynamic Change: Public Policy and Genomics.
Michael Mintrom, University of Auckland
How Structure Encourages and Limits the Influence of
Progressive Ideas in International Politics
Dan Lindley, University of Notre Dame
Disc:
Dan Lindley, University of Notre Dame
Valerie Sperling, Clark University
44-5
WHO/WHAT ARE ELECTIONS GOOD FOR?
ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION, CHANGE AND VOTER
MOTIVATIONS IN SELECT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 12-21
44-6
LOCAL POLITICS IN NEW DEMOCRACIES: PATTERNS
OF DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE MEXICAN STATES
Co-sponsored by 12-39
45-7
ISLAM AND HUMAN RIGHTS: THEORY, LAW, AND
PRACTICE
Basak Cali, University College London
Chair:
Papers:
Analytics and Values: Competing Explanations for Defining
Problems and in Choosing Allies and Opponents in Watershed
Partnerships
Chris Weible, University of Colorado, Denver
Richard H. Moore, Georgia Institute of Technology
THE CONTENTIOUS POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
Co-sponsored by 16-9
42-5
ORGANIZING DIVERSE COMMUNITIES: NEW
STRATEGIES FOR A NEW CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 30-17
Jyl Josephson, Rutgers University, Newark
Chair:
246
Sharia vs. the West: The Conflict Between Sharia Law and
Human Rights Treaties
Neil Chaturvedi, University of California, Irvine
Orlando Lopez Montoya, University of California, Irvine
Jeremy Rayner, University of Regina
Stacy VanDeveer, University of New Hampshire
42-1
Female Circumcision under Islamic Jurisprudence in the Sudan
James Ryan Bowyer, Emory & Henry College
The Dilemma of Religious Freedom: A Comparative Analysis of
Religious Liberty in Western and Islamic Human Rights
Instruments
Kristine J. Kalanges, American University
What Do They Know, Anyway? Rethinking Activist Engagement
in the Policy Process
Shobita Parthasarathy, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Disc:
State and Institution Building: The Irrelevance of War
Deborah A. Boucoyannis, Harvard University
Why Do Sovereign States Amalgamate?
Philip G. Roeder, University of California, San Diego
The Implications of Partisan Selective Exposure for Candidate
Strategy: Introducing the Concept of Selective Production
Natalie Jomini Stroud, University of Texas, Austin
Soohee Kim, University of Texas, Austin
Keri Thompson, University of Texas, Austin
Maegan Stephens, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Faith-Based Community Organizing Goes National
Heidi J. Swarts, Rutgers University, Newark
Islamic Mysticism and Human Rights
Fait Atli Muedini, SUNY University of Buffalo
Improving Human Rights in Iran: Exploring the 30 Year
Disregard for Internationally Recognized Human Rights
Barbara Ann J. Rieffer-Flanagan, Central Washington
University
Disc:
Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State University
Daily Schedule
46-11
Chair:
QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO INSTITUTIONAL AND
POLICY CHANGE IN AMERICAN POLITICS
Donald Rosdil, Northern Virginia Community College
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Disc:
Eric Voegelin Society
Panel 4
Papers:
Complexifying Collaboration
Morris D. Bidjerano, SUNY, Albany
New Insights About Critical Junctures: Lessons From The Study
of Governing Majority Formation in American Politics
Adam Myers, University of Texas, Austin
Curt Nichols, University of Texas, Austin
Chair:
Papers:
Mapping Complex Coalitions: Using Frames and Policy
Positions to Identify Ideologues, Pragmatists, and Dogmatic
Coalition Members in Conflict over Charter Schools
Alex Leland Medler, University of Colorado, Boulder
Abigail Fisher Williamson, Harvard University
49-3
GENDER IN CANADIAN POLITICS AND POLICY
Co-sponsored by 31-6
Related Group Panels
EVOLUTION AND POLITICS
Donald G. Tannenbaum, Gettysburg College
Papers:
Evolutionary Psychology and Nuclear Deterrence Theory
Bradley A. Thayer, Baylor University
Disc:
Group Selection and Group Conflict
Roger D. Masters, Dartmouth College
The Biology of Fairness: Beyond Capitalism and Socialism
Peter Corning, Institute for the Study of Complex Systems
Disc:
Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of Pennsylvania
Lionel Tiger, Rutgers University
Macon W. Boczek, Kent State University
Steven Ealy, Liberty Fund, Inc.
Thomas J. McPartland, Kentucky State University
International Association for the Study of German Politics
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
Life Styles Predict Political Behavior
Nancy E. Aiken
Science and Paradox: Peirce and Voegelin on the Practice of
Language amid God, Man, World, and Society
Rhydon Jackson
The American Open Self: Exploring Voegelin’s Experience of
Peircian Philosophy
Clancy Smith, Duquesne University
Association for Politics and the Life Sciences
Panel 1
Chair:
VOEGELIN’S THE FORM OF THE AMERICAN MIND
AND AMERICAN PRAGMATISM AS A SIGNIFICANT
CONTRIBUTION TO WORLD PHILOSOPHY
Macon W. Boczek, Kent State University
Two Pragmatic Moral Universes: James vs. Dewey and the
Latter Pragmatist
Scott Segrest, U.S. Military Academy
Escaping the Black Hole: Revitalizing Urban Research in the
21st Century
Donald Rosdil, Northern Virginia Community College
Disc:
J. Donald Moon, Wesleyan University
THE PARTY POLITICS OF THE 2009 GERMAN
ELECTION
James C. Sperling, University of Akron
The Paradoxical Impact of Party System Change in Germany
Charles Lees, University of Sheffield
Moving into Unchartered Territory? Economic Crisis and the
German Greens’ New Green Deal
Ingolfur Blühdorn, University of Bath
Back from the Brink; The Strange Survival of Germany’s Left
Party
Dan Hough, University of Sussex
Coalition Governance Under Merkel’s Grand Coalition
Thomas Saalfeld, University of Kent
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 10:00 AM
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
APSA Meetings
Panel 1
MEETING
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE: SAME-SEX ‘MARRIAGE’ IN THE U.S.
AND CANADA: LEGAL CONTROVERSIES AND
EVOLVING PARADIGMS
Matthew J. Franck, Radford University
APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:00 AM
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
Part:
Robert P. George, Princeton University
Bradley C.S. Watson, Saint Vincent College
Frank Guliuzza, III, Patrick Henry College
Christopher Wolfe, Marquette University
Hadley Arkes, Amherst College
SESSION 1
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 1
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
Conference Group on Jurisprudence and Public Law
Panel 1
Chair:
Judging the Holocaust: Hans Morgenthau and Hannah Arendt on
Evil, Accountability, and Genocide
Douglas B. Klusmeyer, American University
Intramural Conflict Among German Courts: The Struggle for
Postwar Justice in the British Zone
Michael E. Bryant, Tufts University
SESSION 1
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 1
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Daily Schedule
Papers:
ACCOUNTABILITY AND THE ETHICS OF
RESPONSIBILITY
J. Donald Moon, Wesleyan University
SESSION 1
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 1
Collapse: Power Versus Law in a National Security State
David Fagelson, American University
247
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:00 AM
Daily Schedule
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
Part:
Kirstie M. McClure, University of California, Los Angeles
Timothy Fuller, Colorado College
SESSION 1
2-7
FORM, CONTENT, AND CONTINGENCY: THE
CONTOURS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Davide Panagia, Trent University
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 1
Working Group: Political Ethics
Chair:
Papers:
SESSION 1
Aesthetics of the Urban: Beyond form and Content
Michael J. Shapiro, University of Hawaii
Inhuman Aesthetics: From Kant to Meillassoux
Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
Tour de Force: Vitalism, Humanity and Poetry in Alain Locke’s
Aesthetic
Michelle Smith, Cornell University
SESSION 1
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
Martha Nussbaum and Problem of Artistic-Political Content
J. Maggio, University of Florida
SESSION 1
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
Disc:
Nancy S. Love, Appalachian State University
SESSION 1
2-18
FEAR OF IMAGES? ROUNDTABLE ON POLITICAL
SCIENCE AND THE EVASION OF VISUAL CULTURE
Co-sponsored by 41-1
James D. Johnson, University of Rochester
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 1
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
Chair:
Part:
Victoria Hattam, New School University
David Campbell, University of Durham
James D. Johnson, University of Rochester
Michelle L. Woodward, Middle East Research and
Information Project
Mark Reinhardt, Williams College
2-37
Chair:
TOCQUEVILLE CONFRONTS THE DEMOCRATIC MIND
Dana R. Villa, University of Notre Dame
Papers:
Tocqueville and Locke on the Utility of Religion
Sanford Kessler, North Carolina State University
SESSION 1
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Affiliate Group Meetings
McGraw-Hill
BUSINESS MEETING 1
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Division Panels
T-2
THEME PANEL: THE IDEA OF CHANGE AND THE
PROBLEM OF POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 1-22
T-3
THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND SECURITY: THE
POLITICS OF POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE OF
TURBULENCE
Co-sponsored by 11-39 and 18-2
1-9
Chair:
Papers:
The Time of Democracy: Tocqueville and the Fourth Dimension
Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Politics is not Economics: Tocqueville and Low Liberalism
Christopher Gaelan Murphy, Grant MacEwan College
Disc:
Susan Jane McWilliams, Pomona College
Dana R. Villa, University of Notre Dame
FOUNDINGS AND THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL
THOUGHT
Alexandra E. Hoerl, Wabash College
3-18
THE MORAL PSYCHOLOGY OF CHOICE AND
COERCION
Alan Houston, University of California, San Diego
The Concept of Founding
Angelica Maria Bernal, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Papers:
Chair:
Moral Psychology and Political Choice
Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine
The Topicality of the Foundations of Politics in Plato’s Republic
Karen Francois, Free University of Brussels
Cognitive and Affective Aspects of Three Concepts of Liberty
Gerry Mackie, University of California, San Diego
Rousseau on Founding Moments and Political Culture: Or How
to Make Sense of the Lawgiver?
Serdar Tekin, University of Toronto
Does ‘May’ Equal ‘Must?’: Drawing the Line between
Permission and Coercion
Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University
Disc:
Alexandra E. Hoerl, Wabash College
Big Love in the Liberal State
Olivia Newman, University of Pittsburgh
1-22
THEME PANEL: THE IDEA OF CHANGE AND THE
PROBLEM OF POLITICS
Co-sponsored by T-2
Michael Allen Gillespie, Duke University
Chair:
Disc:
248
Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago
Tracy B. Strong, University of California, San Diego
Disc:
Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Eastern Michigan University
3-19
FREE MARKET LIBERTARIANISM: IS THERE A
MORAL DEFENSE?
Debra Satz, Stanford University
Chair:
Papers:
The Conscience of a Libertarian
Chandran Kukathas, London School of Economics
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Globalization and Domestic Politics:Party Politics and
Preferences for CAFTA in Costa Rica
Raymond Hicks, Princeton University
Helen V. Milner, Princeton University
Dustin Halliday Tingley, Princeton University
Market Democracy: Economic Liberty and Social Justice
John Tomasi, Brown University
Recognized Rights as Devices of Public Reason
Gerald F. Gaus, University of Arizona
Disc:
Stephen Macedo, Princeton University
Debra Satz, Stanford University
Disc:
Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University
Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego
4-1
Chair:
AGENCY MODELS AND THE POLITICS OF AGENCIES
Nolan McCarty, Princeton University
6-17
Papers:
Preference Aggregation in Heirarchies
Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester
Jinhee Jo, University of Rochester
Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester
DEMOCRATIC REPRESENTATION AND
POLICYMAKING
Micah Altman, Harvard University
Chair:
Papers:
Is “Neutral” Information Aggregation Possible in a Hierarchy?
Thomas H. Hammond, Michigan State University
Stephen R. Haptonstahl, Washington University, St. Louis
Democracy, Labor Power and Social Spending in Latin America
Amanda Louise Beal, University of Missouri, Columbia
Learning and Teaching in a Model of Supervised Policy
Implementation
Alexander Victor Hirsch, Stanford University
Democratic Representation, Opinion Liberalism, and the Size of
Welfare
Jungho Roh, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Partisanship and the Effectiveness of Oversight
Justin Fox, Yale University
Richard Van Weelden, Yale University
Leaps or Ladders: Organizational Structure and Expertise
Development
John W. Patty, Harvard University
Disc:
Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley
5-9
Chair:
RISK
Elizabeth Popp, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
Attitudes towards Risk and Electoral Decision-Making
Cindy D. Kam, Vanderbilt University
Elizabeth Simas, University of California, Davis
Red Brain, Blue Brain: Evaluative Processes Differ in Democrats
and Republicans
James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego
Effective Representation and Authority Allocation in Democratic
Policymaking: An Empirical Model of the Complex ContextConditionality of (Re)Distributive Policy
Robert J. Franzese, Jr., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Disc:
Simon Hix, London School of Economics
7-1
NORTH, WALLIS AND WEINGAST’S “VIOLENCE AND
SOCIAL ORDERS”
Co-sponsored by 11-10
7-15
THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL POLICY: HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVES
Co-sponsored by 25-3
Patricia Strach, Harvard University
Chair:
Papers:
Risk, Ambivalence, and Global Warming
Daniel J. Coffey, University of Akron
Elizabeth Popp, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
6-11
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF GLOBALIZATION IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 16-26
Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University
Chair:
Papers:
Why is there Trade without Compensation in the South?
Globalization without Welfare States in the Developing World
Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder
Globalization and Risk Protection in Developing Countries
Sarah M. Brooks, The Ohio State University
Nixon’s Northern Strategy: Welfare Reform and Race after the
Great Society
Scott Spitzer, California State University, Fullerton
Disc:
Patricia Strach, Harvard University
8-1
EXPERIMENTS IN THE STUDY OF COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 11-40
8-12
ADVANCES IN STUDYING REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL RULES
Alberto Simpser, University of Chicago
Chair:
Papers:
How Eectoral Systems Affect MPs’ Positions
Simon Hug, Université de Genève
The Returns to Office: Public Service Requires No Financial
Sacrifice for U.S. Representatives
Gabriel S. Lenz, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Kevin Lim, MIT
Comparative Election Fraud Detection
Walter R. Mebane, Jr., University of Michigan
Kirill Kalinin, University of Michigan
249
Daily Schedule
Protecting the Poor: Skill Bias in the International Distribution of
Trade Protection
Kenneth F. Scheve, Yale University
Xiaobo Lu, Yale University
Matthew Slaughter, Dartmouth College
Conspicuous and Inconspicuous Public Health Spending
alongside the Development of a Private Health Care System in
the United States
Colleen M. Grogan, University of Chicago
Urban Housing and the Rise of the Public-Private Partnership in
United States Social Policy
Alexander Von Hoffman, Harvard University
Priming Risk: The Accessibility of Uncertainty in Political
Decision Making
Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
David L. Eckles, University of Georgia
Disc:
Rainfall and Representation: How Voter Turnout Shapes the
Effective Constituency for Legislators
Joel Simmons, SUNY, Stony Brook
Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Explaining Variation in the Degree of Electoral Competition in a
Mature Democracy: U.S. Senate Elections, 1922-2004
Stanley L. Winer, Carleton University
Bernard N. Grofman, University of California, Irvine
Lawrence Kenny, University of Florida
Daily Schedule
Chair:
Maiah Jaskoski, Naval Postgraduate School
Papers:
U.S. Military Privatization and its Implications for Developing
Country Coercive Institutions
Shana R Marshall, University of Maryland
Disc:
Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University
Is Defense a Public Good?
Ayesha Siddiqa, University of Pennsylvania
9-1
A NEW WORLD OF POLITICAL SCIENCE PEDAGOGY
Co-sponsored by 10-1
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
Patterns of Military Entrepreneurship in Latin America
Kristina Mani, Oberlin College
Chair:
Papers:
Army For Hire: Variation in the Privatization of Peruvian and
Ecuadorian Army Security Work
Maiah Jaskoski, Naval Postgraduate School
Student Discussion Participation and Satisfaction in Different
Learning Environments
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
Philip H. Pollock, III, University of Central Florida
Bruce M. Wilson, University of Central Florida
‘Text Me, Text Me’: Bringing the Capitol into the Classroom Via
a Blackberry
Himanee Gupta-Carlson, Tacoma Community College
Soldiers of Fortune: The Rise and Fall of PLA, Inc.
James Mulvenon, Center for Intelligence Research and
Analysis
Disc:
Zachary Zwald, UC Santa Cruz
11-39
THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND SECURITY: THE
POLITICS OF POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE OF
TURBULENCE
Co-sponsored by 18-2 and T-3
Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London
Online Discussion, Student Engagement, and Critical Thinking
Leonard Williams, Manchester College
Mary Lahman, Manchester College
Informationalism Overtakes Educational Issues
Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Chair:
Papers:
Europe’s Brave New World: Security Implications of Global
Population Changes, 2007-2050
Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University
Disc:
Bruce Pencek, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
10-1
A NEW WORLD OF POLITICAL SCIENCE PEDAGOGY
Co-sponsored by 9-1
11-10
NORTH, WALLIS AND WEINGAST’S “VIOLENCE AND
SOCIAL ORDERS”
Co-sponsored by 7-1
Margaret Levi, University of Washington, Seattle
Disc:
Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London
Disc:
Robert H. Bates, Harvard University
Larry Diamond, Stanford University
11-40
Part:
David Stasavage, New York University
Barry R. Weingast, Stanford University
Douglass C. North, Washington University
John Wallis, University of Maryland
EXPERIMENTS IN THE STUDY OF COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 8-1
Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley
Chair:
11-22
Chair:
Papers:
THE POLITICS OF SETTLERS AND SETTLEMENTS IN
CONTESTED TERRITORIES
Co-sponsored by 43-1
Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania
The Impact of Jewish Settlers in the West Bank on the
Palestinian-Israeli Peace Process
Oded Haklai, Queen’s University
Settlers and Mobilization in Cyprus: Antinomies of Ethnic
Conflict and Immigration Politics
Neophytos Loizides, Queen’s University of Belfast
Arabs in Iraqi Kurdistan: Reframing the Kirkuk problem
Denise Natali
The Demography of Religious Radicalism
Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London
An Age Structural Theory of State Performance
Richard P. Cincotta, H.L. Stimson Center
Global Population Aging and American Security Interests
Mark L. Haas, Duquesne University
Chair:
Papers:
The Tension between Sampling and Statistical Theories:
Sampling Strategies for Cluster-Randomized Experiments
Steven Shewfelt, Yale University
Joel A. Middleton, Yale University
Do Politicians Answer More to Core Voters or to Swing Voters?
Paolo Spada, Yale University
Corruption and Inequality at the Crossroad:A Multi-Method
Study of Bribery and Discrimination in Latin America
Brian Fried, Yale University
Corruption and Inequality at the Crossroad:A Multi-Method
Study of Bribery and Discrimination in Latin America
Paul Lagunes, Yale University
Corruption and Inequality at the Crossroad:A Multi-Method
Study of Bribery and Discrimination in Latin America
Atheendar Venkataramani, Yale University
Disc:
Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania
Statistical Analysis of Causal Mechanisms in Randomized
Experiments
Kosuke Imai, Princeton University
Luke Keele, Ohio State University
Teppei Yamamoto, Princeton University
11-37
THE ARMED FORCES IN BUSINESS: MILITARY
ENTREPRENEURIAL WORK IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 12-11
Redistributive Records, Partisan Cues, and Voting Behavior
among the Urban Poor: Evidence from a Survey Experiment in
Brazil
Fernando Daniel Hidalgo, University of California, Berkeley
Miguel de Figueiredo, University of California, Berkeley
“Master Race” or Victims of Totalitarianism? Italian Participants
in Fascist Settlement Projects
Roberta Pergher, University of Kansas
250
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Paolo Spada, Yale University
Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley
11-51
LEADERSHIP AND POLICY CHANGE IN THE ERA OF
COMPLEXITY
Co-sponsored by 25-1
Alan J. Renwick, University of Reading
Chair:
Papers:
Political Leadership in Anglophone Democracies
Nigel Bowles, University of Oxford
Alan J. Renwick, University of Reading
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
The Endurance of the Czech Communist Party
Mary Stegmaier, University of Virginia
Klara Plecita-Vlachova, Czech Academy of Sciences
Disc:
Andrew Roberts, Northwestern University
14-6
Chair:
THE NEW POLITICS OF LABOR
Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam
Papers:
Evaluating “Upsurge” in Theory and Comparison:
Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Labor Movement Upsurges and
Democratization
Andrew G. Lawrence, University of Edinburgh
Leadership Responses to Electoral System Change in Japan
Ellis S. Krauss, University of California, San Diego
Robert J. Pekkanen, University of Washington
Society of Owners? A Comparative-Historical Study of Class
and Finance Capitalism in the United States and Germany
Natascha van der Zwan, New School University
Presidential Policy Leadership: Types and Variations
Bruce Miroff, SUNY, Albany
How Do Workers Strike? Globalization, Networks, and Emergent
Solidarity
Erin C. McGrath, University of Pittsburgh
Michael Dale Siciliano, University of Pittsburgh
Gunes Ertan, University of Pittsburgh
Policy Entrepreneurs as Policy Leaders: Cognitive and Affective
Strategies of Policy-Making Success
Nikolaos Zahariadis, University of Alabama, Birmingham
Disc:
Nannerl O. Keohane, Princeton University
12-11
THE ARMED FORCES IN BUSINESS: MILITARY
ENTREPRENEURIAL WORK IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 11-37
12-27
Chair:
Papers:
MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP: NATIONAL
IDENTITIES IN A TRANSNATIONAL WORLD
Apichai W. Shipper, University of Southern California
Globalization, Nationality, and the Construction of Citizenship:
the United Arab Emirates in Comparative Historical Perspective
Manal A. Jamal, James Madison University
The Dual Citizenship Debate in South Korea
Young Ju Audrey Rhee, University of Oxford
Taking Preferences to Task: The Relationship between Job
Characteristics and Views on Welfare Policy
Yotam M. Margalit, Stanford University
Disc:
Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam
14-18
YOUTH, CULTURE AND FOOTBALL: VARIETIES OF
NATIONALISM IN ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES
Co-sponsored by 15-15
15-15
YOUTH, CULTURE AND FOOTBALL: VARIETIES OF
NATIONALISM IN ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES
Co-sponsored by 14-18
Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Chair:
Papers:
Political Transnationalism in Question: What Limits the Political
Transnationalism of “Transnational” Groups in Liberal
Democracies?
Michael Orlando Sharpe, CUNY-York College
Generational Change in Attitudes about Women’s Roles in
Politics and in the Home.
Kathleen Knight, Columbia University
Yvonne Galligan, Queen’s University Belfast
Constructing the Nation on the Stadium: Contesting
“Catalanisms” manifested in Football
Elga Castro, New School of Social Research
Labor Migration and Ethno-Nationalism under Contestation
Yoonkyung Lee, SUNY, Binghamton
Should I Stay or Should I Go? An Exploration of National
Identity in the Face of Forced Migration
Jennifer Eileen Byrne, James Madison University
From Geopolitics to Cultural Affinity: The Change in Voting
Behavior in Eurovision Song Contest
Basak Yavcan Ural, University of Pittsburgh
Stacy Bondanella Taninchev, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Apichai W. Shipper, University of Southern California
13-8
POLITICAL PARTIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN
EUROPE: 20 YEARS AFTER THE FALL OF
COMMUNISM
Co-sponsored by 35-1
Mary Stegmaier, University of Virginia
Disc:
Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
15-20
Party Divisions in Europe: Theory and Evidence from an Expert
Survey in 27 European Democracies
Robert Rohrschneider, University of Kansas
Stephen Whitefield, University of Oxford
FACING A RELIGIOUS DIVIDE? EUROPE IN THE
TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 33-7
16-13
Are Mixed Electoral Systems the Best Choice for Central and
Eastern Europe or the Reason for Defective Party Systems?
Daniel Bochsler, Center for Comparative and International
Studies (University of Zurich)
CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN EXCHANGE RATE
POLICIES
David Leblang, University of Virginia
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Populist Appeals in Postcommunist Europe
Kevin Deegan-Krause, Wayne State University
Tim Haughton, University of Birmingham
Un-United Kingdom: Tolerance, Intolerance, and Contemporary
British Youth Culture
Carol Lorraine Carano
Sore Losers? Multilateral Trade Agreements, Commercial
Disputes, and Exchange Rate Protection
Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin
Mark S. Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Firms and Exchange Rates. The Sectoral and Institutional
Sources of Monetary Regime Preferences
Jose Fernandez-Albertos, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis
Internacionals
251
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Answering Oren’s Challenge: The Independent Role of Public
Democratic Identity in the Security and Foreign Policies of
Democracies
Jarrod Hayes, University of Southern California
Exchange Rate Regime Choice with Multiple Key Currencies
Eric Neumayer, London School of Economics
Thomas Pluemper, University of Essex
The Political Geography of International Monetary Power
David M. Andrews, Scripps College
Fast Money: Institutional Investors and Exchange Rate Politics in
Emerging Markets
Benjamin J. Bloom, University of Virginia
Disc:
Babak Bahador, University of Canterbury
21-13
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND CONFLICT
MANAGEMENT
Lilach Gilady, University of Toronto
Disc:
Michael G. Hall, Wichita State University
Chair:
16-26
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF GLOBALIZATION IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 6-11
Papers:
17-17
ROUNDTABLE ON BETH SIMMONS, MOBILIZING FOR
HUMAN RIGHTS: INTERNATIONAL LAW IN
DOMESTIC POLITICS, CAMBRIDGE 2009
Co-sponsored by 45-3
Thomas Risse, Freie Universität Berlin
Chair:
Part:
18-2
18-10
Chair:
Part:
Ryan Goodman, Harvard University
Xinyuan Dai, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Stephen D. Krasner, Stanford University
Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University
Thomas Risse, Freie Universität Berlin
Barbara Koremenos, University of Michigan
THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND SECURITY: THE
POLITICS OF POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE OF
TURBULENCE
Co-sponsored by 11-39 and T-3
Let’s Talk: Forum Selection in Dispute Resolution
Vanessa Lefler, University of Iowa
Just how Humanitarian are Interventions? UN Peacekeeping and
the Prevention of Civilian Killing during and after Civil Wars
Sarah E. Kreps, Cornell University
Geoffrey Wallace, Cornell University
Disc:
Lilach Gilady, University of Toronto
21-23
CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL
CONFLICT
Cullen S. Hendrix, University of North Texas
Chair:
Papers:
19-3
THE NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION CHALLENGE IN THE
MIDDLE EAST: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Co-sponsored by 18-10
20-14
ELECTIONS AND ATTITUDES IN FOREIGN POLICY
ANALYSIS
Michael T. Koch, Texas A&M University
Climate change, economic welfare and conflict
Vally Koubi, ETH Zurich
Thomas C. Bernauer, ETH Zurich
The Impact of the Troop Surge in Iraq on the Size Distribution
of Violent Events: What can we Learn about the Nature of the
War?
Neil Johnson, University of Miami
Michael Spagat, University of London
Privatization of Security and its Effects on Civil War Duration
Megan Becker, University of California, San Diego
Disc:
Cullen S. Hendrix, University of North Texas
22-2
PARTISANSHIP AND BIPARTISANSHIP IN THE U.S.
CONGRESS
Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester
Chair:
Papers:
Fourth Estate or Mouthpiece? A Game Theoretic Model of the
Influence of Foreign Policy on the Domestic Relationship among
Media, Regime Type and Government Respect for Physical
Integrity Rights
Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, University of Southern California
Patrick James, University of Southern California
Electoral Margins, Presidential Mandates, and American Foreign
Policy
Philip B. K. Potter, University of Michigan
Economic Considerations in Public Opinion about War: Evidence
from the American Public’s Support for the Invasion of Iraq
Sam Sierra Seljan, UC San Diego
252
Pirates: Cause or Consequence of Civil War
Chelsea Denise Brown, Southern Methodist University
Shelby Bishop, Southern Methodist University
Political Demography: Structural Policy Implications of
Changing Demographic Patters
Jacek Kugler, Claremont Graduate University
Tadeusz Kugler, Roger Williams University
F. Gregory Gause, III, University of Vermont
Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University
Negeen Pegahi, University of Chicago
Caitlin Talmadge, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
HUMAN RIGHTS, WOMEN’S RIGHTS AND
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THE BODY IN IR
THEORY
Co-sponsored by 31-10
Chair:
See You Out of Court? Arbitration Treaties and Peaceful Conflict
Management
Megan Shannon, University of Mississippi
THE NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION CHALLENGE IN THE
MIDDLE EAST: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Co-sponsored by 19-3
Dalia Dassa Kaye, RAND Corporation
18-37
The WTO Dispute Resolution Body and Its Effects on the
Kantian Tripod
Christina Fattore, West Virginia University
Papers:
Evaluating Theories of Lawmaking Using Bill Support Rates
Scott Adler, University of Colorado, Boulder
Charles M. Cameron, Princeton University
Partisan Signaling and Agenda Control in the U.S. House of
Representatives
Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia
Michael Crespin, University of Georgia
Anthony Madonna, University of Georgia
Daily Schedule
Managing Uncertainty in the U.S. Senate: Procedural Innovation
and Routinization
Richard S. Beth, Congressional Research Service
Valerie Heitshusen, Congressional Research Service / Library
of Congress
Bill Heniff, Jr., Congressional Research Service
Elizabeth Rybicki, Congressional Research Service
Disc:
23-4
Chair:
Disc:
Part:
24-1
Undoing the Initiative: When Are Ballot Measures Challenged in
Court, and When Do Judges Overturn Them?
Dean P. Lacy, Dartmouth College
Carlos A. Mejia, University of California
David M. Primo, University of Rochester
William Minozzi, Ohio State University
“Pigs in Robes”: An Experimental Study of the Influence of
Negative Judicial Campaign Messages
Jeffrey A. Gottfried, University of Pennsylvania
REFLECTIONS ON PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITIONS THE ROLE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION
Co-sponsored by 24-1
Terry Sullivan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Disc:
Jeff Yates, Binghamton University, SUNY
29-1
Christopher Lu, The White House
Martha Joynt Kumar, Towson University
JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 26-6
29-11
POLICY RESPONSIVENESS IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 37-6
Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida
Blake Gottesman, White House
James A. Thurber, American University
John P. Burke, University of Vermont
Chair:
Papers:
REFLECTIONS ON PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITIONS THE ROLE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION
Co-sponsored by 23-4
THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL POLICY: HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVES
Co-sponsored by 7-15
Income Inequality and Unequal Policy Responsiveness in the
American States
Patrick Flavin, University of Notre Dame
Democratic Responsiveness and Education Governance: Are
State Charter School Laws Responsive to Public Preferences?
Jonah Liebert, Columbia University, Teachers College
Connecting the Representational Dots between Public Opinion
and State Budget Priorities
Kasey Swanke, University of Notre Dame
Lauren Deschamps, University of Notre Dame
Thermostatic Policy Responsiveness in the Fifty States
Julianna Pacheco, Pennsylvania State University
Institutions and Representation: Policy Responsiveness in the
U.S. States
Justin Phillips, Columbia University
Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University
GEOENGINEERING AND GLOBAL ORDER
Co-sponsored by 39-1
Renee Marlin-Bennett, Johns Hopkins University
Uncertainty, Fat Tails, and Time Lags: Why we Must Start
Planning Now to Geoengineer Earth Soon
Thomas F. Homer-Dixon, University of Waterloo
Disc:
Gerald C. Wright, Indiana University, Bloomington
Daniel C. Lewis, University of New Orleans
Geoengineering and World Order: Past and Future
Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University
Jairus V. Grove, Johns Hopkins University
30-7
CITIES AND PUBLIC POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-20
Mara Sidney, Rutgers University, Newark
An Emergent Mangle of Practice: Local Adaptation, Regional
Planning, and National Management of Global Climate Change
as Vernacular Geo-Engineering
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
The Utility and Implications of Real Geoengineering Concepts
Jason J. Blackstock, International Institute for Applied
Systems Analysis
Geoffrey Herrera, Pitzer College
25-20
CITIES AND PUBLIC POLICY
Co-sponsored by 30-7
26-6
JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-1
Jeff Yates, Binghamton University, SUNY
Chair:
Papers:
Nonprofits, Governance, and Sustainability in American Cities
Kent E. Portney, Tufts University
Jeffrey M. Berry, Tufts University
The Politics of Environmental Science
Richard C. Hula, Michigan State University
Rebecca Elizabeth Bromley-Trujillo, Michigan State
University
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Chair:
Legislative Responses to Unconstitutionality: Evidence from the
State Level
Matthew H. Bosworth, Winona State University
Partisan Polarization, Rules and Legislative Productivity
Barbara Sinclair, University of California, Los Angeles
25-3
Papers:
Negativity and Television Advertising in State Supreme Court
Elections
Melinda Gann Hall, Michigan State University
Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh
Executive Strategy and Judicial Candidates: “Going Public” in
State Supreme Court Elections
Teena Wilhelm, University of Georgia
Richard L. Vining, Jr., University of Georgia
LEADERSHIP AND POLICY CHANGE IN THE ERA OF
COMPLEXITY
Co-sponsored by 11-51
Chair:
Papers:
Legislative Compensation within Parties: A Theory with
Evidence
Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Virginia
Nathan W. Monroe, University of California, Merced
25-1
25-7
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Neighborhood Democracy and Affordable Housing in
Minneapolis
Neil J. Kraus, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
Neighborhood Regeneration Policy and the Contest for
Subgovernment Control in Baltimore
Robert P. Stoker, George Washington University
Clarence N. Stone, The George Washington University
Donn C. Worgs, Towson University
253
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Spanning Policymaking Silos in Urban Development and
Environmental Management: When Global Cities are Coastal
Cities Too
Herman L. Boschken, San Jose State University
Disc:
Christopher Leo, University of Winnipeg
31-10
HUMAN RIGHTS, WOMEN’S RIGHTS AND
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THE BODY IN IR
THEORY
Co-sponsored by 18-37
Debra J. Liebowitz, Drew University
Chair:
Papers:
Challenging Realists to “Get Real”: Gendering Weapons, War,
and Terrorism in a Post-9/11 World
Kimberly Rae Carter, University of Toronto
The International Criminal Court: A New Avenue for the
Diffusion of Women’s Rights Norms?
Louise Chappell, University of Sydney
Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Micro-Level Responses to
the Transnational Campaign on Gender-Based Violence
Karisa Tritz Cloward, Yale University
Civil Society Activism and Women’s Human Rights: An
Analysis of the International Marriage Broker Regulation Act
and the International Violence Against Women Act
Noha Shawki, Illinois State University
Disc:
Aaron M. Hoffman, Purdue University
32-8
Chair:
GENDER, RACE AND SEXUALITY
Regina P. Branton, Rice University
Papers:
Is the Gender Gap “American”? The Generational Evolution of
Latino/a Political Differences
Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder
Christina Elizabeth Bejarano, University of Kansas
Sylvia Manzano, Texas A&M University
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Locked in and Silent? The Role of ‘Voice’ in Delivering Public
Services
John Kevin Curtice, University of Strathclyde
Stratos Patrikios, University of Strathclyde
Specialization in Electoral and Non-electoral Political
Participation: A Comparative Analysis
Eline A. de Rooij, University of Oxford
The Changing Determinants of Protest Participation
Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois, Urbana
Champaign
Disc:
Marc Hooghe, KU Leuven
35-1
POLITICAL PARTIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN
EUROPE: 20 YEARS AFTER THE FALL OF
COMMUNISM
Co-sponsored by 13-8
36-20
HOW ELECTION RULES AND ADMINISTRATION
AFFECT VOTERS
John E. McNulty, SUNY, Binghamton
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Regina P. Branton, Rice University
Michael Javen Fortner, Harvard University
33-7
FACING A RELIGIOUS DIVIDE? EUROPE IN THE
TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 15-20
Helene Slessarev-Jamir, Claremont School of Theology
Chair:
Papers:
Legally Mandated Inconvenience: Does Driver’s License
Suspension reduce Voter Turnout?
John E. McNulty, SUNY, Binghamton
Is There Really a Secret Ballot?
Conor M. Dowling, Yale University
Alan Gerber, Yale University
Gregory Huber, Yale University
David Doherty, Yale University
Disc:
Rachael Vanessa Cobb, Suffolk University
36-31
REVISITING THE AMERICAN VOTER
Co-sponsored by 37-10
George Rabinowitz, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Chair:
Papers:
Candidate Perceptions in the 2008 Election
Helmut Norpoth, SUNY, Stony Brook
Preferential Treatment of Religious Organizations and
Discrimination against Minority Religions in Europe
Claus Hofhansel, Rhode Island College
Disc:
Aida Paskeviciute, University of Essex
34-6
BEYOND THE BALLOT BOX: INSTITUTIONS,
PARTICIPATION AND REPRESENTATION
Marc Hooghe, KU Leuven
Chair:
254
The Economy and Voting Behavior in the 2008 Election
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa
Policy Attitudes, Ideology, and Voting Behavior in the 2008
Election
William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University
Segmented Pluralism as Problem or Solution: The Debate about
Pillarization in The Netherlands
Matthijs Bogaards, Jacobs University Bremen
Religion and Support for Turkish Membership in the EU
Hajo Georg Boomgaarden, University of Amsterdam
Satisfaction with Voting Technology and Election Administration
in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
Paul S. Herrnson, University of Maryland
Richard G. Niemi, University of Rochester
Kelly D. Patterson, Brigham Young University
It’s in the Mail: Surveying UOCAVA Voters and Barriers to
Overseas Voting
Claire M. Smith, Overseas Vote Foundation
Muslim, American and Female: Constructing Social Identity
Shawn W. Rosenberg, University of California, Irvine
Fatima Z. Rahman, University of California, Irvine
Straddling the Digital Divide: Race, Pornography, and
Representation in Cyberspace
Niambi M. Carter, Purdue University
One of Us: Multilevel Models Examining the Impact of Social
Representation on Civic Engagement
Pippa Norris, Harvard University
Mona Lena Krook, Washington University, St. Louis
Party Identification in the 2008 Election
Herbert F. Weisberg, The Ohio State University
Disc:
Paul N. Goren, University of Minnesota
George Rabinowitz, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
37-6
POLICY RESPONSIVENESS IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-11
Daily Schedule
37-10
REVISITING THE AMERICAN VOTER
Co-sponsored by 36-31
38-10
DELIBERATION, SOCIAL NETWORKS AND THE
FRAMING OF DISCOURSE
Matthew A. Baum, Harvard University
Chair:
Papers:
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Papers:
Divergent Paths to Transitional Justice: Spain and Portugal
Compared
Omar G. Encarnacion, Bard College
Memorials to Struggle: Artistic Representations and the Politics
of Democratic Consolidation in Latin America
Katherine Hite, Vassar College
Citizen Group Sponsored Issue Ads and Agenda Setting
Daniel E. Bergan, Michigan State University
Genevieve Risner, Michigan State University
Evolution or Revolution? Transitional Justice Culture Across
Borders
Stephanie R. Golob, Baruch College-CUNY
Social Influence and Social Selection in Networks
David Lazer, Harvard University
Michael Neblo, Ohio State University
Brian Rubineau, Cornell University
The Power of Symbolic Capital: Political Struggles over
Monuments and Memorials in the Post-Communist World
Juliet Johnson, McGill University
Benjamin Forest, McGill University
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: How to Save Political
Discussion from Itself
Gregory A. Petrow, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Timothy Vercellotti, Western New England College
Leadership and Political Communication
Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University
Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University
Torun Dewan, London School of Economics
Disc:
Jo-Marie Burt, George Mason University
44-22
Chair:
AUTHORITARIAN REGIME CONSOLIDATION
Andreas Schedler, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia
Economicas
Papers:
How Autocrats Defend Themselves against Armed Rivals
Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles
Disc:
Jennifer Ogg Anderson, Vanderbilt University
39-1
GEOENGINEERING AND GLOBAL ORDER
Co-sponsored by 25-7
Structural Challenges to the Consolidation of Electoral
Authoritarian Regimes
Andreas Schedler, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia
Economicas
40-6
COMPARATIVE EXPERIENCES IN ONLINE POLITICAL
ORGANIZING, DELIBERATING AND PARTICIPATING
Cecilia G. Manrique, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse
Institutionalizing Popular Support for Plebiscitarian Autocracies:
The Case of Russia
Richard Rose, University of Aberdeen
William Mishler, University of Arizona
Revitalising Particpatory Politics?: The Internet, Social Capital
and Political Action.
Rachel K. Gibson, University of Manchester
Ian McAllister, Australian National University
Authoritarian Resilience and State Failure: Lessons from
Zimbabwe
Michael Bratton, Michigan State University
Chair:
Papers:
Can Online Deliberation Transform Citizens? Knowledge and
Opinion Change in an Internet Field Experiment in the UK
Peter C. John, University of Manchester
Chin-Cher Chen, National Chung-Cheng University
Corinne Wales, University of Southampton
Patrick James Sturgis, University of Surrey
Gerry Stoker, University of Southampton
At Least We Could See Them When They Marched in Skokie!
The Virtual Reality of Radical Political Movements in a Web 2.0
World
Robert D. Duval, West Virginia University
Kyle Christensen, West Virginia University
Arian Spahiu, West Virginia University
Disc:
Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University
45-3
ROUNDTABLE ON BETH SIMMONS, MOBILIZING FOR
HUMAN RIGHTS: INTERNATIONAL LAW IN
DOMESTIC POLITICS, CAMBRIDGE 2009
Co-sponsored by 17-17
46-19
QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO STUDYING THE
EMERGENCE AND PRACTICE OF DEMOCRACY
Djamel Mermat, University of Lille 2
Chair:
Papers:
The MoveOn Effect: Internet Fundraising and the Second
Interest Group Realignment
David A Karpf, University of Pennsylvania
Democratisation Processes in Arab Countries: A Fuzzy Set
Analysis
Mohamed Charfi, University of Geneva
Citizens in Front of their Screens: The Joint Influence of Al
Jazeera and TF1 on the Electoral Choice of French Voters of
Maghreb Origin
Djamel Mermat, University of Lille 2
Monia Chaabane, PACTE
Organizing the Web? An Investigation of Party Organization and
Online Presence of Political Partie.
Maria Laura Sudulich, Trinity College Dublin
Michael J. Jensen, University of California, Irvine
41-1
FEAR OF IMAGES? ROUNDTABLE ON POLITICAL
SCIENCE AND THE EVASION OF VISUAL CULTURE
Co-sponsored by 2-18
Governance Infrastructure and High Quality Democracy: A
Theoretically Motivated Concept Construction and Necessary
Condition Analysis
Ryan G. Baird, University of Arizona
43-1
THE POLITICS OF SETTLERS AND SETTLEMENTS IN
CONTESTED TERRITORIES
Co-sponsored by 11-22
44-16
DEMOCRACY, TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE, AND THE
MEMORY OF DICTATORSHIP
Jo-Marie Burt, George Mason University
Chair:
Disc:
Patricia J. Woods, University of Florida
255
Daily Schedule
Disc:
The Role of Coalitions in the Spanish and the Portuguese
Transition to Democracy 1974-1978
Ivo Lima Veiga, University College London
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
46-24
DEBATING RESEARCH DESIGNS: DO QUALITATIVE
AND INTERPRETIVE LOGICS OF INQUIRY DIFFER?
SHOULD THEY?
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods,
Panel 1
Poster Sessions
POSTER SESSION 5
Divisions 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 44
Papers: The Logic of Dispute Initiation in Regional Trade Agreements:
The Case of the European Union
Martha Thomas, Pennsylvania State University
All Free Trade is Not the Same: Why People Like Liberalized
Trade with Some Countries but Not With Others
Jeffrey Drope, Marquette University
The Co-Evolution and Transnational Spread of Corporate Social
Responsibility and Market Liberalism: A Social Network
Analysis, 1982-2007
Daniel Phillip Kinderman, Cornell University
Foreign Aid as Signal to Investors: Predicting FDI in PostConflict Countries
Ana Carolina Garriga, University of Pittsburgh
Brian J. Phillips, University of Pittsburgh
The China Investment Corporation: China’s Sovereign Wealth
Fund
William Norris, MIT
Cooperation or Collusion: Lead Donors and the Development
Aid Cartel
Martin Steinwand, University of Rochester
National Integration and the Closing of Economies
Ishan Joshi, Cornell University
Between Market Radicalism and Policy Palimpsest: Tax and
Welfare Reforms in the New EU Member States
Cornel Ban, University of Maryland
Shareholder Activism and Socially Responsible Investment
Networks: Real or Imagined Power?
Michael R. MacLeod, Bentley College
Enforcement of the International Nonproliferation Regime:
Expanding the Role of International Organizations
Robert L. Brown, Temple University
Embracing Hierarchy in International Organizations: The UN
Security Council and Non-Democratic Sources of Legitimacy
Lora Anne Viola, Social Science Research Center Berlin
The Durability of Power-Sharing Arrangements
Melani Cammett, Brown University
Edmund J. Malesky, University of California, San Diego
State Failure and External Threat: Exploring the Causal
Relationship
Bridget Coggins, Dartmouth College
Targeted Killings in Israel: Why Decision Making Process
Matters
Samy Cohen, CERI
Revolutionary Regimes and International Conflict
Jeff Colgan, Princeton University
Summer Lopez, Princeton University
Tough Talk, Cheap Talk, and Babbling: Government Unity,
Hawkishness, and Military Challenges
Matthew Fehrs, Ohio State University
Politics and Security in the Energy Supply Market
Andrea E. Jones-Rooy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
It’s All About the Umma: Attack Motivations among European
Islamist Terrorists
William J. Josiger, Georgetown University
Black Gold and Blackmail: The Politics of International Oil
Coercion
Rosemary Kelanic, University of Chicago
Implicit Liberalization: Changes to Tariff Type and Protection
Ashley Renee Conner, Stanford University
Deterrence in the Media Age - Security, Discourse and Public
Opinion
Ilan Danjoux, University of Manchester
Weak Ties, Strong Soldiers: Civil Society and Battlefield
Effectiveness
Trace C. Lasley, University of Kentucky
Hegemony and International Society: Must There Be a Conflict?
Barak Mendelsohn, Haverford College
Let Them Eat Grain: Market Liberalism, Agricultural Decline,
and Out-Migration from Mexico
Whitney E. Easton, University of Connecticut
When Weak States Win
Stephanie S. Holmsten, University of Texas, Austin
The Continental Construction and Constraint of US Power: Are
Canada and Mexico the Prime External Constituents of American
Hegemony?
Stephen Clarkson, University of Toronto
Matto Mildenberger, University of Waterloo
Democracies and Market Access: Evidence for the Democratic
Advantage
Rebecca Nelson, Harvard University
Settling Trade Disputes Under Asymmetric Information: A
Theoretical and Statistical Evaluation of the WTO Dispute
Settlement System
Daina Chiba, Rice University
Infringements for Sale? The Public Choice of Non-compliance
with International Agreements
Tobias Hofmann, College of William & Mary
Globalization and the Increasing Intolerance of the Indian Middle
Class
Shanna Dietz Surendra, Indiana University, Bloomington
FINANCIAL GOVERNANCE AND TRANSNATIONAL
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY
Randall Germain, Carleton University
256
Daily Schedule
Hard Questions for Soft Power
Robert Rauchhaus, University of California, Santa Barbara
Thomas R. Hartman, University of California, Santa Barbara
Liberal Interventions, Illiberal Outcomes? Probing the Link
Between the Liberal Peace and State Fragility
Marie-Joelle Zahar, University of Montreal
The Court of International Public Opinion: Assessing the
Effectiveness of International Law
Benjamin Appel, University of Maryland
Can Strategic Culture Change? The Impact of India’s Strategic
Partnership with the United States
Stephen F. Burgess, U.S. Air War College
Deterring North Korea: The Six-Party Talks as a Two-Player
Compellence Game
Eric H. Honda
What Rough Beast: Synthetic Biology and the Future of
Biosecurity
Gautam Mukunda, Masschusetts Institute of Technology
Scott Mohr, Boston University
Climate Change and Security: Applying Civil War Dynamics to
International Conflict
Carmel F. Davis, The Citadel
Metaphors of US Missile Defense: Continuity and Change from
SDI to GMD
William M. Flanik, University of Toronto
Political Islam and Peacebuilding: The Somalia Case
Afyare A. Elmi, Qatar University
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
When Communication Makes Actors Drift Further Apart: The
United States, North Korea and Nuclear Non-proliferation
Markus Kornprobst, Diplomatic Academy of Vienna
The Surrender of Secrecy? Explaining the Strength of
Transparency and Access to Information Laws
Robert Gregory Michener, University of Texas at Austin
A Theoretical Examination of the Role of Humanitarian Crisis in
Violent Conflict
Leah C. Wells, University of Mississippi
Memory and Grass-Roots Politics: The Changing Link Between
State and Civil Society?
Jenny Wustenberg, University of Maryland
When Terrorists Reject Violence: Conditions Conducive to the
Strategic Use of Nonviolence
Susanne Martin, University of Texas, Austin
Lack of a Shared Perception of the Terrorist Threat Among EU
Member States
Oldrich Bures, Metropolitan University Prague
This Land is My Land: Ebbs and Flows in Secessionist Violence
Keisha S. Haywood, Emory University
Related Group Panels
When Grandma Doesn’t Just Knit You a Sweater: Support from
Co-Ethnics and Civil War Duration
Shanna A. Kirschner, University of Michigan
Aging Policy and Politics Group
Does Threat Make the State?
Moran Moshe Mandelbaum, University of Haifa
Chair:
Third-Party Wars, Vicarious Learning, and Rapprochement in
International Rivalries
Jonathan M. DiCicco, Canisius College
Papers:
Panel 1
Not in My Backyard!: External Balancing, Intra-Balancing and
Alliance Dynamics
Jaewook Chung, Arizona State University
CROSSNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON AGING
POLITICS
Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institue of
Technology
Competing for the Exits: Recasting Bismarckian Pension
Reforms in Europe and Japan
Takeshi Ito, Senshu University
Swaying Ageing Voters: Electoral Institutions and Pension
Reform in Representative Democracy
Oliver Pamp, University of Bremen
Taking Comparative Advantage Seriously: Sender-Target Trade
Relationship and Success of Economic Sanctions
Taehee Whang, Texas A&M University
Elena V. McLean, Texas A&M University
Age Trajectories of Social Policy Preferences - How
Demographic Change Influences Age-Based Political
Representation
Harald Wilkoszewski, Max Planck Institute for Demographic
Research
Making Peace or Keeping Peace? Regional Organization and
Conflict Mediation
Ying Zhang, Vanderbilt University
Population Aging, Political Parties,and the Politics of Labor in
Germany
Jennifer Dabbs Sciubba, Rhodes College
An Explanation of Counterinsurgency Effectiveness
Barry Masanori Hashimoto, Emory University
Miriam J. Laugesen, University of California, Los Angeles
Martin Hering, McMaster University
The Partisan Foundations of Participatory Governance Regimes
in Brazil and Colombia
Lindsay Rose Mayka, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
How Politics is fought across Territory: The Institutional
Determinants of the Nationalization of Politics
Julieta Suarez-Cao, Northwestern University
Association of Korean Political Studies in North America
Lessons From Eastern Europe for Democratization Theories:
From ‘Preconditions’ to ‘Constellations’?
Uffe Jakobsen, University of Copenhagen
Panel 1
Chair:
IDENTIFYING KOREA, OTHERING NEIGHBORS
Terence Roehrig, Naval War College
Papers:
The Politics of the Dokdo/Takeshima Issue
Youngshik Daniel Bong, American University
The interaction between state and nation-building in fragmented
societies
Joanne Elizabeth Wallis, University of Cambridge
Language Games of US-Japan Negotiation: Speech Act Analysis
of Conflict over Wartime Comfort Women in 2007
Kiwoong Yang, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Municipal Elections in Saudi Arabia: Review and Assessment
Khalid Othman Alyahya, Dubai School of Government
Korean Nationalism and the Anti-American sentiment in the
Post-Cold War era
Geun Koh, University of Delaware
Preference Falsification and the Spiral of Silence— How Media
Coverage and Opinion Polls led Pinochet to Miscalculate
Support for the ‘No’ Vote in the 1988 Chilean Plebiscite
Elizabeth Stein, University of New Orleans
North Korea’s Nuclear Ambition and Identity Politics: the
Security Dilemma in the Six-Party Talks
Soon-ok Shin, University of Warwick
Shifts in North Korean Strategies in the Asymmetric Conflict
with the U.S.?
Kyung-Ae Park, University of British Columbia
Reigning in the Big Men?: The Politics of Executive Constraints
in Sub-Saharan Africa
Kristin A. McKie, Cornell University
Impact of Transitional Justice on Trajectories of Democratization:
A comparison of 3 African cases
Anu Chakravarty, University of South Carolina
Disc:
The Impact of Social Movements on State Policy: Human Rights
Movements in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay
Cora Fernandez Anderson, University of Notre Dame
Panel 1
Measuring and explaining the increase of Participatory
Democracy in Latin America (1979-2007).
Carlos Melendez, University of Notre Dame
Campaign Finance Research Group
Chair:
Papers:
SMALL DONORS AND LARGE IN U.S. FEDERAL AND
STATE ELECTIONS
Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico
Donor Activism in the 2008 Presidential Elections: A Survey of
Donors to Barack Obama and John McCain
Wesley Joe, Campaign Finance Institute
Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University
257
Daily Schedule
State Capacity as a Pillar for Democracy: A Test Using 26 Postcommunist Countries.
Jessica Fortin, McGill University
Mikyoung Kim, Hiroshima Peace Institute
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Small and Large Donors in the Federal Elections of 2008
Aaron Dusso, George Washington University
Gregory Fortelny, Georgetown University
Small and Large Donors Across the States: Data, Models, and
Policy Options
Michael J. Malbin, SUNY, Albany and The Campaign
Finance Institute
Peter W. Brusoe, American University
Henrik M. Schatzinger, University of Georgia
Disc:
Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Panel 2
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE: THE STATE OF ACADEMIC FREE
SPEECH IN CANADA AND THE U.S.
Luigi Bradizza, Louisiana State University
Daily Schedule
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Panel 1
Chair:
Part:
DEBATING RESEARCH DESIGNS: DO QUALITATIVE
AND INTERPRETIVE LOGICS OF INQUIRY DIFFER?
SHOULD THEY?
Co-sponsored by 46-24
Dvora Yanow, Vrije Universiteit
Colin Elman, Syracuse University
John Gerring, Boston University
Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, Albany
Raymond D. Duvall, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 12:45 PM
APSA Reception
APSA Events
Part:
James R. Stoner, Jr., Louisiana State University
Clifford Orwin, University of Toronto
Janet Ajzenstat, McMaster University
Barry Cooper, University of Calgary
AWARD LUNCHEON--BY INVITATION ONLY
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
Eric Voegelin Society
SESSION 1
Panel 7
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
Chair:
Papers:
REVISITING REINHOLD NIEBUHR IN THE 21ST
CENTURY
Greg Russell, University of Oklahoma
Pilgrims’ Progress: The Disenchanted Destinations of Reinhold
Niebuhr and Raymond Aron
Reed M. Davis, Seattle Pacific University
Fire In Their Hearts: Christian Realism and Democracy
Promotion
Eric Patterson, Georgetown University
Reinhold Niebuhr on Tragedy and Politics
Daniel G. Lang, Lynchburg College
Niebuhr’s Christian Realism and Dewey’s Pragmatism: The Faith
Experience
Vibeke Schou Tjalve, Danish Institute for Military Studies
Disc:
David A. Mayers, Boston University
David Clinton, Baylor University
SESSION 1
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
SESSION 1
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 1
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 1
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 1
Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists
Panel 1
Chair:
NEW TRENDS IN CROSS-TAIWAN STRAIT RELATIONS
Robert S. Ross, Boston College
Papers:
China, Taiwan and the United States—Using Cost-benefit
Analysis to Assess Future Trends
Robert G. Sutter, Georgetown University
Continuity and Change in the Cross-Strait Relations
John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, University of South Carolina
US Policy towards Taiwan in Beijing’s View
Qiang Xin, Fudan University
Identity Politics of the Taiwan Question: From the Island to the
Mainland
Xin Xu, Cornell University
Beijing’s Shifting Positions in the New Era of Cross-Taiwan
Strait Relations
Quansheng Zhao, American University
Guoli Liu, College of Charleston
Disc:
Robert S. Ross, Boston College
Yun-han Chu, Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 1
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 1
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 1
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 1
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 1
258
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM
Intelligence Studies Group
APSA Panel
BUSINESS MEETING
APSA Departmental Services Committee
ROUNDTABLE: FRIEND OR FOE: THE EXTERNAL REVIEW
Part:
Gretchen M. Bauer, University of Delaware
John T. Woolley, University of California, Santa Barbara
Stephen J. Majeski, University of Washington
Michael E. Kraft, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay
Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Women’s Caucus for Political Science
MEETING 1
Section Business Meetings
35 Political Organizations and Parties
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
42 New Political Science
PUBLICATIONS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 1
49 Canadian Politics
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
Thursday, 12:15 PM to 1:45 PM
SESSION 1
Division Panels
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
46-25
SESSION 1
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
Chair:
SESSION 1
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
METHODS CAFE
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods,
Panel 2
Adam Avrushin, University of Chicago
Monika Benova, University of Utah
SESSION 1
Analytic Eclecticism: Between Competing Theories and
Theoretical Synthesis
Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
Concept Formation: Reflexive Approaches
Robert Kaufman Adcock, George Washington University
Papers:
SESSION 1
Contesting the Political Theory/Empirical Research Divide
Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, Whitman College
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
Critical Constructivist and Discourse Analysis
Raymond D. Duvall, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago
SESSION 1
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
Designing Research Designs: Adaptability, Validity,
Generalizability?
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Cyrus Ernesto Zirakzadeh, University of Connecticut
SESSION 1
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 1
Feminist Methods
Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
Field Research I (Participant observation, political ethnography,
etc.): U.S.
Katherine Cramer Walsh, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University
SESSION 1
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
Field Research II (Participant observation, political ethnography,
etc.): “Overseas”
Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Samer S. Shehata, Georgetown University
SESSION 1
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
Interpretive Policy Analysis: Value-critical, Policy Discourse,
Policy Spaces
Ronald J. Schmidt, Sr., California State University, Long
Beach
Dvora Yanow, Vrije Universiteit
SESSION 1
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 1
Intersectionality Research: Race, Ethnicity, Gender, Class,
Sexuality, Religion
Julia S. Jordan-Zachery, Providence College
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 1
Affiliate Group Meetings
Teaching Qualitative-Interpretive Methods
Emily Hauptmann, Western Michigan University
Pi Sigma Alpha
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
Related Group Meetings
Indigenous Studies Network
BUSINESS MEETING
Related Group Panels
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Panel 2
METHODS CAFE
Co-sponsored by 46-25
259
Daily Schedule
Interviewing: Ordinary Language Interviewing and Life History
Narratives
Frederic C. Schaffer, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Lee Ann Fujii, George Washington University
Thursday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM
Thursday, 12:45 PM to 1:45 PM
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 12:45 PM to 1:45 PM
2-20
APSA Reception
Chair:
DECOLONIZING MENTAL SPACE: THE INTERIOR
STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE AND LIBERATION
Morton Schoolman, SUNY, Albany
APSA Events
AWARDS CEREMONY
Papers:
Thursday, 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Holocaust Testimony and the Limits of Narrative and Trauma
Theory
C. Fred Alford, University of Maryland, College Park
APSA Meetings
APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning
COMMITTEE MEETING
Différance, Obama Style: Tolerant Implosion, Hospitable Change
Mary Andrea Caputi, California State University, Long
Beach
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
APSA Panel
Unfreedom and the Internal Mental Space: How to Evaluate the
Political Transformation of Self
James M. Glass, University of Maryland, College Park
Disc:
William Chaloupka, Colorado State University
2-26
Chair:
GOVERNMENTALITY AND BIOPOLITICS
Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College
Papers:
Population as Subject
Marcelo Hoffman, Earlham College
APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning
Panel 1
Chair:
Part:
CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY: POLITICAL SCIENCE
ENTERS THE 21ST CENTURY
Luis Ricardo Fraga, University of Washington
Terri E. Givens, University of Texas-Austin
Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley
Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi
Manuel Avalos, University of North Carolina, Wilmington
The Biopolitical Domination of Life in Nietzsche, Foucault and
Adorno
Vanessa Eva Maria Lemm, Universidad Diego Portales
Scale, Security, and Political Economy: Debating the Biopolitics
of the Global War on Terror
Nicholas J. Kiersey, Ohio University, Chillicothe
Division Panels
T-4
THEME PANEL: ALEKSANDR SOLZHENITSYN 19182008: REMEMBRANCE AND LEGACY
Co-sponsored by 41-6
T-5
THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE STATE REACTIONS
TO LGBT RIGHTS CLAIMS
Co-sponsored by 47-5 and 29-15
1-3
RELIGION AND MODERN POLITICS IN SPINOZA AND
ROUSSEAU
Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas, Austin
Chair:
On the Use and Abuse of Governmentality for Political Theory
Thomas Biebricher, University of Florida
Disc:
Emily Howden Hoechst, Georgetown University
3-10
INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN AND DEMOCRATIC
LEGITIMACY
Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State University
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
Bayle Between Spinoza and Rousseau: A Commentary on the
Pensées Diverses
Ronald Beiner, University of Toronto, Mississauga
Epistemic Risks of Representative Government
Robert E. Goodin, Australian National University
Kai P. Spiekermann, London School of Economics
Pragmatism and Legitimacy
Jack Knight, Duke University
Spinoza and Rousseau on Vanity and Self-Esteem
Julie E. Cooper, University of Chicago
Random Selection and Democratic Legitimacy
Peter C. Stone, Stanford University
Scriptural Hermeneutics as Politics: Spinoza and Rousseau on
How to Read the Bible
Jeremy Fortier, University of Texas at Austin
Supermajority Rules, Arbitrariness, and Democratic Legitimacy
Melissa A. Schwartzberg, Columbia University
Natural Theology as Conscience: Rousseau’s Democratization of
Spinoza’s Ethics
Larissa M Atkison, University of Toronto
Disc:
David M. Estlund, Brown University
Disc:
David Lay Williams, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point
3-21
Chair:
CHALLENGES TO MULTICULTURALISM
Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
1-21
TOCQUEVILLE AND THE ANALYSIS OF DEMOCRATIC
POLITICS
John Grant, Brock University
Papers:
The Third Wave of Liberal Multiculturalism: Beyond the Gender
or Culture Impasse?
Fiona MacDonald, University of Manitoba
Chair:
Papers:
The Moral Force of Indigenous Politics
Courtney Jung, University of Toronto
Tocqueville and Marx: Not Opposites
Roger Boesche, Occidental College
Taylor and Kymlicka on the Recognition of Religious Diversity
James Farney, Queen’s University
Sources of Political Cynicism in Democratic Society
Steven Bilakovics, Yale University
The Politics of Sour Grapes: Tocqueville, Sartre and Elster on
American Populism
Michael L. McLendon, California State University, Los
Angeles
Disc:
260
Michael J. Illuzzi, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater
Liberal Multiculturalism and the Human Rights Revolution
Charles Jones, University of Western Ontario
Disc:
Nahshon Perez, UCLA
4-10
REPUTATION IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 21-7
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
5-13
CORRECT VOTING
Co-sponsored by 36-25
Disc:
Ruth O’Brien, CUNY-Graduate Center
6-7
DELIBERATION AND DECISION-MAKING IN
MONETARY POLICY COMMITTEES
Kevin M. Quinn, Harvard University
8-11
Chair:
ADVANCES IN IDEAL POINT ESTIMATION
Michael Peress, University of Rochester
Papers:
Estimating the Effect of Non-Separable Preferences in EU Treaty
Negotiations.
Daniel Finke, University of Heidelberg
Chair:
Papers:
Does Sunshine Reduce the Quality of Deliberation? The Case of
the Federal Open Market Committee
John T. Woolley, University of California, Santa Barbara
Joseph M. Gardner, Northern Arizona University
The Dimensionality of Spatial Voting Estimates
Keith L. Dougherty, University of Georgia
Ryan Baker, University of Georgia
An Econometric Model of Monetary Policy Decision-Making for
the United Kingdom
Henry Chappell, University of South Carolina
Rob Roy McGregor, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Todd Vermilyea, Philadelphia Federal Reserve
A Latent Measurement Model of Loyalty and Competence
Among Presidential Appointments to U.S. Executive Agencies
and Independent Commissions
George A. Krause, University of Pittsburgh
Anne M. Joseph O’Connell, University of California,
Berkeley
Deliberating Monetary Policy: The Idea of Low Inflation Among
Central Bankers
Cheryl M. Schonhardt-Bailey, London School of Economics
Andrew Bailey, Bank of England
Disc:
William T. Bernhard, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Kevin M. Quinn, Harvard University
6-19
Chair:
INEQUALITY AND REDISTRIBUTION
Barry M. Mitnick, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
Sharing the Wealth: Political Competition Within States and Its
Effect on Income Inequality
Andrew Kirkpatrick, Emory University
Amy H. Liu, Emory University
Donald M. Beaudette, Emory University
Globalization, Inequality, and Redistribution: What Do the (New)
Data Say?
Lloyd Gruber, London School of Economics
Making Votes Talk: Ideology and Government Influence on
Legislative Behavior
Cesar Zucco, Jr., Insituto Universitario de Pesquisas do Rio
de Janeiro
Benjamin Lauderdale, Princeton University
Disc:
Stephen Jessee, University of Texas
9-6
EDUCATING FOR CIVIC ENGAGEMENT: PAST,
PRESENT, AND FUTURE
Co-sponsored by 10-6
10-6
EDUCATING FOR CIVIC ENGAGEMENT: PAST,
PRESENT, AND FUTURE
Co-sponsored by 9-6
Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University South Bend
Chair:
Papers:
Deterinants of Attitudes About Economic Inequality in Latin
America
Brian D. Cramer, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Revitalising Democracy: Civic Education in Europe and the
United States
James Sloam, University of London, Royal Holloway
Ben Kisby, University of Sheffield
The Shadowing Role of Redistributive Institutions in the
Relationship Between Income Inequality and Redistribution
Ahmet Faruk Aysan, Bogazici University
Disc:
John Stephen Ahlquist, UCLA
7-2
THE PERSISTENCE OF NATIONALISM AND NATIONBUILDING IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 11-25
7-14
Chair:
EXPERTS IN THE AMERICAN POLITY
Ronald F. King, San Diego State University
Papers:
Amateurs, Experts, and Regulatory Transformations in American
History
Ann-Marie E. Szymanski, University of Oklahoma
Overlooked or Out-of-Sight?: Congressional Oversight of
Intelligence, 1945-2005
Meredith Wooten, University of Pennsylvania
Going Up, Getting Out or Moving In? The Rise of Professional
Politicians in the U.S., 1812-1944
Scott A. MacKenzie, University of California, Davis
Samuel Kernell, University of California, San Diego
Building Student Engagement in Introduction to American
Government
John C. Berg, Suffolk University
“Seizing the Day: Encouraging Civic Engagement in the
Community College Environment”
Shyam K. Sriram, Georgia Perimeter College
Disc:
Lynne E. Ford, College of Charleston
Michelle D. Deardorff, Jackson State University
11-3
Chair:
STUDYING INTERESTS AND DISTRIBUTION
Timothy Frye, Columbia University
Papers:
Beyond ELF: Measuring Economic Differences Across Ethnic
Groups
John D. Huber, Columbia University
Katharine A. Baldwin, Columbia University
Risk and Redistribution
Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Partisanship and Policymaking in the Latin American Electricity
Sector
Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University
Cecilia Martinez-Gallardo, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
The National Defense Education Act: Sputnik, “Intermestics” and
the Making of Federal Education Policy
Jody Schmid, University at Albany
261
Daily Schedule
Information and Bureaucratic Expertise: The Bureau of
Corporations, 1903-1914
Jonathan Chausovsky, SUNY-Fredonia
Civic Education in Higher Education Institutions: A Status
Reports
Jean Wahl Harris, University of Scranton
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Daily Schedule
Partisanship and Public Opinion on Policymaking: Comparing
Survey Experiments from East and West
Joshua A. Tucker, New York University
Ted Brader, University of Michigan
“Walking the Walk”: Signaling a Credible Commitment to Sound
Economic Policies in the Eyes of International Investors
Heather Bergman, University of California, Los Angeles
Developmental Strategies in a Global Economy: The Unexpected
Emergence of China’s Indigenous Auto Industry
Crystal Chang, University of California, Berkeley
The Other Great Illusion: The Advancement of Separatism
through Economic Integration
Dawn Brancati, Washington University in St. Louis
Foreign Capital Liberalization and Development: Lessons from
China, India, and Russia
Roselyn Hsueh, Temple University
Disc:
Timothy Frye, Columbia University
11-25
THE PERSISTENCE OF NATIONALISM AND NATIONBUILDING IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Co-sponsored by 7-2
Henry E. Hale, George Washington University
Disc:
Louis W. Pauly, University of Toronto
Nathan Jensen, Washington University, St. Louis
12-30
All Good Things Do Not Go Together: The Political Economy of
Nation Formation in Tanzania
Elliott D. Green, London School of Economics
Chair:
GOVERNING DIVERSITY: INCLUSIONS AND
EXCLUSIONS
Bryan R. Daves, Yeshiva University
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
Theories of Nationalism in Latin America: Exploring Insights
and Limitations
Matthias vom Hau, University of Manchester
Paved with Good Intentions: How Consociationalism Contributed
to Ethnic Conflict in Iraq
Bryan R. Daves, Yeshiva University
Does Access to Political Power by Minority Politicians Affect
Everyday Group Relations? Micro-level Evidence from India
Simon Chauchard, New York University
Regions of Nationalism in Europe: Toward a More Complex
East/West Divide?
Zsuzsa Csergo, Queen’s University
Stefan Wolff, University of Nottingham
Public Goods Transfers and National Unity: Evidence from PostSoeharto Indonesia
Risa J. Toha, University of California, Los Angeles
Testing Mechanisms of Change in National Identity: Making the
Case for an Evolutionary Dynamic
Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison
The Making of a Scapegoat: Mass Immigrant Expulsions in
Africa
Claire Leslie Adida, Stanford University
“Hinduization” of Civil Society: A Study of Subregional
Variation in the Proliferation of Hindu Nationalism in India
Soundarya Chidambaram, Ohio State University
Shifting Subjectivity: Racialization and Otherness in Modern
Costa Rica
Erica Townsend-Bell, University of Iowa
Disc:
Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
Disc:
Kimuli Kasara, Columbia University
11-50
DECENTRALIZATION, DEMOCRATIZATION AND
GOVERNANCE: DOES DEMOCRACY IMPROVE LOCAL
GOVERNANCE IN DECENTRALIZED SETTINGS?
Thomas F. Remington, Emory University
12-41
DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN AMERICA: CHANGES
AND CHALLENGES
Jonathan Hartlyn, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Democratic Rollback and Regional Governance in Putin’s Russia
Gulnaz Sharafutdinova, Miami University
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
Chair:
Decentralization, Democratization, and Sub-National Economic
Governance: Vietnam and Indonesia
Alasdair Bowie, George Washington University
Democratization under Assault: Criminal Violence in PostTransition Societies
Jose Miguel Cruz, Vanderbilt University
Decentralization and Discontinuity: The Politics of Urban Water
and Sanitation Delivery in Mexico
Veronica M. Herrera, University of California, Berkeley
Choosing Clientelism: Political Competition, Poverty, and Social
Welfare Policy in Argentina
Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University
The Impact of Institutional Design on Party Control in a Federal
Parliamentary System
Thomas D. Lancaster, Emory University
Disc:
THE STATE AND GENDER EQUALITY: INSTITUTIONS,
POLICIES AND MOVEMENTS
Co-sponsored by 31-12
12-19
FDI AND THE CHANGING CONTOURS OF DOMESTIC
MARKETS
Co-sponsored by 16-28
Louis W. Pauly, University of Toronto
Chair:
Papers:
262
21st Century Democracy in the “Two Mexicos”(The ‘Poor’
South and the ‘Rich’ North): Political Factionalism or Political
Cohesion?
Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, Universidad Iberoamericana
Thomas F. Remington, Emory University
Alfred P. Montero, Carleton College
11-72
Subnational FDI Competition in Developing Countries: The Case
of Viet Nam
Kenneth P. Thomas, University of Missouri, St. Louis
In the Name of Democracy? Right-Wing Actors in “New Left”
Latin America
James D. Bowen, Saint Louis University
The Impact of Federalism on Mexican Legislative Politics
Scott W. Desposato, University of California, San Diego
Francisco Cantu, UCSD
Disc:
Eduardo R. Gomes, Universidade Federal Fluminense
Jonathan Hartlyn, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
13-3
ROUNDTABLE: WHERE IS EUROPE AND WHAT DOES
IT MEAN TO BE EUROPEAN?
Co-sponsored by 15-2
Philip G. Roeder, University of California, San Diego
Chair:
Part:
Ziya Onis, Koc University
Alexander H. Trechsel, European University Institute
Jerzy Mackow, Universitaet Regensburg
Daily Schedule
14-4
Chair:
Papers:
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Li Bennich-Björkman, Uppsala University
Klaus Armingeon, Universitaet of Berne
16-28
FDI AND THE CHANGING CONTOURS OF DOMESTIC
MARKETS
Co-sponsored by 12-19
TAXATION AND INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE IN
ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES
Leonard Seabrooke, University of Warwick
17-8
THE ENFORCEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL
COMMITMENTS
Daniela Donno, University of Pittsburgh
Tax Exemptions and Welfare States: A Critique
Monica Prasad, Northwestern University
Papers:
Chair:
Compensating Whom for What? Reconsidering Public Spending
Imperatives
Niamh Hardiman, University College-Dublin
Do Markets Punish EU Backsliders?
Julia Gray, University of Pittsburgh
Tax Reform, Income Inequality and the Welfare State in Western
Europe
Miguel Glatzer, Harvard University
Putting Money to Mouths: Rewarding and Punishing Human
Rights Behaviors
Darren G. Hawkins, Brigham Young University
Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young University
Core Constituents or Marginal Voters? A Theory of Social
Expenditures in Industrialized Democracies
Timo Idema, University of Oxford
Disc:
Leonard Seabrooke, University of Warwick
14-19
THE COMPLEXITY OF ELECTORAL SYSTEM
CHANGE: THE ROLE OF VALUES
Co-sponsored by 34-3
15-2
ROUNDTABLE: WHERE IS EUROPE AND WHAT DOES
IT MEAN TO BE EUROPEAN?
Co-sponsored by 13-3
15-17
Chair:
Papers:
Monitoring and Enforcement Mechanisms in the Design of
International Agreements
Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University
Enforcers Within: Domestic Sanctions and Compliance with
International Agreements
Thania Sanchez, University of Iowa
Disc:
Duncan Snidal, University of Chicago
17-19
SOFT POWER AND SMART POWER
Co-sponsored by 19-16
IMMIGRANTS VS. NATIONAL IDENTITY? THE
PROBLEM OF INTEGRATION IN EUROPE
Jennifer Fitzgerald, University of Colorado, Boulder
18-14
Immigrant Integration Policies and Liberal-Democratic Nation
Building in Western Europe
Triadafilos Triadafilopoulos, University of Toronto
Anna Korteweg, University of Toronto
Chair:
THREAT AS A THEORETICAL QUESTION:
MICROFOUNDATIONS IN EMOTION, COGNITION, AND
CONSTRUCTION OF COLLECTIVE EXPERIENCE IN
DEMOCRATIC CONDITIONS
Ingrid Creppell, George Washington University
Papers:
Immigration, Left and Right
Sara Claro da Fonseca, Social Science Research Center
Berlin
Sonia Alonso, Social Science Research Center Berlin
Disc:
Jennifer Fitzgerald, University of Colorado, Boulder
16-22
Chair:
RETHINKING THE NECESSITY OF THE STATE FOR
Tanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität Berlin
Papers:
Sanctions and Private Self-Regulation
Virginia Haufler, UC Irvine
Sticks and Pills: Governance Patterns of HIV/Aids Medication in
India and Brazil
Susanne Luetz, Free University Berlin
Thomas Rudolf Eimer, Free University Berlin
Order, Identity, and the Interpretation of Threat
Ingrid Creppell, George Washington University
Collective Action of Firms
Anna Kristin Mueller-Debus, European University Instiute
Nicole Deitelhoff, Goethe-Universitat Frankfurt
The Democratic Peace Revisited in the Context of Transnational
Threats
George E. Shambaugh, Georgetown University
Richard A. Matthew, University of California, Irvine
Bryan McDonald, University of California, Irvine
Disc:
James M. Goldgeier, George Washington University
19-14
NATO AT 60: WHAT IS THE FUTURE FOR ALLIANCES
Co-sponsored by 20-3
Jeffrey A. Larsen, Science Applications International
Corporation
Chair:
Papers:
Ukraine and NATO
Deborah Sanders, JSCSC
Systemic Change and Institutional Adaptation: The Cases of EU
and NATO Crisis Management
Regina Karp, Old Dominion University
“Forging a New Strategic Concept”
Gale A. Mattox, United States Naval Academy
An Evolving Research Agenda for a Changing NATO: If the
Alliance Is Embracing Collective Security, How Do We Study
the Transformation?
Bojan Savic, University of Kent at Brussels
263
Daily Schedule
Nailing the Pudding on the Wall: Soft Law and Weak State
Capacity in Southern and Eastern Europe
Charalambos Koutalakis, University of Athens
Aron Buzogany, Yale University
Tanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität Berlin
Diverse Emotional Reactions to Threat
Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook
Defining Threat: Cognitive and Emotional Bases
David L. Rousseau, SUNY, Albany
Integration for Entry: Examining New Civic Requirements in
Advanced Industrialized Democracies
Sara Wallace Goodman, Georgetown University
Disc:
Defending Democratic Norms: Regional Intergovernmental
Organizations and Democratic Change after Flawed Elections
Daniela Donno, University of Pittsburgh
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Daily Schedule
NATO at War: Understanding the Challenges of Caveats in
Afghanistan
Stephen M. Saideman, McGill University
David P. Auerswald, National War College
Reputation Spillovers in International Relations
Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University
Disc:
Andrew M. Dorman, University of London, King’s College
Wallace J. Thies, Catholic University of America
International Reputation with Dynamic Resolve
Anne E. Sartori, Northwestern University
19-16
SOFT POWER AND SMART POWER
Co-sponsored by 17-19
Alexander Vuving, Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies
Chair:
Papers:
Attention, Attraction, and Persuasion: Dissecting Soft Power
Brantly Womack, University of Virginia
Disaggregating Reputation: Type and Commitment
Allan Dafoe, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
22-6
Chair:
POLITICAL CAREERS AND AMBITION
Richard M. Skinner, Bowdoin College
Papers:
Ambition and Opportunity in Federal Systems: The Political
Sociology of Political Career Patterns in Brazil, Germany, and
the United States
Jens Borchert, University of Frankfurt
Taiwan’s Soft Power and the Future of Cross-Strait Relations
Toshi Yoshihara, United States Naval War College
How Soft Power Works: Evidence from China’s Influence on
Vietnam
Alexander Vuving, Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies
Joern Dosch, University of Leeds
The Persistent Gender Gap in Political Ambition
Jennifer L. Lawless, American University
Richard L. Fox, Loyola Marymount University
Sterner Stuff: An Examination of Ambition in the US Congress.
Joseph Sempolinski, Yale University
Retooling Public Diplomacy to Enhance Smart Power: With a
Special Focus on Taiwan in the Face of a Rising Mainland China
Kwei-Bo Huang, National Chengchi University
U.S. Engagement in East Asia: A Case for “Track Two”
Diplomacy
Sarah Graham, University of Southern California
Disc:
Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Harvard University
20-3
NATO AT 60: WHAT IS THE FUTURE FOR ALLIANCES
Co-sponsored by 19-14
20-17
DOMESTIC POLITICAL STRUCTURE AND
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 21-5
21-5
DOMESTIC POLITICAL STRUCTURE AND
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 20-17
Bruce M. Russett, Yale University
Chair:
Papers:
Institutions, Intelligence Apparatuses, and the Likelihood of
Foreign Policy Mistakes in Dictatorships
Erica Emily Frantz, IPS
Natasha Marie Ezrow, University of Essex
Moderating Effects? Legislative Behavior When Moving from
the House to the Senate
Kristina Miler, University of Illinois
Disc:
Richard M. Skinner, Bowdoin College
22-14
Chair:
WHAT HAPPENED TO INCUMBENCY ADVANTAGE?
Jason M. Roberts, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Part:
Jonathan N. Katz, California Institute of Technology
Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San Diego
David W. Rohde, Duke University
Jeffrey M. Stonecash, Syracuse University
23-9
PERSONALITY, PERFORMANCE, AND THE
PRESIDENT’S LEGACY
Mary E. Stuckey, Georgia State University
Chair:
Papers:
Explaining Presidential Productivity, 1789-2004
J. Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois University
War and Domestic Accountability: Political Institutions, War
Outcomes, and International Context
Jessica Lea Weeks, Cornell University
Bush’s Brain (No, Not Karl Rove):How Bush’s Psyche Shaped
His Decision-making
Robert Maranto, University of Arkansas
Conflict and Risks to Leadership Tenure Across Different Types
of Regimes
Brian Lai, University of Iowa
Explaining Presidential Greatness: The Role of Prosperity
Irwin L. Morris, University of Maryland
Managing the Economy for Whom? Comparing the Economic
Policy Leadership of GW Bush with his Post-war Predecessors
Stephen Weatherford, University of California, Santa
Barbara
From War to Leadership Turnover and Regime Change
Alexandre Debs, University of Rochester
Hein Erich Goemans, University of Rochester
Theoretical Foundations of a Gravity Model for International
Disputes Data
James D. Fearon, Stanford University
Disc:
21-7
Chair:
Papers:
264
James Lee Ray, Vanderbilt University
Allan C. Stam, University of Michigan
REPUTATION IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 4-10
Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
Does Cheap Talk Matter? An Experimental Analysis
Dustin Halliday Tingley, Princeton University
Barbara F. Walter, University of California, San Diego
Determining Presidential Legacies: Who Decides and Why It
Matters
Lori Cox Han, Chapman University
Disc:
Bruce Miroff, SUNY, Albany
Jonathan C. Young, West Virginia University
24-7
CHANGING PATTERNS OF GOVERNANCE AND
ACCOUNTABILITY
Robert W. Smith, Clemson University
Chair:
Papers:
NGOs and Changing Patterns of Governance: Clear Roles or
Growing Complexity?
Jennifer N. Brass, University of California Berkeley
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Do New Modes of Governance Impair Democracy? Attitudes of
local politicians on the impact of three New Public Management
reforms
Mikael Gilljam, University of Gothenburg
Anders Sundell, University of Gothenburg
The Strategic Presidency During Confirmation: Rhetoric,
Uncertainty, and the Selling of Supreme Court Nominees
Michael P. Fix, University of South Carolina
Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina
Daniel S. Morey, University of Kentucky
Beyond Performance: Legitimacy, Accountability and the
Promise of Integrity
Melvin J. Dubnick, University of New Hampshire
Justin O’Brien, Queen’s University
Courting Election: Ronald Reagan’s Use of Supreme Court
Nominations in the 1980 and 1984 Presidential Election
Campaigns
Christine L. Nemacheck, College of William & Mary
When the Piper Gets Paid in Advance: State Funding and
Accountability in Australian’ and Israeli’ Private Schools
Amos J. Zehavi, Tel Aviv University
Judicial Influence on the Executive Branch: How the Prospect of
Judicial Review Shapes Bureaucratic Decision Making.
Patrick C. Wohlfarth, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Wanted: Smart Government
Sheila Suess Kennedy, Indiana University-Purdue University
at Indianapolis
Deanna Malatesta, Indiana University Purdue UniversityIndianapolis
Disc:
Isaac Unah, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
27-6
Disc:
Beryl A. Radin, American University
Chair:
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: MAVEETY AND KNOWLES
ON JUSTICES O’CONNOR AND KENNEDY
Charles M. Lamb, SUNY, Buffalo
25-10
PUBLIC PARTICIPATION, DEMOCRATIC THEORY, AND
POLICYMAKING
Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter
Part:
Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University
Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University
Artemus Ward, Northern Illinois University
Nancy Maveety, Tulane University
Helen J. Knowles, SUNY, Oswego
27-9
Chair:
RELIGION AND CONSTITUTIONAL CONFLICT
Dennis J. Coyle, Catholic University of America
Papers:
Conservative Christian Cause Lawyering, Pluralism, and Gay
Rights
Jonathan Hensley, University of Maryland
Chair:
Papers:
Civic Participation, Accessibility and Disability Policy
Development
Paul Manuel Aviles Baker, Georgia Institute of Technology
Democracy as an Impediment to Change: Recreational Water
Rights in Colorado
Deserai Anderson Crow, University of Colorado, Boulder
The Evolution of Local Partnerships for Agricultural
Sustainability
Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis
Lauren Shaw, University of California, Davis
Disc:
Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter
25-16
THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF CARBON PRICING
IN THE OECD
Steven F. Bernstein, University of Toronto
Chair:
Papers:
Efficiency vs. Feasibility: The Intergovernmental Selection of
Climate Policy Tools in the United States
Barry G. Rabe, University of Michigan
The Politics of Carbon Taxation
Kathryn Harrison, University of British Columbia
Pricing Carbon in Europe: Trading, Taxes, Technologies and
Talking
Henrik Selin, Boston University
Stacy VanDeveer, University of New Hampshire
Taxing Emissions of Carbon Dioxide in the OECD: Explaining
Cross-National Variance in the Price of Carbon
Erick Lachapelle, University of Toronto
Theorizing the First Amendment: From Roger Williams to Larry
Flynt
H. N. Hirsch, Oberlin College
Faith in the Law? The Challenges of Addressing Religion-Based
Tensions through Legal Means
Ofrit Liviatan, Harvard University
We Are All Religious Minorities: Reframing the Constitutional
Politics of Religion
Dennis J. Goldford, Drake University
Disc:
Michael L Coulter, Grove City College
29-15
THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE STATE REACTIONS
TO LGBT RIGHTS CLAIMS
Co-sponsored by 47-5 and T-5
30-1
POLITICS, RACE AND THE CITY
Co-sponsored by 32-2
30-12
ROUNDTABLE: STUDYING CANADIAN CITIES: A SUBFIELD IN MOTION
Co-sponsored by 49-2
Robert K. Whelan, University of Texas, Arlington
Chair:
Disc:
Michael E. Kraft, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay
Steven F. Bernstein, University of Toronto
JUDICIAL POLITICS AND THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH
Isaac Unah, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Papers:
Counting Congress In: Patterns of Success in Judicial
Nomination Requests by Members of Congress to Presidents
Eisenhower and Ford
Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston
Chris Nicholson, University of Houston
Judith A. Garber, University of Alberta
Martin George Horak, University of Western Ontario
Christopher Leo, University of Winnipeg
Andrew Sancton, University of Western Ontario
Zack Taylor, University of Toronto
31-12
THE STATE AND GENDER EQUALITY: INSTITUTIONS,
POLICIES AND MOVEMENTS
Co-sponsored by 11-72
Sonia Kruks, Oberlin College
Chair:
265
Daily Schedule
26-13
Chair:
Part:
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Papers:
Daily Schedule
The Impact of Gender Quotas on Political Party Recruitment:
The Limited Reform Potential of Reserved Seats
Elin Bjarnegard, Uppsala University
Christina Bergqvist, Uppsala University
Par Zetterberg, Uppsala University
Values or Interests: When Governments’ Electoral Reform
Agendas Stall
R. Kenneth Carty, University of British Columbia
Representing Gender: An Institutional and Ideological Analysis
Mala N. Htun, New School for Social Research
The Multiple Roles of Values in Electoral Reform: Mechanisms
and Hypotheses
Jean-Benoit Pilet, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB,
Belgium)
Alan J. Renwick, University of Reading
Constitutional Networks
Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin
The Hybrid State and Women’s Political Citizenship: The Policy
Feedback Model Within and Between Countries
Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University
Varieties of Electoral Systems in Early 20th c. Democracies:
Endogeneity, Methodology and Theory Development in the
Study of Institutional Origins
Marcus Kreuzer, Villanova University
Inequality and the State: Explaining (and overcoming) the
‘Progressive Dilemma’
S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University
Bridging State and Civil Society? The Amphibious Nature of
‘State Feminism’ in Brazil
Simone R. Bohn, York University
Disc:
Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University
Karen Beckwith, Case Western Reserve University
32-2
POLITICS, RACE AND THE CITY
Co-sponsored by 30-1
Black and White Americans and Latino Immigrants: A
Preliminary Look at Attitudes in Three Southern Cities
Paula D. McClain, Duke University
Jessica D. Johnson Carew, Duke University
Candis S. Watts, Duke University
Eugene Walton, Jr., Duke University
Monique L. Lyle, University of Michigan
Efren Osvaldo Perez, Vanderbilt University
Shayla C. Nunnally, University of Connecticut
Gerald F. Lackey, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Daniell P. Clealand, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Disc:
Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
35-10
AUTHOR MEETS READERS: LARRY BARTELS’
‘UNEQUAL DEMOCRACY’
Benjamin I. Page, Northwestern University
Chair:
Papers:
Part:
Larry M. Bartels, Princeton University
Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University
Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
Kay Lehman Schlozman, Boston College
John R. Zaller, University of California, Los Angeles
36-25
CORRECT VOTING
Co-sponsored by 5-13
Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University
Chair:
Papers:
Explaining correct voting in Swiss direct democracy
Alessandro Nai, University of Geneva
Personal and Political Impediments to Correct Voting
Richard R. Lau, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Tessa M. Ditonto, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
a Comparative Analysis of Voting Power on City Councils: The
Political Incorporation of Minorities in Miami-Dade and Los
Angeles Counties
Allen Bronson Brierly, University of Northern Iowa
Civic Duty, Voting Correctly, and the Quality of Democracy
Bryan J. Dettrey, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Maria Elena Sandovici, Lamar University
Where Race Matters: The Effects of Space and Neighborhood on
Voting Behavior
Thomas K. Ogorzalek, Columbia University
Why Do People Vote ’’Incorrectly?’ Risk Attitudes in Voting
Behavior
Takeshi Iida, Waseda University
Disc:
Teri Fair, Suffolk University
33-9
POLITICS AND RELIGION IN THE AMERICAN
FOUNDING ERA
John R. Pottenger, University of Alabama, Huntsville
Disc:
Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University
36-35
The Bible in the Political Culture of the American Founding
Daniel L. Dreisbach, American University
Chair:
A TASTE FOR POLITICS: THE ROOTS AND DYNAMICS
OF POLITICAL INTEREST
Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
Church & State in the States: The Founding-era State
Constitutions
Phillip Munoz, Tufts University
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
Modeling Political Interest Trajectories in Three Countries
Markus Prior, Princeton University
Jeffersonian Walls and Madisonian Lines:The Supreme Court’s
Interpretation of the First Amendment Religion Clauses
Mark David Hall, George Fox University
The More You Try The Less It Sticks: How Increased Political
Interest Within the Family Breaks the Partisan Link Between
Parents and Children
Elias Dinas, European University Institute
Disc:
Diana M. Judd, William Paterson University
Information, Campaigns, and the Dynamics of Political Interest
Matthew Holleque, University of Wisconsin, Madison
34-3
THE COMPLEXITY OF ELECTORAL SYSTEM
CHANGE: THE ROLE OF VALUES
Co-sponsored by 14-19
Jack Vowles, University of Exeter
Disc:
Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
38-13
Chair:
NEWS, INFORMATION AND MOBILIZATION
Tim Groeling, University of California, Los Angeles
International Standards of Electoral Conduct and Electoral
Reform in Semi-Democracies
Sarah Birch, University of Essex
Papers:
The Mobilized Voter: Portrayals of Citizen Participation in Print
News Coverage of Campaign 2008
Soo-Hye Han, University of Texas, Austin
Sharon E. Jarvis, University of Texas, Austin
Chair:
Papers:
266
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Government Surveillance and Political Engagement in the United
States: The Role of Discrete Negative Emotions
Brian S. Krueger, University of Rhode Island
Social Movement Promotion of De-Democratization: The Case
of the Afrikaner Volksbeweging
Shamira M. Gelbman, Illinois State University
Raising the Battle Cry: Elite Information Dynamics and the Case
of Iraq
Evan Parker-Stephen, Texas A&M University
Corwin D. Smidt, Michigan State University
The Warrior’s Curse: Militarized Minorities, Democratic
Transitions, and Ethnic Conflict
Subhasish Ray, University of Rochester
Democratization and Violence in Sub-Saharan Africa
Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Charles Taylor, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Facts, Fancies, and Frames: Crafted Talk and the Limits of
Threat Inflation
A. Trevor Thrall, University of Michigan, Dearborn
When Democratization Radicalizes? The Kurdish Nationalist
Movement in Turkey
Gunes Murat Tezcur, Loyola University, Chicago
When Deliberation Divides: Processes Underlying Mobilization
to Collective Action
Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, IE University
Disc:
Tim Groeling, University of California, Los Angeles
41-6
THEME PANEL: ALEKSANDR SOLZHENITSYN 19182008: REMEMBRANCE AND LEGACY
Co-sponsored by T-4
Flagg Taylor, Skidmore College
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Sanjib Baruah, Bard College
44-21
RELIGION AND DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVES
Amaney Jamal, Princeton University
Chair:
Papers:
‘The Active Struggle Against Evil’: Reflections on a Theme in
Solzhenitsyn
Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College
Islam and Political Ideologies in Europe
Andrew C. Gould, University of Notre Dame
Islamic Movements and Democracy in Indonesia
Michael Buehler, Columbia University
Explaining Differences in Rates of Muslim Representation in
Western Parliaments
Abdulkader Sinno, Indiana University
Being, Time and Art: Solzhenitsyn’s Reflections on Heidegger’s
Question
James Pontuso, Hampden-Sydney College
Muslim Democratic Parties: Islam, Globalization and Democracy
A.Kadir Yildirim, The Ohio State University
The Prophet of Putinism? Solzhenitsyn, Russian Nationalism and
the End of Revolution
Robert Horvath, La Trobe University
Islamic Institutions and Democracy in Central Asia
Dilshod Achilov, University of Arizona
The First Circle and the Second Government: Solzhenitsyn’s
Hierarchy of Freedom.
David Rozema, University of Nebraska, Kearney
Disc:
Ahmet T. Kuru, San Diego State University
Disc:
Robert P. Kraynak, Colgate University
David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America
45-8
Chair:
THE UNITED STATES AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Donald D.A. Schaefer, Texas Tech University
43-14
SHOCKING! SHOCKS AND OTHER EXTERNAL
SOURCES OF FOREIGN POLICY
Waleed Hazbun, Johns Hopkins University
Papers:
US Foreign Policy and Human Rights: Change and Complexity
David P. Forsythe, University of Nebraska
Chair:
Papers:
Riding the Cycle of Violence: The Psychological Roots of US
Citizens’ Attitudes towards Torture
David L. Richards, University of Memphis
Mary R. Anderson, University of Tampa
Analytical Liberalism versus Neo-Classical Realism: Domestic
Politics and British Foreign Policy, 1900-1914
Mark R. Brawley, McGill University
Plausible Legality: Intelligence Practices and Human Rights
Abuses in the American War on Terror
Rebecca Sanders, University of Toronto
Policy Instruments and Major Historical Change: Explaining the
Spanish-American War as Turning Point in U.S. Foreign Policy
Stephen J. Majeski, University of Washington
David Sylvan, Graduate Institute of International and
Development Studies
Democracy and the Balance of Power: Hegemonic Shocks and
Domestic Reforms in the 20th Century
Vsevolod Gunitskiy, Columbia University
Too Close for Conflict: Mexican Authoritarianism as a Response
to US Power, 1944-1949
Soledad Loaeza, El Colegio de Mexico
The Strategic Sources of International Order
Kyle M. Lascurettes, University of Virginia
Drug War’s Collateral Damage: U.S Counter-Narcotic Aid and
Human Rights Violations in Latin America
Horace A. Bartilow, University of Kentucky
Disc:
Denese McArthur, South Texas College
46-20
CONSTRUCTIVISM AND TRADITIONAL IR THEORY:
PLURALISM, CONFLICT OR ECLECTICISM?
J. Samuel Barkin, University of Florida
Chair:
Papers:
What Is Distinctive about Constructivism?
Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon
Ja Ian Chong, Princeton University
Realism, Constructivism, and International Relations Theory
J. Samuel Barkin, University of Florida
44-10
VIOLENCE, UNCIVIL POLITICS AND
DEMOCRATIZATION
Sanjib Baruah, Bard College
Testing Constructivist Identity: Developing Empirical Indicators
from In-depth Interviews
Cynthia S. Kaplan, University of California, Santa Barbara
Chair:
Papers:
Precipitants and Facilitators of Terrorist Disengagement: A
comparative study of Italy, Spain, Germany and the UK
Diego Muro, King’s College London
Pluralism in IR Theory: An Eclectic Study of Diplomatic
Apologies and Regrets
Jérémie Cornut, Université du Québec à Montréal
267
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Disc:
Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon
47-5
THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE STATE REACTIONS
TO LGBT RIGHTS CLAIMS
Co-sponsored by 29-15 and T-5
Arnold Fleischmann, Eastern Michigan University
Chair:
Papers:
Why State Constitutions Differ in their Treatment of Same-Sex
Marriage
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan
Yanna Krupnikov, University of Michigan
Adam Seth Levine, University of Michigan
Spencer Piston, University of Michigan
Minority Rights under Direct Democracy Institutions:
Accounting for State-Level Policy Preferences
Daniel C. Lewis, University of New Orleans
Pushing for Equality Within the Backlash: Same-Sex Marriage
and Civil Unions in Three Midwestern States
Jason Pierceson, University of Illinois, Springfield
Jilted at the Alter: Contingent Public Opinion on Statewide
Same-Sex Marriage Ballot Measures
Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida
Daily Schedule
Towards a Post-Secular Paradigm: Habermas and Lefort on the
Permanence of the Theologico-Political
Carlo Invernizzi Accetti, Columbia University
A Political Conception of the Person for International Justice
Theory
Margaret Jenkins, University of Toronto
William Thompson and Anna Wheeler: Linking The
Autonomous Individual with the Co-operating Community.
Laura R Kelly, Queen’s University
Deciphering Socratic Eironeia and Parrhesia
Matthew Landauer, Harvard University
Three Approaches to Contested Concepts
Marcus Schulzke, University at Albany, SUNY
Liberalism’s Illiberal Obligation: The American Revolutionaries
and the Duty to Revolt
Felix Valenzuela, Notre Dame University
“No one is free when others are oppressed” - Freedom and
Solidarity in Rousseau’s Social Contract
Efrat Waksman, New School for Social Research
Resource Constraints and the Future of Liberalism
Tamas Golya, University of Oregon
Individual Characteristics, State Context, and Morality Policy in
the U.S. States
Heather Marie Rice, University of Pittsburgh
Reason, Republic, and Revolution: The Fateful Divergence of
Liberalism and Republicanism in France, 1830-1848
Christopher Meckstroth, University of Chicago
Disc:
Kenneth Sherrill, CUNY, Hunter College
Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont
Friedrich Nietzsche on the Role of a Bearer of Culture
(Kulturträger) in Modern Democracies
Mihaela Czobor-Lupp, Georgetown University
48-5
HEALTH PRIORITIES, AGENDA-SETTING, AND
POLITICAL TENSIONS: DEFINING THE PUBLIC
INTEREST IN HEALTH
Mary C. Segers, Rutgers University, Newark
Chair:
Papers:
State Regulation of Rape Insurance and HIV Prevention in India
and South Africa
Lisa Boswell Sharlach, University of Alabama, Birmingham
Health Policymaking in the Contemporary Czech Republic
Leah Seppanen Anderson, Wheaton College
Local Demand for a Global Intervention: Public Policy Priorities
in the Time of AIDS
Kim Yi Dionne, University of California, Los Angeles
Disc:
Tim Hicks, University of Oxford
49-2
ROUNDTABLE: STUDYING CANADIAN CITIES: A SUBFIELD IN MOTION
Co-sponsored by 30-12
Poster Sessions
POSTER SESSION 3
Divisions 1, 2, 3, and 4
Papers: Statelessness and the Contestation of Community: On the
Interrelation Between Democracy and Global Justice
Kiran Banerjee, University of Toronto
What is a People? From a Transnational Perspective
Chia-Ming Chen, University of Chicago
The Negative Origins of Positive Law in Rousseau and Plato
Brent Edwin Cusher, University of Toronto
Nietzsche’s Complex Critique of Pity
Laura K. Field, University of Texas, Austin
On Divine World Government: Kant, Fichte, and the Religion of
Reason
Samuel Goldman, Harvard University
Labor, Virtue, and Republicanism
Alexander Gourevitch, Columbia University
268
Marx, Adorno and the Theoretical Challenge to a Pseudo-Praxis
Claudia Leeb, Dartmouth College
(Not) Just a Piece of Cloth: Begum, Recognition and the Politics
of Representation
Lasse Thomassen, Queen Mary, University of London
Complexity, Change and Eschatology: Biology and Time in
KOJÈVE
Gary M. Kelly, Hetta Institute for International Development
The After-Affect of Pre-emption?: Confidence or Hope?
Geoffrey Whitehall, Acadia University
Manifest Destiny, Credit Cards, and the Election of Barack
Obama
Jill E. Hargis, California State Polytechnic University,
Pomona
Futurity: the Genealogy of a Concept in JS Mill’s Political
Philosophy and Political Economy.
Christopher James Barker, Claremont Graduate University
Art Against Equality: A Theoretical Approach to the Study of
Visual Culture, the Politics of Identity, and the Defeat of
Democratic Ideals in Eighteenth-Century France
Mary L. Bellhouse, Providence College
Reading Husserl and Levinas in Light of ’Philosophical
Anthropology’ and Political Aesthetics
Bettina G. Bergo, Université de Montréal
Practices of Intimacy: Race and Politics in the United States
Winter E-N Brown, Duke University
Ancient Ethics and Modern Times: Lessons in Moderation from
Plato’s Charmides, Aristotle’s Ethics, and Cicero’s On Duties
Timothy W. Caspar, Hillsdale College
Dispositions of Man and the Politics of Responsibility
Yusuf Has, University of Chicago
Rethinking Perfectibility Through Change in Wollstonecraft’s A
VINDICATION OF THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN
Angela Maione, Northwestern University
Whither Human Rights? Human Rights Theories and their Critics
Kathleen R. Arnold, University of Texas, San Antonio
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Edward C. Page, London School of Economics
Graham K. Wilson, Boston University
Intimate Labor and Black Feminist Theories of Freedom
Shatema Threadcraft, Yale University
Deliberation, Interest Clarification, and Recognition
Heather Pincock, Syracuse University
The Churchill Centre
Dworkinian Equality: A Plausible First Principle?
Jordan DeCoste, Queen’s University
Panel 1
Chair:
CHURCHILL AND CANADA
Garnet R. Barber
The Complexities of Post-Modernity: Inequality, Power, and
Political Theory
Terrie R. Groth, Universidade de Brasília
Papers:
Churchill and Canada in the History of the English-Speaking
Peoples
Evelyna Popova, University of Toronto
Rethinking representation: how can we make theories of political
representation relevant for those interested in addressing the
needs of the segregated black poor?
Anthony Berryhill, Yale University
Philosophical Anthropology and Institutions in Contemporary
Political Science
Gregory Douglas Davis, Troy University
Justice: Do it.
Ryan W. Davis, Princeton University
National Identity and Modernization in Established Democracies.
If We All Go Global, Where Does the Nation Go ?
Yves Dejaeghere, Catholic University, Leuven
Churchill and Empire
Peter H. Russell, University of Toronto
John Churchill and the Hudson Bay Company
James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Panel 3
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE: ISLAM AND THE WEST
Thomas Karako, Claremont Graduate University
Part:
Brian T. Kennedy, Claremont Institute
Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, Catholic University of America
Stuart Gottlieb, Yale University
Thomas Joscelyn, The Long War Journal
Khalil Habib, Salve Regina University
Forgiveness and Promise in Transformative Politics between
Political Enemies
Man Kwon Kim, New School for Social Research
The Obligation to Conserve Natural Resources for Future People
Joseph Mazor, Harvard University
Phillip W. Gray, University of Hong Kong
Democracy in Nonideal Theory: Unreasonable Citizens and the
Limits of Rawls’ Doctrine of Public Reason
Michael Kates, New York University
Panel 13 THE NEW DEAL AND ITS LEGACY
Chair:
William Morrisey, Hillsdale College
Papers:
Does Global Justice need Democracy?
Regina Kreide, Justus Liebig University Giessen
Franklin Roosevelt and the Economic Bill of Rights
Donald Brand, College of the Holy Cross
To Report or Not to Report: Media, Protest Diffusion, and Local
Governance
Haifeng Huang, Duke University
Party Labels and Information: The Implications of Contagion in
Coelection Environments
Brendan Pablo Montagnes, Northwestern University
Political Salience in a Voting Model with Mass Media
Guido Cataife, University of Louisville
Deliberation and bargaining in State Bureaucracies
Ishan Joshi, Cornell University
National Identity and Modernization in Established Democracies.
If We all Go Global, Where Does the Nation Go?
Marc Hooghe, KU Leuven
The Supreme Court at the Bar of Politics: The New Deal and
Now
Ryan P. Williams, Claremont Graduate University
Disc:
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
Part:
Panel 1
Chair:
Part:
ROUNDTABLE ON PRESSURE GROUPS AND THE
POLICY PROCESS
Wyn P. Grant, University of Warwick
Grant Jordan, University of Aberdeen
Wyn P. Grant, University of Warwick
Darren R. Halpin, Robert Gordon University
Continuity and Discontinuity in Italy’s Foreign Policy
Maurizio Carbone, University of Glasgow
Disc:
Richard S. Katz, Johns Hopkins University
Eric Voegelin Society
Panel 8
Chair:
ANAMNETIC LITERATURE
Charles R. Embry, Texas A&M University, Commerce
Papers:
A Heaven-Gram for World Politics: Hillesum, Heschel and Rilke
Rescuing God in Exile
Meins G.S. Coetsier, Ghent University EHOC
J. M. Coetzee and Eric Voegelin on Remembrance and the
Private and Public Dimensions of Guilt.
Polly Detels, unaffiliated
269
Daily Schedule
British Politics Group
The Transformation of Italian Democracy
Sergio Fabbrini, University of Trento
What’s Left of the Italian Left?
James Lawrie Newell James Lawrie, Newell
ROUNDTABLE: STANDING FREEDOM ON ITS HEAD:
‘EQUALITY’ AND ‘NONDISCRIMINATION’ AND THE
SUPPRESSION OF DEMOCRATIC LIBERTIES
Christopher Wolfe, Marquette University
Christopher Wolfe, Marquette University
Hadley Arkes, Amherst College
Iain Benson, Centre for Cultural Renewal
ITALIAN POLITICS BETWEEN REFORMS AND
REVIVAL
Filippo A. Sabetti, McGill University
The Evolution of the Right in Italy
Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna
American Public Philosophy Institute
Chair:
Steven Ealy, Liberty Fund, Inc.
William Morrisey, Hillsdale College
Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society
Related Group Panels
Panel 1
Progressive Dissenters and the American Form of Bureaucracy
Joseph Postell, The Heritage Foundation
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Disc:
Daily Schedule
W.B. Yeats and the Formation of the National Consciousness
J. Patrick Dowdall
Disc:
Brandon Turner, Clemson University
Anamnesis in the Work of Stefan George
William Petropulos, Eric Voegelin Archive, Munich
1-19
Chair:
RIGHTS, SELF-DETERMINATION AND DIFFERENCE
Theodore Christov, Northwestern University
The Persistence of Symbol and Sacrament in Albert Camus
Matthew Charles Connell, Louisiana State University
Papers:
Community, Security and Universalism: Conflicting Priorities in
Early Modern Thought on International Relations
Peter Mohanty, University of Texas, Austin
Benjamin Gregg, University of Texas, Austin
David Palmieri, Auburn University
Ron Srigley, Thorneloe University
Cannibalism, Death and Slavery: Rights and Liberty in Motion
in the New World
Lauri Tahtinen, University of Cambridge
Thursday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM
Affiliate Group Meetings
Reading Cosmopolitan Right through Kant’s “Religion within the
Boundaries of Mere Reason”: Do Indigenous Land Claims
Involve an Historical Faith?
Timothy P. Waligore, Smith College
McGraw-Hill
BUSINESS MEETING 2
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Disc:
Theodore Christov, Northwestern University
1-31
PLATONIC DIALOGUES ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND
POLITICAL VIRTUE
Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 1
2-11
Chair:
POLITICAL THEORY AS SUBFIELD AND PROFESSION?
Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, Whitman College
Part:
Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley
John G. Gunnell, SUNY, University at Albany
Ian Shapiro, Yale University
Gregory J. Kasza, Indiana University, Bloomington
Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University
International Committee
2-22
Panel 1
Chair:
THE WORLD ACCORDING TO SAMUEL HUNTINGTON
Ethan B. Kapstein, INSEAD
Chair:
CONTESTING SECULAR MODERNITIES
Co-sponsored by 3-3
Roxanne L. Euben, Wellesley College
Part:
Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University
Jorge I. Dominguez, Harvard University
John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago
Panel 5
THE LIFE AND SCHOLARSHIP OF CHARLES TILLY
Co-sponsored by 7-4
APSA Panel
APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and
the Transgendered in the Profession
Panel 1
Chair:
Part:
ROUNDTABLE: OPERATIONALIZING
INTERSECTIONALITY
Angelia Ruth Wilson, University of Manchester
Donald B. Rosenthal
Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder
Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine
Janelle Wong, University of Southern California
Rodolfo Rosales, University of Texas, San Antonio
Papers:
The Faces of Mohammed: Secularism and the Politics of Islamic
Displacement
Shirin S. Deylami, Western Washington University
“Latin Christendom” in Charles Taylor’s Secular Age
Matthew Scherer, Johns Hopkins University
Division Panels
T-6
T-7
1-11
Chair:
Papers:
THEME PANEL: CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
Co-sponsored by 16-10
THEME ROUNDTABLE: DOES POSTCOMMUNISM
STILL MAKE SENSE AS AN ANALYTICAL
FRAMEWORK?
Co-sponsored by 13-2
Roxanne L. Euben, Wellesley College
2-31
Chair:
DEMOCRACY IN MOTION
Thomas S. De Luca, Jr., Fordham University
Papers:
Democracy: A Political Regime or a Type of Society?
Marek Skovajsa, Charles University
An Anarchist Defense of Democracy
Andrew R. Volmert, Brown University
The Rise of the People and the Uselessness of “Democracy” as a
Research Concept
Fred Eidlin, University of Guelph
Adam Smith’s Strangership
Lisa Ellen Hill, University of Adelaide
“Power to the Wise, and Safety to All:” Adam Ferguson and the
Republican Argument against the American Revolution
Yiftah Elazar, Princeton University
Understanding the French Revolution: The Scottish Whig
Historians and French Constitutional History
Anna Plassart, University of Cambridge
270
Disc:
LIBERTY, COMMERCE AND VIRTUE: HISTORICAL
AND THEORETICAL REFLECTIONS ON THE
SCOTTISH ENLIGHTENMENT
Brandon Turner, Clemson University
Plural Passions: Moral Sense Conceptions of Judgment and the
Challenges of Pluralism
Marc Hanvelt, Carleton University
Identity, Justice and Renewal: Sayyid Qutb and the Challenge of
Secularism
Smita A. Rahman, DePauw University
Deliberate Speed: The Temporality of Democratic Politics
Mario Feit, Georgia State University
Disc:
James E. Bourke, Duke University
Julie Mostov, Drexel University
2-35
Chair:
LIBERALISM, ETHICS AND CULTURE
Gerry Mackie, University of California, San Diego
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Disc:
William Roberts Clark, University of Michigan
Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
“Culture” in Political Theory: A Typology and Critique
Leigh K. Jenco, National University of Singapore
7-4
Chair:
THE LIFE AND SCHOLARSHIP OF CHARLES TILLY
Brian Balogh, University of Virginia
Liberalism: Political Theory as Applied Liberal Ethics
Carla Yumatle, Harvard University
Part:
Richard F. Bensel, Cornell University
Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University
Ira Katznelson, Columbia University
Sven Beckert, Harvard University
8-18
STATISTICAL MODELS AND CAUSAL INFERENCE:
DAVID FREEDMAN’S DIALOGUE WITH THE SOCIAL
SCIENCES
Co-sponsored by 46-7
9-2
CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN TEACHING
CRITICAL THINKING IN THE AMERICAN
GOVERNMENT COURSE
Co-sponsored by 10-2
Brigid Harrison, Montclair State University
Disc:
Jill E. Hargis, California State Polytechnic University,
Pomona
Andrew D. Lister, Queen’s University
3-3
CONTESTING SECULAR MODERNITIES
Co-sponsored by 2-22
3-29
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: PETER A. MEYERS, CIVIC
WAR AND THE CORRUPTION OF THE CITIZEN,
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS, 2008
Harvey S. Goldman, University of California, San Diego
Part:
3-31
Political Determinants of Banking Deregulation
Min-young Han, Yale University
Rethinking the Ethical Attributes of the State in a New
Globalized Era
Alessandra Sarquis, Univesity of Brasilia
Identities and Indignities: Liberalism, Multiculturalism, and
Critical Social Theory
Bruce Baum, University of British Columbia
Chair:
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Benjamin R. Barber, DEMOS (New York)
Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin
Paul Frymer, Princeton University
Peter A. Meyers, Princeton University
Chair:
ON CHAIM GANS’ BOOK “A JUST ZIONISM: ON THE
MORALITY OF THE JEWISH STATE” (OUP 2008)
Andreas Follesdal, University of Oslo
Disc:
Chaim Gans, Tel Aviv University
Part:
Joel Perlmann, Bard College
Daniel Kofman, University of Ottawa
Michael R. Marrus, University of Toronto
Howard Adelman, York University
Chair:
Part:
Van A. Wigginton, San Jacinto College-Central Campus
Ann Wyman, Missouri Southern State University
Kathleen M. Collihan, American River College
Raymond Sandoval, Richland College
John R. Wood, Rose State College
10-2
CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN TEACHING
CRITICAL THINKING IN THE AMERICAN
GOVERNMENT COURSE
Co-sponsored by 9-2
11-6
FINANCIAL CRISIS AND CONTEMPORARY
CAPITALISM
Helen V. Milner, Princeton University
Peter A. Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego
Ronald L. Rogowski, University of California, Los Angeles
Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego
Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University
Part:
4-7
Chair:
MODELING REPLACEMENT IN DEMOCRACY
Meredith Rolfe, University of Oxford
Papers:
Internal and External Political Competition
David Hugh-Jones, Max Planck Institute of Economics
11-15
Cabinet Management Strategies: Hiring, Firing and Returning
from the Wilderness
Torun Dewan, London School of Economics
David P Myatt, Oxford University
Chair:
Sanction and Learning in Elections
Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago
Scott Ashworth, University of Chicago
Amanda Y. Friedenberg, Washington University
Nathan Brown, George Washington University
Marc Lynch, George Washington University
Part:
Audra K. Grant, RAND Corporation
Frederic M. Wehrey, Oxford University
Dale Stahl, Columbia University
Dalia Dassa Kaye, RAND Corporation
Adam H. Meirowitz, Princeton University
11-29
COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF ADMINISTRATIVE
POLITICS, DELEGATION AND OVERSIGHT
Christian B. Jensen, University of Iowa
Jeeyang Rhee Baum, Harvard University
6-16
THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: CAUSES AND
CONSEQUENCES
Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Chair:
Chair:
The Bipartisan Roots of the 2008 Financial Services Crisis
Helena Simone Yeaman, Broward College
APAs and Single Party Majority Government
Jeeyang Rhee Baum, Harvard University
Christian B. Jensen, University of Iowa
A “New New Deal”? The Politics of the Democratic Party’s
Program for Economic Recovery
James Shoch, California State University, Sacramento
The Political Economy of Administrative Procedure Acts: The
Role of the Courts
Rui J. de Figueiredo, Jr., University of California-Berkeley
Papers:
Papers:
271
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Social Networks and the Mass Media
David A. Siegel, Florida State University
Disc:
MORE FREEDOM, LESS TERROR? LIBERALIZATION
AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE ARAB WORLD
Co-sponsored by 18-1
Nathan Brown, George Washington University
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Accountability in Developing Countries: The oversight and
control of the Executive in Mexican states
Alejandra Rios-Cazares, CIDE
Daily Schedule
Chair:
Valerie Sperling, Clark University
Papers:
Why Cyber Nationalists Rebel: A Simultaneous Analysis of
Media Effect and the Overseas Chinese Nationalist Movement
Meimei Zhang, University of California, Santa Barbara
Complying Correct and on Time: An Empirical Study of
Member States’ Compliance Record in the Transposition of EC
Directives
Thomas König, Universität Mannheim
Measuring Regulators’ Statutory Independence
Chris Hanretty, European University Institute
Explaining Increases in Xenophobic Outcomes in PostCommunist Russia
Christopher Wendt, Massachusetts Institute of Technolgy
Gabriel Rubin, Montclair State University
Disc:
Jeeyang Rhee Baum, Harvard University
Michael F. Thies, University of California, Los Angeles
Does a Nationalist Card Make for a Weak Hand? Economic
Crisis and Nationalist Demobilization
Stephen Bloom, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
11-42
Chair:
MIGRATION AND DEMOCRACY
Katrina Burgess, Tufts University
Remaking Minority Identities in the Borderlands of the Soviet
Union and the European Union: A Diachronic Comparison
Jessica Allina-Pisano, University of Ottawa
Papers:
Are Western-educated Politicians More Democratic and More
Competent?
Maria Popova, McGill University
Immigrant Transnationalism Across Time in the United States
Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University
Migrants and the Democratization of their Country of Origin
Luis F. Jimenez, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Katrina Burgess, Tufts University
11-53
POLITICS AND NON-TAX REVENUE: EXAMINING
CAUSAL MECHANISMS
Co-sponsored by 16-21
Currency, Identity, and Nation-Building: National Currency
Choices in the Post-Soviet States
Scott B. Cooper, Brigham Young University
Disc:
Magda Giurcanu, University of Florida
Ekrem Karakoc, Pennsylvania State University
14-11
THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF REDISTRIBUTION IN
DIVERSE WELFARE STATES
Co-sponsored by 11-67
Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia
Chair:
11-67
THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF REDISTRIBUTION IN
DIVERSE WELFARE STATES
Co-sponsored by 14-11
12-17
STATE RESPONSES TO LIBERALIZING GLOBAL
PRESSURES
James E. Mahon, Jr., Williams College
Chair:
Papers:
Globalization, Government Ideology, and Redistributive Policies
Eunyoung Ha, Claremont Graduate University
Disc:
James E. Mahon, Jr., Williams College
Dongryul Kim, Rochester Institute of Technology
12-46
FEDERALISM IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: FOUNDINGS
AND FINANCING
Co-sponsored by 28-4
Chair:
Part:
13-11
272
Immigration, National Identity, and Support for the Welfare State
Keith Gordon Banting, Queen’s University
Will Kymlicka, Queen’s University
The Welfare State, Multicultural Policies, and Trust: Examining
the Determinants of Immigrant Integration
Regan Wayne Damron, University of Georgia
The Origins of Solidarity in Diverse Welfare States: Primordial
or Cosmopolitan?
Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia
Jonathan T. Polk, University of Georgia
Why Did the Chicken Cross the Border? An Investigation of
Government Responses to Import Surges in Senegal, Cameroon
and the Ivory Coast
Martha C. Johnson, University of California, Berkeley
Dancing with the Wolf: Institutional Changes and Industrial
Development of China’s Automobile Sector After WTO
Accession
Ying Lin, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
13-2
Papers:
The Impact of Immigration on the Size of Government:
Empirical Evidence from Danish Municipalities
Christer Gerdes, Swedish Institute for Social Research
(SOFI)
Disc:
Gary P. Freeman, University of Texas, Austin
15-13
ELITES VS CITIZENS: WHO WANTS THE EUROPEAN
UNION, WHO DOESN’T AND WHY
Willem Maas, Glendon College, York University
Chair:
Papers:
The Evolution of Public Opinion About European Integration
Over the Long Run
Christopher J. Anderson, Cornell University
Jason D. Hecht, Cornell University
Opinion Polarization and Inter-Party Competition on Europe:
Who’s Taking the Lead and Where?
Carole J. Wilson, University of Texas, Dallas
Ian Down, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
THEME ROUNDTABLE: DOES POSTCOMMUNISM
STILL MAKE SENSE AS AN ANALYTICAL
FRAMEWORK?
Co-sponsored by T-7
Michael Bernhard, University of Florida
European Elites and the UE in the Intune Project: Attitudes
Towards European Integration of Political and Economic Elites
Rafael Vázquez-García, University of Granada
Miguel Jerez-Mir, University of Granada
José Real-Dato, Universidad de Almería
Jeffrey Kopstein, University of Toronto
Donna Bahry, Pennsylvania State University
Keith A. Darden, Yale University
Kevin J. O’Brien, University of California, Berkeley
Pauline Jones Luong, Brown University
Disc:
Willem Maas, Glendon College, York University
POSTCOMMUNIST IDENTITY POLITICS
16-4
CONSTRUCTING US TRADE POLICY
Closing the Community Deficit in the EU
Amitai Etzioni, The George Washington University
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Chair:
Stephanie R. Golob, Baruch College-CUNY
Primary Education and Human Rights: More than Child’s Play
David Sobek, Louisiana State University
Papers:
Narrative and the Construction of Interests: Implications for the
Politics of Trade
Frederick W. Mayer, Duke University
Easy Money: How Unearned Revenues Reduce Respect for
Human Rights
Paola Fajardo-Heyward, SUNY, Binghamton
Trade Talk: Narratives of US Identity in the Making of
Economic Policy
Amy M. Skonieczny, San Francisco State University
The UN Human Rights Council: New Wine in Old Skins?
Eric W. Cox, Texas Christian University
A Certain Idea of America: Identity Politics and North American
Integration
Brian Bow, Dalhousie University
Arturo Santa-Cruz, University of Guadalajara
Disc:
16-10
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Oona Hathaway, Yale University
Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University
18-1
MORE FREEDOM, LESS TERROR? LIBERALIZATION
AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE ARAB WORLD
Co-sponsored by 11-15
18-17
Chair:
CREATING DURABLE ALLIANCES
Paul Poast, University of Michigan
Papers:
Previous Commitments and Future Promises: The Relationship
Between Military Capacity, Alliance Reliability and Future
Alliance Potential, 1950-2005
Anessa L. Kimball, Universite Laval
Alia Alatassi, Université Laval
Jeffrey M. Ayres, Saint Michael’s College
Stephanie R. Golob, Baruch College-CUNY
THEME PANEL: CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
Co-sponsored by T-6
Ibrahim Awad, International Labour Organization
Governing Migration: A Public Goods Approach
James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University
Does International Reputation Matter? A Signaling Theory
Linking Alliance Commitment and Alliance Formation
Neil Narang, University of California, San Diego
Brad LeVeck, University of California, San Diego
Comparing Immigration Policies for the ‘Best and Brightest’
Lucie Cerna, University of Oxford
Variations in Access for High Skilled Migrants
Jeannette Money, University of California, Davis
Linking Issues and Sealing Deals: Explaining the Role of IssueLinkage in International Cooperation using Economic Provisions
in Military Alliance Treaties
Paul Poast, University of Michigan
Organized Labor and Immigrant Workers: The Changing Politics
of Labor Insecurity
Dan Tichenor, University of Oregon
Janice Fine, Rutgers University
Disc:
Ibrahim Awad, International Labour Organization
16-21
POLITICS AND NON-TAX REVENUE: EXAMINING
CAUSAL MECHANISMS
Co-sponsored by 11-53
Sarah Bermeo, Yale University
Chair:
Why Does Alliance Content Vary and Does it Matter for
Interstate Conflict?
Brett Benson, Vanderbilt University
Disc:
Michaela Mattes, Vanderbilt University
18-21
DILEMMAS IN PRIVATE SECURITY, PAST AND
PRESENT
Norrin M. Ripsman, Concordia University
Chair:
Papers:
Natural Resources and Political Contestation: Evidence from
Seventy Years’ Worth of Elections
Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University
Papers:
Oil and Revolutionary Regimes: A Toxic Mix
Jeff Colgan, Princeton University
Privatization of Security and its Effects on Civil War Duration
Megan Becker, University of California, San Diego
Instability and Oil: How Political Time Horizons Affect Oil
Revenue Management
Andrea Herschman Kendall-Taylor, University of California,
Los Angeles
Fighting Legal Windmills after Blackwater: Private Military
Contractors, Accountability, and the Geneva Conventions
Tom Syring, University of Oslo
The Curse of Aid? Donor Intentions and the Impact of Aid on
Authoritarian Regimes
Sarah Bermeo, Yale University
States and Pre-State Actors: The Nomadic Challenge to
Westphalian Territoriality
Joseph MacKay, University of Toronto
Gustavo Seignemartin de Carvalho, University of Toronto
Kristin T R Cavoukian, University of Toronto
Ross Allan Cuthbert, Mr., University of Toronto
Jamie Levin, University of Toronto
Commodity Price Shocks and Civil Conflict: Evidence from
Colombia
Oeindrila Dube, New York University
Juan Fernando Vargas, Universidad del Rosario
Michael L. Ross, University of California, Los Angeles
17-4
CREATING A DIALOGUE BETWEEN QUALITATIVE
AND QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO HUMAN
RIGHTS
Michael Strausz, Texas Christian University
Chair:
Papers:
Persuasion, Legalization, and the Genocide Convention
Michael Strausz, Texas Christian University
Brian D. Greenhill, University of Washington
Disc:
Michael C. Williams, University of Wales, Aberystwyth
18-31
UNIPOLARITY AND WAR IN TODAY’S WORLD
Co-sponsored by 19-9
19-9
UNIPOLARITY AND WAR IN TODAY’S WORLD
Co-sponsored by 18-31
Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Market Failure: The Moral Hazards of Private Military Firms
(PMFs)
Edward T. Barrett, U.S. Naval Academy
273
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Papers:
Daily Schedule
The End of Rivalries and the Beginning of New Ones: The
Causes of Foreign Imposed Regime Change
Melissa Willard-Foster, University of California, Los Angeles
Power and Democratic Weakness: Neoconservatve Approaches to
Changes in International Political Polarity
Jonathan D. Caverley, Northwestern University
Unrest Assured: Why Unipolarity is Not Peaceful
Nuno Peres Monteiro, University of Chicago
Disc:
Philip Arena, SUNY, University at Buffalo
Is There an “Emboldenment” Effect? Evidence from the
Insurgency in Iraq
Jonathan J. Monten, Yale University
22-11
Chair:
CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES
Gregory Robinson, SUNY, Binghamton
Asymmetric Power and the Effectiveness of Coercive Threats
Todd S. Sechser, University of Virginia
Papers:
A New Approach to the Study of Congressional Conference
Committees
James R. Bourbeau, University of of Connecticut
How Unipolarity, Hegemony, and Empire Combine to Cause
Conflict
Thomas J. Wright, Princeton University
Disc:
19-19
20-7
Chair:
Papers:
Competing Loyalties: Influences on Conferee Decision Making
in the 101st-110th Congresses
Michael C. Brady, Duke University
Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University
Christopher Layne, Texas A&M University
Competing Theories of Committees: Maltzman’s Conditional
Theory Reexamined
Natalie M. Jackson, University of Oklahoma
THE BALANCE OF POWER IN INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND
HISTORICAL ANALYSIS
Co-sponsored by 43-7
THE CAUSES, CONDUCT AND CONSEQUENCES OF
NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION AND
NONPROLIFERATION
Co-sponsored by 21-3
Matthew Fuhrmann, University of South Carolina
The Strategic Consequences of Nuclear Acquisition
Negeen Pegahi, University of Chicago
Why Conference Committees?: A Policy Explanation for the Use
of Conference
Ryan J. Vander Wielen, Temple University
Disc:
Gregory Robinson, SUNY, Binghamton
23-3
NEWLY EMERGING QUESTIONS AND TRENDS IN
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS
Harold F. Bass, Ouachita Baptist University
Chair:
Papers:
The Sources and Consequences of Regional Powers’ Nuclear
Postures
Vipin Narang, Harvard University
Party vs Personal Coalitions in Presidential Nominations
Wayne P. Steger, DePaul University
Exporting the Bomb: Statecraft and the Spread of Nuclear
Weapons
Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University
Laughing to the Bank: Financial Implications of Political Humor
in Presidential Nominations
Patrick A. Stewart, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
Initiative Design in Combating Illicit Nuclear Trade
Emma Belcher, Harvard University
Back to the Future?: The Role of Partisan Elites and Masses in
Presidential Nominations, 1976-2008
Randall E. Adkins, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Andrew J. Dowdle, University of Arkansas
John Davis, University of Arkansas
Nuclear Deterrence and Nuclear War: Evaluating the Deterrent
Value of Small Arsenals
Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College
Keir A. Lieber, Georgetown University
Disc:
Matthew Fuhrmann, University of South Carolina
20-18
DOMESTIC POLITICS AND FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 21-19
21-3
THE CAUSES, CONDUCT AND CONSEQUENCES OF
NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION AND
NONPROLIFERATION
Co-sponsored by 20-7
21-19
Chair:
Papers:
DOMESTIC POLITICS AND FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 20-18
Philip Arena, SUNY, University at Buffalo
Diversionary Behavior for Territorial, Maritime, and River Issues
Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa
Clayton L Thyne, University of Kentucky
The Threat of Coups d’etat and the Diversionary Use of Force
Jonathan M. Powell, University of Kentucky
Public Commitment and Endogenous Crisis Initiation
Ahmer Tarar, Texas A&M University
Bahar Leventoglu, Duke University
State Fiscal Capacity and State Failure in the Developing World
Cameron G. Thies, University of Iowa
274
Friending Obama: How Netroots Technology is Altering
Presidential Nomination Dynamics
Christopher C. Hull, Georgetown University
Briana R. Morgan, Georgetown University
A Candidate You Can Believe In? Voter Perceptions of
Candidate Character in the 2008 Presidential Elections.
Charles L. Prysby, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
David B. Holian, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Disc:
Lara Michelle Brown, Villanova University
23-16
GENDER, RACE AND THE PRESIDENCY
Co-sponsored by 31-3
24-2
Chair:
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND CHANGE
Willow Jacobson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Papers:
Effective Recruitment in a Time of Hyper Technological Change:
The Case of the U.S. Federal Government
Jared Llorens, University of Kansas
Is SHRM Taking Root in Local Governments?
Willow Jacobson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
State Public Management Training Programs: Building Human
Capital?
Jessica Sowa, Cleveland State University
Transforming HR: Structural Changes in State Civil Service
Systems
Sally Coleman Selden, Lynchburg College
Daily Schedule
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
The Black Worker as Individualist? The Effects of Social
Movement Competition on the Constitutional Strategies of the
Civil Rights Movement during the Lochner Era
Allison M. Martens, University of Louisville
Civil Service Reform in the U.S. Departments of Defense and
Homeland Security
Gene A. Brewer, University of Georgia
J. Edward Kellough, University of Georgia
Disc:
James S. Bowman, Florida State University
Sara R. Jordan, University of Hong Kong
24-14
DIGITAL GOVERNANCE: POLICY DEVELOPMENT
AND ADMINISTRATIVE STRATEGIES
Co-sponsored by 40-7
25-8
EXPLAINING THE SUCCESS AND FAILURE OF
CERTAIN HEALTH POLICIES
Co-sponsored by 48-6
Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark
Chair:
Papers:
Reliable in Their Failure: An Analysis of Healthcare Reform
Policies in Public Systems
Damien Contandriopoulos, University of Montreal
How Did Change Happen? The Complex Institutions: An
Institutional Account of China’s HIV/AIDS Policy Shift, 19852007
Wenjue Lu Knutsen, Queen’s University
Social Issues, the GOP’s Values Agenda and the Supreme Court:
the New Right Regime’s Fourteenth Amendment
J. Mitchell Pickerill, Washington State University
Cornell W. Clayton, Washington State University
Women Lawyers and Governance in the Progressive Era
Kathleen S. Sullivan, Ohio University
Carol Nackenoff, Swarthmore College
Disc:
Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University
28-4
FEDERALISM IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: FOUNDINGS
AND FINANCING
Co-sponsored by 12-46
David R. Cameron, University of Toronto
Chair:
Papers:
Soft Budget Constraint and the Perils of Fiscal Federalism: The
Case of China
Lynette H. Ong, Harvard University
Governing Biotechnology: Why Do Governments Bother? A
Comparative Analysis of Public Policies in Reproductive
Technology, Embryo Research and Stem Cells Research
Isabelle Engeli, European University Institute
Frédéric Varone, University of Geneva
Handling the High Spenders: Implications of the Distribution of
Health Expenditures for Financing Health Care
Raisa Berlin Deber, University of Toronto
Kenneth Cheak Kwan Lam, University of Toronto
Reviewing and Reassessing the Problem of HIV/AIDS
Anna Persson, University of California, Los Angeles
Martin Sjostedt, Goteborg University
Disc:
Terry S. Weiner, Union College
Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark
25-23
TACTICAL CHOICES AND ORGANIZATIONAL
SUCCESS
Co-sponsored by 35-12
26-4
Chair:
JUDICIAL BEHAVIOR IN THE COURTS OF APPEALS
Sara C. Benesh, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Papers:
Modeling Circuit Effects on the US Courts of Appeals
Chad Westerland, University of Arizona
Brandon L. Bartels, Stony Brook University
Political Variables and Subnational Debt in India
Lawrence Saez, University of London, SOAS
Disc:
David R. Cameron, University of Toronto
Robert Agranoff, Indiana University
29-12
KEY CONCEPTS IN STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
RESEARCH
Ronald E. Weber, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Chair:
Papers:
Assessing Causes of Panel Effects on the Court of Appeals
Sean Farhang, University of California, Berkeley
Gregory J. Wawro, Columbia University
All Together Now: Putting Congress, State Legislatures, and
Individuals on a Common Ideological Space
Boris Shor, University of Chicago
Defining the South: Electoral Reform and Voter Turnout, 19202000
Melanie Jean Springer, Washington University in Saint Louis
Disc:
Richard F. Winters, Dartmouth College
Ronald E. Weber, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
30-8
RAINBOW’S END? AN EXAMINATION OF AN URBAN
CLASSIC
Co-sponsored by 32-15
Peter F. Burns, Loyola University New Orleans
Sara C. Benesh, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
27-10
Chair:
LAWYERING, ADVOCACY, AND INTERESTS
Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University
Papers:
The Federalist Society and the New Federalism: An Epistemic
Community at Work
Amanda Hollis-Brusky, University of California, Berkeley
Chair:
Papers:
Equality, Inferiority and Electoral Competition: Black-Brown
Partnerships in Newark, New Jersey
Andra N. Gillespie, Emory University
Inter-group Relations and Neighborhood Context in Los Angeles
Lorrie A. Frasure, University of California, Los Angeles
Stacey Ann Greene, University of California
Local Versus National Partisan Representation
Jessica Luce Trounstine, Princeton University
Kristen Badal, Princeton University
Disc:
Steven P. Erie, University of California, San Diego
275
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Place and Perception: Understanding the Relationship between
Geography and Attitudes on Voting and Political Identity
Daniel J. Coffey, University of Akron
Measuring “Term-limitedness” in Multi-state Research
Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State University
Purposive vs. Strategic Behavior in the U.S. Courts of Appeals
Anna O. Law, DePaul University
The Effect of War on the U.S. Federal Courts of Appeals: An
Analysis of U.S. Appeals Court Treatment of War Related Cases
Susanne Schorpp, University of South Carolina
Donald R. Songer, University of South Carolina
A Negative Case Test on the Origin of Federalism: The
Emergence of Chile’s Unitary Regime
Rodrigo Mardones, P. Universidad Católica de Chile
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
31-3
Chair:
Papers:
GENDER, RACE AND THE PRESIDENCY
Co-sponsored by 23-16
Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College
Daily Schedule
32-15
RAINBOW’S END? AN EXAMINATION OF AN URBAN
CLASSIC
Co-sponsored by 30-8
32-20
From Hillary to Michelle: Public Opinion and Presidential Wives
Barbara C. Burrell, Northern Illinois University
Brian P. Frederick, Bridgewater State College
Laurel Elder, Hartwick College
RACE AND ELECTORAL POLITICS IN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 36-15
33-3
A Meeting Place for Partisan Politics and Identity Politics: Race,
Class, Gender, and the First Ladyship
MaryAnne Borrelli, Connecticut College
Chair:
THE DISAPPEARING GOD GAP? RELIGION IN THE
2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
Co-sponsored by Christians in Political Science, Panel 2
Napp Nazworth, University of Georgia
From Ferraro to Palin: Sexism in Media Coverage of Female
Vice Presidential Candidates
Caroline Heldman, Occidental College
Sarah Oliver, University of California, Santa Barbara
Meredith Conroy, University of California, Santa Barbara
Papers:
Religion and Election Day
Corwin E. Smidt, Calvin College
Faith of his Fathers: Barack Obama, Islam, and the Impact of
Religious Background Cues on Vote Choice in the 2008
Presidential Election
Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame
John C. Green, University of Akron
Changing, but Staying the Same: The Use of “Motherhood” in
Political Campaigns, 1920-2008
Jill S. Greenlee, Brandeis University
Shifting the Gender Gaze: The Intersection of Race and Gender
in the Obama Candidacy
Valeria Sinclair-Chapman, University of Rochester
Disc:
Paul A. Djupe, Denison University
TACTICAL CHOICES AND ORGANIZATIONAL
SUCCESS
Co-sponsored by 25-23
Virginia H. Gray, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Disc:
Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College
Susan J. Carroll, Rutgers University
35-12
31-16
THE POLITICS OF BACKLASH: THEORY AND CASE
STUDIES IN DYNAMIC RESISTANCE
Co-sponsored by 42-4
Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University
Chair:
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
Solving the Collective Action Problem?: Backlash and
Coordinated Yet Unplanned Behavior
Shauna L. Shames, Harvard University
Jane Mansbridge, Harvard University
The Structure of Lobbying and Representation across
Policymaking Venues
Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa
John W. Patty, Harvard University
Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley
Andrew Pettine, University of Iowa
Backlash to the Backlash: Immigrant Reaction to Restrictive U.S.
State-level Laws
Porsha Cropper, Harvard University
Interest Group Competition and Legislative Success in the U.S.
Congress
Holly Brasher, University of Alabama, Birmingham
Backlash Responses to Nascent Feminist Activism
Johanna L. Ettin, National Organization of Women
Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University
32-4
Chair:
COMPARATIVE RACIAL AND ETHNIC POLITICS
Robin J. Hayes, PhD, Santa Clara University
Papers:
Comparative Ethno-nationalism: Kurds vs. Lazs
Zeki Sarigil, Bilkent University
Portuguese in Canada: Diasporas & Adopted Nations
Robert Maciel, University of Western Ontario
Sikh Politics, Minority Status, and Narrative Identity in
Postcolonial India
Natasha Behl, University of California, Los Angeles
Afro-Brazilian Activists, Blackness, and Black group Identity
Gladys Mitchell, Duke University
Multicultural Multiracialism, Multiracial Multiculturalism: Race,
Mixed-Race and Diversity in the United States, Great Britain and
Canada
Debra Thompson, University of Toronto
Disc:
276
Toygar Halistoprak, Bilkent University
Robin J. Hayes, PhD, Santa Clara University
Signals through the Fog: Bureaucratic Signaling and Attention in
Financial Regulation
Samuel Workman, The University of Texas at Austin
JoBeth Surface Shafran, University of Texas at Austin
Organizational Strategies in Breast Cancer Research Advocacy
Patricia Strach, Harvard University
Resistance to Climate Change Social Movement Across
Geographic Space
Jennifer W. Howk, Harvard University
Disc:
Religion and the Fall Campaign
Kevin R. den Dulk, Grand Valley State University
Disc:
Marie Hojnacki, Pennsylvania State University
Beth L. Leech, Rutgers University
36-15
RACE AND ELECTORAL POLITICS IN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 32-20
Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington
Chair:
Papers:
Turn Out or Burn Out? How Negative Ads Affect Latino and
non-Latino Voting.
Jennifer L. Merolla, Claremont Graduate University
Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington
Victoria Maria DeFrancesco Soto, Northwestern University
Ricardo Ramirez, University of Southern California
Race, Redistricting and Minority Officeholding in Congress and
State Legislatures, 1960s to 2008
Mingus Mapps, Brandeis University
The Impact of Race and Ethnicity on Turnout in US Presidential
Elections
Beth Ginsberg
The Effect of African-American Proximity on Latino Vote
Choice in the 2008 Presidential Primary
Ryan D. Enos, University of California, Los Angeles
Daily Schedule
Elections in Black and White: Race, Perceptions, and Voting
Behavior in U.S. House Elections
Matthew L. Jacobsmeier, University of New Orleans
Disc:
Gabriel Sanchez, University of New Mexico
Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
40-7
Chair:
DIGITAL GOVERNANCE: POLICY DEVELOPMENT
AND ADMINISTRATIVE STRATEGIES
Co-sponsored by 24-14
Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
36-24
Chair:
ECONOMIC SELF-INTEREST AND THE VOTE
Peter Enns, Cornell University
E-Government at the Local Level: Variations and Potential
Explanations
John Hoornbeek, Kent State University
Mark Cassell, Kent State University
Papers:
Economic Status and Political Voice: Cause or Common Source?
Martin Kroh, German Institute for Economic Research
E-government in Authoritarian States: Content Analysis of EGovernment Websites in Central Asia
Erica J. Johnson, University of Washington
Papers:
Why Do Red States Vote Republican While Blue States Pay the
Bills? Federal Spending and Electoral Votes, 1984-2008
Dean P. Lacy, Dartmouth College
Federal Agency Blogs in Transition: Comparison of Late Bush
Administration and Early Obama Administration Use of Blogs
Julianne Mahler, George Mason University
Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
Unemployment, Government Partisanship, and the Dynamics of
Voter Choice
Hyeok Yong Kwon, Korea University
When Do Government Benefits Influence Voters’ Behavior? The
Effect of FEMA Disaster Awards on US Presidential Votes.
Jowei Chen, University of Michigan
Disc:
Christopher Wlezien, Temple University
37-16
Papers:
REPRESENTATION
Rethinking Party Polarization: Political Context, Mass Opinion
Dynamics, and Party System Change
Christopher R. Ellis, North Carolina State University
All Politics Is Local, or Is It? Political Blogs and State Politics
Antoinette Pole, Montclair State University
Disc:
Henry Farrell, George Washington University
42-4
THE POLITICS OF BACKLASH: THEORY AND CASE
STUDIES IN DYNAMIC RESISTANCE
Co-sponsored by 31-16
43-7
THE BALANCE OF POWER IN INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND
HISTORICAL ANALYSIS
Co-sponsored by 19-19
William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College
The Partisan Face of Political Representation in the U.S.
David C. Barker, University of Pittsburgh
Chair:
Roll Calls, Constituents, and Representation: Results From a
Survey Experiment
Andrew P. Kelly, University of California, Berkeley
Robert Van Houweling, University of California, Berkeley
Papers:
Interest Groups and Inequality in Democratic Responsiveness in
the U.S.
Martin Gilens, Princeton University
When Might Makes Right: Legitimacy and Balancing in
International Politics
Stacie E. Goddard, Wellesley College
Sending a Message or Staying Mum: How Newspapers Write
about Public Opinion in Non-Election Years
Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University
Networks of Domination:Social Ties and Imperial Governance in
International Politics
Paul K. MacDonald, Williams College
38-7
Chair:
NEWS ACROSS BORDERS
Babak Bahador, University of Canterbury
Papers:
A Comparative Analysis Of Chinese And American Press
Coverage Of Two Tainted Food Scandals
Bruce A. Williams, University of Virginia
Ruoyun Bai, University of Toronto, Scarborough
Ottawa vs. Washington: Comparing the Role of Opinion
Referents in Canadian and American Coverage of NAFTA
Stacey L. Pelika, College of William & Mary
A Grand Strategy of Transnational Coalition-Building
Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware
Disc:
William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College
44-11
CHINA’S THIRD SECTOR: DYNAMICS AND
CONSEQUENCES
Nara Dillon, Harvard University
Chair:
Papers:
Environment and Energy Policy: Comparing Reports from US
and Canadian Television News
Stuart N. Soroka, McGill University
Stephen J. Farnsworth, George Mason University
Lori Young, McGill University
Andrea Lawlor, McGill University
Trust, Rationality, and Electoral Participation in Rural China
Fubing Su, Vassar College
Deliberative Democracy in China: Connecting a Deliberative Poll
with the Local People’s Congress
Alice Siu, Stanford University
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University
Rui Wang, Stanford University
Disc:
Jennifer Yuan-Jean Hsu, University of Cambridge
Babak Bahador, University of Canterbury
277
Daily Schedule
Coverage of Post-Communist Countries by ABC, CBS and NBC:
Politics of Miscommunication
Ivan Katchanovski, SUNY-Potsdam
Alicen Rose Morley, SUNY Potsdam
Governing Civil Society in Contemporary China: Adapting
Revolutionary Methods to Serve Post-Communist Goals
Nara Dillon, Harvard University
Accountability Under Authoritarianism: Citizen Complaints in
China and Eastern Europe
Martin Dimitrov, Dartmouth College
Japanese and U.S. Media Coverage of the Iraq War: A
Comparative Analysis of Media’s Impact on Public Opinion
Kazuhiro Maeshima, Bunkyo University
Disc:
Structural Realism and Balancing Failure: The Systemic Causes
of Underbalancing Revisited
Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown University
Michael Glosny, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
44-19
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE: GEORGE W. BUSH’S DEMOCRATIC
PROMOTION LEGACY
Sheri Berman, Barnard College
Disc:
Sheri Berman, Barnard College
Part:
Larry Diamond, Stanford University
Jennifer Windsor, Freedom House
Peter Beinart, City University of New York
Omar G. Encarnacion, Bard College
46-7
STATISTICAL MODELS AND CAUSAL INFERENCE:
DAVID FREEDMAN’S DIALOGUE WITH THE SOCIAL
SCIENCES
Co-sponsored by 8-18
Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley
Chair:
Disc:
Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley
David Collier, University of California, Berkeley
Part:
Jason Seawright, Northwestern University
Donald P. Green, Yale University
Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley
Wendy K. Tam Cho, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Thad Dunning, Yale University
Daily Schedule
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies
Panel 1
Chair:
GOVERNING TAIWAN
Wei-chin Lee, Wake Forest University
Papers:
Chances and Limits of the Small Parties in the Legislative Yuan
Yun-Chu Tsai, National Chengchi University
Friends or Foes? Cross-Party Cooperation during the Period of
Divided Government
Rung-Yi Chen, National Chengchi University
Who Controls the Judiciary in Taiwan?
Chin-shou Wang, National Cheng Kung University
The Dynamic Triangles Among Constituencies, Parties and
Legislators: A Comparison Before and After the Reform of
Electoral System
Shing-Yuan Sheng, National Chengchi University
Women and Politics in Taiwan: A Special Case?
Joyce Gelb, CUNY-Graduate Center
Disc:
46-22
Chair:
Papers:
RESEARCH DESIGN, METHODS, AND THEORYBUILDING IN COMPARATIVE JUDICIAL POLITICS
Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
Eric Voegelin Society
Panel 11 THE PRIMACY OF PERSONS IN POLITICS:
EMPIRICISM AND THEORY
Chair:
Thomas W. Heilke, University of Kansas
Papers:
The True Form of a Government: The Constitutional Movements
of Power
Tilo Schabert, University of Erlangen, Nuremberg
Measuring the Rule of Law
Juan Rebolledo, Yale University
Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University
Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
48-6
EXPLAINING THE SUCCESS AND FAILURE OF
CERTAIN HEALTH POLICIES
Co-sponsored by 25-8
Can Power be Creative? Evidence and Theory.
Thomas W. Heilke, University of Kansas
Friendship as Precondition and Consequence of Creativity in
Politics
John F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge
Bridging Theory, Building Courts: Crossing Subfield Boundaries
to Clarify Causation in Judicial Politics
Matthew C. Ingram, University of New Mexico
Disc:
T.Y. Wang, Illinois State University
Shelley Rigger, Davidson College
The Hidden Power for the Creation of Order
Peter Nitschke, University of Vechta
French Politics Group
Related Group Panels
Panel 2
Chair:
Part:
Christians in Political Science
Panel 2
THE DISAPPEARING GOD GAP? RELIGION IN THE
2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
Co-sponsored by 33-3
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Panel 5
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
278
ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND THE AMERICAN
PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT
John B. Kienker, Claremont Review of Books
Woodrow Wilson and the Legacy of Abraham Lincoln
Ronald J. Pestritto, Jr., Hillsdale College
POLITICAL RADICALISM IN FRANCE: RIGHT, LEFT,
AND CENTER
James G. Shields, University of Warwick
Jocelyn Evans, University of Salford
Florence Haegel, Centre d’Etudes de La Vie Politique
Francaise
Nonna Mayer, CEVIPOF
James G. Shields, University of Warwick
Green Politics and Theory
Panel 1
Chair:
NEW APPROACHES TO GREEN RESEARCH
David Whiteman, University of South Carolina
Papers:
The Local Ecology of New Social Movements
Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago
Lincoln and the Progressive Historians
John Marini, University of Nevada, Reno
A Polycentric Theory of Human-Environment Interactions:
Understanding Commodity Chains and Social Ecological
Changes
Tun Myint, Carleton College
Distaining the Beaten Path: Herbert Croly and the 100th
Anniversary of Lincoln’s Birth
David Alvis, University of West Florida
Jason Jividen, University of St. Francis
The Environment is (a) Good: The Impact of Access, Ideology,
and Economics on Environmental Preferences
Mirya R. Holman, Claremont Graduate University
Travis Coan, Claremont Graduate University
Herman Belz, University of Maryland
David K. Nichols, Baylor University
The Agnotology of Ecology: How Dominant Environmental
Discourses serve to Postpone Changing ‘Business As Usual’
Yogi Hendlin, University of California, Los Angeles
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Thursday, 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM
Institute for Constitutional Studies
APSA Reception
Panel 1
Chair:
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: LAW AND COURTS
Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland
APSA Events
Part:
David J. Danelski, Stanford University
Joel B. Grossman, The Johns Hopkins University
Thomas G. Walker, Emory University
Doris Marie Provine, Arizona State University
INTERNATIONAL ATTENDEE WELCOME RECEPTION
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 1
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 1
Labor Project
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
Panel 2
REVERSING THE TIDE? THE ELECTION OF BARACK
OBAMA AND THE FUTURE OF ORGANIZED LABOR IN
THE US
Gordon Lafer, University of Oregon
SESSION 1
Disc:
George Faraday, Change to Win
Thea M. Lee, AFL-CIO
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Part:
Neil Kwatra, UNITE-HERE
Tracy Roof, University of Richmond
Taylor E. Dark, III, California State University, Los Angeles
Nancy Wiefek, American Rights At Work
Bama Athreya, International Labor Rights Forum
Chair:
Society for Greek Political Thought
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
PLATONIC DIALOGUES ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND
POLITICAL VIRTUE
Co-sponsored by 1-31
Robert C. Bartlett, Emory University
Law and Regime in Plato’s Statesman
Amy Nendza, Boston College
Is Courage Wisdom? An Examination of Plato’s Protagoras
Lisa Leibowitz, Kenyon College
The Education for Political Virtue: Courage and Moderation in
Plato’s Statesman and Republic
Linda Rabieh, Tufts University
Disc:
Robert C. Bartlett, Emory University
Graham R. Howell
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 1
SESSION 1
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 1
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 1
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 1
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 1
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
SESSION 1
Thursday, 5:00 PM to 8:00 PM
Affiliate Group Receptions
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
Cengage-Wadsworth
SESSION 1
RECEPTION
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
Thursday, 5:30 PM to 6:30 PM
SESSION 1
APSA Reception
Thursday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM
APSA Events
APSA MENTOR PROGRAM NETWORKING RECEPTION
Affiliate Group Meetings
Thursday, 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM
MEETING
APSA Panel
PI SIGMA ALPHA LECTURE: KEVIN PHILLIPS, “BAD MONEY:
RECKLESS FINANCE, FAILED POLITICS, AND THE GLOBAL
CRISIS OF AMERICAN CAPITALISM”
Western Political Science Association
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
Daily Schedule
APSA Events
Journal of Theoretical Politics
Related Group Meetings
Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society
BUSINESS MEETING
Section Business Meetings
8
Political Methodology
BUSINESS MEETING
279
Thursday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM
Daily Schedule
23 Presidency Research
University of Michigan
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
RECEPTION
28 Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations
National Conference of Black Political Scientists
BUSINESS MEETING
WOMEN OF COLOR RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Women and Politics Research
Organized Section, the Women’s Caucus for Political Science,
APSA Council, Cambridge University Press-Politics &
Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for Political Science
29 State Politics and Policy Section
BUSINESS MEETING
30 Urban Politics
BUSINESS MEETING
33 Religion and Politics
BUSINESS MEETING
42 New Political Science
BUSINESS MEETING
46 Qualitative Methods
BUSINESS MEETING
New York University Wilf Family Department of Politics
RECEPTION
University of Pennsylvania Political Science Department
RECEPTION
The Review of Politics
RECEPTION
Vanderbilt University
Thursday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM
RECEPTION
APSA Reception
APSA GRADUATE STUDENT HAPPY HOUR
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by Palgrave Macmillan and Caucus for a New
Political Science
Affiliate Group Meetings
Related Group Receptions
Politics and Gender
Political Studies Association
EDITORIAL SEARCH COMMITTEE
RECEPTION
APSA Events
Thursday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM
Section Receptions
23 Presidency Research
RECEPTION
29 State Politics and Policy Section
RECEPTION
York University Department of Political Science
Women’s Caucus for Political Science
WOMEN OF COLOR RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the National Conference of Black Political
Scientists, the Women and Politics Research Organized
Section, APSA Council, Cambridge University Press-Politics
& Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for Political
Science
30 Urban Politics
Thursday, 8:00 PM to 9:00 PM
RECEPTION
APSA Panel
31 Women and Politics Research Section
APSA Events
WOMEN OF COLOR RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the National Conference of Black Political
Scientists, the Women’s Caucus for Political Science, APSA
Council, Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender
Journal, and the Latino Caucus for Political Science
APSA PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS DELIVERED BY PETER
KATZENSTEIN, CORNELL UNIVERSITY
Part:
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
33 Religion and Politics
Thursday, 9:00 PM to 11:00 PM
RECEPTION
43 International History and Politics
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Qualitative and Multi-Method Research
Organized Section
46 Qualitative Methods
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the International History and Politics
Organized Section
APSA Reception
APSA Events
APSA 105TH ANNUAL MEETING OPENING RECEPTION
Sponsored by Cambridge University Press
Thursday, 10:00 PM to 11:30 PM
Affiliate Group Receptions
Political Research Quarterly
Brookings Institution
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by Washington State University
RECEPTION
University of Toronto
Conference for the Study of Political Thought
RECEPTION
RECEPTION
Washington State University
Indiana University Department of Political Science
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by Political Research Quarterly
Affiliate Group Receptions
RECEPTION
Institute for Humane Studies
RECEPTION
University of Massachusetts
RECEPTION
280
Daily Schedule
Friday, September 4, 2009
Thursday, 10:00 PM to 11:30 PM
2-2
ROUNDTABLE: AFTER THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL
AND POSTMODERNISM: RETHINKING APPROACHES
TO THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT
Co-sponsored by 1-5
2-10
Friday, 7:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Affiliate Group Meetings
MEETING OF EDITORIAL BOARD AND ADVISORY COUNCIL
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE ON STEPHEN K. WHITE’S “THE ETHOS
OF A LATE-MODERN CITIZEN”
Fonna Forman-Barzilai, University of California, San Diego
Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM
Disc:
Stephen K. White, University of Virginia
Section Business Meetings
Part:
Tracy B. Strong, University of California, San Diego
Jane Bennett, The Johns Hopkins University
Patchen Markell, University of Chicago
Sharon R. Krause, Brown University
2-25
Chair:
POLITICS, ECOLOGY, AND EQUITY
Dennis J. Coyle, Catholic University of America
Papers:
Climate Justice Beyond Equity: The Flourishing of Human and
Non-Human Communities
David Schlosberg, Northern Arizona University
Publius: The Journal of Federalism
42 New Political Science
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:30 AM
APSA Meetings
APSA Events
ASSOCIATIONS BREAKFAST
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Republicanism and the Critique of the Domination of Nature
Christopher Buck, St. Lawrence University
Affiliate Group Meetings
Legislative Studies Quarterly
We Have Never Been Liberal: Possibilities for Effective
Environmental Social Criticism
John M. Meyer, Humboldt State University
MEETING
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Ecological Citizenship, Time, and Corruption: Aldo Leopold’s
Biotic Republicanism
Peter Francesco Cannavo, Hamilton College
Division Panels
T-8
THEME PANEL: UNDERSTANDING A COMPLEX
WORLD: COMPLEXITY THEORY AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE?
Co-sponsored by 14-7
T-9
THEME PANEL: HEALTH SYSTEM COMPLEXITY AND
CHANGE: MEASURING THE POLITICS OF
DELIVERING CARE
Co-sponsored by 48-2
1-5
ROUNDTABLE: AFTER THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL
AND POSTMODERNISM: RETHINKING APPROACHES
TO THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT
Co-sponsored by 2-2
Alan Houston, University of California, San Diego
Chair:
Part:
Disc:
Elisabeth H. Ellis, Texas A&M University
Steven J. Vanderheiden, University of Colorado, Boulder
2-34
Chair:
VISION, NARRATIVE AND POLITICS
Susan Jane McWilliams, Pomona College
Papers:
The Anatomy of Political Theory: a Typology Based on
Narrative Structure
Avery Elias Plaw, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
An Epic Comeback? Post-Western Politics in Theory and Film
John S. Nelson, University of Iowa
True Lies: Theories of Narrative Imagination in Public Speech
and the Bush War on Terror
Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Eastern Michigan University
Mark Bevir, University of California, Berkeley
Richard Boyd, Georgetown University
George Klosko, University of Virginia
1-17
Chair:
RETHINKING TELEOLOGY AND LIBERALISM
Alex Schulman, University of California, Los Angeles
Papers:
Contra Politanism: Against the Moral Teleology of Political
Forms
Jacob T. Levy, McGill University
The Politics of Cognition and Sense Perception in New Media
Technology
Martin Morris, Wilfrid Laurier University
J. Maggio, University of Florida
Nicholas J. Kiersey, Ohio University, Chillicothe
2-50
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JAMES FISHKIN, WHEN
THE PEOPLE SPEAK: DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY
AND PUBLIC CONSULTATION
Co-sponsored by Committee on the Political Economy of the
Good Society, Panel 1
3-6
Chair:
THE AUTHORITY OF DEMOCRACY
Cristina Lafont, Northwestern University
Papers:
Christiano on Democracy’s Basis in Equality
David M. Estlund, Brown University
Skeptical Liberalism as Democratic Virtue
Shefali Misra, Oberlin College
Rethinking Classical Liberalism in “Progressive” Times
Robert Kaufman Adcock, George Washington University
The Political Thought of Jotiba Phule and Mahadev Govind
Ranade: some Reflections on the Emergence of a Non-Western
Model of Liberalism in Modern India
Rinku Lamba, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
Disc:
Chandran Kukathas, London School of Economics
Estlund on Fair Procedures and the Importance of Democracy
Thomas Christiano, University of Arizona
Democratic Authority as Arbitration
Daniel Viehoff, Columbia University
281
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Democracy, Race, and Authority
T. J. Donahue, Yale University
Disc:
Anna Stilz, Princeton University
3-22
Chair:
IS EQUALITY POSSIBLE?
Michael T. Gibbons, University of South Florida
Papers:
Contesting and De-Contesting Political Equality
Peter D. Breiner, SUNY, Albany
Daily Schedule
Chair:
Randall L. Calvert, Washington University
Papers:
Deliberation, Endogenous Groups, and Social Polarization
Catherine Hafer, New York University
Can We Divine Order? The Impossibility of Instrumental
Rhetoric and Deliberative Democracy
John W. Patty, Harvard University
Elizabeth Maggie Penn, Harvard University
The Rhetorical Strategies of Leaders: Stepping Down, Standing
Back, and Speaking Clearly
Torun Dewan, London School of Economics
David P Myatt, Oxford University
A Capable Theory of Equality and Opportunity
Joshua Broady Preiss, Bucknell University
Political Equality: Can this Ideal Be Saved in the Contemporary
Era?
Thomas S. De Luca, Jr., Fordham University
Disc:
Randall L. Calvert, Washington University
Rafael Hortala-Vallve, London School of Economics
Finding Time for Democracy: Towards a Theory of Political
Equality over Time
James L. Wilson, Princeton University
7-9
Chair:
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONGRESS AND HISTORY
Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland
Disc:
Bryan T. McGraw, Wheaton College
Papers:
3-33
DEMOCRACY AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF
CAREWORK
Co-sponsored by 31-18
Public Opinion, the Congressional Policy Agenda, and the Limits
of New Deal Liberalism, 1935-1945.
Eric Schickler, University of California, Berkeley
4-2
Chair:
MODELS OF ELECTIONS
Scott Ashworth, University of Chicago
Papers:
Candidates and Commitment in Repeated Elections
Richard Van Weelden, Yale University
Congress and the Roots of Sunbelt Conservatism
Joseph Crespino, Emory University
Disc:
Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland
The Effects of Violence on Political Elections
Yasushi Asako, University of Wisconsin, Madison
8-3
Chair:
COMPUTATIONAL MODELS OF POLITICS
Stephen R. Haptonstahl, Washington University, St. Louis
The Party’s Choice Between a Competitive and an
Uncompetitive Primary Election
Gilles Serra, Oxford University
Papers:
The Complex Adaptive Congress
Robi Ragan, University of Georgia
Gregory Robinson, SUNY, Binghamton
Arturas Rozenas, Duke University
6-6
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION
Co-sponsored by 16-7
6-8
THE GOVERNANCE AND CRISIS OF INTERNATIONAL
FINANCE
Co-sponsored by 14-2
Lloyd Gruber, London School of Economics
Papers:
The Dynamics of Lawmaking within Sovereignty Related Issues,
1877-1994
John Lapinski, University of Pennsylvania
Superconnected: Candidates and Parties in a Complex Adaptive
System
Michael Tofias, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Disc:
Chair:
Congress and the Resurgence of a Democratic National Security
Advantage, 1954-1960
Julian E. Zelizer, Princeton University
The Social Construction of Cause and its Policy Consequences:
The Political Geography of the 2008 Financial Crisis
Leslie Elliott Armijo, Portland State University
Kathryn C. Lavelle, Case Western Reserve University
The Process of Civil War Resolution
Michael Findley, Brigham Young University
An Infinitely Repeated Game of Competition with Stochastically
Retrieved Resources
Dominick E. Wright, University of Michigan
An Agent-Based Model of War Expansion and Diffusion
Kyle A. Joyce, University of California, Davis
Modeling Trans-National Ethnic Linkages and Civil War
Ravi Bhavnani, Michigan State University
Rick Riolo, University of Michigan
Petra Hendrickson, Michigan State University
Disc:
Stephen R. Haptonstahl, Washington University, St. Louis
Regulating Globally, Implementing Locally: Explaining Variation
in Financial Codes and Standards
Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
9-3
Financial Markets, Institutions, and Transaction Costs: The
Endogeneity of Financial Governance
Geoffrey R.D. Underhill, University of Amsterdam
Chair:
BEAUTIFUL SOULS AND JUST WARRIORS: GENDER,
THE MILITARY, AND PEDAGOGY
Co-sponsored by 19-1
Katherine Brown, King’s College London
Legitimacy and the Political Sources of Financial Liberalisation
Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam
Geoffrey R.D. Underhill, University of Amsterdam
Panicos Demetriadis, University of Leicester
Papers:
A Canadian perspective
Jane Errington, Queen’s University
Disc:
Michelle D. Deardorff, Jackson State University
Disc:
Henry Laurence, Bowdoin College
Part:
6-22
LEADERSHIP AND RHETORIC
Kathleen A. Mahoney-Norris, Air Command and Staff
College
Morten G. Ender, U.S. Military Academy
Diane M. Ryan, PhD, US Military Academy
282
Daily Schedule
11-13
Chair:
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Judith H. Stiehm, Florida International University
Disc:
Donald L. Horowitz, Duke University
INSTITUTIONAL ORIGINS OF CAPITALISM
Co-sponsored by 15-1
Alexander Michael Hicks, Emory University
11-47
THE REMAINS OF THE STATE – GOVERNANCE
WITH(OUT) GOVERNMENT
Co-sponsored by 12-12
The Shadow of the State: Can Governance Without Government
Really Work?
Tanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität Berlin
Thomas Risse, Freie Universität Berlin
Papers:
Papers:
Political Representation of Economic Interests and Two Paths to
Democracy
Torben Iversen, Harvard University
David Soskice, Oxford University
Governing and Meta-governing: Confronting the Dilemmas of
Limited Control and Influence
B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh
Gonna Party Like It’s 1899: Electoral Systems and the Origins of
Varieties of Coordination
Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University
Duane H. Swank, Marquette University
Transformation(s) of the State? The State of (private) Security
and the Security of the State
Nicole Deitelhoff, Goethe-Universitat Frankfurt
Business Interest Representation under Divided Sovereignty:
“Entrepreneurial Representatives” in Interwar Palestine and the
USA
Omri Metzer, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Michael Shalev, Hebrew University
Governance without Government? – Non-State Actors and
International Law
Beate Rudolf, Freie Universität Berlin
Let Us Help You With That: The power and influence of
international influences in reshaping post-socialist states
Nicholas C Wheeler, University of Virginia
Partisanship at the Origins of Modern Capitalist Institutions
Richard Carney, Nanyang Technological University
Behind Public Sector Efficiency: the role of Culture and
Institutions
Pietro Tommasino
Disc:
11-24
Chair:
Papers:
11-62
INEQUALITY AND CITIZENSHIP IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 12-38
11-65
POLITICAL TRUST, SATISFACTION, AND
PARTICIPATION IN TODAY’S CHINA
Co-sponsored by 13-14
12-12
Why Democracies Die: Leaders, Generals, and Citizens in the
Collapse of Representative Government
Chappell Lawson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
THE REMAINS OF THE STATE – GOVERNANCE
WITH(OUT) GOVERNMENT
Co-sponsored by 11-47
12-22
The Fate of Young Democracies
Ethan B. Kapstein, INSEAD
Chair:
MOBILIZING ETHNIC AND CLASS IDENTITIES
Co-sponsored by 32-12
Courtney Jung, University of Toronto
Safeguarding Fledgling Democracies: The Primacy of Potent
Legislatures
M. Steven Fish, University of California, Berkeley
Papers:
Alexander Michael Hicks, Emory University
THE POLITICS OF DEMOCRATIC REVERSAL
Co-sponsored by 44-1
Larry Diamond, Stanford University
Comparative Ethno-nationalism: Kurds vs. Lazs
Zeki Sarigil, Bilkent University
Democracy and Development: A Historical Perspective
John Gerring, Boston University
Strom Thacker, Boston University
Disc:
Larry Diamond, Stanford University
11-36
POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTIONS IN DIVIDED
SOCIETIES
Donald L. Horowitz, Duke University
Chair:
Papers:
Conservative Peacemakers: Centre-Right Parties in the Northern
Irish and Cypriot Peace Processes
Nukhet Ahu Sandal, University of Southern California
Neophytos Loizides, Queen’s University of Belfast
Institutional and Electoral Engineering in Bosnia and Macedonia:
Does It Make a Difference?
Dejan Guzina, Wilfrid Laurier University
International Efforts at Post-conflict Party-building in Divided
Societies
Andrew Radin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Economics or Culture? Motivations for Sub-State Nationalists in
Europe
Seth Kincaid Jolly, Syracuse University
Rethinking Class Analysis in Democratization Studies: Turkey
and Thailand
Ayse Zarakol, Washington & Lee University
The Genesis of Muhajir Identity and Violence in Pakistan
Kavita R. Khory, Mount Holyoke College
Disc:
Alexandra L. Scacco, Columbia University
Courtney Jung, University of Toronto
12-38
INEQUALITY AND CITIZENSHIP IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 11-62
Erik M. Kuhonta, McGill University
Chair:
Papers:
Democracy, Inequality, and Human Development in Southeast
Asia
Erik M. Kuhonta, McGill University
How Inequality Undermines Citizenship: Some Extreme African
Cases
Jacqueline Klopp, Columbia University
Documenting Citizenship: Inequality, Rights, and the Production
of Paper Work
Kamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine
283
Daily Schedule
Revisiting Electoral Engineering: Party Systems and Electoral
Reforms In Turkey, Northern Ireland, Guyana, and Sri Lanka
Evangelos Liaras, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Why Ethnic Groups Rebel: The Role of Opportunity and
Grievances in Civil War
Luke N Condra, Stanford University
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Daily Schedule
Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania
David C. Earnest, Old Dominion University
William E. Connolly, Johns Hopkins University
Thomas F. Homer-Dixon, University of Waterloo
Citizenship as Consumption or Citizenship as Agency: The
Challenge for Civil Society
Philip D. Oxhorn, McGill University
Unfulfilled Promise: Income Inequality, Communist Regimes,
and Failed Democratic Transitions
Robert Brathwaite, University of Notre Dame
15-1
Disc:
Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin
John Echeverri-Gent, University of Virginia
INSTITUTIONAL ORIGINS OF CAPITALISM
Co-sponsored by 11-13
15-10
13-5
PECULARITIES OF POSTCOMMUNIST ELECTORAL
BEHAVIOR
Co-sponsored by 36-2
Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University
Chair:
A ‘SECOND TRANSITION’ IN SPAIN? THE SOCIALIST
GOVERNMENT OF JOSÉ LUIS RODRÍGUEZ ZAPATERO
(2004-08)
Co-sponsored by Iberian Studies Group, Panel 1
Bonnie N. Field, Bentley University
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
Mass-Level Perceptions of Political Party Corruption and the
Vote: A Choice Model of Voting Behavior in Poland
Goldie Shabad, The Ohio State University
Kazimierz M. Slomczynski, Ohio State University
Business as Usual: EU Policy under Zapatero
Carlos Closa Montero, Spanish High Council for Scientific
Research (CSIC)
Party Systems Competition in Post-Communist Europe (19902008): Institutionalization or Fluidity?
Zsolt Enyedi, Central European University
Fernando Casal Bertoa, European University Institute
Immigration and the Labor Movement in Zapatero’s Spain
Andrew Richards, Juan March Institute
Socially Structured Inequality and Ideological Polarization in
Post-Communist Societies
Geoffrey Evans, Oxford University
Matthew Loveless, University of Oxford
Territorial Politics in Zapatero’s Spain
Diego Muro, King’s College London
Minority Government and Legislative Politics in Spain, 20042008
Bonnie N. Field, Bentley University
A Rational Postcommunist Public?
Andrew Roberts, Northwestern University
Disc:
Petia A. Kostadinova, University of Florida
Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University
13-14
POLITICAL TRUST, SATISFACTION, AND
PARTICIPATION IN TODAY’S CHINA
Co-sponsored by 11-65
Robert Harmel, Texas A&M University, College Station
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Richard Gunther, Ohio State University
16-7
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION
Co-sponsored by 6-6
Kate Ivanova, Ohio State University
Chair:
Papers:
One-Party Rule or Multi-Party Competition?: Chinese Attitudes
Toward Party Systems Alternatives
Robert Harmel, Texas A&M University, College Station
Alexander C. Tan, University of Canterbury
14-2
14-7
Patterns of Political Participation in Contemporary China
M. Kent Jennings, University of California, Santa Barbara
Ning Zhang, California Polytechnic State University, San
Luis Obispo
Achieving The U.N.’s MDGs: Corruption, Human Development,
and Child Mortality
John Doces, Bucknell University
Gregory S. Sanjian, Bucknell University
Explaining Public Concern for Environmental Protection in
China
Xinsheng Liu, Texas A&M University
Ren Mu, Texas A&M University
Changing the Rules of the Game: Historical Insights from
Transparency International’s Defence against Corruption
Eiko Elize Sakamoto, London School of Economics
John James Kennedy, University of Kansas
Lily Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
THE GOVERNANCE AND CRISIS OF INTERNATIONAL
FINANCE
Co-sponsored by 6-8
Chair:
THEME PANEL: UNDERSTANDING A COMPLEX
WORLD: COMPLEXITY THEORY AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE?
Co-sponsored by T-8
Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto
Part:
Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan
284
Institutions, Incentives and Investment: How Financial Market
Development Affects Corruption Levels
Chelsea Denise Brown, Southern Methodist University
A Cross-Country Analysis of Corruption in World Bank Projects
Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois, Urbana
Champaign
What Do Corruption Indices Measure?
Dilyan Donchev, Harvard University
Gergely Ujhelyi, University of Houston
Institutional Trust in China: Levels, Reasons, and Consequences
Wenfang Tang, University of Iowa
Qing Yang, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Citizenship Policies and the Political Involvement of Minorities
in Zapatero’s Spain
Kerman Calvo, Centro de Estudios Politicos y
Constitucionales
Irene Martin Cortes, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
Disc:
Kate Ivanova, Ohio State University
16-32
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INTERNATIONAL
REGIMES
Co-sponsored by 17-18
17-7
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
Co-sponsored by 18-28
Xinyuan Dai, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Chair:
Part:
Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University
Oona Hathaway, Yale University
Thania Sanchez, University of Iowa
Kal Raustiala, University of California, Los Angeles
Xinyuan Dai, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Daily Schedule
17-18
Chair:
Papers:
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INTERNATIONAL
REGIMES
Co-sponsored by 16-32
Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University
18-28
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
Co-sponsored by 17-7
18-39
Testing the Effects of the GATT/WTO: Round 2
Joanne Gowa, Princeton University
ROUNDTABLE: UNDERSTANDING POLITICAL
EXTREMISM
Co-sponsored by 43-8
19-1
Democratization and Human Rights Regimes
Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of California, San
Diego
Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin
Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania
BEAUTIFUL SOULS AND JUST WARRIORS: GENDER,
THE MILITARY, AND PEDAGOGY
Co-sponsored by 9-3
19-2
NEW APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING NUCLEAR
NONPROLIFERATION
Co-sponsored by 18-7
Strengthening the Dispute Settlement Procedure
Leslie Johns, University of California, Los Angeles
B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University
20-13
Chair:
TOOLS OF STATECRAFT: SANCTIONS AND FORCE
Norrin M. Ripsman, Concordia University
Why the Overhang? Explaining the Gap Between Bound and
Applied Tariff Rates
Marc L. Busch, Georgetown University
Krzysztof J. Pelc, Georgetown University
Papers:
Adverse Institutional Consequences of U.S. Interventions in
Developing Regions
Hilton L. Root, George Mason University
Disc:
Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University
17-21
WHERE’S TRUTH AND JUSTICE? TRACKING
CHANGES IN INTERNATIONAL LAW
Co-sponsored by 43-6
18-7
Chair:
Papers:
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
A Principal-Agent Approach to Economic Statecraft
William Norris, MIT
Measuring Success of Foreign Policy Tools: The Role of
International Sanctions
Francesco Giumelli, Metropolitan University Prague
Democratic Diversions: Partisan Ambition and Diversionary War
Peter Trubowitz, University of Texas, Austin
Jungkun Seo, University of North Carolina, Wilmington
NEW APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING NUCLEAR
NONPROLIFERATION
Co-sponsored by 19-2
Scott D. Sagan, Stanford University
Balancing Force and Diplomacy: Lessons of the 2006 IsraelLebanon War
Eric B. Lorber, Duke University
Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University
The Design of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
Dane Swango, University of California, Los Angeles
Disc:
Joseph M. Grieco, Duke University
Breaking Up The Atom Is Hard to Do: Nuclear Capability as a
Function of State Capacity
Jacques E.C. Hymans, University of Southern California
21-12
Chair:
MEDIATION AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
Fear of Commitment: Evaluating the Intentions of Conflict
Managers
Molly M. Melin, Loyola University, Chicago
What Drives States to Support New Nonproliferation
Obligations? Three Portraits of the 1995 NPT Indefinite
Extension Decision
Andrew Grotto, Center for American Progress
Deterrence Theory and Emerging Nuclear Powers
Joshua Rovner, US Naval War College
Mediation Processes in African Intra-State Crises: Security
Guarantees and the Stability of Negotiated Outcomes
Jonathan Wilkenfeld, University of Maryland
Michael Brecher, McGill University
David Quinn, University of Maryland
Pelin Eralp, University of Maryland
Theodore D. McLauchlin, McGill University
Coercive Disarmament: The Causes of Nuclear Reversal
David Palkki, University of California, Los Angeles
Disc:
Francis J. Gavin, Jr., University of Texas, Austin
18-20
POWER AND PRESTIGE IN A CHANGING WORLD:
CHINA, RUSSIA, AND THE DILEMMAS OF BECOMING
A GREAT POWER
Karrie J. Koesel, University of Oregon
Chair:
Papers:
‘Great Power Rising’: China Re-Conceptualizes Its Role in the
International System
Thomas J. Bickford, CNA Corporation
The ‘Century of Humiliation,’ Then and Now
Alison Kaufman, CNA China Studies
Is Russia Resurgent? Why a Less Powerful Russia is More
Threatening
Sarah E. Kreps, Cornell University
Disc:
Karrie J. Koesel, University of Oregon
Mediator Bias and Impartiality: Mediation Acceptance and
Outcome
Su-Mi Lee, University of Kentucky
Disc:
Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh
21-21
Chair:
ELECTIONS AND INTERNATIONAL VIOLENCE
Clayton L Thyne, University of Kentucky
Papers:
Terrorism and Electoral Politics
Johanna Kristin Birnir, University of Maryland
Time to Kill: The Impact of Election Timing and Sequencing on
Post-Conflict Stability
Dawn Brancati, Washington University in St. Louis
Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University
285
Daily Schedule
Muddling Through the Shadow of the Past: Post-Communist
Russia’s Search for a New Regime Ideology
Cheng Chen, SUNY, Albany
Uncertainty and Incentives in Mediation
Mark Fey, University of Rochester
Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Daily Schedule
War Terms? Term Limits, Election Cycles, and the Timing and
Propensity of Democratic Conflict.
Michael T. Koch, Texas A&M University
Dangerous Times?: Exploring the Relationship between Elections
and Terror.
Stephen C. Nemeth, University of Iowa
Howard Bartlett Sanborn, IV, Virginia Military Institute
Public Services Performance and Stakeholders: Findings from
experimental research in China, Hong Kong and South Korea
M. Jae Moon, Yonsei University
Disc:
Hal G. Rainey, University of Georgia
25-4
GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: AN INTERNATIONAL
PERSPECTIVE ON THE ROLE OF PUBLIC
MANAGEMENT AND POLICY
Co-sponsored by 24-4
Disc:
Clayton L Thyne, University of Kentucky
22-4
Chair:
LEGISLATIVE PRODUCTIVITY
Gregory Koger, University of Miami
25-21
LEADERSHIP IN CITY GOVERNMENT AND SCHOOLS:
POLICY PROCESSES AND OUTCOMES
Co-sponsored by 30-9
Papers:
Explaining Legislative Productivity, 1789-2004
Nathan Kelly, University of Tennessee
J. Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois University
26-8
Chair:
METHODS IN JUDICIAL POLITICS
Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University
Papers:
Taking the Measure of Ideology: Empirically Measuring Supreme
Court Cases
Tonja Jacobi, Northwestern University
Matthew J. Sag, DePaul College of Law
Cosponsorship and Coalition-Building in the U.S. House
William T. Bernhard, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Tracy Sulkin, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Legislative Seniority: An Excludable or Non-Excludable Good?
Andrew J. Taylor, North Carolina State University
Measuring the Rule of Law
Juan Rebolledo, Yale University
Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University
Legislative Effectiveness in Congress: Advancing Health Policy
Reforms
Craig Volden, The Ohio State University
Alan E. Wiseman, Ohio State University
Disc:
The Role of the “Legal Status Quo” in Supreme Court DecisionMaking
Thomas H. Hammond, Michigan State University
Forrest Maltzman, George Washington University
Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin
Diana Evans, Trinity College
23-7
Chair:
GOING PUBLIC AND THE RHETORICAL PRESIDENCY
Philip Abbott, Wayne State University
Papers:
Constitutional Origins of the Rhetorical Presidency
Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University
Imagery as Rhetoric in the Early Presidency
Karen S. Hoffman, Marquette University
Locating the Ideal Points of Solicitors General in Policy Space
Ryan J. Owens, Harvard University
Ryan C. Black, Michigan State University
Disc:
Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University
26-14
Chair:
SOCIAL IMPACTS OF THE COURTS
Christine L. Nemacheck, College of William & Mary
Papers:
The Importance of Federal Judical Selection on Presidential Vote
Choice
Nancy Scherer, Wellesley College
Sara C. Benesh, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Amy L. Steigerwalt, Georgia State University
“Dear America:” Public Letters as an Early Form of Presidential
Mass Communication
Melvin C. Laracey, University of Texas, San Antonio
The Post-Rhetorical Presidency
Justin S. Vaughn, Cleveland State University
Disc:
Philip Abbott, Wayne State University
Lilly J. Goren, Carroll College
24-4
GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: AN INTERNATIONAL
PERSPECTIVE ON THE ROLE OF PUBLIC
MANAGEMENT AND POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-4
Gene A. Brewer, University of Georgia
Chair:
Papers:
Nature of Municipal Outputs in a Latin American Setting: Does
the Public Manager’s Previous Sector-based Experience Matter?
Claudia N. Avellaneda, University of North Carolina at
Charlotte
The Judiciary as Agenda Setter: Explaining Interest Group
Participation in the Courts
Alixandra B. Yanus, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
What to do With Racial Preferences in Financial Aid? Rational
Learning and Implementing the Michigan Cases
David Glick, Princeton University
Disc:
Christine L. Nemacheck, College of William & Mary
27-5
ROUNDTABLE: SAME-SEX MARRIAGE, COURTS, AND
DIRECT DEMOCRACY
John J. Dinan, Wake Forest University
Chair:
Part:
Kenneth P. Miller, Claremont McKenna College
Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los Angeles
Nathaniel Persily, Columbia University
Rainer Knopff, University of Calgary
Susan Gluck Mezey, Loyola University, Chicago
28-10
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS AND THE STIMULUS
PACKAGES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics, Panel 1
29-4
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND REPRESENTATION IN THE
STATES
Co-sponsored by 32-14
Political and Managerial Succession and the Performance of
English Local Governments
George A. Boyne, Cardiff University
Rhys Andrews, University of Cardiff
Political and Managerial Succession and the Performance of
English Local Governance
Nicolai Petrovsky, Cardiff University
George A. Boyne, Cardiff University
Oliver James, University of Exeter
286
Daily Schedule
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Chair:
Kerry L. Haynie, Duke University
32-14
Papers:
Nationalism, Race and the Obama Victory
Joseph Bafumi, Jr., Dartmouth College
Michael C. Herron, Dartmouth College
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND REPRESENTATION IN THE
STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-4
33-6
RELIGIOUS POLITICAL PARTIES IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 35-4
Ramazan Kilinc, Michigan State University
Critical Actors or Critical Mass? The Conditional Role of Race
and Ethnicity in Legislative Agenda Setting
Stella M. Rouse, University of Maryland
Advancing beyond the Local and Congressional Level: Under
Which Conditions are Black’s Nominated for High Profile StateWide Office
Christopher Stout, University of California, Irvine
Chair:
Papers:
Policymaking in the Forced Federalism Era
Richard C. Witmer, Creighton University
Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa
Joshua Johnson, Creighton University
Disc:
Kerry L. Haynie, Duke University
Lester Kenyatta Spence, Johns Hopkins University
30-9
LEADERSHIP IN CITY GOVERNMENT AND SCHOOLS:
POLICY PROCESSES AND OUTCOMES
Co-sponsored by 25-21
Wilbur C. Rich, Wellesley College
Chair:
Papers:
Negotiating Islam, Civil Society, and Secularism: The Justice and
Development Party in Turkey
Ani Sarkissian, Michigan State University
Serife Ilgu Ozler, SUNY New Paltz
What accounts for the success of Islamist parties in the Arab
world? Evidence from Jordan
Michael D. H. Robbins, University of Michigan
Robert Alfred Dowd, University of Notre Dame
In the Eye of Hurricane Katrina: Black Mayoral Leadership and
the Reconstruction of New Orleans
Stefanie Chambers, Trinity College
William E. Nelson, Jr., Ohio State University
34-10
PARTY LINKAGE AND PARTY GOVERNMENT IN
CONTEMPORARY DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 35-5
Sex and the City: The Effect of Mayoral Gender on Agenda
Setting, Policy Process, and Policy Outcomes.
Mirya R. Holman, Claremont Graduate University
35-4
RELIGIOUS POLITICAL PARTIES IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 33-6
A New Politics of School Leadership? Tracing the Policy and
Practice Effects of New York City’s New School Governing
Regime
Dorothy Shipps, Baruch College, CUNY
35-5
PARTY LINKAGE AND PARTY GOVERNMENT IN
CONTEMPORARY DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 34-10
Richard S. Katz, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
Jeffrey R. Henig, Columbia University
31-18
DEMOCRACY AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF
CAREWORK
Co-sponsored by 3-33
Alisa Rosenthal, Gustavus Adolphus College
Papers:
Religion between Movement and Party: A Comparative Analysis
of Religious Party Formation in Middle East and Latin America
Luis F. Mantilla, Georgetown University
Disc:
When Urban School Districts Innovate: The Politics of Turning
Around Low Performing School Organizations
Kenneth K. Wong, Brown University
Francis X. Shen, University of California, Santa Barbara
Chair:
Understanding Moderation and Extremism: The Strategies and
Goals of Religious Parties
P. Pushkar, McGill University
Madhvi Gupta, Concordia University
Chair:
Papers:
Comparing Voter Participation: Individual Resources,
Orientations and the Context of Party Politics
Miki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State University
Parties and Participation: The Linkage between Parties and
Voters
Ian McAllister, Australian National University
Forming a Government: Do Expectations Match Reality
Russell J. Dalton, University of California, Irvine
Democratic Representation: The Congruence Between Citizens
and Government
David M. Farrell, University of Manchester
Producing Citizens: Women, Parenthood, and the Democratic
Public Sphere
Elizabeth Markovits, Mount Holyoke College
Susan Bickford, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Voter Diversity, Ideological Trends, and Changing Party System
Polarization: Implications for Ideological Congruence
G. Bingham Powell, Jr., University of Rochester
Disc:
André Blais, Université de Montréal
Care, Resentment, and Vulnerability
Julie A. White, Ohio University
35-15
Chair:
PARTY POLITICS AND LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS
Stephen K. Medvic, Franklin and Marshall College
Analyzing Practices of Care & Disabled Embodiment in U.S.
Advocacy Organizations
Stacy A. Clifford, Vanderbilt University
Papers:
Disc:
Joan C. Tronto, CUNY, Hunter College
Candidate Ideology or Candidate Quality: Explaining Democratic
House Victories in 2006 and 2008
Gregory Huber, Yale University
Conor M. Dowling, Yale University
31-22
GENDER AND VOTER BEHAVIOR: 2008 AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 36-22
Realignment, Open Seats, the Retirement Slump, and the
Appearance of an Increasing Incumbency Effect
Jeffrey M. Stonecash, Syracuse University
32-12
MOBILIZING ETHNIC AND CLASS IDENTITIES
Co-sponsored by 12-22
Risk Taking and Redistricting: How a Party’s Willingness to
Accept Risk Leads to Seat Gains and Losses
Aaron Dusso, George Washington University
287
Daily Schedule
Fashioning Caring Bodies: Inequality, Bodywork, and Caregiving
Hollie Sue Mann, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Changing the Playing Field: Redistricting and Party Competition
in the States
John M. Bruce, University of Mississippi
Jonathan Winburn, University of Mississippi
Robert D. Brown, University of Mississippi
Disc:
Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia
36-2
PECULARITIES OF POSTCOMMUNIST ELECTORAL
BEHAVIOR
Co-sponsored by 13-5
36-9
ELECTIONS AND THE ECONOMY: NEW DIRECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 37-7
Jonathan Nagler, New York University
Chair:
Papers:
Daily Schedule
Papers:
What is the Difference Between a Hockey Mom and a Pit Bull?
Presentations of Palin and Gender Stereotypes in the 2008
Presidential Election
Lindsay Eberhardt, Claremont Graduate University
Sarah Burns, Claremont Graduate University
Victoria Maria DeFrancesco Soto, Northwestern University
The Gender Gaps of the 2008 Presidential Election: Explaining
Gender Gap Variation Across Regions and States
Richard E. Matland, Loyola University, Chicago
Charles H. Franklin, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Gender Differences in Political and Civic Engagement Among
Young People
Richard G. Niemi, University of Rochester
Kent E. Portney, Tufts University
Richard C. Eichenberg, Tufts University
Retrospective or Prospective Voters? The Role of Sophistication
David A. M. Peterson, Iowa State University
Erica Socker, Texas A&M University
The American Voter Goes Shopping
Peter Enns, Cornell University
Christopher J. Anderson, Cornell University
Ecologies of Unease: Foreclosures and Presidential Voting in the
2008 Election
Andrew Reeves, Boston University
James G. Gimpel, University of Maryland, College Park
Gender Affinity Effects in Vote Choice? Evidence from
Independents, Leaners, and Partisan Defectors
Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant, Queen’s University
Julie Croskill, Queen’s University
Effects without Causes: Explaining Enduring Gender Gaps in
Internal Efficacy and Political Interest in Post-Industrial
Democracies
Melanee Thomas, McGill University
Disc:
Sally Friedman, SUNY, Albany
Is Wal-Mart Good for Political Participation?
David S. Brown, University of Colorado
37-7
ELECTIONS AND THE ECONOMY: NEW DIRECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-9
Electoral Uncertainty and Inverse Political Business Cycles: An
Examination of U.S. Housing Market Dynamics
Brandice Canes-Wrone, Princeton University
37-15
Chair:
RELIGION, PUBLIC OPINION, AND POLITICS
Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Disc:
Jonathan Nagler, New York University
Cameron Anderson, University of Western Ontario
Papers:
36-11
Chair:
FIELD EXPERIMENTS AND MOBILIZATION
Donald P. Green, Yale University
Faith of his Fathers: Barack Obama, Islam, and the Impact of
Religious Background Cues on Vote Choice in the 2008
Presidential Election
Kerem Ozan Kalkan, University of Maryland
Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame
John C. Green, University of Akron
Papers:
Both Sides Now: A Field Experiment With Competing Messages
Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University
Peter John Loewen, Université de Montréal
Where Do Americans Draw The Line Between Church And
State?
David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame
Is it the Message or the Messenger?: Evaluating Race, Religion,
and Campaign Rhetoric
Khalilah L. Brown-Dean, Yale University
Racial Cues, Neighborhood Behavior, and Turnout: Results from
a Field Experiment
David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame
Ismail K. White, Ohio State University
Targeting Latino Voters with Spanish vs. English-language
Appeals: Field Experimental Evidence
Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University
Marisa Abrajano, University of California, San Diego
Making Vote-by-Mail Elections Work: A Randomized Field
Experiment Testing the Impact of Mobilization in Traditional and
Vote-by-Mail Precincts
Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University
Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego
Megan Mullin, Temple University
A Field Experiment on Nonpartisan Mobilization and Persuasion
Down-Ballot
Lauren Deschamps, University of Notre Dame
Disc:
David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame
36-22
GENDER AND VOTER BEHAVIOR: 2008 AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 31-22
Kathleen Knight, Columbia University
Chair:
God and Country: The Interface of Religious and National
Identity
Matthew Wright, University of California, Berkeley
Jack Citrin, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Kenneth D. Wald, University of Florida
38-3
MEDIA, PARTIES, AND THE 2008 ELECTIONS: CANADA
AND THE UNITED STATES COMPARED
Richard Davis, Brigham Young University
Chair:
Part:
Jeff Dvorkin, Ryerson University
Thomas Flanagan, University of Calgary
Christopher Waddell, Carleton University
Regina G. Lawrence, Louisiana State University
38-19
NEW STRATEGIES OF POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
IN CANADA
Co-sponsored by 49-7
41-3
ART AND POLITICS IN FLORIAN HENCKEL VON
DONNERSMARCK’S THE LIVES OF OTHERS
Jay Nordlinger, National Review
Chair:
288
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Post-Totalitarianism in The Lives of Others
Flagg Taylor, Skidmore College
The Aesthetic Education of a Good Man: Schiller and The Lives
of Others
Michael Valdez Moses, Duke University
Disc:
Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College
David K. Nichols, Baylor University
43-6
WHERE’S TRUTH AND JUSTICE? TRACKING
CHANGES IN INTERNATIONAL LAW
Co-sponsored by 17-21
Matthew Rendall, University of Nottingham
Papers:
For the Money? Human Rights Agreements and Foreign Aid
Richard Nielsen, Harvard University
The Redemptive Power of Art Against Communism’s Moral
Corruption in The Lives of Others
Carl Eric Scott, Hampden-Sydney College
Long Day’s Journey into Brecht: The Ambiguous Politics of The
Lives of Others
Paul A. Cantor, University of Virginia
Chair:
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Disc:
Denese McArthur, South Texas College
46-9
TAKING RESEARCH DESIGN SERIOUSLY IN
IDEATIONAL APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Jeffrey W. Legro, University of Virginia
Chair:
Papers:
Reputation and Image in International Institutions: International
Pressures to Adopt ‘Responsible’ Arms Transfer Policy
Jennifer L. Erickson, Cornell University
Contestation or Consensus? Ideas, Foreign Policy Beliefs, and
U.S. Alliance Relations
Andrew Yeo, Catholic University of America
Complexity and the Administration of the Just War
Sara R. Jordan, University of Hong Kong
Phillip W. Gray, University of Hong Kong
European Security in the Shadow of NATO: Party Ideology and
Institution Building
Stephanie Claudia Hofmann, Cornell University
How Rule of Law Travels: Legal Circulations, Ports of Call,
Troubled Destinations
Iza Hussin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Methodological Challenges and Progress in Ideational Research
Stephen Craig Nelson, Cornell University
Andrew Yeo, Catholic University of America
Changing the Logic of Appropriateness: The Emergence of the
International Norm of Truth Commissions
Michal Ben-Josef Hirsch, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Where Is It Still Safe To Be King? A Comparative Analysis of
Judicial Treatment of the Sovereign Immunity Rule for Human
Rights Violations
Suzanne Katzenstein, Columbia University
Disc:
Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University
46-16
REFINEMENTS IN RESEARCH DESIGN: CASES,
CONCEPTS, VARIABLES
Hillel David Soifer, Princeton University
Chair:
Papers:
The Other Forgotten War: Understanding Atrocities During the
Malayan Emergency
Christi Leigh Siver, University of Washington
Disc:
Matthew Rendall, University of Nottingham
43-8
ROUNDTABLE: UNDERSTANDING POLITICAL
EXTREMISM
Co-sponsored by 18-39
Manus I. Midlarsky, Rutgers University
Chair:
When John Bolton is the Life of the Party: Explaining the
Erosion of Multilateralism in the GOP
Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin
Jonathan J. Monten, Yale University
Sheri Berman, Barnard College
Martha Crenshaw, Stanford University
Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware
Cas Mudde, University of Antwerp
David Art, Tufts University
Manus I. Midlarsky, Rutgers University
44-1
THE POLITICS OF DEMOCRATIC REVERSAL
Co-sponsored by 11-24
45-11
Chair:
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS AND HUMAN RIGHTS
David L. Cingranelli, SUNY, Binghamton
Papers:
Developing What? Aims and Effects of Foreign Development
Assistance
Bethany Barratt, Roosevelt University
Economic Sanctions and Human Rights: New Findings Based on
the Notion of Political Survival
Cristiane Carneiro
Carmela Lutmar, Princeton University
Theory and Method in the Study of Nuclear Proliferation
Etel L. Solingen, University of California, Irvine
Improving Measurement in Qualitative Social Science Research
Stefanie Walter, Harvard University
Dirk Leuffen, ETH Zürich
Disc:
Hillel David Soifer, Princeton University
46-26
UNDERSTANDING EXPERIENCES ACROSS THE
SUBFIELDS: RHETORIC, PHENOMENOLOGY,
FIELDWORK, FRAMING/NARRATIVES, AND TEXTUAL
ETHNOGRAPHY
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods,
Panel 3
48-2
THEME PANEL: HEALTH SYSTEM COMPLEXITY AND
CHANGE: MEASURING THE POLITICS OF
DELIVERING CARE
Co-sponsored by T-9
Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Chair:
Papers:
Rational Historical Institutionalism: Post-War Health Policy in
Sweden and the UK
Tim Hicks, University of Oxford
Health Care in Crisis: The Drive for Health Reform in Canada
and the United States
Antonia Maioni, McGill University
Theodore R. Marmor, Yale University
The Impact of Joint Respect for Human Rights on Bilateral Aid
Ali Sanaei, Louisiana State University
289
Daily Schedule
Part:
Case Selection in Qualitative Research
Thomas Pluemper, University of Essex
Eric Neumayer, London School of Economics
Vera Eva Troeger, University of Essex
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Daily Schedule
Environmental Sustainability in East Asia: Policies and
Technological Output in Japan, Korea, and Taiwan
Matthew A. Shapiro, Illinois Institute of Technology
Close to Home: The Impact of Media Attention on Public Health
Outcomes
Patricia Strach, Harvard University
Erika Franklin Fowler, University of Michigan
The Political Determinants of Health: A Cross-National Study
Simon Wigley, Bilkent University
Disc:
49-7
Chair:
Papers:
Mark A. Peterson, University of California, Los Angeles
Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
NEW STRATEGIES OF POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
IN CANADA
Co-sponsored by 38-19
Richard Schultz, McGill University
Does Ethno-Racial Diversity Diminish Political Engagement?
Elisabeth L. Gidengil, McGill University
Jason J. Roy, McGill University
Andrea Lawlor, McGill University
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Panel 8
Chair:
Part:
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
Richard Schultz, McGill University
Related Group Panels
Asian Pacific American Caucus
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
ASIAN AMERICANS AND IMMIGRANT POLITICAL
INCORPORATION
Andrew L. Aoki, Augsburg College
‘The Lost Suitcase’: Memory and Narrative in a Post-1965
Indian Immigrant Family Tale
Himanee Gupta-Carlson, Tacoma Community College
Discourses of Exclusion: Historical Analysis of U.S. Immigration
Law vis-a-vis Asian-Americans and Latinos
Robert W. Scharr, University of Florida
Disc:
Andrew L. Aoki, Augsburg College
The Paradoxical Role of the Military in the Amnesty,
Reconciliation and Reintegration (AR2) Process
Michael W. Mosser, University of Texas, Austin
Counterinsurgency and Transitional Justice
Ganesh Sitaraman, Harvard Law School
Disc:
Isaiah Wilson, III, United States Military Academy, West
Point
Jason Lyall, Yale University
Committee on the Political Economy of the Good Society
Panel 1
Chair:
Part:
Intergenerational Transmission of Immigrant Political Attitudes:
The Case of the Hmong in America
Carolyn Wong, Carleton College
Immigrants, Political Incorporation and Homeland Politics: The
Case of Korean-Americans and Korean Nationalism in the U.S.
Soo-Bin You, Rutgers University
COERCION AND RECONCILIATION IN
COUNTERINSURGENCY OPERATIONS
Isaiah Wilson, III, United States Military Academy, West
Point
Coercion and Accommodation in Counterinsurgency Warfare
Jacqueline L. Hazelton, Brandeis University
From Pollsters to Journalists: Media Coverage of Polls during
the 2008 Canadian Election
Francois Petry, Laval University
Frédérick Bastien, Université Laval
Disc:
Joseph R. Fornieri, Rochester Institute of Technology
Phillip G. Henderson, Catholic University of America
Ethan Fishman, University of South Alabama
Lucas E. Morel, Washington & Lee University
Herman Belz, University of Maryland
Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy
Organization Change in Canadian and US Political Parties
Mildred A. Schwartz, New York University
An Energy Superpower?: Building the Case Through an
Examination of Canada’s National Newspapers Coverage of Oil
Sands in 2006
Laura Way, University of Alberta
ABRAHAM LINCOLN: THE 200TH ANNIVERSARY OF
HIS BIRTH
Kenneth L. Deutsch, SUNY Geneseo
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JAMES FISHKIN, WHEN
THE PEOPLE SPEAK: DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY
AND PUBLIC CONSULTATION
Co-sponsored by 2-50
Stephen L. Elkin, University of Maryland
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University
Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin
Jane Mansbridge, Harvard University
Lynn M. Sanders, University of Virginia
Albena Azmanova, University of Kent
Comparative Urban Politics
Panel 1
Chair:
Part:
Association of Korean Political Studies in North America
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS AND THE STIMULUS
PACKAGES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Co-sponsored by 28-10
Ronald K. Vogel, University of Louisville
Robert Andrew Young, University of Western Ontario
Katherine Graham, Carleton University
Ann O’M. Bowman, Texas A&M University
Michael A. Pagano, University of Illinois at Chicago
Panel 2
Chair:
KOREA’S RESPONSES TO GLOBALIZATION
Jongsoo James Lee, Stonehill College
Papers:
The Political Logic of Financial Reform: Assessing Reform
Outcomes A Decade After Crisis in South Korea and Japan
Heon Joo Jung, Indiana University, Bloomington
Panel 13 ROUNDTABLE: THE MODERN PHILOSOPHICAL
REVOLUTION: THE LUMINOSITY OF EXISTENCE
Chair:
Michael G. Franz, Loyola College of Maryland
Divided Workers in the Era of Globalization: South Korean Case
Ji-Young Kim, Ewha University
Disc:
David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America
Part:
Glenn Hughes, St. Mary’s University, San Antonio
Henrik Syse, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)
Cyril O’Regan, University of Notre Dame
Eric Voegelin Society
South Korean Food Security or Neo-Colonialism? Daewoo
Logistics’ Industrial Agriculture in Madagascar
Jeffrey L. Gower, SUNY, Buffalo
290
Daily Schedule
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Rouven J. Steeves, U.S. Air Force Academy
Thomas W. Heilke, University of Kansas
FTAA, Brazil and United States: Why the Negotiations in
Agriculture Came to a Deadlock
Marco Antonio Ferreira de Araujo, Faculdade Integrada do
Recife
Marcelo Jorge Figueiredo Lima
European Consortium for Political Research
Panel 1
Chair:
THE AMERICANISATION OF EUROPEAN EXECUTIVES
Luciano Bardi, Università di Pisa
Papers:
The Americanization of European Executives: the Case of the
British Prime Minister
Patricia Lee Sykes, American University
FDI by Economic Sectors and Its Effect on Inequality in Latin
American Medium Income Countries
Juan Bogliaccini, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Patrick J.W. Egan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
The Transformation of Social Governance in the Neoliberal Era:
The Politics of Social Reform in Argentina and Chile
Mikael Wigell, London School of Economics and Political
Science
The German Core Executive: Ever More Power to the
Chancellor?
Thomas Poguntke, University of Bochum
Personalization of Leadership and the US Presidency
Colin Campbell, University of British Columbia
Jamie Gillies, University of British Columbia
The Americanisation of European Executives: Undisputed Trend
or Contrasted Process?
Sergio Fabbrini, University of Trento
Restraining Clientelism in Mexico
Yuriko Takahashi, Kobe University
Disc:
Latino Caucus in Political Science
Panel 1
Iberian Studies Group
Panel 1
A ‘SECOND TRANSITION’ IN SPAIN? THE SOCIALIST
GOVERNMENT OF JOSÉ LUIS RODRÍGUEZ ZAPATERO
(2004-08)
Co-sponsored by 15-10
Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE: COMPLEX MODELS FOR LATINO
POLITICS: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE
INNOVATIONS
Tony Affigne, Providence College
Disc:
Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas
Gary M. Segura, Stanford University
UNDERSTANDING EXPERIENCES ACROSS THE
SUBFIELDS: RHETORIC, PHENOMENOLOGY,
FIELDWORK, FRAMING/NARRATIVES, AND TEXTUAL
ETHNOGRAPHY
Co-sponsored by 46-26
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Part:
Louis DeSipio, University of California, Irvine
Rene R. Rocha, University of Iowa
Sharon Ann Navarro, University of Texas at San Antonio
Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, University of Texas, Pan
American
How to Research Institutions Experientially:Methods of Creative
Syncretism
Gerald Berk, University of Oregon
Dennis C. Galvan, University of Oregon
Panel 1
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Panel 3
Chair:
Papers:
Embedded IR-ist: Learning about the EU’s Practices in External
Assistance
Xymena Kurowska, Central European University
Society for Romanian Studies
Chair:
Papers:
The Rhetorical Analysis of Politics
Nick Turnbull, University of Manchester
Choosing a Good Candidate: Modeling Parties’ Legislative
Recruitment Decisions in Romania
Oleh Protsyk, European Centre for Minority Issues
Frames and Narratives: Two Modes of Political Understanding;
Two Forms of Scholarly Interpreation.
Cyrus Ernesto Zirakzadeh, University of Connecticut
Political Parties and Good Governance in Romania and Beyond
Patricia T. Young, Rutgers University
Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson College
Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon
A Tale of Two Palaces: Semi-Presidential Government and
Strategic Conflict in Romania
Ronald F. King, San Diego State University
Cosmin Gabriel Marian, Babes-Bolyai University
Latin American Studies Association
Panel 3
Chair:
Attitudes in the Chilean National Congress During the
Ratification Process of the Free Trade Agreement with the
United States
Jaime Baeza Freer, Academía Nacional de Estudios Políticos
y Estratégicos (Anepe)
Miguel Ángel López-Varas, Universidad de Chile
Disc:
Katja Michalak, American University in Bulgaria
Friday, 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM
Daily Schedule
Papers:
FREE TRADE, SOCIAL REFORM, AND POLITICS IN
LATIN AMERICA
Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Marius Lupsa Matichescu, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University
of Iasi, Romania
What Drives the Vote for the Extreme Right? Absolute vs.
Relative Deprivation
Florin Nicolae Fesnic, “Babes-Bolyai” University Cluj
Raluca Viman Miller, Georgia State University
Methodological Issues in Comparative Political Theory:
Perspectives from Indigenous Studies
Johannes Morrow, SUNY, University at Albany
Disc:
VOTER, CANDIDATE AND PARTY STRATEGIC
DECISION-MAKING: CASES FROM THE ROMANIAN
EXPERIENCE
Katja Michalak, American University in Bulgaria
APSA Meetings
APSA Departmental Services Committee
COMMITTEE MEETING
291
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Daily Schedule
Locke on Civility and Politics
Emily Nacol, Vanderbilt University
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
APSA Meetings
Paradoxes of Democratic Education: Freedom and Violence in
the Training of Good Citizens
Dustin Howes, Louisiana State University
APSA Civic Education and Engagement Committee
COMMITTEE MEETING
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Disc:
Brian Duff, University of New England
APSA Panel
2-6
THE POLITICAL THOUGHT OF ISAIAH BERLIN:
NEGLECTED DIMENSIONS AND CONTINUING
LEGACIES
Alan Ryan, University of Oxford
International Committee
Panel 3
Chair:
Part:
Panel 4
ROUNDTABLE: CHALLENGING AMERICA’S
IMPOVERISHED POLITICS: MINING THE
SCHOLARSHIP OF H. MARK ROELOFS (1923-2008)
Theodore J. Lowi, Cornell University
Chair:
Papers:
Ralph P Hummel, Institute for Applied Phenomenology for
Science & Technology
Marla Brettschneider, University of New Hampshire
Patricia Moynagh, Wagner College
Lori Marso, Union College
Frank M. Coleman, Independent Scholar
Kathy E. Ferguson, University of Hawaii
Donald G. Tannenbaum, Gettysburg College
THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF NELSON W. POLSBY
Co-sponsored by 7-20 and 35-8
Division Panels
Berlin and Rawls
George Crowder, Flinders University
Can Value Pluralism Support Liberalism?: The Problem of
Priority and What to do About It
James E. Bourke, Duke University
Liberty, Choice and Anti-Paternalism in Isaiah Berlin’s Political
Thought
Joshua L. Cherniss, Harvard University
Isaiah Berlin: The History of Ideas as Psychodrama
Alan Ryan, University of Oxford
Disc:
Carla Yumatle, Harvard University
2-9
Chair:
”WE ARE ALL DEMOCRATS NOW...”
Nicholas Xenos, University of Massachusetts
Part:
Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania
Neve Gordon, Ben-Gurion University
Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley
John R. Wallach, CUNY, Hunter College
Antonio Y. Vazquez Arroyo, University of Minnesota
T-10
THEME ROUNDTABLE: INTERNATIONAL
GOVERNANCE AND GLOBAL DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by 3-23
T-11
THEME ROUNDTABLE: JUST HOW DIFFERENT?
SEXUAL POLITICS IN CANADA AND THE UNITED
STATES
Co-sponsored by 47-7
T-12
THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE PRINCIPLES OF
REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES
Co-sponsored by 3-24 and 2-48
2-17
Chair:
MACHIAVELLI AND DEMOCRACY
Mary G. Dietz, Northwestern University
1-4
Chair:
THE POLITICS OF HUNGER
George M. Shulman, New York University
Papers:
Rhetoric, Violence and Redistribution in Machiavelli’s Account
of the Gracchi
John P. McCormick, University of Chicago
Papers:
From Lamentation to Logos: Antigone and the Hunger of
Melancholy
Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University
Populus and Plebs: Roman and Medieval Traditions of
Conceiving the People in Machiavelli’s Political Thought
Miguel E. Vatter, Universidad Diego Portales
Hungry Like a Wolf: Derrida on Voracious Sovereignty
Diego Hernan Rossello, Northwestern University
Equality and Violence in Machiavelli’s Florentine Histories
Yves Winter, University of California, Berkeley
What is Political Hunger?
Romand Coles, Northern Arizona University
Democratic Excess: Machiavelli, Hatred, and the Power of the
People
Robyn Marasco, Williams College
Disc:
J. Peter Euben, Duke University
1-12
THE USES AND ABUSES OF GEORGE ORWELL IN THE
TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
Melissa Lane, Princeton University
Chair:
Part:
David Runciman, University of Cambridge
Andrew Sabl, UCLA
Corey Robin, Brooklyn College/CUNY Graduate Center
Gregory Claeys, University of London, Royal Holloway
1-25
CULTIVATING AGENCY IN LOCKE, ROUSSEAU AND
MILL
Christopher James Barker, Claremont Graduate University
Chair:
Disc:
Michelle Tolman Clarke, Dartmouth College
Melissa Marie Matthes, Yale Divinity School
2-47
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND MASS SOCIETY
Co-sponsored by 3-13
2-48
THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE PRINCIPLES OF
REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES
Co-sponsored by 3-24 and T-12
3-13
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND MASS SOCIETY
Co-sponsored by 2-47
Andreas Follesdal, University of Oslo
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
292
Complicating Barbarism and Civilization: Mill’s Complex
Sociology of Human Development
Inder Singh Marwah, University of Toronto
Can Deliberative Democracy Fix Kansas?
Simone Chambers, University of Toronto
Daily Schedule
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Feeling the Pinch: A Cross-National Study of Emotion-Driven
Reactions to the Global Economic Crisis
Jennifer L. Merolla, Claremont Graduate University
Elizabeth Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University
Deliberative Democracy and Social Complexity: Decentering
Mass Society
James Bohman, St. Louis University
Supersizing Deliberative Democracy and the Risk of Group
Polarization
Jose Luis Marti, Pompeu Fabra University
Deliberative Democracy and Civic Participation in Mass Society
Cristina Lafont, Northwestern University
Uneasy Street: Fear and Learning in an Economic Crisis
Shana Kushner Gadarian, Princeton University
Bethany Albertson, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Cindy D. Kam, Vanderbilt University
Dennis F. Thompson, Harvard University
Archon Fung, Harvard University
6-4
3-14
Chair:
SHOULD CITIZENS THINK?
James R. Stoner, Jr., Louisiana State University
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND DOMESTIC
POLICY CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 16-2
6-21
Papers:
The Dark Heart of Critical Citizenship
Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College
Chair:
THE NEW POLITICS OF ECONOMIC POLICY MAKING
IN JAPAN
Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group, Panel 2
William W. Grimes, Boston University
Law-abidingness and Civic Education
Ian R. MacMullen, Washington University in St. Louis
Papers:
Disc:
If Democratic Theory Calls for Informed Voters, Why Is It
Democratic to Expand the Franchise?
Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University
Disc:
James R. Stoner, Jr., Louisiana State University
3-23
THEME ROUNDTABLE: INTERNATIONAL
GOVERNANCE AND GLOBAL DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by T-10
Benjamin R. Barber, DEMOS (New York)
Chair:
Part:
Benjamin R. Barber, DEMOS (New York)
Robert O. Keohane, Princeton University
Saskia Sassen, Columbia University
Sungmoon Kim, University of Richmond
Virginia Held, CUNY, Graduate Center
Japanese Fiscal Debts and Public Financing: An Analysis on
JGB Markets
Myung-koo Kang, Claremont McKenna College
Globalization, Inequality, and Political Realignment: the
Emerging Clash Between Structural Reforms and Rising
Inequalities in Japan
Yves E. Tiberghien, University of British Columbia
Disc:
Jennifer Amyx, University of Pennsylvania
Kay Shimizu, Columbia University
7-11
SHIFTING MODES OF GOVERNANCE: A PUNITIVE
TURN IN AMERICAN SOCIAL POLICY?
Christopher Howard, College of William & Mary
Chair:
Papers:
3-24
Chair:
Part:
THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE PRINCIPLES OF
REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES
Co-sponsored by 2-48 and T-12
Jeff Spinner-Halev, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
RACE, RACISMS, XENOPHOBIA AND POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 32-1
5-10
Chair:
AFFECT AND EMOTIONS
Cindy D. Kam, Vanderbilt University
Papers:
Does Affective Contagion Promote Coherent Political Thinking?
Cengiz Erisen, SUNY, Stony Brook
Milton Lodge, SUNY, Stony Brook
Charles S. Taber, SUNY, Stony Brook
Appealing to Emotions: How Anger and Anxiety Help Us Move
Forward In the Debate Between Proximity and Directional
Theories of Vote Choice
Andrew J.W. Civettini, Knox College
Punitive Governance in Education: The Strange Origins of No
Child Left Behind
Jesse H. Rhodes, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Experimenting with Punitive Tools: The Changing Governance
of Crime Control
Vesla Mae Weaver, University of Virginia
Disc:
Christopher Howard, College of William & Mary
Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley
7-20
THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF NELSON W. POLSBY
Co-sponsored by 35-8
8-5
NEW APPROACHES TO STUDYING PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-5
Mitchell S. Sanders, Harris Interactive
Chair:
Papers:
Creation of A New Representative Sample Internet Survey Panel
Via Face-to-Face Recruitment and Providing Free Computers to
All Respondents: Evaluation of the FFISP
Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University
Matthew DeBell, Stanford University
Roger Tourangeau, University of Maryland
Allison Renee Ackermann, University of Dayton
Chintan Turakhia, Abt SRBI
Ariel Malka, Stanford University
293
Daily Schedule
Personal Happiness and Retrospective Voting: Evidence from
Two Natural Experiments on College Football Outcomes and
Election Day Cloud Cover
Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
Andrew Healy, Loyola Marymount University
Governing the Poor: The Rise of the Neoliberal Paternalist State
Richard C. Fording, University of Kentucky
Sanford F. Schram, Bryn Mawr College
Joe Soss, University of Minnesota
From Shifting Modes of Governance to Transformed Civic
Attitudes? Exploring Social Program Effects, 1970-2008
Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University
Jeremy Waldron, New York University
Charles Taylor, McGill University
Anne Phillips, London School of Economics
Duncan Ivison, University of Sydney
Gurpreet Mahajan, Jawaharlal Nehru University
5-1
The New Politics of Fiscal Policy in Japan
Gene Park, CUNY-Baruch College
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Old versus New: The Comparative Efficiency of Mail and
Internet Surveys
Samuel H. Fisher, III, University of South Alabama
Rebekah Herrick, Oklahoma State University
Democratization and Determinants of Ethnic Violence: The
Rebel-Moderate Organizational Nexus
Sanjay Jeram, University of Toronto
Jacques Bertrand, University of Toronto
Hunting Where the Ducks Are: Polling in the Aftermath of a
Natural Disaster
Brian J. Brox, Tulane University
J. Celeste Lay, Tulane University
Dollars versus Sense: The Nation-Building Logics of EthnicallyBased Redistribution
Brian Shoup, Indiana University
Applying Voice Recognition to Vox Populi: State Transition
Models in the Study of Public Opinion and Political
Communication
Abe Gong, University of Michigan
Dynamical Decomposition of Political Time-series
Pedro C. Magalhaes, Instituto de Ciencias Sociais da
Universidade de Lisboa
Luis Aguiar-Conraria, Universidade do Minho
Patterns of Immigrant Incorporation in Ethnic and Religious Kin
States: The Case of Serbia
Mila Dragojevic, Brown University
Disc:
Richard Simeon, University of Toronto
11-57
POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCE IN
DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES: NEW EXPERIMENTAL
EVIDENCE
Co-sponsored by 12-25
11-58
THE POLITICS OF TARGETED SOCIAL POLICY AND
CLIENTELISM IN LATIN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 12-32
Disc:
Nathan Kelly, University of Tennessee
8-19
CONSTRUCTING CROSS-NATIONAL DATASETS:
CHALLENGES AND LESSONS
Co-sponsored by 46-23
12-10
VIOLENCE: WHAT DOES COMPARATIVE POLITICS
CONTRIBUTE TODAY TO UNDERSTANDING AND
ADDRESSING GENOCIDE AND CIVIL WAR?
Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University
TRANSFORMATIONS OF BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT
RELATIONS IN DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION
ECONOMIES
Co-sponsored by 11-32
12-20
URBANIZATION AND THE POLITICS OF THE CITY IN
THE DEVELOPING WORLD
Co-sponsored by 30-2
Richard Stren, University of Toronto
11-7
Chair:
Part:
11-32
Chair:
Papers:
Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Benjamin A. Valentino, Dartmouth College
Barbara F. Walter, University of California, San Diego
Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University
Chair:
Papers:
TRANSFORMATIONS OF BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT
RELATIONS IN DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION
ECONOMIES
Co-sponsored by 12-10
Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Rural-Urban Migration Experiments in China and India
Grace Huang, St. Lawrence University
Kevin H. Keepper, TechnoServe
Metropolitanization, Decentralization and Local Democracy in
East Africa
Christopher Gore, Ryerson University
Nansozi Muwanga, Makerere University
Private or Collective Interests?: Business-Government Relations
in Transition Countries
G. Magnus Feldmann, University of Bristol
Metropolitan Growth, Urbanization and Conflict in Asia-Pacific:
The Dislocation of Public Policy
Daniel E. Esser, American University
The Emergence of Collective Firm Strategies in Industrializing
States: Evidence from Prussia
Alexander Kuo, Stanford University
Liquid Assets and Fluid Contracts: Regulatory Politics following
the Washington Consensus
Alison E. Post, University of California, Berkeley
Governing Transport: An Empirical Study of the Politics of
Transport and Growth
Sandra Sequeira, Harvard University
Business Lobbying & Social Policy: Education and Housing
Reforms in the Post-Communist Countries
Sarah Wilson Sokhey, Ohio State University
Disc:
Victor C. Shih, Northwestern University
11-41
DEMOCRATIZATION AND ETHNIC MINORITIES:
CONFLICT, PROTECTION, AND ACCOMMODATION
Co-sponsored by 44-2
Oded Haklai, Queen’s University
Chair:
Papers:
The Political Integration of Minorities in New European
Democracies: Explaining the Variation
Zsuzsa Csergo, Queen’s University
Democratization and Recognition of Difference in a Chinese
Society: The Taiwan Experience
Andre Laliberte, University of Ottawa
294
Political Party Linkages to the Urban Poor in African
Democracies: The Cases of Senegal and Zambia
Danielle Elise Resnick, Cornell University
Disc:
Mohamed Halfani, UN-Habitat
Patricia McCarney, University of Toronto
12-25
POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCE IN
DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES: NEW EXPERIMENTAL
EVIDENCE
Co-sponsored by 11-57
Nancy Hite, Yale University
Chair:
Papers:
Engendering Political Participation in Traditional Settings:
Experimental Grassroots and Elite-Level Evidence on Rural
Women’s Behavior in India
Jennifer Green, Yale University
Expert Information, Public Deliberation, and Electoral Support
for Good Governance: Experimental Evidence from Benin
Leonard Wantchekon, New York University
Political Engagement, Social Change and the Political Economy
of Financial Modernization: Experimental Evidence from the
Philippines
Nancy Hite, Yale University
Daily Schedule
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Why Does Political Participation Improve Satisfaction in Public
Goods Provision? Field Experiments on Disentangling the Role
of Information from Governance Structure in Mexico
Rachel Brule, Stanford University
Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University
Ruth Kricheli, Stanford University
Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University
Indian Migration and “Temporary” Labor Programs: Select
Contrasts in Policies and Trends in the European Union and the
United States
Mary E. Breeding, Georgetown University
Explaining Local Responses to New Immigration
Hamutal Bernstein, Georgetown University
Corporatist Birds of a Feather? Austrian and Dutch Immigration
Politics
Alex A. Caviedes, SUNY Fredonia
Local Collective Action
Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University
Jeremy M. Weinstein, Stanford University
Disc:
Donald P. Green, Yale University
12-32
THE POLITICS OF TARGETED SOCIAL POLICY AND
CLIENTELISM IN LATIN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 11-58
Juan Pablo Luna, Universidad Católica de Chile
Chair:
Papers:
Branding Distribution: Social Programs and Political Behavior in
Hugo Chávez’s Venezuela
Samuel Handlin, University of California, Berkeley
The Political Targeting of Social Programs in a Least Likely
Case: Chile 2000-2006.
Juan Pablo Luna, Universidad Católica de Chile
Rodrigo Mardones, P. Universidad Católica de Chile
Disc:
Susan F. Martin, Georgetown University
15-4
RESPONSES TO NEW IMMIGRATION: THE EUROPEAN
UNION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 14-13
16-2
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND DOMESTIC
POLICY CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 6-4
J. Lawrence Broz, University of California, San Diego
Chair:
Papers:
Examining the Influence of International Organizations on
Domestic Politics: The Case of IMF Labor Market Conditionality
between 1980 and 2000
Mark Anner, Pennsylvania State University
Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota
Stephanie J. Rickard, Dublin City University
The Political Effects of Brazil’s Conditional Cash Transfer
Program
Cesar Zucco, Jr., Insituto Universitario de Pesquisas do Rio
de Janeiro
Patronage Networks, Ideological Proximity, and Vote Choice
Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Houston
Changing Patterns in Partisan Politics: Evidence from East
European and Latin American IMF Programs
Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University
Do Conditional Cash Transfer Programs Influence Political
Parties’ Strategies to Win Votes? Evidence from Mexico
Ana Lorena De La O Torres, Yale University
Disc:
13-7
Chair:
Papers:
Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
AUTHORITARIAN REGIME BUILDING AND
BREAKDOWN IN POST-SOVIET EURASIA
Co-sponsored by 44-7
Vladimir Gel’man, European University at St. Petersburg
The Logic of Hybrid Regimes in Post-Soviet Eurasia
Henry E. Hale, George Washington University
IMF Program Suspensions: Theoretical Issues in Model
Specification
Martin S. Edwards, Seton Hall University
Disc:
Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University
16-8
THE POLITICAL RAMIFICATIONS OF THE GLOBAL
FINANCIAL CRISIS
Co-sponsored by 17-1
Dale Copeland, University of Virginia
Chair:
Part:
Daniel W. Drezner, Tufts University
Jonathan Kirshner, Cornell University
Michael Mastanduno, Dartmouth College
Mark Blyth, Brown University
Varieties of Authoritarian Politics in the Caucusus
Valerie Bunce, Cornell University
Sharon Wolchik, George Washington University
17-1
THE POLITICAL RAMIFICATIONS OF THE GLOBAL
FINANCIAL CRISIS
Co-sponsored by 16-8
Stability and Breakdown in Transitional States: An Analysis of
Central Asia and the Caucasus
Scott B. Radnitz, University of Washington
17-10
INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE AND CONFLICT
MANAGEMENT
Dieter Kerwer, Technical University of Munich
The Dynamics of Sub-National Authoritarianism: Russia in a
Comparative Perspective
Vladimir Gel’man, European University at St. Petersburg
Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto
14-13
RESPONSES TO NEW IMMIGRATION: THE EUROPEAN
UNION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 15-4
Rey Koslowski, SUNY, University at Albany
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
Integration for Entry: Examining New Civic Requirements in
Advanced Industrialized Democracies
Sara Wallace Goodman, Georgetown University
Mechanisms of Conflict Management in EU Regulatory Policy
Burkard Eberlein, York University
Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Chair:
Inviting Wallflowers onto the Floor: International Institutions,
Domestic Experts, and State Policies
Songying Fang, Rice University
Canada-United States Policy Relations and Democratic
Legitimacy
Monica Gattinger, University of Ottawa
Joining Transgovernmental Networks: an empirical analysis
David Bach, IE Business School
Abraham Newman, Georgetown University
295
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Daily Schedule
After the Halcyon Days: NGO Engagement of International
Institutions since 9/11
Edward A. Fogarty, Colgate University
Harnessed Power: Authoritarian Leadership Selection and
Conflict Behavior
Ozlem Elgun, Emory University
Disc:
Dieter Kerwer, Technical University of Munich
Economic Interests and Threat Credibility
Katja B. Kleinberg, SUNY, Binghamton University
18-16
CONCEPTUALIZING TERRORISM
Co-sponsored by 19-5
David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Chair:
Papers:
Assessing the Effectiveness of Leadership Decapitation Against
Hamas
Jenna Jordan, University of Chicago
Disc:
Kelly M. Kadera, University of Iowa
22-8
Chair:
LEGISLATIVE POLICY BARGAINING AND CHANGE
Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University
Papers:
Delaying the Buck: Timing, Uncertainty, and Appropriations
Outcomes
Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa Barbara
Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh
The Politics of Militancy
Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University
C. Christine Fair, Georgetown University
Researching Terrorism: Some Steps Forward
Risa A. Brooks, Northwestern University
Orthodox Social Choice versus Veto Players Theory: Theory and
Evidence
Anthony J. McGann, University of California, Irvine
Islamist De-Radicalization in Democracies and
Dictatorships:Comparing the British and the Egyptian Cases
Omar Ashour, University of Exeter
The Dynamics of Inertia: Stability and Change in Democratic
Brazil’s Budgeting Institutions
Sergio Praca, University of São Paulo
Disc:
David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University
Taking Time Seriously: Time Pressure, Time Horizons, and
Legislative Behavior
Helen Abbie Erler, Kenyon College
18-34
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: AN ASSESSMENT OF R.
HARRISON WAGNER’S “WAR AND THE STATE”
Co-sponsored by 21-8
Disc:
Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University
Jason M. Roberts, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
18-40
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT AND THE FATE OF
LIBERAL DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by 43-10
23-17
PRESIDENCY AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-13
24-8
BEYOND THE HOLLOW STATE: MULTISECTOR
GOVERNANCE
Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark
19-5
CONCEPTUALIZING TERRORISM
Co-sponsored by 18-16
20-6
FOREIGN POLICY CHALLENGES FOR THE OBAMA
ADMINISTRATION
Christopher Sprecher, Texas A&M University
Chair:
Part:
21-8
Chair:
Part:
21-18
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
Peter D. Feaver, Duke University
Robert J. Lieber, Georgetown University
James M. Goldgeier, George Washington University
Beyond the Hollow State: The Substitute State?
H. Brinton Milward, University of Arizona
Evaluating Competitiveness: A Closer Examination of Social
Service Contracting Bids.
Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma
Meeyoung Lamothe, University of Oklahoma
James D. Fearon, Stanford University
Michael C. Williams, University of Wales, Aberystwyth
Hein Erich Goemans, University of Rochester
Robert Harrison Wagner, University of Texas, Austin
DOMESTIC CONSTRAINTS AND INTERNATIONAL
CONFLICT
Kelly M. Kadera, University of Iowa
United We Fall: Bargaining Failure in the Face of Opposition
Support
Philip Arena, SUNY, University at Buffalo
Audience Costs, Updating, and Domestic Political Conditions
Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania
Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania
Whither the Public Service? American Exceptionalism, Human
Resource Management and the Contract State
Robert F. Durant, American University
Jocelyn M. Johnston, American University
Amanda M. Girth, American University
The Context of Contracting: Nonprofit Distinctiveness or MultiSector Pervasiveness?
Jeffrey L. Brudney, Cleveland State University
Chung-Lae Cho, Ewha Womans University
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: AN ASSESSMENT OF R.
HARRISON WAGNER’S “WAR AND THE STATE”
Co-sponsored by 18-34
Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University
The Credibility of Domestic Dissent in Coercive Diplomacy:
Indicator of State Weakness or Signal of Leader Resolve?
Seth Goldstein, Ohio State University
296
Chair:
Ideology, Contracts, and Distributive Politics
Anthony Michael Bertelli, University of Southern California
David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt University
Disc:
Sally Coleman Selden, Lynchburg College
25-24
ADAPTING TO OR AVOIDING DOOMSDAY: DEALING
WITH CLIMATE CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 39-4
26-12
CANADIAN COURTS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 49-1
Roy B. Flemming, Texas A&M University
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Judicial Decision-making in Canadian Appellate Courts: The
Impact of Political Affiliation
Troy Riddell, University of Guelph
Lori J. Hausegger, Boise State University
Matthew Hennigar, Brock University
The Supreme Court of Canada in Historical Perspective: The
Impact of Institutional Change on Judicial Behavior
Susan W. Johnson, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Institutional Legitimacy, Strategic Decision-Making, and the
Supreme Court of Canada: A Look at Secession Reference and
Marshall
Vuk Radmilovic, University of Toronto
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
The Fault Lines of Power: Urban Theory and Disciplinary
Divides
Richard Gendron, Assumption College
Disc:
Susan E. Clarke, University of Colorado
30-11
NEW DIRECTIONS IN URBAN/LOCAL POLITICS
RESEARCH
Bryan D. Jones, University of Texas, Austin
Chair:
Papers:
How Courts Make Federalism Work: The Impact of Judicial
Review on Federalism in Spain, Belgium and Canada
Gemma Sala, Grinnell College
Low Level Equilibrium Traps in Urban Contexts: The Garbage
Crisis in Naples
Eleonora Pasotti, University of California, Santa Cruz
Constitutional Dialogues and Theories of Federalism: Their
Impact on Judicial Activism in Canada and the United States
Mark E. Rush, Washington and Lee University
Disc:
Roy B. Flemming, Texas A&M University
28-9
DO WE NEED A NEW ACIR: REFLECTIONS ON THE
50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE U.S. ACIR
Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism, Panel 1
29-8
ELECTORAL REFORM, VOTING TECHNOLOGY, AND
EQUAL ACCESS
Co-sponsored by 36-3
Carl E. Klarner, Indiana State University
Chair:
Papers:
Election Reform in the States: Income Inequality and the
Adoption of Alternative Voting Methods
William W. Franko, University of Iowa
The Invisible Hand of Election Officials: Promotion of Mail
Voting and Methods of Voting in the Colorado 2008 Election
Christopher B. Mann, University of Miami
Rachel Sondheimer, United States Military Academy
American Federalism, City Partisanship, and Local Public Policy
Outputs
Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan
Daniel J. Hopkins, Harvard University
Identity, Institutions, and the Election of Ethnic Minority
Candidates in European Cities
Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University
Up and Down with Policy Attention: Reconstructing National
Urban Policy
Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University
The Provision of Local Public Goods: Analyzing Municipal
Bond Elections
Jessica Luce Trounstine, Princeton University
Jacob S Rugh, Princeton University
Disc:
Dennis R. Judd, University of Illinois, Chicago
31-4
ELECTED OFFICIALS AT THE INTERSECTION OF
GENDER AND RACE
Co-sponsored by 32-16
Julia S. Jordan-Zachery, Providence College
Chair:
Papers:
Estimating the Causal Effect of DRE Allocations on Electoral
Outcomes
Marc Meredith, University of Pennsylvania
Institutions, Intersections, and Women (of Color) Legislators:
How Race/Ethnicity and Gender Inform Office Holding across
the States
Becki Scola, St. Joseph’s University
How Do We Get Along? Linked Fate, Political Allies, and Issue
Coalitions
Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame
Pei-te Lien, University of California, Santa Barbara
Carol Hardy-Fanta, PH.D., University of Massachusetts,
Boston
Christine Marie Sierra, University of New Mexico
Does Electoral Reform Decrease or Increase Political Inequality?
Melanie Jean Springer, Washington University in Saint Louis
Elizabeth Rigby, University of Houston
Not Worth the Trip? Convenience, Polling Place Accessibility,
and Voter Turnout in Primary, Midterm, and Presidential
Elections
Edward M. Burmila, Indiana University
Disc:
Carl E. Klarner, Indiana State University
Joshua J. Dyck, University at Buffalo, SUNY
We’re Not Always Busboys: How Intersectional Discrimination
Shapes Latino Political Participation
Alesha E. Doan, University of Kansas
Christina Elizabeth Bejarano, University of Kansas
30-2
URBANIZATION AND THE POLITICS OF THE CITY IN
THE DEVELOPING WORLD
Co-sponsored by 12-20
Understanding Differences in the Electoral Success of Women
State Legislature Candidates across Racial Groups and
Institutional Contexts
Katherine Gallagher, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
30-4
THE ONCE AND FUTURE STUDY OF CITY POLITICS:
OVERCOMING THE MALAISE ABOUT THEORY
David Imbroscio, University of Louisville
Chair:
Niambi M. Carter, Purdue University
Kathleen A. Bratton, Louisiana State University
Reconsidering the Pluralist Keyboard: Returning to a
Prematurely Foreclosed Debate
Clarence N. Stone, The George Washington University
31-15
The Neoliberal City After the Collapse of Neoliberalism
Jason Hackworth, University of Toronto
Chair:
WOMEN IN MOTION: ADVANCES AND SETBACKS IN
IMPLEMENTING WOMEN’S RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 45-4
Shannon Drysdale Walsh, University of Notre Dame
Challenging Theoretic Orthodoxies in the Study of City Politics
David Imbroscio, University of Louisville
Papers:
Women’s Rights, Informal Institutions and Ombudsman
Autonomy in the Central Andes
Vilma C. Balmaceda, Ph.D., Nyack College
A Turning Point for Cities?
J. Phillip Thompson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
297
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Disc:
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Implementing Women’s Rights to be Free from Violence in
Central America
Shannon Drysdale Walsh, University of Notre Dame
The Congressional Elections of 2006 and 2008
Stephen D. Ansolabehere, Harvard University
Presidential Cabinet Formation and Party-Building
Harold F. Bass, Ouachita Baptist University
Who Shall Speak For Me? Women Leaders and the Rights of
Women
Karen L. Mitchell, Ottawa University
The Problem of Ideology
John R. Zaller, University of California, Los Angeles
Women’s Rights, Citizenship Rights, and the “Other”
Laura Roost, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Political Regimes Matter in “Abeyance Times”: Feminist
Organizing in Franco’s Spain (1930s-1975)
Celia Valiente, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Disc:
Shawna E. Sweeney, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
32-1
RACE, RACISMS, XENOPHOBIA AND POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 5-1
Gladys Mitchell, Duke University
Chair:
Papers:
Continuity and Change in the Study of Congress
David W. Brady, Stanford University
36-3
ELECTORAL REFORM, VOTING TECHNOLOGY, AND
EQUAL ACCESS
Co-sponsored by 29-8
36-13
Chair:
MONEY IN AMERICAN ELECTIONS
Richard M. Skinner, Bowdoin College
Papers:
Hey, Big Spender! Gender and the Financing of Congressional
Challengers
Sarah Fulton, Texas A&M University
Cherokee Freedmen: Racism and Citizenship in Tribal Societies
Donna C. Langston, University of Colorado, Denver
The Hidden Gatekeepers: Early-Money in Congressional
Campaigns
Melissa Ann Bell, University of Maryland
James M. Curry, University of Maryland
Kimberly A. Karnes, University of Maryland
Polemics, Political Racism, and Misrecognition: Naming and
Analyzing Prejudice Against Arab-Americans
Emily Wills, New School University
Racial Bias by Another Name: Anti-Muslim Attitudes and Voting
Against Barack Obama
David P. Redlawsk, University of Iowa
The Fifth Source and the Ballot Box: Public Money, Candidate
Time, and Changing American Elections
Michael G. Miller, Cornell University
The Added Value of Explicit Racial Resentment: A Comparison
of Old and New Concepts and Measures
David C. Wilson, University of Delaware
Darren Davis, University of Notre Dame
Disc:
Gladys Mitchell, Duke University
32-16
ELECTED OFFICIALS AT THE INTERSECTION OF
GENDER AND RACE
Co-sponsored by 31-4
34-8
Chair:
REPRESENTATION AND LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR
Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter
Papers:
Electoral System and Committee Assignment in the German
Bundestag
Dominic Heinz, University of Hagen
The Effects of Early Voting on Congressional Campaign
Expenditures: 1980-2004
Robert M. Stein, Rice University
Disc:
Dino P. Christenson, The Ohio State University
36-27
VOTERS IN SPACE: SPATIAL MODELS OF VOTING
AND ELECTIONS
James Adams, University of California, Davis
Chair:
Papers:
Activists, Issues, and Medians:Bringing Data to Downsian
Puzzles
Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley
Kay Lehman Schlozman, Boston College
Sidney Verba, Harvard University
The Distinct Effect of Electoral Systems and Candidate Selection
Procedures on Legislators’ Behavior
Yael Shomer, Washington University in St. Louis
Faulty Recommendations? Party Positions in Online Voting
Advice Applications
Markus Wagner, London School of Economics
Outi Ruusuvirta, London School of Economics and Political
Science
Legislators and Representational Roles. Habits of the Heart or
Strategic Choices?
Thomas Zittel, Cornell University
District Magnitude and Legislators’ Personal Vote-Seeking
Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Audrey Ann André, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Kris Deschouwer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Vote for Me: The Conditional Effects of Electoral Systems on
Personal Vote-Seeking
Burt L. Monroe, Pennsylvania State University
Eitan Tzelgov, Pennsylvania State University
Disc:
Steven J. Brams, New York University
35-8
THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF NELSON W. POLSBY
Co-sponsored by 7-20
Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Chair:
Papers:
298
The Divided Democrats Revisited: Ideological Cohesion in the
American Party System, 1996-2008
William G. Mayer, Northeastern University
Issue Proximity and Priority in the 2008 Presidential Election
Walter J. Stone, University of California, Davis
Ronald B. Rapoport, College of William & Mary
Empirical Tests of Canonical Theories of Party Platforms in
Spatial Competition
Jon Rogowski, University of Chicago
Testing the Foundations of Spatial Voting in the 2008
Presidential Election
Stephen Jessee, University of Texas
Disc:
James Adams, University of California, Davis
37-5
NEW APPROACHES TO STUDYING PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 8-5
37-13
PRESIDENCY AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 23-17
Steven E. Schier, Carleton College
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Who Really Leads Whom? Leadership and Responsiveness
Among Multiple Publics in Reagan’s Central America Policy
Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston
Fighting to Win: Major Wars and the American Public
Andrew H. Sidman, CUNY, John Jay College
Helmut Norpoth, SUNY, Stony Brook
A Tale of Two Wars: Public Opinion on the U.S. Military
Interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq
Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San Diego
Ken Mulligan, Southern Illinois University
39-4
ADAPTING TO OR AVOIDING DOOMSDAY: DEALING
WITH CLIMATE CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 25-24
Leigh S. Raymond, Purdue University
Chair:
Papers:
Climate Change: From Mitigation to Adaptation
Wolfgang Brauner, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
When Things are Fully Expected to Fall Apart: Preemptive
State-Building and the New Politics of Global Climate Change
Jennifer W. Howk, Harvard University
Presidential Saber Rattling and Public Approval
B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University
Doomsday Thinking: Applying Terror Management Theory to
Climate Change Beliefs and Policy Preferences
Kristy E.H. Michaud, California State University, Northridge
Danny Hayes, Syracuse University
Steven E. Schier, Carleton College
37-26
COMMUNICATION AND POLITICAL SUPPORT
Co-sponsored by 38-8
38-4
FRAMING EXPERIMENTS IN THE 2008 PRESIDENTIAL
CAMPAIGN
Ann N. Crigler, University of Southern California
Papers:
Disc:
Biased Partisans or Rational Updaters? How Ordinary Citizens
Update Their Evaluations of the President
Ben Highton, University of California, Davis
Disc:
Chair:
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Bandwagon and Underdog Effects in the 2008 Presidential
Primary Campaign: A Survey Experiment
Matthew A. Baum, Harvard University
Marion R. Just, Wellesley College
How News Coverage of Ads Conditions the Effectiveness of
Campaign Ads
Richard R. Lau, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
John G. Geer, Vanderbilt University
Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles
The Role of Race and Age in 2008: A Series of List
Experiments
Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University
Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles
Climate Change and Social Distress
Brian K. Min, University of California, Los Angeles
Miriam A. Golden, University of California, Los Angeles
Disc:
So Young Kim, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and
Technology
42-9
Chair:
MARX AND THE CURRENT CRISIS
John Ehrenberg, Long Island University
Part:
Stephen Eric Bronner, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Leo Panitch, York University
Craig Steven Wilder, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Christine A. Kelly, William Paterson University
Adolph L. Reed, Jr., University of Pennsylvania
43-10
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT AND THE FATE OF
LIBERAL DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by 18-40
Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University
Chair:
Papers:
Emotions and Horserace Framing: Studying the Effects of
Anxiety and Reassurance on Partisan Identifiers
Ann N. Crigler, University of Southern California
Jesse John Mills, University of Southern California
War, Recruitment Systems, and Democracy
Deborah Avant, University of California, Irvine
The Effects of War on Civil Society: Cross-National Evidence
from World War II
Rieko Kage, University of Tokyo
What Drives Economic Voting? An Experimental Study
Joel A. Middleton, Yale University
War and Reform: Gaining Labor’s Compliance on the Homefront
Elizabeth Kier, University of Washington
Disc:
Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
38-8
COMMUNICATION AND POLITICAL SUPPORT
Co-sponsored by 37-26
Ken Mulligan, Southern Illinois University
International Conflict and the Constitutional Balance: Executive
Authority after War
Ronald R. Krebs, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University
DEMOCRATIZATION AND ETHNIC MINORITIES:
CONFLICT, PROTECTION, AND ACCOMMODATION
Co-sponsored by 11-41
44-7
The Arc of Resonance: Hurricane Katrina and its Metaphoric
Aftermath
Andrew Rojecki, University of Illinois, Chicago
AUTHORITARIAN REGIME BUILDING AND
BREAKDOWN IN POST-SOVIET EURASIA
Co-sponsored by 13-7
45-4
The Effects of Patriotic Messages in the Mass Media After the
Election of Barack Obama
Laura Roselle, Elon University
WOMEN IN MOTION: ADVANCES AND SETBACKS IN
IMPLEMENTING WOMEN’S RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 31-15
46-4
Chair:
ETHNOGRAPHIC METHODS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:
WHAT DIFFERENCE CAN THEY MAKE?
Edward Schatz, University of Toronto at Mississauga
Disc:
Dvora Yanow, Vrije Universiteit
Part:
Calvin Chen, Mount Holyoke College
The End of Alienation? The Rise of Political Trust and Efficacy
in the United States
Priscilla L. Southwell, University of Oregon
Immigration and Government Support in Britain
Lauren M. McLaren, University of Nottingham
Matthew Lebo, SUNY, Stony Brook
299
Daily Schedule
44-2
Is National Diversity Under Threat? Cosmopolitan
Communications and Cultural Convergence
Pippa Norris, Harvard University
Ronald Inglehart, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Timothy Pachirat, New School University
Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University
Edward Schatz, University of Toronto at Mississauga
46-23
Chair:
CONSTRUCTING CROSS-NATIONAL DATASETS:
CHALLENGES AND LESSONS
Co-sponsored by 8-19
Andreas Schedler, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia
Economicas
Daily Schedule
Do Regional Powers Export their Political Regimes? Comparing
China, India and Russia
Julia Bader, German Development Institute
Redistributive Politics and Public Expenditures on Education in
Latin America
Christian Ponce de Leon, University of Chicago
Ethnic Headcounts in Patronage Democracies: Experimental
Evidence from India
Mark A. Schneider, Columbia University
Simon Chauchard, New York University
Disc:
Jose Antonio Cheibub, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Islam and Christianity as Sources of Political Orientations
Toward Democracy in Nigeria: Complex Causal Relations and
Moving Beyond Political Culture
Brandon Kendhammer, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Part:
Amy R. Poteete, Concordia University
Ronald A. Francisco, University of Kansas
Monty G. Marshall, George Mason University
Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University
Wolfgang Merkel, WZB
The Rise and Fall of Political Rights of Resident Aliens: A
Comparative Study of the US and Japan during the First Wave
of International Migration (the 1860s to 1945)
Choong Hoon Lee, New School for Social Research
47-7
THEME ROUNDTABLE: JUST HOW DIFFERENT?
SEXUAL POLITICS IN CANADA AND THE UNITED
STATES
Co-sponsored by T-11
Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont
Chair:
Part:
Miriam Smith, York University
David Rayside, University of Toronto
Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University
Rinaldo Walcott, University of Toronto
49-1
CANADIAN COURTS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 26-12
Poster Sessions
POSTER SESSION 6
Divisions 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 45, and 49
Papers: Attitudes Toward Inequality Amid Economic Globalization: A
Comparative Study Across Five Countries
Paul R. Viotti, Jr., California State University, Chico
Alessandra Cassar, University of San Francisco
Framing Income Inequality: The Politics of Growth and
Redistribution
JongWan Baik, New School of Social Research
Income Inequality, Redistribution & Preference Aggregation: The
Role of Electoral Institutions
Oliver Pamp, University of Bremen
Phillip Mohl, Free University Berlin
Infrastructural Power as Boundary-Work, or What it Really
Means to be a Strong State
Matthias Staisch, University of Chicago
Young-hwa (Diana) Kim, University of Chicago
Comparing Apples without Juxtaposing Oranges: Linking
Democratic Practices with Civic Engagement in European PostCommunist Countries
Nikolay Valkov, Universite de Montreal
Which Repressive Counterterrorism Strategies do Democracies
Use?
Dominick E. Wright, University of Michigan
Measuring Challenges to Healthcare System Reform: A Global
Index of Healthcare Financing
Ivailo M Kotzev, University of Connecticut
Lyle A. Scruggs, University of Connecticut
Sanctioning, Clientelism and Ethnic Parties: The Impact of
Ethnicity on Primary and Secondary Education in Africa
Anke Weber, University of Zurich
300
How do Heterogeneity in Preferences for Redistribution and
Political Party Structure Affect Government Social Policy?
Elvire Guillaud, University of Paris I
Bruno Amable, University of Paris I
Donatella Gatti, CEPREMAP
The Warrior’s Curse: Militarized Minorities, Democratic
Transitions, and Ethnic Conflict
Subhasish Ray, University of Rochester
Ethnic-Cultural Diversity, Regimes of Minority Integration and
Social Cohesion in Europe. Investigating the Conditional Effects
of Immigration on Social Trust
Tim Reeskens, KU Leuven
Defenders of the Regime: How Revolutions Succeed when the
Military Fails
Marcus Schulzke, University at Albany, SUNY
Specific Skilled Labor and the Demand for Social Insurance
Jeffrey F. Timmons, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de
Mexico
RECOGNIZING ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND POLITICAL
STABILITY
Tolga Sinmazdemir, New York University
The Choice of Electoral Systems in Electoral Autocracies
Arturas Rozenas, Duke University
Informal Institutions Compared – Persistence and Change of
Neopatrimonialism in Various World Regions
Christian von Soest, German Institute of Global and Area
Studies
Do Regional Powers Export their Political Regimes? Comparing
China, India and Russia
Julia Bader, German Development Institute
Conceding Control: The Political Economy of Decentralization in
India
Anjali Thomas Bohlken, New York University
The Discursive Structure of National Pride: A Cross-Country
Comparison
Min Shu, Waseda University
Reo Matsuzaki, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
State-Led Mobilization of Civil Society in the New Democratic
Brazil: Comparative Lessons from Three Brazilian Social
Movements
Jessica Alexis Jolicoeur Rich, University of California,
Berkeley
Taming Authoritarian Rulers? Comparing the Non-Violent
Resistance Movements in Three Sub-Saharan Africa Countries:
Kenya, Liberia, and Sierra Leone
Robert Press, University of Southern Mississippi
Daily Schedule
Local Demand for a Global Intervention: Public Policy Priorities
in the Time of AIDS
Kim Yi Dionne, University of California, Los Angeles
Securitizing HIV/AIDS
Megan H. MacKenzie
Reviewing and Reassessing the Problem of HIV/AIDS
Anna Persson, University of California, Los Angeles
Martin Sjostedt, Goteborg University
Tlhopha Sentle! By-elections in Botswana
Charles W. Gossett, California State Polytechnic University,
Pomona
Understanding Social Movements in Contemporary China
Bo Ma, CUNY Graduate Center
Hegemonic Challenge and Democratization: Theory and the Case
of China
Nori Katagiri, University of Pennsylvania
Coalitions for Party System Change: Cape Town in a Dominant
Party System
Danielle Langfield, Ohio State University
Reigning in the Big Men?: The Politics of Executive Constraints
in Sub-Saharan Africa
Kristin A. McKie, Cornell University
Holding Representatives Accountable in Africa - For What?:
Evidence from Ghana
Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Florida
Testing How Ideology Matters: Globalism, Dependency, and
Regressive Taxation in Latin America’s Post Washington
Consensus
Mark R. Hibben, Syracuse University
Flat Taxes and Policy Change in Slovakia and the Czech
Republic
Joseph M. Ellis, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Organization and the Politics of Difference: Social Policy
Regimes and Nonwhite Civil Society in New York City and
London
Michael Javen Fortner, Harvard University
United in Diversity: Support for European Institutions among
Europe’s Ethnic Minorities
Kathleen M. Dowley, SUNY, New Paltz
Brian D. Silver, Michigan State University
Andrew Moravcsik, Princeton University
Comparative Analysis of French and British Public Opinion on
the EU in the Post-Maastricht Era
Pierre Philippe Balestrini, University of Surrey
Parliamentary Party Group Discipline in Comparison
Stefanie Bailer, University of Zurich
How Ideas Matter: The Neoclassical Synthesis, Economists and
Normpolitik in Spain’s Economic Transition
Cornel Ban, University of Maryland
Imminent Secession in the North Sea Region: the Cases of
Faroe, Shetland, and Orkney
Britt Ashton Cartrite, Alma College
Who Do Democracies Comply with Human Rights Judgements?
A Comparative Analysis of UK, Germany, and Ireland
Basak Cali, University College London
Alice Wyss, University College London
The Ties that Bind: A Network Analysis of Human Rights
INGOs
Amanda Marie Murdie, Emory University
David R. Davis, Emory University
David Brewington, Emory University
The Dark Side of the Band of Brothers: Explaining Variance in
War Crimes
Christi Leigh Siver, University of Washington
Taxation and State Legitimacy: Explaining Differential Tax
Outcomes in Developing Countries
Michelle D’Arcy, University College, Dublin
Democratization and Human Rights, A Spurious Correlation?:
The Role of International Regines on Democratization and
Human Rights Improvement
Youngsoo Yu, Binghamton University, SUNY
Underground Markets in North Korea
Hyung-Min Joo, Korea University
Change and Continuity in Recent Canadian General Elections
Tony L. Hill, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Pirates: Cause or Consequence of Civil War
Chelsea Denise Brown, Southern Methodist University
Shelby Bishop, Southern Methodist University
Lovable Losers or Forgettable Failures? Unsuccessful Leadership
Candidates for Federal and Provincial Parties in Canada, 19502007
J.P. Lewis, Carleton University
The Effect of Supranational Identity on Political Interest and
Efficacy in Divided Societies
Ryan Kennedy, University of Houston
Ethnic Territorial Autonomy and Post-Soviet Ethnic Political
Mobilization
David J. Meyer, George Fox University
The Strengths of Weakness: State Failure, Weak Civil Society,
and (the absence of) Transitional Violence
John G. Gledhill, London School of Economics and Political
Science
Repression and Redistribution Under Authoritarianism: A
Comparison of China and Eastern Europe
Martin Dimitrov, Dartmouth College
Nothing to Gain But Your Chains: Popular Support for
Authoritarianism in the Former Soviet Union
Robert Person, Yale University
Oil, Labor Flows, and Democratization
David H. Bearce, University of Pittsburgh
Jennifer Ann Laks, Univeristy of Pittsburgh
The Contemporary Russian Form of Government in the Context
of Political Engineering of the World
Oleg Zaznaev, Kazan State University
Civil Society and Regime Duration in Authoritarian Countries
Jessica C. Teets, University of Colorado, Boulder
Susumu Suzuki, Wayne State University
Strategic Government Spending and Legislative Fragmentation:
Evidence and Lesson from Pre- and Post-Democratization South
Korea and Taiwan
O. Fiona Yap, University of Kansas
Regimes Longevity: A Comparative Analysis
Abdel-Fattah Mady, Alexandria University
Continuity and Change in Nationality Laws and Citizenship
Policies
Willem Maas, Glendon College, York University
Governing Civil Society in Contemporary China: Adapting
Revolutionary Methods to Serve Post-Communist Goals
Nara Dillon, Harvard University
Large Party Collapse: A Preliminary Investigation
Jennifer K. Smith, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Nested Games and One-Party Dominance: Re-examining United
Malay National Organization’s (UMNO) One-Party Dominance
in Malaysia
Thiam Chye Tay, University of California, Los Angeles
301
Daily Schedule
To Have is To Be: Social Stratification in Post-Communist
Eastern Europe
Aleksander Lust, Cornell University
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Xenophobia and Immigrant Contact: British Public Attitudes
Toward Immigrants
Seth Kincaid Jolly, Syracuse University
The Leadership Variable in Africa: Situating Structure and
Agency in Governance Trajectories
Peter A. VonDoepp, University of Vermont
Mexico’s Electoral Legislation After the Crisis of 2006: An
Undemocratic Reform?
Gilles Serra, Oxford University
Personalism without Neopatrimonialism: A ‘crucial case study’
of leadership and civil society in an African democracy
Parakh Hoon, Virginia Tech
Socioeconomic Resources and the Civilized State: A Study of
Education, Political Trust, and Political Liberalization in Urban
China
Diqing Lou, Rider University
Disc:
Carl LeVan, American University
British Politics Group
Immigrant Integration vs. Transnational Ties? The Role of the
Sending State
Alexandra Delano, The New School
Panel 2
Chair:
POLITICS IN SCOTLAND AND QUEBEC
Terrence Casey, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
Why Violence Stopped: Administrative Boundary Revision in
Indonesia
Risa J. Toha, University of California, Los Angeles
Papers:
Intergovernmental Relations and the Scottish National Party
Paul Cairney, University of Aberdeen
Political Connection and Firms’ Performance: The Case of Hong
Kong
Stan Hok-Wui Wong, Chinese University of Hong Kong
The Devolution Debate About Co-Payment: Reality or
Reflection?
John Kevin Curtice, University of Strathclyde
Stratos Patrikios, University of Strathclyde
Regime Responsiveness and the (In-)Stability of Authoritarian
Regimes
Daniel Lambach, University of Duisburg-Essen
Christian Göbel, University of Duisburg-Essen
The Party of Scottish Nationalisms: Differences of Identity and
Opinion Among SNP Members
Robert Johns, University of Strathclyde
James Mitchell, University of Strathclyde
Demos Conceptions in Liberia - The Limits of Citizenship
Among Ex-combatants
Johanna Söderström, Uppsala University
The Legislative Strategy of Separatist Parties.
Clare Joanna McGovern, University of British Columbia
Referendums in Scotland and in Quebec
Jean A. Laponce, University of British Columbia
Old Laws, New Strategies: Continuity and Change in the Labor
Politics of Brazil and Mexico
Andra Olivia Miljanic, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Winning Elections the Democratic Way: Political Parties and
Internal Party Democracy in Post-Communist Europe
Maria Spirova, Leiden University
Center for the Study of Federalism
Insitutional Power and Democracy in the Post-Communist
Region
Magda Giurcanu, University of Florida
Fluid Party Systems, Social Spending, and Inequality: The
Democracy-Inequality Paradox in Southern and Postcommunist
Europe
Ekrem Karakoc, Pennsylvania State University
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
Mark P. Shephard, University of Strathclyde
Melissa A. Haussman, Carleton University
DO WE NEED A NEW ACIR: REFLECTIONS ON THE
50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE U.S. ACIR
Co-sponsored by 28-9
Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of Pennsylvania
The Next Intergovernmental Management Agenda
Bruce D. McDowell, National Academy of Public
Administration
Lack of a Shared Perception of the Terrorist Threat Among EU
Member States
Oldrich Bures, Metropolitan University Prague
Is There a Futrure for a New ACIR?
Carl W. Stenberg, III, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Compliance and International Human Rights Tribunals: Costly
Signals and Credible Commitments
Courtney Hillebrecht, University of Wisconsin, Madison
The State of the State ACIRS
Richard L. Cole, University of Texas, Arlington
Revive ACIR? - Yes and No
Richard P. Nathan, Rockefeller Institute of Government
Minsk to Beijing: Eurasian Political Trajectories
Theodor Tudoroiu, Universite de Montreal-McGill University
State Capacity as a Pillar for Democracy: A Test Using 26 PostCommunist Countrie
Jessica Fortin, McGill University
Being All She Can Be: Gender Integration in NATO Military
Forces
Lana Obradovic, Yonsei University
Related Group Panels
The U.S. ACIR: Killed by Partisan, Coercive Federalism
John Kincaid, Lafayette College
Disc:
Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of Pennsylvania
Center for the Study of the Constitution
Panel 1
Chair:
JUDICIAL RESTRAINT AND POLITICAL CHANGE:
FIERCE OPPONENTS OR FELLOW TRAVELERS?
Matthew J. Franck, Radford University
African Politics Conference Group
Panel 2
Chair:
Papers:
302
AFRICAN LEADERSHIP ROLES AND THE ROLE OF
THE CIVIC IN A CONTEXT OF POLITICAL CHANGE
Bruce A. Magnusson, Whitman College
The Ravalomanana Reforms and the Efficacy of Civic Oversight
in Madagascar
Richard R. Marcus, California State University, Long Beach
Papers:
19th Century Judicial Restraint: the Curious Case of Barron v.
Baltimore
William Geisler, University of Dallas
Who’s In Charge Here? Luther v. Borden and the Political
Questions Doctrine
Warner R. Winborne, Hampden-Sydney College
Edward Corwin, Judicial Review, and the Death of Judicial
Restraint
Matthew J. Franck, Radford University
Daily Schedule
Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
William Petropulos, Eric Voegelin Archive, Munich
Strict Construction in Historical Perspective
Joseph H. Lane, Jr., Emory & Henry College
Disc:
Dennis J. Goldford, Drake University
Jack W. Nowlin, University of Mississippi
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Panel 10 LEO STRAUSS’S ‘WHAT IS POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY?’: 50TH ANNIVERSARY
Chair:
Ronald J. Pestritto, Jr., Hillsdale College
Part:
Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College
Daniel Tanguay, University of Ottawa
Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame
James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia
Committee on Political Sociology
Panel 1
Papers:
PARTY ORGANIZATIONS AND THE CHALLENGE OF
“DEMOCRATIZATION”
Party organization malaise in established democracies.
Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna
Disc:
Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna
Part:
Rachel K. Gibson, University of Manchester
Anika Gauja, University of Sydney
Laurent Olivier, université nancy 2
Conference Group on the Middle East
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
POLITICAL REFORM IN THE MIDDLE EAST:
CONTEXTS, DILEMMAS, CASES
Augustus Richard Norton, Boston University
Political Reform for Saudi Women: An Intersection of Political
Opportunism and Conservative Politics
Toby C. Jones, Rutgers University
Pod Casts, Ramadan Soaps and Talk Shows: Religious and
Secular Identity in Syria and Morocco
Evelyn A. Early, Air University - Air War College
Papers:
Policy Studies Organization
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
’AS IF THERE REALLY WAS A WORLD OUT THERE’:
APPLICATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY TO GLOBAL
CHALLENGES
David Mena Aleman, Universidad Iberoamericana
Applying Schmitt to Global Puzzles
Emma R. Norman, Universidad de las Américas, Puebla
Global and Regional Governance from Southern Perspectives
Thomas Legler, Universidad Iberoamericana
Would ‘Global Republicanism’ be a better Republicanism than
the One we Have
David Mena Aleman, Universidad Iberoamericana
Legal-constructivism and Crisis Management: a study of three
cases in the European Union
Rebecka Villanueva Ulfgard, Instituto Mora, México City
Cosmopolitan theory meets Constructivism: a new framework for
Cultural and Public Diplomacy
Cesar Villanueva Rivas, Universidad Iberoamericana
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
APSA Meetings
APSA Events
MEET THE APSA OFFICERS AND 2010 COUNCIL NOMINEES
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 1
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 1
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
Governing Areas of Dissidence:Nation-Building and Ethnic
Movements in Turkey and Morocco
Senem Aslan, Princeton University
SESSION 1
MYSTICISM AND POLITICS IN VOEGELIN’S
PHILOSOPHY
Ellis Sandoz, Louisiana State University
William James’ Pure Experience and the Creative Potential of
the Metaxy
Macon W. Boczek, Kent State University
Plato as Mystic Philosopher: The Voegelin – Strauss Impasse
Henrik Syse, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)
Voegelin and Basil of Caesarea’s Teaching on Discernment
Anne Gordon Keidel, Boston College
How Far Is It from Voegelin’s Reflective Distance to Mysticism?
Peter Von Sivers, University of Utah
Glenn Hughes, St. Mary’s University, San Antonio
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 1
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 1
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 1
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 1
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 1
303
Daily Schedule
Joachim of Fiore and Gnosticism
Matthias Riedl, Central European University
Disc:
THE NEW POLITICS OF ECONOMIC POLICY MAKING
IN JAPAN
Co-sponsored by 6-21
SESSION 1
Eric Voegelin Society
Chair:
Panel 2
Role of Education in Building Peace: The Case of Somalia
Afyare A. Elmi, University of Alberta
Sectarianism from Below: Youth Politics and Communal Conflict
in Lebanon.
Elinor Bray-Collins, University of Toronto
Panel 1
Japan Political Studies Group
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 1
SESSION 1
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 2
SESSION 1
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
Friday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM
APSA Meetings
APSA Events
PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Private event for the Perspectives Editorial Board.
SESSION 1
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
SESSION 1
APSA Panel
SESSION 2
APSA Departmental Services Committee
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
WORKSHOP FOR DEPARTMENT CHAIRS: AFTER THE
ECONOMIC CRASH: LEADING THE DISCIPLINE IN A TIME OF
TRANSFORMATION
Pre-registration is required. Register by sending an e-mail to
[email protected].
Part:
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
Thomas R. Rochon, Ithaca College
Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley
Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Education
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Friday, 12:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
Affiliate Group Meetings
SESSION 1
National Conference of Black Political Scientists
SESSION 2
MEETING
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
Friday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM
Affiliate Group Meetings
American Politics Research
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 1
Political Networks
SESSION 2
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
Southern Political Science Association
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
COUNCIL MEETING
Theory and Event
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Western Political Science Association
SESSION 1
Related Group Meetings
SESSION 2
African Politics Conference Group
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 1
2010 PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEETING
BUSINESS MEETING
Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 2
French Politics Group
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 1
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 2
Section Business Meetings
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
304
Green Politics and Theory
6
Political Economy
BUSINESS MEETING
24 Public Administration
BUSINESS MEETING
Daily Schedule
Friday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
32 Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
SESSION 1
31 Women and Politics Research Section
BUSINESS MEETING
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
35 Political Organizations and Parties
SESSION 1
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
39 Science, Technology and Environmental Politics
SESSION 1
34 Representation and Electoral Systems
BUSINESS MEETING
41 Politics, Literature and Film Section
BUSINESS MEETING
43 International History and Politics
BUSINESS MEETING
47 Sexuality and Politics
Friday, 12:15 PM to 2:00 PM
Affiliate Group Meetings
Journal of Democracy
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
BUSINESS MEETING
Friday, 12:30 PM to 2:00 PM
Friday, 12:15 PM to 1:45 PM
Related Group Meetings
APSA Panel
Aging Policy and Politics Group
APSA Events
PLENARY SESSION: BARACK OBAMA: THE POLITICS OF
CHANGE
Chair:
Larry M. Bartels, Princeton University
Part:
Glenn C. Loury, Brown University
Theda Skocpol, Harvard University
Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania
AGING POLITICS AND POLICY GROUP DUTCH-TREAT
BUSINESS LUNCHEON
Luncheon will be held at Azure Restaurant, located in the
InterContinental Hotel
Friday, 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM
APSA Meetings
APSA Events
MINORITY STUDENT RECRUITMENT PROGRAM MEETING
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 1
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 1
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
SESSION 1
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 1
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 1
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 1
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 1
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 1
SESSION 1
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 1
SESSION 1
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 1
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
SESSION 1
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 1
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 1
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 1
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 1
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 1
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 1
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 1
305
Daily Schedule
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
Friday, 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
Daily Schedule
1-6
SESSION 1
TOCQUEVILLE’S VIEWS ON AMERICA AFTER 1840:
WHAT WOULD THE THIRD VOLUME OF
“DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA” HAVE LOOKED LIKE
HAD IT EVER BEEN WRITTEN?
Co-sponsored by 2-3
James T. Schleifer, College of New Rochelle
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
Chair:
SESSION 1
Disc:
Aurelian Craiutu, Indiana University
Jeremy R Jennings, University of London, Queen Mary
College
Part:
Jennifer Pitts, University of Chicago
James Farr, Northwestern University
Cheryl B. Welch, Harvard University
1-13
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE: “THE WEST” AS CATEGORY AND
CONCEPT
Chandran Kukathas, London School of Economics
APSA Panel
Disc:
Leigh K. Jenco, National University of Singapore
APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession
Part:
Delia Alexandru Popescu, LeMoyne College
Juliet Hooker, University of Texas, Austin
Shirin S. Deylami, Western Washington University
1-28
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY APPLIED:
CHANGE AND HYBRIDITY IN THE STUDY OF
POLITICAL THOUGHT
Mohammad H. Fadel, University of Toronto
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 1
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
APSA Meetings
APSA Events
APSR EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Panel 1
Part:
NEW DIRECTIONS IN LATINO POLITICS RESEARCH
Francisco I. Pedraza, University of Washington
Adrian Felix, University of Southern California
Ricardo Ramirez, University of Southern California
Christina Elizabeth Bejarano, University of Kansas
APSA Events
THE 40TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE APSA MINORITY
FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM: PROMOTING SCHOLARSHIP AND
DIVERSITY
*With special comments from Dr. Jewel Prestage, Prairie
View A&M University, and additional APSA Minority Fellow
Alumni
Part:
Matthew B. Platt, Harvard University
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley
Maurice C. Woodard, Howard University
Tony Affigne, Providence College
Joseph S. Brown, Baylor University
Mae C. King, Howard University
Sherri L. Wallace, University of Louisville
Chair:
Papers:
Paradoxes of Popular Sovereignty in Comparative Perspective
Paulina Ochoa Espejo, Yale University
Taking People as They Are: Fitra in Modern Islamic Moral and
Political Theorizing
Andrew F. March, Yale University
Disc:
Mohammad H. Fadel, University of Toronto
2-3
TOCQUEVILLE’S VIEWS ON AMERICA AFTER 1840:
WHAT WOULD THE THIRD VOLUME OF
“DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA” HAVE LOOKED LIKE
HAD IT EVER BEEN WRITTEN?
Co-sponsored by 1-6
2-12
POLITICAL THEORY TODAY: RESULTS AND
IMPLICATIONS OF A NATIONAL SURVEY
Matthew J. Moore, California Polytechnic State University,
San Luis Obispo
APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning
Panel 1
Chair:
Part:
IS THE NEXT GENERATION OF POLITICAL
SCIENTISTS PREPARED? DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES
FROM THE DISCIPLINE
Terry M. Moe, Stanford University
Elizabeth Beaumont, University of Minnesota
Susan E. Clarke, University of Colorado
Luis Ricardo Fraga, University of Washington
Paula D. McClain, Duke University
Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine
Chair:
Part:
Jodi Dean, Hobart & William Smith Colleges
Martha A. Ackelsberg, Smith College
Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Matthew J. Moore, California Polytechnic State University,
San Luis Obispo
2-27
Chair:
ENCOUNTERING THE OTHER
Fred R. Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame
Papers:
In Love and Out of Sorts: Anticolonial Subjects and the
Timescapes of Their Politics
Asma Abbas, Bard College at Simon’s Rock
Division Panels
T-14
THEME PANEL: THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE
‘FRENCH MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN ETHNIC
AND RACIAL POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 1 and 32-10
T-15
THEME PANEL: RETHINKING STATE POLICY
DIFFUSION
Co-sponsored by 29-2 and 25-19
T-16
THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 31-9 and 32-18
306
Fear and Fearlessness in Gandhi and Fanon
Brandon M. Terry, Yale University
Otherness, Canonicity and Comparative Political Theory
Hassan Bashir, Texas A&M University at Qatar
Travel, Geopolitics, and Borders: Excavating Territorial
Attachments across the Arab/Israeli Frontier
Waleed Hazbun, Johns Hopkins University
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Matthew Scherer, Johns Hopkins University
Lasse Thomassen, Queen Mary, University of London
2-42
Chair:
THE RULE OF LAW IN TIMES OF EMERGENCY
Jeffrey K. Tulis, University of Texas, Austin
Papers:
For the Good of the People
Ross J. Corbett, Northern Illinois University
Filling the Void: Deliberation and the Legitimization of ExtraLegal Powers
Clement Fatovic, Florida International University
Separation of Powers and the National Security State
Benjamin A. Kleinerman, Michigan State University
Disc:
Jeffrey K. Tulis, University of Texas, Austin
3-5
WHEN ARE CITIZENS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE
ACTIONS OF THE STATE?
John Francis Burke, University of St. Thomas
Chair:
Papers:
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
“Folk Realism” and Political Knowledge: Realism in LowInformation Foreign Policy Contexts
Joshua Kertzer, Ohio State University
Kathleen McGraw, Ohio State University
Candidate Inconsistency and Voter Choice
Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University
Robert Van Houweling, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University
Peter Enns, Cornell University
5-11
Chair:
PERSONALITY AND POLITICS
Dona-Gene Mitchell, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Papers:
When Framing Matters: Emotional, Cognitive, and Partisan
Cues’ Influence on Political Attitudes
Michael W. Wagner, University of Nebraska
The Nature of Civic Duty: Political Science, Life Science and
the Determinants of Juror Satisfaction
Jeffery Mondak, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Andrew J. Bloeser, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Carl McCurley, Washington State Center for Court Research
Taking Citizens Seriously as Responsible Political Agents
Farid Abdel-Nour, San Diego State University
Global Citizenship with Civic Responsibility
Jun-Hyeok Kwak, Korea University
Personality, Politics, and Academia
Alan Gerber, Yale University
Gregory Huber, Yale University
David Doherty, Yale University
Conor M. Dowling, Yale University
Accounting for Political Catastrophe
Catherine Lu, McGill University
A Responsibility to Know: Challenging the “I didn’t know that
was racist” Ignorance of White Supremacy
Vincent Jungkunz, Ohio University
Julie A. White, Ohio University
Disc:
Steven J. Vanderheiden, University of Colorado, Boulder
3-15
CAN COSMOPOLITANISM CO-EXIST WITH THE
NATION-STATE?
Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine
Chair:
Papers:
Genes, Personality and Politics
Bradley Verhulst, Stony Brook University
Pete Hatemi, University of Iowa
Lindon J. Eaves, Virginia Commonwealth University
Disc:
Matthew V. Hibbing, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
5-15
IDEOLOGY
Co-sponsored by 37-17
Foundations for a Cosmopolitan Citizenship
Daniele Archibugi, Italian National Research Council
6-18
Chair:
POLITICS OF FISCAL POLICY
Edward C. Page, London School of Economics
Global Solidarity Runs Through the Democratic State Towards
New Global Institutions
Joseph M. Schwartz, Temple University
Papers:
The Politics of Strategic Budgeteering: An Empirical
Investigation of the Fiscal-Political Determinants of Political
Business Cycles
Vera Eva Troeger, University of Essex
Christina J. Schneider, University of California, San Diego
Cosmopolitan Republics: Rethinking Global Democracy with
Hannah Arendt
Lars Peter Rensmann, University of Michigan
Fragmented Legislatures and the Budget: Analyzing Presidential
Democracies
Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University
Beyond Schadenfreude: Liberal Sovereignty and the Nation-State
of Exception
Jacqueline Stevens, University of California, Santa Barbara
Disc:
Julie Mostov, Drexel University
The Politics of Fiscal Performance Around the World
Joachim Wehner, London School of Economics
Paolo de Renzio, University of Oxford
4-9
STRUCTURAL ESTIMATION OF FORMAL MODELS
Co-sponsored by 8-4
5-5
POLITICAL INFORMATION
Co-sponsored by 37-3
Pazit Ben-Nun-Bloom, SUNY, Stony Brook
Fiscal Policies in Canadian Provinces: Convergence or
Divergence?
Oleg Kodolov, Kent State University
Chair:
Deliberation and Learning
Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin
Gaurav Sood, Stanford
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University
Nuri Kim, Stanford University
People Know What They Know: Self-Reported Political
Knowledge on Hot-Button Social Issues
Dean P. Lacy, Dartmouth College
Qian Wang, Dartmouth College
James E. Mahon, Jr., Williams College
7-17
Chair:
INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE COURTS
John D. Skrentny, University of California, San Diego
Papers:
Adversarial Legalism and the Civil Rights State
R. Shep Melnick, Boston College
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Disc:
Institutions, Rulemaking, and the Politics of Judicial
Retrenchment
Sarah Staszak, Brandeis University
307
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Delegation and Democracy: the Legislative Choice between
Administrators and Courts
Sean Farhang, University of California, Berkeley
Morality, Citizenship, and Immigrants’ Ethnic Education in
Japan, the United States, and Sweden
Apichai W. Shipper, University of Southern California
Intercurrence and the Politics of Injury Compensation
Jeb Barnes, University of Southern California
Thomas F. Burke, Wellesley College
Comparing Immigrant Integration Policies in Japan and Korea
Byoungha Lee, Rutgers University
Disc:
Yumiko Mikanagi, Columbia University
Deborah J. Milly, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
STRUCTURAL ESTIMATION OF FORMAL MODELS
Co-sponsored by 4-9
Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester
11-26
A Strategic Statistical Model of Crisis Initiation and Escalation
Justin E. Esarey, Emory University
Chair:
THE NEW COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
LATIN AMERICA: ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION AND
BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 12-6
Sebastian Etchemendy, Torcuato Di Tella University
Electoral and Policy Dynamics in US Politics
Tasos Kalandrakis, University of Rochester
John Duggan, University of Rochester
Papers:
Disc:
Ken I. Kersch, Boston College
8-4
Chair:
Papers:
Daily Schedule
A Structural Model of the 2000 Presidential Election:
Instrumenting for Endogenous Ideology
Guido Cataife, University of Louisville
Jose Fernandez, University of Louisville
Revolution, Reform, and Reinforcement: Latin American
Responses to theGlobalization of Intellectual Property
Kenneth Shadlen, London School of Economics
Assessing Compliance with International Agreements: Structural
Estimation of a Simultaneous-Move Game
Yukari Iwanami, University of Rochester
Disc:
Claire Lim, Stanford University
8-14
Chair:
USING NETWORK ANALYSIS
David Lazer, Harvard University
Papers:
Mapping Mobilization Networks in the Democratizing Color
Revolutions: A New Methodological Approach to the Study of
Contested Elections
Spyridon Kotsovilis, McGill University
A Snowball’s Chance in Nigeria: Combining Random and
Respondent-Driven Sampling to Locate Riot Participants
Alexandra L. Scacco, Columbia University
From Man, the State, and War to Vertices, Networks, and
Change: Relational Ontologies to Understand Complexity in
Politics
David C. Earnest, Old Dominion University
Models of Economic Liberalization: Regime, Power and
Compensation to the Losers in Argentina, Spain, Chile and the
Iberian-American Region
Sebastian Etchemendy, Torcuato Di Tella University
Politics and Diversified Business Groups: Origins, Support, and
Decline.
Ben Ross Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Labor-Market Outsiders and State Expansion: Bridging the Social
Policy Divide in Latin America
Maria Candelaria Garay, University of California, Berkeley
The Rise of Two Lefts in Latin America
Raul L. Madrid, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University
Peter A. Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego
11-27
ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 12-7
M. Steven Fish, University of California, Berkeley
Chair:
Papers:
Network of Interest Groups in Judicial Politics: Using Amicus
Curiae Filing Information to Reveal Informal Structure of
Interaction
Rentaro Iida, Georgetown University
Imperfect Democrats: The Muslim Brotherhood and Egyptian
Democracy
Bruce K. Rutherford, Colgate University
Democracy and Authoritarianism in the Muslim World: An
Overview
Ahmet T. Kuru, San Diego State University
Political Communication Networks
Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago
Islamists and the Democratic Commitment Trap
Nathan Brown, George Washington University
Disc:
David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame
Islam and Democracy in the Post-Soviet States
Kathleen A. Collins, University of Minnesota
11-2
WOMEN, IMMIGRANTS AND LABOR MARKETS:
UNDERSTANDING AND RESPONDING TO LABOR
SHORTAGES AND LOW FERTILITY IN AGING
SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group, Panel 1
Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University
Chair:
Papers:
Maternal Employment and Immigration Policy in Low Fertility
Countries: A Comparison of Japan and Germany
Priscilla A. Lambert, Western Michigan University
Marisha Lecea, Western Michigan University
An Invisible Policy Shift: International Health-Care Migration to
Japan
Gabriele Vogt, German Institute for Japanese Studies
Labor market structures, women’s work, and low fertility
Patricia Boling, Purdue University
308
Paper Stones Redux: The Future of Electoral Islamism
David S. Patel, Cornell University
Disc:
Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University
11-31
PARTY CHANGE: NEW APPROACHES TO OLD
QUESTIONS
Jason Seawright, Northwestern University
Chair:
Papers:
Partyism in New Democracies
Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin
Rules for Dying: Institutions and Party Demise in the Americas
Jennifer Marie Cyr, Northwestern University
Larkin Terrie, Northwestern University
Daily Schedule
The Dynamics of the Party System in Postwar Japan: A
Quantitative Content Analysis of Electoral Pledges and
Manifestos
Michael F. Thies, University of California, Los Angeles
Jonathan B. Slapin, Trinity College, Dublin
Sven-Oliver Proksch, University of Mannheim
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Chair:
Naunihal Singh, University of Notre Dame
Papers:
From Rebels to Soldiers: An Analysis of the Philippine and East
Timorese Policy Integrating Former Moro National Liberation
Front (MNLF) and Falintil Combatants into the Armed Forces
Rosalie Arcala Hall, University of the Philippines in the
Visayas
Feeling Like a Change: Affect and Cognition as Mechanisms for
Anti-Party-System Voting
Jason Seawright, Northwestern University
Transforming a Rebel: Soldiers, Politicians and Post-Conflict
Governance
Devon Curtis, University of Cambridge
Applying New Approaches to Electoral Volatility: East vs. West
Joshua A. Tucker, New York University
Eleanor Neff Powell, Harvard University
Disc:
Pradeep Chhibber, University of California, Berkeley
Masaru Kohno, Waseda University
12-6
THE NEW COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
LATIN AMERICA: ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION AND
BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 11-26
12-7
ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 11-27
12-18
EFFECTING SOCIAL CHANGE IN A GLOBALIZED
ERA: SOCIAL DEMOCRACY, INEQUALITY AND PROPOOR POLICIES
Erik M. Kuhonta, McGill University
Chair:
Papers:
The Politics of Combatant Demobilization in Colombia
Enrique Desmond Arias, CUNY, John Jay College
Gipsy Escobar, CUNY, Graduate Center
The Ecuadorian Army’s Mission Performance: Neglecting a
Porous Border while Policing the Interior
Maiah Jaskoski, Naval Postgraduate School
Accommodate or Antagonize? Left Governments and the
Military in Latin America
Richard T. Hay, Northwestern University
Disc:
Naunihal Singh, University of Notre Dame
13-13
Chair:
INTELLECTUALS IN POLITICS
Eleanor Townsley, Mount Holyoke College
Papers:
Intellectuals in Politics: Reviving Kantian Ethics for 21st
Century Realities
Barbara J. Falk, Canadian Forces College
Is Social Democracy Possible in a Neoliberal Global Order?: A
Comparative Analysis of Asia and Latin America
Simone B. Chun, Suffolk University
The Political Role of Intellectuals in the Revolutions of 1989
Andras Bozoki, Central European University
The Intellectual: A Value-laden Concept
Rebecka Lettevall, Södertörn University College
Welfare States in Global South: What Produces Varying Levels
of Redistributive Commitment?
Anil Mathew Varughese, University of Toronto
Poverty and the Role of Intelligentsia in Qualifying Economic
Liberalism
Umut Korkut, Dogus University
The Politics of Equity-Enhancing Tax Reform in Latin America
Tasha A. Fairfield, University of California, Berkeley
Between the Masses and Power: The Social Place and Role of
Contemporary Intellectuals
Ridvan Edmond Peshkopia, University of Kentucky
Arben Imami, Institute for Political Studies
Divergent Trajectories: Healthcare Reforms in South Korea and
Chile
Illan Nam, Colgate University
Redistributive Spending During Elections in Latin America
George F. Avelino, FGV-SP
Lorena G. Barberia, Fundação Getulio Vargas
Disc:
Eleanor Townsley, Mount Holyoke College
Disc:
James W. McGuire, Wesleyan University
14-3
Chair:
IDEAS AND NORMS IN COMPLEX POLITICAL ORDERS
Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon
12-31
THE POLITICS OF ETHNICITY, SECTARIANISM AND
THE STATE
Paul Kingston, University of Toronto
Papers:
The Comparative Political Economy of Corporate Social
Responsibility Across the OECD: 1977-2007
Daniel Phillip Kinderman, Cornell University
Chair:
Papers:
Sectarianism from Below: Youth Politics and Communal Conflict
in Lebanon.
Elinor Bray-Collins, University of Toronto
“... what the hell do you think you are doing there ...?”
Comparing Politicians’ Practical Theories of Democracy
Jens Borchert, University of Frankfurt
Jürgen Petersen, Goethe University Frankfurt/Main
Religious Succession in a Sectarian State: the Case of Lebanon
Michelle Flores, University of Southern California
The Real But Limited Effects of Ideas on Policy
Johannes Lindvall, University of Oxford
Christianity, Islam and Social Capital in Sub-Saharan Africa
Robert Alfred Dowd, University of Notre Dame
How Ideas Matter: The Neoclassical Synthesis, Economists and
Normpolitik in Spain’s Economic Transition
Cornel Ban, University of Maryland
Bringing Power to Ideational Analysis of Institutional Change
Ronen Mandelkern, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Governing Areas of Dissidence: Nation-Building and Ethnic
Movements in Turkey and Morocco
Senem Aslan, Princeton University
Disc:
Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon
Disc:
Paul Kingston, University of Toronto
14-15
12-42
FROM REBELS TO SOLDIERS: LEGITIMIZING REBELS
AND MILITARIES
Chair:
WELFARE PREFERENCES IN A POST-INDUSTRIAL
ERA
Co-sponsored by 15-5
David Rueda, University of Oxford
309
Daily Schedule
Ethnic Politics and Governance
Rachel M. Gisselquist, Harvard University
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Papers:
Daily Schedule
What Explains Preferences over the Welfare State?
Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam
Fabian Dekker, Erasmus University
17-3
CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN FINANCIAL AND
OTHER INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 16-16
Who are the Outsiders and What do they Want? The Dualization
of Welfare Politics in a Comparative Perspective
Silja Haeusermann, University of Zurich
Hanna Schwander, Institute for Political Scicne
18-5
POST-CIVIL WAR PROCESSES
Co-sponsored by 44-4
Nancy Bermeo, Oxford University
How the Insider-Outsider Cleavage Changes Preferences for Tax
Policies
Achim Kemmerling, Jacobs University Bremen
Chair:
Papers:
The Bureaucratic Theory of Government Growth Revisited: A
Comparatives Study of Fifteen Post-Industrial Economies
Markus Tepe, Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg
Can Development Aid Contribute to Social Cohesion After Civil
War?
Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University
Jeremy M. Weinstein, Stanford University
Bureaucrats and Bankers: An Analysis of Service Workers and
Welfare Preferences
Jane R. Gingrich, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Ben William Ansell, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Disc:
David Rueda, University of Oxford
15-5
WELFARE PREFERENCES IN A POST-INDUSTRIAL
ERA
Co-sponsored by 14-15
15-9
Chair:
EXTREME POLITICS
Ian Cooper, University of Oslo
Papers:
Back to the Future? Economic Reform and Political Radicalism
in France and Germany in the New Century
Gabriel Goodliffe, Johns Hopkins University
Radical Parties in Eastern Europe: The Effect of Policy
Convergence and Ethnic Heterogeneity on Voting Behavior
Lenka Bustikova-Siroky, Duke University
Laying a Foundation for Peace?: Micro-Effects of Peacekeeping
in Cote d’Ivoire
Cyrus Dara Samii, Columbia University
Eric N. Mvukiyehe, Columbia University
Democratization after Civil War
Page Fortna, Columbia University
Reyko Huang, Columbia University
Does War Influence Democratization?
Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania
Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University
Disc:
Nancy Bermeo, Oxford University
Elisabeth King, Columbia University
18-19
TESTING SECURITIZATION THEORY BEYOND THE
EUROPEAN UNION
Audie Klotz, Syracuse University
Chair:
Papers:
Society and Psychology in Societal Security: Sorting Out Rival
Explanations of Anti-Migrant Hostility in Russia
Mikhail A. Alexseev, San Diego State University
Migration and Politics in Austria: The Legacy of J. Haider
Lapo Salucci, University of Colorado at Boulder
Migration and Security
James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University
It’s All About the Umma: Attack Motivations among European
Islamist Terrorists
William J. Josiger, Georgetown University
Does ‘Societal Security’ Travel? A Comparison of German and
South African Responses to Immigration
Asli Ilgit, Syracuse University
Audie Klotz, Syracuse University
Disc:
Ian Cooper, University of Oslo
16-16
CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN FINANCIAL AND
OTHER INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 17-3
Michael J. Tierney, College of William & Mary
How Well Does the Copenhagen School Travel to Canada?
Identity, Societal Security and the Securitization of Migration
Policies
J.A. Sandy Irvine, Wilfrid Laurier University
Chair:
Papers:
Are IOs Agents or Norms Platforms? Member-Country and
World Bank’s Influence on Environmental Practice at the Islamic
Development Bank
Daniel L. Nielson, Brigham Young University
Christopher Blake O’Keefe, University of California, San
Diego
The Role of Intergovernmental Organizations in Institutional
Design
Tana Johnson, University of Chicago
The IO Learning Curve: The Politics of Performance Evaluation
in the World Bank and International Monetary Fund
Catherine Weaver, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
The Securitization of Migration in Malaysia
Kevin McGahan, National University of Singapore
Disc:
Kamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine
18-38
LESSONS IN WAR, LESSONS FROM WAR
Co-sponsored by 43-5
19-11
US FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 20-2
Chris C. Demchak, US Naval War College
Chair:
Papers:
Coercive Diplomacy Meets Diversionary Incentives: Domestic
Politics, Credibility and the Standoff Between the United States
and Iran
Graeme Davies, University of Wales, Aberystwyth
Explaining Change in International Governance Institutions:
Moving Beyond Path Dependence
Lora Anne Viola, Social Science Research Center Berlin
Thomas Rixen, Social Science Research Center, Berlin
Smart Power, Counterinsurgency and Military Operations Other
Than War (MOOTW): American Military Policy in the 21st
Century
Jack Porter, The Citadel
Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin
The Crafting of National Security Policy in the 21st Century
Alan G. Stolberg, United States Army War College
Wages of War: Public Support for the Military in the Wake of
Vietnam and Iraq
David T. Burbach, Naval War College
310
Daily Schedule
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
From the Yom-Kippur War to the Second Lebanon War:
Systemic Effects on US Management of War and Peace in the
Middle East
Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa
Disc:
Caitlin Talmadge, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
20-2
US FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by 19-11
20-15
METHODS, MODELS AND THEORY IN FOREIGN
POLICY
Wallace J. Thies, Catholic University of America
Chair:
Papers:
Personality, Popularity, and Prosperity: Exploring Covariates of
Israeli Foreign Policy Behavior (1979-2007) Using Discrete
Sequence Pattern Recognition
Philip A. Schrodt, University of Kansas
Valerie M. Hudson, Brigham Young University
Cristian Cantir, University of Kansas
Realism, Prediction, and Foreign Policy
J. Samuel Barkin, University of Florida
Previous Commitments and Future Promises: The Relationship
Between Military Capacity, Alliance Reliability and Future
Alliance Potential, 1950-2005
Anessa L. Kimball, Universite Laval
Alia Alatassi, Université Laval
The Moral Hazard and International Disputes
Vesna Danilovic, SUNY-Buffalo
Joe Clare, Louisiana State University
A Good Friend Isn’t Hard to Buy: Economic Interdependence
and Alliance Reliability
Matthew R. DiGiuseppe, Binghamton University, SUNY
Disc:
Geoffrey Wallace, Cornell University
22-17
EXPLAINING PARTY POLARIZATION IN THE U.S.
CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 35-16
23-10
Chair:
CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE PARTIES
Wayne P. Steger, DePaul University
Papers:
Checks, Balances and Beyond: The Presidential Accountability
“System.”
Bruce Buchanan, University of Texas, Austin
Monitoring, Assessing, and Forecasting International Crises
Using Athena’s Prism and ICS: Part I-The Case of the North
Korean Nuclear Crisis
G. Jiyun Kim, University of Pennsylvania
Barry G. Silverman, University of Pennsylvania
Gnana K. Bharathy, University of Pennsylvania
The President and the Environment
Jeffry Burnam, Georgetown University
Congress’s Ambivalence in the George W. Bush Presidency
Jasmine Farrier, University of Louisville
Domestic Legitimacy and Foreign Policy Responses: A Time
Series Analysis of India-Pakistan Enduring Rivalry
Waheed A. Khan, Brescia University
Congressional Development of the Institutional Presidency
Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley
John W. Patty, Harvard University
Policy implications of Anti-Americanism in the Middle East
C. Todd Kent, Texas A&M University-Qatar
Disc:
Philip B. K. Potter, University of Michigan
21-16
Papers:
CIVIL WAR ONSET
The Counterinsurgency Dilemma: State Repression and Civil
War Onset
T. David Mason, University of North Texas
Jason M. Quinn, University of North Texas
Ethnic Brokerage, Coups, and Civil War
Philip Roessler, University of Oxford
Transnational Linkages and Civil War Interactions
Idean Salehyan, University of North Texas
David E. Cunningham, Iowa State University
Responses to Reagan: Congressional Actions to Deny Executive
Designs
Wendy R. Ginsberg, Congressional Research Service
Disc:
Wayne P. Steger, DePaul University
MaryAnne Borrelli, Connecticut College
24-5
CRISIS GOVERNANCE: THE ORGANIZATIONAL AND
POLITICAL CHALLENGES OF HEALTH EPIDEMIC
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-5
Mark Rhinard, Swedish Institute of International Affairs
Chair:
Papers:
The Rain in Spain Falls Mainly on the Plain: Local Analyses of
Rainfall, Growth, and Conflict
Cullen S. Hendrix, University of North Texas
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex
Decision Support for Complex Systems: Building Capacity for
Coordinated Action Among Public Health Organizations
Louise K. Comfort, University of Pittsburgh
Democracy Aid, Democratization, and Civil Conflict: How Does
Aid Affect Civil Conflict?
Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh
Daniel C. Tirone, University of Pittsburgh
Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
21-22
Papers:
ALLIANCES: FORMATION AND INFLUENCE
Military Alliance Formation: A Multilevel Theory and Model
Andrew G. Long, Kansas State University
Ethan M. Bernick, University of North Texas
Formalizing International Agreements: Pre-commitment of Future
Leaders
Michaela Mattes, Vanderbilt University
Citizen Response to Pandemics: Authorities’ Nightmare or
Daydream?
Ira Helsloot, Free University of Amsterdam
Blame Avoidance and Network Coordination: Evidence from
Crisis Response
Donald P. Moynihan, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Disc:
Todd R. La Porte, University of California, Berkeley
25-5
CRISIS GOVERNANCE: THE ORGANIZATIONAL AND
POLITICAL CHALLENGES OF HEALTH EPIDEMIC
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 24-5
25-19
THEME PANEL: RETHINKING STATE POLICY
DIFFUSION
Co-sponsored by 29-2 and T-15
311
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Dynamic Capacity for Public Health Crises
Christopher K. Ansell, University of California, Berkeley
Ann C. Keller, University of California, Berkeley
Arjen Boin, Louisiana State University
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Daily Schedule
26-9
Chair:
JUDICIAL SELECTION AND JUDICIAL RETIREMENT
Lawrence Baum, Ohio State University
30-5
Papers:
Judicial Selection and Judicial Choice
Wendy L. Martinek, SUNY, Binghamton
Kevin M. Scott, Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts
Chair:
The Politics of Leaving the Court
Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown University
Albert Yoon, University of Toronto
Disc:
Clarence N. Stone, The George Washington University
Part:
Amy B. Bridges, University of California, San Diego
Martin George Horak, University of Western Ontario
Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University
Michael Leo Owens, Emory University
Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Margaret Weir, University of California, Berkeley
31-9
THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 32-18 and T-16
Jennifer Leigh Disney, Winthrop University
Greener Pastures: Are Federal Judges Leaving the Bench to
Pursue More Lucrative Careers in Private Practice?
Scott A. Comparato, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Philip Habel, Southern Illinois University
The Public Treatment of Judicial Nominees
Lisa M. Holmes, University of Vermont
Disc:
Lawrence Baum, Ohio State University
28-2
UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION OF
FEDERATIONS: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON
INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE
Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Panel 1
Richard Simeon, University of Toronto
Chair:
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
The Politics of Intersectionality
Erica Townsend-Bell, University of Iowa
Adapting Federalism: Indigenous Peoples and Multilevel
Governance in Canada and the United States
Martin Papillon, University of Ottawa
Intersectionality and Feminist Theory: Reflections on the Current
Debate in Europe
Ina Kerner, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Does Diversity Always Lead to Decentralization and Difference?
Jennifer M. Wallner, University of Toronto
Intersections and Privilege: Uncovering the Genesis of False
Universalizations.
Lee MacLean, University of Toronto
Varieties of Capitalism/Varieties of Federalism in Australia and
Canada
Luc Turgeon, University of Toronto
Robert Kent Weaver, Georgetown University
Stéphane Dion, University de Montreal
29-2
THEME PANEL: RETHINKING STATE POLICY
DIFFUSION
Co-sponsored by 25-19 and T-15
Mark Carl Rom, Georgetown University
Chair:
Papers:
Modeling the Contagion of Innovation: Issue Characteristics,
Innovation Carriers, and Policy Outbreaks in the American
States.
Graeme Boushey, San Francisco State University
Determinants and Diffusion: State Legislative Agenda-Setting on
Environmental Policy, 1993-2007
Kathleen A. Bratton, Louisiana State University
Tabitha Marie Cale, Louisiana State University
Intra-state Patterns of Policy Diffusion
Deven Carlson, University of Wisconsin, Madison
John F. Witte, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Mandated Health Insurance Coverage for Infertility Treatment:
An Epidemiological Diffusion Analysis
John Fulwider, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Vertical Diffusion and the Policymaking Process: The Politics of
Embryonic Stem Cell Research
Andrew J. Karch, University of Texas at Austin
Disc:
312
Craig Volden, The Ohio State University
Michael Mintrom, University of Auckland
What will be left of parity democracy once we embrace
intersectionality?
Petra Meier, University of Antwerp
Institutionalising Intersectionality in the European Union? Policy
Developments and Contestations
Emanuela Lombardo, Complutense University
Mieke Verloo, Radboud University Nijmegen
How Federations Evolve: Interest Group Politics, Public Policy,
and Institutional Change
Jan Erk, Leiden University
Disc:
ROUNDTABLE: A REEXAMINATION ON THE 20TH
ANNIVERSARY OF CLARENCE STONE’S REGIME
POLITICS: GOVERNING ATLANTA: 1946-1988
Marion Orr, Brown University
Matthew O. Thomas, California State University, Chico
Disc:
Ange-Marie Hancock, University of Southern California
Jennifer Leigh Disney, Winthrop University
31-26
STATES OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE: WHAT ELSE IS AT
STAKE?
Co-sponsored by 47-2
32-10
THEME PANEL: THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE
‘FRENCH MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN ETHNIC
AND RACIAL POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 1 and T-14
32-18
THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 31-9 and T-16
33-1
RELIGION AND AMERICAN PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 36-5
Is there a Religious Left? Evidence from the 2006 and 2008
ANES
Kenneth D. Wald, University of Florida
Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati
David C. Leege, University of Notre Dame
Papers:
Religious Bias in the 2008 Presidential Nominations
Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona
Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University
The Effects of Religion and Income on Presidential Vote Choice:
A Comparison of the 2004 and 2008 General Elections
Leigh A. Bradberry, University of California, San Diego
Framing Faith: How Voters Responded to Candidates’ Religions
in the 2008 Presidential Campaign
David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame
Joseph Quin Monson, Brigham Young University
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Mary C. Segers, Rutgers University, Newark
34-11
BIAS AND RESPONSIVENESS IN ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
Co-sponsored by 36-34
35-16
EXPLAINING PARTY POLARIZATION IN THE U.S.
CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 22-17
Jon R. Bond, Texas A&M University, College Station
Chair:
Papers:
Whatever Happened to Moderate Republicans? Party Asymmetry
in the U.S. Congress, 1972-2008
David A. Hopkins, University of California, Berkeley
Income Inequality and Party Polarization in the U.S. House
Jeffrey W. Ladewig, University of Connecticut
Samuel J. Best, University of Connecticut
Robert O’Brien, University of Connecticut
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
The Impacts of Electoral Systems on Political Representation
Tse-Hsin Chen, Michigan State University
Disc:
Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University
37-3
POLITICAL INFORMATION
Co-sponsored by 5-5
37-8
THE 2008 ELECTION AND THE FUTURE OF
AMERICAN POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 36-10
37-17
IDEOLOGY
Co-sponsored by 5-15
William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University
Chair:
Papers:
What about Institutions? The Polarizing Effect of Reforms on the
House of Representatives’ Amendment Process
Barry Pump, University of Washington
The Contingent Ideological Consequences of Authoritarianism:
The Role of Political Expertise
Christopher M. Federico, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
Emily L. Fisher, University of Minnesota
Grace M. Deason, University of Minnesota
Understanding Political Ideology: The Necessity of a MultiDimensional Conceptualization
Stanley Feldman, SUNY, Stony Brook University
Christopher David Johnston, SUNY, Stony Brook
Procedural Polarization in the U.S. Congress
Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Jeffrey D. Grynaviski, University of Chicago
36-5
RELIGION AND AMERICAN PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 33-1
Perceptions of Party Positions on the Left-Right Scale
Marco Fernandez, Duke University
John H. Aldrich, Duke University
Sinziana Dorobantu, Duke University
36-10
THE 2008 ELECTION AND THE FUTURE OF
AMERICAN POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 37-8
Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University
Ideological Identification: Meanings, Origins, Dynamics, and
Consequences Over Lifetimes
Nathan P. Kalmoe, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Chair:
Papers:
The 2008 Presidential Election: Change versus More of the Same
Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles
Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University
The Issue Dynamic of the 2008 Presidential Election
George Rabinowitz, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Stuart Elaine Macdonald, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Disc:
William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University
38-5
NEW MEDIA, NEW POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 40-1
Christine B. Williams, Bentley University
Chair:
Papers:
The 2008 Presidential Campaign in Context
Richard G.C. Johnston, University of Pennsylvania
Emily Thorson, University of Pennsylvania
Why are Internet Users Politically More Active? In Search of a
Causal Effect
Martin Kroh, German Institute for Economic Research
Hannes Neiss, German Institute for Economic Research
Obama’s Coalition and the Future of American Politics
Alan I. Abramowitz, Emory University
Evaluating the time of vote decision in the 2008 presidential
election: a panel study
Sunshine Hillygus, Harvard University
Michael B. Henderson, Harvard University
36-34
Chair:
Papers:
Needles and Haystacks:The Explosion of Political and NonPolitical Information Flow
W. Russell Neuman, University of Michigan
Only the Good Vote Young? The Internet, Age, and Political
Participation in the 2008 Presidential Campaign
Hannes R. Richter, Free University Berlin
BIAS AND RESPONSIVENESS IN ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
Co-sponsored by 34-11
Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton
Electoral Uncertainty and (Increases in) Support for Minor
Political Parties in Single-Member-District Plurality Systems
Robin E. Best, Leiden University
Consistent Biases in Electoral Environments: Evidence from
Entry and Exit of Senators
Brendan Pablo Montagnes, Northwestern University
Yosh Halberstam, Northwestern University
Unraveling Differences in Barriers to Technology Use
Karen Mossberger, University of Illinois, Chicago
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
Benedict Jimenez, University of Illinois at Chicago
Disc:
Christine B. Williams, Bentley University
38-9
GOVERNMENTAL NEWS MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES:
EXAMINING THE INTERNATIONAL EVIDENCE
Gadi Wolfsfeld, Hebrew University
Chair:
Papers:
When Can Governments Shape the News?: Insights from Social
Network Analysis
Robin Christopher Brown, University of Leeds
313
Daily Schedule
The Arithmetic of Votes to Seats in U.S. House Elections, 19582008
Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton
The NetRoots Narrative: The Evolution of the Liberal
Blogosphere from 2004 to the Present
Diana Tracy Cohen, Central Connecticut State University
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Daily Schedule
Policy Certainty and the CNN Effect
Babak Bahador, University of Canterbury
Disc:
David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University
Media (Non)Conformity to Executive Framing: The Conditions
Under Which Media Transmit the President’s Framing of Foreign
Policy Crises
Amber Ellen Boydstun, University of California, Davis
Rebecca Glazier, University of California, Santa Barbara
43-17
CHINA, WORLD ORDER, AND SECURITY ISSUES IN
ASIA
Jongsoo James Lee, Stonehill College
Chair:
Papers:
Political Messages: Explaining Tone and Content in Comparative
Campaigns
Scott W. Desposato, University of California, San Diego
The External Role in State-Building: Evidence from the Creation
of the Modern Chinese and Indonesian States
Ja Ian Chong, Princeton University
Media Priming and Leadership Evaluations in Britain
Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter
Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter
Susan A. Banducci, University of Exeter
Disc:
Gadi Wolfsfeld, Hebrew University
40-1
NEW MEDIA, NEW POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 38-5
41-8
JUSTICE, PASSION, AND SELF-KNOWLEDGE IN PLATO
AND ARISTOPHANES
Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 2
42-6
ARE THESE TIMES A CHANGIN’? PARTY POLITICS IN
THE OBAMA ERA
Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Chair:
Papers:
Independent Politics in the Obama Era: Is the Third-Party
Movement Dead?
John C. Berg, Suffolk University
“Out of Many, We are One”: Spinoza, Obama and the Politics of
the Multitude from an APD Perspective
Ruth O’Brien, CUNY-Graduate Center
The Chinese World Order and War in Asian History
Yuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan University
The Invisible Hand in the Korean Peninsula: The United States
Congressional Influence on the Agreed Framework between
United States and North Korea and its Fulfillment
Sang Wan Lee, Seoul National University
Identity, Critical Junctures, and Adaptation: North Korea’s Path
to Nuclear Diplomacy
Sung Chull Kim, Hiroshima Peace Institute
Disc:
Jongsoo James Lee, Stonehill College
44-4
POST-CIVIL WAR PROCESSES
Co-sponsored by 18-5
44-14
CIVIL SOCIETY, CITIZENSHIP AND PARTICIPATORY
DEMOCRACY
Katherine Hite, Vassar College
Chair:
Papers:
The Democratic Majority and the Immigrant’s Rights Movement:
Has the Structure for Political Opportunities Really Changed?
Ron Hayduk, CUNY, Borough of Manhattan Community
College
Miryam Hazan, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Michael Lipscomb, Winthrop University
William L. Niemi, Western State College of Colorado
42-10
ROUNDTABLE: 40 YEARS SINCE J DAVID
GREENSTONE’S “LABOR IN AMERICAN POLITICS”:
REFLECTIONS ON WHERE WE’VE BEEN, WHERE WE
ARE, AND WHERE WE SHOULD GO
Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 3
43-5
Chair:
LESSONS IN WAR, LESSONS FROM WAR
Co-sponsored by 18-38
Manus I. Midlarsky, Rutgers University
Learning About Military Effectiveness: Lessons Drawn by
Military Observers from the Russo- Japanese War.
W. Alexander Vacca, Northrop Grumman
Reinventing the Wheel: British Adaptation to the U-Boat Menace
of World War I and the Eventual Adoption of Convoys, 1914-18
Matthew Tattar, Brandeis University
The Reputational Effects of War Losses: Assessing the
International Consequences of the Vietnam War
Kathryn McNabb Cochran, Duke University
314
Youth Movements in Post-Communist Societies: A Model of
Nonviolent Resistance
Olena Nikolayenko, Stanford University
Democratization, Civil Society, and Social Capital in the Former
Communist World: Four Empirical Tests of a Sui Generis
Relationship
Nikolay Valkov, Universite de Montreal
Jump-starting Civil Society: The Experiment of the Public
Chamber in Russia
Lisa Post, University of Guelph
Fred Eidlin, University of Guelph
ICT Diffusion and the Incidents of Resistance against Repressive
Regimes
Patrick Meier, Tufts University
Disc:
Katherine Hite, Vassar College
Andrew S. Barnes, Kent State University
45-5
ANALYSING COMPLEXITY AND CHANGE IN HUMAN
RIGHTS RESEARCH
Todd Landman, University of Essex
Chair:
Papers:
Military Occupation and Economic Reforms
Inhan Kim, University of Virginia
Papers:
Measuring Complexity and Change in Human Rights
Todd Landman, University of Essex
Edzia Carvalho, University of Essex
Violence Against Women: A Multidimensional Benchmark
David L. Richards, University of Memphis
Jillienne Haglund, University of Memphis
Amanda Kuppers, University of Memphis
Windows of Power: North Vietnamese Military Doctrine and
Asymmetric Warfare
Kelly A. Grieco, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Pro-Government Militias: Incidence, Location, and Impact on
Human Rights
Neil J. Mitchell, University of Aberdeen
Sabine C. Carey, University of Nottingham
Soldiers in the Other War: The United States Marine Corps’
Combined Action Platoons in Vietnam
Peter P. Campbell, Notre Dame University
The Political Terror Scale – and Beyond
Mark P. Gibney, University of North Carolina-Asheville
Reed M. Wood, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Daily Schedule
The Escalation of Violence Against Noncombatants in Civil War:
Ethnographic Evidence from Burundi
Meghan K. Lynch, Yale University
Disc:
Mohammed Rodwan Abouharb, Louisiana State University
46-17
EVERYDAY POLITICS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES:
QUALITATIVE APPROACHES
Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Florida
Chair:
Papers:
Navigating Shifting Front Lines: A Relational Approach to
Gender and Political Ethnography in Religiously Divided
Societies: A Comparison of Nigeria and Lebanon
Maren Milligan, University of Maryland
The ‘Dependent-Variable Problem’ of the Colonial State:
Conceptual Stretching and Discontent in Development Studies
Sybille Ngo Nyeck, University of California, Los Angeles
Applying Historical Methods to Understanding the Evolution of
Property Rights When Land is Not Scarce
Tonya Caprarola Giannoni, George Washington University
Democracy’s Impact on Bureaucratic - Legislative Relations:
Theoretical Expectations and Mexican Realities
Rodrigo Velazquez, University of Texas, Austin
Fatwas as Data: Uncovering Historical Change in Islamic
Institutions
Jeremy Menchik, University of Wisconsin
47-2
Chair:
Papers:
STATES OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE: WHAT ELSE IS AT
STAKE?
Co-sponsored by 31-26
Angelia Ruth Wilson, University of Manchester
The Fundamental Right to Marry, Individual Liberty, and State
Interests
Anna Marie Smith, Cornell University
Home Movies: Families, Film, and the Marriage Debate
Joe Rollins, CUNY-Queens College
State DOMAs and Sexual Citizenship
Jyl Josephson, Rutgers University, Newark
49-4
Chair:
Papers:
FORECASTING CANADIAN FEDERAL ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by Political Forecasting Group, Panel 1
Richard Nadeau, University de Montreal
Campaign News and Vote Intentions in Canada, 1993-2008
Lori Young, McGill University
Marc A. Bodet, McGill University
Stuart N. Soroka, McGill University
What Trial Heat Polls Can (and Cannot) Tell Us About Public
Opinion During an Election Campaign: Evidence from Canada
Mark A. Pickup, University of Oxford
A Vote Function Model to Forecast Canadian Federal Election
Outcomes
Eric Belanger, McGill University
Jean-Francois Godbout, Simon Fraser University
Disc:
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa
Christopher Wlezien, Temple University
Poster Sessions
POSTER SESSION 1
Divisions 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, and 33
Papers:
Lawmaking and Policy Conflict: Reauthorizing Laws in the U.S.
Congress, 1987-2007
Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University
Shifting Minority Leadership: An Analysis of Changing
Institutional Context and Minority Congressional Leadership
Katrina L. Gamble, Brown University
The Power and Influence of the Minority Party in the U.S.
House of Representatives
Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America
Congressional information Management and the Successful
Maintenance of Policymaking Power
William Curtis Ellis, University of Oklahoma
I’m Your Puppet: The Changing Role of the House Rules
Committee
Jill L. Curry, University of Maryland
James M. Curry, University of Maryland
Effects of Third Parties on Roll Call Voting
Daniel J. Lee, Michigan State University
Assessing Experts: Establishing Reliability and Validity of
Aggregate Informant Measures
Cherie Maestas, Florida State University
Matthew Buttice, University of California, Davis
Federal Delegation
Pamela Clouser McCann, University of Michigan
The Role of Gender in Congressional Hearings on Health Policy
Nicole C. Quon, Indiana University
The Priming Effects of Informational Spillover: Campaign
Advertizing and Media Market Overlap in U.S. House Elections
Nicholas Seabrook, SUNY, University at Buffalo
The Impact of Political Oversight on Public Attitudes Towards
the Police
Clare Joanna McGovern, University of British Columbia
Distributive Politics and Communities of Interest: The Role of
Redistricting in Slicing up the Bacon within Districts
Jonathan Winburn, University of Mississippi
District Characteristics and Representation in the U.S. House of
Representatives
Daniel Bowen, University of Iowa
Signaling Resolve or Rallying The Troops? The Effect of Veto
Threats on Cosponsorship.
Brad LeVeck, University of California, San Diego
On Making Democracy Work in the Constitutional Republic
Boris Bruk, Virginia Tech
Mr. President, Why Do You Go Public? A Study of President
Bush’s Weekly Radio Addresses
Jonghoon Eun, University of Texas, Austin
The Electoral College after Census 2010 and 2020: the political
impact of population growth and redistribution
Edward M. Burmila, Indiana University
Divided Government and the Expansion of Federal Power, 1960
to 2008
R. Steven Daniels, California State University, Bakersfield
Factor Endowment, Regime Type, and Foreign Direct Investment
Regulation in Developing Countries
Boliang Zhu, Columbia University
After the Oath: The Bush Legacy for US Citizenship Policy
Robin A. Harper, CUNY-York College
Bureaucratic Responsiveness, Accounting Regulation, and the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
Renée J. Johnson, Kent State University
Hierarchy, Specialization, and Representative Bureaucracy:
Expanding the Scope of Representation
Meredith Brooke Loudd Walker, Texas A&M University
Morgen S. Johansen, Texas A&M University
315
Daily Schedule
A Regional Swing Model for Converting Canadian Popular Vote
into Parliamentary Seats 1963-2008
Barry J. Kay, Wilfrid Laurier University
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Government Legitimacy: The Effect of Representative
Bureaucracy
Lina Rombalsky Eskew, Northern Illinois University
Parties and Professionals in the Courts: A Survey of 2008
Judicial Campaigns
Brian K. Arbour, CUNY, John Jay College
Individual-Level Determinants Toward Bureaucracy
William J. Miller, Ohio University
Parental Mobility under Universal School Voucher Reform
Elif Erisen, Cal Poly State University
The Impact of Political Oversight on Public Attitudes Towards
the Police
Clare Joanna McGovern, University of British Columbia
Boardroom Progressives: The New Leaders in Urban Education
Reform
Sarah E. Reckhow, Michigan State University
The Nature of Experience: Effects of Hierachical Trust and
Perceived Competence on the Use of Bureaucratic Discretion
Amy E. Lerman, Princeton University
Boris, the Boroughs and the City Charter: A Public Choice
Perspective on London’s Evolving Governance
Barry Macleod-Cullinane, London Councils
Succession Planning in Public Institutions: Reviewing
Intergenerational Metanarratives and How They May Inform the
Policy Decisions of Human Resource Managers
Kimberly A. Carlson, Virginia Tech
The Flemish city-region: which urban reality is emerging?
Ellen Wayenberg, University College Ghent
Beyond the Neighbor Effect: Policy Learning in Managing the
Risk of Childhood Obesity in Schools
Ling Zhu, Texas A&M University
Congressional Preference Formation and Gun Control: The
Brady Roll Calls
Meredith A. Levine, Yale University
Yi Kang, Yale University
Karina Cendon Boveda, Yale University
Kyohei Yamada, Yale University
Regulating the Creative Commons? Uneven Implementation of
the EU Copyright Directive
Madeline Barch, Indiana University
In with the Old, Out with the New: The Politics of
Grandfathering in Environmental Law
Bruce R. Huber, University of California, Berkeley
Partisanship, Public Policy and Private-Sector Social Welfare:
How partisanship in Congress has changed the level of privatesector social spending in America from 1967-1994
Christopher Faricy, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Alberta climate-change policy in the Canada-US context
David Houle, University of Toronto
Douglas Macdonald, University of Toronto
The Inequality of Disaster Victim Compensation: 9/11 v.
Hurricane Katrina
Kevin G. McQueeney, Rutgers University
The Power of the Purse: The Impact of Female Representation
on Public Expenditure, 1990-2006
Guy Jonathan Sands Burton, London School of Economics
Mike Seiferling, London School of Economics
Rethinking the Institutional Basis of Urban Development:
Hurricane Katrina and Neighborhood Recovery Efforts in New
Orleans
Min Hee Go, University of Chicago
Coping with Colorblind Legal Activism: The Diffusion of
Organizational Rights Practices in the Aftermath of Proposal 2 at
the University of Michigan
Daniel N. Lipson, SUNY, New Paltz
The Judicialization of Health Care in Colombia: Assessing the
Policy Impact of Judicial Attitudes
Rodrigo Nunes, University of Texas, Austin
Litigation in Action: Modeling the Decision to Appeal & the
Outcome on Appeal
Christina L. Boyd, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Restorative Justice In Practice: Tribal Law And Tribal Courts In
Iraq
Adam L. Silverman, US Army
The Power to Decide
Seth W. Greenfest, University of Washington
Precedent and Auditing in the Judicial Hierarchy
Greg Goelzhauser, Florida State University
316
Daily Schedule
Suburban Transformations in Three U.S. Metropolitan Areas:
What Patterns and Trends since 1970 Reveal about the Role of
Fragmentation in Shaping Change, Decline, and Local Responses
Jeremy W. Main, University of Missouri - Saint Louis
Transnational Egg and Sperm Donation: Constructing the
Cosmopolitan Citizen?
Sara Angevine, Rutgers University
The Continued Dependence upon Kinship Ties among Nationallevel Female Candidates 1978-2008
Kimberly L. Casey, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Comparative Responses to Sexual Harassment
Peter B. Hovde, University of Washington, Seattle
Social Movements or Civil Society: Examining Women’s
Movements strength in Central and Eastern Europe
Ingrid Bego, Washington State University
Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University
Intimate Labor and Black Feminist Theories of Freedom
Shatema Threadcraft, Yale University
Explaining the Transatlantic Muslim Public Opinion Gap
David Buckley, Georgetown University
Religiosity, Societal Development, and Political Attitudes: A
Political Economy Model
Matt Golder, Florida State University
David A. Siegel, Florida State University
Ben Gaskins, Florida State University
A Comparison of Public Opinion on Abortion in El Salvador,
Hungary, Poland, and the United States
Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Change and Complexity in the Christian Right
Napp Nazworth, University of Georgia
God’s Politics and Religious Political Identities
Stratos Patrikios, University of Strathclyde
State Feminism and Democratic Institutions: South Korea and
Taiwan in Comparison
Chang-Ling Huang, National Taiwan University
Fostering or Hindering Forces of Women’s Legislative
Representation in Seychelles
Mi Yung Yoon, Hanover College
Rethinking Democracy: Legal Challenges Against Pornography
and Sex Inequality in Canada, Sweden and the United States
Max Waltman, Stockholm University
Should Feminism Transcend Nationalism?
Hee-Kang Kim, Kyung Hee University
Prostitution Policy Reform and the Causal Role of Ideas: A
Comparative Study of Policymaking in the Nordic Countries
Gregg Bucken-Knapp, University West
Women and Political Participation in Egypt and Morocco
Jennifer Nowlin, Ohio State University
The Turkish Exceptionalism? Islam, Secularism, and
Democratization
Ramazan Kilinc, Michigan State University
Daily Schedule
Canadian Cities and Global Migration: Comparing Local
Responses to Demographic Change
Livianna Stephanie Tossutti, Brock University
Jurisdictional Gridlock and the Genesis of Waterfront Toronto
Gabriel Eidelman, University of Toronto
Local Integration Policies and Immigrant Political Incorporation
in U.S. New Destinations
Abigail Fisher Williamson, Harvard University
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 1
Co-sponsored by Divisions 29 and 36
Papers: We “No” How to Vote: Confusion and No Votes in the Initiative
Process
Mike Binder, University of California, San Diego
Sequential and Spatial Voting: the Case of the 2008 Presidential
Election
Baodong Paul Liu, University of Utah
Disc:
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Disc:
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 6
Sponsored by Division 29
Papers: Why Do States Adopt Collateral Sanctions Laws?
Alec Ewald, University of Vermont
The Influence of Professionalism in State Legislatures on Interest
Group Strategies
David Prince, Georgia Gwinnett College
Disc:
Boris Shor, University of Chicago
Teaching Electoral Behavior and Political Research Methods
Through a Course on Election Forecasting
Randall J. Jones, Jr., University of Central Oklahoma
What Students Read: Representation of Bureaucracy in American
Government Textbooks
William J. Miller, Ohio University
Derek Feuerstein, University of Akron
Learning Civic Norms Outside of the Classroom: Diversity and
Campus Associational Life
J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University
Chris Owens, Central Michigan University
Gay Neighbors and Political Behavior: Testing Contact vs.
Threat Hypotheses in Voting Behavior on Same-Sex Marriage
Ballot Measures, 2004-2008
Joshua J. Dyck, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz, University of Maryland
The Complexity of Our Canon: Examining the Content of
Introductory Texts in American Politics
Jocelyn Evans, University of West Florida
David Lindrum, Soomo Publishing
Kevin E. Kvalvik, Shadowbox Design
Rebecca Smith Shelley, Soomo Publishing
Beth Reingold, Emory University
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 3
Co-sponsored by Division 26 and 29
Papers: Organized Interests in State Courts: An Institutional Approach
Joseph Ross, University of Arizona
Do Graduate Student Teacher Training Programs Affect
Placement Rates?
John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Christine Anne Balarezo, University of North Texas
Darrin Dykes, Lamar University
Tom Miles, University of North Texas
The Tenth Justice Goes to the States: the Diffusion of State
Solicitors General
Colin Provost, University College London
Contributions to Judicial Campaigns: Assessing Comprehension
in an Environment without Partisan Signals
Brent D. Boyea, University of Texas, Arlington
Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh
Damon M. Cann, Utah State University
Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington
Disc:
Teena Wilhelm, University of Georgia
Related Group Panels
Association for Israel Studies
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 4
Sponsored by Division 29
Papers: State Politics, Organized Interests and Income Inequality
Suzanne M. Robbins, George Mason University
Disc:
Finding a Home? The Religious Right in the 2009 Elections
Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison
The Rationality of Electoral Competition in a Defused MultiParty System: The Very Small Parties in the Israeli Election
Gideon Doron, Tel Aviv University
The 2009 Elections and the “Death of the Left”: Class Voting in
Israel 1999-2009
Gal Levy, The Open University of Israel
Michael Shalev, Hebrew University
Association of Chinese Political Studies
Panel 2
Chair:
GLOBALIZATION AND THE CHINESE REGULATORY
STATE
Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago
317
Daily Schedule
Do State Policies Affect Immigration Rates?
Rene R. Rocha, University of Iowa
Daniel P. Hawes, Kent State University
Alisa Hicklin, University of Oklahoma
ELECTIONS IN ISRAEL, 2009: CONTINUITY OR
CHANGE
Shaul Shenhav, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Between Kadima and Likud: A Matter of Ideology
Arye Naor, Ben Gurion University
Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas, Dallas
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 5
Sponsored by Division 29
Papers: Bureaucratic Incorporation and Institutional Effects on
Immigration Integration: Punctuated Equilibrium in Response to
Complexity and Change in the States
Christine Thurlow Brenner, Rutgers University
Richard F. Winters, Dartmouth College
POSTER SESSION 7
Divisions 9 and 10
Papers: Data Matrix, Causal Model, Scatterplot, and Cross-Tabulation:
Visual Thinking in the Undergraduate Political Science Research
Methods Class
Joel Lefkowitz, SUNY-New Paltz
POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 2
Sponsored by Division 29
Papers: Registering and Turning Out: Voting Patterns of Women (of
Color) Across the States
Carole Jean Uhlaner, University of California, Irvine
Becki Scola, St. Joseph’s University
Disc:
Robert R. Preuhs, Metropolitan State College of Denver
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Papers:
Why is the Cost of Regulating China’s Health Sector so High?
Yanzhong Huang, Seton Hall University
Regulating China’s Land Market: Central-Local Incentives and
Institutional Evolution
Fubing Su, Vassar College
Independence and Mother-in-Laws: the Effect of MOCA
Regulations on Civil Society Autonomy in China.
Jessica C. Teets, University of Colorado
The Regulatory State under Market-Leninism: Telecoms Reform
in China and Vietnam
Yukyung Yeo, City University of Hong Kong
Regulating Food Safety Risk in China: A Historical-Comparative
Analysis
Peng Liu, Renmin University of China
Disc:
Xiaobo Hu, Clemson University
Fengshi Wu, Chinese University of Hong Kong
British Politics Group
Panel 4
Chair:
Part:
Daily Schedule
BRITISH POLITICS GROUP ROUNDTABLE- YEAR IN
REVIEW
Justin T. Fisher, Brunel University
Sarah Childs, University of Bristol
Elizabeth Penelope Evans, Cardiff University
Paul D. Webb, University of Sussex
Vote Choices Under the Mixed-Member Majoritarian System: A
Comparison Between Taiwan and Japan
Chi Huang, National Chengchi University
Disc:
Eric Voegelin Society
Panel 2
Chair:
Part:
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
Walter J. Nicgorski, University of Notre Dame
James H. Nichols, Claremont McKenna College
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies
Panel 2
Chair:
CHOICE AND DEMOCRACY IN TAIWAN
Huoyan Shyu, Academia Sinica
Papers:
Shifting Partisanship Among Taiwan New Voters
I-Chou Liu, National Chengchi University
Disc:
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
EXAMINING INDIGENOUS RIGHTS, IDENTITIES, AND
GOVERNANCE THROUGH NATIVE AND NON-NATIVE
FRAMEWORKS
Timothy P. Waligore, Smith College
Expanding Racial Orders: American Indians in the Early
American State
Ruth Anne French-Hodson, University of Oxford
Indigenous Global Politics: Forging International Change
Sheryl R. Lightfoot, University of British Columbia
Indigenous Justice: Transitional Justice for Indigenous Peoples in
Canada
Courtney Jung, University of Toronto
Methodological Issues in Comparative Political Theory:
Perspectives from Indigenous Studies
Johannes Morrow, SUNY, University at Albany
Electoral Reform on Taiwan in Comparative Perspective
Hans J. Stockton, University of St. Thomas
318
Randall A. Hansen, University of Toronto
Indigenous Studies Network
Hollowing Out in the Middle: A Social-Base Analysis of
Political Polarization in Taiwan Since 2000
Yi-feng Tao, National Taiwan University
Mingchi Chen, Yale University
Issues and Voting Choices in Taiwan’s Local Elections: A Case
Study of the Taipei Mayor Elections, 1994-2006
Chia-hung Tsai, National Chengchi University
Chi Huang, National Chengchi University
Alexander C. Tan, University of Canterbury
Ching-hsin Yu, National Chengchi University
The Rise of Indirect Affirmative Action: New Strategies for
Promoting “Diversity” in Selective Institutions of Higher
Education in the United States and France
Daniel Sabbagh, Centre d’Etudes et de Recherches
Internationales
The Interplay between Religion and Ethnicity in
Antidiscrimination Policies: a Comparison of France and Britain
Valérie Amiraux, Université de Montréal
Philosophy, Poetry, and the Law: Confronting Cicero’s de
Legibus
Richard J. Dougherty, University of Dallas
Disc:
THEME PANEL: THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE
‘FRENCH MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN ETHNIC
AND RACIAL POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 32-10 and T-14
Terri E. Givens, University of Texas-Austin
The Persistence of Intent Requirements in Criminal and Civil
Enforcement of Employment Discrimination Law
Julie C. Suk, Yeshiva University
Ancient Ethics in Modern Times: Lessons in Moderation from
Plato’s Charmides, Aristotle’s Ethics, and Cicero’s On Duties
Timothy W. Caspar, Hillsdale College
Cicero, Machiavelli, and the Stability of States
Xavier Marquez, Victoria University of Wellington
Jodi L. Bruhn, Independent Scholar
John F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge
Robert P. George, Princeton University
Travis D. Smith, Concordia University
Governing Ethnic Minorities in a Post-Secular World:
Convergences Between France and Canada
Eléonore Lépinard, Université de Montréal
Panel 14 CICERO’S POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Chair:
Luigi Bradizza, Louisiana State University
Augsutine and Cicero on Faith, Reason, and the Best Life
Kathleen Arnn, Claremont Graduate University
CONSCIENCE, EXPRESSION & LIBERTY: PITFALLS OF
POLITICAL CORRECTNESS
Barry Cooper, University of Calgary
French Politics Group
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Papers:
Karl Ho, University of Texas, Dallas
John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, University of South Carolina
Diluting Practices: How to Keep the “Indigenous” in Indigenous
Governance or Listening to the ‘Ginew Grandmothers’
Paula Mohan, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater
Disc:
Stephanie J. Di Alto, University of California, Irvine
Anne FB Flaherty, Duke University
Daily Schedule
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Japan Political Studies Group
Friday, 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM
Panel 1
APSA Meetings
WOMEN, IMMIGRANTS AND LABOR MARKETS:
UNDERSTANDING AND RESPONDING TO LABOR
SHORTAGES AND LOW FERTILITY IN AGING
SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by 11-2
International Committee
COMMITTEE MEETING
Labor Project
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Panel 3
APSA Panel
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE: 40 YEARS SINCE J DAVID
GREENSTONE’S “LABOR IN AMERICAN POLITICS”:
REFLECTIONS ON WHERE WE’VE BEEN, WHERE WE
ARE, AND WHERE WE SHOULD GO
Co-sponsored by 42-10
Susan E. Orr, SUNY, Brockport
Disc:
Ira Katznelson, Columbia University
Part:
Michael Goldfield, Wayne State University
Paul Frymer, Princeton University
Janice Fine, Rutgers University
Peter L. Francia, East Carolina University
Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University
APSA Events
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY PLENARY: CHARLES
TAYLOR, “THE MANY FORMS OF SECULARISM”
APSA Task Force on U.S. Standing in the World
Panel 2
Chair:
Papers:
FORECASTING CANADIAN FEDERAL ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 49-4
Approval Ratings, the Presidency, and American Standing in the
World
Margaret G. Hermann, Syracuse University
Publius: The Journal of Federalism
Panel 1
UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION OF
FEDERATIONS: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON
INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 28-2
Society for Greek Political Thought
Panel 2
Chair:
Papers:
JUSTICE, PASSION, AND SELF-KNOWLEDGE IN PLATO
AND ARISTOPHANES
Co-sponsored by 41-8
Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas, Austin
The Political Philosophy of Aristophanes: Prosperity, Piety, and
Justice in the “Wealth”
Svetozar Minkov, Roosevelt University
Tyrannical Hopes in Plato’s “Charmides”
Robert Goldberg, St. John’s College
Why Does Thrasymachus Blush? Injustice and Self-Knowledge
in Plato’s “Republic”
David Leibowitz, Kenyon College
The Political Significance of Man’s Erotic Character
Dennis Westergaard, Keyano College
Disc:
Americans’ Perceptions of U.S. Standing in the World: What
They Think and Why It Matters
Matthew A. Baum, Harvard University
Going International: Understanding the Importance of U.S.
Standing Abroad for Presidential Power at Home
Meena Bose, Hofstra University
Political Forecasting Group
Panel 1
INTERNATIONAL STANDING AND AMERICAN
POLITICS: HOW AMERICA’S IMAGE ABROAD
INFLUENCES POLITICS AT HOME
Peter Trubowitz, University of Texas, Austin
American Views of Anti-Americanism: Different Schools of
Thought
Henry R. Nau, George Washington University
Disc:
Stephen D. Krasner, Stanford University
Division Panels
T-17
THEME ROUNDTABLE: 2008 AND THE FUTURE OF
THE AMERICAN PARTY COALITIONS
Co-sponsored by 35-9
T-18
THEME PANEL: WEB 2.0 AND SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE
2008 ELECTIONS AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by 40-2
T-19
THEME PANEL: NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Janice Bially Mattern, Lehigh University
Chair:
Papers:
“Man” in the Mirror: Human Nature and World Politics
Neta C. Crawford, Boston University
Neuroscientific Contributions to International Relations
Rose McDermott, Brown University
Timothy W. Burns, Skidmore College
Paul W. Ludwig, St. John’s College
Emotional Beliefs
Jonathan Mercer, University of Washington
Friday, 3:15 PM to 5:00 PM
Emotion, Risk, and Surprise in International Politics
Janice Gross Stein, University of Toronto
APSA Meetings
APSA Events
Disc:
Janice Bially Mattern, Lehigh University
1-14
Chair:
RHETORIC, REPRESENTATION, AUTHORIZATION
Jill Frank, University of South Carolina
Papers:
Contested Representations: Cicero on the Republic
Joy Connolly, New York University
ACADEMIC ADMINISTRATORS MEETING
Daily Schedule
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Section Business Meetings
22 Legislative Studies
COUNCIL MEETING
Plato’s Mimetic Republic
Christina H. Tarnopolsky, McGill University
The Representation of Hobbesian Sovereignty
Arash Abizadeh, McGill University
319
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
The Relationship between the Biblical Prophet and Roman
Orator: The Limits of Preaching and Prudence
Gary Remer, Tulane University
Disc:
Jill Frank, University of South Carolina
Ryan Balot, University of Toronto
1-30
POLITICAL THEORY AND TEACHING
Co-sponsored by 10-5
2-5
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY PLENARY:
CHARLES TAYLOR, “THE MANY FORMS OF
SECULARISM”
Leslie Paul Thiele, University of Florida
Chair:
Papers:
2-19
Chair:
Papers:
The Many Forms of Secularism
Charles Taylor, McGill University
CRITICAL THEORY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
IN THE 21ST CENTURY: A LOOK INTO THE FUTURE
WITH AN EYE ON THE PAST
Katharine N. Farrell, University of Aarhus
On the Dialectic of Natural Beauty and the Beauty of Art
Donald Burke, York University
Marcuse and an Aestheticist Ecocritique
Bradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University
Daily Schedule
3-12
Chair:
SOCIAL JUSTICE, THE PUBLIC, AND THE CITY
Clarissa R. Hayward, Washington University
Papers:
Discipline and Democracy in Progressive Era Theories of Public
Space
Margaret Kohn, University of Toronto
Liberty and Self Respect in the City
Loren A. King, Wilfrid Laurier University
Bad Stories: Narrative, Identity, and the State’s Materialist
Pedagogy
Clarissa R. Hayward, Washington University
The Re-publican City: Recovering and Reinvigorating the Idea of
the “Public” in Contemporary Cities
Thad Williamson, University of Richmond
Disc:
Keally DeAnne McBride, University of San Francisco
3-32
THEORIZING DIMENSIONS OF WOMEN’S EQUAL
CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by 31-11
4-5
Chair:
MODELING AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS
David Hugh-Jones, Max Planck Institute of Economics
Papers:
Electoral Authoritarianism and Democracy: A Formal Model of
Regime Transitions
Michael K. Miller, Princeton University
Non-identity and Ecology
Colin J. Campbell, York University
Mass Revolutions vs. Elite Coups--A Theory of Authoritarian
Regimes’ Stability
Ruth Kricheli, Stanford University
Yair Livne, Stanford University
Complexity and Ecocritique: The Chaos of Commodification
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
Unpacking Narratives of Self-delusion: Critical Theory and the
Politics of Unsustainability
Ingolfur Blühdorn, University of Bath
Strategic Constitutional Choice in an Autocracy: The 1980
Constitution in Chile
Gerald B. Pech, American University in Bulgaria
Katja Michalak, American University in Bulgaria
Disc:
Robert Paehlke, Trent University
Andrew Biro, Acadia University
A Dynamic Theory of Economic Openness and Political Stability
in Autocracies
Kai Zeng, Northwestern University
2-28
Chair:
DEPLOYING ARENDT
Nick Zavediuk, Saint Louis University
Papers:
Post-modern Aristotles: Strauss, Arendt, Virno
William Clare Roberts, McGill University
Globalization and Necessity: Re-Reading Arendt’s Human
Condition
Patrick F. McKinlay, Morningside College
Sustainable Freedom in an Arendtian Mode
Rachael Sotos, Fordham University
Flying Blind: Media Control and Authoritarian Stability
Peter L. Lorentzen, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Piotr Swistak, University of Maryland, College Park
Erik Snowberg, Caltech
5-4
VALUES
Co-sponsored by 37-2
Philip Habel, Southern Illinois University
Chair:
Papers:
“Perplexities of the Rights of Man”: Methodological and
Political Orientations of Arendt’s Critique of Human Rights
Ayten Gundogdu, Barnard College-Columbia University
Family Values in Political Campaigns
Bethany Albertson, University of Texas, Austin
The Positive and Negative Dimensions of Freedom
Liberatarianism and Self-Expression Values Revisited
Gina Linda Gustavsson, Uppsala University
Disc:
Lena K. Zuckerwise, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Wynne Walker Moskop, Saint Louis University
2-46
Chair:
SPINOZA AND CRITICAL THEORY
Terrell Carver, University of Bristol
Papers:
The Affects of Beasts: Agency Beyond the Human in Spinoza
Hasana Sharp, McGill University
Disc:
Philip Habel, Southern Illinois University
Painful Affects: Spinoza, Tolerance, and the Politics of Pain
Lars Tonder, Northwestern University
6-10
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF MIGRANTS’ FINANCIAL
FLOWS
Co-sponsored by 16-25
David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Spinoza and the Critical Theory of Political Expression
Christopher Skeaff, University of Michigan
Disc:
320
Ronald Beiner, University of Toronto, Mississauga
Personal Values and Public Opinion
Paul N. Goren, University of Minnesota
On the Nature of Generalized Trust. A Cross-National Inquiry
Into the Relation Between Human Values and Generalized Trust
Tim Reeskens, KU Leuven
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Remittances, Public Goods Provision and Political Inequality
Rikhil Bhavnani, Stanford University
Margaret Peters, Stanford University
Quantitative Discovery from Qualitative Information
Gary King, Harvard University
Justin Grimmer, Harvard University
Harnessing the Diaspora: The Political Economy of External
Voting Rights
David Leblang, University of Virginia
Modeling the Strategic Ratification of Native American Treaties:
A Kernel Methods Approach
Arthur Spirling, Harvard University
Curtis S. Signorino, University of Rochester
Clientelism and migrants’ remittances: The 3x1 Program in
Mexico
Covadonga Meseguer, CIDE
Political Investment: Remittances and Elections
Angela O’Mahony, University of British Columbia
Do Remittances Promote Democratization? How international
Migration Helps to Overcome Political Clientilism
Tobias Pfutze, Georgetown University
Disc:
David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
7-3
BRINGING SEXUAL ORIENTATION IN: GAY
CITIZENSHIP AND AMERICAN POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
Richard M. Valelly, Swarthmore College
Chair:
Part:
7-18
Chair:
Papers:
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Disc:
Daniel J. Hopkins, Harvard University
8-13
Chair:
ADVANCES IN STUDYING ELECTIONS
John E. McNulty, SUNY, Binghamton
Papers:
Reconciling Neyman and Fisher: Attributing Effects to A Cluster
Randomized Get-Out-The-Vote Campaign
Jake Bowers, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Ben Hansen, University of Michigan
Modeling Voter Heterogeneity via Latent Class Regression
Jonathan N. Katz, California Institute of Technology
Gabriel Katz, California Inst. Technology
Health and Vote Choice: New Bayesian and Classical
Approaches to Regional Heterogeneity and Multidimensional
Policy Preferences
Marcus Alexander, Harvard University
Matthew C. Harding, Stanford University
Stephen M. Engel, Yale University
Margot Canaday, Princeton University
Mary Bernstein, University of Connecticut
Priscilla Yamin, University of Oregon
David Rayside, University of Toronto
ECONOMIC REGULATION IN HISTORICAL AND
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Stephen Weatherford, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Re-Defining Political Participation with Item Response Theory
Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania
Ecological Inference under Extreme Conditions: Straight and
Split-Ticket Voting in Diverse Settings and in Small Samples
Michael J. Hanmer, University of Maryland
Won-Ho Park, University of Florida
Disc:
Justin E. Esarey, Emory University
Law and Economic Regulation in Nineteenth Century Canada
and the United States
Ryan R. Hurl, University of Toronto
9-4
The National Recovery Administration Reconsidered, or Why
Shipping Container Code Succeeded
Gerald Berk, University of Oregon
Chair:
ENHANCING & CONNECTING EXPERIENTIAL
EDUCATION & CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
Co-sponsored by 10-3
Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi
Still Seeking Rents, After All These Years? Testing a NeoBeardian Account of the Birth of the Bank of the United States
Eric Lomazoff, Harvard University
Papers:
Does It Work?: Ways of Assessing Community-Based Learning
in Political Science
Jennifer Erkulwater, University of Richmond
The Creation of a Regulatory Framework: The Enactment of
Glass-Steagall
Erik M. Filipiak, Cornell University
Disc:
Charles C. Turner, California State University, Chico
J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University
Disc:
Stephen Weatherford, University of California, Santa
Barbara
10-3
ENHANCING & CONNECTING EXPERIENTIAL
EDUCATION & CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
Co-sponsored by 9-4
8-10
Chair:
ADVANCES IN QUANTITATIVE TEXTUAL ANALYSIS
Albert Peter Weale, University of Essex
10-5
POLITICAL THEORY AND TEACHING
Co-sponsored by 1-30
Bruce E. Caswell, Rowan University
Papers:
Measuring Party Positioning and Issue Salience with MediaData:Characteristics and Research Questions
Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center Berlin
Anke Daniela Tresch, University of Geneva
Chair:
Testing the Validity and Robustness of Wordscore to Derive the
Ideological Positions of Governors: Are Female Governors More
Liberal Than Their Male Counterparts?
Karen Shafer, Walden University
Richard Herrera, Arizona State University
Reconstituting the Political: Foucault and the Modern University:
An Exploration of Power, Transition, and Discourse
Mike Laurence, University of Western Ontario
An Emancipatory Authority?: Teaching in Levinas and Ranciere.
Rachel Magnusson, York University
Polyvocality and the “Conversation”: Bringing Other Voices into
Political Theory
Wairimu Njoya, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Deconstructing Discourse in order to Reconstruct a Clearly
Defined Position: Teaching Political Theory to students with
limited background in Political Science
Jeanne W. Simon, Universidad de Concepcion
321
Daily Schedule
Cross-Validating Measurement Techniques of Party Positioning
Simon Hug, Université de Genève
Tobias Schulz, Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL
Christine Arnold, Universiteit Maastricht
Papers:
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Disc:
Johnny Goldfinger, Indiana University-Purdue University,
Indianapolis
11-8
COMPARATIVE POLITICS IN A GLOBALIZED WORLD:
WHAT PROBLEMS OUGHT IT BE ADDRESSING
Margaret Levi, University of Washington, Seattle
Chair:
Part:
David D. Laitin, Stanford University
Susan C. Stokes, Yale University
Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago
Craig Calhoun, New York University
11-16
DEMOCRACY, DICTATORSHIP, AND POLITICAL
SUCCESSION
Co-sponsored by 12-1
Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Chair:
Papers:
Legislative Institutions in Dictatorships
Carles Boix, Princeton University
Milan Svolik, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Daily Schedule
The Transnational Vote and the 2006 Mexican Presidential
Election
David L. Leal, University of Texas, Austin
James A. McCann, Purdue University
Exit During Crisis: How Migration and Economic Crisis Affect
Democratization
Joseph Wright, Pennsylvania State University
The Effects of “Bringing it All Back Home” on Customary
Village Governance in Oaxaca: Remittances, Customary Law,
and Voluntary Service in Indigenous Southern Mexico
Todd Eisenstadt, American University
Michael S. Danielson, American University
Disc:
Anna Sampaio, University of Colorado, Denver
12-36
COLONIALISM, DEMOCRACY, AND DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 11-60
Atul Kohli, Princeton University
Chair:
Papers:
Authoritarian Elections and Leadership Succession, 1975-2000
Gary W. Cox, University of California, San Diego
The Effect of Colonizer Identity on Long-Run Development:
Theory and Evidence
James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Colonialism, Democracy, and Institutions
Steven I. Wilkinson, University of Chicago
Political Competition, Non-Hegemonic Institutions, and
Democratic Stability in Latin America during the Twentieth
Century
Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh
Colonial Education and Ethnic Conflict
Matthew Lange, McGill University
An Institutional Theory of Direct and Indirect Rule
Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University
Parties, Armies and Bureaucracies: The Institutional Choices of
Autocrats and Their Effects on Investment
Scott G. Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Philip Keefer, The World Bank
Colonial Legacies, Ethnicity and Internal Migration in Kenya
Kimuli Kasara, Columbia University
Do Democratic Breakthroughs Last? Liberalization and
Democratization After the Cold War
Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University
Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Disc:
Atul Kohli, Princeton University
13-10
Disc:
Robert H. Bates, Harvard University
Papers:
11-54
HEALTH POLICY, CROSSING NATIONAL
BOUNDARIES, AND IDEOLOGICAL PARADIGMS
Co-sponsored by 48-4
POSTCOMMUNIST PARTY POLITICS: COMPARING
CENTRAL EUROPE AND THE FORMER SOVIET UNION
Co-sponsored by 11-64
The Impact of Media Exposure on Electoral Behavior in a New
Democracy
Hubert Tworzecki, Emory University
Holli A. Semetko, Emory University
11-60
COLONIALISM, DEMOCRACY, AND DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 12-36
11-64
POSTCOMMUNIST PARTY POLITICS: COMPARING
CENTRAL EUROPE AND THE FORMER SOVIET UNION
Co-sponsored by 13-10
11-68
ACTOR FRAGMENTATION AND CIVIL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 21-11
11-76
DECENTRALIZED GOVERNANCE AND SOCIAL
INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics, Panel 2
12-1
DEMOCRACY, DICTATORSHIP, AND POLITICAL
SUCCESSION
Co-sponsored by 11-16
12-28
Chair:
MIGRANTS: AGENTS OF CHANGE?
David L. Leal, University of Texas, Austin
Papers:
International Migration and the Diffusion of Democracy: Friends
or Foes?
Sarah Wilson Sokhey, Ohio State University
Yoon-Ah Oh, Ohio State University
322
Elections as a Tool of Party System Consolidation in Poland
Amie Kreppel, University of Florida
The Voting Behavior of Islamic Minorities in a Fledgling
Democracy: The Case of Russia
Robert G. Moser, University of Texas, Austin
Michael P. Dennis, University of Texas, Austin
Representation and Constituency Service in Ukraine
Erik S. Herron, University of Kansas
Nazar Boyko, Lviv Reginald Public Admin Institute
Disc:
Irina Khmelko, Georgia Southern University
14-9
THE FINANCIAL CRISIS - THE RETURN OF THE
MIXED ECONOMY?
Sheri Berman, Barnard College
Chair:
Papers:
Preventing Markets from Self-Destruction: The Quality of
Government Factor
Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg
Embedded Liberalism is Dead, Long Live Embedded Liberalism:
National Welfare Concerns and the International Financial Crisis
Leonard Seabrooke, University of Warwick
Good Inflation, Bad Inflation: The Housing Boom, Economic
Crisis and the Rise of Public-Private Keynesianism
Colin Hay, University of Sheffield
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University
15-19
JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE EUROPEAN UNION
Co-sponsored by 26-7
15-22
EUROPE AND ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-23
16-6
ILLICIT FLOWS AND CONTROLS
Co-sponsored by 18-3
H. Richard Friman, Marquette University
Chair:
Papers:
An Extreme Case of Sovereignty at Bay? Illicit Flows and State
Power in Historical and Comparative Perspective
Peter Andreas, Brown University
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
The Political Economy of Investor Protection: The Adoption and
Enforcement of Insider Trading Laws
Andrew Kerner, University of Michigan
Jeffrey Robert Kucik, Emory University
Networks As Channels of Policy Diffusion: Explaining
Worldwide Changes in Capital Taxation, 1998-2006
Xun Cao, University of Essex
Diffusion and the Design of Constitutions
Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Jude C. Hays, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Tim Buthe, Duke University
17-13
TRANSFORMING THE FRAGILE STATE: THE ROLE OF
INTERNATIONAL BUREAUCRACIES IN MODERN
STATE FORMATION
Co-sponsored by 18-29
Lise Morjé Howard, Georgetown University
Economic Globalizatoin and Canada’s Drug War: The Quest for
Prosperity and Security
Horace A. Bartilow, University of Kentucky
An Analysis of Illicit Arms Trade
Kate Ivanova, Ohio State University
Chasing Illicit Flows: The OECD and Crime Control
Anja P. Jakobi, University of Bremen
Chair:
Papers:
Constructing Enforcement: The International Anti-Money
Laundering Regime and the Interaction of Constructivist and
Rationalist Dynamics
Mark Nance, North Carolina State University
Disc:
H. Richard Friman, Marquette University
16-17
PUBLIC/PRIVATE INTERACTION AND THE
TRANSFORMATION OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
Alexandra Gheciu, University of Ottawa
Chair:
Papers:
Organizational Strategies and Security in Unstable Territory
Virginia Haufler, UC Irvine
Non-State Environmental and Social Global Governance and the
Transformation of Global Markets: Panacea or Pipe Dream?
Steven F. Bernstein, University of Toronto
International Peacebuilding Failures: Lessons from the Congo
Severine Autesserre, Barnard College, Columbia University
Organizational Barriers to Peace: International Bureaucratic
Routines and Modern State Formation
Susanna Pfohl Campbell, Tufts University
Toward Rent-Seeking or Reform? International Organizations and
the Politics of Security Sector Reform in Post-Conflict States
Louis-Alexandre Berg, Georgetown University
18-3
ILLICIT FLOWS AND CONTROLS
Co-sponsored by 16-6
18-9
Chair:
RECONSIDERING THE ROLE OF UNCERTAINTY IN IR
Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin
Papers:
Misplaced Certainty and War
Jennifer Mitzen, Ohio State University
Governing Financial Risk: Intersubjective Expectation and the
Failure of Private Governance in Credit Markets
Rodney Bruce Hall, Oxford University
Circles of Trust: The Creation of International Security
Organizations and the Domestic Politics of Multilateralism
Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California
Multiple Frontiers, Multiple Entanglements: The Changing
Public/Private Divide’s Relationship to Other Changing Divides
Tony Porter, McMaster University
Defining Material Power: U.S. Ballistic Missile Defense, 19832007
Zachary Zwald, UC Santa Cruz
The World Bank and Public Private Partnerships (PPPs) in
Development Governance
Arne Ruckert, University of Ottawa
Disc:
Randall Germain, Carleton University
16-25
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF MIGRANTS’ FINANCIAL
FLOWS
Co-sponsored by 6-10
17-9
Chair:
Institutional Legacies and the Diffusion of Financial Openness
Sarah M. Brooks, The Ohio State University
Marcus J. Kurtz, The Ohio State University
International Accounting Standards: Domestic-International
Linkage
Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University
Dimensions of Uncertainty and Their Cognitive Challenges: A
Social Evolutionary Psychology Perspective
Shiping Tang, Fudan University
Disc:
Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin
18-22
NEW CHALLENGES IN ASIAN REGIONAL SECURITY
Co-sponsored by 19-6
Alice D. Ba, University of Delaware
Chair:
Papers:
Autocratic Cooperation in International Organizations: China and
the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
Phillip Y. Lipscy, Stanford University
Hiroki Takeuchi, Southern Methodist University
Demographic Peace: Northeast Asian Arms Race and Implication
of Population Change in the Region
Seongho Sheen, Seoul National University
Back to the Future? The “Chinese World Order” and China’s
Rise Today
Ji-Young Lee, Georgetown University
323
Daily Schedule
Papers:
INTERNATIONAL POLICY DIFFUSION: FURTHER
INVESTIGATION ON DOMESTIC-INTERNATIONAL
LINKAGE
Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich
Seeing Like a State or a Dragonfly? Organizational Cultures in
UN Peace Operations
Michael L. Lipson, Concordia University
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Time for Renewal: The Changing U.S. Role and the Shifting
Regional Order in East Asia
Il Hyun Cho, Cleveland State University
Daily Schedule
Chair:
Henry A. Kim, University of Arizona
Papers:
Legislative Committees and Multiparty Government
Shane Martin, Dublin City University
Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Security Regionalization in Asia
Galia Press-Barnathan, Hebrew University, Jerusalem
Disc:
Chyungly Lee, National Chengchi University
18-29
TRANSFORMING THE FRAGILE STATE: THE ROLE OF
INTERNATIONAL BUREAUCRACIES IN MODERN
STATE FORMATION
Co-sponsored by 17-13
The Evolution of American State Legislative Committee Systems
Nancy Martorano, University of Dayton
Keith E. Hamm, Rice University
Ronald D. Hedlund, Northeastern University
Plenary ‘Amendments’ to Committee Reports: Legislative
Powers of the European Parliament Committees
Nikoleta Yordanova, European University Institute
19-6
NEW CHALLENGES IN ASIAN REGIONAL SECURITY
Co-sponsored by 18-22
Disc:
Royce A. Carroll, Rice University
Henry A. Kim, University of Arizona
20-11
HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN FOREIGN POLICY
ANALYSIS
Alan G. Stolberg, United States Army War College
23-11
PRESIDENTIAL LEADERSHIP, THE NEWS MEDIA, AND
PUBLIC OPINION
Karen S. Hoffman, Marquette University
Chair:
Chair:
Papers:
The Nature of Containment, 1945-1953
Paul C. Avey, University of Notre Dame
Papers:
Generations and Foreign Policy Change: The Case of the
“Generation of 1914”
Tim Luecke, Ohio State University
Presidential Leadership of the Media and Public: The Case of
Iraq
Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North Texas
Jeffrey S. Peake, Bowling Green State University
The Foreign Policy Choices of China and India in Historical
Perspective
Ishan Joshi, Cornell University
Three Way Information Flow between the President, News
Media, and Public: Who Affects Whom?
Han Soo Lee, Texas A&M University
The Stubborn Cowboy: An Analysis of G.W. Bush Foreign
Policy
Colleen E. Miller, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Presidents, Parties, and Prosperity: The Political Economy of
Public Opinion
Daniel E. Ponder, Drury University
Raymond Tatalovich, Loyola University, Chicago
Dane G. Wendell, Loyola University Chicago
Neoclassical Realism and American Foreign Policy in the Post
Cold War
Tudor Andrei Onea, Queen’s University
21-11
Chair:
Papers:
ACTOR FRAGMENTATION AND CIVIL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 11-68
Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
When Nationalists Fall Apart
Kristin Marie Bakke, Leiden University
Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, Iowa State University
Lee Seymour, Harvard University
Commitment Problems or Bidding Wars: Rebel Fragmentation
As Peacemaking
Jesse Driscoll, Stanford University
Disc:
Lori Cox Han, Chapman University
Justin S. Vaughn, Cleveland State University
24-11
GENDER AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: NEW
APPROACHS AND TOOLS
Co-sponsored by 31-1
Mary E. Guy, University of Colorado, Denver
Chair:
Papers:
Explaining Insurgent Cohesion and Fragmentation: Trajectories
of Militancy in Kashmir and Pakistan
Paul Staniland, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
22-9
ROUNDTABLE: CONGRESS AND THE 21ST CENTURY:
FUTURE CHALLENGES AND DEVELOPMENT
Daniel P. Mulhollan, Congressional Research Service
Chair:
Part:
22-13
324
Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland
Thomas E. Mann, Brookings Institution
Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America
John R. Hibbing, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Kathryn Pearson, University of Minnesota
Colleen J. Shogan, Congressional Research Service
COMMITTEES OUTSIDE THE U.S. CONGRESS
Representative Bureaucracy and Gender Consciousness: A
Framework for Investigating Gendered Policy Outputs
Julie Dolan, Macalester College
A Retrospective Analysis of Scholarship on Gender and
Diversity
Mary E. Guy, University of Colorado, Denver
Kristin L. Schumacher, University of Colorado, Denver
Out-Group Conflict, In-Group Unity? Exploring the Effect of
Repression on Movement Cohesion
Theodore D. McLauchlin, McGill University
Wendy Pearlman, Northwestern University
Disc:
Leading the Party from the Oval Office
Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Impact of Descriptive Representation in the Bureaucracy on
Public Employee Turnover and Satisfaction
Lael R. Keiser, University of Missouri, Columbia
Jason A Grissom, University of Missouri-Columbia
Developing a Management Tool for Gender Gap in Local
Governments
Fany Yuval, Ben-Gurion University
Do Diversity Strategies Promote Social Equity or the Bottom
Line? Evidence from U.S. Federal Government Agencies
David Pitts, American University
Disc:
Suzanne J. Piotrowski, Rutgers University, Newark
Karen M. Hult, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
25-11
AGENDA SETTING AND POLICY CHANGE IN NEW
CONTEXTS
Daily Schedule
Chair:
Sheldon Kamieniecki, University of California, Santa Cruz
Papers:
Towards a General Theory of Agenda-Setting
Stefaan Walgrave, University of Antwerp
Brandon C. Zicha, Universiteit van Antwerpen
Rens Vliegenthart, University of Amsterdam
Multiple Lenses and Multiple Narratives in Public Policy: Are
They Complementary or Contradictory?
Paul Cairney, University of Aberdeen
Norms and Public Policy: Toward a Better Theory of the Policy
Process
Leigh S. Raymond, Purdue University
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Leslie Friedman Goldstein, University of Delaware
Ran Hirschl, University of Toronto
Gary J. Jacobsohn, University of Texas, Austin
George Thomas, Claremont McKenna College
29-3
Chair:
Papers:
Counterfactuals and Punctuated Equilibrium Theory: Finding
Evidence of Policy Entrepreneurship in Policy Arenas
Gordon Shockley, Arizona State University
ELECTING WOMEN TO STATE AND LOCAL OFFICE
Co-sponsored by 31-2
Susan B. Hansen, University of Pittsburgh
The Initiative Process and the Election of Women in the States
Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa
Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa
Alicia Mundy, University of Iowa
Where are the Women? Strategically Moving South Carolina out
of Last Place in Legislative Gender Representation
Lynne E. Ford, College of Charleston
How Change Happens: Explaining Civil Rights Policy Change
Matt Grossmann, Michigan State University
Disc:
Frank R. Baumgartner, Pennsylvania State University
Sheldon Kamieniecki, University of California, Santa Cruz
Women and Politics in Cities: Determinants of the Descriptive
Representation of Women in City Halls and Councils
Adrienne Smith, Emory University
Beth Reingold, Emory University
25-15
Chair:
’INTEREST GROUPS AND TRANSPARENCY IN THE
Anthony D. Perl, Simon Fraser University
State Effects and the Emergence and Success of Female
Gubernatorial Candidates.
Jason Windett, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Papers:
Transparency as a Legitimation Strategy
Alasdair S. Roberts, Suffolk University Law School
Are Term Limits a Woman Candidate’s Friend?
Stephen J. Stambough, California State University, Fullerton
Valerie R. O’Regan, California State University, Fullerton
Lobbying Regulation Across Four Continents: Promoting
Transparency?
Raj S. Chari, Trinity College, Dublin
Gary Murphy, Dublin City University
John W. Hogan, Dublin Institute of Technology
The European Transparency Initiative: Does One Size Fit All
Irina Michalowitz, European Doctoral College, Strasborg
Following the Money: EU Funding of Civil Society
Organizations
Christine Mahoney, Syracuse University
Michael Beckstrand, Syracuse University
Disc:
Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina
Susan B. Hansen, University of Pittsburgh
29-13
Chair:
GUBERNATORIAL POLITICS
Margaret R. Ferguson, Indiana University-Indianapolis
Papers:
State Institutions and Their Distinct Effects on Decreases and
Increases Within Budgets
Christian Breunig, University of Toronto
Chris Koski, James Madison University
What Money Can’t Buy: Self-Financed Candidates in
Gubernatorial Elections
Adam R. Brown, Brigham Young University
Transparency, Access and Influence: Regulating Lobbying in the
UK
Conor McGrath
Disc:
Anthony D. Perl, Simon Fraser University
G. Grant Amyot, Queen’s University
26-7
JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE EUROPEAN UNION
Co-sponsored by 15-19
Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota
Chair:
Papers:
European Courts and the Definition of the Juridical Boundaries
of the European Union
Alexander Panayotov, New York University
Judicial Behavior behind Mask and Shield: Modeling the
European Court of Justice
Michael Malecki, Washington University in St. Louis
The Rise of Adversarial Legalism in Europe
R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Disc:
Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota
27-4
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE: CONSTITUTIONAL IDENTITY
Gary J. Jacobsohn, University of Texas, Austin
Part:
John E. Finn, Wesleyan University
Do Term Limits Matter? The Case of Gubernatorial Economic
Policy
Christopher Parker, Stony Brook University
Make it Rain: The Politics of Gubernatorial requests for
Presidents Disaster Aid
Andrew Reeves, Boston University
John Gasper, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Margaret R. Ferguson, Indiana University-Indianapolis
Samuel H. Fisher, III, University of South Alabama
30-10
ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
IN CITIES
Co-sponsored by 42-3
Teri Fair, Suffolk University
Chair:
Papers:
The Local Ecology of New Social Movements
Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago
Is Lobbying Really Effective? A Field Experiment of Local
Interest Group Strategies to Influence Elected Representatives in
the UK
Peter C. John, University of Manchester
Liz Richardson, University of Manchester
325
Daily Schedule
Judicial Selection and Women on High Courts in Europe: The
Role of Selection Mechanisms and Party Quotas
Valerie J. Hoekstra, Arizona State University
Gender and the Gubernatorial Agenda
Brianne Heidbreder, Kansas State University
Kate Scheurer, University of North Dakota
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
From the Bottom Up: Building the Power of Working People at
the Local Level
Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay
Robert A. Brown
Understanding the Tactics of Refusal: The Relationship Between
Autonomous Social Movements and Political Institution.
Sean Parson, University of Oregon
Disc:
Elaine B. Sharp, University of Kansas
31-1
GENDER AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: NEW
APPROACHS AND TOOLS
Co-sponsored by 24-11
31-2
ELECTING WOMEN TO STATE AND LOCAL OFFICE
Co-sponsored by 29-3
31-11
THEORIZING DIMENSIONS OF WOMEN’S EQUAL
CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by 3-32
Linda C. McClain, Boston University
Chair:
Papers:
Daily Schedule
32-21
PREJUDICE, RACISM, RACIAL THREAT, AND PUBLIC
OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-22
34-5
COMPARING THE REPRESENTATIVE OUTCOMES OF
INSTITUTIONAL DIFFERENCES
William M. Downs, Georgia State University
Chair:
Papers:
The Electoral Sweet Spot: Low-Magnitude Proportional Electoral
Systems
Simon Hix, London School of Economics
John M. Carey, Dartmouth College
The Surprisingly Majoritarian Nature of Proportional Democracy:
Testing the Proposition that Small Parties have Disproportionate
Influence
Anthony J. McGann, University of California, Irvine
The Politics of Institutional Choice: Evidence from Ballot Laws
Jason M. Roberts, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis
Stem Cells, Abortion, and Citizenship: A Feminist Approach to
Equal Citizenship
Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania
Gender at the Margins of Contemporary Constitutional
Citizenship
Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania
The Runoff Rule for the Election of the President in Latin
America: Implications for Democracy
Cynthia McClintock, The George Washington University
Disc:
Jill N. Wittrock, University of Oxford
Arturas Rozenas, Duke University
Feminism, Queer Theory, and Sexual Citizenship
Maxine Eichner, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
35-9
Must Feminists Identify as Secular Citizens?: Lessons from
Ontario
Beverley Baines, Queen’s University
Chair:
THEME ROUNDTABLE: 2008 AND THE FUTURE OF
THE AMERICAN PARTY COALITIONS
Co-sponsored by T-17
Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame
Women and the Bill of Rights
Gretchen Ritter, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Melissa S. Williams, University of Toronto
Linda C. McClain, Boston University
31-25
THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN
Co-sponsored by 41-5
31-27
GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 47-4
32-6
RACE, ETHNICITY, POPULAR CULTURE AND
POLITICS
Tatishe Mavovosi Nteta, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Chair:
Papers:
Part:
Paul R. Abramson, Michigan State University
Paul Allen Beck, Ohio State University
Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame
Tasha S. Philpot, University of Texas at Austin
Gary M. Segura, Stanford University
36-16
THE AMERICAN VOTER IN CONTEXT:
NEIGHBORHOODS, SOCIAL ENVIRONMENTS, AND
THE VOTE
Robert M. Stein, Rice University
Chair:
Papers:
Overcoming Prejudice? Muslim Americans and their Bumpy
Ride in Presidential Politics
Dino N. Bozonelos, University of California, Riverside
Post-9/11 Politics and the Political Representation of Muslim
Women in the West
Melanie M. Hughes, University of Pittsburgh
326
Tatishe Mavovosi Nteta, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Battleground Suburbia: Race, Class and Shifting Political
Ideology in American Suburbs
Lorrie A. Frasure, University of California, Los Angeles
The Racial Context in Presidential Elections
Joel A. Lieske, Cleveland State University
Edward B. Hasecke, Wittenberg University
Shifting the Gender Gaze: The Intersection of Race and Gender
in the Obama Candidacy
Valeria Sinclair-Chapman, University of Rochester
Local Context and Citizen Response to Government Action:
Sources of Variation in Effects of Vietnam Draft Lottery Status
on Voting Behavior
Tiffany C. Davenport, Yale University
Citizenship and Cultural Diversity: Building Trust, Developing
Solidarity and Sharing Power
Magdalena Dembinska, McGill University
Disc:
Do Preference Transfers assist Moderates in Deeply Divided
Societies? Evidence from Northern Ireland and Fiji
John Coakley, University College Dublin, Belfield
Jon Fraenkel, Australian National University
Disc:
Charles L. Prysby, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
36-23
EUROPE AND ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 15-22
Matthew Gabel, Washington University, St. Louis
Chair:
Papers:
Explaining Heterogeneity in European Union Issue Voting
Erik R. Tillman, University of Nebraska
Catherine E. De Vries, University of Amsterdam
Daily Schedule
Learning from the Polish Case: European Parliament Elections
and Attitudes toward the EU in Central and Eastern Europe
Simona Guerra, University of Nottingham
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Papers:
Time and Punishment: An Analysis of the Relationship Between
National and European Vote Choice
Jonathan T. Polk, University of Georgia
Ryan Bakker, University of Georgia
Disc:
Catherine E. De Vries, University of Amsterdam
36-32
UNDERSTANDING RECORD VOTER PARTICIPATION IN
THE FRENCH ELECTIONS OF 2007 AND THE U.S.
ELECTIONS OF 2008
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 4
Jean-Yves Dormagen, Universite Montpellier 1
Chair:
Papers:
The U.S. and the R.O.K: The Popular Basis of a Security
Friendship
Giacomo Chiozza, Vanderbilt University
Ajin Choi, Yonsei University
National Pride, Personal Experiences and Incumbent Support:
Public Perceptions towards Neighboring Countries in China,
Japan and South Korea
Min Shu, Waseda University
Hidetoshi Nakamura, Waseda University
Winning Muslim Hearts and Minds: Mapping Entrenchment of
Anti-American Sentiment in the Islamic World
Lisa A. Blaydes, Stanford University
Drew Linzer, Emory University
Voter Registration and Electoral Turnout : The French Case
Braconnier Céline, Université de Cergy-Pontoise
Opinion and Policy Beyond the Democratic West
Cale Horne, University of Georgia
The Return of the Voter: Voter Turnout in the 2008 Presidential
Election
Michael P. McDonald, George Mason University
39-7
Chair:
WHEN SCIENCE BEGETS VALUES AND VICE VERSA
Lada V. Kochtcheeva, North Carolina State University
Electoral competition and turnout level. A comparative study
Joel Gombin, Université de Picardie-Jules Verne
Papers:
Civic Responsibility and Human Overpopulation: Does Good
Citizenship Require Having Fewer Children?
Kris Aaron Beck, Gordon College
How French Voters Make Their Choice in Presidential Elections:
the 2007 French Electoral Panel
Anne Muxel, CEVIPOF
A Light Bulb Goes On: Values, Attitudes, Social Norms, and
Personal Energy Consumption
Toby Bolsen, Northwestern University
Interest, Attention and Participation in the 2008 U.S. Presidential
Election: Anomaly or Brave New World?
Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University
Disc:
André Blais, Université de Montréal
Nonna Mayer, CEVIPOF
37-2
VALUES
Co-sponsored by 5-4
37-22
PREJUDICE, RACISM, RACIAL THREAT, AND PUBLIC
OPINION
Co-sponsored by 32-21
Racial Context is Factual, But is Racial Threat Partisan?
Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
Eschewing Solidarity: Understanding Anti-Immigration Attitudes
Among Immigrants in Europe
Aida Paskeviciute, University of Essex
Absence of Prejudice or Political Correctness? Comparing
Survey-Based Indicators of Racial Bias with the Implicit
Association Test
Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
Kyu S. Hahn, University of California, Los Angeles and
Yonsei University
Biotechnology and Power: Toward a Classical Liberal Bioethics
Lauren K. Hall, Rochester Institute of Technology
Truth or Consequences: Reason and Authority in Contemporary
Politics
Diana M. Judd, William Paterson University
Risk Perceptions, Values, and Public Opinion on Global
Warming
Jacob Sohlberg, Stony Brook University
Disc:
Lada V. Kochtcheeva, North Carolina State University
Lorelei Moosbrugger, University of California, Santa Barbara
40-2
THEME PANEL: WEB 2.0 AND SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE
2008 ELECTIONS AND BEYOND
Co-sponsored by T-18
Antoinette Pole, Montclair State University
Chair:
Papers:
The Impact of Racism on Votes in the 2008 Presidential
Election: Results from the Associated Press/Yahoo News!/
Stanford Survey, the Stanford MRI Survey, and the American
National Election Studies
Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University
Josh Pasek, Stanford University
Yphtach Lelkes, Stanford University
Omair Akhtar, Stanford University
Trevor Tompson, The Associated Press
Keith Payne, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Identity and Group Politics in the 2008 Presidential Candidate
Websites
Kimberly A. Mealy, APSA
Cyberactivism in the Pre- and Post-Election Period of the Obama
Administration
Jongwoo Han, Syracuse University
Ines A. Mergel, Syracuse University
What if you had a choice?
George (Bob) Robert Boynton, University of Iowa
What is the Best Way to Measure the Bradley Effect? Lessons
from the 2008 Election
Reuben Kline, University of California, Irvine
Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University
37-23
COMPARATIVE PUBLIC OPINION
I Hear America Texting and Other Themes for a Virtual Polis:
Rethinking Democracy in the Global InfoTech Age
Renee Marlin-Bennett, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
Kenneth S. Rogerson, Duke University
327
Daily Schedule
Emotions Underlying Contemporary Racial Threat; Anger or
Fear
Antoine J. Banks, University of Maryland
Disc:
Examining the Impact of Web 2.0 and Social Media on Political
Participation and Civic Engagement in the 2008 Obama
Campaign
Derrick L. Cogburn, American University
Fatima K. Espinoza Vasquez, Syracuse University
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
41-5
Chair:
Papers:
THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN
Co-sponsored by 31-25
Pamela K. Jensen, Kenyon College
Gender, Pornography and the Politics of Liberal Individualism in
DeLillo’s “Running Dog”
Heather Hadar Wright, Wittenberg University
Tom Wolfe’s Theory of Status and Freedom in American
Democracy
Carol L. McNamara, Utah State University
42-3
Revisiting Human Rights Discourse: The Challenge of
Environmental Refugees to International Moral and Legal Norms
Nicole Marshall, University of Alberta
Towards a Decolonized Global Justice Based on International
Human Rights
Ariadna Estevez, UNAM
Politics, Subversion, and Austen: The Case of Entail in Pride and
Prejudice
Kimberly L. Casey, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Love and Politics in Antony and Cleopatra
Mary Mathie, Baylor University
Disc:
Daily Schedule
The Normativity of Human Rights is Self-Evident
Amitai Etzioni, The George Washington University
Disc:
Shareen Hertel, University of Connecticut
46-14
REPRESSION AND PROTEST IN NON-DEMOCRATIC
REGIMES
Piero Stanig, Columbia University
Chair:
Papers:
Lilly J. Goren, Carroll College
Pamela K. Jensen, Kenyon College
The Effects of Labor Standards on Export Performance in Lowand Middle-Income Countries
Emmanuel Teitelbaum, George Washington University
ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
IN CITIES
Co-sponsored by 30-10
43-13
Chair:
NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND THE COLD WAR
Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University
Papers:
Does Nuclear Learning Occur? Evidence from the Cold War
Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania
Political Protest in Neo-liberal Jordan
Jillian M. Schwedler, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Kevin Koehler, OSCE Academy in Bishkek
Disc:
Maria Inclan, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia
Economicas
47-4
GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 31-27
Miriam Smith, York University
Nuclear Weapons and the Origins of America’s Global Empire
Sebastian Rosato, University of Notre Dame
Domestic Coalitions, State Capacity and and the Politics of
Nuclear Adjustment: Comparing Nuclear Proliferation in South
Asia and the Southern Cone
Nikolaos Biziouras, United States Naval Academy
Chair:
Papers:
Did the Nuclear Taboo Matter?
Keir A. Lieber, Georgetown University
Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College
Disc:
Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University
44-15
”NEW” SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND
DEMOCRATIZATION
Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico
Chair:
Papers:
Enforcing Gender: The Constitution of Masculinity and
Femininity in Prison Regimes
Sarah X Pemberton, University of British Columbia
Legislating Morality Through the Age of Consent: The
Comparative Politics of Generation in Canada, the U.K and the
U.S.
Carol Dauda, University of Guelph
Constructing the Patriarch in the Personal Responsibility Act
Alexa DeGagne, University of Alberta
Disc:
Susan Gluck Mezey, Loyola University, Chicago
Penny A. Weiss, Saint Louis University
Whose in Charge?: Indigenous Politics, Green Mobilization and
Multinational Mining Corporations in Ecuador
Monique Segarra, Bard College
48-4
From Subjects to Citizens: The Contribution of HIV/AIDS
Associations Toward Deepening Democracy in Southern Africa
Kenly Greer Fenio, Virginia Tech University
Chair:
HEALTH POLICY, CROSSING NATIONAL
BOUNDARIES, AND IDEOLOGICAL PARADIGMS
Co-sponsored by 11-54
Thomas R. Oliver, University of Wisconsin
Environmental Movements and the Development of Democracy:
India and the Soviet Union
Amy Forster Rothbart, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Simanti Lahiri, University of Alabama
Papers:
Disc:
Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico
45-9
Chair:
NORMATIVE DIMENSIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS
Basak Cali, University College London
Papers:
Obligations to Non-Citizens in a Globalizing World
Barbara Buckinx, Brown University
Cross-border Health Cooperation in Zones of Conflict
William J. Long, Georgia Institute of Technology
Changing Borders: The Complexities of Cross-Border Healthcare
in the United States and European Union
Miriam J. Laugesen, University of California, Los Angeles
Arturo Vargas-Bustamante, UCLA
Social Protest in Electoral Autocracies: Competition, Coercion,
and Mexico’s Cycle of Indigenous Contention
Guillermo Trejo, Duke University
328
Protest and Repression Cycles in Reformist Iran 1997-2001
Mirjam Künkler, Princeton University
Funding Foci, Cost Effectiveness, and Recipients’ Priorities for
Global Health: Are US Foundations More Responsive Than
Official Development Assistance?
Daniel E. Esser, American University
Health and Canadian Foreign Policy: Canada’s Menu of Choices
to Improve Global Drug Access
Jillian Clare Kohler, University of Toronto
Disc:
Jeremy Youde, University of Minnesota, Duluth
Daily Schedule
Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Hegel Today
Cyril O’Regan, University of Notre Dame
Affiliate Group Meetings
Midwest Political Science Association
Understanding the Revolution in Philosophy
David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America
PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEETING
Related Group Panels
Christians in Political Science
Panel 3
Chair:
RELIGION AND GLOBAL POLITICS
Scott T. Waalkes, Malone College
Papers:
Explaining Illiberal Protestant Parties in the Developing World
Samuel R. Greene, Catholic University of America
Eastern Orthodoxy’s Relationship To The State And To Religious
Tolerance: The Closer The Church Is To The State, The More
Intolerant Of Other Religions They Both Are?
David J. Meyer, George Fox University
Christian Jihadists and the Middle East: the Problem and a Better
Way
William Scott Harrop, University of Virginia
Disc:
Disc:
Harald Bergbauer, Munich School of Political Science
Michael Allen Gillespie, Duke University
French Politics Group
Panel 4
UNDERSTANDING RECORD VOTER PARTICIPATION IN
THE FRENCH ELECTIONS OF 2007 AND THE U.S.
ELECTIONS OF 2008
Co-sponsored by 36-32
Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists
Panel 3
Chair:
NEW TRENDS IN CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY
Yong Deng, U.S. Naval Academy
Papers:
Managing Sino-American relations in Chinese Foreign Policy
Jianwei Wang, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point
Mary B. Manjikian, Regent University
Mark R. Amstutz, Wheaton College
Coping with Internal and External Challenges in Chinese Foreign
Policy in a Changing World
Yufan Hao, University of Macau
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Media, Public Sphere and China Foreign Policy
Ying Hou, University of Macau
Panel 4
China and Vietnam in the Global Financial Crisis
Brantly Womack, University of Virginia
Chair:
Part:
ROUNDTABLE: THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION: FIRST
SEVEN MONTHS
John B. Kienker, Claremont Review of Books
Brian T. Kennedy, Claremont Institute
Charles R. Kesler, Claremont McKenna College
Hadley Arkes, Amherst College
James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia
Comparative Urban Politics
Panel 2
Chair:
Papers:
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
DECENTRALIZED GOVERNANCE AND SOCIAL
INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 11-76
R. Alan Walks, University of Toronto, Mississauga
Gender Mainstreaming in the European Union: Not for All? The
EU’s Role in Healthcare Provision for Trans People
Ryan Muncy Combs, University of Manchester
The Instrumentalization of the LGBT Issue in Transdniester
Julien Danero, Université Libre de Bruxelels
Political Dynamics of Spatial Inequalities in Swiss Metropolitan
Areas
Urs Scheuss, University of Applied Sciences Northwestern
Switzerland
The Metropolitanization of Politics and the Restructuring of
Urban Governance in Canadian Metropolitan Areas
R. Alan Walks, University of Toronto, Mississauga
Disc:
The New Lure of Local Politics: Harvey Milk, Sean Penn and
Sex in the City
John Brigham, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Gay and Lesbian Adoptions: Next Battle of Rights
Lynna Lan Tien Nguyen Do, Walden University
Decentralized Governance and Metropolitan Social Inequality:
An Analytical Framework with Applications to the United States
Jefferey M. Sellers, University of Southern California
Spatial Inequalities and Governance: Policies of Place-Equality
in Brazil
Marta Arretche, University of São Paulo
EMERGING RIGHTS BATTLES: LGBT POLITICS
TODAY
Ronald L. Holzhacker, University of Twente
The Evolution of Same-Sex Partnership Recognition in Brazil
Shawn Richard Schulenberg, University of California,
Riverside
Disc:
H. N. Hirsch, Oberlin College
Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine
Political Studies Association
Panel 2
Chair:
CHILDREN, JUSTICE, AND DEMOCRACY
Pablo Gilabert, Concordia University
Papers:
Why Not to Worry about Enfranchising Children: The Joint
Authorship of Laws
Robert E. Goodin, Australian National University
Joanne Lau, Australian National University
Ronald K. Vogel, University of Louisville
Eric Voegelin Society
ASSESSING VOEGELIN’S CRITIQUE OF HEGEL
Timothy Fuller, Colorado College
Papers:
Decrypt: Voegelin and Kojeve’s Hegel
Barry Cooper, University of Calgary
Reflections on Hegel’s Philosophy of Right
Timothy Fuller, Colorado College
History as Freedom? Voegelin’s Hegel
Horst Mewes, University of Colorado, Boulder
Justice and The Retreat from Educational Equality
Colin Macleod, University of Victoria
How Many Parents Can a Child Have? Philosophical Reflections
on the “Three Parent Case” and Brighouse and Swift’s Argument
for Parental Rights
Samantha Brennan, University of Western Ontario
The Just School
Philip Andrew Cook, London School of Economics
329
Daily Schedule
Panel 6
Chair:
Friday, 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM
Friday, 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 2
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 2
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 2
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 2
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 2
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 2
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 2
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 2
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 2
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Friday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
APSA Panel
SESSION 2
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
JOHN GAUS AWARD LECTURE: “THE TIES THAT BIND?
NETWORKS, PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE” DELIVERED BY LARRY O’TOOLE, UNIVERSITY OF
GEORGIA
SESSION 2
Affiliate Group Meetings
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
Journal of Electoral Studies
SESSION 2
Friday, 6:00 PM to 6:15 PM
Section Business Meetings
38 Political Communication
MENTORING MEETING
APSA Events
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Politics & Policy Journal
BOARD MEETING
Journal of Politics
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Related Group Meetings
Asian Pacific American Caucus
Friday, 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
Christians in Political Science
SESSION 2
BUSINESS MEETING
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 2
Latino Caucus in Political Science
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 2
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
Women’s Caucus for Political Science
SESSION 2
MEETING 2
330
Daily Schedule
Section Business Meetings
2
Foundations of Political Theory
BUSINESS MEETING
5
Political Psychology
BUSINESS MEETING
7
Politics and History
Friday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 2
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 2
11 Comparative Politics
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 2
BUSINESS MEETING
15 European Politics and Society
BUSINESS MEETING
19 International Security and Arms Control
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 2
20 Foreign Policy
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 2
21 Conflict Processes
BUSINESS MEETING
22 Legislative Studies
BUSINESS MEETING
26 Law and Courts
Friday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 1
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
36 Elections and Voting Behavior
SESSION 1
BUSINESS MEETING
37 Public Opinion
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
SESSION 1
38 Political Communication
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 1
40 Information Technology and Politics
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
BUSINESS MEETING
45 Human Rights
BUSINESS MEETING
Friday, 6:15 PM to 7:45 PM
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 1
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: Political Ethics
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 1
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 2
SESSION 1
Working Group: Political Ethics
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 2
SESSION 1
331
Daily Schedule
SESSION 2
Friday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Friday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM
36 Elections and Voting Behavior
APSA Reception
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Political Psychology Organized Section
APSA Events
APSR EDITORIAL BOARD RECEPTION
Private reception for the members of the American Political
Science Review Editorial Board.
37 Public Opinion
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Political Psychology Organized Section
38 Political Communication
Friday, 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM
RECEPTION
APSA Reception
40 Information Technology and Politics
APSA Events
RECEPTION HONORING TEACHING
Sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha
Affiliate Group Receptions
Pi Sigma Alpha
RECEPTION HONORING TEACHING SPONSORED BY PI SIGMA
ALPHA
Friday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM
APSA Reception
RECEPTION
45 Human Rights
RECEPTION
47 Sexuality and Politics
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and
Transgendered Caucus and the APSA Committee on
Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered (LGBT)
Affiliate Group Receptions
American University
RECEPTION
APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and
the Transgendered in the Profession
University of California, Berkeley
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Sexuality and Politics Organized Section
and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus
University of California, San Diego
APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession
RECEPTION
RECEPTION
RECEPTION
University of Chicago Political Science Department
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Latino Caucus in Political Science
Columbia University
Section Receptions
Cornell University Government Department
2
RECEPTION
Foundations of Political Theory
RECEPTION
RECEPTION
University of Houston
5
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by Rice University, Texas A&M University, and
University of Texas at Austin
Political Psychology
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting
Behavior Organized Section
7
Politics and History
Jack Miller Center
RECEPTION
RECEPTION
University of Maryland Government and Politics
11 Comparative Politics
RECEPTION
RECEPTION
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Political Science
19 International Security and Arms Control
RECEPTION
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by CAMOS
University of Minnesota
20 Foreign Policy
Princeton University Department of Politics
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored with Conflict Processes
RECEPTION
21 Conflict Processes
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored with Foreign Policy
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by University of Texas at Austin, University of
Houston, and Texas A&M University
22 Legislative Studies
Routledge
RECEPTION
RECEPTION TO CELEBRATE THE PUBLICATION OF THE
FUTURE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND OUR OTHER NEW
TITLES
24 Public Administration
RECEPTION
26 Law and Courts
RECEPTION
31 Women and Politics Research Section
RECEPTION FOR WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION
Co-sponsored by the Women’s Caucus for Political Science
and the Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender
Journal
332
RECEPTION
Rice University
Rutgers University
RECEPTION
Stanford University
RECEPTION
Texas A&M University
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by Rice University, University of Texas at
Austin, and University of Houston
Daily Schedule
Friday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM
University of Texas at Austin
Saturday, 7:30 AM to 8:30 AM
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by Rice University, University of Houston, and
Texas A&M University
APSA Meetings
University of Wisconsin-Madison
RECEPTION
Yale University
APSA Events
RELATED GROUP ORGANIZER MEETING
Saturday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM
RECEPTION
APSA Meetings
Related Group Receptions
APSA Events
British Politics Group
JOURNAL EDITORS’ BREAKFAST
RECEPTION
Affiliate Group Meetings
Christians in Political Science
Polity
RECEPTION
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the International Security and Arms
Control Organized Section
European Consortium for Political Research
RECEPTION
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
RECEPTION
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
APSA Panel
APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the
Profession
Panel 1
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE ON THE 2008 NATIONAL ASIAN
AMERICAN SURVEY
Janelle Wong, University of Southern California
Latino Caucus in Political Science
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of
Latino/as
Part:
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Sexuality and Politics Organized Section
and the APSA Committee on Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and
the Transgendered (LGBT)
Division Panels
T-20
THEME ROUNDTABLE: NEW WAVES IN POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY
Co-sponsored by 2-44
T-21
THEME PANEL: CITIZENS’ ASSEMBLIES AND
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by 34-7
T-22
THEME PANEL: “FORGOTTEN PARTNERSHIP”
REMEMBERED: U.S.-CANADA RELATIONS 25 YEARS
LATER
Co-sponsored by 49-8
1-10
RAWLS AND THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL
LIBERALISM
David L. Schaefer, College of the Holy Cross
Women’s Caucus for Political Science
RECEPTION FOR WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION
Co-sponsored by the Women and Politics Research
Organized Section and the Cambridge University PressPolitics & Gender Journal
Friday, 10:00 PM to 11:30 PM
Affiliate Group Receptions
Harvard University Department of Government
RECEPTION
Quarterly Journal of Political Science
RECEPTION
Syracuse University
RECEPTION
Natalie Masuoka, Tufts University
S. Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California,
Riverside
Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California
Chair:
Papers:
Related Group Receptions
The Missing History of Political Liberalism
Andrew D. Lister, Queen’s University
French Politics Group
Rawls’s Humean Moment
Stephen Adam Seagrave, University of Notre Dame
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the French Embassy, CEVIPOF, AFSP,
Sciences Po Bordeaux, and PSA-UK
Rawls on Bodin: Comprehensive Doctrines and Political
Liberalism
Arun Abraham, University of Pennsylvania
Saturday, September 5, 2009
Affiliate Group Receptions
RWJF Scholars in Health Policy Research Program
RECEPTION
Stephen L. Newman, York University
1-26
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THOUGHT:
PERSPECTIVES ON THE STATE OF NATURE
Fred R. Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame
Chair:
Papers:
Sage Kings & the State of Nature: Comparative Preconditions
and the Social Contract
Jon D. Carlson, University of California, Merced
The Politics of Essence in Taoist and Enlightenment Conceptions
of the State of Nature
Eric Goodfield, American University in Cairo
333
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 7:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Disc:
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Daily Schedule
State of Nature, Absolute-Universalism and Civic-Republicanism:
A Comparison on Han Feizi’s ‘Shi’ and Machiavelli’s ‘Prince’
Shaojin Chai, University of Notre Dame
3-27
I’d Rather Just Devolve, Thank You: Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and an
Ambiguous State of Nature
Stefan Paul Dolgert, Duke University
Chair:
Disc:
Russell Arben Fox, Friends University
2-23
Chair:
NIETZSCHE
Cynthia Halpern, Swarthmore College
Papers:
Self-knowledge, Instincts, and Individuality in Nietzsche’s
Philosophy
Roberto Alejandro, University of Massachusetts-Amherst
The End of Morality at the End of History: Nietzsche and
Heidegger’s Views on the Values of the Age
James Pontuso, Hampden-Sydney College
Disc:
Corey L. Brettschneider, Brown University
James E. Fleming, Boston University
Part:
Jack Knight, Washington University in St. Louis
Eric Beerbohm, Harvard University
Elizabeth Beaumont, University of Minnesota
Stephen Macedo, Princeton University
4-8
AGGREGATION OF PREFERENCES AND
INFORMATION
Elizabeth Maggie Penn, Harvard University
Chair:
Papers:
Nietzsche, Empire, and the Critique of Modernity: Politics
Beyond the State
Paul E. Kirkland, College of the Holy Cross
Michelle Tolman Clarke, Dartmouth College
Sean Noah Walsh, University of Florida
2-38
Chair:
PLATO AND POLITICAL LIFE
Gerald Mara, Georgetown University
Papers:
Legislative Innovation and Conservatism in Plato’s Magnesia
Ryan Balot, University of Toronto
Knowing Theaetetus
Andrew Hertzoff, California State University, Sacramento
The Evasive Gadfly: The Strangeness of Socratic Activity
Joel Alden Schlosser, Duke University
Disc:
Arlene W. Saxonhouse, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
2-44
THEME ROUNDTABLE: NEW WAVES IN POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY
Co-sponsored by T-20
Christopher F. Zurn, University of Kentucky
Chair:
Part:
Amy Allen, Dartmouth College
Lawrence Hamilton, University of KwaZulu-Natal
Ajume H. Wingo, Ajume H. Wingo
Mika LaVaque-Manty, University of Michigan
Kevin Olson, University of California, Irvine
3-9
Chair:
DEMOCRACY AND COLLECTIVE WISDOM
Peter C. Stone, Stanford University
Papers:
Democratic Reason: Why the Many are Smarter than the Few
and Why It Matters
Helene E. Landemore, Yale University
An Aristotelian Middle Way Between Deliberation and
Independent-Guess Aggregation
Josiah Ober, Stanford University
Deliberation, Influence, and Democratic Choices
Scott E. Page, University of Michigan
Disc:
334
Stephanie Julie Novak, Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris
The Banks Set and the Uncovered Set under Supermajority
Decision Rules
Reuben Kline, University of California, Irvine
Post-Electoral Bargaining in Parliamentary Systems
Daniel Diermeier, Northwestern University
Pride and Sexual Friendship: The Battle of the Sexes in
Nietzsche’s Post-Democractic World
Lisa Uhlir-Yancy, Tarrant County College
Disc:
THE COMPLEXITIES OF SECURING RIGHTS AND
DEMOCRACY: A ROUND TABLE ON COREY
BRETTSCHNEIDER’S
Elizabeth Beaumont, University of Minnesota
The Undercut Procedure: An Algorithm for the Envy-Free
Division of Indivisible Items
Marc Kilgour, Wilfrid Laurier University
Steven J. Brams, New York University
Christian Klamler, University of Graz
Information Aggregation and Social Learning in Majority Rule
Settings
Soenke Ehret, Free University of Berlin
Information Aggregation Properties of Agenda Procedures
Scott Moser, Oxford University
Disc:
John W. Patty, Harvard University
5-8
Chair:
INFORMATION PROCESSING
Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis
Papers:
A Dual-Process Model of Political Judgment
Howard Lavine, SUNY, Stony Brook
Christopher David Johnston, SUNY, Stony Brook
Marco R. Steenbergen, University of Berne
Thinking about Immigration: A Multi-Method Study of
Individual Differences in Political Cognition
Shawn W. Rosenberg, University of California, Irvine
Leah A. Hemze, University of California, Irvine
The Cognitive Foundations of Temporal Discounting in Public
Policy
Scott Matthews, Queen’s University
Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia
Why Do We Use Race and Gender When Policy Information Is
Available?
Nathan A. Collins, Santa Fe Institute
Disc:
Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis
5-14
BIOLOGY, GENETICS, AND POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 37-12
6-2
COMPARATIVE SUBNATIONAL POLITICS AND
POLITICAL ECONOMY IN ASIA
Co-sponsored by 11-12
6-5
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF TRADE AGREEMENTS
AND TRADE INSTRUMENTS: NEW INSIGHTS INTO
CAUSES AND EFFECTS
Co-sponsored by 16-3
Daily Schedule
6-14
Chair:
Papers:
THE LOBBYING OF BUSINESSES, BANKERS AND
AGENCIES
Oleg Kodolov, Kent State University
What Firms Really Want: Evidence from Germany, Japan, and
the United States
Michael A. Witt, INSEAD
Gordon Redding, INSEAD
Business Interests and the Exchange Rate: Preferences over
Adoption of the Euro in Britain
Ophelia Eglene, Harvard University
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
9-7
IMPROVING STUDENT LEARNING IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE COURSES
Co-sponsored by 10-7
10-7
IMPROVING STUDENT LEARNING IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE COURSES
Co-sponsored by 9-7
Charles C. Turner, California State University, Chico
Chair:
Papers:
How Do Bankers Lobby? Empirically Examining the Policy
Influence of Private Financial Institutions
Kevin Young, London School of Economics
The Elusive Quest for Learning: Intensive Analytical Writing in
Large Lecture Undergraduate Courses
Baris Kesgin, University of Kansas
Alexandria J. Innes, University of Kansas
Catherine Weaver, University of Texas, Austin
Intergovernmental Lobbying in U.S. Federal Agencies
Scott H. Ainsworth, University of Georgia
Erik Kinji Godwin, Texas A&M University
Kenneth Godwin, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Disc:
Joachim Wehner, London School of Economics
7-12
Chair:
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND THEIR TACTICS
Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University
Papers:
The Modern Presidency and Social Movements: the Allegiances
and Rivalries that Reform Politics Make
Sidney M. Milkis, University of Virginia
Dan Tichenor, University of Oregon
Running Simulations Without Ruining Your Life: Simple Ways
to Incorporate Active Learning into Your Teaching
Rebecca Glazier, University of California, Santa Barbara
What Students Tell Us About Doing Research
Bruce Pencek, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
Scott G. Nelson, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
Craig Leonard Brians, Virginia Tech
Political Economy, Pedagogy and Student Enthusiasm
Theresa Reidy, University College Cork
Peer Evaluation in the Political Science Classroom
Michael K. Baranowski, Northern Kentucky University
Kimberly Weir, Northern Kentucky University
Patience and Manly Virtue: First-Class Citizenship Rights as
Men’s Rights
Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, Albany
Disc:
Leanne C. Powner, College of Wooster
Quentin Kidd, Christopher Newport University
State Constitutions as Tools for Educational Change
Emily Zackin, Princeton University
11-12
COMPARATIVE SUBNATIONAL POLITICS AND
POLITICAL ECONOMY IN ASIA
Co-sponsored by 6-2
Kevin Morrison, Cornell University
Innovation Edges, the Mobilization of Bias, and the Evolution of
Political Campaigns: Modeling Changes in Campaigning over
Time
David A Karpf, University of Pennsylvania
Chair:
Disc:
Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University
Decentralization, Indonesia-Style
Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University
Maria Monica Wihardja, Cornell University
8-8
Chair:
ADVANCES IN PANEL/TSCS/MULTILEVEL MODELS
Robert W. Walker, Washington University, St. Louis
Striking the Right Balance: Economic Concentration and
Subnational Politics in Indonesia and the Philippines
Christian Von Luebke, Stanford University
Papers:
Correct Confidence Intervals for Time-Invariant and Rarely
Changing Variables in Panel Data: A Bootstrap Approach
Jonathan Michael Bischof, Harvard University
Why Authoritarian Leaders Sometimes Empower the Public in
Authoritarian Regimes: Learning from Local Variations across
China
Mayling Birney, Princeton University
Causal Inference of Repeated Observations: A Synthesis of
Propensity Score and Multilevel Modeling Methods
Jeronimo Cortina, University of Houston
Yu-Sung Su, CUNY, Graduate Center
Measuring Accountability in Authoritarian Legislatures: The
Representativeness of Vietnamese National Assembly Delegates
Edmund J. Malesky, University of California, San Diego
Paul J. Schuler, University of California, San Diego
Interaction Effects of Electoral Systems, Ethnic Heterogeneity
and Time in 20 democracies. The Use of multilevel models.
Patrick Vander Weyden, University of Ghent
Bart Meuleman, Catholic University of Leuven
Electoral Incentives and Municipal Government Consolidation in
Japan
Kyohei Yamada, Yale University
Yusaku Horiuchi, Australian National University
Jun Saito, Yale University
Modeling Unbalanced Discrete Time-Series Cross-Section Data:
Serial Dependence, Heterogeneity and Spatial Correlation
Xun Pang, Washington University
Disc:
Vera Eva Troeger, University of Essex
8-16
ESTIMATING IDEAL POINTS IN THE U.S. CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 22-7
Disc:
Kevin Morrison, Cornell University
Lynette H. Ong, Harvard University
11-23
INTER-ETHNIC CONTACT AND VIOLENCE: FROM
POGROMS AND RIOTS TO WAR AND GENOCIDE
Co-sponsored by 43-2
R. William Ayres, IV, Elizabethtown College
Chair:
Papers:
Threat Framing, Ethnic Demographics, and Xenophobic Violence
in Russia
Mikhail A. Alexseev, San Diego State University
335
Daily Schedule
“Dirty Pool” Revisited: Applying Randomization Tests to the
“Democratic Trade” Hypothesis
Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University
Pablo Martin Pinto, Columbia University
Kelly T Rader, Columbia University
Papers:
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Constructing Inter-Ethnic Conflict and Cooperation: the Role of
State Institutions and Nationality Policy
Diana Dumitru, Moldova State Pedagogical University
Carter R. Johnson, University of Maryland
Daily Schedule
Papers:
State Capacity and Human Development Outcomes
Michael Bernhard, University of Florida
Simone Dietrich, Pennsylvania State University
Taxes, Institutions and Local Governance: Evidence from a
Natural Experiment in Colonial Nigeria
Daniel Berger, New York University
Who Riots? Explaining Individual Participation in Ethnic
Violence
Alexandra L. Scacco, Columbia University
Disc:
Marc Howard Ross, Bryn Mawr College
Complexity and Change: On the Relationship of Decentralization
and Good Governance
Veerle van Doeveren, Leiden University
11-38
RESACRALIZING IMAGINED COMMUNITIES:
RETHINKING RELIGION AND NATIONALISM
George T. Crane, Williams College
On the Incentives to Experiment in a Decentralized Authoritarian
Regime: The Politics of Labor Policy Reform in China
Chelsea Chia-chen Chou, Cornell University
Hans Han-Pu Tung, Harvard University
The Impossibility of Confucian Nationalism
George T. Crane, Williams College
Examining Sources of Conflicts Behind Institutional Change:
The Case of Turkish Regulatory Reforms Since 1999
Umit Sonmez, London School of Economics and Political
Science
Chair:
Papers:
Nationalizing Protestantism In China
Carsten Vala, Loyola University Maryland
Sex and the Sacred: Contraception, Catholicism and the
Construction of Filipino National Identity Since 1986
Jonathan T. Chow, University of California, Berkeley
Haven Nationalism: Secular Elitism and the Challenges of
Religious Revival in Turkey, Israel and Pakistan
Sener Akturk, Harvard University/Koc University, Istanbul
Adnan Naseemullah, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Daniel Berger, New York University
12-35
CHANGING BUSINESS - STATE RELATIONS IN THE
EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES IN DEVELOPING
ECONOMIES
Co-sponsored by 11-59
Unequal Bargains: Corporate Social Responsibility and Changing
Business - State Relations in Africa’s Extractive Industries
John R. Heilbrunn, Colorado School of Mines
Papers:
“Nationalism and Religion: Explaining the Radicalization of
Separatist Movements”
Gregory D. Miller, University of Oklahoma
Kuhika Gupta, University of Oklahoma
Disc:
Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison
11-45
Chair:
TRANSPARENCY, INFORMATION AND GOVERNANCE
Susan J. Pharr, Harvard University
Papers:
The Process of Adoption of Freedom of Information Laws: A
Nested Logit Model
Manuel Balan, University of Texas, Austin
The Impact of the Changing Relationship between FIs and Host
Governments on Fiscal Regimes in the 20th Century
Pauline Jones Luong, Brown University
Political Risk and the Resource Curse
Nathan Jensen, Washington University, St. Louis
Local Direct Investments of Foreign Mining Companies in Peru
Cecilia Perla, Brown University
Disc:
Michael L. Ross, University of California, Los Angeles
12-40
DEMOCRATIZATION, STATE STRENGTH AND
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN
AFRICA: NEW EMPIRICAL AND CONCEPTUAL
HORIZONS
Co-sponsored by African Politics Conference Group, Panel 1
Richard Joseph, Northwestern University
The Surrender of Secrecy? Explaining the Strength of
Transparency and Access to Information Laws
Robert Gregory Michener, University of Texas at Austin
Freedom of Information Laws: Causes and Consequences
Thomas C. Ellington, Wesleyan College
The Effectiveness of Freedom of Information Legislation in East
and Central Europe
Alexandru Grigorescu, Loyola University Chicago
Chair:
Papers:
The Impact of Quality of Government as Impartiality: Theory
and Evidence
Jan Teorell, Lund University
Disc:
Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia
Jeeyang Rhee Baum, Harvard University
11-59
CHANGING BUSINESS - STATE RELATIONS IN THE
EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES IN DEVELOPING
ECONOMIES
Co-sponsored by 12-35
11-75
IS THERE A MULTIMETHOD CONSENSUS IN
COMPARATIVE POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 46-5
12-29
Chair:
336
STATE CAPACITY AND CHANGE: NATIONAL AND
LOCAL LEVELS
Richard R. Marcus, California State University, Long Beach
The Consequences of Political Inclusion: A Report from
Contemporary Africa
Carl LeVan, American University
Strong States are Good for Business: Democracy, Market and
State Capacity in Africa
Scott D. Taylor, Georgetown University
Toward Further Democratic Stateness in Sub-Saharan Africa:
Conceptual and Empirical Challenges.
John W. Harbeson, CUNY, City University of New York
Disc:
Richard Joseph, Northwestern University
13-9
THE POSTCOMMUNIST DEMOCRATIC EXPERIMENT
TWENTY YEARS AFTER 1989: TRAJECTORIES AND
ASSESSMENTS
Luba Racanska, St John’s University
Chair:
Papers:
Creating Democratic Polities and Market-Oriented Economies in
Post-Communist Europe: Understanding Large-Scale Political
and Economic Change
David R. Cameron, Yale University
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Chair:
Mark S. Manger, London School of Economics
Papers:
Origins Matter: When Expanding Democracy Does Not Expand
Welfare
Christine S. Lipsmeyer, Texas A&M University
Not all PTAs are Equal: Credible Commitment through PTAs
and their Effects on Trade
Soo Yeon Kim, University of Maryland
Raymond Hicks, Princeton University
The Devil’s Advocate? Party Politics and the Churches after
1989.
Anna M. Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan
Trading Freely and Fairly: Distinguishing Sincere versus
Insincere Fair Trade States
Moonhawk Kim, University of Colorado, Boulder
Democratic Revolutions in Post-Communist Europe, Post-Soviet
Eurasia and Central Asia
Christian William Haerpfer, University of Aberdeen
Disc:
Matthew A. Light, University of Toronto
14-14
Papers:
ANTI-AMERICANISM
Anti-Americanism and the Financial Crisis
Sophie Meunier, Princeton University
Explaining the Spread of Regional Trade Agreements: The Role
of Trade and Investment Diversion
Andreas Duer, University College Dublin
Leonardo Baccini, Trinity College Dublin
Vertical Trade Integration and the Formation of North-South
PTAs
Mark S. Manger, London School of Economics
The Economic Consequences of Anti-Americanism
Monti Narayan Datta, University of California Davis
The Microfoundations of the Diffusion of Capital Account
Liberalization
Alexandra G. Guisinger, University of Notre Dame
Nancy Brune, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Anti-Americanism and International Cooperation in East Asia
Byong-Kuen Jhee, Chosun University
Framing, Diplomacy and Anti-Americanism in Central Asia
Edward Schatz, University of Toronto at Mississauga
Renan Levine, University of Toronto
Disc:
Giacomo Chiozza, Vanderbilt University
15-6
THE HISTORICAL TURN IN DEMOCRATIZATION
STUDIES: LESSONS FROM EUROPE
Co-sponsored by 44-8
Peter A. Hall, Harvard University
Chair:
Disc:
Megumi Naoi, University of California, San Diego
B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University
16-14
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON BILATERAL INVESTMENT
TREATIES: A DISAGGREGATED ANALYTICAL
APPROACH
Co-sponsored by 17-2
Todd L. Allee, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
The Historical Turn in Democratization Studies
Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University
Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University
The Popularity of BITs Re-Considered: The Case of Pakistan
Lauge Skovgaard Poulsen, London School of Economics
The Founding of the French Third Republic
Stephen E. Hanson, University of Washington
Ratification Matters: The Domestic Fate of Bilateral Investment
Treaties
Yoram Z. Haftel, University of Illinois-Chicago
Modes of Inclusion and Exclusion: The Political Sociology of
Regime-Type in Interwar East-Central Europe
Jeffrey Kopstein, University of Toronto
Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley
Settling Investment Disputes in Latin America: Who Needs the
ICSID?
Daniela Campello, Princeton University
Picking a Fair Fight: Why Elites Choose to Hold Fair Elections
Nancy Bermeo, Oxford University
Disc:
Andrew C. Gould, University of Notre Dame
15-18
RETHINKING PARTY POLITICS IN COMPARATIVE
WELFARE STATE RESEARCH
Robert Kent Weaver, Georgetown University
Chair:
Papers:
Homes States and Bilateral Investment Treaties in the 1970s and
1980s :The Strategic Appeal of Private-Actor Standing
Suzanne Katzenstein, Columbia University
The Long and the Short of BIT: How Domestic Institutions
Shape Preferences over the Length and Precision of Bilateral
Investment Treaties
Daniel Blake, The Ohio State University
Todd L. Allee, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Alison E. Post, University of California, Berkeley
Unequal Risk: Partisan Politics and Welfare Reform in the
United States and Britain
Fiona Ross, University of Bristol
16-30
ACCOUNTABILITY, CREDIBILITY, AND CAPTURE OF
NGOS IN GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 17-14
Political Parties, Blame Avoidance, and Welfare State Change
Karen M. Anderson, Radboud University Nijmegen
17-2
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON BILATERAL INVESTMENT
TREATIES: A DISAGGREGATED ANALYTICAL
APPROACH
Co-sponsored by 16-14
17-14
ACCOUNTABILITY, CREDIBILITY, AND CAPTURE OF
NGOS IN GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 16-30
Peter A. Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego
Party Competition and Reforms of Unemployment Benefits in
Italy and Germany
Georg Picot, University of Milan
Why Do Left Parties Cut Back on Welfare? A Socio-Structural
Explanation
Silja Haeusermann, University of Zurich
Disc:
Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
16-3
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF TRADE AGREEMENTS
AND TRADE INSTRUMENTS: NEW INSIGHTS INTO
CAUSES AND EFFECTS
Co-sponsored by 6-5
Chair:
Papers:
A Household Name: How Amnesty International’s Principles
Became Human Rights Norms
Wendy Wong, University of Toronto
337
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Searching for Partners: Questions of Accountability and
Credibility between Foreign Aid Donors and Local NGOs
Carew Boulding, University of Colorado, Boulder
Credible Certification: The Politics of Investment, Child Labor,
and Watch-Dog Groups
Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University
Explaining Variation in States’ Battlefield Effectiveness in
Interstate Wars
Caitlin Talmadge, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
18-12
HOSTILE TERRITORY? IN SEARCH OF COMMON
GROUND IN THE THEORETICAL AND POLICY
DEBATES ON MILITARY PRIVATIZATION
Deborah Avant, University of California, Irvine
Can’t Go To War Without Them, Can Win With Them
-Conuterinsurgency and Private Security Companies
Ulrich Petersohn, RAND Corporation
Democratic Peace, or Democratic Pocketbook? The Impact of the
Private Security Industry on the Democratic Peace and the
Democratic Advantage
Molly Clark Dunigan, RAND Corporation
Who is a Mercenary? The Private Security Industry: A Changing
Normative Landscape
Jennifer Catallo, University of Toronto
Supply and demand aspects of regulating non-Anglophone
PMSCs
Olivia Allison
Disc:
Sarah V. Percy, University of Oxford
18-32
THE NPT AT WORK
Co-sponsored by 19-10
18-33
UNIFYING ANALYSES OF CIVIL AND INTERSTATE
WAR
Co-sponsored by 21-6
19-10
Chair:
Papers:
Unipolar, Multipolar or Globalized? The International Political
Economy of American Weapons Acquisition
Jonathan D. Caverley, Northwestern University
Ethan B. Kapstein, INSEAD
Disc:
Stuart Griffin, King’s College London
20-8
THE ISRAEL LOBBY AT 2.
Co-sponsored by 43-4
Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University
Chair:
Disc:
Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University
John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago
Part:
Jerome N. Slater, SUNY, University at Buffalo
Tony Smith, Tufts University
John Mueller, Ohio State University
21-6
UNIFYING ANALYSES OF CIVIL AND INTERSTATE
WAR
Co-sponsored by 18-33
Distinctions Without Differences?: Comparing Civil and
Interstate Wars
David E. Cunningham, Iowa State University
Douglas Lemke, Pennsylvania State University
Papers:
The Size of War: Does It Matter Theoretically? You Bet It Does!
Brandon G. Valeriano, University of Illinois, Chicago
John A. Vasquez, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Battle Deaths, Duration and the Nature of Combat:
Distinguishing Low and High Intensity Warfare
Havard Strand, PRIO
THE NPT AT WORK
Co-sponsored by 18-32
Christopher Way, Cornell University
International Enforcement of International Nonproliferation
Treaties”
Robert L. Brown, Temple University
Conventional Arms and Influence within the NPT Regime
Jennifer L. Erickson, Cornell University
Cheating Honestly: Exit Versus Predation in the Nonproliferation
Regime
Matthew Fuhrmann, University of South Carolina
Jeffrey D. Berejikian, University of Georgia
“New wars”: the revolution in the ability of governments to win
interstate and civil wars
Gary Goertz, University of Arizona
Disc:
Robert Harrison Wagner, University of Texas, Austin
21-20
DOMESTIC INSTITUTIONS AND INTERNATIONAL
CONFLICT
Michael T. Koch, Texas A&M University
Chair:
Papers:
The Political Geography of the AQ Khan Network and
Implications for the Non-Proliferation Regime
Justin Hastings, Georgia Institute of Technology
Disc:
Christopher Way, Cornell University
Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University
19-18
Chair:
DEVELOPING MILITARY CAPACITIES
Daniel S. Geller, Wayne State University
Democratic Peace Revisited: It Is Veto Players
George Tsebelis, University of Michigan
Seung-Whan Choi, University of Illinois, Chicago
Democracy and the Treatment of Prisoners of War
Geoffrey Wallace, Cornell University
Proportional Doves, Majoritarian Hawks: Government Structure
and Conflict Initiation
Taehee Whang, Texas A&M University
Mark Andreas Kayser, University of Rochester
When Allies Go Nuclear: the Use of Security Leverage and the
Changing Nature of the American Response to ‘Friendly’
Nuclear Programs
Maria N. Zaitseva, Cornell University
338
The Inverse Effects of Military Innovations
Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin
Cassy Dorff, University of Texas, Austin
From Recipients to Participants: African States in Contemporary
Multinational Military Operations
Katharina P. Coleman, University of British Columbia
Janice Gross Stein, University of Toronto
Peter A. Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego
Papers:
Papers:
Which Monitors are Credible? Reputation, Signaling, and
International Election Monitoring
Susan Dayton Hyde, Yale University
Disc:
Chair:
Daily Schedule
A Logic of Diversionary-Peace
Sung-Ju Cho, University of Virginia
Disc:
Michael T. Koch, Texas A&M University
22-7
ESTIMATING IDEAL POINTS IN THE U.S. CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 8-16
Daily Schedule
Chair:
Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University
Papers:
Estimating Dynamic Legislator Positions from Speech
Burt L. Monroe, Pennsylvania State University
Kevin M. Quinn, Harvard University
Michael P. Colaresi, University of Colorado, Boulder
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Courting Democracy? High Courts and Regime Dynamics in
Post-Transition South America
Diana Kapiszewski, University of California, Irvine
Judicial Insulation as an Obstacle in the Fight Against
Corruption
Maria Popova, McGill University
Estimating Proposal and Status Quo Locations Using Voting and
Cosponsorship Data
Michael Peress, University of Rochester
Curbing the Courts: Latin American Lessons on Curtailing
Judicial Independence
Matthew M. Taylor, University of São Paulo
Estimating Party-Free Ideal Points in the U.S. Congress
Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester
Fang-Yi Chiou, Academia Sinica
Nicole Asmussen, University of Rochester
Courts as Losers: The Impact of Constitutional Crises on Judicial
Power in Russia and Ukraine
Alexei Trochev, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Houses in Motion: Getting to the Unidimensional Congress
1953-2004
Michael Tofias, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Michael J. Ensley, Kent State University
Scott de Marchi, Duke University
Disc:
Lee Epstein, Northwestern University
27-11
Electoral Pressure and Policy Change: Conversion or
Replacement?
Shawn Treier, University of Minnesota
Chair:
NEOLIBERAL PENALITY AND SHIFTING
INSTITUTIONAL NORMS OF RESPONSIBILITY
Co-sponsored by 25-18
Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University
Disc:
Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown University
23-13
Chair:
THE PRESIDENT AND THE BUREAUCRACY
Andrew C. Rudalevige, Dickinson College
Papers:
George W. Bush and Presidential Control of the Bureaucracy: An
Assessment
David M. Hedge, University of Florida
“The Administrator Shall Consider”: Controlling the Basis of
Agency Choice
Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester
Executive Review of Agency Rulemaking
Melanie M. Marlowe, Miami University
Ryan J. Barilleaux, Miami University
A Theoretical and Empirical Analysis of Cabinet Turnover in the
United States
Alejandro Quiroz-Flores, New York University
Papers:
Safety Culture and Tropes of Neoliberalism
Susan Silbey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Responsibility and Choice: Their Place in Neoliberal Penality
Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University
From MaCaulay to Malimath: The Problem of the Police in India
Keally DeAnne McBride, University of San Francisco
Disc:
Uday Mehta, Amherst College
Mariana Valverde, University of Toronto
28-5
FEDERALISM, MEDICAID, AND CHANGING MODES OF
SOCIAL SERVICE DELIVERY
Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University
Chair:
Papers:
Shifting Politics, Enduring Tensions, and the Continuity of
Senate-confirmed Agency Appointees
Patrick S. Roberts, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State
University
Matthew M. Dull, Virginia Tech
Sang Ok Choi, Virginia Tech
Disc:
24-13
25-18
25-22
Chair:
Papers:
Long on Promise, Short on Delivery?: Political intent, policy
implementation and state capacities for Medicaid reforms
Eldon Grant Porter, Columbia University
Disc:
Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University
29-9
PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 35-2
Rachael Vanessa Cobb, Suffolk University
Chair:
Papers:
EXPLAINING SEX EQUALITY POLICY: RELIGION,
ECONOMICS, MOVEMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 31-13
When Do Party Elites Democratize?: The Direct Primary in
Pennsylvania, 1842-1906
Kaori Shoji, Gakushuin University
COURTS IN CRISIS AND TRANSITION: LATIN
AMERICAN AND POST-COMMUNIST STATES IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Lee Epstein, Northwestern University
Weak Courts, Risky Judges: Why Do High Courts Invite
Political Retribution?
Gretchen Helmke, University of Rochester
Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
The Dynamic Relationship Between State Party Organizational
Strength and Electoral Success
Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas, Dallas
Daily Schedule
26-2
NEOLIBERAL PENALITY AND SHIFTING
INSTITUTIONAL NORMS OF RESPONSIBILITY
Co-sponsored by 27-11
Intergovernmental Management by Network: Mental Retardation/
Developmental Disabilites, Federal to Local
Robert Agranoff, Indiana University
Medicaid and the Funding of Nonprofit Service Organizations
Scott W. Allard, University of Chicago
Steven Rathgeb Smith, University of Washington
Robert F. Durant, American University
Andrew C. Rudalevige, Dickinson College
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND URBAN
GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 30-16
Neoliberal Penality: The Birth of Natural Order, the Illusion of
Free Markets
Bernard E. Harcourt, University of Chicago
A network analysis of state party committee strength
Andrew Waugh, University of California, San Diego
Party Strength and Activity and Women’s Political
Representation at the Local Level
Melody Crowder-Meyer, Princeton University
Disc:
John A. Clark, Western Michigan University
339
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Rachael Vanessa Cobb, Suffolk University
30-16
Chair:
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND URBAN
GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 24-13
Arnold Fleischmann, Eastern Michigan University
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Major G. Coleman, SUNY, New Paltz
Andrew L. Aoki, Augsburg College
33-2
EVANGELICAL POLITICAL THOUGHT AND NATURAL
LAW
Co-sponsored by Christians in Political Science, Panel 1
Kevin J. Cooney, Union University
Chair:
Papers:
Is All Collaboration the Same? Metropolitan Contracting and
Coordination for Social Services
Karen Mossberger, University of Illinois, Chicago
Rebecca Hendrick, University of Illinois, Chicago
Jennifer M. Benoit-Bryan, University of Illinois, Chicago
Evangelical Antipathy and the Natural Law Tradition
Bryan T. McGraw, Wheaton College
Cultural Apologetics, Natural Law, and Evangelical Political
Thought
Jesse D. Covington, Westmont College
Michigan Local Government Approaches to Fiscal Challenges
and Economic Development: Nurturing an “Innovation
Ecosystem”
Debra Horner, University of Michigan
Righteousness and Rights: Toward a Legal Worldview of
Evangelical and Fundamentalist Christians
Linda Veazey, University of Houston
Jason E. Whitehead, California State University, Long Beach
Disc:
Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri, St. Louis
31-13
EXPLAINING SEX EQUALITY POLICY: RELIGION,
ECONOMICS, MOVEMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 25-22
Patricia Boling, Purdue University
Papers:
Evangelical Political Thought, Scripture, and Natural Law
Micah J. Watson, Union University
Intermunicipal Partnerships: Environmental Constraints and Civic
Capital in Cooperation for Regional Economic Development
Jen Nelles, University of Toronto
For Mayors, the Future Is Now: Professionalization of the
American Mayoralty, 1801-1980
Scott A. MacKenzie, University of California, Davis
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Mark David Hall, George Fox University
34-7
THEME PANEL: CITIZENS’ ASSEMBLIES AND
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY
Co-sponsored by T-21
R. Kenneth Carty, University of British Columbia
Chair:
Papers:
Constituent Assemblies: Anti-Democratic in Nature
Kelby Carter, University of Western Ontario
Look Who’s Talking: Deliberation and Social Influence
Alice Siu, Stanford University
Defining Equality:The Politics of Women, Land and Tradition in
Kwazulu, South Africa
Jennifer Yvette Terrell, New School for Social Research
Using Citizens Assemblies to Reform the Process of Democratic
Reform
J.H. Snider, iSolon.org
Advancing Reproductive Rights in Conservative Gender Regimes
Debora Lopreite, Carleton University
Investigating the Economic Determinants of Gender Equality
Policy Agendas
Francesca Gains, University of Manchester
Claire Annesley, University of Manchester
Should We Let Citizens Decide? Lessons from Citizen
Assemblies
Patrick Fournier, Université de Montréal
R. Kenneth Carty, University of British Columbia
Jonathan Rose, Queen’s University
The Influence of Religion on Women’s Rights Policies in Africa
Alice Kang, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Citizen Assemblies and the Global Recession
Hilary Pearse, Victoria University of Wellington
The Equal Employment Opportunity Law in Japan ; Twenty
Years of Progress?
Joyce Gelb, CUNY-Graduate Center
Disc:
Dennis F. Thompson, Harvard University
Andre Bächtiger, University of Bern
Disc:
Merike Blofield, University of Miami
Isabelle Engeli, European University Institute
35-2
PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-9
31-23
GENDER AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-20
35-6
32-3
PAN-ETHNICITY, EXPLORING NEW HORIZONS IN
IDENTITY
Harwood K. McClerking, Ohio State University
THE POLITICS OF PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-7
Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona
Chair:
Papers:
The Social and Political Consequences of Asian American
Panethnicity
Kathy Rim, University of California, Irvine
Latino Public Opinion: Does It Exist?
David L. Leal, University of Texas, Austin
Endogenous Pan-Ethnicity: Parties, Politics and American Latino
Identity
Ali Adam Valenzuela, Stanford University
Panethnicity as both a Dependent and Independent Variable:
Asian American and Latino Cases
Tae Eun Min, University of Iowa
340
Chair:
Papers:
Early State Primary Momentum: Media Hype or Reliable Cue?
Dino P. Christenson, The Ohio State University
Corwin D. Smidt, Michigan State University
The Consequences of Open Presidential Primaries
Michael G. Hagen, Temple University
Richard G.C. Johnston, University of Pennsylvania
Healing the Rifts: Intraparty Factionalism at the 2008
Presidential Nominating Conventions
Michael T. Heaney, University of Florida
Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Seth E. Masket, University of Denver
Daily Schedule
Politics in Motion: Dynamics of Presidential Primaries, 1972 2008
Martin Cohen, James Madison University
David Karol, University of California, Berkeley
Hans Noel, University of Michigan
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Papers:
The Gender Gap & the Use of Force: An Experimental
Approach
Deborah Jordan Brooks, Dartmouth College
Benjamin A. Valentino, Dartmouth College
Disc:
Seth E. Masket, University of Denver
Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona
Public Opinion on Gender and Racial Policy: The Politics of
Rights and Roles, Rights and Separation
Nancy Burns, University of Michigan
Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
36-7
THE POLITICS OF PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS
Co-sponsored by 35-6
The Hidden Role of Gender Beliefs in Shaping Political
Cognition
Nicholas Winter, University of Virginia
36-26
Chair:
ELECTORAL VOLATILITY
Robin E. Best, Leiden University
Papers:
The Volatile American Voter: Unstable Voting Behavior in
American Presidential Elections, 1948-2004
Arthur Beckman, CUNY-Graduate Center
Measuring Electoral Volatility in MMD/SNTV Systems: A
Candidate-Level Analysis
Dennis P. Patterson, Texas Tech University
Frank C. Thames, Texas Tech University
Taylor McMichael, Texas Tech University
Royce Wu, Texas Tech University
Philip Van Praag, University of Amsterdam
Towards a New Regionalization of National Politics? A
Comparative Exploration of Spain, Germany, Belgium and the
Netherlands
Kris Deschouwer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Disc:
37-12
Chair:
Papers:
“Mortgage Moms” and “More Responsible Fathers”: Parenthood
and Issue Attitudes in the 2008 Presidential Election
Laurel Elder, Hartwick College
Steven Greene, North Carolina State University
Gender, Conflict Avoidance, and Social Network Usage
Paul A. Djupe, Denison University
Anand E. Sokhey, Ohio State University
Disc:
Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Tracy L. Steffy, CUNY Graduate Center
37-25
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: TALKING TOGETHER:
PUBLIC DELIBERATION AND POLITICAL
PARTICIPATION IN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 38-6
38-6
Chair:
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: TALKING TOGETHER:
PUBLIC DELIBERATION AND POLITICAL
PARTICIPATION IN AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 37-25
Katherine Cramer Walsh, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Disc:
Simone Chambers, University of Toronto
Part:
Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota
Michael X. Delli Carpini, University of Pennsylvania
Fay Lomax Cook, Northwestern University
Archon Fung, Harvard University
Diana C. Mutz, University of Pennsylvania
38-15
COMMUNICATING AND FRAMING POLITICAL
IDENTITIES
Hyun Jung Yun, Texas State University
Robin E. Best, Leiden University
Zeynep Somer-Topcu, Vanderbilt University
BIOLOGY, GENETICS, AND POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 5-14
Rose McDermott, Brown University
The Neural Basis or Representation
John R. Hibbing, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
John R. Alford, Rice University
Genetic and Environmental Transmission of Value Orientations
Carolyn L. Funk, Virginia Commonwealth University
Kevin B. Smith, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
John R. Alford, Rice University
Matthew V. Hibbing, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Pete Hatemi, University of Iowa
Robert Krueger, Washington University in St. Louis
Lindon J. Eaves, Virginia Commonwealth University
John R. Hibbing, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Chair:
Papers:
Racial Framing in Coverage of the 2008 Presidential Election
Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington University
Johanna Harvey, George Washington University
Claire Low, George Washington University
Genes, Anxiety, and Heuristics
Chris Dawes, University of California, San Diego
Genetic Covariation between Survey Response Style and
Personality
Levente Littvay, Central European University
Matthew V. Hibbing, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
The Impact of Political Campaigns on the Nascent Partisanship
of Mexican Immigrants in the United States: Evidence from Two
Mobilization Experiments
James A. McCann, Purdue University
Katsuo A. Nishikawa, Trinity University
Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue University
Michael W. Wagner, University of Nebraska
Ira H. Carmen, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
37-20
GENDER AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 31-23
Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Chair:
Like Parents, Like Citizens: Mexican Children’s Political
Socialization
Juan Enrique Huerta, ITESM
Young Voters in the U.S. and Turkey: The Changing Landscape
of Political Attitudes, Media Use and Individual Traits.
M. Selcan Kaynak, Bogazici University
Disc:
Daniel C. Hallin, University of California, San Diego
341
Daily Schedule
The Relationship Between Political Preferences, Fear, Trust, and
Psychopathologies
Pete Hatemi, University of Iowa
Rose McDermott, Brown University
Disc:
Racial Discourse in Political Advertisements: An Historical View
Stephen Maynard Caliendo, North Central College
Charlton D McIlwain, New York University
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
42-7
Chair:
Papers:
Daily Schedule
RECONSIDERING RESISTANCE: CONTESTED SITES
FOR POLITICAL CHANGE
Dorinda Tetens, CUNY-Graduate Center
Battles Over Bathrooms: Sexual Difference and Intimate Public
Space
Jennifer Gaboury, CUNY-Graduate Center
What’s at Stake in US-China Relations? Interpretation, Discourse
Analysis and the “Responsible Stakeholder” Debate
Eric M. Blanchard, University of Southern California
Disc:
Jeremy Menchik, University of Wisconsin
49-8
THEME PANEL: “FORGOTTEN PARTNERSHIP”
REMEMBERED: U.S.-CANADA RELATIONS 25 YEARS
LATER
Co-sponsored by T-22
Carol Wise, University of Southern California
Explaining Variation in Elites’ Mobilization of Women Fighters
in the Horn of Africa
Lisa Boswell Sharlach, University of Alabama, Birmingham
Rethinking “the People” in the Age of Chávez
George Ciccariello-Maher, Drexel University
Hearing the Voice of the People: Human Rights as if People
Mattered
Jose Miguel Cruz, Vanderbilt University
Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University
Infrapolitics: Race, Class and the Political Relevance of
Resistance
Jamila D. Celestine Michener, University of Chicago
Chair:
Part:
Greg Anderson, University of Alberta
Earl Fry, Brigham Young University
Patrick James, University of Southern California
Christopher M. Sands, Hudson Institute
Charles F. Doran, Sr., The Johns Hopkins University
Related Group Panels
African Politics Conference Group
Disc:
Jennifer Leigh Disney, Winthrop University
Robin J. Hayes, PhD, Santa Clara University
43-2
INTER-ETHNIC CONTACT AND VIOLENCE: FROM
POGROMS AND RIOTS TO WAR AND GENOCIDE
Co-sponsored by 11-23
Association of Chinese Political Studies
43-4
THE ISRAEL LOBBY AT 2.
Co-sponsored by 20-8
Panel 1
Chair:
CHINA, THE UNITED STATES, AND GLOBAL ORDER
Brantly Womack, University of Virginia
44-8
THE HISTORICAL TURN IN DEMOCRATIZATION
STUDIES: LESSONS FROM EUROPE
Co-sponsored by 15-6
Papers:
China’s Second Ascent and International Relations Theory
James C. Hsiung, New York University
45-6
CONCEPTUAL INNOVATIONS IN HUMAN RIGHTS
THEORIZING
Richard P. Hiskes, University of Connecticut
Chair:
Part:
46-5
Chair:
Part:
Panel 1
Understanding the Fallout in Sino-American Relations Over the
1999 Belgrade Embassy Bombing
Gregory J. Moore, Eckerd College
Peaceful Rise, Responsible Stakeholder: A Constructivist
Explanation of Improving Sino-American Relations
Ramon Pacheco Pardo, London School of Economics &
Political Science
David L. Cingranelli, SUNY, Binghamton
Jack Donnelly, University of Denver
Mark P. Gibney, University of North Carolina-Asheville
Shareen Hertel, University of Connecticut
Richard P. Hiskes, University of Connecticut
Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University
IS THERE A MULTIMETHOD CONSENSUS IN
COMPARATIVE POLITICS?
Co-sponsored by 11-75
Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania
Michael J. Coppedge, University of Notre Dame
Yoshiko M. Herrera, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Evan S. Lieberman, Princeton University
Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Energy, Environmental, Public Health, and Food Safety Risks in
China: Consequences for US-China Relations
Elizabeth Wishnick, Montclair State University
China’s Rise and the Challenges of Regulatory Globalization
Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago
Disc:
Chair:
Papers:
MEANING, DISCOURSE AND AGENCY IN POLITICAL
LIFE
Chris Mantzavinos, Witten/Herdecke University
How to Explain ‘Meaningful’ Actions
Chris Mantzavinos, Witten/Herdecke University
Imagination, political science, and agency
Brendan Jerome Hogan, New York University
Designing Conversational Interviews for Phronetic and Causal
Analyses: The Constitution in the Everyday Lives of Ordinary
Americans
J. Mitchell Pickerill, Washington State University
342
Brantly Womack, University of Virginia
Ja Ian Chong, Princeton University
British Politics Group
Panel 3
Chair:
Papers:
46-18
DEMOCRATIZATION, STATE STRENGTH AND
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN
AFRICA: NEW EMPIRICAL AND CONCEPTUAL
HORIZONS
Co-sponsored by 12-40
MEASUREMENT AND ELECTORAL BEHAVIOUR IN
THE UK
Paul Cairney, University of Aberdeen
How Political is Civic Engagement? A Case Study of the United
Kingdom Using a Multilevel Latent Class Analysis
David John Cutts, University of Manchester
Paul Widdop, University of Manchester
Katey Matthews, University of Manchester
Becoming Independent, Becoming Partisan? A Latent-Class
Analysis of Partisan Identification in Britain
Thomas John Scotto, University of Essex
Malcolm Brynin, University of Essex
Political Autonomy and Public Preferences in Scotland and
Wales: Conceptualisation, Measurement and Modelling
Roger Scully, Aberystwyth University
Christopher J. Carman, Strathclyde University
Daily Schedule
The First Casualty of the End of Conflict? The Death of Class
Politics in Northern Ireland
Jonathan Tonge, University of Liverpool
Disc:
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Chair:
Joel J. Kassiola, San Francisco State University
Papers:
Ecological Citizenship, Time, and Corruption: Aldo Leopold’s
Biotic Republicanism
Peter Francesco Cannavo, Hamilton College
Robert Johns, University of Strathclyde
Nonidentity, Equity and Exploitation
Matthew Rendall, University of Nottingham
Christians in Political Science
Panel 1
EVANGELICAL POLITICAL THOUGHT AND NATURAL
LAW
Co-sponsored by 33-2
Why Participatory Deliberative Democracy and Sustainable
Development Need Each Other - Toward a Transformative Green
Politics
Breanna Maria Forni, University of Maryland
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Limits of Freedom and the Freedom of Limits: Responding to
the Extinction Crisis
Jason Lambacher, University of Washington, Seattle
Panel 12 THE RECENT TERM OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT
Chair:
Ryan P. Williams, Claremont Graduate University
Part:
Robert Alt, The Heritage Foundation
David R. Upham, University of Dallas
Ralph A. Rossum, Claremont McKenna College
Anthony A. Peacock, Utah State University
Thomas Karako, Claremont Graduate University
Disc:
Harlan Wilson, Oberlin College
Japan Political Studies Group
Panel 3
Chair:
THE INTERACTION OF DOMESTIC AND
INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY IN JAPAN
Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies
Panel 3
Chair:
Papers:
TRANSNATIONALISM AND TAIWAN’S ROLE IN THE
WORLD
Vincent Wei-cheng Wang, University of Richmond
Papers:
Inside the Castle Gates: The Effects of Foreign Firms on
Policymaking in Japan
Kenji Kushida, University of California, Berkeley
Economic Statecraft in the Global Era: A Study of the Effects of
China’s Favor-Granting and Businessmen-Coopting Policy
Shu Keng, National Chengchi University
Comparative Responses to Financial Market Crises
Kay Shimizu, Columbia University
Values, Instrumentality and US Strategy: Change and continuity
in US perceptions and policies towards Taiwan
Joshua Su-Ya Wu, Ohio State University
Liberalization and Firm Demands for Trade Protection: the Case
of Japanese Petroleum
Llewelyn Hughes, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Taiwan’s Voluntary Compliance with International Norms of
Climate Change: instrumental adaptation or socialization
Hsiao-Chi Hsu, University of Washington, Seattle
Across the Pacific: Taiwanese / Chinese Abroad and Homeland
Politics
Pei-te Lien, University of California, Santa Barbara
Da-Chi Liao, National Sun Yat-sen University
Disc:
Educating Future Non-Citizens: The National, International, and
Sub-National Politics of Foreign Residents’ Education in Japan
Ken Haig, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
William W. Grimes, Boston University
Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego
The Becoming of Immigrants from Outsiders to In-Betweeens:
The National Identity of Immigrants in Taiwan
Nian-tzu Cheng, University of London, SOAS
Politica: Study of Medieval Political Thought
Chyungly Lee, National Chengchi University
Yuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan University
Chair:
Eric Voegelin Society
Panel 3
Chair:
VOEGELIN AND THE ANCIENTS
Paul Caringella, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and
Peace
Papers:
The Gnostic and the Spoudaios: Voegelin, Aristotle and the Art
of Pneumotaxonomy
Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Panel 1
Papers:
OBEDIENCE, HIERARCHY, AND AUTHORITY IN THE
MIDDLE AGES
Gerson Moreno-Riano, Regent University
Legislative authority in the later Middle Ages
Noah Dauber, Harvard University
St. Anselm and the Paradox of Justice
Alex S. Tuckness, Iowa State University
John M. Parrish, Loyola Marymount University
‘[A] dog’s obey’d in office’: Authority and Natural Hierarchy in
Aquinas
Leonard Donald Gordon Ferry, University of Toronto
Harvey Brown, University of Western Ontario
Voegelin’s Reading of Plato’s Philebus
Bernat Torres Morales, Hermeneutica i Platonisme
Josep Monserrat Molas, Hermenèutica i Platonisme
Disc:
Aristophanic Themes in the Republic
Zdravko Planinc, McMaster University
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Voegelin on Aristotle’s “Science of the Polis”
Jacqueline L. Pfeffer Merrill, St. John’s College
American National Election Studies
Daily Schedule
Disc:
The Political Economy of Energy Efficiency: Japan’s Efficiency
Gains in Comparative Perspective
Phillip Y. Lipscy, Stanford University
Affiliate Group Meetings
PUBLIC MEETING
Ron Srigley, Thorneloe University
Timothy Fuller, Colorado College
Green Politics and Theory
Panel 2
ECOLOGY, EQUITY, AND DEMOCRACY
343
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Disarming the Philosophers: Savonarola and Machiavelli’s
Critiques of Natural Philosophy
Rebecca Jean McCumbers, University of Notre Dame
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
APSA Panel
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession
Panel 1
Part:
BLACK FACULTY RECRUITMENT AND RETENTION:
THE IMPACT OF THE ECONOMIC CRISIS
Angela K. Lewis, University of Alabama, Birmingham
Clarissa Peterson, DePauw University
Michael O. Adams, Texas Southern University
Linda D. Smith, Texas Southern University
Disc:
Haig Patapan, Griffith University
2-1
ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES TULLY’S ‘PUBLIC
PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW KEY’
Co-sponsored by 1-1
2-13
THE PEOPLE JUDGE
Co-sponsored by 3-2
Kirstie M. McClure, University of California, Los Angeles
APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and
the Transgendered in the Profession
Chair:
Panel 2
Chair:
HETEROSEXUAL POLITICAL SCIENCE?
Paul A. Passavant, Hobart & William Smith Colleges
Papers:
Papers:
“What’s Wrong with Being Sexy?” Why Political Science Needs
to Get Serious About Sexuality
Alesha E. Doan, University of Kansas
By Means of Decision and Judgment: The Collective Wisdom of
the Popular Constituent Power
Andreas Kalyvas, New School University
Who is Judge? Locke and Kant on Political Judgment and Right
of Resistance
Miguel E. Vatter, Universidad Diego Portales
Bentley was Right: The Significance of LGBT Politics for
Political Science
Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas
Reflections on the Contribution of LGBT Political Studies to the
Study of Politics
Gary Mucciaroni, Temple University
Gay, Straight, or Questioning? Sexuality and Political Science
Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine
Disc:
Martha A. Ackelsberg, Smith College
APSA Task Force on U.S. Standing in the World
Panel 1
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE: U.S. STANDING IN WORLD AFFAIRS
Jeffrey W. Legro, University of Virginia
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
Part:
Aaron L. Friedberg, Princeton University
Martha Finnemore, George Washington University
John R. Ruggie, Harvard University
Theda Skocpol, Harvard University
Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University
Peter Trubowitz, University of Texas, Austin
Division Panels
T-23
THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA AND THE CITIES
Co-sponsored by 30-14 and 28-7
1-1
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES TULLY’S ‘PUBLIC
PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW KEY’
Co-sponsored by 2-1
Duncan Ivison, University of Sydney
Disc:
James Tully, University of Victoria
Part:
David Armitage, Harvard University
Rainer Forst, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University
Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University
Anthony Simon Laden, University of Illinois at Chicago
1-20
Chair:
Papers:
MACHIAVELLI’S METHODS FOR ADDRESSING
“POLITICS IN MOTION”
Haig Patapan, Griffith University
344
Popular Rule and Democratic Usurpation
Bryan Garsten, Yale University
Disc:
Kirstie M. McClure, University of California, Los Angeles
2-36
Chair:
CITIZENSHIP AND CIVIC CULTURE
Benjamin McKean, Princeton University
Papers:
Soft Borders: Complex Interdependencies and Multi-scalar
Associations
Julie Mostov, Drexel University
Eros, Philia and Periclean citizenship.
Rachel Templer, Goucher College
Cosmopolitan virtues and public acts
Anand Bertrand Commissiong, West Texas A&M University
Disc:
Jennet Kirkpatrick, University of Michigan
2-40
NATURE, SCIENCE, AND DEMOCRACY AFTER BRUNO
LATOUR
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
Chair:
Papers:
Bruno Latour and the Symmetries of Science and Politics
Mark B. Brown, California State University, Sacramento
‘Faitiche’-izing the People: What Representative Democracy
might learn from Science Studies
Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan
Testing Powers of Engagement: Sustainable Living Experiments,
the Object Turn, and the Undoability of Public Involvement
Noortje S. Marres, Oxford Institute for Science, Innovation
and Society
Cosmopolitics, not a Democracy of Things: On Latour’s Political
Theory in “Politics of Nature”
Michael Nordquist, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Disc:
William Chaloupka, Colorado State University
2-49
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON
STANLEY HAUERWAS AND ROMAND COLES,
CHRISTIANITY, DEMOCRACY, AND THE RADICAL
ORDINARY
Co-sponsored by 33-4
3-2
THE PEOPLE JUDGE
Co-sponsored by 2-13
“Life of Castruccio Castracani”: Machiavelli as Historian, Poet,
and Politician
Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame
The Fortune of Machiavelli’s Unarmed Prophet
John T. Scott, University of California, Davis
Criticism from Within: Anti-democracy in the Age of Democracy
Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University
Daily Schedule
3-16
Chair:
Papers:
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
CREATING THE CONDITIONS FOR A DELIBERATIVE
DEMOCRACY
Ronald Terchek, University of Maryland, College Park
Becoming Red and Blue: Education, Productivity and American
Voting
Lucy M. Goodhart, Columbia University
Is Spin Bad? An Analysis of Rhetorical Manipulation
Nathaniel Klemp, Pepperdine University
The Extension of the Franchise and Political Behavior in
Victorian Britain
Torun Dewan, London School of Economics
Samuel Berlinski, University College, London
Does Democracy Presuppose a Secular Public Sphere? Four
Arguments
Ian Ward, University of Maryland
Endogenous Preferences: The Political Consequences of
Economic Institutions
Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, London School of Economics
Two Trust-Based Uses of Mini-Publics in Democracy
Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia
Are Poor Voters Easier to Buy Off with Money? A Natural
Experiment from the 2004 Florida Hurricane Season
Jowei Chen, University of Michigan
Democracy Counts
Sofia Nasstrom, Stockholm University
Disc:
4-6
Papers:
Casiano A.W. Hacker-Cordón, Centro de Estudios Políticos y
Constitucionales
WARFIGHTING WITHIN AND ACROSS NATIONS
Suicide Terrorism and the Weakest Link
Brian Roberson, Miami University
Dan Kovenock, University of Iowa
Daniel Arce, University of Texas, Dallas
Disc:
Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San Diego
7-10
THE POLITICAL ANALYSIS OF POLICY
DEVELOPMENT
Jacob S. Hacker, University of California, Berkeley
Chair:
Papers:
Unsustainability of Equal Opportunity: the Development of the
Higher Education Act, 1965-2007.
Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University
Deondra Rose, Cornell University
Uncertainty and Incentives in Mediation
Mark Fey, University of Rochester
Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
An Experimental Investigation of Colonel Blotto Games
Dan Kovenock, University of Iowa
Roman M. Sheremeta, Purdue University
Subhasish Modak Chowdhury, Purdue University
The Delegated State: Marketizing Governance of American
Social Provision.
Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institue of
Technology
Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University
A Dynamic Theory of War Initiation and Termination
Yoji Sekiya, University of Rochester
When Policy Does Not Remake Politics: The Limits of Policy
Feedback.
Eric M. Patashnik, University of Virginia
Julian E. Zelizer, Princeton University
Bargaining Chips: Allocating Power in International Politics.
Thomas Chadefaux, University of Michigan
Disc:
Adam H. Meirowitz, Princeton University
5-16
POLITICAL TRUST
Co-sponsored by 37-18
6-9
THE POLITICS OF FINANCIAL CRISES: RESPONSES
TO THE 2007-2009 CRISIS IN COMPARATIVE AND
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 16-24
Benjamin J. Cohen, University of California, Santa Barbara
Chair:
Papers:
Interests, Institutions, and Incentives to Delay Adjustment: Why
Policymakers Fail to Address Early Signs of Trouble
Stefanie Walter, Harvard University
Disc:
Jacob S. Hacker, University of California, Berkeley
7-19
PRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT IN HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 23-2
8-6
QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 45-1
Amanda Marie Murdie, Emory University
Chair:
Papers:
Interest Group Influence in Authoritarian States: Comparing
Chinese Responses to the Crises of 1998 and 2008
David A. Steinberg, Northwestern University
Using the Zero-Inflated Ordered Probit in a Pooled CrossSectional Time-Series Setting to Clarify the Political Economy of
the Ratification of, and Compliance with, Human Rights Treaties
Will H. Moore, Florida State University
Bumba Mukherjee, Pennsylvania State University
At the Edge of Liberty: Proximity and Diffusion in the Human
Rights Space
Christopher J. Fariss, University of California San Diego
Keith E. Schnakenberg, San Diego State University
How the 2007-2009 Global Financial Crisis Taught Europeans to
Love the Euro
Patrick Leblond, University of Ottawa
Sara Binzer Hobolt, Oxford University
1925 Return to Gold: Keynes and Mr Churchill’s Economic
Crisis
James Ashley Morrison, Middlebury College
The Theoretical Benefits of Policy-Focused Analysis
Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley
Measuring Transitional Justice and Human Rights
Byung-Jae Lee, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Clair Apodaca, Florida International University
Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University
Benjamin J. Cohen, University of California, Santa Barbara
8-15
NEW APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 21-17
6-20
Chair:
THE ECONOMICS OF VOTING BEHAVIOR
David Hugh-Jones, Max Planck Institute of Economics
11-5
Papers:
Who Swings? Income and Unequal Voting Behavior
Seth J. Hill, University of California, Los Angeles
THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
Co-sponsored by 16-1
Idean Salehyan, University of North Texas
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Disc:
345
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Papers:
Don’t Want to Live with No Refugees
David Leblang, University of Virginia
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Citizenship Policy in Global Perspective
Jeannette Money, University of California, Davis
Jennifer C. Seely, Earlham College
Party Nationalization and Institutions
Scott Morgenstern, University of Pittsburgh
Stephen M. Swindle, Lee University
Temporal and Spatial Patterns in District-Level Party Support
Thomas Mustillo, Indiana U Purdue U Indianapolis
Sarah Mustillo, Purdue University
A Million Little Gestures: Individual Transnational Aid and
Political Stability
Richard W. Frank, Binghamton University
Party Organizations and Electoral Performance in PostCommunist Europe
Margit Tavits, Washington University
Where Did Everybody Go? Migration as a Form of Export-Led
Growth
Cali Mortenson Ellis, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
Timm Betz, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
The Europeanisation of Electoral Politics: An Analysis of
Converging Voting Distributions in 30 European Countries,
1970-2008
Daniele Caramani, University of St. Gallen
Politics When He’s in the U.S. and She Isn’t: The Political
Economy of Migration, Gender Roles, and Women’s Political
Participation
Jorge Bravo, UCLA
National Parties and Sub-National Party Systems: An Analytic
Perspective Applicable to Bolivia and Ecuador
Simón Pachano, FLACSO
Disc:
Idean Salehyan, University of North Texas
Disc:
Pradeep Chhibber, University of California, Berkeley
11-17
CIVILIAN TARGETING DURING CIVIL WAR:
EXPLORING SUB-NATIONAL VARIATION
Co-sponsored by 12-2
Alexander B. Downes, Duke University
11-56
THE NEW BUSINESS POLITICS IN DEVELOPING AND
POST-SOCIALIST COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 12-24
11-61
CHINA AND INDIA AS DEVELOPMENTAL MODELS?:
THE CONCEPTUAL CHALLENGES AND POLICY
IMPLICATIONS OF THE CHINESE AND INDIAN
DEVELOPMENTAL PATHS
Co-sponsored by 12-37
11-63
TAX ME IF YOU CAN: RENEWED STATE-BUILDING
AND REVENUE EXTRACTION IN POST-COMMUNIST
EUROPE
Co-sponsored by 13-6
11-66
THE POLITICS OF INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 14-10
12-2
CIVILIAN TARGETING DURING CIVIL WAR:
EXPLORING SUB-NATIONAL VARIATION
Co-sponsored by 11-17
12-24
THE NEW BUSINESS POLITICS IN DEVELOPING AND
POST-SOCIALIST COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 11-56
Kent Eaton, University of California, Santa Cruz
Chair:
Papers:
Direct and Indirect Violence against Civilians in Internal Conflict
Laia Balcells, Yale University
Loss Frames and Deliberate Civilian Targeting in the Angolan
War, 1961-2002
Jennifer Ziemke, John Carroll University
Military Empowerment and Civilian Targeting in Civil War
Juan Fernando Vargas, Universidad del Rosario
Displacement and Collective Violence in Civil Wars: Evidence
from Colombia
Abbey Steele, Yale University
Disaggregating Civilian Casualties in Civil War: Targeting
Patterns in Sri Lanka
Lisa Hultman, Uppsala University
Jannie Lilja, Uppsala University
Disc:
Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
11-34
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HEALTH
Co-sponsored by 48-1
Marcus Alexander, Harvard University
Chair:
Chair:
Papers:
Entrepreneurs and Parties in Democratic Latin America: A
Newfound Vocation for Politics
William T. Barndt, University of California, Riverside
Do Electoral Systems Have an Impact on Population Health?
Arzu Akkoyunlu-Wigley, Hacettepe University
Out of Chaos? Business Elites and the Rule of Law in Russia
Jordan Luc Gans-Morse, University of California, Berkeley
Death and Politics: How Partisanship and Inequality Shape
Health in the OECD
Marcus Alexander, Harvard University
From Who Knows Whom to Who Owns Whom? The Impact of
Corporate Ownership on State and Market Building
Roger Schoenman, University of California, Santa Cruz
Diffusion and Democratic Politics: The Rise and Fall of the
National Health Service Model
Katerina Linos, Harvard University
The Fragmentation of Business Interest Representation in
Contemporary Mexico
Steven T. Wuhs, University of Redlands
Disc:
Matthew C. Harding, Stanford University
11-48
MODELING PARTY PERFORMANCE OVER TIME AND
SPACE
Thomas Mustillo, Indiana U Purdue U Indianapolis
346
Business Support for Opposition in African Elections
Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California, Berkeley
Do Electoral Systems Have an Impact on Population Health?
Simon Wigley, Bilkent University
Poor Health at High Cost? The Effects of Wealth and Institutions
on Mortality in Advanced Democracies
Matthew C. Harding, Stanford University
Carlos Lamarche, University of Oklahoma
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Antoinette Handley, University of Toronto
Kent Eaton, University of California, Santa Cruz
12-37
CHINA AND INDIA AS DEVELOPMENTAL MODELS?:
THE CONCEPTUAL CHALLENGES AND POLICY
IMPLICATIONS OF THE CHINESE AND INDIAN
DEVELOPMENTAL PATHS
Co-sponsored by 11-61
Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Friends, Family, or Foreigners? The Political Economy of
Remittances and Diasporic FDI in India and China
Kellee S. Tsai, Johns Hopkins University
Transporting Models of Special Economic Zones: Comparing
SEZs in India and China
Aseema Sinha, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Nayantara Mukherji, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Varieties of Asian Capitalism and Federalism: Comparing the
Politics of Indian and Chinese Securities Finance
Matthew Rudolph, Georgetown University
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
14-16
WELFARE STATE AND INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 15-8
15-7
FRANCE AND EUROPE: A REKINDLED AFFECTION?
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 3
Francesca Vassallo, University of Southern Maine
Chair:
Papers:
Leadership in the European Union: Understanding France’s
Influence in the Trio Council Presidency
Colette Grace Mazzucelli, New York University
Sarkozy in Charge: The 2008 French Presidency of the European
Union
Francesca Vassallo, University of Southern Maine
The Illusions of a China Model: China, Latin America and the
“Beijing Consensus”
Matthew Glen Ferchen, Tsinghua University
When Bolkestein is Trapped by the French Anti-Liberal
Discourse: A Discursive Institutionalist Account of the French
Position on the EU Services Directive
Amandine Crespy, Université libre de Bruxelles
The Policy and Political Implications for the Developing World
of China’s Global Hybrid Model of Development
Douglas Fuller, University of London, King’s College
Tartuffe or Steamroller? France in the making of EU Health
Policy
Scott L. Greer, University of Michigan
Disc:
Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison
12-45
THE NEW ROLE OF COURTS IN LATIN AMERICA:
ARBITERS OF POLITICAL CONFLICTS OR ACTIVE
DEFENDERS OF RIGHTS?
Co-sponsored by 26-3
Disc:
Didier Georgakakis, IEP Strasbourg
James G. Shields, University of Warwick
12-48
IT’S NOT EASY GOING GREEN
Co-sponsored by 39-8
15-8
12-50
VARIETIES OF PRESIDENTIALISM IN LATIN
AMERICA: ORIGINS, SCOPE AND CONSEQUENCES
Co-sponsored by 44-18
Chair:
WELFARE STATE AND INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 14-16
Sofia A. Perez, Boston University
13-6
TAX ME IF YOU CAN: RENEWED STATE-BUILDING
AND REVENUE EXTRACTION IN POST-COMMUNIST
EUROPE
Co-sponsored by 11-63
Scott G. Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
The Political Foundations of Inequality in Post-Industrial
Capitalist Democracies
Duane H. Swank, Marquette University
Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University
Welfare State Institutions, Production Regimes and Preferences
for Redistribution in Advanced Industrial Countries
Daniel Stegmueller, University of Nijmegen
International Leverage vs. Institutional Mimicry: Explaining Tax
Reform in Eastern Europe
Gerald M. Easter, Boston College
Policy Transformation and Pension Regime in Comparative
Perspective
Hiroshi Araki, Sakushin Gakuin University
Politics and the Flat Tax in Post-Communist Europe
Hilary Appel, Claremont McKenna College
Policy Feedback in the Welfare State: An Analysis of Public
Support for the Welfare State in 13 States
Jason Jordan, Florida State University
Explaining the Changes in Attitudes towards Tax Compliance in
Russia: 2001 to 2008
Mikhail Pryadilnikov, Harvard University
Disc:
Johannes Lindvall, University of Oxford
Does Political Culture Matter? Deciphering the Whys of
Ukrainian Tax Compliance in Relation to Poland and Russia
Marc P. Berenson, Institute of Development Studies, U Sussex
15-21
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF PARTY POSITIONS
IN EUROPEAN DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 35-14
Disc:
Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University
16-1
THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
Co-sponsored by 11-5
14-10
THE POLITICS OF INEQUALITY
Co-sponsored by 11-66
Michael Shalev, Hebrew University
16-19
Chair:
STATES, MULTINATIONALS, AND EMERGING POWERS
Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Papers:
Diasporas vs. Multinationals: Foreign Origins of External
Liberalization in China and India
Min Ye, Boston University
Chair:
Papers:
Realigning Labor Market and Social Policies: Three Paths to
Reform
Torben Iversen, Harvard University
The Effect of Mass War on Tax Policy Preferences
Kenneth F. Scheve, Yale University
David Stasavage, New York University
Disc:
Ronald L. Rogowski, University of California, Los Angeles
High-Technology Innovation in India: The Challenging Case of
Semiconductors
William W. Keller, University of Pittsburgh
Louis W. Pauly, University of Toronto
Growth and Inequality within India: Government Efficiency,
Policy Choice and FDI
Tadeusz Kugler, Roger Williams University
Travis Coan, Claremont Graduate University
Do State Institutions Impact the Research and Development
Activities of Multinational Firms in Developing Countries?
Evidence from Brazil.
Patrick J.W. Egan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
347
Daily Schedule
Inequality and Voter Preferences for Redistribution in Western
Europe
David Rueda, University of Oxford
Jonas Pontusson, Princeton University
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Disc:
Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
16-24
THE POLITICS OF FINANCIAL CRISES: RESPONSES
TO THE 2007-2009 CRISIS IN COMPARATIVE AND
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 6-9
Daily Schedule
Environmental Change, Humanitarian Aid, and War
Andrew Coe, Harvard University
Muhammet Bas, Harvard University
Disc:
Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto
18-30
ROUNDTABLE ON ATOMIC OBSESSION (OXFORD UP,
2009), BY JOHN MUELLER
Co-sponsored by 19-8
19-8
Chair:
ROUNDTABLE ON ATOMIC OBSESSION (OXFORD UP,
2009), BY JOHN MUELLER
Co-sponsored by 18-30
Jacques E.C. Hymans, University of Southern California
Disc:
John Mueller, Ohio State University
Part:
Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin
Etel L. Solingen, University of California, Irvine
David A. Welch, University of Toronto
Scott D. Sagan, Stanford University
How Norms Do Not Travel Unchanged. The Andean
Community, Its Court of Justice, and the Challenge of Regional
Integration
Osvaldo Saldias, Humboldt University in Berlin
19-12
Chair:
FUTURE OF WARFARE
Robert Rauchhaus, University of California, Santa Barbara
Disc:
Amichai A. Magen, Stanford University
Papers:
Reinforcing MAD While Moving Toward Zero
Jane Kellett Cramer, University of Oregon
18-8
IMMIGRATION, SECURITY AND THE BORDERLANDS
IN THE POST-GLOBAL AGE
Michael Minkenberg, New York University
17-5
Chair:
Papers:
EUROPE’S TRANSFORMATIVE POWER AND
MECHANISMS OF SOCIAL INFLUENCE IN
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Anja Jetschke, University of Freiburg
The Transformative Power of Europe and Europe’s
Neighbourhood Policy
Tanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität Berlin
Mimetic Adoption and Norm Diffusion: ASEAN, Security
Cooperation and Human Rights
Hiro Katsumata, University of Bristol
Europe’s Transformative Power in Southeast Asia
Anja Jetschke, University of Freiburg
Chair:
Part:
18-18
Chair:
Papers:
The Evolution of Armed Groups
David H. Sacko, US Air Force Academy
Disc:
Warren Chin, King’s College London
Kelly A. Grieco, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Intervener Motives: Altruism or Cynicism?
Arman Grigoryan, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
20-1
THE MOTIVES BEHIND INTERVENTIONS
Co-sponsored by 18-18
21-17
NEW APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by 8-15
Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University
What is Bias and How Can We Measure It?
Holger Schmidt, George Washington University
Chair:
Does “the Responsibility to Protect” Encourage Intervention?
Taylor B. Seybolt, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
Clifford A. Bob, Duquesne University
18-23
THE ENVIRONMENT AND SECURITY:
CONCEPTUALIZATIONS, PROBLEMS AND
STRATEGIES
Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto
On Temporal Dependence in International Relations
Allan Dafoe, University of California, Berkeley
The “Separation Plot”: A New Visual Method for Evaluating the
Predictive Power of Logit/Probit Models
Brian D. Greenhill, University of Washington
Michael D. Ward, University of Washington
A Strategic Model of War Onset and Outcomes: A Fresh
Empirical Look at Why Democracies Win Wars
Patrick Michael Kuhn, University of Rochester
Kerim Can Kavakli, University of Rochester
Food Security in a Global Age: Addressing Challenges from
Malnutrition, Food Safety and Environmental Change
Bryan McDonald, University of California, Irvine
Climate Change and Human Security: Measuring the Economic
Loss due to Future Increase in Tropical Cyclones
Christian Webersik, United Nations University
Miguel Esteban, United Nations University
Tomoya Shibayama, Yokohama National University
348
Command Culture and the US Army in Iraq: Evidence of
Disparate Cultures and Approaches to Counterinsurgency
Matthew M. Zais, United States Military Academy
THE MOTIVES BEHIND INTERVENTIONS
Co-sponsored by 20-1
Arman Grigoryan, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Disc:
Papers:
Strong Horse or Paper Tiger: Reputational Effects of War
Outcomes
Kathryn McNabb Cochran, Duke University
Martin A. Schain, New York University
Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University
Sylvia Maier, New York University
Ariane Chebel D’Appollonia, Sciences Po
External Support for Non-Core Groups and the Politics of
Nation-Building: The Case of Tibet
Harris Mylonas, George Washington University
Chair:
Globalization, Theory of Action in Conflict, and Cybersphere
Chris C. Demchak, US Naval War College
Resolve and Uncertainty in International Relations
Jeremy Kedziora, University of Rochester
Index Variables and Aggregation Bias
Jun Xiang, University of Rochester
Disc:
Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University
Brian Lai, University of Iowa
22-12
CONSTITUTENT CONNECTIONS
Daily Schedule
Chair:
Michael L. Mezey, DePaul University
Papers:
The Politics of Ego: Senatorial Front Office Presentation of Self
to their Constituents
Brendan J. Doherty, United States Naval Academy
Sorting out influences in legislative voting behavior: The impact
of greater transparency and constituencies’ characteristics.
Carmen Le Foulon, Columbia University
Role Perceptions of Cross-Pressured Legislators in Emerging
Democracies: Preliminary Insights from the African Legislatures
Project
Shaheen Mozaffar, Bridgewater State College
Joel D. Barkan, University of Iowa
Robert Britt Mattes, University of Cape Town
Kimberly Smiddy, University of Cape Town
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
The Foreign Policies of the U.S. Presidents and the Giving of
Aid to the United States Agency for International Development
for the Reduction of the Spread of Narcotics: 1981 to 2006
Donald D.A. Schaefer, Texas Tech University
Disc:
Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington
R. Steven Daniels, California State University, Bakersfield
24-10
Chair:
WORKFORCE ISSUES IN MOTION
Stephen E. Condrey, University of Georgia
Papers:
Implementing the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990:
Human Resources Innovations in City Government
Christine B. Ledvinka, University of Georgia
Stephen E. Condrey, University of Georgia
Jonathan P. West, University of Miami
Surprisingly Normal: Recognition of Black Issues by Non-Black
Members of Congress
Matthew B. Platt, Harvard University
Disc:
Sally Friedman, SUNY, Albany
Michael L. Mezey, DePaul University
22-19
CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS AND ACCOUNTABILITY
Co-sponsored by 36-28
23-2
PRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT IN HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by 7-19
Ann-Marie E. Szymanski, University of Oklahoma
Chair:
Papers:
From Substance to Symbol: Head Start and the Change From
Modern to Postmodern Presidents
Joseph Cammarano, Providence College
Assessing the Performance of Pay for Performance in the U.S.
Federal Government
Laura I. Langbein, American University
The Aging of the State Government Workforce: Trends and
Implications
Yoon Jik Cho, Georgia State University
Gregory B. Lewis, Georgia State University
Creating Management Development Opportunities: The Unique
Role of Independent Employee Associations in Building Public
Management Capacity
Jared Llorens, University of Kansas
Choosing Careers in the Public Sector: A Nationwide Survey of
Canadian Post-Secondary Students
Charles W. Gossett, California State Polytechnic University,
Pomona
Disc:
Wendy R. Ginsberg, Congressional Research Service
James S. Bowman, Florida State University
25-13
FACTORS THAT DRIVE POLICY FORMATION AND
IMPLEMENTATION: WHAT DRIVES THE SCIENCE
THAT DRIVES POLICY?
Co-sponsored by 39-3
Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University
The Presidency and Prerogative: Lessons From History
Michael A. Genovese, Loyola Marymount University
Presidential Leadership in the Early United States
Fred I. Greenstein, Princeton University
Reliving the Lover’s Quarrel: The Creative Destruction of
Federalism and Presidential Power
Elvin T. Lim, Wesleyan University
Judicial Politics in the Streets: How Nixon’s Court Changed
American Politics
Kevin J. McMahon, Trinity College
Disc:
Andrew J. Dowdle, University of Arkansas
Graham G. Dodds, Concordia University
23-12
THE PRESIDENT IN FOREIGN AND DEFENSE POLICYMAKING
Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington
Chair:
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
Institutional Incentives and Early Adoption of Sustainable
Energy Innovations
Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University
Anthony Kassekert, Florida State University
Frances Stokes Berry, Florida State University
Surges, Jolts, Overloads, and Blackouts: Unexpected Changes to
Stable Energy Policies
William R. Lowry, Washington University
Ian Ostrander, Washington University in St. Louis
Changing America’s Image in the World: An Early Assessment
of Foreign-Policy Leadership in the Obama Administration
Meena Bose, Hofstra University
The Role of Science in Environmental Protection: Is the
Development of Environmental Law Toward More Protective and
Productive Way, or Distorted to Inequality, Through the
Involvement of Science?
Wen-Hsiang Kung, Indiana University
Transformation, Change, Continuity? Bush, Obama, and
Transition in the Pentagon
Tim Came, University of British Columbia
Colin Campbell, University of British Columbia
Cool Hand Nuke: Lessons from the Quiet Diplomacy of the
Cienfuegos Non-Crisis
Thomas M. Martin, Eastern Kentucky University
Disc:
Robert T. Nakamura, SUNY, Albany
25-28
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND CIVIL SOCIETY:
INTERPRETIVE APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and
Society, Panel 1
349
Daily Schedule
Executive War Power and the Supreme Court: A Reconsideration
of Historical Practices
Richard J. Dougherty, University of Dallas
Complexity and the Direction of Influence in the TechnologyEnvironmental Policy Relationship
Suna Bayrakal, York University
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
26-3
Chair:
Papers:
THE NEW ROLE OF COURTS IN LATIN AMERICA:
ARBITERS OF POLITICAL CONFLICTS OR ACTIVE
DEFENDERS OF RIGHTS?
Co-sponsored by 12-45
Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
Sex Work and the City: Local Politics and the Regulation of Sex
Among Consenting Adults
Cheryl A. Auger, University of Toronto
Inequity, Agency, and Subversion: An Ethnographic Case Study
of Korean Women Involved in the Sex Trade in the U.S. Military
Bases
Miduk Kim, Rutgers University
And Justice for Whom? Judicial Power and Autonomy in Brazil
Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas, Austin
Strategic Constitutional Review in Colombia, 1992-2006
Juan Carlos Rodriguez-Raga, Universidad de los Andes/
University of Pittsburgh
From Quietism to Incipient Activism: The Institutional Roots of
Rights Adjudication in Chile
Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota
Javier Couso, Universidad Diego Portales
The Institutional Setting for Constitutional Justice in Latin
America
Julio Rios-Figueroa, CIDE
Disc:
Daily Schedule
Gretchen Helmke, University of Rochester
John Ferejohn, Stanford University
27-3
Chair:
CONSTITUTIONAL EMPIRE
Jack M. Balkin, Yale University
Papers:
International law, citizenship, and empire
Christina Duffy Burnett, Columbia University
Liberty vs. Tutelage: The Northwest Ordinance and American
political development
Stefan Heumann, University of Pennsylvania
Straddling the Digital Divide: Race, Pornography, and
Representation in Cyberspace
Niambi M. Carter, Purdue University
Disc:
Lilly J. Goren, Carroll College
Penny A. Weiss, Saint Louis University
31-19
BLACK FEMINIST INTERSECTIONALITY IN ACTION:
A ROUNDTABLE ON BLACK WOMEN, CULTURAL
IMAGES, AND SOCIAL POLICY
Co-sponsored by 32-19
Nikol G. Alexander-Floyd, Rutgers University
Chair:
Disc:
Julia S. Jordan-Zachery, Providence College
Nikol G. Alexander-Floyd, Rutgers University
Part:
Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University
James Jennings, Tufts University
Stephen H. Marshall, University of Texas, Austin
Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas
Andrea Y. Simpson, University of Richmond
32-19
BLACK FEMINIST INTERSECTIONALITY IN ACTION:
A ROUNDTABLE ON BLACK WOMEN, CULTURAL
IMAGES, AND SOCIAL POLICY
Co-sponsored by 31-19
33-4
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON
STANLEY HAUERWAS AND ROMAND COLES,
CHRISTIANITY, DEMOCRACY, AND THE RADICAL
ORDINARY
Co-sponsored by 2-49
Morton Schoolman, SUNY, Albany
The Illegitimacy of Constitutional Empire
Mariah Zeisberg, University of Michigan
Losing the Constitution? Omniviolence, Arms Control, and
Limited Government
Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
Jack M. Balkin, Yale University
28-7
THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA AND THE CITIES
Co-sponsored by 30-14 and T-23
30-14
THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA AND THE CITIES
Co-sponsored by 28-7 and T-23
Harold Wolman, The George Washington University
Chair:
Chair:
Disc:
Part:
31-8
Chair:
Papers:
Douglas W. Rae, Yale University
Marion Orr, Brown University
Susan E. Clarke, University of Colorado
William R. Barnes, National League of Cities
Lorrie A. Frasure, University of California, Los Angeles
Robert T. Starks, Northeastern Illinois University
Wilbur C. Rich, Wellesley College
SELLING SEX, SELLING SELVES? GENDER, THE SEX
TRADE AND THE STATE
Co-sponsored by 47-1
Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University
An Absence of Leadership: The Role of Women in AntiTrafficking Policy in the U.S. Congress
Girish J. Gulati, Bentley College
Sex Work and Women’s Agency: A Feminist Argument for
Decriminalization
Carisa R. Showden, University of North Carolina,
Greensboro
350
Disc:
Stanley Hauerwas, Duke University
Romand Coles, Northern Arizona University
Part:
Cornel West, Princeton University
Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia
Kathleen Roberts Skerrett, Grinnell College
33-11
RELIGION AND POLITICS IN CANADA
Co-sponsored by 49-5
35-7
STABILITY AND CHANGE IN AMERICAN
PARTISANSHIP
Co-sponsored by 36-8
John J. Coleman, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Chair:
Papers:
The Next American Voter: The Political Demography of
American Partisanship
Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London
Vegard Skirbekk, International Institute for Applied Systems
Analysis
The Geography of Political Independence
Brian J. Brox, Tulane University
The New Democratic Majority: Who Voted in the 2008
Presidential Election?
Seth C. McKee, University of South Florida St. Petersburg
David Hill, Stetson University
Daily Schedule
A Reversal of Trends? Voter Turnout in the 2008 Presidential
Elections
Priscilla L. Southwell, University of Oregon
Disc:
John J. Coleman, University of Wisconsin, Madison
35-14
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF PARTY POSITIONS
IN EUROPEAN DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 15-21
Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia
Chair:
Papers:
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
37-18
Chair:
Papers:
Who’s the President? Source Cues, Trust, and Public Support for
Economic Interventions
Elizabeth Popp, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Thomas J. Rudolph, University of Illinois
The Influence of School and Peer Networks on Social Integration
and Political Trust
Jaime E. Settle, University of California, San Diego
Justin Levitt, University of Calfornia, San Diego
Cross-Cutting Issues and Party Strategy in the European Union
Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon
Till Weber, European University Institute
Who is Left Behind? Comparing European Party and Voter
Positions Along Two Dimensions
Jan Rovny, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Disc:
Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton
36-8
STABILITY AND CHANGE IN AMERICAN
PARTISANSHIP
Co-sponsored by 35-7
36-14
Chair:
VOTERS AND CANDIDATES
Danny Hayes, Syracuse University
Papers:
Candidate Quality and Fundraising in Canadian Federal Elections
David Coletto, University of Calgary
Disc:
Jeffrey W. Koch, SUNY, Geneseo
38-11
CAMPAIGN MESSAGES: IMPACTS OF INFORMATION
QUALITY AND TONE
Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University
Chair:
Papers:
Who Cleans Up When the Party’s Over? The Decline of Partisan
Media and Rise of Split-Ticket Voting in the 20th Century
Tim Groeling, University of California, Los Angeles
Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis
Just How Competitive is “Competitive”? Describing the
Relationship Between Electoral Competition and the Quality of
Campaign Information Environments
Keena Lipsitz, CUNY, Queens College
Disc:
Mary C. Deason, University of Mississippi
Arthur Sanders, Drake University
A History of Black Presidential Candidates: 1872-2008
Christina M. Greer, Smith College
38-18
INTERNET: COLLECTIVE ACTION, SOCIAL
MOBILIZATION, AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
Co-sponsored by 40-4
39-3
FACTORS THAT DRIVE POLICY FORMATION AND
IMPLEMENTATION: WHAT DRIVES THE SCIENCE
THAT DRIVES POLICY?
Co-sponsored by 25-13
39-8
IT’S NOT EASY GOING GREEN
Co-sponsored by 12-48
Lada V. Kochtcheeva, North Carolina State University
Hannah Goble, University of Wisconsin, Madison
36-28
CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS AND ACCOUNTABILITY
Co-sponsored by 22-19
Brendan Nyhan, University of Michigan
The President as a Focal Point in Congressional Elections
Matthew A. Childers, University of California, San Diego
Competition, Responsiveness, and the Strategic Politicians
Hypothesis
Eric McGhee, Public Policy Institute of California
Brendan Nyhan, University of Michigan
Hahrie C. Han, Wellesley College/RWJ Fellow, Harvard
Chair:
Papers:
Climate Agenda as an Agenda for Development in Brazil: A
Policy Oriented Approach
Sergio Abranches, ECOPOLÍTICA
Climate Change Decisions: International Influences on
Argentina’s Foreign Policy Decision Making
Amy M. Below, Ohio University
Changing Climate? China’s New Interest in Multilateral Climate
Change Negotiation
Wei Liang, Monterey Institute of International Studies
351
Daily Schedule
A Field Experiment of Participatory Shirking among Legislators:
Pressuring Representatives to Show up for Work
Christian R. Grose, Vanderbilt University
Disc:
Explaining Perceptions of Campaign Tone
Travis N. Ridout, Washington State University
Erika Franklin Fowler, University of Michigan
Does the Public Have a Double Standard for Candidate
Emotionality? Voter Reactions to the Tears and Anger of Male
and Female Candidates
Deborah Jordan Brooks, Dartmouth College
Disc:
Papers:
Toward a Candidate-Centered Model of Campaign Message
Strategy
Brian K. Arbour, CUNY, John Jay College
Do Preconceptions Drive Voter Perception of Campaign
Negativity?
Stephen C. Brooks, University of Akron
Rick D. Farmer, Oklahoma House of Representatives
Bias and Vote Choice: Lab Election Experiments on Gender and
Race
Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, Stanford University
G. Michael Weiksner, Stanford University
Chair:
Experimental Evidence on Political Trust
Aleisha Karjala, University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma
The Consequences of Conflict: How Party Polarization Affects
Political Trust
Scott O’Brien, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
When Parties Position Themselves. Political Parties in Policy
Space Across Europe
Alexander H. Trechsel, European University Institute
Voter Engagement and Responses to Party Polarization and
Depolarization: An Analysis of Party Positioning and Voter
Partisanship in Britain, 1970-2005
James Adams, University of California, Davis
Jane Green, University of Manchester
Caitlin Milazzo, University of California, Davis
POLITICAL TRUST
Co-sponsored by 5-16
Jeffrey W. Koch, SUNY, Geneseo
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Regional Environmental Governance: NGOs, States and the
Sulu-Sulawesi Marine Ecoregion
Kim D. Reimann, Georgia State University
Disc:
Elizabeth R. DeSombre, Wellesley College
40-4
INTERNET: COLLECTIVE ACTION, SOCIAL
MOBILIZATION, AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
Co-sponsored by 38-18
Micah Altman, Harvard University
Chair:
Papers:
The Internet and American Politics: Where The Politically Rich
Get Richer and the Politically Poor Get Perez Hilton
Laura McKenna, Ramapo College of New Jersey
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Pericles’ Statesmanship: Democratic Imperialism and
Transformational Statecraft
Mark Menaldo, Michigan State University
The Theory of Co-evolution in War as an Explanation of
Systems Change:A Comparison of Ancient Greece and Ancient
India
Manjeet S. Pardesi, Indiana University
From Anarchy to Hegemony: The Failure of the Balance of
Power in Medieval Japan, 1568-1600
Philip Streich, Rutgers University
Disc:
Christopher Darnton, Catholic University of America
Transitions 2.0: Web-Based Social Mobilization in Autocratic
Central Asia
Eric McGlinchey, George Mason University
44-18
Information Technology, Group Strategies, and News Media
Coverage
Young Mie Kim, Ohio State University
Michael McCluskey, Ohio State University
Chair:
VARIETIES OF PRESIDENTIALISM IN LATIN
AMERICA: ORIGINS, SCOPE AND CONSEQUENCES
Co-sponsored by 12-50
Javier Corrales, Amherst College
Papers:
The Transformation of Collective Action: Comparing
Organizations in Collective Action Space
Bruce Bimber, University of California, Santa Barbara
Disc:
Diana M. Owen, Georgetown University
41-7
BEYOND ‘SELF-RELIANCE’: EMERSON’S POLITICS IN
MOTION
Alan Levine, American University
Papers:
43-9
Chair:
Part:
43-16
Chair:
352
The Logic of Constitutional Change: Evidence from Latin
America
Gabriel L. Negretto, Centro de Investigación y Docencia
Económicas
Explaining the Variation of Presidential Interruptions in Latin
America
Leiv Marsteintredet, University of Bergen
Disc:
Scott Mainwaring, University of Notre Dame
Jonathan Hartlyn, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
44-20
Chair:
POST-WAR DEMOCRATIZATION
Christoph M. Zuercher, University of Ottawa
Papers:
Emerson’s Environmentalism: Nature as a Limit On and Source
of Power in His Thought
Hans von Rautenfeld, Kansas City Art Institute
Democracy Promotion in Post-Conflict Countries: Narratives,
Policies, Responses
Carrie Manning, Georgia State University
Sarah Riese, Freie Universität Berlin
Emerson’s Skeptical Morality Compared to Montaigne’s and
Nietzsche’s
Alan Levine, American University
Fostering Stability or Democracy? Aid in post-conflict countries
Rachel Hayman, University of Edinburgh
Carrie Manning, Georgia State University
The Limits of Self-Reliance: Emerson, Slavery, and Abolition
James H. Read, College of Saint Benedict
Emerson’s Transcendental America: Foolish Consistency and the
Contradictions of American Exceptionalism
Shannon Mariotti, Southwestern University
Disc:
The Origins of Presidentialist Constitutions in Latin America
since the 1980s
Javier Corrales, Amherst College
Crisis and Rapid Re-equilibration: The Consequences of
Presidential Challenge and Failure In Latin America
David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota
Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico
Facebook is... Fostering Political Engagement: A Study of Social
Network Groups and Offline Participation
Jessica Timpany Feezell, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Meredith Conroy, University of California, Santa Barbara
Mario Guerrero, University of California, Santa Barbara
Chair:
Securing Iraq: Lessons from Davy Crockett
David Malet, George Washington University
Mission Intrusiveness and Democratic Outcomes
Nora Roehner, Freie Universität Berlin
Jack Turner, University of Washington
Daniel S. Malachuk, Western Ilinois University-Quad Cities
PROCESS TRACING IN INTERNATIONAL AND
COMPARATIVE POLITICS: ACHIEVEMENTS AND
CHALLENGES
Co-sponsored by 46-3
Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University
Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University
Colin Elman, Syracuse University
James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Negotiating the Liberal Peace: On the Interaction Between
Peacebuilders and Local Elites
Jens Narten, Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy
Hamburg
Christoph M. Zuercher, University of Ottawa
Disc:
Jonathan Wheatley, Centre for Democracy, Aarau
45-1
QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 8-6
46-3
PROCESS TRACING IN INTERNATIONAL AND
COMPARATIVE POLITICS: ACHIEVEMENTS AND
CHALLENGES
Co-sponsored by 43-9
46-15
CHALLENGES AND ADVANCES IN HISTORICALLYORIENTED RESEARCH
THE SWEEP OF HISTORY: CLEANING UP ON
HISTORICAL LESSONS
Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Daily Schedule
Chair:
Eileen Doherty-Sil, University of Pennsylvania
Papers:
Permissive and Causal Conditions in Historical Causation:
Windows of Opportunity and types of Critical Junctures
Hillel David Soifer, Princeton University
Applying Historical Methods to Understanding the Evolution of
Property Rights When Land is Not Sacred
Tonya Caprarola Giannoni, George Washington University
Advice for Raising Registration and Turnout Rates: Field
Experiments on 37 College Campuses
Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University South Bend
Critical Junctures and Legal Meaning: (Re)Constituting Property
by Constituting Wetlands
Laura J. Hatcher, Southern Illinois University
Mirroring the Party: Candidate assessments and Party Images in
Britain
Tereza Capelos, University of Surrey
Evolution and Historical Institutionalism: Tropes Without Theory
Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania
Are Traditional or Modern Forms of Campaigning More
Effective? Combining Evidence from Agent Survey Data,
Campaign Spending and BES Survey Data at British General
Elections 1992-2005
David John Cutts, University of Manchester
Edward A. Fieldhouse, University of Manchester
48-1
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HEALTH
Co-sponsored by 11-34
49-5
RELIGION AND POLITICS IN CANADA
Co-sponsored by 33-11
Christopher Kirkey, State University of New York College at
Plattsburgh
Religion and Political Thought on the Canadian Prairies
Clark Banack, University of British Columbia
Evangelical Christians and the Conservative Party of Canada
Jonathan Malloy, Carleton University
The Catholic-Liberal Connection in Canada: Untangling the
Specifics
Laura Stephenson, University of Western Ontario
The Religion Enigma: Theoretical Riddle or Classificational
Artifact?
Barry J. Kay, Wilfrid Laurier University
Steven D. Brown, Wilfrid Laurier University
Andrea M.L. Perrella, Wilfrid Laurier University
Disc:
Political Survey of Incarcerated Americans
Amir Fairdosi, University of Chicago
Turnout and Primaries
Kristin L. Kanthak, University of Pittsburgh
Rebecca B. Morton, New York University
SELLING SEX, SELLING SELVES? GENDER, THE SEX
TRADE AND THE STATE
Co-sponsored by 31-8
Papers:
Young Voters, Engagement, and the 2008 Presidential Election
David P. Redlawsk, University of Iowa
Allison Hamilton, University of Iowa
Theoretical Deduction or Empirical Induction? Resolving Causal
Tensions in Comparative-Historical Research
Sean L. Yom, Harvard University
47-1
Chair:
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
James Farney, Queen’s University
Poster Sessions
POSTER SESSION 2
Divisions 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 42, 43, 48
Papers: Coalition Signals and Vote Decisions: A Survey Experiment
Michael F. Meffert, Leiden University
Thomas Gschwend, Universität Mannheim
Kingmakers and Leaders in Coalition Formation
Steven J. Brams, New York University
Marc Kilgour, Wilfrid Laurier University
Identification of Party Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa
Jonathan van Eerd, University of Zurich
Political Risk and Strategic Investing: Explaining Political
Parties, Interest Groups, and Activists’ Contributions in State
Supreme Court Elections
Beth Easter, Indiana University, Bloomington
The Effects of Judicial Campaign Messages on Voter
Mobilization: An Experimental Study
Jeffrey A. Gottfried, University of Pennsylvania
Eran N. Ben-Porath, Social Science Research Solutions
Campaign Learning and Issue Publics: Seniors in the 2000 and
2004 Elections
Michael B. Henderson, Harvard University
Context and Sub-National Economic Voting in Canada
Cameron Anderson, University of Western Ontario
Testing the Impact of Resources on the Individual-Level
(In)stability of Political Participation Over Time
Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
Sarah A. Treul, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Coalition Signals and Vote Decisions: A Survey Experiment
Michael F. Meffert, Leiden University
Thomas Gschwend, Universität Mannheim
The Effects of Education on Political Participation - An
Empirical Test of the Sorting Model in Sweden
Mikael Persson, Goteburg University
Distinguishing the Attitude from the Behavior: Toward a TwoStage Model of Nativism and Immigration Policy Attitudes
Benjamin R. Knoll, University of Iowa
Kramer Revisited: Comparing the Effect of Economic Attitudes
and the Real Economy on Vote Choice
Raymond M. Duch, University of Oxford
David A. Armstrong, II, University of Oxford
Public Opinion toward Immigrants and Employment
Opportunities in the European Union
Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron
The Perception and Reality of Political Corruption in the
American States
Robert Kirby Goidel, Louisiana State University
Donald A. Gross, University of Kentucky
Risk Taking and Redistricting: How a Party’s Willingness to
Accept Risk Leads to Seat Gains and Losses
Aaron Dusso, George Washington University
Beyond the Music: The Impact of Exposure to Rap Music and
Black Political Attitudes
Lakeyta Bonnette, Ohio State University
Are Young Republican Voters Deserting? An Analysis of
Partisan Alignment Among Young Conservative-Leaning Voters
During the George W. Bush Presidency
Emily McClintock Ekins, University of California, Los
Angeles
Breaking Through the Digital Divide: The Political Implications
of Latinos On-Line
Corinna A. Reyes, University of California, Santa Barbara
Digital Politics Divide: Worldwide Inequalities in Using the
Internet to Practice Politics
Andrea Calderaro, European University Institute
353
Daily Schedule
Party Movement in the Policy Space under Different Electoral
Systems
Iulia Cioroianu, New York University
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Using the Issue Crawler to Map Gun Control Issue-Networks
Peter Malachy Ryan, Ryerson University
Zachary P. Devereaux, Ryerson University
Neil R. Thomlinson, Ryerson University
Wendy Cukier, Ryerson University
How the Voters’ Satisfaction with the Municipal Government
Influences the End Result in an Election for Mayor, in a
Multiparty System: Brazil, 2008
Luciana Fernandes Veiga, Universidade Federal do Paraná
Choices for a New Political Era
Dorinda Tetens, CUNY-Graduate Center
Issue Interconnections in Party Competition: Policy Linkages and
Ideological Change in 23 Democracies
Markus Wagner, London School of Economics
The World Social Forum: Social Forums as Resistance Relays of
the Alter-Globalization Movement
Peter N. Funke, University of Pennsylvania
Individual Level Determinants of a Populist Vote: Evidence from
Eastern Europe
Galina Zapryanova, University of Pittsburgh
A Theory of Conceptual Change in Conventional Objects:
Wittgenstein, Political Inquiry, and ‘The Troubles’ in Northern
Ireland
Robert M. Mauro, SUNY-Albany
Not in My Front Yard! What Yard Signs Tell Us About
Expression, Instrumentalism and the Paradox of Political
Participation
Todd Makse, The Ohio State University
Anand E. Sokhey, Ohio State University
Complexity, Innovation and the Case for Reading Political
Theory Rhetorically
Daniel Skinner, CUNY Graduate Center
Teaching in the Storm’s Wake: Post-Katrina Public Education
Reform in New Orleans
Peter F. Burns, Loyola University New Orleans
Matthew O. Thomas, California State University, Chico
Politics in Motion: Emigration and the Sending State
Erin Court, University of Oxford
Undecided Beyond SES: System Affect Among Resource-Rich
Nonvoters
L. Matthew Vandenbroek, University of Texas, Austin
The Cash Nexus: Cities, Trade, Debt, and Parliaments
Deborah A. Boucoyannis, Harvard University
Profit as Aid
Lisa M. Burke, University of Denver
Visions of Liberalism: Negative Liberty, Positive Liberty, and
American Grand Strategy in Europe
Brendan R. Green, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
After the End: Francis Fukuyama’s End of History at Twenty
Ulrich Krotz, Brown University
Francisco Resnicoff, Brown University
POSTER SESSION 2: NEW FRONTIERS IN AMERICAN PARTY
RESEARCH
Sponsored by Division 35
Papers: Parties and Movements in American Politics: Patterns of
Alliance from Free Soil to the Christian Right
Daniel Schlozman, Harvard University
From Images to Votes: Understadning the Dynamics of Issue
Evolution
Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin, Madison
A Final Act for Carbon? Helsinki’s Lessons for Transatlantic
Cooperation on Climate Change
Robert Shum, Johns Hopkins University
Troubling Past: Denial and Silence in the Age of Apologies
Nava Löwenheim, Hebrew University
Vying for the Plank: Discovering the Conditions under which
Interest Groups Influence Party Platforms
Jennifer Nicoll Victor, University of Pittsburgh
Is the Internet Bringing About a New Quality of Democracy? An
Analysis of the Effect of Remote Electronic Voting on Turnout
Daniel Bochsler, Center for Comparative and International
Studies (University of Zurich)
The Cultural Basis of Party Identification
Joel A. Lieske, Cleveland State University
Edward B. Hasecke, Wittenberg University
Who Votes Strategically? A Panel Data Analysis of the 2006
Mexican Presidential Election and an Individual-Level Model
that Accounts for Measurement Error in the Dependent Variable
Francisco Flores-Macias, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
When National Politicians Meet Local Stakeholders: A DemandSide Approach of Pork-Barrel Politics
Carlos Pereira, Michigan State University
Count What You Want to Count: Motivated Perception and
Contested Ballots
Kyle Casimir Kopko, Ohio State University
Disc:
POSTER SESSION 2: EXPLAINING ORGANIZED POLITICAL
ACTION
Sponsored by Division 35
Papers: Examining Endogeneity in Social Movement Protest and Public
Opinion: The Case of the U.S. Women’s Movement
Lee Ann Banaszak, Pennsylvania State University
Heather L. Ondercin, Louisiana State University
Baptists and Church-State Advocacy: An Analysis of the Effects
of Membership Opinion on Lobbying the Supreme Court
Andrew R. Lewis, American University
It’s Personal: The Vote and the Role of Candidate Personality in
Mexico and Brazil
Mary C. Slosar, University of Texas, Austin
Should We Go Steady? Patterns of Cooperative Lobbying
Behavior Among Forestry Advocacy Groups in France and
Sweden
Emily Olivia Matthews, University of California, San Diego
Primaries in Mexico: The Effect of the PRI Nomination Process
in the 2000 and 2006 Presidential Election
Amalia Mena-Mora, University of Houston
Advocacy Coalitions: Beyond Influence, an Organizational
Survival Perspective
Stephanie Yates, Laval University
Raymond Hudon, Universite Laval
Voter Choice in the 2006 Mexican Presidential Election
Ines Levin, California Institute of Technology
Do Partisans’ Attachments Affect Finnish Parties’ Relocations?
Achillefs Papageorgiou, Tampere University
Poverty and Pocketbook Politics: The Relationship Between
Class, Egotropic Evaluations, and Presidential Approval in Peru
Matthew Singer, University of Connecticut
Macro Trends in Political Engagement: A Comprehensive Study
of Turnout and Unconventional Political Participation
Daniel Stockemer, University of Connecticut
354
David Karol, University of California, Berkeley
Soliciting Participation: Understanding the Role of Membership
Groups in Promoting Political Engagement
Maryann Barakso, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Disc:
Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
POSTER SESSION 2: INTRA-PARTY DEMOCRACY IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Sponsored by Division 35
Papers: Do Primaries Matter? How Internal Democracy Affects Party
Performance in the General Election
Kathleen M. Bruhn, University of California, Santa Barbara
Supreme Strategizing: The Nominating President, The
Confirming Senate, and the Delayed Supreme Court Justice
Jamaal S. Barnes, St. John’s College
Do Different Faces = Different Perspectives? The Study of
Intersectionality among African American Congresswomen
during the 103rd and 105th Congresses
Lashonda Marie Brenson, University of Rochester
Do Parties Become More Democratic and Does it Pay?
Assessing the Reciprocal Relationship Between Intraparty
Democracy and Party Membership
Ingo Rohlfing, University of Cologne
Disc:
Zero Tolerance and Academic Performance: When Fear Dictates
School Culture
LaGina Gause, Howard University
Formal Models of Machine Politics
Ugur Ozdemir, Washington University in St. Louis
The Chavez Effect: Public Opinion in Venezuela
Victoria Marie Jackson, Pennsylvania State University
Intra-Party Dynamics and Party Splits
Hande Mutlu, New York University
An Incomplete Evolution: Evangelical Minorities, Cultural
Values, and Issue Evolution
Ashley Lagaron, University of Florida
Simone R. Bohn, York University
Marisa Kellam, Texas A&M University
Testing Our Tolerance: American Attitudes toward Limitations
on the First Amendment Rights of Arab and Muslim Americans
Maisha T. Rashid, Barnard College
POSTER SESSION 4: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE
METHODS
Divisions 8 and 46
Papers: Taking Endogeneity of Generalized Trust Seriously: A Multilevel
Simultaneous Equation Modeling Approach for the Effect of
Generalized Trust on Economic Inequality
Changkuk Jung, Michigan State University
Traditional Measures for Untraditional Legislators: Legislative
Effectiveness of African Americans in the 103rd and 105th
Congresses
Camillia Redding, University of Rochester
Aid and Democratization: At the Intersection of Africa’s Crisis
Mariela A. Rodriguez, Georgia State University
Broken Promises: Neoliberalism in Latin America
Jennifer Tejada, Connecticut College
Reexamining Coattail Effects
Marc Meredith, University of Pennsylvania
Use Data-Mining Technique to Manage Overflow of Information
Herlin Chien, National Sun Yat-sen University
Verbal Style and Vice-Presidential Rhetoric: Unleashing the
Attack Dog in the 2008 Debate
David Lynn Painter, University of Florida
Specifying Spatio-Temporal Heterogeneity of Currency Policy in
East Asia: A Bayesian Analysis
Chih-Cheng Almond Meng, University of Texas at Austin
Related Group Panels
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Panel 11 THE AMERICAN FOUNDERS AND FREE SPEECH
Chair:
Larry Greenfield, The Claremont Institute
Papers:
Accounting for Empirical Uncertainty of Connectivity Weights in
Spatial Autoregressive Models
Martin Steinwand, University of Rochester
Is There a Right to Blaspheme? Thoughts from the Founders on
Religion and Freedom of Speech
Jeffrey Sikkenga, Ashland University
Is the Majority Party Just an Interest Group?: Reconciling
Legislator Ideal Points and the Roll Call Record
Adam Ramey, University of Rochester
The American Founding and the Limits of Free Speech
Christopher C. Burkett, Ashland University
Uncertainty, Multiple Possibilities, and Institutional Development
in Public Finance in Meiji Japan, 1868-1882
Wenkai He, Hong Kong University of Science and
Technology
Disc:
FRONTLINES/HEADLINES: Media, Military, and War in Iraq
Julia Y. Lam, Harvard University
Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and Society
What Political Science Has to Learn from Science Studies
Michael S. Kochin, Tel Aviv University
Genealogy and the Construction of Change, Continuity, and
Complexity in International Relations
Christine M. Lee, Duke University
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
Time to Agree: Gauging the Impact of Time Pressue and
‘Deadline Diplomacy’ in post-Cold War Peace Negotiations
Marco Pinfari, London School of Economics
Disc:
‘The Only Effectual Guardian of Every Other Right:’ Madison
on Free Speech
Edward J. Erler, California State University-San Bernardino
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND CIVIL SOCIETY:
INTERPRETIVE APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by 25-28
Douglas Torgerson, Trent University
Students as Stakeholders in Education Policy
Celina Su, Brooklyn College
Tensions in Deliberative Practice: A View from Civil Society
Jennifer Dodge, New York University
Disc:
Archon Fung, Harvard University
Aletta Norval, University of Essex
Eric Voegelin Society
Panel 5
VOEGELIN’S THE POLITICAL RELIGIONS AFTER 70
YEARS
355
Daily Schedule
Social Movements, Knowledge and Public Policy
Miriam Smith, York University
Michael Orsini, University of Ottawa
Michael J. Ensley, Kent State University
Luke Keele, Ohio State University
Philip A. Schrodt, University of Kansas
Shawn Treier, University of Minnesota
POSTER SESSION 2: RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER INSTITUTE
Papers: Ethnic Diversity and Overurbanization in the Middle East:
(Originally) Benign Differences with (Hidden) Political
Consequences
Jesse James Atencio, Washington University in St. Louis
Phillip Munoz, Tufts University
Montgomery B. Brown
Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Chair:
Matthias Riedl, Central European University
Papers:
A Secular Age as a Religious Age? Voegelin & Taylor on
Defining Modern Times
Rodney Kilcup, Independent scholar
The Concept of Evil in The Political Religions
Alin Vara, Central European University
The Concept of the State in Political Religions
Maxwell Reed Staley, Central European University
Fascism as Political Religion: The Case of the Roumanian Iron
Guard
Ionut Florin Biliuta, Central European University
Disc:
Peter Brickey LeQuire, University of Chicago
Thierry Gontier, University of Jean Moulin - Lyon 3
Daily Schedule
Jeb Barnes, University of Southern California
Naomi Murakawa, University of Washington, Seattle
Gordon Silverstein, University of California, Berkeley
Saturday, 11:30 AM to 1:30 PM
APSA Panel
APSA Departmental Services Committee
SESSION FOR GRADUATE DIRECTORS: THE MARKET IN
GRADUATE TRAINING: TRENDS IN HIGHER EDUCATION
Pre-registration is required. Register by sending an e-mail to
[email protected].
Part:
Richard C. Hula, Michigan State University
John Portz, Northeastern University
Robert D. Grey, Grinnell College
Sofia A. Perez, Boston University
European Consortium for Political Research
Panel 2
Chair:
Papers:
ENERGY POLICY AND GLOBAL WARMING:
AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN APPROACHES
Martin J. Bull, University of Salford
Governing Renewable Energy: A Continuing Balancing Act
Johannes Stripple, Lund University
Roger Hildingsson, Lund University
Public Opinion, the 2008 Presidential Election, and the Politics
of Climate Change in the United States
Paul R. Brewer, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
The Climate Challenge, Ecological Modernisation and
Technology Forcing: A Comparative Analysis of EU and US
Approaches’
Joseph Szarka, University of Bath
Institutions for Adaption to Climate Change
Katrien Termeer, Wageningen University
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 2
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 2
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
SESSION 2
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 2
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 2
French Politics Group
Panel 3
FRANCE AND EUROPE: A REKINDLED AFFECTION?
Co-sponsored by 15-7
Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists
Panel 2
Chair:
Papers:
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT UNDER AN
AUTHORITARIAN REGIME: FINDINGS FROM RECENT
SURVEY RESEARCH ON CHINA
Melanie Frances Manion, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Social Capital and Self-Government under an Authoritarian: A
Survey of Rural China
Jie Chen, Old Dominion University
Narisong Huhe, Old Dominion University
Religion and Politics in China
Wenfang Tang, University of Iowa
Disc:
Chair:
SESSION 2
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 2
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 2
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
Crisis management in an Authoritarian Regime: Media effects
during the Sichuan Earthquake
Pierre F. Landry, Yale University
Daniela Stockmann, Leiden University
SESSION 2
Citizen Compliance and State Legitimacy in Rural China
Lily Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
Melanie Frances Manion, University of Wisconsin, Madison
SESSION 2
Institute for Constitutional Studies
Panel 2
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
AUTHOR MEETS READERS, GORDON SILVERSTEIN’S
LAW’S ALLURE: HOW LAW SHAPES, CONSTRAINS,
SAVES, AND KILLS POLITICS
Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 2
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 2
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 2
Part:
356
Charles R. Epp, University of Kansas
R. Shep Melnick, Boston College
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
SESSION 3
SESSION 2
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 3
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 2
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 2
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 2
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 2
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 2
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 2
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 2
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM
SESSION 3
APSA Meetings
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
COMMITTEE MEETING
SESSION 2
APSA Events
SESSION 3
2010 APSA PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEETING
APSA Committee on the Status of Women in the Profession
COMMITTEE MEETING
APSA Events
SESSION 2
Daily Schedule
APSA Reception
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 3
PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS PUBLIC RECEPTION AND OPEN
DIALOGUE WITH NEW EDITOR
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
Affiliate Group Meetings
SESSION 3
SESSION 2
Soomo Publishing
SPONSORED LUNCH
Featuring a presentation by David Lindrum entitled “Ten
Things You Couldn’t Do Ten Years Ago”
357
Saturday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
Affiliate Group Meetings
SESSION 2
Cooperative Congressional Election Study
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
Journal of Political Science Education
SESSION 2
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Related Group Meetings
Labor Project
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 2
Political Forecasting Group
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 2
Section Business Meetings
23 Presidency Research
Saturday, 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
25 Public Policy
SESSION 2
BUSINESS MEETING
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
48 Health Politics and Health Policy
BUSINESS MEETING
SESSION 2
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
Saturday, 12:15 PM to 1:45 PM
SESSION 2
APSA Panel
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
APSA Events
SESSION 2
PLENARY SESSION GREAT DEBATE: HOW FREE SHOULD HATE
SPEECH BE?
Chair:
Amy Gutmann, University of Pennsylvania
Part:
Carissima Mathen, University of New Brunswick
Robert Post, Yale University
Jeremy Waldron, New York University
Keith E. Whittington, Princeton University
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 2
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 2
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 2
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 2
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 2
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 2
358
SESSION 2
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 2
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 2
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Papers:
APSA Reception
Analyzing the Interrelationship between Metaphors and Contexts:
Informing and Performing
Jernej Pikalo, University of Ljubljana
APSA Events
RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER INSTITUTE, MINORITY
FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM, AND MINORITY STUDENT
RECRUITMENT PROGRAM COFFEE HOUR
Using Metaphors to Analyze the US Report on ‘Trafficking in
Persons’
Dag Stenvoll, University of Bergen
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Metaphorical Concepts and the Discursive Construction of
Legitimacy: The Framing of (Inter-)National Governance
Arrangements in Media Discourses
Steffen G. Schneider, University of Bremen
APSA Panel
International Committee
Panel 2
FEDERALISM, NATIONALISM, AND DEMOCRACY: A
ROUNDTABLE HONORING SAMUEL H. BEER’S
CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM
Co-sponsored by 28-3
APSA Task Force on U.S. Standing in the World
Panel 3
Chair:
Part:
ROUNDTABLE: U.S. STANDING ACROSS THE WORLD’S
REGIONS
Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University
Victor D. Cha, Georgetown University
Maya Chadda, William Paterson University
Giacomo Chiozza, Vanderbilt University
Marc Lynch, George Washington University
Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University
Etel L. Solingen, University of California, Irvine
Division Panels
T-24
THEME PANEL: CANADIAN HUMAN RIGHTS
COMMISSIONS
Co-sponsored by 45-10
T-25
THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND
THE SHIFTING STUDY OF ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 6-24 and 12-14
Context and Metaphor: A New Approach to the History of Ideas
Takashi Shogimen, University of Otago
Disc:
Vasileios Syros, University of Chicago
2-24
Chair:
BODIES, PASSIONS, DE BEAUVOIR
Mihaela Czobor-Lupp, Georgetown University
Papers:
Depression and Political Action: Philosophical Reflections
Margaret Jean Ogrodnick, University of Manitoba
The Embodied Subject in a De-materialized World
Elaine Stavro, Trent University
Freedom and the Drama of Coexistence
Patricia Moynagh, Wagner College
Disc:
Marilyn LaFay, University of Vermont
Cynthia Halpern, Swarthmore College
2-30
Chair:
JUDGMENT AND POLITICS
Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine
Papers:
The Role of Judgment in Explanations of Politics
Sanjay Ruparelia, New School for Social Research
Political Judgment beyond Paralysis and Heroism: Deliberation,
Decision, and the Crisis in Darfur
Mathias Thaler, Universidade de Coimbra
1-18
Chair:
DEMOCRACY, AGONISM AND POWER
Emily Nacol, Vanderbilt University
The Phenomenological Resurrection of Aristotle: Heidegger,
Arendt, and Phronesis
Matthew C. Weidenfeld, Washington State University
Papers:
Between Eris and Eros: Nietzsche on Beautiful Competition
Jeffrey Church, Duke University
’My Divinity Opposes Me’: Socrates and the Political Decision
Char Roone Miller, George Mason University
The Power of Democracy: Spinoza on Collective Action
Martin Saar, University of Frankfurt
Disc:
Any Given We: Sheldon Wolin and Vital Democracy
Scott G. Nelson, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
Crina Archer, Northwestern University
Torrey J. Shanks, University at Albany, SUNY
2-41
POLITICAL POSSIBILITY IN THE NOVELS OF JOSE
SARAMAGO
Co-sponsored by 41-2
Simona Goi, Calvin College
Disc:
Emily Nacol, Vanderbilt University
2-8
Chair:
POLITICS AND/AS DRIVE
Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, Whitman College
Papers:
Ethics and the Democratic Drive: The Case of George W. Bush
James R. Martel, San Francisco State University
Mark Andrejevic, University of Queensland
Chair:
Papers:
Jose Saramago: Our Bodies, Our Places
Stephen L. Esquith, Michigan State University
Emergency! Saramago on Blindness and Seeing
Joan C. Tronto, CUNY, Hunter College
Citizens Don’t Always Need a Name or How Senhor Jose Can
Teach us Political Freedom
Eric Gorham, Quest University Canada
Politics without Politics
Jodi Dean, Hobart & William Smith Colleges
Disc:
Maria Valadas, Michigan State University
Disc:
Steven Johnston, University of South Florida
2-51
2-14
FOCUS ON METAPHOR: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
LANGUAGE AND DISCOURSE
Co-sponsored by 46-2
Terrell Carver, University of Bristol
POWER, GOVERNMENTALITY AND SOCIAL CHANGE
Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee ‘36 (Power),
Panel 1
3-8
UNCONVENTIONAL CONVENTIONS IN JUST WAR
THEORY
Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago
Chair:
Chair:
359
Daily Schedule
Left Melodrama
Elisabeth Anker, George Washington University
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Papers:
Daily Schedule
Individual and National Defense
David R. Mapel, University of Colorado
Disc:
Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
The Justificatory Independence of the Norms of War
Matthew Noah Smith, Yale University
6-12
NEW APPROACHES TO REGIME PERFORMANCE AND
TRANSITION
Co-sponsored by 11-55
David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota
Liberal Lustration
Yvonne Chiu, Brown University
Vindicating the Principle of Distinction in the Fight against
Terrorism
Avery Elias Plaw, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
Disc:
Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago
3-26
Chair:
KANT AND RAWLS
Shaun P. Young, York University
Papers:
Rawlsian Affirmative Action
Robert S. Taylor, University of California, Davis
Chair:
Papers:
Modeling the Relationship Between Inequality and Regime
Transition: Fear of Expropriation from the State, Not
Redistribution from the Poor
Ben William Ansell, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota
Why Do Some Autocracies Perform Surprisingly Well?
William Roberts Clark, University of Michigan
Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Thomas E. Flores, New York University
Paul Poast, University of Michigan
International Factor Prices and Waves of Regime Change
John Stephen Ahlquist, UCLA
Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University
Rethinking the Reasonable Endorsement Test as a Basis for
Public Reason
David Thunder, Princeton University
Autonomy and the Sources of Political Normativity
Christian F. Rostboll, University of Copenhagen
Disc:
Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles
Kant and Rastafari on Respect
Neil Roberts, Williams College
6-24
THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND
THE SHIFTING STUDY OF ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 12-14 and T-25
Richard F. Doner, Emory University
Disc:
Shaun P. Young, York University
4-4
Chair:
CONNECTING THE BRANCHES
Alan E. Wiseman, Ohio State University
Disc:
Robert H. Bates, Harvard University
Atul Kohli, Princeton University
Papers:
Legislatures, Bureaucracies and Distributive Spending
Michael M. Ting, Columbia University
Part:
Ben Ross Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Catherine Boone, University of Texas, Austin
Melani Cammett, Brown University
Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago
7-5
RETHINKING THE AMERICAN STATE: HISTORIANS
AND POLITICAL SCIENTISTS CONVERSE
James T. Sparrow, University of Chicago
Chair:
“The Administrator Shall Consider”: Controlling the Basis of
Agency Choice
Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester
Congressional Development of the Institutional Presidency
Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley
John W. Patty, Harvard University
A Dynamic Model of Judicial Appointments
David M. Primo, University of Rochester
Yoji Sekiya, University of Rochester
Chair:
Papers:
Common Agency Lobbying and Majority Rule Institutions
Alexander Victor Hirsch, Stanford University
David P. Baron, Stanford University
Disc:
Justin Fox, Yale University
5-12
Chair:
ATTRIBUTIONS AND JUDGMENTS
Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
The Politics of Causes: Identities, Predispositions, and
Attributions Toward Shooting Tragedies
Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas
Mark R. Joslyn, University of Kansas
Public Responses to Global Threats: A Racial Divide?
Ted Brader, University of Michigan
Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan
Affective Attributions: Shock, Anxiety, and Attribution of Blame
During Crisis Events
Cherie Maestas, Florida State University
Lonna Rae Atkeson, University of New Mexico
Black Elite Rhetoric and System Justification Ideology
Byron D’Andra Orey, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Hyung Lae Park, Jackson State University
Lester Kenyatta Spence, Johns Hopkins University
360
Beyond Retrenchment: Republicans and the Welfare State
Jeremy Johnson, Brown University
Ironies of the American State
Robert C. Lieberman, Columbia University
Desmond King, Oxford University
A Government out of Sight: The Mystery of National Authority
in Nineteenth-Century America
Brian Balogh, University of Virginia
Challenging Corporate Liberalism: The Convergence of Right
and Left Critiques of Economic Regulation in the United States,
1960-1973
Eduardo Canedo, Princeton University
Private Litigants, Public Policy Enforcement: The Regulatory
Power of Private Litigation and the American Bureaucracy
Quinn W. Mulroy, Columbia University
Disc:
James T. Sparrow, University of Chicago
8-7
Chair:
ESTIMATING CAUSAL EFFECTS
Kevin A. Clarke, University of Rochester
Papers:
Oil, Civil War, and the State Weakness Mechanism: Bounding
Mechanism Specific Causal Effects
Adam Glynn, Harvard University
Daily Schedule
Logic of Comparison in Experimental Method: Methodological
Compatibility between Experiments and Comparative Studies
Junko Kato, University of Tokyo
Hiroko Ide, University of Tokyo
Modelling Complex Causality in Welfare State Reform: A New
Theoretical and Empirical Model
Gijs Schumacher, VU University Amsterdam
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
11-30
Chair:
Papers:
A General Approach to Causal Mediation Analysis
Kosuke Imai, Princeton University
Luke Keele, Ohio State University
Erin Hartman, University of California, Berkeley
8-17
NETWORKS OF ADVOCATES AND ACTIVISTS
Co-sponsored by 35-13
11-14
ILLIBERAL POLITICS IN LIBERAL STATES: STUDYING
THE ‘ROUGH EDGES OF DEMOCRACY’
Co-sponsored by 46-1
Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
11-21
Chair:
Papers:
Performing the Nation-State: Rebel Groups and Symbolic
Sovereignty
Zachariah Cherian Mampilly, Vassar College
Ethnic Civil War Termination, Minorities, and Post-Partition
Violence
Carter R. Johnson, University of Maryland
In the Midst of Cynicism and Faith: Avenues of Participation
among Ex-Combatants in Liberia
Johanna Söderström, Uppsala University
Disc:
Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University
Democratic signalling and restrictions to pluralism: Banning
extremist parties in advanced democracies
Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University
11-46
Antidiscrimination Policy and Rights: Majority vs. Minority
Terri E. Givens, University of Texas-Austin
Chair:
DEMOCRACY, ELECTIONS, AND POLITICAL
(IN)STABILITY
Co-sponsored by 44-3
Leonard B. Weinberg, University of Nevada, Reno
Making Islam Safe for Democracy: Legal Restrictions on
Political Islamist Federations in Western European Democracies
Jonathan A. Laurence, Boston College
Papers:
Post-Election Protests and Their Consequences
Emily Ann Beaulieu, University of Kentucky
Weak Democratic States and Reactions to Extremism
Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin
Eran Zaidise, University of Haifa
Elections and Civil War
Jose Antonio Cheibub, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Jude C. Hays, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
When Democracies Kill. A comparative study of the USA,
Northern Ireland, Rwanda, and India.
Christian Davenport, University of Maryland
Making Democracy Safe: Institutional Causes & Consequences
of Electoral Coercion and Violence
Megan E. Reif, University of Michigan
When Will Parties Comply with Electoral Results?
Svitlana Chernykh, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin
Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University
COMPLEXITY AND CLIENTELISM: THE ROLE OF
MOBILIZATION AND REGIME TYPE
Co-sponsored by 12-5
Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University
The Effect of Democratic Political Institutions on Political
Violence in Different Societal Settings
Joel Selway, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Kharis Ali Templeman, University of Michigan
Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University
11-52
DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 16-11
11-55
NEW APPROACHES TO REGIME PERFORMANCE AND
TRANSITION
Co-sponsored by 6-12
The Dynamics of Particularistic Politics in Non-Democracies
Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University
11-69
PARTY UNITY AND DEFECTION
Co-sponsored by 22-3
The Transformation of Political Clientelism in African
Democracies
Nicolas van de Walle, Cornell University
12-5
COMPLEXITY AND CLIENTELISM: THE ROLE OF
MOBILIZATION AND REGIME TYPE
Co-sponsored by 11-21
12-9
INSURGENT GOVERNANCE OF CIVILIANS DURING
CIVIL WAR
Co-sponsored by 11-30
12-14
THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND
THE SHIFTING STUDY OF ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 6-24 and T-25
Reconsidering Ecological Evidence of Distributive Politics
Susan C. Stokes, Yale University
Moderating Effects of Patronage in the Middle East and Eastern
Europe
Sherrill Stroschein, University College, London
Gul M. Kurtoglu Eskisar, Dokuz Eylul University
Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University
361
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Political Cash Transfers? Redistribution, Elections and Bolsa
Familia in Brazil
Simeon C. Nichter, University of California, Berkeley
Claudio Ferraz, PUC-Rio
Disc:
The Creation of Wartime Social Orders: Armed Groups’
Strategies and Civilian Agency in Civil War
Ana Arjona, Yale University
Guerrilla Organization of Civilian Resources during Civil War
Nelson Kasfir, Dartmouth College
A Counterfactual Analysis of Necessary and Sufficient Causation
Teppei Yamamoto, Princeton University
Disc:
INSURGENT GOVERNANCE OF CIVILIANS DURING
CIVIL WAR
Co-sponsored by 12-9
Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
12-26
Chair:
Papers:
Daily Schedule
ISLAM AND POLITICAL MOBILIZATION IN
SOUTHEAST ASIA
David S. Patel, Cornell University
Mobilizing Political Islam in Democratic Indonesia
Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University
R. William Liddle, Ohio State University
Saiful Mujani, Syarif Hidayatullah State Islamic University
Does Piety Matter? Islamist Party Mobilization in Muslim
Southeast Asia
Kikue Hamayotsu, Northern Illinois University
Islamist or Ethnonationalist Mobilization? Explaining the
Resurgence of Ethnic Violence Among Muslim Minorities in
Thailand and the Philippines
Jacques Bertrand, University of Toronto
A Road with Multiple Lanes: Joining Economic and Monetary
Union
Assem Dandashly, University of Victoria
Disc:
Klaus Armingeon, Universitaet of Berne
Irina Khmelko, Georgia Southern University
16-11
DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 11-52
Christina Davis, Princeton University
Chair:
Papers:
The decline of “Islamism” in Indonesia
Michael Buehler, Columbia University
Common Agency and China’s Trade Policymaking: An
Endogenous Switching Regression Analysis
Hans Han-Pu Tung, Harvard University
Interlopers in Ethnic and Religious Conflicts: Terrorist Networks
and Militias in Christian-Muslim Violence in Indonesia
Yuhki Tajima, University of California, Riverside
Disc:
Eva R. Bellin, CUNY, Hunter College
12-52
ETHNICITY, RELIGION AND TRADITIONAL
AUTHORITY IN AFRICAN POLITICS
Co-sponsored by African Politics Conference Group, Panel 3
13-16
THE AMBIGUOUS POLITICAL LEGACIES OF EU
ENLARGMENT
Co-sponsored by 15-11
14-5
Chair:
MODELING COMPLEX POLITICAL ENVIRONMENTS
Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto
Papers:
Party Decision Rules and the Evolution of Party Systems: An
Agent-Based Modeling Study
James Adams, University of California, Davis
Alex Mayer, University of California, Davis
Zeynep Somer-Topcu, Vanderbilt University
Protectionist Consumers vs. Free Trade Producers: Evidence
from Survey Experiments in Japan
Megumi Naoi, University of California, San Diego
Ikuo Kume, Waseda University
Democratic Differences: Electoral Institutions and Compliance
withGATT/WTO Agreements
Stephanie J. Rickard, Dublin City University
Lobbying for Litigation: The Domestic Politics of GATT/WTO
Adjudication
Christina Davis, Princeton University
Disc:
Moonhawk Kim, University of Colorado at Boulder
Cheryl M. Schonhardt-Bailey, London School of Economics
16-23
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS ROUNDTABLE: DAVID
LAKE’S HIERARCHY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Co-sponsored by 18-4
17-11
THE ROLE OF DOMESTIC COURTS IN
INTERNATIONAL AND TRANSNATIONAL POLITICAL
AND ECONOMIC PROCESSES
Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina
Chair:
Papers:
The Role of Social Autonomy in Perceptions of “Other” in the
International System
Timothy J. Junio, University of Pennsylvania
Court Reform and FDI in Transitional States: Chile and the
Philippines
Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine
Private International Law in Domestic Courts: Implications for
Global Economic Welfare
Christopher A. Whytock, University of Utah
Veto Actors Bargaining in Common Pools: Empirical Models of
Policy with Multiple Policymakers
Robert J. Franzese, Jr., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Examining Trends over Time in International Law Decisions of
the US Courts of Appeals
Alan Tauber, University of South Carolina
Partisan Waves: Ideological Change and the Economics of the
Median Voter
Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, London School of Economics
Giving Deference: U.S. Judges and the Use of International
Comity
Tonya L. Putnam, Columbia University
Disc:
Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto
15-11
THE AMBIGUOUS POLITICAL LEGACIES OF EU
ENLARGMENT
Co-sponsored by 13-16
Amie Kreppel, University of Florida
Disc:
Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina
18-4
The Political Challenge of Integrating East/Central European
States into the European Union: Equal Partners or Reluctant
Neighbors?
Luba Racanska, St John’s University
Chair:
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS ROUNDTABLE: DAVID
LAKE’S HIERARCHY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Co-sponsored by 16-23
Susan Dayton Hyde, Yale University
Disc:
David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
The Politics of Euro Adoption in the New Member States
Petia A. Kostadinova, University of Florida
Part:
Stephen D. Krasner, Stanford University
Robert O. Keohane, Princeton University
Alexander Cooley, Barnard College
Michael N. Barnett, University of Minnesota
18-41
GRAND STRATEGY BETWEEN THE WARS
Co-sponsored by 43-11
Chair:
Papers:
The Quality of Democracy in the European Union
David R. Cameron, Yale University
The East Side Story: Socialisation and Empowerment in the EU
Enlargement Context
Cristina Elena Parau, University of Oxford
362
Daily Schedule
19-13
Papers:
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
THE END OF AMERICAN HEGEMONY? RISING
POWERS AND WORLD ORDER
Co-sponsored by 43-3
Status Hierarchy and Great Powers: Russia and China
William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College
David C. Kang, University of Southern California
Political Parties and the Duration of the Peace in Post Conflict
Societies
John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Anna Batta, University of North Texas
The Demand for Reparations: Determinants of Transitional
Justice in the Aftermath of the Nepali Civil War
Wendy L. Hansen, University of New Mexico
Prakash Adhikari, University of New Mexico
India’s Rise and the Global Order: Slow Integration and Peaceful
Change
T.V. Paul, McGill University
Mahesh Shankar, McGill University
Adjusting to the Coming Multipolar World: The Rise of China
and American Grand Strategy
Christopher Layne, Texas A&M University
Bringing Russia and China into the Western Order: Status
Concerns and Cooperation
Deborah Welch Larson, University of California, Los Angeles
Alexei Shevchenko, California State University, Fullerton
Explaining Changes in US Grand Strategy:The Rise of Offensive
Liberalism and the War in Iraq
Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa
20-4
Chair:
Papers:
Conflict-Induced Displacement, Understanding the Causes of
Flight
Prakash Adhikari, University of New Mexico
Wendy L. Hansen, University of New Mexico
Disc:
Resat Bayer, Koc University
Sarah Zukerman Daly, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
22-3
PARTY UNITY AND DEFECTION
Co-sponsored by 11-69
Anna M. Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan
Chair:
Papers:
BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (1): THEORY
Co-sponsored by 21-1
Anne E. Sartori, Northwestern University
Like day and night? Party Unity in Legislative Voting in
Parliamentarianism and Presidentialism
Steffen Kailitz, Technical University of Dresden
Regulating Party Cohesion in Parliamentary Democracies: The
Emergence of Anti-Defection Legislation in India and Israel
Csaba Nikolenyi, Concordia University
Shaul Shenhav, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Bringing Diplomacy Back In: Theoretical Foundations
Shuhei Kurizaki, Texas A&M University
Costless Communication and Indivisible Crisis
Robert W. Walker, Washington University, St. Louis
Bailey Kimssy, Washington University in St. Louis
Disc:
Anne E. Sartori, Northwestern University
James D. Morrow, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Part:
Robert F. Trager, University of California, Los Angeles
Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
20-12
Chair:
TOOLS OF STATECRAFT: FOREIGN AID
Marijke Breuning, University of North Texas
Papers:
Does Foreign Aid Win Hearts and Minds? How Aid Recipients
Feel about their Donors
Gina Yannitell Reinhardt, Texas A&M University
Institutional and Preference-Based Determinants of Party and
Party System Change in Parliaments
Olga V. Shvetsova, Binghamton University, SUNY
Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia
Instrumental Changes in Political Party Structure
Kenneth Mori McElwain, University of Michigan
Disc:
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University
23-6
PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by 38-1
Diane J. Heith, St. John’s University
Chair:
Papers:
What Happened to Arab Foreign Aid? Examining the Changing
Dynamics of Aid from Wealthy Arab Countries to Poor Ones
Debra Shushan, College of William & Mary
Trading with the Embargoed: State Decisions to Violate United
Nations Arms Embargoes
Matthew Moore, University of Missouri, Columbia
Marijke Breuning, University of North Texas
21-1
BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (1): THEORY
Co-sponsored by 20-4
POST CIVIL CONFLICT
Resat Bayer, Koc University
Papers:
Stop Singing the Blues! Blue Helmets and the Duration of Civil
Peace
Tobias Hofmann, College of William & Mary
Lena M. Schaffer, ETH Zürich
The Exceptional Electoral Style of Barack Obama
Roderick P. Hart, University of Texas, Austin
Presidential Nomination Acceptance Speeches as “Presidential”
Documents: How do Potential Presidents Address Policy?
Donna R. Hoffman, University of Northern Iowa
Alison Howard, Dominican University of California
The Communications Program of the Bush White House: An
Assessment
William G. Mayer, Northeastern University
Disc:
Colleen J. Shogan, Congressional Research Service
Matthew J. Dickinson, Middlebury College
23-14
Chair:
STAFFING THE WHITE HOUSE
Peri E. Arnold, University of Notre Dame
Daily Schedule
21-15
Chair:
Limping Ducks: Comparing Speechmaking Patterns of
Presidential Terms
Shannon L. Bow, University of Texas, Austin
Demagogic or Dialogic?: Winning Arguments in the 2008
Presidential and Vice Presidential Debates
Lara Michelle Brown, Villanova University
Zim Gregory Nwokora, Oxford University
Coming into Money: the impact of foreign aid on leader survival
Amanda A. Licht, University of Iowa
Disc:
Parliamentary Party Group Discipline in Comparison
Stefanie Bailer, University of Zurich
363
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Papers:
The Chief of Staff’s Progenitor: Secretaries to the President from
Washington through Coolidge
David B. Cohen, University of Akron
Charles E. Walcott, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
Getting Started in the Obama White House: Presidential
Management and Staffing in the New Administration
James D. King, University of Wyoming
James W. Riddlesperger, Jr., Texas Christian University
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Edward P. Weber, Washington State University
26-1
Chair:
COURTS IN THE POLITICAL ENVIRONMENT
Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Papers:
What Difference Does A New Justice Make? Evidence from the
Post-War Period
Charles M. Cameron, Princeton University
Separate, Representation and Nested Constituencies: The Role of
Public Opinion in Supreme Court Nomination Politics
Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University
Jonathan P. Kastellec, Princeton University
Your Community is Mine. ¡Si Se Puede!” Latina/o Political
Appointees in the Executive Branch: How these Leaders Can
Help President-Elect Obama Make a Case to Better Serve the
Country
Frances Marquez, Gallaudet University
Compliance and Legal Consistency in the U.S. Courts of
Appeals
Joshua A. Strayhorn, Emory University
Rivals, or a Team? Advisory Institutions and Hierarchy in the
Early Obama Administration
Andrew C. Rudalevige, Dickinson College
Pay to Play? Judicial Promotion and Ideological Extremism
Cliff Carrubba, Emory University
Tom Clark, Emory University
Distinctiveness in Presidential Operations
Terry Sullivan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Disc:
Karen M. Hult, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
Peri E. Arnold, University of Notre Dame
25-2
SYSTEM EFFECTS, PATH DEPENDENCE, AND HEALTH
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 48-3
25-9
IS EDUCATION POLICY SERVING THE
DISADVANTAGED?
Co-sponsored by 32-13
Race, Class and Education Policy: Second-Generation
Discrimination in the 21st Century
Kenneth J. Meier, Texas A&M University
Meredith Brooke Loudd Walker, Texas A&M University
Sadé Walker, Texas A&M University
Papers:
Disc:
Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Charles M. Cameron, Princeton University
27-8
POPULAR CONSTITUTIONALISM IN GLOBAL
PERSPECTIVE
John Brigham, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Chair:
Papers:
Politics of Constitution-Building for Reconciliation between
Political Enemies
Man Kwon Kim, New School for Social Research
Jeffersonian Democracy and Popular Constitutionalism
Melvin C. Laracey, University of Texas, San Antonio
No Latino Left Behind: The Development of Education Policy
Affecting Latinos, 1968-2008
Jason P. Casellas, University of Texas, Austin
Closing Educational Attainment Gaps:Problem Definition,
Measurement, and Policy Strategies
Greg Thorson, University of Redlands
Welfare, Low-Income Women and Access to Higher Education:
The State of Policy in the States
Tracy L. Steffy, CUNY Graduate Center
Multiple Identity Theory and Racial Integration Policies in the
Era of Voluntary School Integration
Edwina Barvosa, University of California, Santa Barbara
Disc:
Khalilah L. Brown-Dean, Yale University
25-14
EXPLOITING NATURAL RESOURCES LIKE THERE IS
NO TOMORROW
Michael E. Kraft, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay
Chair:
Papers:
Policy Learning and Institutional Change in Collaborative
Settings
Andrea K. Gerlak, University of Arizona
Tanya Heikkila, Columbia University
Water Management in an Ecology of Games
Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis
Changing the Face of SMCRA Reclamation: The Importance of
Political Trust
Darren A. Wheeler, University of North Florida
Stacy Edmonds Wheeler, Ball State University
Changing the Rules: Interest Groups and Federal Environmental
Rulemaking
Sara Rinfret, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay
364
Reconstituting the People: The Case of Ecuador’s 2008
Constitution
Angelica Maria Bernal, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Jaime Vintimilla, Universidad San Francisco de Quito
Two Paths to Judicial Power: The Basic Structure Doctrine,
Public Interest Litigation, and the Supreme Court of India
Manoj Mate, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Artemus Ward, Northern Illinois University
28-3
FEDERALISM, NATIONALISM, AND DEMOCRACY: A
ROUNDTABLE HONORING SAMUEL H. BEER’S
CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM
Co-sponsored by APSA
Timothy J. Conlan, George Mason University
Chair:
Part:
Hugh Heclo, George Mason University
Martha Derthick, University of Virginia
Richard P. Nathan, Rockefeller Institute of Government
Joseph Paul McLaughlin, Jr., Temple University
Robert Vipond, University of Toronto
29-10
CONNECTICUT’S NEW PUBLIC FINANCING SYSTEM:
A FIRST LOOK
Rick D. Farmer, Oklahoma House of Representatives
Chair:
Papers:
Donor Participation under Connecticut’s New Public Financing
System
Wesley Joe, Campaign Finance Institute
Michael J. Malbin, SUNY, Albany and The Campaign
Finance Institute
Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University
Peter W. Brusoe, American University
Henrik M. Schatzinger, University of Georgia
Daily Schedule
Money, Participation, and Deliberation in the Connecticut
Legislature
Vincent G. Moscardelli, University of Connecticut
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Disc:
Melissa Deckman, Washington College
Part:
David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame
Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame
Joseph Quin Monson, Brigham Young University
34-1
THE IMPACT OF GENDER QUOTAS: DESCRIPTIVE,
SUBSTANTIVE, AND SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATION
Co-sponsored by 31-17
34-2
TURNOUT AND ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 36-6
Mark N. Franklin, European University Institute
Does Public Funding in State Legislative Elections Encourage
Citizens to Run for Office?
Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Perspectives of State Legislative Candidates on Connecticut’s
Implementation of Clean Elections
Keith E. Hamm, Rice University
Robert E. Hogan, Louisiana State University
Disc:
Thomas M. Carsey, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Rick D. Farmer, Oklahoma House of Representatives
Chair:
Papers:
31-17
Chair:
Papers:
THE IMPACT OF GENDER QUOTAS: DESCRIPTIVE,
SUBSTANTIVE, AND SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATION
Co-sponsored by 34-1
Rainbow Murray, University of London, Queen Mary
The Effects and Costs of Early Voting and Same Day
Registration in the 2008 Elections
Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin
David T. Canon, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Kenneth R. Mayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Donald P. Moynihan, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Under-Qualified or Over-Prepared? Assessing the Qualifications
of ‘Quota Women’ in the Ugandan Parliament
Diana Z. O’Brien, Washington University in St. Louis
Referendum Design, Quorum Rules and Turnout
Pedro C. Magalhaes, Instituto de Ciencias Sociais da
Universidade de Lisboa
Luis Aguiar-Conraria, Universidade do Minho
Who Runs for Office in Which Party? Political Party Gender
Quotas and Political Ambition in Germany
Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami
Political Institutions, Political Knowledge, and the Turnout of
Young Citizens: A Nordic Comparison
Henry Milner, Universite de Montreal
Grappling with the Perverse Effects of Women’s Political
Presence in South Africa
Denise Marie Walsh, University of Virginia
An Interest Based Theory of Turnout and Electoral Bias
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
Todd Donovan, Western Washington University
Quotas and Women’s Symbolic Representation: Lessons from
Mexico
Par Zetterberg, Uppsala University
The Impact of Gender Quotas: A Research Agenda
Mona Lena Krook, Washington University, St. Louis
Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary
Jennifer Marie Piscopo, University of California, San Diego
Disc:
Disc:
John H. Aldrich, Duke University
Sarah Birch, University of Essex
34-12
ELECTION LAW ISSUES FROM THE 2008 ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by Law and Political Process Study Group,
Panel 1
Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los Angeles
Gretchen M. Bauer, University of Delaware
Mark P. Jones, Rice University
Chair:
31-24
GENDERED POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by 38-16
32-5
Chair:
COALITIONS, AND MINORITY POLITICS
Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Papers:
Robert A. Brown
Papers:
Public Perceptions about State Election Reforms: Who Cares and
Why?
David Konisky, University of Missouri
Lilliard E. Richardson, Jr., University of Missouri, Columbia
Jeffrey Milyo, University of Missouri
John D. Griffin, University of Notre Dame
32-13
IS EDUCATION POLICY SERVING THE
DISADVANTAGED?
Co-sponsored by 25-9
32-22
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE POLITICS OF SAME-SEX
MARRIAGE
Co-sponsored by 47-3
33-10
Chair:
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON
MELISSA DECKMAN’S SCHOOL BOARD BATTLES
James Matthew Wilson, Southern Methodist University
Disc:
Richard L. Hasen, Loyola Law School
Mark E. Rush, Washington and Lee University
35-11
Chair:
ADVOCACY AND LEGISLATIVE ACTIVITY
Kristina Miler, University of Illinois
Papers:
How a Bill Becomes a Law: The Effect of Interest Groups
Matt Grossmann, Michigan State University
Kurt Pyle, Michigan State University
Lobbying the State Legislature: Who Dominates and When Does
it Matter?
Dave Nelson, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Congressional Responses to Lobbying: Observations of an APSA
Congressional Fellow
Amy Melissa McKay, Georgia State University
365
Daily Schedule
Disc:
N=1: The Anomalous Early Voter in 2008 and the Perils of
Reform
Paul Gronke, Reed College
Bridge to Nowhere: The Death of Public Funding for
Presidential Campaigns in the 2008 Election
Clifford A. Jones, University of Florida
The Obama and the Clinton Factors: How Race and Gender
Factor into Blacks’, Whites’, and Latinos’ Trust in the
Representation of Group Interests
Shayla C. Nunnally, University of Connecticut
Illinois Latinos and Obama: A Comparative Analysis of the the
2004 and 2008 Elections
Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern University
The Resurgent American Voter, 1988-2008
Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Daily Schedule
Organized Interest Campaign Advertisements and Legislative
Behavior
Mary C. Deason, University of Mississippi
Disc:
Scott H. Ainsworth, University of Georgia
35-13
NETWORKS OF ADVOCATES AND ACTIVISTS
Co-sponsored by 8-17
Timothy M. LaPira, College of Charleston
Chair:
The Contradictory Consequences of Ambivalence for Political
Engagement
Robert Huckfeldt, University of California, Davis
Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University
Disc:
Anand E. Sokhey, Ohio State University
37-14
THE PUZZLE OF POPULAR LEGITIMACY
Co-sponsored by Latin American Studies Association, Panel 2
Damarys Canache, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Disc:
Papers:
Network Determinants of Interest Groups’ Participation in
Coalitions Over Time
John C. Scott, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Part:
William Mishler, University of Arizona
Christian Welzel, Jacobs University Bremen
Russell J. Dalton, University of California, Irvine
Mitchell A. Seligson, Vanderbilt University
Bruce Gilley, Portland State University
38-1
PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by 23-6
38-16
GENDERED POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by 31-24
Rosalee Clawson, Purdue University
It’s Not Personal; It’s Strictly Business: A Social Networks
Analysis of Internal Party Cleavages, 1972-2008
Hans Noel, University of Michigan
527 Committees as Central Actors in the Political Party
Network, 2004 and 2006
David A. Dulio, Oakland University
Richard M. Skinner, Bowdoin College
Seth E. Masket, University of Denver
Parties and the Congressional Lobbying Network
Gregory Koger, University of Miami
Jennifer Nicoll Victor, University of Pittsburgh
Social Networks, Political Heterogeneity, and Interpersonal
Influence: Test of a Formal Model with Empirical Evidence from
Italy and the U.S.
Delia Baldassarri, Princeton University
Disc:
Suzanne M. Robbins, George Mason University
36-6
TURNOUT AND ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 34-2
36-19
Chair:
VOTERS AND WELFARE STATES
Stefan Svallfors, Umea University
Papers:
The Impact of Inequality on Political Participation- New
Evidence on a Burgeoning Debate
Lyle A. Scruggs, University of Connecticut
Daniel Stockemer, University of Connecticut
Welfare State Retrenchment and Political Trust in Europe 19732002
Staffan Kumlin, University of Gothenburg
The Electoral Consequences of Policy Reform through Social
Pacts or Legislation: Evidence from Western Europe, 1980-2006
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
John E. Kelly, University of London, Birkbeck College
Alexia Katsanidou, University of Southampton
Chair:
Papers:
Gendered News Coverage of Women Candidates and Politicians:
Theorizing the Presentation-Provision Distinction
Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant, Queen’s University
Gendered Appeals Online: A Study of Female Representatives’
Websites
Sarah Allen Gershon, Georgia State University
“Win Ugly or Lose Pretty”: The Calls for Hillary Clinton’s Exit
in Historical Comparison
Melody Rose, Portland State University
Regina G. Lawrence, Louisiana State University
Women Covering Women: The effect of Reporter Gender on
Candidate Coverage in the 2008 Primaries
Rachel VanSickle-Ward, Pitzer College
Gender-Based Strategies in Candidate Websites
Monica C. Schneider, Miami University of Ohio
Disc:
Rosalee Clawson, Purdue University
40-5
Chair:
INTERNET GOVERNANCE: STRUCTURES AND ISSUES
Laura Roselle, Elon University
Papers:
NGOs in Global Internet Governance: Co-Creation Processes,
Collective Learning, and Network Effectiveness
Nanette S. Levinson, American University
Regulating the New Economy - New Forms of EU Governance
for Telecoms and the Information Society
Kirsten L. Rodine Hardy, Northeastern University
Disc:
Stefan Svallfors, Umea University
36-29
Chair:
SOCIAL PROCESSES AND VOTING
Anand E. Sokhey, Ohio State University
Papers:
Facebook and Political Engagement: An Analysis of the 2008
Presidential Election
Juliet Carlisle, Idaho State University
Robert C. Patton, Idaho State University
Networked Publics in International Affairs: An Empirical
Analysis
Stuart J. Thorson, Syracuse University
Hyunjin Seo, Syracuse University
Social Voting: How Political Discussion May Improve the
Chances of Voting in One’s Economic Self-Interest
Barry Pump, University of Washington
Using Indices to Measure the Digital Divide
Cecilia G. Manrique, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse
Gabriel G. Manrique, Winona State University
366
Coping with Innovation in Privacy Protection
Andreas Busch, University of Göttingen
Social Networks as a Shortcut to Information and Correct Voting
John Barry Ryan, University of California, Davis
Disc:
Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
Political Communication Networks
Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago
41-2
POLITICAL POSSIBILITY IN THE NOVELS OF JOSE
SARAMAGO
Co-sponsored by 2-41
Daily Schedule
42-8
Chair:
Papers:
ANALYZING RELIGION AND SOCIAL RELATIONS IN
AN AGE OF GLOBALIZATION
William L. Niemi, Western State College of Colorado
Zizek and the Fundamentals: Marxism and the Terror of
Religious Belief
Daniel J. O’Connor, California State University, Long Beach
The Opiate of the People: The Marxist Critique of Religion in a
Global Dark Age
Clyde W. Barrow, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
46-2
FOCUS ON METAPHOR: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
LANGUAGE AND DISCOURSE
Co-sponsored by 2-14
46-21
COMPLEXITY AND INTERDEPENDENCE IN WORLD
POLITICS: NEW QUALITATIVE APPROACHES
Gary Goertz, University of Arizona
Chair:
Papers:
A Plea for Civil Religion: Reflexions on Rousseau’s Savoyard
Vicar in the Global Age
Michael Forman, University of Washington, Tacoma
Holes in the Whole: Negative Dialectics and the Limits of
Integration Theory
Daniel J. Levine, Johns Hopkins University
Religious Choices and the Decline of American Republicanism
R. Claire Snyder-Hall, George Mason University
A New Path or a Cul-de-sac? Complex Adaptive Systems and
International Relations Theory
Vsevolod Gunitskiy, Columbia University
Religion: Friend or Foe in the Politics of Immigration
Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University
Alethia Jones, SUNY, Albany
Disc:
Bradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University
William L. Niemi, Western State College of Colorado
43-3
THE END OF AMERICAN HEGEMONY? RISING
POWERS AND WORLD ORDER
Co-sponsored by 19-13
43-11
Chair:
GRAND STRATEGY BETWEEN THE WARS
Co-sponsored by 18-41
Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College
Complexity and Stability in Contexts of Joint Decision-Making.
An Experimental Study
Tanja Pritzlaff, University of Bremen
Implications of Qualitative Methods for Studying International
Politics
Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Disc:
Kaija E. Schilde, University of Pennsylvania
47-3
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE POLITICS OF SAME-SEX
MARRIAGE
Co-sponsored by 32-22
Evan Gerstmann, Loyola Marymount University
Chair:
Papers:
Balance of Power, Components of Power, and Britain’s Threat
Perception in the 1930s
Steven E. Lobell, University of Utah
Papers:
Strategy of Innocence or Calculated Provocation? Neoclassical
Realism, Resource Extraction, the Roosevelt Administration’s
Road to World War II, 1938-41
Jeffrey W. Taliaferro, Tufts University
Asian-Americans and Marriage Equality
Robert W. Scharr, University of Florida
Julie Liang, University of Florida
Trade Expectations and German Strategy in the Interwar Period
Dale Copeland, University of Virginia
Disc:
Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College
David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University
44-3
DEMOCRACY, ELECTIONS, AND POLITICAL
(IN)STABILITY
Co-sponsored by 11-46
Chair:
Part:
Sonia Cardenas, Trinity College
Philippe Dufresne, Canadian Human Rights Commission
Thomas Flanagan, University of Calgary
Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University
Julie Mertus, American University
Richard Moon, University of Windsor
ILLIBERAL POLITICS IN LIBERAL STATES: STUDYING
THE ‘ROUGH EDGES OF DEMOCRACY’
Co-sponsored by 11-14
The Political and Sexual Attitudes of Young Black Americans
Alexandra Moffett-Bateau, University of Chicago
Embodied Borders: The Role of Marital and Immigration Policy
in the Regulation of US Citizenship
Sara Angevine, Rutgers University
Disc:
Evan Gerstmann, Loyola Marymount University
Helene Slessarev-Jamir, Claremont School of Theology
48-3
SYSTEM EFFECTS, PATH DEPENDENCE, AND HEALTH
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-2
Edward A. Miller, Brown University
Chair:
Papers:
Bridging International and National Regulatory Policymaking on
Medical Devices: A Comparison of the EU, Japan and the U.S.
Christa Altenstetter, CUNY-Graduate Center
Access to Care vs. Access to Coverage: Explaining One State’s
Policy Choices
Mary A. Clark, Tulane University
Transitions between Private and Public Health Insurance Plans:
Why it happens and What are Peoples Experiences?
Colleen M. Grogan, University of Chicago
367
Daily Schedule
46-1
THEME PANEL: CANADIAN HUMAN RIGHTS
COMMISSIONS
Co-sponsored by T-24
Michael Goodhart, University of Pittsburgh
California’s Proposition 8: Demographic Explanations and
Implications
Patrick J. Egan, New York University
Kenneth Sherrill, CUNY, Hunter College
‘Whites Oppose, Blacks Support, Latinos Divided’: Making
Sense of the Racialized Discourse Surrounding California’s
Proposition 8
Victoria Wilson, University of California, Irvine
Balance of Power, Preventive War, and British and French Policy
toward Nazi Germany in the Early 1930s
Norrin M. Ripsman, Concordia University
Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University
45-10
The Political and Institutional Construction of International
Regions: Conceptualization and Operationalization
Gary Goertz, University of Arizona
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
New Governance In Action: The Renewed War On Cancer In
The United States And European Union
Thomas R. Oliver, University of Wisconsin
The Crisis of the Divided Welfare State: Surprising Lessons from
France
Marc E. Smyrl, Universite de Montpellier 1
Disc:
Jeremy Green, Yale University
Terry S. Weiner, Union College
Poster Sessions
POSTER SESSION 8
Divisions 5, 6, 7, 38, 41, and 47
Papers: American Virtue: Benjamin Franklin and Civic Engagement
Christie L. Maloyed, Texas A&M University
Bob Dylan, Charles Taylor, and Cultural Disintegration
Justin Rex, Wayne State University
Election-Specific Factors Versus Routine: Understanding
Individuals’ Turnout Decisions
James Douglas Melton, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
American Ambivalence Towards Equality and Limited
Government
Laurence M O’Rourke, ICF International
Deficits, Public Opinion, and Context-Conditional Political
Budget Cycles
Marek Hanusch, University of Oxford
The Effect of Educational Quality and Achievement on Political
Participation
Meghan Condon, University of Wisconsin, Madison
The Stubborn Cowboy: An Analysis of G.W. Bush Foreign
Policy
Colleen E. Miller, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Reaching Back into the Cookie Jar? Explaining Decisions to
Increase War Aims
Thomas M. Dolan, Jr., University of Rochester
Daily Schedule
It is Not Easy Being Green: Use of the Environmental Frame by
Canadian National Newspapers in Telling the Story of Alberta’s
Oil Sands in 200.
Laura Way, University of Alberta
Interactions Between Risk, Cooperative Experience, and
Distribution Preferences: Experimental Evidence for the
Importance of Institutions and the Limits of Game Theory
William E. English William E., English
Michael C. Munger Michael C., Munger
Responding to Globalization: How Governments Use Labor
Mobility to Deepen Globalization
Qiang Zhou, University of Chicago
Understanding Oil: Beyond State vs. Market
Andrew S. Barnes, Kent State University
Institutions, Education, and Economic Performance
Jamus Jerome Lim, World Bank
Jonathon Adams-Kane, University of California, Santa Cruz
Beyond Inflation Fighting: Partisanship, Central Bank
Independence, and Foreign Direct Investment
Terence Teo, Rutgers University
Social Welfare Spending and Disabled Veterans in the United
States
Kevin G. McQueeney, Rutgers University
Evolution of the Second Amendment: 1939-2008
Benjamin B. Carlson, SUNY at Buffalo
Change under Pressure: Building the Fiscal State in the
Habsburg and Ottoman Empires, 1660-1780
Tolga Demiryol, University of Virginia
Using Historical Analysis to Understand Mass Citizen Behavior:
The Feedback Effects of Social Welfare and Education Policy
Jennifer Erkulwater, University of Richmond
Historical Institutionalism, Critical Junctures and the Problem of
Civil Peace in Post-Colonial Africa- Lessons from Three States
in Africa
John Froitzheim, University of Virginia
Fellow Kleptocrats? How Mafias and States Cohabit
Thomas Chadefaux, University of Michigan
Jonson Nathaniel Porteux, University of Michigan
Building the Disaster State: Disaster Relief from the Founding to
the Twentieth Century
Patrick S. Roberts, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State
University
Generous Legislators? A Characterisation of Vote Trading
Agreements
Rafael Hortala-Vallve, London School of Economics
The Neo-institutional Origins of Governing Cycles in American
Politics
Curt Nichols, University of Texas, Austin
The Political Economy of Disease: Historical Evidence from the
US, France and Germany
Stephen August Meserve, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Mobile Phones and Corruption in Africa
Catie Snow Bailard, George Washington University
Informal Political Intermediaries and Path Dependence: Evidence
from Rural Punjab, Pakistan
Shandana Khan Mohmand, University of Sussex
Ali Cheema, Lahore University of Management Sciences
Manasa Patnam, University of Cambridge
Political Advertising and Political Perceptions- The 2008 U.S.
Presidential Campaign
Joseph Boesch, University of Texas at Austin
Shinya Wakao, University of Texas
Preferential Trading Agreements and Trade Capacity Building
Leonardo Baccini, Trinity College Dublin
Johannes Urpelainen, Columbia University
Hearing and Talking to the Other Side: Antecedents of CrossCutting Exposure
Porismita Borah, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Stephanie Edgerly, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Emily K. Vraga, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Dhavan Vinod Shah, University of Wisconsin
Insights from an Unusual Dataset on the Wages of Corruption
for India’s Politicians
Rikhil Bhavnani, Stanford University
This is My Territory! Election Posters as Signals of Campaign
Credibility. The case of France and Belgium
Delia Dumitrescu, Ohio State University
Informalization, Segmentation, Liberalization: The Politics of
Changing Labor Markets
Sebastian Karcher, Northwestern University
Partisan Control, Media Bias, and Viewer Responses: Evidence
from Berlusconi’s Italy
Ruben Durante, Brown University
Economic Retrospecition: National-, State-, and County-Level
Contextual Influences on the U.S. Presidential Vote
Meredith A. Levine, Yale University
A Bayesian Hierarchical Topic Model for Political Texts:
Measuring Expressed Agendas in Senate Press Releases
Justin Grimmer, Harvard University
Public Policy, Media Discourse and Democracy: Elite
Manipulation and America’s Right Turn
Matthew P. Guardino, Syracuse University
368
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Call and Response: Citizen Communication with Congress
Emily G. Hickey, Harvard University
McCain Played Clean (Mostly): Image Analysis Indicates that
Obama’s Skin Tone is Not Darker in McCain’s 2008 Campaign
Advertisements
Solomon Messing, Stanford University
Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
Challenges and Issues in Measuring Media Freedom: The Update
of the Global Press Freedom Dataset (1948-2007)
Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, University of Southern California
Douglas Van Belle, Victoria University of Wellington
Political Communication, Fourth Estate and the Nigerian Press
Muhammad Jameel Yusha’u, Sheffield University
God is Dead, Long Live God: Examining Rebellion and
Redemption in the Violent Bear It Away
Kimberly Roxanne Hurd, Louisiana State University
Voegelin’s Nietzsche: Overcoming the Problem of Evil in
Zarathustra
Sarah Shea, McGill University
Reinhold Niebuhr, Modernity, and the Problem of Evil
Matt Sitman, Georgetown University
Disc:
Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists
Panel 4
Chair:
CHINESE DEMOCRATIZATION IN TIMES OF CHANGE
Shiping Hua, University of Louisville
Papers:
Democracy, Dictatorship and Development: China, Africa and
the East Asian Model in a Dynamic World
Barrett McCormick, Marquette University
The Price of Village Democracy: Vote Buying and Village
Elections in China
John James Kennedy, University of Kansas
Wise Blood: Flannery O’Connor’s Theologico-Political Problem
Leslie G. Rubin, Duquesne University
Enemies of the State: The Evolution of Subversion in Post-Mao
China
Andrew Wedeman, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Related Group Panels
African Politics Conference Group
Panel 3
Chair:
Papers:
ETHNICITY, RELIGION AND TRADITIONAL
AUTHORITY IN AFRICAN POLITICS
Co-sponsored by 12-52
Keith A. Darden, Yale University
Democratization in China Since the Tiananmen Incident
Joseph Y.S. Cheng, City University of Hong Kong
Chinese Political Tradition and Its Contemporary Practices
Yanqi Tong, University of Utah
Who Are Africa’s (Non) Ethnic Voters? Evaluating Theories on
the Salience of Ethnicity in African Electoral Politics
Jeffrey K. Conroy-Krutz, Columbia University
Disc:
Social Structure and Political Mobilization
Dominika Koter, Yale University
IPSA Research Committee 36 (Power)
The Political Implications of Religion and Ethnicity in Africa: a
Field Experiment along the Muslim-Christian Divide.
John F. McCauley, University of California, Los Angeles
Big Men and Ballots: Results from a Survey Experiment in
Zambia
Katharine A. Baldwin, Columbia University
Disc:
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
Thad Dunning, Yale University
Daniel N. Posner, University of California, Los Angeles
Panel 15 TOCQUEVILLE AFTER 150 YEARS: WHAT IS ALIVE
AND WHAT IS DEAD IN THE POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
OF ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE?
Chair:
Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College
Harvey C. Mansfield, Harvard University
Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College
John Marini, University of Nevada, Reno
Cheryl B. Welch, Harvard University
Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College
Eric Voegelin Society
Panel 9
Papers:
Brutality, Vulgarity, and Evil in Chekhov’s Three Sisters
Lee Trepanier, Saginaw Valley State University
F.W.J. Schelling on the Metaphysics of Evil
Steven Francis McGuire, Catholic University of America
POWER, GOVERNMENTALITY AND SOCIAL CHANGE
Co-sponsored by 2-51
Clarissa R. Hayward, Washington University
Power and Truth
Mark Haugaard, National University of Ireland, Galway
Structural Disadvantages and Counterbalancing Strategies of
Small States in International Negotiations
Diana Panke, University College Dublin
Two Modes of Power in IR – Towards a Clearer Distinction
Kira Petersen, Harvard University
Disc:
Giulio M. Gallarotti, Wesleyan University
Latin American Studies Association
Panel 2
THE PUZZLE OF POPULAR LEGITIMACY
Co-sponsored by 37-14
Law and Political Process Study Group
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
ELECTION LAW ISSUES FROM THE 2008 ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by 34-12
Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los Angeles
N=1: The Anomalous Early Voter in 2008 and the Perils of
Reform
Paul Gronke, Reed College
Daily Schedule
Chair:
THEORISTS, THEOLOGIANS, AND LITTÉRATEURS:
EVIL AND MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Martin Palous, Czech Ambassador to the United Nations
Dennis Hickey, Missouri State University
Andre Laliberte, University of Ottawa
Power and Representation
Thamy Pogrebinschi, Instituto Universitário de Pesquisas do
Rio de Janeiro (IUPERJ)
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Part:
Michael D. Henry, St. John’s University
Paul Corey, Humber College
Bridge to Nowhere: The Death of Public Funding for
Presidential Campaigns in the 2008 Election
Clifford A. Jones, University of Florida
Psychologists of Evil: Nietzsche and Dostoevsky on the
Darkness of the Soul
Rouven J. Steeves, U.S. Air Force Academy
369
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Disc:
Public Perceptions about State Election Reforms: Who Cares and
Why?
David Konisky, University of Missouri
Jeffrey Milyo, University of Missouri
Lilliard E. Richardson, Jr., University of Missouri, Columbia
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
Richard L. Hasen, Loyola Law School
Mark E. Rush, Washington and Lee University
SESSION 3
Political Studies Association
Panel 1
Chair:
Daily Schedule
CHINA’S WELFARE POLITICS IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Ito Peng, University of Toronto
SESSION 3
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM
APSA Meetings
APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and
the Transgendered in the Profession
COMMITTEE MEETING
Papers:
Distributional Coalitions and Welfare Politics in Large Uneven
Developers: The Case of China
Mark W. Frazier, University of Oklahoma
APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession
Job Loss, Worker Disturbances, and State Welfare Response:
China, France, and Mexico, 1980-2005
Dorothy J. Solinger, University of California, Irvine
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Social Assistance in China 1993-2002: Accommodating
Institutions and Sponsors
Daniel Hammond, University of Glasgow
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession
Explaining Welfare State Retrenchment: The Case of Health in
China, 1978-2003
Jane Duckett, University of Glasgow
COMMITTEE MEETING
APSA Panel
Panel 2
Chair:
Part:
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 3
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 3
CAREERS OF SELECTED AFRICAN AMERICAN
POLITICAL SCIENTISTS WHO RECEIVED THEIR
PH.DS DURING THE “SEPARATE BUT EQUAL” ERA
Maurice C. Woodard, Howard University
Michael Frazier, Howard University
Alice M. Jackson, Morgan State University
Cris Johnson, Esq., CUNY-Graduate Center
Tobe Johnson, Morehouse College
E. Walter Miles, San Diego State University
Lorenzo Morris, Howard University
Jewel L. Prestage, Prairie View A&M University
Lucius J. Barker, Stanford University
Michael W. Combs, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
APSA Committee on the Status of Women in the Profession
SESSION 3
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
Panel 1
Chair:
POLITICS, MORALITY, AND HUMAN TRAFFICKING
Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine
SESSION 3
Part:
Audrey Macklin, University of Toronto
Jacqueline Berman, Berkeley Policy Associates
Lyndsey Gayle Christoffersen, University of California,
Irvine
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 3
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
Division Panels
SESSION 3
T-26
THEME PANEL: EDUCATING STUDENTS TO BE
GLOBAL CITIZENS
Co-sponsored by 9-5 and 10-4
T-27
THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM
AND VARIETIES OF CRISIS?
Co-sponsored by 14-8 and 13-15
1-2
ROUNDTABLE: MOTIVATING POLITICS: ANCIENT
AND MODERN PERSPECTIVES ON REASON AND
DESIRE
Patchen Markell, University of Chicago
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 3
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 3
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 3
Chair:
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
Part:
Giulia Sissa, University of California-Los Angeles
Jill Frank, University of South Carolina
Duncan Kelly, University of Cambridge
Sharon R. Krause, Brown University
Melissa Lane, Princeton University
1-8
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL DEMOCRACY
AND COSMOPOLITAN CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by 3-1
Monique Deveaux, Williams College
SESSION 3
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 3
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
SESSION 3
370
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Global Citizenship and Social Rights
Barbara Arneil, University of British Columbia
Chair:
Burke Hendrix, Cornell University
Can Institutions Motivate, or Create, Global Citizens?
Patti Tamara Lenard, University of Ottawa
Papers:
Explaining Historical Injustice: History, Socially Embedded
Power, and Group Asymmetries
Christopher Lebron, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Democracy and Rights: Beyond the Idealisations
Anne Phillips, London School of Economics
Redressing the Right Wrong: Historic Redress for Indigenous
People
Douglas Sanderson, University of Toronto
Does Global Justice need Democracy?
Regina Kreide, Justus Liebig University Giessen
Disc:
Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania
1-15
Chair:
GLOBAL JUSTICE AND TRANSNATIONAL POLITICS
Casiano A.W. Hacker-Cordón, Centro de Estudios Políticos y
Constitucionales
Papers:
Towards Global Justice: Autonomous Development and Global
Empowerment
Nancy Kokaz, University of Toronto
International Justice and Agency: Hegel’s Reply to Rawls
Maria G. Kowalski, Columbia University
Is the World Social Forum a Transnational Public Sphere? Nancy
Fraser, Critical Theory and the Containment of Radical
Possibility
Jakeet Singh, University of Toronto
Janet Conway, Brock University
Disc:
Casiano A.W. Hacker-Cordón, Centro de Estudios Políticos y
Constitucionales
1-23
Chair:
HISTORIES OF LIBERTY
Luigi Bradizza, Louisiana State University
Papers:
“A difference in Opinion is inevitable”: Benjamin Franklin and
Religious Liberty
Alan Houston, University of California, San Diego
Two Forms of Aboriginal Political Reconciliation: Constitutional
and Moral.
Dale Turner, Dartmouth College
Can We Supersede Historic Injustice
Burke Hendrix, Franklin & Marshall College
Disc:
Melissa S. Williams, University of Toronto
3-1
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL DEMOCRACY
AND COSMOPOLITAN CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by 1-8
3-4
MISUNDERSTANDING HISTORICAL INJUSTICE
Co-sponsored by 2-43
3-7
ISAIAH BERLIN’S “TWO CONCEPTS OF LIBERTY”
AFTER 50 YEARS
Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State University
Chair:
Papers:
Freedom and Selves
John Christman, Penn State University
From Rationalism to Micro-power: Freedom and Its Enemies
Diana H. Coole, University of London, Birkbeck College
Retrieving Positive Freedom and Why It Matters
Carol C. Gould, Temple University
Republicanism and the Market in Berlin’s “Two Concepts of
Liberty”
Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State University
Ideas of Power and the English System of Liberty in Eighteenth
Century Thought
Suzanne Marcuzzi, University of Cambridge
Disc:
Bruce Baum, University of British Columbia
Maria Dimova-Cookson, Durham University
The Multiple Freedoms of Cicero’s Emerging Republican Politics
Daniel Cordes, Columbia University
5-6
Disc:
Luigi Bradizza, Louisiana State University
Chair:
DELIBERATION AND SOCIAL NETWORKS
Co-sponsored by 37-4
Andrew J. Bloeser, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
2-16
”CAPITALISM AND CHRISTIANITY, AMERICAN
STYLE” BY WILLIAM E. CONNOLLY
William E. Connolly, Johns Hopkins University
Kathy E. Ferguson, University of Hawaii
David R. Howarth, University of Essex
Philip Goodchild, University of Nottingham
Catherine Keller, Drew University
Part:
2-33
Chair:
CONCEPTS OF THE POLITICAL
Melissa A. Orlie, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Papers:
Toward an Ethics of the Third Term
Ella Myers, University of Utah
Papers:
Personal Network Composition and Political Attitudes among
First-Year University Students
Michael Keane, University of Notre Dame
A Group-Based Approach to Understanding Deliberation: The
Deliberative Justice Experiment
Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University
Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University
The Impact of Social Network Composition Upon Knowledge
and Resistance to Persuasion: Reconciling Findings
Lindsey C. Levitan, Stony Brook University
Considered Opinions on Further EU Enlargement: Evidence from
an EU-Wide Deliberative Poll
Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University
Assessing ‘Acknowledgment’ as a Political Language: Ethics and
Rhetoric in Baldwin, Cavell, and Butler
George M. Shulman, New York University
Paul C. Apostolidis, Whitman College
2-43
MISUNDERSTANDING HISTORICAL INJUSTICE
Co-sponsored by 3-4
Disc:
Andrew J. Bloeser, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
6-15
INSTITUTIONS OF MONETARY POLICY
371
Daily Schedule
Why We Need a New Concept of the Political
Melissa A. Orlie, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Disc:
The Effect of Social Networks on the Quality of Thinking about
Policies
Elif Erisen, Cal Poly State University
Cengiz Erisen, SUNY, Stony Brook
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Chair:
J. Lawrence Broz, University of California, San Diego
Chair:
William E. Hudson, Providence College
Papers:
Voting in Monetary Policy-Making Committees: A Statistical
Analysis
Nick Vivyan, London School of Economics and Political
Science
Bjorn Hoyland, University of Oslo
Papers:
Diversity, Tolerance and Political Socialization: An Empirical
Inquiry into the Democratic Impact of Schools and
Neighbourhoods.
Ellen Claes, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Seeking a Just and Humane World: Motivation for Continuity
and Change
Pamela N. Waldron-Moore, Xavier University
Paying Less to Play: How Central Bank Inflation Targeting
Increases Institutional Quality and Political Stability
Joseph J. St. Marie, University of Southern Mississippi
Shahdad Naghshpour, University of Southern Mississippi
Samuel S. Stanton, Jr., Grove City College
Bruno Sergi, University of Messina
Two Faces to Peace: Reconciling Academics and Advocacy in
Peace Education
Michaelene D. Cox, Illinois State University
Visual Culture as a Pedagogical Tool Toward Ethics and Human
Rights
Safia Swimelar, Elon University
Accounting for Economic Institutions: How Independent Central
Banks Affect Democratic Accountability
Cassandra Rose Grafstrom, University of Michigan
Teaching Political Science in the Poorest State in the U.S. and
the Poorest Country in Africa: Similarities and Differences
Robert Press, University of Southern Mississippi
Ideological Distance and a Common Framework for Political
Business Cycles
Michael G. Hall, Wichita State University
Disc:
Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas, Dallas
10-4
6-25
VARIETIES OF CHANGE IN EUROPEAN POLITICAL
ECONOMY
Co-sponsored by 15-12
THEME PANEL: EDUCATING STUDENTS TO BE
GLOBAL CITIZENS
Co-sponsored by 9-5 and T-26
11-9
VARIETIES OF ECONOMIC CHANGE?
Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 1
Matthew E. Carnes, Georgetown University
7-7
Chair:
Part:
8-2
Chair:
Papers:
FRESH DEBATES IN SOUTHERN POLITICS: RACE,
CLASS, RELIGION, AND PARTISANSHIP IN A
CHANGING AMERICAN SOUTH
Byron E. Shafer, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers:
The Politics of Labor Reform: The Enduring Effects of Labor
Relations Systems
Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota
James M. Glaser, Tufts University
John C. Green, University of Akron
Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University
Harold W. Stanley, Southern Methodist University
Richard G.C. Johnston, University of Pennsylvania
Corporatism 2.0? Understanding the Rebirth of Labor Politics in
Latin America
Matthew E. Carnes, Georgetown University
HOW BAYESIAN METHODS MAKE THE STUDY OF
LATIN AMERICAN POLITICS SUBSTANTIALLY
BETTER.
Co-sponsored by 12-15
Jeff Gill, Washington University
Political Origins of Anti-Labor Institutions
Alexander Kuo, Stanford University
Connor Raso, Stanford University
Committee Leadership in Mexico’s Chamber of Deputies, 1997-2006
Francisco Javier Aparicio, CIDE
Joy Langston, CIDE
Unveiling State-Delegation Effects in Legislative Behavior in
Mexico’s National Congress
Guillermo Rosas, Washington University
Learning, Political Regimes and the Liberalization of Trade
Abel Escriba-Folch, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis
Internacionals
Covadonga Meseguer, CIDE
Putting Postcommunist Labor in Comparative Perspective
Stephen F. Crowley, Oberlin College
The Politics of Labor Market Deregulation in Japan and Korea
Jiyeoun Song, Harvard University
Disc:
Katrina Burgess, Tufts University
Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
11-28
FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON DEMOCRACY IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 12-8
Leonard Wantchekon, New York University
Chair:
Papers:
Getting Clean Elections? A Field Experiment with Domestic
Election Observers in Ghana
Nahomi Ichino, Harvard University
Ideology and Discipline in the Mexican Lower Chamber of
Congress, 1998-2008
Gustavo Adolfo Robles, Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de
México
Tune in to Governance: An Experimental Investigation of Radio
Campaigns in Africa
Devra Coren Moehler, Cornell University
Judges’ Law: Ideology and Coalitions in Mexico’s Election
Tribunal 1996-2006
Federico Estevez, Institute Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico
Eric Magar, ITAM
Against the Machine: Experimental Results from Georgia’s 2008
Parliamentary Election
Jesse Driscoll, Stanford University
Fernando Daniel Hidalgo, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Andrew D. Martin, Washington University
9-5
THEME PANEL: EDUCATING STUDENTS TO BE
GLOBAL CITIZENS
Co-sponsored by 10-4 and T-26
372
Chair:
When Do Voters Punish Corrupt Politicians? Experimental
Evidence from Brazil
Miguel de Figueiredo, University of California, Berkeley
Fernando Daniel Hidalgo, University of California, Berkeley
Yuri Kasahara, Fundação Getúlio Vargas
Disc:
Donald P. Green, Yale University
Daily Schedule
11-43
Chair:
Papers:
COORDINATED MARKET ECONOMIES UNDER
PRESSURE
Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia
Varieties of Capitalism and Varieties of Macroeconomic Policy:
Are Some Economies More Pro-Cyclical than Others?
Bruno Amable, University of Paris I
Karim Azizi, University of Paris 1
1989 and the reshaping of Europe’s ideological landscape
Albena Azmanova, University of Kent
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Disc:
Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
Jason Lyall, Princeton University
12-34
THE POLITICS OF REDISTRIBUTION IN LATIN
AMERICA
Co-sponsored by Latin American Studies Association, Panel 1
Gabriel Ondetti, Missouri State Unviersity
Chair:
Papers:
The Politics of Education and Training Reform in Advanced
Industrial Economies
Sara Jane McCaffrey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Welfare and Redistribution in Latin America: Toward a New
Model?
Michelle L. Dion, Georgia Institute of Technology
Coordinated Market Economies under Pressure: The Politics of
Skill Formation in Times of Low Birthrates in Germany,
Slovenia and Korea
Nicole Richardt, University of Utah
Nicole Richardt, University of Utah
Monika Benova, University of Utah
Hyobin Lee, University of Utah
Taxing Agriculture in Argentina: Export Taxes, Producers’
Power, and the 2008 Strikes
Tasha A. Fairfield, University of California, Berkeley
Incorporating the Informal Sector? The Politics of Fiscal
Inclusion in Latin America
James E. Mahon, Jr., Williams College
Immigration, Welfare State features, and Labor Market
Regulation: An analysis based on European data
Sofia A. Perez, Boston University
Disc:
Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University
11-44
NEW METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO
ETHNICITY AND NATIONAL IDENTITY
Yoshiko M. Herrera, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
12-49
PROTEST AND DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN
AMERICA AND EAST ASIA
Co-sponsored by 44-17
Ethnicity, Strategic Contingency and Democracy
Shaheen Mozaffar, Bridgewater State College
12-51
Beyond National Identity: Collective Schemata of the Nation in
Thirty-Three Countries
Bart Bonikowski, Princeton University
AGENCY UNDER AUTHORITARIANISM
Co-sponsored by 44-23
13-15
United but Unequal: Experiments in Nationalism and Islam
Natan B. Sachs, Stanford University
THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM
AND VARIETIES OF CRISIS?
Co-sponsored by 14-8 and T-27
14-8
Yoshiko M. Herrera, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Rose McDermott, Brown University
Chair:
THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM
AND VARIETIES OF CRISIS?
Co-sponsored by 13-15 and T-27
Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg
Conceptualizing and Measuring Subnationalism
Prerna Singh, Harvard University
MEASURING QUALITY OF GOVERNMENT: IS THERE
ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT?
Co-sponsored by 24-6
12-8
FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON DEMOCRACY IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by 11-28
12-15
HOW BAYESIAN METHODS MAKE THE STUDY OF
LATIN AMERICAN POLITICS SUBSTANTIALLY
BETTER.
Co-sponsored by 8-2
Chair:
DISAGGREGATING CIVIL WARS
Co-sponsored by 18-27
Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
The Effects of Warfare in Civil Wars: An Empirical Analysis
Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University
Laia Balcells, Yale University
Killing cleavages? The politics of religious diversity and civil
war
Ragnhild Nordås, PRIO
How many types of civil wars?
Andreas Wimmer, University of California, Los Angeles
Part:
Juliet Johnson, McGill University
Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics
Peter A. Hall, Harvard University
Mary E. Gallagher, University of Michigan
Raj M. Desai, Brookings Institution
14-12
CONDITIONS FOR CHANGE: REFORMING ADVANCED
WELFARE STATES
Co-sponsored by 15-3
Martin J. Rhodes, University of Denver
Chair:
Papers:
The Political Causes of Unemployment Insurance Reforms in
OECD Countries
Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh
Conditions for Successful Pension Reform: International
Pressures and Domestic Politics
Sabina Avdagic, University of Sussex
Martin J. Rhodes, University of Denver
Coalition Governments and Reform Capacity
Johannes Lindvall, University of Oxford
Power and Institutions in Welfare Politics: The Impact of
Political Institutions on Political Power and Policy Outcomes in
the Welfare State
Jason Jordan, Florida State University
373
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Democratization and Redistributive Policymaking: Taxation,
Social Spending and Labor Market Regulation in Brazil and the
Dominican Republic
Gabriel Ondetti, Missouri State Unviersity
Disc:
11-70
12-23
Politicians & Social Policy: Building Citizenship or Reinforcing
Clientelism in Brazil?
Wendy Hunter, University of Texas, Austin
Natasha Borges Sugiyama, University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Jonas Pontusson, Princeton University
16-31
15-3
CONDITIONS FOR CHANGE: REFORMING ADVANCED
WELFARE STATES
Co-sponsored by 14-12
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: THEORETICAL
INNOVATIONS AND CURRENT ISSUES
Co-sponsored by 17-16
17-16
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: THEORETICAL
INNOVATIONS AND CURRENT ISSUES
Co-sponsored by 16-31
Tim Buthe, Duke University
15-12
Chair:
Papers:
VARIETIES OF CHANGE IN EUROPEAN POLITICAL
ECONOMY
Co-sponsored by 6-25
Pepper D. Culpepper, Harvard University
Chair:
Papers:
When Small States Make Big Leaps into New Industries:
Creative Corporatism and High Tech Competition in Northern
Europe
Darius Ornston, University of California, Berkeley
The Circuits of Regulation: Transatlantic Perspectives on
Persistent Organic Pollutants and Endocrine Disrupting
Chemicals
Christopher K. Ansell, University of California, Berkeley
Joerg Balsiger, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Capital Mobility, Corporate Governance and Complex Causation:
A Comparative Perspective on France-Germany
Michel Goyer, Warwick Business School
Open Skies, Closed Markets? The Difficult Regulation of
Transatlantic Civil Aviation
Cornelia Woll, CERI/Sciences Po
Ideas, Institutions and Organized Capitalism: Germany, Europe
and 21st Century Path Dependent Economic Policy Models
Christopher S. Allen, University of Georgia
Disc:
Pepper D. Culpepper, Harvard University
16-5
MIGRATION REGIMES: INTERNATIONAL PROSPECTS
AND NATIONAL VARIATIONS
James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University
Chair:
Papers:
The Travel-Refugee Regime Complex
Alexander Betts, Oxford University
The International Nationality Regime: Imperial Past and Global
Prospects
Audie Klotz, Syracuse University
International Migration Agreements: Why so few?
Margaret Peters, Stanford University
“Labor Migration to the Gulf: Understanding Variations in the
Kafala System”
Steven D. Roper, Eastern Illinois University
Lilian A. Barria, Eastern Illinois University
Private Global Regulation: The Politics of Setting Standards for
International Product and Financial Markets
Tim Buthe, Duke University
Walter Mattli, Oxford University
Risky Prospects: Transnational Conflict and Cooperation during
Disease Outbreaks
Frank Smith, Griffith University
Disc:
Elliot Posner, Case Western Reserve University
18-13
SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT REVISITED:
THEORIES AND PRACTICES
Co-sponsored by 19-4
Pascal Vennesson, European University Institute
Chair:
Papers:
James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University
16-15
RESPONDING TO INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC
CRISES
Joseph M. Grieco, Duke University
Chair:
Papers:
Development, Security and the Contested Usefulness of Human
Security Corinne Heaven, Sascha Werthes, Sven Vollnhals
Sascha Werthes, University Duisburg-Essen
Corinne Heaven, University of Duisburg-Essen
Disc:
Pascal Vennesson, European University Institute
The death of Laissez faire: Self-regulation of banking sector
Anna Hanchar, Trinity College Dublin
18-24
political uncertainty and currency crises
Jungkeun Yoon, Claremont Graduate University
Chair:
NEW CASES AND IDEAS ON INTERNATIONAL PEACE
BUILDING
Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London
Reform Processes and Financial Markets: Bureaucratic Origins of
Policy Uncertainty and Market Responses before the Asian
Financial Crisis
Dongryul Kim, Rochester Institute of Technology
374
Beyond Linear Coordination: Coping with the Complexities of
the Development-Security Nexus
Christian Bueger, European University Institute
State Capacity and Economic Crises
George E. Shambaugh, Georgetown University
The Political Economy of Coordinated Response to Financial
Crisis: The Experience of the G7 and G20 in 1997-99 and 20072009
Ivan Savic, Columbia University
Disc:
Development and Security: Military Cultures and the Conflicting
Uses of Colonial Traditions
Chiara Ruffa, European University Institute
Pascal Vennesson, European University Institute
Exploring the Connections Between Development and Security at
the United Nations: Imperial Project or Larger Freedom?
Laura Zanotti, Virginia Tech
The Politics of Immigration and Nationalism in Japan and Korea
Seo-Hyun Park, Cornell University
Disc:
When Local Problems Go Global: Ensuring the Safety of
Imported Food, Drugs, and Consumer Products
Cary Coglianese, University of Pennsylvania
Joseph M. Grieco, Duke University
Papers:
From Kabul to Kandahar: Has the CF Peace Operations Culture
Been Changed?
Kimberly Marten, Barnard College
INTERNATIONAL PEACEBUILDING FAILURES: LESSONS
FROM THE CONGO
Severine Autesserre, Barnard College, Columbia University
Ethnic Civil Wars and the Illiberal Peace
Lise Morjé Howard, Georgetown University
Guns, Campaigns or Bankruptcy: Disentangling the Determinants
of Armed Organizations’ Post-War Trajectories
Sarah Zukerman Daly, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Disc:
Stephen M. Saideman, McGill University
22-10
18-27
DISAGGREGATING CIVIL WARS
Co-sponsored by 12-23
Chair:
18-35
TERRITORIAL DISPUTES: CONFLICT AND
RESOLUTION
Co-sponsored by 21-9
19-4
SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT REVISITED:
THEORIES AND PRACTICES
Co-sponsored by 18-13
19-15
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
Learning Lessons the Hard Way: Afghanistan, Iraq and the
Evolution of British Military Doctrine
Stuart Griffin, King’s College London
Party Cohesion through Perceived Preference Coherence: An
Analysis of Voting Networks in the European Parliament
Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Estimating Cross-Country Common Space Ideal Point Scores
using European Parliament Bridge Actors
Boris Shor, University of Chicago
Disc:
Daniel Pemstein, Harvard University
22-18
POLITICAL PARTIES AND POLICY MAKING IN THE
U.S. CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 35-17
23-5
CHECKING AND BALANCING? INSTITUTIONAL
INTERACTIONS AND THE (IN)OPERATION OF THE
SEPARATION OF POWERS IN THE ‘WAR ON TERROR’
Co-sponsored by 27-2
Nigel Bowles, University of Oxford
Fighting while Preparing: Case Studies in Managing Defence
Policy While Undertaking Operations
Stephen Prince, Royal Naval Historical Branch
Memory and Mythology in Policy-Making: Why Let the Facts
Spoil a Good Stor.
Andrew M. Dorman, University of London, King’s College
Disc:
Russell A. Burgos, University of California, Los Angeles
20-5
BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (2) EMPIRICS
Co-sponsored by 21-2
Revenge and Peaceful Change
Resat Bayer, Koc University
Papers:
European Diplomacy and Security Integration
Mai’a Keapuolani Davis Cross, University of Southern
California
Mapping Legislative Positions in the Absence of Roll-Call Votes:
The Case of Colombia, 1998-2006
Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston
Minority Governments and Legislative Voting in Parliament
Jean-Francois Godbout, Simon Fraser University
PREPARING FOR THE FUTURE WHILST
CONFRONTING THE PRESENT: BRITISH DEFENCE
AND SECURITY POLICY IN AN UNSTABLE WORLD
Katherine Brown, King’s College London
Britain and the War on Terror: Strategy and Operations and
Tactics
Warren Chin, King’s College London
LEGISLATORS’ PREFERENCES AND VOTING ACROSS
LEGISLATURES
Daniel Pemstein, Harvard University
Chair:
Papers:
U.S. Torture Policy and Command Responsibility
James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University
The Politics of Shared Power in the ‘War on Terror’
Louis Fisher, Library of Congress
Anna Oldmeadow, University of Oxford
Cheney, Vice Presidential Power and the War on Terror
Joel K. Goldstein, Saint Louis University
Congressional Oversight of The ‘Imperial President’
Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University
Disc:
Network Analysis of Diplomatic Representation
Shuhei Kurizaki, Texas A&M University
Benjamin Tkach, Texas A&M University
Robert F. Trager, University of California, Los Angeles
Koji Kagotani, University of California, Los Angeles
James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University
Nigel Bowles, University of Oxford
24-6
Disc:
Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford University
Chair:
MEASURING QUALITY OF GOVERNMENT: IS THERE
ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT?
Co-sponsored by 11-70
B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh
21-2
BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (2) EMPIRICS
Co-sponsored by 20-5
Papers:
21-9
TERRITORIAL DISPUTES: CONFLICT AND
RESOLUTION
Co-sponsored by 18-35
Krista E. Wiegand, Georgia Southern University
Chair:
Papers:
Government Effectiveness in Comparative Perspective
Andrew B. Whitford, University of Georgia
Soo-Young Lee, University of Georgia
Innovative Approaches to Developing Cross-National
Institutional Gauges: The SID Project
Peter F. Nardulli, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Past Experience and Methods of Territorial Dispute Resolution
Krista E. Wiegand, Georgia Southern University
Emilia Justyna Powell, University of Alabama
An Experimental Evaluation of Indian Public Service Reforms
Jennifer L. Bussell, University of California, Berkeley
Auditing Income Inequality Data in Models of Capitalism,
Development and Democracy
Ross E. Burkhart, Boise State University
Credible Commitments and Negotiations over Territory
Paul R. Hensel, University of North Texas
Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa
Disc:
Gabriella R. Montinola, University of California, Davis
25-12
RAISING THE TEMPERATURE ON CLIMATE CHANGE
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 39-2
375
Daily Schedule
Secessionist Violence in the Caucasus
David S. Siroky, Duke University
Why Now? Explaining the Timing of International Militarized
Engagements over Territory
Jaroslav Tir, University of Georgia
Disc:
Bureaucratic Structure and Corruption: Does Weberianism Work?
Carl Johan Dahlström, University of Gothenburg
Victor Lapuente, University of Gothenburg
Jan Teorell, Lund University
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Chair:
Amy M. Below, Ohio University
Papers:
Punctuated Equilibrium and Advocacy Coalitions: Toward a Post
Carbon Policy Paradigm for the Automobile in North America
James A. Dunn, Jr., Rutgers University, Camden
Anthony D. Perl, Simon Fraser University
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Creeping National Standards: The Politics of Personal
Identification in the Voting Booth, the DMV and Schools
Valentina Bali, Michigan State University
Belinda Creel Davis, Louisiana State University
Federalism and Election Law: Implementation Issues in Rural
America
Heather M. Creek, University of Maryland
Kimberly A. Karnes, University of Maryland
The Structure of Evolving US Scientific Opinion on Climate
Change And Its Potential Consequences
Stephen J. Farnsworth, George Mason University
S. Robert Lichter, George Mason University
State Resistance to Federal Mandates: A Cross-Case Analysis
Christopher J. Deering, George Washington University
Bryan Shelly, Wake Forest University
An Inconvenient Solution? The Economic and Political Debate
on Global Warming Policy in the United States
Michael Martin, Carleton College
The Impact of Symbolic Action: Local Government Refusal to
Comply with State and Federal Laws
Lori A. Riverstone-Newell, Illinois State University
Who Runs the Greenhouse? The Role of the Judiciary in U.S.
Climate Policy
Marilyn Averill, University of Colorado at Boulder
Politics in Motion: Congressional Devolution and Preemption:
Countervailing Trends.
Joseph F. Zimmerman, SUNY, Albany
Climate Change Policies at the U.S. State Level: Evidence,
Complexity, and Challenges to Comprehensive Strategies
Lada V. Kochtcheeva, North Carolina State University
Disc:
Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State University
Disc:
Leigh S. Raymond, Purdue University
30-15
25-27
CRITICAL PUBLIC POLICY QUESTIONS IN CANADA
AND THE US
Co-sponsored by 49-6
26-10
STRATEGIC INFLUENCES ON JUDICIAL DECISIONMAKING
Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh
ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT
TERRITORIAL RESCALING, HOW DO WE KNOW IT
AND WHY SHOULD WE STUDY IT: PERSPECTIVES
FROM THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Co-sponsored by 28-8
Andrew Sancton, University of Western Ontario
Chair:
Papers:
Chair:
Part:
Where Do Legal Opinions Come From? Strategic Opinion
Writing on the Supreme Court
Yonatan Lupu, University of California, San Diego
James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego
Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University
Andrew Glassberg, University of Missouri, St Louis
Jered B. Carr, Wayne State University
Pierre Hamel, Universite de Montreal
31-5
Crafting Opinions on the Circuit Courts of Appeals: An Inside
Look at Strategic Accommodation
Ryan J. Owens, Harvard University
Ryan C. Black, Michigan State University
Chair:
BETWEEN MINORITY INCLUSION AND GENDER
EQUALITY? ANALYZING IDENTITIES AND
INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 32-17
Hamideh Sedghi, Harvard University
Logic of Judicial Deference in the Separation-of-Power Structure
– Legislative delegation, information elicitation, and deliberative
policymaking
Cheng-yi Huang, University of Chicago
Papers:
Article III: The Executive Enforcement Problem and the
Separation of Powers
Edward Stiglitz, Stanford University
Disc:
Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh
27-2
CHECKING AND BALANCING? INSTITUTIONAL
INTERACTIONS AND THE (IN)OPERATION OF THE
SEPARATION OF POWERS IN THE ‘WAR ON TERROR’
Co-sponsored by 23-5
28-6
28-8
29-14
Chair:
376
FEDERAL MANDATES IN THE STATES:
IMPLEMENTATION AND RESISTANCE
Co-sponsored by 29-14
ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT
TERRITORIAL RESCALING, HOW DO WE KNOW IT
AND WHY SHOULD WE STUDY IT: PERSPECTIVES
FROM THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Co-sponsored by 30-15
FEDERAL MANDATES IN THE STATES:
IMPLEMENTATION AND RESISTANCE
Co-sponsored by 28-6
John Kincaid, Lafayette College
Do Majority-Minority Districts and Reserved Seats for Minorities
Undermine the Election of Women?
Robert G. Moser, University of Texas, Austin
Stephanie S. Holmsten, University of Texas, Austin
Dislocating Muslim Women in Post-Feminist, Post-Secular
France
Hollie Sue Mann, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Ines Valdez, University of Oxford
Gender Equality Versus Minority Inclusion: The Political
Dilemma of Religious Arbitration
Catherine Warrick, Villanova University
The Limits of Deliberation: Debating Gender and Religion in the
French and Canadian Public Spheres
Leah Bassel, City University London
32-7
Chair:
Papers:
ASSIMILATION, INCORPORATION OR
RACIALIZATION?
Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay
Urban School Contexts and the Political Socialization of
Immigrant Children
Loan Le, University of California, Berkeley
Immigrant Transnationalism Across Time in the United States
Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University
Overcoming Pre-immigration Barriers to Socio-political
Participation in the Latino Immigrant Community
Javier M. Rodriguez, University of California, Los Angeles
Rafael Augusto Jimeno, Arizona State University
Mark Q. Sawyer, University of California, Los Angeles
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
When The Gloves Come Off: Inter-Party Variation in Negative
Campaigning
Catherine E. De Vries, University of Amsterdam
Annemarie Sophie Walter, University of Amsterdam
Residential Concentration and the Political Participation of
Immigrants in Canada
Antoine Bilodeau, Concordia University
Disc:
Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay
Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania
32-17
BETWEEN MINORITY INCLUSION AND GENDER
EQUALITY? ANALYZING IDENTITIES AND
INSTITUTIONS
Co-sponsored by 31-5
34-4
Chair:
MINORITY AND DESCRIPTIVE REPRESENTATION
Richard S. Katz, Johns Hopkins University
Papers:
Should Congress Look Like America? Explaining Preferences
about Descriptive Representation
Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter
Susan A. Banducci, University of Exeter
Disc:
Renan Levine, University of Toronto
36-30
Chair:
LEARNING, PERSISTENCE, AND HABITS IN VOTING
Mark N. Franklin, European University Institute
Papers:
Voting across Time and Generations
Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
M. Kent Jennings, University of California, Santa Barbara
Using Ballot Order to Test for Cognitive Dissonance: Results
From a Natural Experiment
Gregory Huber, Yale University
Alan Gerber, Yale University
Joseph Sempolinski, Yale University
Next Time I’ll Remember: Negotiating the Learning Curve for
Voter Indentification Requirements
Timothy Vercellotti, Western New England College
David J. Andersen, Rutgers University
Electoral Systems and the Success of Ethnoregional Parties
David I. Lublin, American University
The Congressional Representation of Muslim-Americans
Shane Martin, Dublin City University
The Election of Women in List PR Systems: Testing the
Conventional Wisdom
Gregory D. Schmidt, University of Texas at El Paso
Disc:
Elias Dinas, European University Institute
36-33
Chair:
WHAT’S NOW AND WHAT’S NEXT: THE PRESENT AND
FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTION
STUDIES
Co-sponsored by 37-11
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan
Disc:
Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan
Part:
Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University
Matthew DeBell, Stanford University
Keith Payne, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Gary M. Segura, Stanford University
Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University
37-4
DELIBERATION AND SOCIAL NETWORKS
Co-sponsored by 5-6
37-11
WHAT’S NOW AND WHAT’S NEXT: THE PRESENT AND
FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTION
STUDIES
Co-sponsored by 36-33
37-21
MASS MEDIA AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 38-2
Stacey L. Pelika, College of William & Mary
Defining groups entitled to reserved seats in national legislatures:
a comparative approach
Petra Meier, University of Antwerp
Disc:
35-17
Chair:
Papers:
David M. Farrell, University College Dublin, Belfield
Lorelei Moosbrugger, University of California, Santa Barbara
POLITICAL PARTIES AND POLICY MAKING IN THE
U.S. CONGRESS
Co-sponsored by 22-18
Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester
A Computational Model of Party Committee Influence on
Legislative Behavior
Andrew Waugh, University of California, San Diego
Taming the Filibuster: Vote Skipping and Omnibus Spending
Bills in the U.S. Senate
Peter Hanson, University of California Berkeley
Party Power in the U.S. House: Discharge Petitions, Agenda
Control, and Committees
Susan Miller, University of Missouri-Columbia
L. Marvin Overby, University of Missouri
House Appropriations After the Republican Revolution
David W. Rohde, Duke University
John H. Aldrich, Duke University
Brittany N. Perry, Duke University
Disc:
Chair:
Papers:
Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester
Steven S. Smith, Washington University
LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS AND REPRESENTATION
Thomas Zittel, Cornell University
Papers:
Constituency Campaigns in the 2005 German Federal Elections:
Patterns, Motivations, and Effects
Thomas Zittel, Cornell University
Public Opinion amid a Fragmenting Media Environment
Danny Hayes, Syracuse University
Television News and the Framing of War Images
Jennifer Ogg Anderson, Vanderbilt University
Does Changing Media Change Minds?: TV, Partisanship, and
Shifting Public Opinion Towards Lesbians and Gays
Jeremiah Garretson, Vanderbilt University
Geo-Ethnic Political Dialogue: Multi-Color Skins with Blue,
Red, and Purple Mindsets
Hyun Jung Yun, Texas State University
Lynda Lee Kaid, University of Florida
The Variable Effect of Congressional Competition on Incumbent
Accountability: A Multilevel Model
Amber Wichowsky, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Losers’ Consent Among Elected Representatives in Established
Democracies – Evidence From Six Surveys With Swedish MPs
Peter Esaiasson, University of Gothenburg
Disc:
Stacey L. Pelika, College of William & Mary
Jonathan McDonald Ladd, Georgetown University
377
Daily Schedule
36-21
Chair:
The Geography of Mass Media Exposure and Political News
Consumption
James G. Gimpel, University of Maryland, College Park
Scott L. Althaus, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Daily Schedule
38-2
MASS MEDIA AND PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by 37-21
Popular Protest and Democratic Consolidation in South Korea
Sunhyuk Kim, Korea University
38-17
LEGISLATURES AND INTERNET USE: GOVERNING
AND CAMPAIGNING
Co-sponsored by 40-3
Determinants of Contentious Political Participation in South
America: An Analysis of Citizens’ Survey Responses
Margaret Emily Edwards, University of New Mexico
39-2
RAISING THE TEMPERATURE ON CLIMATE CHANGE
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 25-12
Economic Liberalization, Contentious Politics, and Political
Representation in East Asia
Wonik Kim, Louisiana State University
40-3
LEGISLATURES AND INTERNET USE: GOVERNING
AND CAMPAIGNING
Co-sponsored by 38-17
Geoffery William Seaver, IRM College
Chair:
Disc:
Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh
44-23
AGENCY UNDER AUTHORITARIANISM
Co-sponsored by 12-51
Mark Beissinger, Princeton University
Chair:
Papers:
Representation as Communication: An Analysis of the
Information Environment of Local Government Elected Officials
Michael J. Jensen, University of California, Irvine
Papers:
Timeless Strategy Meets New Medium: Going Negative on
Congressional Campaign Websites, 2002-2006
Michael Parkin, Oberlin College
James N. Druckman, Northwestern University
Martin Kifer, University of Minnesota
Altering Authoritarianism: Institutional Complexity and
Autocratic Agency in Indonesia
Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Economic Inequality and Institutions in Dictatorships
Milan Svolik, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Would You Ask Turkeys to Mandate Thanksgiving? The Dismal
Politics of Legislative Transparency
J.H. Snider, iSolon.org
Diffusion of Web Innovations among Members of Congress
Kevin M. Esterling, University of California, Riverside
David Lazer, Harvard University
Michael Neblo, Ohio State University
Prospering from a Death March: The Role of Remnant Factions
in Chinese Elite Coalition Formation
Victor C. Shih, Northwestern University
Deer in Headlights: Authoritarian Skill and Regime Trajectories
after the Cold War
Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto
Disc:
Mark Beissinger, Princeton University
Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University
Social Networks in Political Campaigns: Facebook and
Congressional Elections 2006, 2008
Christine B. Williams, Bentley University
Girish J. Gulati, Bentley College
46-10
Disc:
Joel D. Bloom, SUNY, University at Albany
Chair:
CASE STUDY META-ANALYSIS: METHODOLOGICAL
CHALLENGES AND APPLICATIONS IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE
Jens Newig, Leuphana University Lüneburg
43-12
SHAPING REALITY WITH INFORMATION
OPERATIONS, PROPAGANDA, AND SPIN
Jane Kellett Cramer, University of Oregon
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
Fiction, “Social Facts” and the Construction of National Security
Policy
Kelly M. Greenhill, Tufts and Harvard Universities
Does Participatory Governance Lead to Better Environmental
Outcomes? Methodology and Results from a Transatlantic
Comparative Meta-Analysis of 60 Case Studies in Environmental
Decision Making
Jens Newig, Leuphana University Lüneburg
Oliver Fritsch, University of Aarhus
Research Design and Causal Analysis in European Studies. A
Meta-Analysis of the Europeanization Literature
Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter
Theofanis Exadaktylos, University of Exeter
Information Operations as Political Advertising: Overstating the
Utility of Information Operations in Internal War
Colin F. Jackson, U.S. Naval War College
Spinning History and Psychological Ego-Defense: Assessing
How Leaders Shape Historical Reality
Jane Kellett Cramer, University of Oregon
Cumulating the Results from Political Science, Public
Administration and Public Policy Case Studies Using MetaAnalysis: Issues, Examples, and Recommendations.
Jason Jensen, University of North Dakota
Pressure, Resistance and Change: Theorizing States’
Vulnerability to Pressure on Official Narratives of Traumatic
Pasts
Jennifer M. Dixon, University of California, Berkeley
Focusing on the Structure of Uncertainty: Using Information
Models to Enhance the Structured-Focused Case Study Method
Katya Drozdova, Stanford University & NSI
Kurt Taylor Gaubatz, Old Dominion University
Disc:
David Mendeloff, Carleton University
Disc:
Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter
44-17
PROTEST AND DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN
AMERICA AND EAST ASIA
Co-sponsored by 12-49
Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico
46-13
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN POST-COMMUNIST
SPACE
Jessica Allina-Pisano, University of Ottawa
Chair:
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
The Role of Mass Protests in Presidential Failure: Mob Rule or
Street Accountability?
Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico
Market-Based Repoliticization and Democracy in Latin America
Moises E. Arce, University of Missouri
Paul Thomas Bellinger, Jr, University of Missouri
378
Redefining Russia: Qualitative Research and Western Political
Science
Paul Goode, University of Oklahoma
Power, Space, and Movement in the Eastern Borderlands of the
European Union
Jessica Allina-Pisano, University of Ottawa
André Simonyi, University of Ottawa
Daily Schedule
Beyond “Beyond Identity”: The Creation of Magyar and Korean
“Minorities” in Ukraine
André Simonyi, University of Ottawa
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Sensitive Questions Demand Sensitive Methods: A Comparative
Analysis of Interview and Survey Responses to Questions about
Corruption and Professional Misconduct in the Romanian
Judiciary
Daniel J. Beers, Indiana University
Chair:
Disc:
Stephen E. Hanson, University of Washington
49-6
CRITICAL PUBLIC POLICY QUESTIONS IN CANADA
AND THE US
Co-sponsored by 25-27
Janna Ferguson, Rutgers University
Chair:
Papers:
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Binational Ecopolitics: An Examination of U.S. Canadian
Environmental Policy
Glen Sussman, Old Dominion University
Byron W. Daynes, Brigham Young University
Political/Economic Sustainability and the Development of
Commercial Private Sector Involvement in the Canadian Federal/
Provincial Health Care Systems: Particularly, Alberta, Ontario
and Quebec
Howard A. Palley, University of Maryland
Marie-Pascale Pomey, University of Montreal
Pierre-Gerlier Forest, Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation
Panel 7
Papers:
Charles Conteh, Lakehead University
Francois Petry, Laval University
The Problem of Human Nature in the French Enlightenment
Peter McNamara, Utah State University
Shaftesbury and the Authentic Liberty of the Self
Travis S. Cook, Belmont Abbey College
Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College
Disc:
Panel 10 VOEGELIN IN TORONTO, THE DVD: REFLECTIONS
ON THE 1978 YORK UNIVERSITY “HERMENEUTICS
AND STRUCTURALISM” CONFERENCE
Chair:
Zdravko Planinc, McMaster University
Part:
Association of Korean Political Studies in North America
Chair:
Panel 3
Chair:
CONSOLIDATING DEMOCRACY IN SOUTH KOREA?
Jong Oh Ra, Hollins University
Part:
Papers:
An Early Assessment of the Lee Myung Bak Presidency: The
First CEO President in South Korea
Sung Deuk Hahm, Korea University
Yonghwan Choi, Korea University
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
The Old Friend is Better than the New One: Continuity and
Change in South Korea’s Foreign Policy Under President Lee
Myung-bak
Jae-Jung Suh, The Johns Hopkins University
Financial Statecraft and the Emerging Powers: Whither China
and Brazil?
Leslie Elliott Armijo, Portland State University
Shaping Global Governance in Trade: India’s Role in the WTO
Surupa Gupta, University of Mary Washington
Jean Daudelin, Carleton University
Disc:
Regina Regina Soares de Lima, IUPERJ
NATIONAL SECURITY INTELLIGENCE: A RESEARCH
AGENDA
Loch K. Johnson, University of Georgia
Congressional Oversight of Intelligence: Approaches to Solving
Problem
Jennifer Kibbe, Franklin & Marshall College
Atrophy? Explaining Reversion in Domestic Intelligence
Agencies
Genevieve Lester, University of California, Berkeley
New Directions for America’s Domestic Intelligence Agencies
Arthur S. Hulnick, Boston University
Disc:
David M. Barrett, Villanova University
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Jean-Yves Haines, University of Toronto
John Robert Kelley, American University
Nicholas Kitchen, London School of Economics
Lisa Aronsson, Royal United Services Institute
Cristina Barrios, ESCP Europe
Learning and Blaming in Intelligence Reform
Glenn P. Hastedt, James Madison University
Brazilian Political Science Association
EMERGING POWERS AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
Fabiano Guilherme M. Santos, Rio de Janeiro Graduate
Research Institute
TERRORS IN TRANSATLANTIA- STILL? EUROPE AND
THE UNITED STATES FROM BUSH TO OBAMA
Sergio Fabbrini, University of Trento
Intelligence Studies Group
Is South Korea Succeeding in Controlling Corruption?
Jong-sung You, University of California, San Diego
Panel 1
Chair:
Barry Cooper, University of Calgary
Joseph Gonda, York University
Frederick G. Lawrence, Boston College
John O’Neill, York University
European Consortium for Political Research
Panel 3
Neoliberalism and Korean Democracy: Initial Assessments
Jungmin Seo, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame
Eric Voegelin Society
Related Group Panels
Democracy without Parties? Explaining party underinstitutionalization in Korea
Yoonkyung Lee, SUNY, Binghamton
Identity and Liberty in Hegel’s Oneship Family
Scott E. Yenor, Boise State University
Locke’s Confrontation with the Claims of Biblical Revelation in
the Two Treatises
David Azerrad, University of Dallas
Changing Canada’s Politics Towards the US
David Dyment, Carleton University
Disc:
LIBERTY AND HUMAN NATURE IN MODERN
POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Kathleen Arnn, Claremont Graduate University
Labor Project
Panel 1
VARIETIES OF ECONOMIC CHANGE?
Co-sponsored by 11-9
Latin American Studies Association
Panel 1
THE POLITICS OF REDISTRIBUTION IN LATIN
AMERICA
Co-sponsored by 12-34
379
Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
National Humanities Institute
Daily Schedule
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
Panel 2
Chair:
LITERATURE AND THE STUDY OF POLITICS
Claes G. Ryn, Catholic University of America
Papers:
The Conundrum of Hector: The Iliad as Political Philosophy
William Geisler, University of Dallas
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
Edward Bellamy and the Teaching of Political Economy
Gregory S. Butler, New Mexico State University
Working Group: Political Ethics
The Aesthetics of Burke and Gadamer
Ryan Robert Holston, University of Alabama, Huntsville
Disc:
Michael P. Federici, Mercyhurst College
Claes G. Ryn, Catholic University of America
Society of Catholic Social Scientists
Panel 1
Chair:
JOHN PAUL II AND LIBERAL MODERNITY
Filippo A. Sabetti, McGill University
Papers:
John Paul II and the Modern Quest for Freedom
Kenneth L. Grasso, Texas State University
Disc:
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
SESSION 2
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 2
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 2
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
SESSION 2
The Culture of Death and Political Tyranny
Gary D. Glenn, Northern Illinois University
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
To Lose God is to Lose Man:What “Public Reason” Can Learn
from Public Faith
J. Budziszewski, University of Texas, Austin
SESSION 2
Personalism and Community
Kenneth L. Schmitz, John Paul Institute
SESSION 2
Carson L. Holloway, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Saturday, 5:15 PM to 7:15 PM
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
Saturday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM
APSA Meetings
APSA Events
GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING
Affiliate Group Meetings
Related Group Meetings
Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies
BOARD MEETING
BUSINESS MEETING
Saturday, 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM
Related Group Meetings
Section Business Meetings
10 Political Science Education
BUSINESS MEETING
Eric Voegelin Society
44 Comparative Democratization
BUSINESS MEETING
BUSINESS MEETING
Saturday, 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM
Saturday, 6:15 PM to 8:00 PM
APSA Reception
Affiliate Group Meetings
APSA Events
International Organization (Journal)
APSA MINORITY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM 40TH ANNIVERSARY
RECEPTION
MEETING
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
Saturday, 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM
SESSION 2
Related Group Receptions
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
Eric Voegelin Society
SESSION 2
RECEPTION
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
Saturday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM
SESSION 2
APSA Reception
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the
Profession
SESSION 2
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 2
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 2
380
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Asian Pacific American Caucus, the
Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized Section, and the
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession
Daily Schedule
Saturday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession
Saturday, 10:00 PM to 11:30 PM
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized
Section, the Asian Pacific American Caucus, and the APSA
Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the
Profession
Section Receptions
42 New Political Science
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION HONORING TOM
HAYDEN
Section Receptions
10 Political Science Education
Sunday, September 6, 2009
RECEPTION
32 Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Asian Pacific American Caucus, the
APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans
in the Profession, and the APSA Committee on the Status of
Blacks in the Profession
Division Panels
T-28
THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE
OF MULTICULTURALISM IN TORONTO
Co-sponsored by 30-13
35 Political Organizations and Parties
1-7
ROUNDTABLE: CLINTON ROSSITER’S
CONSTITUTIONAL DICTATORSHIP: CRISIS
GOVERNMENT IN THE MODERN DEMOCRACIES:
STILL RELEVANT?
Co-sponsored by 27-1
William E. Scheuerman, Indiana University
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by Representation and Journal of Elections,
Public Opinion and Parties
44 Comparative Democratization
RECEPTION
Chair:
Affiliate Group Receptions
Part:
Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin
Nomi Claire Lazar, Yale University
Clement Fatovic, Florida International University
Susan Williams, Indiana University
Jack M. Balkin, Yale University
London School of Economics
1-24
Chair:
POLITICAL INHERITANCE AND CRITIQUE
Laura A. Janara, University of British Columbia
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Global Policy Journal
Papers:
Repugnance: The Boundaries of Law, Governance, and Colonial
Power
Vicki Hsueh, Western Washington University
University of Georgia School of Public & International Affairs
(SPIA)
RECEPTION
Intercollegiate Studies Institute
RECEPTION
Representation and Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and
Parties
Political Critique and the Inheritance of Authority in Locke’s
Two Treatises
Torrey J. Shanks, University at Albany, SUNY
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the Political Organizations and Parties
Organized Section
Ironic Political Theory Past and Present: Julien Offray de la
Mettrie and Richard Rorty
Sharon Stanley, University of Memphis
University of Rochester Department of Political Science
RECEPTION
Related Group Receptions
Economic Subjectivity in a Non-Cartesian World: Hobbes and
the Problem of Luxury
Dean Mathiowetz, University of California, Santa Cruz
Asian Pacific American Caucus
RECEPTION
Co-sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Asian
Pacific Americans in the Profession, the Race, Ethnicity, and
Politics Organized Section, and the APSA Committee on the
Status of Blacks in the Profession
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies
RECEPTION
Disc:
James R. Martel, San Francisco State University
2-15
Chair:
THE POLITICS OF GOOD INTENTIONS
Margaret Kohn, University of Toronto
Papers:
Rethinking Authenticity
Jill L. Locke, Gustavus Adolphus College
Saturday, 8:30 PM to 10:00 PM
The Road to Hell...Advising Others
Laurie E. Naranch, Siena College
APSA Panel
APSA Events
Division Panels
42-11
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE PLENARY ADDRESS,
DELIVERED BY TOM HAYDEN: MOVEMENTS
AGAINST MACHIAVELLIANS, THE THEORY AND
PRACTICE OF SOCIAL CHANGE
Reception (gratis) & Book Signing to Follow
The Tragedy of Humanitarian Intervention: Or, the Perfection of
Good Intentions
Steven Johnston, University of South Florida
Disc:
Jane Bennett, The Johns Hopkins University
2-29
Chair:
THEORIZING THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
Ronald Terchek, University of Maryland, College Park
Papers:
A Primer to a Democratic Philosophy of Social Science
Amit Ron, Arizona State University, West Campus
Daily Schedule
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE PLENARY ADDRESS DELIVERED BY
TOM HAYDEN: MOVEMENTS AGAINST MACHIAVELLIANS, THE
THEORY AND PRACTICE OF SOCIAL CHANGE
Reception (gratis) & Book Signing to Follow
381
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Daily Schedule
Charles Taylor’s Critical Realism
Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine
Special Rules and Offices: The Emergence and Persistence of
Unequal Legislative Procedures
Razvan Vlaicu, University of Maryland
Daniel Diermeier, Northwestern University
Theory construction in science and the social sciences.
Piotr Swistak, University of Maryland, College Park
A Picture Theory Based Philosophy for the Social Sciences
Itai Sened, Washington University
Sarit Smila, Washington University in Saint Louis
Disc:
Claudia Leeb, Dartmouth College
Andrew Dilts, University of Chicago
2-45
Chair:
USES OF RANCIERE
J. Peter Euben, Duke University
Papers:
Comic Relief: Ranciere and the Heroes of Aristophanic Comedy
John Zumbrunnen, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Disc:
Erik Snowberg, Caltech
5-3
FRAMING
Co-sponsored by 37-1
Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Chair:
Papers:
Durability of Framing Effects on Public Opinion
Dennis Chong, Northwestern University
James N. Druckman, Northwestern University
How Partisan Frames Affect Public Consideration of Policy
Problems
Jennifer K. Benz, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Thomas M. Carsey, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Bruce Desmarais, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
‘Yes We Can’ and The Democratic Politics of Equality
Samuel A. Chambers, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan
3-17
Chair:
IMMIGRANTS AND EMIGRANTS
Daniel Weinstock, Universite de Montreal
Papers:
Civic Integration: How Does Identity Come into It? A
Republican Perspective
Iseult Honohan, University College Dublin
Disc:
Renan Levine, University of Toronto
Toward a Liberal Theory of Returns
Fumio Iida, Kobe University
6-23
TRADE AND PARTISANSHIP
Co-sponsored by 16-27
Stephanie J. Rickard, Dublin City University
Framing, Motivated Reasoning, and Emergent Technologies
Toby Bolsen, Northwestern University
James N. Druckman, Northwestern University
Framing Opinion – The Development of Associations between
Issues and Social Groups
Carl Lucas Palmer, University of California, Davis
The Effect of Conceptions of Justice on Attitudes towards
Immigration Policy
Mary McThomas, Mississippi State University
Chair:
Towards an Ideal of Integration of Immigrants
Brian Thomas
Papers:
Disc:
Daniel Weinstock, Universite de Montreal
3-28
Chair:
THE STATUS OF PARTY PRIMARIES
James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia
Papers:
The Constitutional Puzzle of Party Primaries
Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth College
The Supply and Demand of Protectionism in Hard Times
Krzysztof J. Pelc, Georgetown University
Factor Mobility, Party Unity, and the Distribution of Trade
Protection in Contemporary Democracies
Su-Hyun Lee, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Is Consumer Bias Institutionalized?: An Issue Specific Test of
the Stigler-Peltzman Framework with International Trade Data
Joe Weinberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Primary Reform and the Progressive Quarrel with the State
Elvin T. Lim, Wesleyan University
Democratic Theory and Party Primaries
Russell Muirhead, University of Texas, Austin
Bryan Garsten, Yale University
Disc:
Andrew Rehfeld, Washington University, St. Louis
4-3
BARGAINING THEORY IN VARIOUS POLITICAL
ARENAS
Michael M. Ting, Columbia University
Chair:
Papers:
382
Political Institutions, Veto Players, and Consumer Goods:
Explaining Tariff Rates and Policy Change in Wealthy
Democracies.
Jesse T. Wasson, SUNY, University at Buffalo
Disc:
Stephanie J. Rickard, Dublin City University
7-8
AUTHOR MEETS READERS: SHELDON POLLACK’S
“WAR, REVENUE, AND STATE BUILDING: FINANCING
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE AMERICAN STATE.”
Leslie Friedman Goldstein, University of Delaware
Chair:
Part:
Stephen Skowronek, Yale University
Bartholomew H. Sparrow, University of Texas, Austin
Sheldon D. Pollack, University of Delaware
David B. Robertson, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Leslie Friedman Goldstein, University of Delaware
Reputation and Accountability in Repeated Elections
Rainer Schwabe, Princeton University
7-16
A Bargaining Model of State Formation
Jeremy Kedziora, University of Rochester
Chair:
RACE AND AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 32-11
Catherine Paden, Simmons College
Bargaining Chips: Allocating Power in International Politics.
Thomas Chadefaux, University of Michigan
Papers:
Trading Office for Policy. A Legislative Bargaining Model of
Minority and Super-majority Governments.
Anna Bassi, New York University
Drawing the Color Line – Racial Identity and Antebellum Courts
in New Orleans, 1840-1860
Gwendoline M. Alphonso, Cornell University
Richard F. Bensel, Cornell University
Daily Schedule
Crime and Citizenship
Megan Ming Francis, University of Chicago
Police Chief Ben C. Collins and Law Enforcement in Clarksdale,
Mississippi, 1961-1966
Daniel Kryder, Brandeis University
A History of Black Presidential Candidates: 1872-2008
Christina M. Greer, Smith College
Disc:
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
11-18
Chair:
Papers:
Catherine Paden, Simmons College
Alvin B. Tillery, Jr., Rutgers University
8-9
Chair:
ADVANCES IN EVENT HISTORY MODELS
Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa
Papers:
Estimating Interdependent Duration Models with Applications to
Government Formation and Survival and War-Joining Decisions
Jude C. Hays, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Aya Kachi, University of Illinois
What Happens Depends on When It Happens: Continuous or
Ordered Event History Analysis Using Copula
Kentaro Fukumoto, Gakushuin University
Testing Copula Functions as a Method to Derive Bivariate
Weibull Distributions
Alejandro Quiroz-Flores, New York University
Modeling Rebellion Intensity with a Zero-Inflated Ordered Probit
Model
Feng-yu Lee, National Taiwan University
Tse-min Lin, University of Texas, Austin
David Carter, Pennsylvania State University
11-4
MODES OF DEMOCRATIC PARTISAN
ACCOUNTABILITY AND ELECTORAL COMPETITION.
PROGRAMMATIC AND/OR CLIENTELISTIC CITIZENPOLITICIAN LINKAGES?
Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
Chair:
Papers:
National Profiles of Democratic Accountability: Programmatic
and/or Clientelistic Party Competition?
Kent E. Freeze, Duke University
Kiril Kolev, Duke University
Yi-ting Wang, Duke University
Strategies of Political Competition: When do Politicians Invest In
Clientelistic and/or Programmatic Modes of Party Competition?
Daniel Max Kselman, Duke University
Arturas Rozenas, Duke University
Theories of Clientelism Revisited: What Accounts for the
Varying Relevance of Clientelistic Party-Voter Relations in Party
Competition? Socio-Economic Development, Institutions, and
Strategic Partisan Configurations?
Lenka Bustikova-Siroky, Duke University
Cristina Corduneanu-Huci, Duke University
Clientelism and Corrupation: The Same Thing or Different?
Matthew Singer, University of Connecticut
Gustavo Rodriguez, Duke University
The Spread of New Constitutional Courts in Latin America
Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas, Austin
Abby Katharine Blass, University of Texas at Austin
Diffusion Dynamics in European and Latin American
Democratization
Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Mark Beissinger, Princeton University
11-35
THE CHANGING POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HUMAN
CAPITAL FORMATION
Co-sponsored by 14-1
Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Steven I. Wilkinson, University of Chicago
James Adams, University of California, Davis
Rising De-Industrialization Meets Partisan Strategies in Mature
Welfare States
Carsten Jensen, University of Aarhus
Towards the Knowledge Society?--Contrasting Union Strategies
Toward Labor Market Adjustment in Denmark and Germany
Tobias Schulze-Cleven, University of California, Berkeley
The Politics of Governance Reform in Higher Education and
Public Research Institutions
Eckhard Schroeter, Zeppelin University
Human Capital Formation of the Highly Skilled at the
Intersection of Migration and Gender
Kathrin Zippel, Northeastern University
Disc:
Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh
11-74
ISLAM, SECULARISM, AND SEXUAL EQUALITY:
RESISTANCE AND CHANGE IN MUSLIM SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by 31-20
12-3
DIFFUSION DYNAMICS IN DEMOCRATIZATION
PROCESSES
Co-sponsored by 11-18
12-33
TOWARDS A NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY OF RENTS:
LATE DEVELOPMENT IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Pete W. Moore, Case Western Reserve University
Chair:
Papers:
Remittances beyond Rents: How Private Capital Shapes Public
Opposition in Authoritarian Settings
Sean L. Yom, Harvard University
Anya Vodopyanov, Harvard University
Shadow Governments: Foreign Aid and Parallel States in Iraq
and South Korea
Anne Mariel Peters, University of Virginia
Escaping the Resource Curse: Lessons from Kentucky Coal
Counties
Kristen A. Harkness, Princeton University
Fiscal Federalism as a Source of Rents: Subnational Rentier
States and Democracy in Argentina
Carlos Gervasoni, University of Notre Dame
383
Daily Schedule
Partisan Strategies and Political Economic Performance. Do
Modes of Democratic Accountability Affect Economic Fortunes?
Marco Fernandez, Duke University
Jan Henryk Pierskalla, Duke University
Transnational Networks, Diffusion Dynamics, and Electoral
Change in the Postcommunist World
Valerie Bunce, Cornell University
Sharon Wolchik, George Washington University
International Factors and Regime Change in Latin America,
1945-2005
Scott Mainwaring, University of Notre Dame
Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh
Change Comes with Time: Interpreting the Substantive Impact of
Non-Proportional Hazards in Event History Analysis
Amanda A. Licht, University of Iowa
Disc:
DIFFUSION DYNAMICS IN DEMOCRATIZATION
PROCESSES
Co-sponsored by 12-3
Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Disc:
Pete W. Moore, Case Western Reserve University
Benjamin Smith, University of Florida
12-44
SOCIAL ORIGINS OF PARTY SYSTEMS AND PARTYSYSTEM CHANGE
Susan C. Stokes, Yale University
Chair:
Papers:
Daily Schedule
Chair:
Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron
Papers:
The New Community: Liberal Intergovernmentalism and East
African Integration
Mwita Chacha, University of Georgia
Private Sector Interests and Regional Integration in South
America
Jessica Crivelli, University of Zürich
Party System Stability versus Collapse: Crisis, Social
Transformation and Interest Incorporation in Latin America
Jana Morgan, University of Tennessee
Trade and Financial Regionalisms in East Asia: Structures,
Sequencing, and Linkages
Saori N. Katada, University of Southern California
The Making of Party Systems: The Organization of Social
Alliances in India and Pakistan
Maya Jessica Tudor, Harvard University
Cooperation in Competition: Asymmetrical Uncertainty and the
Rise of East Asia Intra-regional FTAs
Guan-Yi Leu, University of Virginia
Electoral Bases of the ‘Left Turn’ in Latin America
Noam Lupu, Princeton University
Authoritarian Legacies of Local Incorporation and Democratic
Party System Origins in Africa
Rachel Beatty Riedl, Princeton University
Disc:
Joel Selway, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
12-47
MASS MEDIA AND NATIONAL IDENTITY
Co-sponsored by 38-14
13-4
ENERGY AS AN INSTRUMENT OF RUSSIAN FOREIGN
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 16-29
John S. Duffield, Georgia State University
Chair:
Is China Leading?China, Southeast Asia, and East Asian
Integration
Alice D. Ba, University of Delaware
Disc:
Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron
16-27
TRADE AND PARTISANSHIP
Co-sponsored by 6-23
16-29
ENERGY AS AN INSTRUMENT OF RUSSIAN FOREIGN
POLICY
Co-sponsored by 13-4
17-12
COMPLEXITY AND ORGANIZATIONAL ADAPTATION
IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Elizabeth Bloodgood, Concordia University
Chair:
Papers:
Energy Leverage in Conditions of External Shock: the case of
Russian Energy Relations with Ukraine and Belarus, 2006-2009
Margarita M. Balmaceda, Harvard University
Papers:
Principal-Agent Theory and Economic Integration in Eurasia
Kathleen J. Hancock, University of Texas, San Antonio
Governance Experiments in Complex Adaptive Systems
Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto
Complexity Transcends Functionalism in Organizational Studies:
International Parliamentary Institutions and the Foundation of
Evolutionary Learning
Robert M. Cutler, Carleton University
Russian-Azerbaijani relations: All Change after the August war
of 2008?
Li-Chen Sim, Zayed University
The Dynamics of NGO Death
Elizabeth Bloodgood, Concordia University
Emily Clough, University of North Texas
Russia’s Energy Statecraft and the “Great Game Redux”: Parsing
Realism’s Contending Claims
Adam N. Stulberg, Georgia Institute of Technology
Disc:
Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University
Confronting Complexity: Can International Bureaucracies Adapt
to Post-Conflict?
Susanna Pfohl Campbell, Tufts University
14-1
THE CHANGING POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HUMAN
CAPITAL FORMATION
Co-sponsored by 11-35
Adaptive Activists: Analyzing the Capacity of International
Nongovernmental Organizations and Civil Society Networks to
Survive and Campaign in a Complex Political Environment
Vanessa Timmer, One Earth Web
14-17
WHERE IS THE LEFT?
Co-sponsored by 15-14
15-14
WHERE IS THE LEFT?
Co-sponsored by 14-17
Marc E. Smyrl, Universite de Montpellier 1
Chair:
Papers:
Liberalization and the Left in Europe: Why Do Centre-Left
Parties Adopt Market Liberal Reforms?
Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics
Social Democracy’s Strategic Quandary: Responses to
Immigration Challenges and Far-Right Policy Capture in Europe
William M. Downs, Georgia State University
The Politics of Poverty: Income Inequality and the
Transformation of the German Left
Mark I. Vail, Tulane University
Benjamin T. Bowyer, College of William and Mary
Disc:
16-20
384
Christopher S. Allen, University of Georgia
DYNAMICS OF REGIONAL INTEGRATION
Looking in the Mirror: Comparing INGO Networks Across Issue
Areas
Amanda Marie Murdie, Kansas State University
David R. Davis, Emory University
18-11
Chair:
Papers:
TO INTERVENE OR NOT TO INTERVENE? ASSESSING
THE IMPACT OF FOREIGN MILITARY INTERVENTION
AND OCCUPATION
Mia M. Bloom, University of Georgia
Catastrophic Success? The Effectiveness of Foreign-Imposed
Regime Change
Alexander B. Downes, Duke University
Should I Stay or Should I Go Now? Strategies for Struggling
Military Interventions
David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University
Military Force as an Instrument to Craft States
Patricia L Sullivan, University of Georgia
Women and Occupation: Should we still ‘shoot the women
first?’
Mia M. Bloom, University of Georgia
Daily Schedule
Disc:
John M. Owen, IV, University of Virginia
18-42
IDENTITY POLITICS AND NATIONALISM IN CHINA:
Co-sponsored by 43-18
20-16
Chair:
ASIAN FOREIGN POLICY CONCERNS
Tae-Hyung Kim, Daemen College
Papers:
Realist Logic of Engagement: Explaining U.S. China Policy
Wooseon Choi, Ramapo College of New Jersey
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Assessing the Bush Administration White House Legal
Policymaking Structure
Darby Morrisroe, St. Lawrence University
The Post-Bush Presidency and the Constitutional Order
Robert J. Spitzer, SUNY, Cortland
Limiting the Presidential Surveillance State? An Inquiry into the
Role of the Judiciary in the War on Terror
Darren A. Wheeler, University of North Florida
Disc:
Nancy V. Baker, New Mexico State University
Kevin J. McMahon, Trinity College
24-3
LABOR RELATIONS IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR:
CHANGING PARADIGMS, STRUCTURES, AND
MEASUREMENT
James D. Ward, Mississippi University for Women
THE AUTOCRATIC PEACE OF CENTRAL ASIA
Brenda Shaffer, University of Haifa
U.S. Foreign Policy – How Bureaucratic Politics Explains Why
China May be Getting Mixed Messages
Rachel Adler, University of California, Irvine
Chair:
Disc:
Tae-Hyung Kim, Daemen College
21-14
FORMAL THEORY APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL
CONFLICT
Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
Evolving Preferences: Simulating an Assuring Future
Christopher K. Butler, University of New Mexico
Bringing Free-Riders into the Fold: Exploring the Link between
Procedural Fairness and Union Membership in the Federal
Government
Ellen V. Rubin, SUNY Albany
Reaching Back into the Cookie Jar? Explaining Decisions to
Increase War Aims
Thomas M. Dolan, Jr., University of Rochester
Labor Relations in the Public Sector: Changing Paradigms,
Structures, and Measurement
Marick Masters, Wayne State University
A Unified Model of Military Intervention and Occupation
Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Commitment Problems and War Termination
Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania
22-5
Chair:
LEGISLATORS’ SPEECH AND ITS DETERMINANTS
Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh
Papers:
How Congress Goes Public During Times of War: Examining the
Influence of Divided Government on Congressional Behavior
Michael Bressler, Furman University
Disc:
Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma
J. Edward Kellough, University of Georgia
25-17
OPPORTUNITIES AND TENSIONS SURROUNDING
PUBLIC PARTNERSHIPS WITH FAITH-BASED AND
COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS AT THE CLOSE OF
THE BUSH ERA
Cathy M. Johnson, Williams College
Chair:
Papers:
State Faith-Based Practices and the Dual Cultural Processes of
Desecularization and Devolution of the Public Sector
Rebecca Sager, Loyola Marymount University
The Dynamics of Communication with Constituents
Chad Murphy, University of Mary Washington
Institutional and Electoral Foundations of Parliamentary
Speeches
Sven-Oliver Proksch, University of Mannheim
What Determines the Parliamentary Questions Agenda? A
Longitudinal (1978-2007) and Comparative Study in Five
Countries
Stefaan Walgrave, University of Antwerp
Rens Vliegenthart, University of Amsterdam
Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh
23-8
ASSESSING EXECUTIVE POWER BEFORE, DURING,
AND AFTER THE BUSH PRESIDENCY
Kevin J. McMahon, Trinity College
Papers:
The Tides of Presidential Power: Obama and the Prospects for a
Constitutional Presidency
David Gray Adler, Idaho State University
Looking Forward, Looking Backward: Undoing the Bush Years
Nancy Kassop, SUNY, New Paltz
The Role of State Faith Community Liaisons in Charitable
Choice Implementation
Pamela Winston, Mathematica Policy Research
Ann E. Person, Mathematica Policy Research
Disc:
Steven Rathgeb Smith, University of Washington
25-26
TODAY’S SCIENCE FICTION, TOMORROW’S POLICY?
Co-sponsored by 39-6
26-5
COURTS AND PUBLIC OPINION IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Kevin T. McGuire, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Chair:
Papers:
Can State Courts Influence Public Opinion? The Case of SameSex Marriage
Robert J. Hume, Fordham University
Courts, Legislatures, and Ballot Initiatives: How Policy Venue
Affects Public Acceptance
Alison Gash, University of California, Berkeley
Michael H. Murakami, Yale University
385
Daily Schedule
Disc:
The Overlooked Role of Faith-Based Organizations and Secular
Nonprofits in the Modern American Welfare State
Scott W. Allard, University of Chicago
The Response of Faith-Based Organizations and Secular
Nonprofits after Disasters
Carol DeVita, Urban Institute
To Speak Or Not To Speak: That Is The Question.
Stonegarden Grindlife, UCLA
Chair:
Public Sector Labor Relations and Collective Bargaining: A
Review of the Research and Analysis of Future Prospects
Richard C. Kearney, North Carolina State University
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Daily Schedule
Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University
Supreme Court Unity and Public Opinion: An Experimental
Study
Michael Salamone, University of California, Berkeley
31-7
An Experimental Study of Judicial Impact
Vincent James Strickler, Utah State University
Brennan Tyler Lindsay, Utah State University
Chair:
The Australian High Court and Attitudes Toward Aborigines: A
Test of Court Influence on Australian Public Opinion
William Myers, Michigan State University
Reginald S. Sheehan, Michigan State University
Papers:
GENDERING POLITICAL ORGANIZING: WOMEN, MEN
AND ACTIVISM IN THE US
Co-sponsored by 35-3
Jennifer Leigh Disney, Winthrop University
National Coalition Work in the American Women’s Movement
Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina
Pro-Women, Antifeminist? Understanding Sarah Palin Through
Conservative Women Activists
Ronnee Schreiber, San Diego State University
Disc:
Kevin T. McGuire, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
27-1
ROUNDTABLE: CLINTON ROSSITER’S
CONSTITUTIONAL DICTATORSHIP: CRISIS
GOVERNMENT IN THE MODERN DEMOCRACIES:
STILL RELEVANT?
Co-sponsored by 1-7
Advocacy in Hard Times: Representing Marginalized Groups in
the Twenty-First Century
Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
28-11
NON-METROPOLITAN POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Panel 2
29-5
POLITICS AND PUNISHMENT IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 42-2
Adrienne Smith, Emory University
The Electoral Success of Women’s Organizations: Do the Media
Matter?
Danielle Marie Thomsen, Cornell University
Chair:
Papers:
Finding Their Punitive Best: Explaining Variation in Crime
Policy Across the American States
Lisa L. Miller, Rutgers University
Naomi Murakawa, University of Washington, Seattle
A Criminal Background Check to Sleep Here: Housing Options
with a Felony Charge
Keesha M. Middlemass, Rutgers University, Newark
Governance and the Political Activity of Women’s Associations
Maryann Barakso, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Disc:
Kristin Goss, Duke University
31-20
ISLAM, SECULARISM, AND SEXUAL EQUALITY:
RESISTANCE AND CHANGE IN MUSLIM SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by 11-74
Melanie M. Hughes, University of Pittsburgh
Chair:
Papers:
Sanctioning the Right to Assistance: States, Felons, and Social
Welfare
Michael Leo Owens, Emory University
Adrienne Smith, Emory University
Declaring Sexual Equality: Documents from around the World
Penny A. Weiss, Saint Louis University
Islam, Secularism and Gender Equality
Ebru Erdem, University of California, Riverside
Registration and Turnout among Convicted Offenders and ExOffenders in the 2008 Presidential Election
Traci Burch, Northwestern University
Reforming the State: An Examination of Changes in Criminal
Disenfranchisement Laws
Khalilah L. Brown-Dean, Yale University
Disc:
Vesla Mae Weaver, University of Virginia
30-13
THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE
OF MULTICULTURALISM IN TORONTO
Co-sponsored by T-28
Randall A. Hansen, University of Toronto
Chair:
Papers:
The Political Inclusion of Migrants in Multi-ethnic Cities:
Toronto Compared
Jill S. Gross, Hunter College-CUNY
The Municipal Role in Multiculturalism Initiatives: Toronto’s
Experience in Comparative Perspective
Kristin Ruth Good, Dalhousie University
From Monolithic to Multicultural: Toronto’s Urban
Transformation
Myer Siemiatycki, Ryerson University
Governance and Urban Diversity: A Comparative Exploration
Richard Stren, University of Toronto
Gentrification, Social Mix, and the Immigrant-Reception
Function of Inner-City Neighbourhoods: An Updated Analysis,
1971 - 2006
R. Alan Walks, University of Toronto, Mississauga
Disc:
386
Randall A. Hansen, University of Toronto
Women and the Politics of Resistance in Iran: The One Million
Signatures Campaign
Hamideh Sedghi, Harvard University
Islam’s Patriarchal Effect: Spurious or Substantive?
Amy Alexander, University of California
Christian Welzel, Jacobs University Bremen
Disc:
Marijke Breuning, University of North Texas
Mary Lou Kendrigan, Lansing Community College
32-11
RACE AND AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by 7-16
33-5
RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN DEMOCRATIZATION
PROCESSES: EVIDENCE FROM FIVE MUSLIM
DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 44-9
Wolfgang Merkel, WZB
Chair:
Papers:
State vs. Government in Turkey: How Islam has Framed the
Power Struggle between Elected and Non-Elected Officials
Quinn Mecham, Middlebury College
Between Diversity and Exclusivism: The Political Role of
Islamic Actors in Indonesia’s First Democratic Decade
Mirjam Künkler, Princeton University
Religious Pragmatism and Democratic Transition in Albania
Fatos Tarifa, European University of Tirana
The Diverse Roles of Islamic Actors in Mali’s Democratic
Consolidation: From Fostering Socio-Political Pluralism to
Inhibiting the Development of Strong State Institutions?
Julia Leininger, Peace Research Institute
Negotiating Muslim Democracy: Religious Actors and Secular
Activists in Senegal
Leonardo A. Villalon, University of Florida
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Timothy Samuel Shah, Council on Foreign Relations
35-3
GENDERING POLITICAL ORGANIZING: WOMEN, MEN
AND ACTIVISM IN THE US
Co-sponsored by 31-7
36-12
POLARIZATION
Co-sponsored by 37-9
Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania
Chair:
Papers:
Independents in a Polarized Society: Mythical, Critical or
Closeted?
Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter
Todd Donovan, Western Washington University
Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside
David J. Lanoue, University of Alabama
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Choice in Motion: A Multi-System Framework on Technological
Innovation and Environmental Problems
Hui-Yin Sung, Free University of Berlin
Sheng-Chih Wang, Free University of Berlin
The Fuzzy Front End and the Policy Primordial Soup
Rachel VanSickle-Ward, Pitzer College
Preeta M. Banerjee, Brandeis University
41-4
Papers:
THEY’VE ALL GONE TO LOOK FOR AMERICA
Hugh Henry Brackenridge’s Satirical Commentary on the
Transition from a Republican Political Culture to a Democratic
Culture in Early America.
Bruce E. Caswell, Rowan University
Close Encounters? Power and Recognition in Terrence Malick’s
“The New World”
Benjamin McKean, Princeton University
Partisans Without Constraint: Political Polarization and Trends in
American Public Opinion
Delia Baldassarri, Princeton University
Andrew Gelman, Columbia University
Machiavelli’s Presence in Emanuele Criasele’s “The Golden
Door”
Andrea Ciliotta-Rubery, SUNY, College at Brockport
Route 66 State of Nature: Jack Kerouac’s On the Road and the
Social Contract Tradition
Philip Abbott, Wayne State University
Mass Preferences for Bipartisanship in Congress
Laurel Harbridge, Stanford University
Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
Disc:
Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin
Disc:
Lee Trepanier, Saginaw Valley State University
Mihaela Czobor-Lupp, Georgetown University
37-1
FRAMING
Co-sponsored by 5-3
42-2
37-9
POLARIZATION
Co-sponsored by 36-12
POLITICS AND PUNISHMENT IN THE STATES
Co-sponsored by 29-5
43-18
37-27
EXAMINING ATTITUDES ABOUT GAY RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 47-6
Chair:
IDENTITY POLITICS AND NATIONALISM IN CHINA:
Co-sponsored by 18-42
Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison
38-14
MASS MEDIA AND NATIONAL IDENTITY
Co-sponsored by 12-47
Ranjit Singh, University of Mary Washington
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
The (In)coherence of Chinese Soft Power: A Consideration of
the Fluidity of National Identity and Nationalism in
Contemporary Chinese Foreign Relations
Allen Carlson, Cornell University
Communicating Reforms: Exploring Media’s Role in the Political
and Economic Development of Post-Communist Bulgaria
Petia A. Kostadinova, University of Florida
Daniela V. Dimitrova, Iowa State University
Strategic Nationalism: The Mobilization and Repression of AntiForeign Protest in China
Jessica C. Weiss, Princeton University
Advertising the “Nation” in Postapartheid South Africa:
Television Commercials and Nation-Building
Sean Jacobs, The New School
The News Media’s Prospective Accountability Function:
Explaining Variable Press Support for Access to Government
Information Laws
Robert Gregory Michener, University of Texas at Austin
Media Use and Political Attitude in China
Min Tang, Purdue University
Dwayne Woods, Purdue University
Disc:
Ranjit Singh, University of Mary Washington
39-6
TODAY’S SCIENCE FICTION, TOMORROW’S POLICY?
Co-sponsored by 25-26
Gautam Mukunda, Masschusetts Institute of Technology
Chair:
Are We Ready for Nanotechnology?: How To Define Humaness
in Public Policy
Liz Johnson, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Developing An Analytical Framework for Genetic Warfare
Policy
R.E. Burnett, Virginia Military Institute
Is Technology Outpacing Democracy? The Case of Cloned
Animals and American Regulatory Institutions
Maya Joseph, New School University
Rebirth of the Propaganda State: Promoting Japan in China
James Reilly, University of Sydney
Disc:
Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison
44-9
RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN DEMOCRATIZATION
PROCESSES: EVIDENCE FROM FIVE MUSLIM
DEMOCRACIES
Co-sponsored by 33-5
44-12
REVISITING REGIME CHANGE: CROSS-REGIONAL
PERSPECTIVES
Deborah L. Norden, Whittier College
Chair:
Papers:
Regime Change and Democratization in Cuba: Comparative
Perspectives
Eusebio Mujal-Leon, Georgetown University
Eric Langenbacher, Georgetown University
“TRANSITION” VERSUS “CONSOLIDATION” AND “EAST”
VERSUS “SOUTH”: A Theoretical Argument for Inter-Regional
Comparison of Social Mobilization in Eastern Europe and Latin
America.
Olga Onuch, University of Oxford
387
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Selective Othering: the Formation of Chinese National Identity
and Attitudes to the External World
Yinan He, Seton Hall University
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Daily Schedule
LESSONS FROM EASTERN EUROPE FOR
DEMOCRATIZATION THEORIES: From ‘preconditions’ to
‘constellations’?
Uffe Jakobsen, University of Copenhagen
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Disc:
Deborah L. Norden, Whittier College
Chair:
46-12
VIRTUES AND LIMITS OF MIXED-METHOD
RESEARCH IN DIVERSE CONTEXTS
Aaron Schneider, Tulane University
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
Panel 6
Conceptual Stretching in Mixed Method Research
Ariel Ahram, University of Oklahoma
Triangulating Methods to Assess the Performance of
International Bureaucracies: An Analysis of EU Institutions
Through Case Studies and Surveys
Kaija E. Schilde, University of Pennsylvania
Xenophon and Noble Conduct: Book Four of the Anabasis of
Cyrus
Eric Buzzetti, Concordia University
Disc:
Chair:
Papers:
Panel 12 THE LANGUAGES OF POLITICAL ORDER:
EXPERIENCE AND SYMBOLIZATION IN NONWESTERN MODES OF THOUGHT
Chair:
Timothy Hoye, Texas Woman’s University
EXAMINING ATTITUDES ABOUT GAY RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by 37-27
Patrick J. Egan, New York University
Styles of Truth in Gao Xingjian’s Soul Mountain
Timothy Hoye, Texas Woman’s University
The Politics and Geopolitics of the Two Koreas and the United
States
Yu Nam Kim, Dankook University
Network Diversity and Views about Same-Sex Marriage
Elisabeth L. Gidengil, McGill University
Religion and Politics in the Constitutions of Japan
Kyoko Inoue, University of Illinois, Chicago
Polling Pink: An Examination of Interviewer Bias and Pragmatic
Inference in Item Wording and Question Order on the Issue of
Gay Rights in the 2008 Presidential Election
Paul G. Harwood, University of North Florida
Nicholas James Seaton, University of North Florida
Patrick J. Egan, New York University
Disc:
Panel 1
Chair:
RECENT RESEARCH IN BIOLOGY AND POLITICS
Rob Sprinkle, University of Maryland
Papers:
Digging up the Past: The Circulation of Biovalue across Space
and Time
Amy L. Fletcher, University of Canterbury
Abandoned Baby Legislation: The States’ Response to Parental
Divestment
Laurette T. Liesen, Lewis University
Association for the Study of Nationalities
Panel 1
Chair:
UKRAINE: LOOKING WEST ... AND EAST
Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University
Part:
Erik S. Herron, University of Kansas
Dominique Arel, University of Ottawa
Taras Kuzio, University of Toronto
Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University
Red Brain, Blue Brain
Darren Schreiber, University of California, San Diego
Bizarre Beliefs & Rational Choices: A Behavioral &
Neuroimaging Perspective
John W. Schiemann, Fairleigh Dickinson University
Disc:
Cato Institute
Chair:
Part:
388
ROUNDTABLE: AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY AND
THE POLITICS OF FEAR: THREAT INFLATION SINCE
9/11
Justin Logan, Cato Institute
Jane Kellett Cramer, University of Oregon
A. Trevor Thrall, University of Michigan, Dearborn
Benjamin H. Friedman, Massachusets Insitute of Technology
Jonathan Renshon, Harvard University
John Robert Ross, University of North Texas
Thomas J. McPartland, Kentucky State University
Timothy J. Lomperis, Saint Louis University
IPSA Research Committee 12 (Biology and Politics)
Related Group Panels
Panel 1
Place and Identity in Palestinian Literature: Susan Abulhawa’s
THE SCAR OF DAVID
Samah Elhajibrahim, University of Pennsylvania
Explaining the Success of Proposition 8: Determinants of
Opposition to Same-Sex Marriage
Gregory B. Lewis, Georgia State University
Politicizing the Courts: Attacking “Activist Judges” in the
Debate over Election Referenda about Gay Marriage
Seth K. Goldman, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame
David Davies, University of Dallas
Eric Voegelin Society
Papers:
47-6
Nobility and Beauty in the Plays of Aristophanes
Wayne Ambler, University of Colorado
Nobility as an End in Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics
Erik Dempsey, University of Texas, Austin
Understanding Social and Political Practice: A Mixed-Method
Strategy
Gitte Sommer Harrits, University of Aarhus
Change and Complexity in Stateness: Quantitative, Qualitative,
and Interpretive Tools to make sense of State Authority in an
Age of Globalization
Aaron Schneider, Tulane University
THE PLACE OF NOBILITY IN THE THOUGHT OF
ARISTOTLE, ARISTOPHANES, AND XENOPHON
William Morrisey, Hillsdale College
Susanne Lohmann, University of California, Los Angeles
Jenny Rebecca Kehl, Rutgers University
Rebecca J. Hannagan, Northern Illinois University
Publius: The Journal of Federalism
Panel 2
Chair:
Papers:
NON-METROPOLITAN POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
Co-sponsored by 28-11
Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University
Federalism at Work: Housing the Homeless in North Carolina
Robert J. Thompson, East Carolina University
Carmine P. Scavo, East Carolina University
Daily Schedule
Policy Responses to the Plight of Infectious Disease in Federal
Systems
Daniel Baracskay, Valdosta State University
Comparing Rural Health and Health Care in Canada and the
United States: The Influence of Federalism
Joseph Blankenau, Wayne State College
Disc:
Chair:
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
TERRITORIAL RIGHT AND GLOBAL JUSTICE
Co-sponsored by 1-29
Monique Deveaux, Williams College
THe External Legitimacy of State Territorial Control
Anna Stilz, Princeton University
Territorial Right and the Demands of STrangers
Margaret Moore, Queens University
Shelly R. Arsneault, California State University, Fullerton
Ten Minutes of Nice Things to Say About Settlers and
Settlements
Tamar Meisels, Tel Aviv University
Division Panels
1-27
3-25
Federalism and Election Law: Implementation Issues in Rural
America
Heather M. Creek, University of Maryland
Kimberly A. Karnes, University of Maryland
Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
T-29
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
THEME PANEL: HISTORY, IDENTITY, POLITICAL
VIOLENCE: THE RELATIVE MERITS OF QUALITATIVE
METHODS TO EXPLAIN COMPLEX AND DYNAMIC
PHENOMENA
Co-sponsored by 46-8
Territorial Right, Justice and the Environmnet
Avery Kolers, Univeristy of Louisville
Disc:
Burke Hendrix, Franklin & Marshall College
5-7
Chair:
MOTIVATED REASONING
Andrew J.W. Civettini, Knox College
Papers:
News Consumption, Partisan Polarization, and Political Learning
during Presidential Elections
Ramesh Raj Sharma, University of Kentucky
RECOGNITION, CIVILITY AND POLITICAL
DISCOURSE
Michael T. Gibbons, University of South Florida
Truth, Relevance and Motivated Processing in Perceptions of
Political Advertising
Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter
Barbara Allen, Carleton College
John L. Sullivan, University of Minnesota-Minneapolis
A Wittgensteinian Perspective on “People,” “Nation” and
“Culture”
Catherine Frost, McMaster University
The Uses of Civility: Public Discourse and the Requirements of
Temperate Reasoning
Joseph C. Mink, New College of Florida
Opening the Partisan Mind? The Effect of Self-Affirmation on
Political Learning
Brendan Nyhan, Duke University
Jason A. Reifler, Georgia State University
“Demanding” Recognition? Plato, Hegel, and Beyond
Charles Blattberg, University of Montreal
The Paradox of Partisan Responsiveness
Eric William Groenendyk, University of Michigan
Disc:
Michael T. Gibbons, University of South Florida
Disc:
Andrew J.W. Civettini, Knox College
1-29
TERRITORIAL RIGHT AND GLOBAL JUSTICE
Co-sponsored by 3-25
6-1
2-32
Chair:
ABOUT SCHMITT
Michael Forman, University of Washington, Tacoma
CORRUPTION AND THE SOURCES OF DEMOCRATIC
SUCCESS AND FAILURE
Co-sponsored by 11-11
7-13
Papers:
The Nomos of Exception and the Problem of Democratic Space
in Schmitt and Agamben
Francois Debrix, Florida International University
ENGINES OF CHANGE? AMERICAN POLITICAL
PARTIES IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University
Chair:
Papers:
Renewing Democratic Authority: Hamlet’s Politics with (and
against) Carl Schmitt
Philip A. Michelbach, West Virginia University
Andrew Poe, University of California, San Diego
Party Factions and the President
Daniel R. DiSalvo, City College of New York-CUNY
Mass Opinion and American Populism
Samuel DeCanio, Georgetown University
The Utopian Function of the Enemy in the Thought of the
Frankfurt School
William Winstead, George Washington University
Peter D. Breiner, SUNY, Albany
3-20
Chair:
TAKING INJUSTICE SERIOUSLY
Christopher Lebron, University of Virginia
Papers:
Expanding the Scope of Transitional Justice: Individual, State
and Social Responsibility for Mass Atrocity
Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University
The Conceptual Priority of Injustice
Eric Beerbohm, Harvard University
The Vietnam War and the American Party System
Robert P. Saldin, University of Montana
Parties as Political Institutions in American Political
Development
Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University
Disc:
Nancy L. Rosenblum, Harvard University
Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University
11-11
CORRUPTION AND THE SOURCES OF DEMOCRATIC
SUCCESS AND FAILURE
Co-sponsored by 6-1
Philip Keefer, The World Bank
Chair:
Who Owns the Past?
Peter Lindsay, Georgia State University
Disc:
Christopher Lebron, University of Virginia
389
Daily Schedule
Disc:
Partisan Regimes in American Politics
Andrew J. Polsky, Hunter College, CUNY
Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Papers:
The Sources and Consequences of Heterogeneity in Perceptions
of Political Corruption
Eric C.C. Chang, Michigan State University
Nicholas Kerr, Michigan State University
Daily Schedule
Papers:
Informal Institutions and Implementation of Unpopular Policies
in Authoritarian Regime
Jing Vivian Zhan, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Corruption, Ideology, and the Returns to Democracy
Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia
Consensual Elections in Rural China
Hiroki Takeuchi, Southern Methodist University
Legislative Corruption in Contemporary India
Miriam A. Golden, University of California, Los Angeles
Devesh Tiwari, University of Calfornia, San Diego
Eat, Drink, Bureaucracies: Patronage Distribution and Public
Sector Growth in Local China
Yuen Yuen Ang, Stanford University
Corruption, Electoral Corruption and Development Outcomes: A
Cross-National Study
Alberto Simpser, University of Chicago
Are There Biases in the Cross-National Measures of Perceived
Corruption?
Jong-sung You, University of California, San Diego
Pierre F. Landry, Yale University
Xiaobo Lu, Yale University
15-16
Unsettling: Displacement Decisions in Civil Wars
Abbey Steele, Yale University
THE HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME IN EUROPE: ISSUES
AND CHALLENGES
Co-sponsored by 45-2
Divergence and Convergence in Path-Dependent Developments:
Comparing the Evolution of the European and Inter-American
Systems for the Protection of Human Rights
Andreas von Staden, Ph.D., TU Darmstadt
Unpacking Civilian Collaboration in Civil War: Beyond ‘Hearts
and Minds’ and Domination
Ana Arjona, Yale University
Attack of the Clones? Legal Mobilization and the Litigation
Explosion Before the European Court of Human Rights
Lisa Conant, University of Denver
Making War and Maintaining Peace: Agency and the Limits of
Morality in Kenya’s Mau Mau War, 1952-60
Daniel Branch, University of Warwick
Ties That Bind: Examining the Role of Human Rights in Family
Reunification Policy Formation
Aubrey Westfall, University of Colorado, Boulder
Violence and the Amplification of Agency in Warscape Social
Transformation: A Critical Theoretical Framework
Stephen C. Lubkemann, George Washington University
A Civil Rights Movement for Europe: The Importance of
European Spaces and Institutions in Constructing, Funding and
Empowering the Roma Rights Movement
Jacqueline S. Gehring, Allegheny College
Philip Keefer, The World Bank
11-20
CIVILIAN AGENCY IN CIVIL WARS
Co-sponsored by 12-4
David S. Patel, Cornell University
Papers:
Legal Institutions, Governance, and Economic Growth in China
Yu Zheng, University of Connecticut
Disc:
Disc:
Chair:
Participation, Collaboration, and Nonparticipation in Civil War:
Competition between Government and Rebels and Individuals’
Calculations in Cambodia
Yuichi Kubota, SUNY, University at Albany
Papers:
16-18
Chair:
Disc:
Jesse Driscoll, Stanford University
11-73
SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION OF
WOMEN : NEW APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by 31-14
12-4
CIVILIAN AGENCY IN CIVIL WARS
Co-sponsored by 11-20
12-16
INTERNATIONAL DO-GOODERS AND DOMESTIC
POLITICAL ECONOMIES
David S. Brown, University of Colorado
Papers:
Chair:
Papers:
Managed Representation for Authoritarian Rule: Local Chinese
Congresses as Agents of Constituents and Party
Melanie Frances Manion, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Is Trade Really Good for Your Health?
Nita Rudra, University of Pittsburgh
Daniel C. Tirone, University of Pittsburgh
Conflicting Norms, Constrained Policies: The Case of Mexico’s
Approach to Genetically Modified Organisms
Wendy Hicks-Casey, University of Toronto
The Impact of IMF Agreements on Public Health Performance
Matthew Hoddie, Towson University
Caroline A. Hartzell, Gettysburg College
Jason Matthew Smith, Texas A&M University
Climate Change and Trade: The Case of Environmental Goods
and Services Trade in the Developing World
Deborah K. Elms, Nanyang Technological University
Poverty Reduction Strategies and their Impact on
Democratization in Developing Countries
Sophia Melody Haenny, University of Zurich
Katharina Michaelowa, University of Zurich
The Impact of International Support for Political Parties in New
Democracies: Malawi and Zambia Compared
Lars Svasand, University of Bergen
Lise Rakner, University of Bergen
HEATH, ENVIRONMENT, AND INTERNATIONAL
OPENNESS
Jeffrey Drope, Marquette University
Disaggregating Aid Matters: How Foreign Aid Affects Human
Development Outcomes
Simone Dietrich, Pennsylvania State University
Disc:
Jeffrey Drope, Marquette University
Internationalized Regimes
Oisín Tansey, University of Reading
17-15
Disc:
David S. Brown, University of Colorado
Chair:
PRIVATE STANDARDS, PUBLIC GOALS: NON-STATE
ACTORS AS STANDARD-SETTERS
Tim Buthe, Duke University
13-12
LOCAL GOVERNANCE, POLICY IMPLEMENTATION,
AND AUTHORITARIAN RULE IN CHINA
Hiroki Takeuchi, Southern Methodist University
Chair:
390
Papers:
Private standards in the Climate Regime: the Greenhouse Gas
Protocol
Jessica F. Green, Princeton University
Daily Schedule
Can Non-State Governance “Ratchet Up” Global Standards?
Assessing Indirect and Evolutionary Potential
Benjamin W. Cashore, Yale University
Stefan Renckens, Yale University
Kelly Levin, Yale University
Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Papers:
The (In)Decision to Go to War: Dynamics of Turkey’s Iraq War
Policy Making
Baris Kesgin, University of Kansas
When Effect Becomes Cause: Private Governance Beyond
Emergence
Graeme Auld, Carleton University
Luc Fransen, University of Amsterdam
Turkish Foreign Policy in the New Millennium: Contending
Pressures from the US, Europe, and Transnational Islam
Ali Tekin, Harvard University
A New Middle Ground between Humanitarian NonGovernmental Organizations and Epistemic Communities?: the
Cases of the Ottawa Convention and the Convention on Cluster
Munitions
Naoko Kumagai, CUNY, Graduate Center
Regional Environmental Governance: NGOs, States and the
Sulu-Sulawesi Marine Ecoregion
Kim D. Reimann, Georgia State University
Who makes the Turkish Foreign Policy: Decision Units?
Structure? Or Their Interaction?
Gokce Ozgen Baykal, Rutgers University
The Power of Religious Ideas: How Islam Transformed Turkish
Foreign Policy 2002-2008
Pinar Kizir Tremblay, UCLA
Re-evaluating History, Geography and Culture? Understanding
Recent Changes in Turkish Foreign Policy
Ali Resul Usul, Bahcesehir University
Disc:
Baris Kesgin, University of Kansas
21-10
ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF PEACEKEEPING AND
PEACEMAKING
Co-sponsored by 18-36
Holger Schmidt, George Washington University
Disc:
Tim Buthe, Duke University
17-20
CHANGING CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF SECURITY
Co-sponsored by 19-17
18-15
Chair:
CROSS-BORDER THREATS
Peter Andreas, Brown University
Papers:
Border Control Assistance in Post-Conflict States
George Gavrilis, University of Texas, Austin
Peace Treaties: Then and Now
Tanisha Fazal, Columbia University
Doing Nothing: Explaining Delay and Inaction in Territorial
Disputes
M. Taylor Fravel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
UN Tactics and the Durability of Peace
Kyle Beardsley, Emory University
Holger Schmidt, George Washington University
Kleptocratic Interdependence: Trafficking, Corruption, and the
Marriage of Politics and Illicit Profits
Kelly M. Greenhill, Tufts and Harvard Universities
Examining the Duration of Peacekeeping Operations
Birger Heldt, National Defence College of Sweden
Do Walls Work? Exploring the Conditions Under Which
Artificial Barriers Impede Population Movement
Ron E. Hassner, University of California, Berkeley
Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley
Chair:
Papers:
Peacekeeping and War Outcomes
Page Fortna, Columbia University
Coercive Diplomacy and the International Criminal Court
Leslie Vinjamuri, School of Oriental and African Studies
Disc:
David E. Cunningham, Iowa State University
Disc:
Peter Andreas, Brown University
22-15
18-36
ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF PEACEKEEPING AND
PEACEMAKING
Co-sponsored by 21-10
CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE POLITICS OF
SIGNING STATEMENTS
Co-sponsored by 23-15
23-15
CHANGING CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF SECURITY
Co-sponsored by 17-20
Ramesh Thakur, University of Waterloo
Chair:
CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE POLITICS OF
SIGNING STATEMENTS
Co-sponsored by 22-15
Jeffrey S. Peake, Bowling Green State University
19-17
Chair:
Papers:
Papers:
International Monetary Risks to U.S. Security and Foreign
Policy:Dissecting Hard and Soft Power
Paul R. Viotti, University of Denver
Presidential Signing Statements as Informants that Guide
Congressional Oversight
Kevin Evans, University of California, Davis
Re-conceptualizing Security Issues: Securitization and DeSecuritization
Carolyn M. Stephenson, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Presidential Power and the Politics of Signing Statements
Ian Ostrander, Washington University in St. Louis
Joel Sievert, Washington University in St. Louis
Globalizing Security: The Politics of Human Security
James P. Muldoon, Rutgers University, Newark
Economic Development and Military Effectiveness
Michael C. Beckley, Columbia University
Disc:
Robert L. Brown, Temple University
20-10
Chair:
ADVANCES IN TURKISH FOREIGN POLICY
Andrew J. Flibbert, Trinity College
Disc:
Jeffrey S. Peake, Bowling Green State University
Daniel E. Ponder, Drury University
24-12
GOVERNING AT THE LOCAL LEVEL
Co-sponsored by 30-3
Jeanne W. Simon, Universidad de Concepcion
Chair:
Daily Schedule
Understanding Security Cooperation in the Face of Technological
Change
David W. Kearn, Jr., St. John’s University
Presidential Signing Statements as an Effort to Counteract
Vigilant Congressional Oversight
Michael J. Berry, University of Colorado, Denver
391
Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Papers:
26-15
Chair:
Part:
Constitutive and Substantive Representation: Sex, Gender and
Party in the UK Parliament
Sarah Childs, University of Bristol
Paul D. Webb, University of Sussex
Policy Tool Selection: Predicting the Bundling of Economic
Development Policy Instruments Using a Multivariate Probit
Analysis
Anthony Kassekert, Florida State University
Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University
Explaining the Institutional Influence on Tenure of City
Managers: Duration Dependence (Binary TSCS) Approach
In Won Lee, Florida State University
Defining Women’s Interests: A Comparative Mapping of
Representative Claims
Karen Celis, University College Ghent
Johanna Elina Kantola, University of Helsinki
Monitoring The Money: political context and the monitoring of
financial discretion in English local government.
Stephen Greasley, University of Manchester
The Potential Symbolic Value of Descriptive Representation: The
Case of Female Representation
Ana Espirito-Santo, European University Institute
Political Conflict and Interlocal Cooperation
Eric Zeemering, San Francisco State University
The Role of Personal Experience in Women’s Substantive
Representation
Christina Xydias, Ohio State University
The Formalization of Growth Coalitions and the New Politics of
Urban Development Top of Form
James M. Smith, Indiana University South Bend
Disc:
Daily Schedule
Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University
Charles Conteh, Lakehead University
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: SAUL BRENNER AND
JOSEPH WHITMEYER, STRATEGY ON THE UNITED
STATES SUPREME COURT
Lawrence Baum, Ohio State University
Disc:
Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami
Merike Blofield, University of Miami
36-17
Chair:
VOTERS, ELECTIONS, AND THE INTERNET
Geoffery William Seaver, National Defense University
Papers:
Attack Politics on the Internet: Comparing German and
American E-Campaigns
Eva Johanna Schweitzer, University of Mainz
A Bottleneck Model of Internet Voting.Explaining the Limited
Impact of Technology on Electoral Participation
Till Weber, European University Institute
Kristjan Vassil, European University Institute
David Klein, University of Virginia
Wendy L. Martinek, SUNY, Binghamton
Paul J. Wahlbeck, The George Washington University
Saul Brenner, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Joseph M. Whitmeyer, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
James R. Rogers, Texas A&M University
29-7
Chair:
SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY IN THE STATES
Edward A. Miller, Brown University
Papers:
Ending Welfare As We Didn’t Know It: The Story of Welfare
Privatization in California, New York, Texas and Wisconsin
Michelle D. Brophy-Baermann, Rhode Island College
Andrew J. Bloeser, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Welfare Reform and Racial Regimes in the American States
David M. Hedge, University of Florida
Renée J. Johnson, Kent State University
Hyun Jung Yun, Texas State University
The American Internet Voter
Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago
Thad E. Hall, University of Utah
Presidential Candidates’ Use of the Internet to Communicate
Issue Positions
Mark D. Ludwig, California State University, Sacramento
Disc:
Girish J. Gulati, Bentley College
40-8
ROUNDTABLE ON CONNECTING DEMOCRACY:
ONLINE CONSULTATION AND THE FUTURE OF
DEMOCRATIC DISCOURSE
Peter M. Shane, Ohio State University
Chair:
Part:
David Lazer, Harvard University
Sungsoo Hwang, Grand Valley State University
Steven J. Balla, George Washington University
Alicia Schatteman, Rutgers, the State University of New
Jersey
Laurence Monnoyer-Smith, University of Technology of
Compiègne
44-13
Chair:
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF DEMOCRATIZATION
Pablo Toral, Beloit College
Papers:
The Enduring Legacies of the Democratic Transition: Zapatero
and the Challenges of Economic Reforms
Sebastian Royo, Suffolk University
Racial and Economic Segregation, Representation and Social
Welfare: A State-Level Analysis
Robert R. Preuhs, Metropolitan State College of Denver
Rodney E. Hero, University of Notre Dame
Explaining Developments in State Medicaid Coverage for LowIncome Families
Saundra K. Schneider, Michigan State University
Disc:
Ann O’M. Bowman, Texas A&M University
Michael J. Rich, Emory University
30-3
GOVERNING AT THE LOCAL LEVEL
Co-sponsored by 24-12
Labor as a Pro-democracy Actor in Egypt and Brazil
Rabab El-Mahdi, American University of Cairo
31-14
SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION OF
WOMEN : NEW APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by 11-73
Merike Blofield, University of Miami
The Difference that Democracy Makes: Two Phases of Economic
Reform in Chile and New Zealand
Kate Nicholls, National University of Singapore
Paul Buchanan, University of Auckland
Chair:
Papers:
Businessmen and Democratization: A Comparative Analysis of
Greece and Turkey
Yaprak Gursoy, Sabanci University
Representing the Social: Gender and Representation in Japan in
the Age of Neo-liberalism and Gender Mainstreaming
Yuki Tsuji, Kyoto University
Disc:
392
Pablo Toral, Beloit College
Daily Schedule
Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
45-2
THE HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME IN EUROPE: ISSUES
AND CHALLENGES
Co-sponsored by 15-16
State Power and Development: Comparing Taiwan and South
Korea Through a Case Study of the Bicycle Industry
Michelle F. Hsieh, Academia Sinica
46-6
THE EPISTEMOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF MIXEDMETHOD RESEARCH
Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
The Limit of the Developmental State: The Innovation Pattern of
Taiwan’s Bio-Pharmaceutical Industry
Jenn-Hwan Wang, National Chengchi University
Tsung-Yuan Chen, National Chengchi University
Are We Really Bridging the Gap? On the Conflicting
Epistemological Foundations of Multi-method Research
David Kuehn, University of Heidelberg
Ingo Rohlfing, University of Cologne
Push and Pull in Taiwan’s Technology Transformation:
Evaluating the Role of ITRI and Industrial Clusters in Fostering
Sectoral Development in Taiwan
Douglas Fuller, University of London, King’s College
Mei-Chih Hu, National Chung-Hsing University
Chair:
Papers:
Ontology, Epistemology, and Multiple Methods
Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Virginia
Disc:
46-8
Chair:
Papers:
Disc:
Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University
Ted Hopf, Ohio State University
Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and Society
THEME PANEL: HISTORY, IDENTITY, POLITICAL
VIOLENCE: THE RELATIVE MERITS OF QUALITATIVE
METHODS TO EXPLAIN COMPLEX AND DYNAMIC
PHENOMENA
Co-sponsored by T-29
Jonathan Githens-Mazer, University of Exeter
Beyond a Snapshot Approach: Findings from Life-History
Interviews with Extreme Right-Wing Activists
Matthew Goodwin, University of Manchester
Understanding Muslim Community Perspectives of Violent
Extremism: A Qualitative Case Study in London
Robert A. Lambert, University of Exeter
EXPERTISE AND PUBLIC POLICY
Jennifer Dodge, New York University
Papers:
Does Political Science Scholarship Order the World? The Case
of Complexity in United Nations Peace Operations
Christian Bueger, European University Institute
Smoking Bans, Health and Science: A Comparative Study of
Policy Networks and Smoking Policies in England, Germany and
Denmark
Lars Thorup Larsen, University of Aarhus
Constructing the right to public support: Changing Concepts of
Solidarity in Danish Disability Policy
Marie Oestergaard Moeller, University of Aarhus
Disc:
Panel 1
Chair:
Papers:
Basia Spalek, University of Birmingham
‘A Shining City Upon a Hill’: Ronald Reagan, America, and the
Things of God and Caesar
Justin David Garrison, Catholic University of America
THE CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT AND THE LEGACY
OF WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY, JR.
Larry Greenfield, The Claremont Institute
Charles R. Kesler, Claremont McKenna College
Michael M. Uhlmann, Claremont Graduate University
William Voegeli, Claremont Institute for the Study of
Statesmanship and Political Philosophy
John J. Pitney, Jr., Claremont McKenna College
Panel 4
Chair:
RE-CONSIDERING THE DEVELOPMENTAL STATE
Tun-jen Cheng, College of William & Mary
Papers:
Techno-nationalism or Techno-globalism Across the Taiwan
Strait? A Case Study of Common Technical Standard Setting
Hwei-luan Poong, National Chengchi University
Gregory S. Butler, New Mexico State University
Ryan Robert Holston, University of Alabama, Huntsville
Walter Bagehot Research Council on National Sovereignty
Panel 1
Chair:
CONSTITUTIONAL POWERS OF THE PRESIDENCY:
HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL EXPLORATIONS
Joseph Prud’homme, Christopher Newport University
Disc:
Matthew A. Tengs, Christopher Newport University
Stephen J. Shaw, Christopher Newport University
Part:
Joseph DiSarro, Washington & Jefferson College
Frank P. Le Veness, St. John’s University
Matthew A. Pauley, Manhattanville College
Buba Misawa, Washington & Jefferson College
Stuart Farrand
Lana Obradovic, Yonsei University
Daily Schedule
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies
Alexander Hamilton in Practice and Theory
Michael P. Federici, Mercyhurst College
America and the Problem of Endless Reformation
Richard M. Gamble, Hillsdale College
Disc:
Part:
THEORY AND PRACTICE IN THE AMERICAN
FOUNDING
Richard M. Gamble, Hillsdale College
The Consolidated Union in John Marshall’s Political
Imagination: What’s a Political Community For?
Jeffrey Polet, Hope College
Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Philosophy
Chair:
Aletta Norval, University of Essex
National Humanities Institute
Related Group Panels
Panel 9
Joseph Wong, University of Toronto
Panel 2
Chair:
Causal Processes, Radicalisation and Bad Policy: The Importance
of Case Studies of Radical Violent Takfiri Jihadism for
Establishing Logical Causality
Jonathan Githens-Mazer, University of Exeter
The Advantages of Qualitative Methods in Difficult to Research
Subject Populations: Triangulating Interviews and Secondary
Sources
Orla Lynch, University of St. Andrews
Disc:
Remaking Taiwan: Society and the State Since the End of
Martial Law
Thomas Gold, UC-Berkeley
Mapping the Epistemological Commitments of Methods: A
framework for Mixed-Method Research
Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
393
Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Alan G. Stolberg, United States Army War College
Sunday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM
Working Group: Citizenship and Migration
SESSION 2
Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science
SESSION 2
Working Group: Comparative Political Theory
SESSION 2
Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes
SESSION 2
Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities:
Historical and Comparative Perspectives
SESSION 2
Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on
Citizenship
SESSION 2
Working Group: Policy Network Analysis
SESSION 2
Working Group: Political Ethics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in
Government
SESSION 2
Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership
SESSION 2
Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous
Peoples and Politics
SESSION 2
Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State:
Gender Moving from Local to Global
SESSION 2
Working Group: eLearning in Political Science
SESSION 2
394
Daily Schedule
INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
A
Abbas, Asma............................308 (2-27)
Abbott, Philip ..........288 (23-7), 389 (41-4)
Abdel-Nour, Farid .......................309 (3-5)
Abizadeh, Arash .......................321 (1-14)
Abouharb, Mohammed Rodwan.......... 317
(45-5)
Abraham, Arun .........................335 (1-10)
Abrajano, Marisa ..... 247 (37-19), 290 (3611)
Abramowitz, Alan I. ................315 (36-10)
Abramson, Paul R. ...................328 (35-9)
Abranches, Sergio ....................353 (39-8)
Achilov, Dilshod ......................269 (44-21)
Ackelsberg, Martha A. ...... 308 (2-12), 346
(Panel 2)
Ackerly, Brooke A. ....................344 (42-7)
Ackermann, Allison Renee..........295 (8-5)
Adams, James ........ 300 (36-27), 353 (3514), 364 (14-5), 385 (11-4)
Adams, Michael O. ..............346 (Panel 1)
Adams-Kane, Jonathon ...................... 370
Adcock, Robert Kaufman ....... 261 (46-25),
283 (1-17)
Adelman, Howard.....................273 (3-31)
Adhikari, Prakash ...................365 (21-15)
Adida, Claire Leslie ................264 (12-30)
Adkins, Randall E. ....................276 (23-3)
Adler, David Gray .....................387 (23-8)
Adler, Rachel..........................387 (20-16)
Adler, Scott ..............................254 (22-2)
Affigne, Tony ............... 293 (Panel 1), 308
Agranoff, Robert .....277 (28-4), 341 (28-5)
Aguiar-Conraria, Luis..........296 (8-5), 367
(34-2)
Ahlquist, John Stephen..... 263 (6-19), 362
(6-12)
Ahmed, Amel F......344 (46-5), 394 (46-6),
395 (46-6)
Ahram, Ariel ...........................390 (46-12)
Aiken, Nancy E....................249 (Panel 1)
Ainsworth, Scott H.....337 (6-14), 368 (3511)
Ajzenstat, Janet...................260 (Panel 2)
Akhtar, Omair .........................329 (37-22)
Akkoyunlu-Wigley, Arzu .......... 348 (11-34)
Akturk, Sener ......................... 338 (11-38)
Alatassi, Alia ...... 275 (18-17), 313 (21-22)
Albertson, Bethany ......295 (5-10), 322 (54)
Aldrich, John H........ 315 (37-17), 367 (342), 379 (35-17)
Alejandro, Roberto....................336 (2-23)
Aleman, Eduardo....................377 (22-10)
Alexander, Amy ......................388 (31-20)
Alexander, Marcus..... 323 (8-13), 348 (1134)
Alexander-Floyd, Nikol G. .......352 (31-19)
Alexiadou, Despina......... 375 (14-12), 385
(11-35)
Alexseev, Mikhail A......... 312 (18-19), 337
(11-23)
Alford, C. Fred..........................262 (2-20)
Alford, John R. .......................343 (37-12)
Allard, Scott W. .... 341 (28-5), 387 (25-17)
Allee, Todd L. .........................339 (16-14)
Allen, Amy................................336 (2-44)
Allen, Barbara ............................391 (5-7)
Allen, Christopher S........ 376 (15-12), 386
(15-14)
Allina-Pisano, Jessica ..... 274 (13-11), 380
(46-13)
Allison, Olivia .........................340 (18-12)
Alonso, Sonia .........................265 (15-17)
Alphonso, Gwendoline M. .........384 (7-16)
Alt, Robert......................... 345 (Panel 12)
Altenstetter, Christa ..................369 (48-3)
Althaus, Scott L. .....................379 (37-21)
Altman, Micah ........251 (6-17), 354 (40-4)
Alvis, David .........................280 (Panel 5)
Alyahya, Khalid Othman ..................... 259
Amable, Bruno ............... 302, 375 (11-43)
Ambler, Wayne ....................390 (Panel 6)
Amiraux, Valérie ..................320 (Panel 1)
Amodeo, Joseph Tyler ..............247 (33-8)
Amstutz, Mark R..................331 (Panel 3)
Amyot, G. Grant .....................327 (25-15)
Amyx, Jennifer .........................295 (6-21)
Andersen, David J. .................379 (36-30)
Andersen, Ellen Ann......... 270 (47-5), 302
(47-7)
Anderson, Cameron ......... 290 (36-9), 355
Anderson, Christopher J. ....... 274 (15-13),
290 (36-9)
Anderson, Greg ........................344 (49-8)
Anderson, Jennifer Ogg......... 257 (38-10),
379 (37-21)
Anderson, Karen M. ...............339 (15-18)
Anderson, Leah Seppanen .......270 (48-5)
Anderson, Mary R. ...................269 (45-8)
Anderson, Sarah ......................298 (22-8)
André, Audrey Ann ...................300 (34-8)
Andreas, Peter .....325 (16-6), 393 (18-15)
Andrejevic, Mark.........................361 (2-8)
Andrews, David M. .................254 (16-13)
Andrews, Rhys .........................288 (24-4)
Ang, Yuen Yuen .....................392 (13-12)
Angevine, Sara................. 318, 369 (47-3)
Anker, Elisabeth .........................361 (2-8)
Anner, Mark..............................297 (16-2)
Annesley, Claire .....................342 (31-13)
Ansell, Ben William....312 (14-15), 362 (612)
Ansell, Christopher K. ....... 313 (24-5), 376
(17-16)
Ansolabehere, Stephen D. ........300 (35-8)
Aoki, Andrew L. .... 292 (Panel 1), 342 (323)
Aparicio, Francisco Javier...........374 (8-2)
Apodaca, Clair............................347 (8-6)
Apostolidis, Paul C. ..................373 (2-33)
Appel, Benjamin ................................. 258
Appel, Hilary.............................349 (13-6)
Araki, Hiroshi............................349 (15-8)
Araujo, Marco Antonio Ferreira de ......293
(Panel 3)
Arbour, Brian K............... 318, 353 (38-11)
Arce, Daniel ...............................347 (4-6)
Arce, Moises E. ......................380 (44-17)
Arceneaux, Kevin ................... 290 (36-11)
Archer, Crina ............................361 (2-30)
Archibugi, Daniele ....................309 (3-15)
Arel, Dominique...................390 (Panel 1)
Arena, Philip....... 276 (21-19), 298 (21-18)
Arias, Enrique Desmond ......... 311 (12-42)
Arjona, Ana ........ 363 (11-30), 392 (11-20)
Arkes, Hadley.............. 249 (Panel 1), 271
(Panel 1), 331 (Panel 4)
Armesto, Alejandra .................244 (12-39)
Armijo, Leslie Elliott ............284 (6-8), 381
(Panel 1)
Armingeon, Klaus ......265 (13-3), 364 (1511)
Armitage, David..........................346 (1-1)
Armstrong, II, David A. ....................... 355
Arneil, Barbara ...........................372 (1-8)
Arnn, Kathleen .......... 320 (Panel 14), 381
(Panel 7)
Arnold, Christine.......................323 (8-10)
Arnold, Kathleen R. ............................ 270
Arnold, Peri E..... 365 (23-14), 366 (23-14)
Aronsson, Lisa ....................381 (Panel 3)
Arretche, Marta ...................331 (Panel 2)
Arriola, Leonardo R. ...............348 (12-24)
Arsneault, Shelly R. .............391 (Panel 2)
Art, David .................................291 (43-8)
Asako, Yasushi...........................284 (4-2)
Ashour, Omar .........................298 (18-16)
Ashworth, Scott ..........273 (4-7), 284 (4-2)
Aslan, Senem....... 305 (Panel 1), 311 (1231)
Asmussen, Nicole.....................341 (22-7)
Atencio, Jesse James......................... 357
Athreya, Bama ....................281 (Panel 2)
Atkeson, Lonna Rae .................362 (5-12)
Atkison, Larissa M ......................262 (1-3)
Auerswald, David P.................266 (19-14)
Auger, Cheryl A. .......................352 (31-8)
Auld, Graeme .........................393 (17-15)
Autesserre, Severine ...... 325 (17-13), 376
(18-24)
Avalos, Manuel....................262 (Panel 1)
Avant, Deborah ....... 301 (43-10), 340 (1812)
Avdagic, Sabina .....................375 (14-12)
Avelino, George F................... 311 (12-18)
Avellaneda, Claudia N. .............288 (24-4)
Averill, Marilyn........................378 (25-12)
Avey, Paul C. ......................... 326 (20-11)
Avnon, Dan .........................241 (Panel 1)
Avramenko, Richard ......... 250 (2-37), 345
(Panel 3)
Avrushin, Adam ......................261 (46-25)
Awad, Ibrahim ........................275 (16-10)
Ayres, Jeffrey M. ......................275 (16-4)
Ayres, IV, R. William ............... 337 (11-23)
Aysan, Ahmet Faruk .................263 (6-19)
Azari, Julia Rezazadeh .............288 (23-7)
Azerrad, David ....................381 (Panel 7)
Azizi, Karim ............................ 375 (11-43)
Azmanova, Albena ...... 292 (Panel 1), 375
(11-43)
B
Bächtiger, Andre.......................342 (34-7)
Ba, Alice D. ........ 325 (18-22), 386 (16-20)
Baccini, Leonardo............. 339 (16-3), 370
Bach, David.......... 244 (17-6), 297 (17-10)
Backer, David ......................... 243 (11-49)
Badal, Kristen...........................277 (30-8)
Bader, Julia ........................................ 302
Baer, Judith A........250 (3-18), 267 (27-6),
277 (27-10), 352 (31-8)
Baeza Freer, Jaime .............293 (Panel 3)
Bafumi, Jr., Joseph...................289 (29-4)
Bahador, Babak....... 254 (20-14), 279 (387), 315 (38-9)
Bahry, Donna ...........................274 (13-2)
Bai, Ruoyun .............................279 (38-7)
Baik, JongWan ................................... 302
Bailard, Catie Snow ............................ 370
Bailer, Stefanie ................. 303, 365 (22-3)
Bailey, Andrew ...........................263 (6-7)
Bailey, Michael A. ......314 (26-9), 341 (227)
Baines, Beverley .................... 328 (31-11)
Baird, Ryan G. .......................257 (46-19)
Baker, Andy.............................. 251 (6-11)
Baker, Nancy V.........................387 (23-8)
Baker, Paul Manuel Aviles ......267 (25-10)
Baker, Ryan ............................. 263 (8-11)
Bakke, Kristin Marie ............... 326 (21-11)
Bakker, Ryan..........................329 (36-23)
Balan, Manuel ........................ 338 (11-45)
Balarezo, Christine Anne .................... 319
Balcells, Laia ...... 348 (11-17), 375 (12-23)
Baldassarri, Delia .... 368 (35-13), 389 (3612)
Baldwin, Katharine A. ....... 263 (11-3), 371
(Panel 3)
Balestrini, Pierre Philippe.................... 303
Balfour, Lawrie .........................352 (33-4)
Bali, Valentina ........................378 (29-14)
Balkin, Jack M..........352 (27-3), 383 (1-7)
Balla, Steven J. ........................394 (40-8)
Balmaceda, Margarita M...........386 (13-4)
Balmaceda, Ph.D., Vilma C. ...299 (31-15)
Balogh, Brian .............273 (7-4), 362 (7-5)
Balot, Ryan ............322 (1-14), 336 (2-38)
Balsiger, Joerg .......................376 (17-16)
Ban, Cornel .............. 258, 303, 311 (14-3)
Banack, Clark...........................355 (49-5)
Banaszak, Lee Ann ............................ 356
Banducci, Susan A. .......... 316 (38-9), 379
(34-4)
Banerjee, Kiran ..................................270
Banerjee, Preeta M. .................389 (39-6)
Banks, Antoine J. ...................329 (37-22)
Banting, Keith Gordon ............ 274 (14-11)
Baracskay, Daniel................390 (Panel 2)
Barakso, Maryann ............ 356, 388 (31-7)
Baranowski, Michael K. ............337 (10-7)
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Barber, Benjamin R. ....273 (3-29), 295 (323)
Barber, Garnet R. ................271 (Panel 1)
Barberia, Lorena G. ................ 311 (12-18)
Barch, Madeline ................................. 318
Bardi, Luciano .....................293 (Panel 1)
Barilleaux, Ryan J. .................341 (23-13)
Barkan, Joel D. ......................351 (22-12)
Barker, Christopher James .... 270, 294 (125)
Barker, David C. .....................279 (37-16)
Barker, Lucius J...................372 (Panel 2)
Barkin, J. Samuel .... 269 (46-20), 313 (2015)
Barndt, William T. ...................348 (12-24)
Barnes, Andrew S. ......... 316 (44-14), 370
Barnes, Jamaal S. .............................. 357
Barnes, Jeb.......310 (7-17), 358 (Panel 2)
Barnes, William R...................352 (30-14)
Barnett, Michael N....................364 (18-4)
Baron, David P. ..........................362 (4-4)
Barratt, Bethany ..................... 291 (45-11)
Barreto, Matt A. ....... 278 (36-15), 279 (3615)
Barrett, David M. .................381 (Panel 1)
Barrett, Edward T....................275 (18-21)
Barria, Lilian A..........................376 (16-5)
Barrington, Lowell W............390 (Panel 1)
Barrios, Cristina...................381 (Panel 3)
Barrow, Clyde W.......................369 (42-8)
Bartels, Brandon L....................277 (26-4)
Bartels, Larry M.............. 268 (35-10), 306
Bartilow, Horace A.....269 (45-8), 325 (166)
Bartlett, Robert C. ...............281 (Panel 1)
Baruah, Sanjib........................269 (44-10)
Barvosa, Edwina ......................366 (25-9)
Bas, Muhammet .....................350 (18-23)
Bashir, Hassan .........................308 (2-27)
Bass, Harold F........276 (23-3), 300 (35-8)
Bassel, Leah ............................378 (31-5)
Bassi, Anna................................384 (4-3)
Bastien, Frédérick ....................292 (49-7)
Bates, Robert H....... 252 (11-10), 324 (1116), 362 (6-24)
Batta, Anna ............................365 (21-15)
Battista, James S.C. .................246 (29-6)
Batto, Nathan F. .......................245 (22-1)
Bauer, Gretchen M. ........ 260, 367 (31-17)
Baum, Bruce ............273 (2-35), 373 (3-7)
Baum, Jeeyang Rhee ..... 273 (11-29), 274
(11-29), 338 (11-45)
Baum, Lawrence ...313 (26-9), 314 (26-9),
394 (26-15)
Baum, Matthew A. .......... 256 (38-10), 301
(38-4), 321 (Panel 2)
Baumgartner, Frank R. ........... 327 (25-11)
Bayer, Resat ........365 (21-15), 377 (20-5)
Baykal, Gokce Ozgen .............393 (20-10)
Bayrakal, Suna.......................351 (25-13)
Beal, Amanda Louise ...............251 (6-17)
Bearce, David H. ................................ 303
Beardsley, Kyle ......................393 (21-10)
Beaudette, Donald M. ...............263 (6-19)
Beaulieu, Emily Ann ............... 363 (11-46)
Beaumont, Elizabeth.... 308 (Panel 1), 336
(3-27)
Beck, Kris Aaron ......................329 (39-7)
Beck, Paul Allen .......................328 (35-9)
Becker, Megan ... 254 (21-23), 275 (18-21)
Beckert, Sven.............................273 (7-4)
Beckley, Michael C. ................393 (19-17)
Beckman, Arthur.....................343 (36-26)
Beckstrand, Michael ...............327 (25-15)
Beckwith, Karen ...247 (34-9), 268 (31-12)
Bedi, Sonu ...............................384 (3-28)
Beer, Caroline C.....................244 (12-39)
Beerbohm, Eric ......336 (3-27), 391 (3-20)
Beers, Daniel J.......................381 (46-13)
Bego, Ingrid........................................ 318
Behl, Natasha...........................278 (32-4)
Beinart, Peter .........................280 (44-19)
Beiner, Ronald..........262 (1-3), 322 (2-46)
Beissinger, Mark...... 380 (44-23), 385 (1118)
395
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Bejarano, Christina Elizabeth .......256 (328), 299 (31-4), 308 (Panel 1)
Belanger, Eric...........................317 (49-4)
Belcher, Emma.........................276 (20-7)
Bell, Melissa Ann....................300 (36-13)
Bellhouse, Mary L............................... 270
Bellin, Eva R. .........................364 (12-26)
Bellinger, Jr, Paul Thomas ......380 (44-17)
Below, Amy M. .....353 (39-8), 377 (25-12)
Belz, Herman ... 280 (Panel 5), 292 (Panel
8)
Ben-Josef Hirsch, Michal ..........291 (43-6)
Ben-Nun-Bloom, Pazit ................309 (5-5)
Ben-Porath, Eran N. ........................... 355
Benesh, Sara C.........277 (26-4), 288 (2614)
Bennett, Andrew.......................354 (43-9)
Bennett, Jane .........283 (2-10), 383 (2-15)
Bennich-Björkman, Li................264 (13-3)
Bennion, Elizabeth A. ....... 263 (10-6), 355
Benoit-Bryan, Jennifer M. .......342 (30-16)
Benova, Monika....... 261 (46-25), 375 (1143)
Bensel, Richard F. ....273 (7-4), 384 (7-16)
Benson, Brett .........................275 (18-17)
Benson, Iain ........................271 (Panel 1)
Benz, Jennifer K.........................384 (5-3)
Berejikian, Jeffrey D. ..............340 (19-10)
Berenson, Marc P. ....................349 (13-6)
Berg, John C. .........263 (10-6), 316 (42-6)
Berg, Louis-Alexandre ............325 (17-13)
Bergan, Daniel E. ...................257 (38-10)
Bergbauer, Harald ...............331 (Panel 6)
Berger, Daniel ........................338 (12-29)
Bergman, Heather .......... 244 (16-12), 264
(12Bergo, Bettina G. ............................ 270
Bergqvist, Christina ................268 (31-12)
Berk, Gerald......293 (Panel 3), 323 (7-18)
Berlinski, Samuel......................347 (6-20)
Berman, Jacqueline .............372 (Panel 1)
Berman, Sheri ... 279 (44-19), 280 (44-19),
291 (43-8), 324 (14-9)
Bermeo, Nancy ......312 (18-5), 339 (15-6)
Bermeo, Sarah .......................275 (16-21)
Bernal, Angelica Maria........250 (1-9), 366
(27-8)
Bernauer, Thomas C. .............254 (21-23)
Bernhard, Michael .....274 (13-2), 338 (1229)
Bernhard, William T. ....263 (6-7), 288 (224)
Bernick, Ethan M....................313 (21-22)
Bernstein, Hamutal .................297 (14-13)
Bernstein, Mary ..........................323 (7-3)
Bernstein, Steven F. ....... 267 (25-16), 325
(16-17)
Berry, Frances Stokes ............351 (25-13)
Berry, Jeffrey M. .......................255 (30-7)
Berry, Michael J......................393 (23-15)
Berryhill, Anthony ............................... 271
Bertelli, Anthony Michael ..........298 (24-8)
Bertrand, Jacques ... 296 (11-41), 364 (1226)
Best, Robin E. .... 315 (36-34), 343 (36-26)
Best, Samuel J. ......................315 (35-16)
Beth, Richard S. .......................254 (22-2)
Betts, Alexander .......................376 (16-5)
Betz, Timm............................... 348 (11-5)
Bevir, Mark .................................283 (1-5)
Bharathy, Gnana K. ................313 (20-15)
Bhavnani, Ravi .......244 (12-43), 284 (8-3)
Bhavnani, Rikhil................ 322 (6-10), 370
Bially Mattern, Janice ...............321 (T-19)
Bickers, Kenneth N...................246 (30-6)
Bickford, Susan ......................289 (31-18)
Bickford, Thomas J.................287 (18-20)
Bidjerano, Morris D................. 249 (46-11)
Biebricher, Thomas...................262 (2-26)
Bilakovics, Steven ....................262 (1-21)
Biliuta, Ionut Florin...............358 (Panel 5)
Bilodeau, Antoine .....................378 (32-7)
Bimber, Bruce...........................354 (40-4)
Binder, Mike ....................................... 319
Birch, Sarah ...........268 (34-3), 367 (34-2)
Birkland, Thomas A. ....... 351 (25-13), 394
(24-12)
Birney, Mayling....................... 337 (11-12)
Birnir, Johanna Kristin.............287 (21-21)
Biro, Andrew ............................322 (2-19)
Bischof, Jonathan Michael ..........337 (8-8)
Biser, Ashley ............................242 (1-16)
Bishop, Shelby ............... 254 (21-23), 303
Biziouras, Nikolaos .................330 (43-13)
Bjarnegard, Elin......................267 (31-12)
396
Blühdorn, Ingolfur ........ 249 (Panel 1), 322
(2-19)
Black, Ryan C. ..... 288 (26-8), 378 (26-10)
Blackstock, Jason J. .................255 (25-7)
Blais, André.......... 289 (35-5), 329 (36-32)
Blake, Daniel ..........................339 (16-14)
Blanchard, Eric M. ..................344 (46-18)
Blankenau, Joseph ..............391 (Panel 2)
Blass, Abby Katharine ............ 385 (11-18)
Blattberg, Charles.....................391 (1-27)
Blaydes, Lisa A. .....................329 (37-23)
Bloeser, Andrew J. ...... 309 (5-11), 373 (56), 394 (29-7)
Blofield, Merike........ 342 (31-13), 394 (3114)
Bloodgood, Elizabeth..............386 (17-12)
Bloom, Benjamin J. ................254 (16-13)
Bloom, Joel D...........................380 (40-3)
Bloom, Mia M. ........................ 386 (18-11)
Bloom, Stephen...................... 274 (13-11)
Blyth, Mark...............................297 (16-8)
Bob, Clifford A. .......................350 (18-18)
Bochsler, Daniel ............... 253 (13-8), 356
Boczek, Macon W........ 249 (Panel 4), 305
(Panel 1)
Bodet, Marc A. .........................317 (49-4)
Boehmke, Frederick J..... 278 (35-12), 289
(29-4), 327 (29-3), 385 (8-9)
Boerzel, Tanja A. ..... 265 (16-22), 285 (1147), 350 (17-5)
Boesch, Joseph.................................. 370
Boesche, Roger........................262 (1-21)
Bogaards, Matthijs....................256 (33-7)
Bogliaccini, Juan .................293 (Panel 3)
Bohlken, Anjali Thomas ...................... 302
Bohman, James .......................294 (3-13)
Bohn, Simone R. ............ 268 (31-12), 357
Boin, Arjen ...............................313 (24-5)
Boix, Carles............................ 324 (11-16)
Boling, Patricia ..... 310 (11-2), 342 (31-13)
Bolsen, Toby ............329 (39-7), 384 (5-3)
Bond, Jon R. ..........................315 (35-16)
Bong, Youngshik Daniel.......259 (Panel 1)
Bonikowski, Bart..................... 375 (11-44)
Bonneau, Chris W. ... 255 (26-6), 319, 378
(26-10)
Bonnette, Lakeyta .............................. 355
Boomgaarden, Hajo Georg .......256 (33-7)
Boone, Catherine .....................362 (6-24)
Borah, Porismita................................. 370
Borchert, Jens ........ 266 (22-6), 311 (14-3)
Borick, Christopher P. ...............248 (39-5)
Borrelli, MaryAnne .....278 (31-3), 313 (2310)
Boryczka, Jocelyn M.................369 (42-8)
Boschken, Herman L. ...............255 (30-7)
Bose, Meena ........ 321 (Panel 2), 351 (2312)
Bosworth, Matthew H. ..............255 (26-6)
Botterman, Sarah .....................247 (33-8)
Boucoyannis, Deborah A. ......248 (43-15),
356
Boudreau, Cheryl .......................336 (5-8)
Boulding, Carew .....................339 (17-14)
Bourbeau, James R................ 276 (22-11)
Bourke, James E......272 (2-31), 294 (2-6)
Boushey, Graeme.....................314 (29-2)
Boveda, Karina Cendon...................... 318
Bow, Brian................................275 (16-4)
Bow, Shannon L. ......................365 (23-6)
Bowen, Daniel .................................... 317
Bowen, James D. ...................264 (12-41)
Bowers, Jake ...........................323 (8-13)
Bowie, Alasdair ...................... 264 (11-50)
Bowler, Shaun ........................389 (36-12)
Bowles, Nigel ....... 253 (11-51), 377 (23-5)
Bowman, Ann O’M. ..... 292 (Panel 1), 394
(29-7)
Bowman, James S. ...277 (24-2), 351 (2410)
Bowyer, Benjamin T. ...............386 (15-14)
Bowyer, James Ryan................248 (45-7)
Boyd, Christina L................................ 318
Boyd, Richard.............................283 (1-5)
Boydstun, Amber Ellen .............316 (38-9)
Boyea, Brent D................................... 319
Boyko, Nazar .........................324 (13-10)
Boyne, George A......................288 (24-4)
Boynton, George (Bob) Robert ....329 (402)
Bozoki, Andras ....................... 311 (13-13)
Bozonelos, Dino N.......... 247 (37-19), 328
(32-6)
Bradberry, Leigh A....................314 (33-1)
Brader, Ted ............ 264 (11-3), 362 (5-12)
Bradizza, Luigi............. 260 (Panel 2), 320
(Panel 14), 373 (1-23)
Brady, David W.........................300 (35-8)
Brady, Henry E. .........280 (46-7), 300 (3627), 306
Brady, Michael C. ................... 276 (22-11)
Brams, Steven J......300 (34-8), 336 (4-8),
355
Brancati, Dawn..... 264 (11-3), 287 (21-21)
Branch, Daniel........................ 392 (11-20)
Brand, Donald ................... 271 (Panel 13)
Branton, Regina P. ...................256 (32-8)
Brasher, Holly.........................278 (35-12)
Brass, Jennifer N......................266 (24-7)
Brathwaite, Robert..................286 (12-38)
Bratton, Kathleen A. ......... 246 (29-6), 299
(31-4), 314 (29-2)
Bratton, Michael .....................257 (44-22)
Brauner, Wolfgang....................301 (39-4)
Bravo, Jorge............................. 348 (11-5)
Brawley, Mark R. .......242 (6-13), 269 (4314)
Bray-Collins, Elinor ...... 305 (Panel 1), 311
(12-31)
Brecher, Michael.....................287 (21-12)
Breeding, Mary E. ..................297 (14-13)
Breiner, Peter D......284 (3-22), 391 (2-32)
Brennan, Samantha.............331 (Panel 2)
Brenner, Christine Thurlow ................. 319
Brenner, Saul .........................394 (26-15)
Brenson, Lashonda Marie................... 357
Brescoll, Victoria.......................247 (32-9)
Bressler, Michael ......................387 (22-5)
Brettschneider, Corey L. ... 242 (3-11), 336
(3-27)
Brettschneider, Marla...........294 (Panel 3)
Breunig, Christian...................327 (29-13)
Breuning, Marijke .... 365 (20-12), 388 (3120)
Brewer, Gene A......276 (24-2), 288 (24-4)
Brewer, Paul R. ... 248 (38-12), 358 (Panel
2)
Brewington, David .............................. 303
Brians, Craig Leonard...............337 (10-7)
Bridges, Amy B. .......................314 (30-5)
Brierly, Allen Bronson ...............268 (32-2)
Brigham, John ...... 331 (Panel 1), 366 (278)
Brinks, Daniel M. ....... 352 (26-3), 385 (1118)
Bromley-Trujillo, Rebecca Elizabeth .... 255
(30-7)
Bronner, Stephen Eric ..............301 (42-9)
Brooks, Deborah Jordan ........ 343 (37-20),
353 (36-14)
Brooks, Risa A. ......................298 (18-16)
Brooks, Sarah M. ... 251 (6-11), 325 (17-9)
Brooks, Stephen C. .......... 246 (30-6), 353
(38Brophy-Baermann, Michelle D. ........394
(29-7)
Brown, Adam R. .....................327 (29-13)
Brown, Chelsea Denise .........254 (21-23),
286 (16-7), 303
Brown, David S. ...290 (36-9), 392 (12-16)
Brown, Harvey.....................345 (Panel 1)
Brown, Joseph S. ............................... 308
Brown, Katherine....284 (9-3), 377 (19-15)
Brown, Lara Michelle ........ 276 (23-3), 365
(23-6)
Brown, Mark B. ........................346 (2-40)
Brown, Montgomery B. ...... 357 (Panel 11)
Brown, Nathan ... 273 (11-15), 310 (11-27)
Brown, Robert A...... 328 (30-10), 367 (325)
Brown, Robert D.....................290 (35-15)
Brown, Robert L. .... 258, 340 (19-10), 393
(19-17)
Brown, Robin Christopher.........315 (38-9)
Brown, Steven D. .....................355 (49-5)
Brown, Wendy.......... 272 (2-11), 294 (2-9)
Brown, Winter E-N.............................. 270
Brown-Dean, Khalilah L. ........290 (37-15),
366 (25-9), 388 (29-5)
Brox, Brian J. ...........296 (8-5), 352 (35-7)
Broz, J. Lawrence .......297 (16-2), 373 (615)
Bruce, John M........................289 (35-15)
Brudney, Jeffrey L. ...................298 (24-8)
Bruhn, Jodi L.......................320 (Panel 2)
Bruhn, Kathleen M.............................. 356
Bruhn, Miriam......................... 243 (11-19)
Bruk, Boris ......................................... 317
Brule, Rachel .........................296 (12-25)
Brune, Nancy ...........................339 (16-3)
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Brusoe, Peter W. ......... 260 (Panel 1), 366
(29-10)
Bruyneel, Kevin M. ..............293 (Panel 3)
Bryant, Michael E. ...............249 (Panel 1)
Brynin, Malcolm...................344 (Panel 3)
Buchanan, Bruce....................313 (23-10)
Buchanan, Paul ......................394 (44-13)
Buchler, Justin........242 (5-2), 315 (36-34)
Buck, Christopher.....................283 (2-25)
Bucken-Knapp, Gregg ........................ 318
Buckinx, Barbara ......................330 (45-9)
Buckley, David.................................... 318
Budziszewski, J. ..................382 (Panel 1)
Bueger, Christian............ 376 (18-13), 395
(Panel 2)
Buehler, Michael...... 269 (44-21), 364 (1226)
Bueno de Mesquita, Ethan .........273 (4-7)
Bull, Martin J. ......................358 (Panel 2)
Bunce, Valerie ...... 297 (13-7), 385 (11-18)
Burbach, David T. ................... 312 (19-11)
Burch, Traci..............................388 (29-5)
Burden, Barry C. .......367 (34-2), 389 (3612)
Bures, Oldrich ............................ 259, 304
Burgess, Katrina... 274 (11-42), 374 (11-9)
Burgess, Stephen F. ...........................258
Burgoon, Brian ........253 (14-6), 284 (6-8),
311 (14-15)
Burgos, Russell A...................377 (19-15)
Burke, Donald ..........................322 (2-19)
Burke, John Francis ....247 (33-8), 309 (35)
Burke, John P...........................255 (23-4)
Burke, Lisa M. .................................... 356
Burke, Thomas F. .....................310 (7-17)
Burkett, Christopher C. ...... 357 (Panel 11)
Burkhart, Ross E. .....................377 (24-6)
Burmila, Edward M. .......... 299 (29-8), 317
Burnam, Jeffry ........................313 (23-10)
Burnett, Christina Duffy.............352 (27-3)
Burnett, R.E. ............................389 (39-6)
Burns, Nancy .........................343 (37-20)
Burns, Peter F. ................. 277 (30-8), 356
Burns, Sarah ..........................290 (36-22)
Burns, Timothy W. ...............321 (Panel 2)
Burrell, Barbara C.....................278 (31-3)
Burt, Jo-Marie.........................257 (44-16)
Burton, Guy Jonathan Sands ..............318
Busby, Joshua..........................291 (46-9)
Busch, Andreas ........................368 (40-5)
Busch, Marc L. .......................287 (17-18)
Bussell, Jennifer L. ...................377 (24-6)
Bustikova-Siroky, Lenka.... 312 (15-9), 385
(11-4)
Buthe, Tim.... 325 (17-9), 376 (17-16), 392
(17-15), 393 (17-15)
Butler, Christopher K. .............387 (21-14)
Butler, Gregory S......... 382 (Panel 2), 395
(Panel 1)
Buttice, Matthew................................. 317
Buzogany, Aron ......................265 (16-22)
Buzzetti, Eric .......................390 (Panel 6)
Byrne, Jennifer Eileen ............253 (12-27)
C
Céline, Braconnier ..................329 (36-32)
C., Munger, Michael C. Munger
Michael ...........................................370
Cairney, Paul........ 304 (Panel 2), 327 (2511), 344 (Panel 3)
Calder, Kent E........................ 243 (11-33)
Calderaro, Andrea ..............................355
Cale, Tabitha Marie ..................314 (29-2)
Calhoun, Craig ......................... 324 (11-8)
Cali, Basak..... 248 (45-7), 303, 330 (45-9)
Caliendo, Stephen Maynard....343 (38-15)
Calvert, Randall L.....................284 (6-22)
Calvo, Ernesto F........242 (6-13), 297 (1232)
Calvo, Kerman .......................286 (15-10)
Came, Tim .............................351 (23-12)
Cameron, Charles M. ....... 254 (22-2), 366
(26-1)
Cameron, David R.....277 (28-4), 338 (139), 364 (15-11)
Cammarano, Joseph ................351 (23-2)
Cammett, Melani .............. 258, 362 (6-24)
Campbell, Andrea Louise.... 259 (Panel 1),
347 (7-10)
Campbell, Colin .... 293 (Panel 1), 351 (2312)
Campbell, Colin J. ....................322 (2-19)
Campbell, David .......................250 (2-18)
Campbell, David E.......... 290 (37-15), 314
(33-1), 367 (33-10)
Campbell, Peter P.....................316 (43-5)
Campbell, Susanna Pfohl ......325 (17-13),
386 (17-12)
Campello, Daniela .......... 244 (16-12), 339
(16Canache, Damarys .............368 (37-14)
Canaday, Margot ........................323 (7-3)
Canedo, Eduardo .......................362 (7-5)
Canes-Wrone, Brandice............290 (36-9)
Cann, Damon M. ................................ 319
Cannavo, Peter Francesco ......283 (2-25),
345 (Panel 2)
Canon, David T.........................367 (34-2)
Cantir, Cristian........................313 (20-15)
Cantor, Paul A..........................291 (41-3)
Cantu, Francisco ....................264 (12-41)
Cao, Xiaoxia...........................248 (38-12)
Cao, Xun..................................325 (17-9)
Capelos, Tereza .................................355
Capoccia, Giovanni ... 339 (15-6), 363 (1114)
Caputi, Mary Andrea.................262 (2-20)
Caramani, Daniele.................. 348 (11-48)
Carano, Carol Lorraine ...........253 (15-15)
Caraway, Teri L. ..... 297 (16-2), 374 (11-9)
Carbone, Maurizio ...............271 (Panel 1)
Cardenas, Sonia.....................369 (45-10)
Carew, Jessica D. Johnson.......268 (32-2)
Carey, John M. .........................328 (34-5)
Carey, Sabine C. ......................316 (45-5)
Caringella, Paul ...................345 (Panel 3)
Carlisle, Juliet.........................368 (36-29)
Carlson, Allen.........................389 (43-18)
Carlson, Benjamin B........................... 370
Carlson, Deven ........................314 (29-2)
Carlson, Jon D. ........................335 (1-26)
Carlson, Kimberly A............................318
Carman, Christopher J.........344 (Panel 3)
Carmen, Ira H. .......................343 (37-12)
Carneiro, Cristiane.................. 291 (45-11)
Carnes, Matthew E. .................. 374 (11-9)
Carney, Richard...................... 285 (11-13)
Carpenter, Daniel P.....................242 (7-6)
Carr, Jered B..........................378 (30-15)
Carreira Da Silva, Filipe............245 (25-6)
Carroll, Royce A. ....................326 (22-13)
Carroll, Susan J........................278 (31-3)
Carrubba, Cliff ..........................366 (26-1)
Carsey, Thomas M. ...367 (29-10), 384 (53)
Carson, Jamie L. .......254 (22-2), 290 (3515)
Carter, David ..............................385 (8-9)
Carter, Kelby ............................342 (34-7)
Carter, Kimberly Rae ..............256 (31-10)
Carter, Niambi M. ......256 (32-8), 299 (314), 352 (31-8)
Cartrite, Britt Ashton ........................... 303
Carty, R. Kenneth ......268 (34-3), 342 (347)
Carvalho, Edzia ........................316 (45-5)
Carver, Terrell.........322 (2-46), 361 (2-14)
Casal Bertoa, Fernando............286 (13-5)
Casellas, Jason P. ....................366 (25-9)
Casey, Kimberly L. ........... 318, 330 (41-5)
Casey, Terrence ..................304 (Panel 2)
Cashore, Benjamin W. ............392 (17-15)
Caspar, Timothy W. ... 270, 320 (Panel 14)
Caspary, William R. ..................242 (2-39)
Casper, Gretchen G................257 (44-22)
Cassar, Alessandra ............................ 302
Cassell, Mark ...........................279 (40-7)
Castro, Elga ...........................253 (15-15)
Caswell, Bruce E.......323 (10-5), 389 (414)
Cataife, Guido ....................271, 310 (8-4)
Catallo, Jennifer .....................340 (18-12)
Cavari, Amnon ............... 326 (23-11), 356
Caverley, Jonathan D. ...... 275 (19-9), 340
(19-18)
Caviedes, Alex A....................297 (14-13)
Cavoukian, Kristin T R............275 (18-21)
Ceaser, James W. ..... 305 (Panel 10), 331
(Panel 4), 384 (3-28)
Celestine Michener, Jamila D.......344 (427)
Celis, Karen ...........................394 (31-14)
Cerna, Lucie...........................275 (16-10)
Cha, Victor D.......................361 (Panel 3)
Chaabane, Monia ...................257 (46-19)
Chacha, Mwita .......................386 (16-20)
Chadda, Maya.....................361 (Panel 3)
Chadefaux, Thomas ... 347 (4-6), 370, 384
(4-3)
Chai, Shaojin............................335 (1-26)
Chakravarty, Anu ................................ 259
Chaloupka, William......262 (2-20), 346 (240)
Chambers, Samuel A. ..............384 (2-45)
Chambers, Simone....294 (3-13), 343 (386)
Chambers, Stefanie ..................289 (30-9)
Chang, Crystal .......................264 (12-19)
Chang, Eric C.C. .................... 391 (11-11)
Chappell, Henry..........................263 (6-7)
Chappell, Larry W................241 (Panel 1)
Chappell, Louise.....................256 (31-10)
Charfi, Mohamed....................257 (46-19)
Chari, Raj S. ..........................327 (25-15)
Chatterjee, Abhishek ................395 (46-6)
Chaturvedi, Neil........................248 (45-7)
Chauchard, Simon.......... 264 (12-30), 302
Chausovsky, Jonathan..............263 (7-14)
Checkel, Jeffrey T......354 (43-9), 395 (466)
Cheema, Ali ....................................... 370
Cheibub, Jose Antonio.... 302 (46-23), 363
(11-46)
Chen, Calvin ............................301 (46-4)
Chen, Cheng ..........................287 (18-20)
Chen, Chia-Ming ................................ 270
Chen, Chin-Cher ......................257 (40-6)
Chen, Jie.............................358 (Panel 2)
Chen, Jowei .........279 (36-24), 347 (6-20)
Chen, Mingchi .....................320 (Panel 2)
Chen, Rung-Yi.....................280 (Panel 1)
Chen, Tse-Hsin.......................315 (36-34)
Chen, Tsung-Yuan ...............395 (Panel 4)
Chen, Xi................................... 243 (11-1)
Cheng, Joseph Y.S. .............371 (Panel 4)
Cheng, Nian-tzu ..................345 (Panel 3)
Cheng, Tun-jen....................395 (Panel 4)
Cherniss, Joshua L.....................294 (2-6)
Chernykh, Svitlana ................. 363 (11-46)
Chhibber, Pradeep....311 (11-31), 348 (1148)
Chiba, Daina ...................................... 258
Chidambaram, Soundarya ...... 264 (11-25)
Chien, Herlin ...................................... 357
Childers, Matthew A. ..............353 (36-28)
Childs, Sarah ....... 320 (Panel 4), 394 (3114)
Chin, Warren ...... 350 (19-12), 377 (19-15)
Chiou, Fang-Yi .........................341 (22-7)
Chiozza, Giacomo .......... 329 (37-23), 339
(14Chittick, William O.................245 (20-9)
Chiu, Yvonne..............................362 (3-8)
Cho, Chung-Lae .......................298 (24-8)
Cho, Il Hyun ...........................325 (18-22)
Cho, Sung-Ju .........................340 (21-20)
Cho, Wendy K. Tam .................280 (46-7)
Cho, Wonbin ..........................243 (12-21)
Cho, Yoon Jik.........................351 (24-10)
Choi, Ajin ...............................329 (37-23)
Choi, Sang Ok........................341 (23-13)
Choi, Seung-Whan .................340 (21-20)
Choi, Wooseon.......................387 (20-16)
Choi, Yonghwan ..................381 (Panel 3)
Chong, Dennis ...........................384 (5-3)
Chong, Ja Ian.... 269 (43-14), 316 (43-17),
344 (Panel 1)
Chou, Chelsea Chia-chen.......338 (12-29)
Chow, Jonathan T................... 338 (11-38)
Chowdhury, Subhasish Modak....347 (4-6)
Christensen, Kyle .....................257 (40-6)
Christenson, Dino P. ....... 300 (36-13), 342
(35-6)
Christia, Fotini .... 326 (21-11), 348 (11-17)
Christiano, Thomas ....................283 (3-6)
Christman, John .........................373 (3-7)
Christoffersen, Lyndsey Gayle ............ 372
(Panel 1)
Christov, Theodore ...................272 (1-19)
Chu, Yun-han ......................260 (Panel 1)
Chun, Simone B. .................... 311 (12-18)
Chung, Jaewook................................. 259
Church, Jeffrey .........................361 (1-18)
Ciccariello-Maher, George ........344 (42-7)
Ciliotta-Rubery, Andrea.............389 (41-4)
Cincotta, Richard P. ................ 252 (11-39)
Cingranelli, David L. ....... 291 (45-11), 344
(45-6)
Cioroianu, Iulia ................................... 355
Citrin, Jack .............................290 (37-15)
Civettini, Andrew J.W........ 295 (5-10), 391
(5-7)
Claes, Ellen................................374 (9-5)
Claeys, Gregory .......................294 (1-12)
Clare, Joe ..............................313 (21-22)
Clark, John A. ..........................341 (29-9)
Clark, Mary A. ..........................369 (48-3)
Clark, Terry Nichols .......... 245 (25-6), 280
(Panel 1), 327 (30-10)
Clark, Tom............ 245 (26-11), 366 (26-1)
Clark, William Roberts ...... 273 (6-16), 362
(6-12)
Clarke, Kevin A. .........................362 (8-7)
Clarke, Michelle Tolman.... 294 (2-17), 336
(2-23)
Clarke, Susan E. ... 299 (30-4), 308 (Panel
1), 352 (30-14)
Clarkson, Stephen .............................. 258
Claro da Fonseca, Sara..........265 (15-17)
Clawson, Rosalee ..................368 (38-16)
Clayton, Cornell W..................277 (27-10)
Clealand, Daniell P. ..................268 (32-2)
Cleary, Matthew R. .................244 (12-39)
Clifford, Stacy A. ....................289 (31-18)
Clinton, David......................260 (Panel 7)
Closa Montero, Carlos ............286 (15-10)
Clough, Emily .........................386 (17-12)
Clouser McCann, Pamela ................... 317
Cloward, Karisa Tritz ..............256 (31-10)
Coakley, John...........................328 (34-5)
Coan, Travis.... 280 (Panel 1), 349 (16-19)
Cobb, Rachael Vanessa ........256 (36-20),
341 (29-9)
Cochran, Kathryn McNabb.......316 (43-5),
350 (19-12)
Coe, Andrew ..........................350 (18-23)
Coetsier, Meins G.S.............271 (Panel 8)
Coffey, Daniel J. .....251 (5-9), 277 (29-12)
Cogburn, Derrick L. ..................329 (40-2)
Coggins, Bridget................................. 258
Coglianese, Cary....................376 (17-16)
Cohen, Benjamin J. ....................347 (6-9)
Cohen, David B. .....................365 (23-14)
Cohen, Diana Tracy..................315 (38-5)
Cohen, Martin...........................342 (35-6)
Cohen, Samy .....................................258
Colaresi, Michael P. ..................341 (22-7)
Cole, Richard L. ..................304 (Panel 1)
Coleman, Frank M...............294 (Panel 3)
Coleman, John J. ......352 (35-7), 353 (357)
Coleman, Katharina P. ............340 (19-18)
Coleman, Major G. ...................342 (32-3)
Coles, Romand ........294 (1-4), 352 (33-4)
Coletto, David.........................353 (36-14)
Colgan, Jeff.................... 258, 275 (16-21)
Collier, David............................280 (46-7)
Collihan, Kathleen M. .................273 (9-2)
Collins, Kathleen A. ................ 310 (11-27)
Collins, Nathan A. ......................336 (5-8)
Combs, Michael W. .............372 (Panel 2)
Combs, Ryan Muncy ...........331 (Panel 1)
Comfort, Louise K.....................313 (24-5)
Commissiong, Anand Bertrand ......346 (236)
Comparato, Scott A. .................314 (26-9)
Conant, Lisa...........................392 (15-16)
Condon, Meghan................................ 370
Condra, Luke N ....... 245 (18-25), 285 (1222)
Condrey, Stephen E. ..............351 (24-10)
Conlan, Timothy J. ...................366 (28-3)
Connaughton, Stacey L. .........343 (38-15)
Connell, Matthew Charles....272 (Panel 8)
Conner, Ashley Renee........................ 258
Connolly, Joy............................321 (1-14)
Connolly, William E......286 (14-7), 373 (216)
Conroy, Meredith ....278 (31-3), 354 (40-4)
Conroy-Krutz, Jeffrey K. ......371 (Panel 3)
Contandriopoulos, Damien........277 (25-8)
Conteh, Charles ...381 (49-6), 394 (24-12)
Conway, Janet..........................373 (1-15)
Cook, Fay Lomax .....................343 (38-6)
Cook, Philip Andrew ............331 (Panel 2)
Cook, Travis S.....................381 (Panel 7)
Coole, Diana H...........................373 (3-7)
Cooley, Alexander ....................364 (18-4)
Cooney, Kevin J. ......................342 (33-2)
Cooper, Barry .............. 260 (Panel 2), 320
(Panel 2), 331 (Panel 6), 381 (Panel
10)
Cooper, Ian ..............................312 (15-9)
Cooper, Julie E...........................262 (1-3)
Cooper, Scott B. ..................... 274 (13-11)
Copeland, Dale .... 297 (16-8), 369 (43-11)
Copelovitch, Mark S. ..............253 (16-13)
Coppedge, Michael J. ...............344 (46-5)
Corbett, Ross J. .......................309 (2-42)
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Cordes, Daniel .........................373 (1-23)
Corduneanu-Huci, Cristina........ 385 (11-4)
Corey, Paul .........................371 (Panel 9)
Corning, Peter .....................249 (Panel 1)
Cornut, Jérémie......................269 (46-20)
Corrales, Javier ......................354 (44-18)
Correa-Cabrera, Guadalupe....264 (12-41)
Corrigan, Bryce ..........................242 (5-2)
Cortina, Jeronimo .......................337 (8-8)
Costa, Kevin........ 253 (15-15), 293 (Panel
3), 328 (32-6), 354 (43-16)
Coulter, Michael L ....................267 (27-9)
Court, Erin.......................................... 356
Couso, Javier ...........................352 (26-3)
Covington, Jesse D. .................342 (33-2)
Cox, Eric W. .............................275 (17-4)
Cox, Gary W. ......................... 324 (11-16)
Cox, Michaelene D. ....................374 (9-5)
Coyle, Dennis J. .....267 (27-9), 283 (2-25)
Craiutu, Aurelian.........................308 (1-6)
Cramer, Brian D. ......................263 (6-19)
Cramer, Jane Kellett ....... 350 (19-12), 380
(43-12), 390 (Panel 1)
Crane, George T..................... 338 (11-38)
Crawford, Neta C. ....................321 (T-19)
Creek, Heather M. .......... 378 (29-14), 391
(Panel 2)
Crenshaw, Martha ....................291 (43-8)
Crepaz, Markus M. L. ..... 274 (14-11), 353
(35-14), 374 (11-43)
Creppell, Ingrid..... 242 (3-11), 265 (18-14)
Crescenzi, Mark J.C. ................245 (21-4)
Crespin, Michael.......................254 (22-2)
Crespino, Joseph .......................284 (7-9)
Crespy, Amandine ....................349 (15-7)
Crigler, Ann N...........................301 (38-4)
Crivelli, Jessica ......................386 (16-20)
Cropper, Porsha .....................278 (31-16)
Croskill, Julie ..........................290 (36-22)
Cross, Mai’a Keapuolani Davis ....377 (205)
Crow, Deserai Anderson.........267 (25-10)
Crowder, George ........................294 (2-6)
Crowder-Meyer, Melody............341 (29-9)
Crowley, Stephen F................... 374 (11-9)
Cruz, Jose Miguel ... 264 (12-41), 344 (427)
Csergo, Zsuzsa ....... 264 (11-25), 296 (1141)
Cukier, Wendy.................................... 356
Culpepper, Pepper D. .............376 (15-12)
Cunningham, David E..... 313 (21-16), 340
(21-6), 393 (21-10)
Cunningham, Kathleen Gallagher ....... 326
(21-11)
Curry, James M. ............. 300 (36-13), 317
Curry, Jill L. ........................................ 317
Curtice, John Kevin .......... 256 (34-6), 304
(Panel 2)
Curtis, Devon ......................... 311 (12-42)
Cusher, Brent Edwin........................... 270
Cuthbert, Mr., Ross Allan........275 (18-21)
Cutler, Robert M. ....................386 (17-12)
Cutts, David John........ 344 (Panel 3), 355
Cyr, Jennifer Marie ................. 310 (11-31)
Czobor-Lupp, Mihaela ..... 270, 361 (2-24),
389 (41-4)
D
D’Appollonia, Ariane Chebel .....350 (18-8)
D’Arcy, Michelle.................................. 303
Dafoe, Allan .........266 (21-7), 350 (21-17)
Dahlström, Carl Johan ..............377 (24-6)
Dai, Xinyuan.........254 (17-17), 286 (17-7)
Dallmayr, Fred R. ........308 (2-27), 335 (126)
Dalton, Russell J. ......289 (35-5), 368 (3714)
Damron, Regan Wayne .......... 274 (14-11)
Dancygier, Rafaela ................. 299 (30-11)
Dandashly, Assem.................. 364 (15-11)
Danelski, David J. ...............281 (Panel 1)
Danero, Julien .....................331 (Panel 1)
Daniels, R. Steven.......... 317, 351 (23-12)
Danielson, Michael S. .............324 (12-28)
Danilovic, Vesna.....................313 (21-22)
Danjoux, Ilan ...................................... 258
Darden, Keith A..... 274 (13-2), 371 (Panel
3)
Dark, III, Taylor E.................281 (Panel 2)
Darnton, Christopher ..............354 (43-16)
Datta, Monti Narayan..............339 (14-14)
Dauber, Noah ......................345 (Panel 1)
397
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Dauda, Carol ............................330 (47-4)
Daudelin, Jean ....................381 (Panel 1)
Davenport, Christian ............... 363 (11-14)
Davenport, Tiffany C...............328 (36-16)
Daves, Bryan R. .....................264 (12-30)
Davidson-Schmich, Louise K. ......367 (3117), 394 (31-14)
Davies, David ......................390 (Panel 6)
Davies, Graeme ..................... 312 (19-11)
Davis, Belinda Creel ...............378 (29-14)
Davis, Carmel F.................................. 258
Davis, Christina ...................... 364 (16-11)
Davis, Darren ...........................300 (32-1)
Davis, David R. .............. 303, 386 (17-12)
Davis, Gregory Douglas...................... 271
Davis, John ..............................276 (23-3)
Davis, Reed M. ...................260 (Panel 7)
Davis, Richard..........................290 (38-3)
Davis, Ryan W. .................................. 271
Dawes, Chris..........................343 (37-12)
Daynes, Byron W. ....................381 (49-6)
de Carvalho, Gustavo Seignemartin....275
(18-21)
de Figueiredo, Miguel ..... 252 (11-40), 374
(11-28)
de Figueiredo, Jr., Rui J. ........ 273 (11-29)
De La O Torres, Ana Lorena........ 243 (1119), 297 (12-32)
De Luca, Jr., Thomas S...........272 (2-31),
284 (3-22)
de Marchi, Scott .......................341 (22-7)
De Neve, Jan-Emmanuel.........347 (6-20),
364 (14-5)
de Renzio, Paolo......................309 (6-18)
de Rooij, Eline A. .....................256 (34-6)
De Vries, Catherine E..... 328 (36-23), 329
(36-23), 379 (36-21)
Dean, Jodi................308 (2-12), 361 (2-8)
Deardorff, Michelle D. ....... 263 (10-6), 284
(9-3)
Deason, Grace M. ..................315 (37-17)
Deason, Mary C. ..... 353 (38-11), 367 (3511)
DeBell, Matthew .....295 (8-5), 379 (36-33)
Deber, Raisa Berlin ..................277 (25-8)
Debrix, Francois .......................391 (2-32)
Debs, Alexandre.......................266 (21-5)
DeCanio, Samuel .....................391 (7-13)
Deckman, Melissa ..................367 (33-10)
DeCoste, Jordan ................................ 271
Deegan-Krause, Kevin..............253 (13-8)
Deering, Christopher J............378 (29-14)
DeFrancesco Soto, Victoria Maria....... 278
(36-15), 290 (36-22)
Defreytas, Ms, Mariko............. 243 (11-33)
DeGagne, Alexa .......................330 (47-4)
Deitelhoff, Nicole ..... 265 (16-22), 285 (1147)
Dejaeghere, Yves ............................... 271
Dekker, Fabian .......................312 (14-15)
Delano, Alexandra .............................. 304
Delli Carpini, Michael X. ...........343 (38-6)
Dembinska, Magdalena ............328 (32-6)
Demchak, Chris C. ......... 312 (19-11), 350
(19-12)
Demetriadis, Panicos..................284 (6-8)
Demiryol, Tolga .................................. 370
Dempsey, Erik .....................390 (Panel 6)
den Dulk, Kevin R. ...................278 (33-3)
Deng, Yong .........................331 (Panel 3)
Dennis, Michael P...................324 (13-10)
Depauw, Sam....... 300 (34-8), 326 (22-13)
Derthick, Martha .......................366 (28-3)
Desai, Raj M. ...........................375 (14-8)
Desch, Michael C. ....... 272 (Panel 1), 301
(43-10), 330 (43-13), 340 (20-8)
Deschamps, Lauren ....... 255 (29-11), 290
(36-11)
Deschouwer, Kris ......300 (34-8), 343 (3626)
DeSipio, Louis .....................293 (Panel 1)
Desmarais, Bruce.......................384 (5-3)
DeSombre, Elizabeth R. ...........354 (39-8)
Desposato, Scott W. ....... 264 (12-41), 316
(38-9)
Detels, Polly ........................271 (Panel 8)
Dettrey, Bryan J......................268 (36-25)
Deudney, Daniel .....255 (25-7), 352 (27-3)
Deutsch, Kenneth L. ............292 (Panel 8)
Deveaux, Monique....372 (1-8), 391 (3-25)
Devereaux, Zachary P. ....................... 356
DeVita, Carol..........................387 (25-17)
Dewan, Torun ........257 (38-10), 273 (4-7),
284 (6-22), 347 (6-20)
Deylami, Shirin S.........272 (2-22), 308 (113)
398
Di Alto, Stephanie J.............320 (Panel 1)
Diamond, Larry........ 252 (11-10), 280 (4419), 285 (11-24)
Diaz-Cayeros, Alberto..... 297 (12-25), 363
(11-21)
DiCicco, Jonathan M. ......................... 259
Dickinson, Matthew J................365 (23-6)
Diermeier, Daniel........336 (4-8), 384 (4-3)
Dietrich, Simone ...... 338 (12-29), 392 (1618)
Dietz, Mary G. ..........................294 (2-17)
DiGiuseppe, Matthew R. .........313 (21-22)
Dilley, Stephen C......................242 (1-16)
Dillon, Nara .................... 279 (44-11), 303
Dilts, Andrew ............................384 (2-29)
Dimitrov, Martin .............. 279 (44-11), 303
Dimitrova, Daniela V. ..............389 (38-14)
Dimova-Cookson, Maria .............373 (3-7)
Dinan, John J. ..........................288 (27-5)
Dinas, Elias ........ 268 (36-35), 379 (36-30)
Dion, Michelle L......................375 (12-34)
Dion, Stéphane ........................314 (28-2)
Dionne, Kim Yi ................. 270 (48-5), 302
DiSalvo, Daniel R. ....................391 (7-13)
DiSarro, Joseph...................395 (Panel 1)
Disch, Lisa J. .........346 (2-40), 384 (2-45)
Disney, Jennifer Leigh ...... 314 (31-9), 344
(42-7), 388 (31-7)
Ditonto, Tessa M. ...................268 (36-25)
Dixon, Jennifer M. ..................380 (43-12)
Dixon, L. Beth ..........................247 (32-9)
Djupe, Paul A. ......278 (33-3), 343 (37-20)
Do, Lynna Lan Tien Nguyen .... 331 (Panel
1)
Doan, Alesha E. .... 299 (31-4), 346 (Panel
2)
Doces, John .............................286 (16-7)
Dodds, Graham G. ...................351 (23-2)
Dodge, Jennifer ........... 357 (Panel 1), 395
(Panel 2)
Doherty, Brendan J.................351 (22-12)
Doherty, David...... 256 (36-20), 309 (5-11)
Doherty-Sil, Eileen..................354 (46-15)
Dolan, Julie ............................ 326 (24-11)
Dolan, Jr., Thomas M. .... 370, 387 (21-14)
Dolgert, Stefan Paul .................336 (1-26)
Dombrowski, Daniel A. ............. 242 (3-11)
Dominguez, Jaime....................367 (32-5)
Dominguez, Jorge I. ............272 (Panel 1)
Donahue, T. J.............................283 (3-6)
Donchev, Dilyan .......................286 (16-7)
Doner, Richard F. .....................362 (6-24)
Donnelly, Jack ..........................344 (45-6)
Donno, Daniela ........................265 (17-8)
Donovan, Todd .....367 (34-2), 389 (36-12)
Doran, Sr., Charles F. ...............344 (49-8)
Dorff, Cassy ...........................340 (19-18)
Dormagen, Jean-Yves ............329 (36-32)
Dorman, Andrew M. ....... 266 (19-14), 377
(19-15)
Dorobantu, Sinziana ...............315 (37-17)
Doron, Gideon.....................319 (Panel 1)
Dosch, Joern ..........................266 (19-16)
Dougherty, Keith L.................... 263 (8-11)
Dougherty, Richard J. ....... 320 (Panel 14),
351 (23-12)
Dowd, Robert Alfred ......... 289 (33-6), 311
(12-31)
Dowdall, J. Patrick...............271 (Panel 8)
Dowdle, Andrew J. ....245 (22-1), 276 (233), 351 (23-2)
Dowley, Kathleen M............................ 303
Dowling, Conor M........... 256 (36-20), 289
(35-15), 309 (5-11)
Down, Ian...............................274 (15-13)
Downes, Alexander B. .... 348 (11-17), 386
(18-11)
Downs, William M......328 (34-5), 386 (1514)
Dragojevic, Mila...................... 296 (11-41)
Dreisbach, Daniel L. .................268 (33-9)
Drezner, Daniel W. ...................297 (16-8)
Driessen, Michael.....................247 (33-8)
Driscoll, Jesse ... 326 (21-11), 374 (11-28),
392 (11-20)
Drope, Jeffrey................. 258, 392 (16-18)
Drozdova, Katya.....................380 (46-10)
Druckman, James N. ........ 380 (40-3), 384
(5-3)
Drury, Shadia B. .........................242 (2-4)
Dube, Oeindrila ......................275 (16-21)
Dubnick, Melvin J. ....................267 (24-7)
Duch, Raymond M.............................. 355
Duckett, Jane ......................372 (Panel 1)
Duer, Andreas ..........................339 (16-3)
Duff, Brian ..............241 (1-16), 294 (1-25)
Duffield, John S........................386 (13-4)
Dufresne, Philippe ..................369 (45-10)
Duggan, John.............................310 (8-4)
Dulio, David A. .......................368 (35-13)
Dull, Matthew M. ....................341 (23-13)
Dumitrescu, Delia ............................... 370
Dumitru, Diana ....................... 337 (11-23)
Dunigan, Molly Clark ..............340 (18-12)
Dunn, Jr., James A. ................378 (25-12)
Dunn, Marika..........................247 (37-19)
Dunning, Thad....... 280 (46-7), 371 (Panel
3)
Durant, Robert F........298 (24-8), 341 (2313)
Durante, Ruben ..................................370
Dusso, Aaron ....... 259 (Panel 1), 289 (3515), 355
Duval, Robert D........................257 (40-6)
Duvall, Raymond D. .... 260 (Panel 1), 261
(46-25)
Dvorkin, Jeff .............................290 (38-3)
Dwyre, Diana ... 259 (Panel 1), 260 (Panel
1)
Dyck, Joshua J................. 299 (29-8), 319
Dykes, Darrin .....................................319
Dyment, David..........................381 (49-6)
E
E., English, William E. English
William............................................ 370
Ealy, Steven ..... 249 (Panel 4), 271 (Panel
13)
Early, Evelyn A. ... 248 (38-12), 305 (Panel
1)
Earnest, David C. ........286 (14-7), 310 (814)
Easter, Beth .......................................355
Easter, Gerald M. .....................349 (13-6)
Easton, Whitney E.............................. 258
Eaton, Kent ............................348 (12-24)
Eaves, Lindon J......... 309 (5-11), 343 (3712)
Eberhardt, Lindsay .................290 (36-22)
Eberlein, Burkard....................297 (17-10)
Echeverri-Gent, John..............286 (12-38)
Eckles, David L. .........................251 (5-9)
Edelstein, David M. ...316 (43-5), 369 (4311), 386 (18-11)
Edgerly, Stephanie ............................. 370
Edwards, Margaret Emily........380 (44-17)
Edwards, Martin S. ...................297 (16-2)
Egan, Patrick J. ......369 (47-3), 390 (47-6)
Egan, Patrick J.W. ....... 293 (Panel 3), 349
(16-19)
Eglene, Ophelia........................337 (6-14)
Ehrenberg, John.......................301 (42-9)
Ehret, Soenke ............................336 (4-8)
Eichenberg, Richard C............290 (36-22)
Eichner, Maxine...................... 328 (31-11)
Eidelman, Gabriel............................... 319
Eidlin, Fred...........272 (2-31), 316 (44-14)
Eimer, Thomas Rudolf ............265 (16-22)
Eisenstadt, Todd.....................324 (12-28)
Ekins, Emily McClintock...................... 355
El-Mahdi, Rabab.....................394 (44-13)
Elazar, Yiftah ............................ 272 (1-11)
Elbel, Brian ..............................247 (32-9)
Elder, Laurel.........278 (31-3), 343 (37-20)
Elgun, Ozlem .........................298 (21-18)
Elhajibrahim, Samah.......... 390 (Panel 12)
Elkin, Stephen L. .................292 (Panel 1)
Elkins, Zachary.......268 (34-3), 325 (17-9)
Ellington, Thomas C. .............. 338 (11-45)
Ellis, Cali Mortenson................. 348 (11-5)
Ellis, Christopher R.................279 (37-16)
Ellis, Elisabeth H. .....................283 (2-25)
Ellis, Joseph M. ..................................303
Ellis, William Curtis............................. 317
Elman, Colin........ 241, 260 (Panel 1), 354
(43-9)
Elmi, Afyare A. ............ 258, 305 (Panel 1)
Elms, Deborah K. ...................392 (16-18)
Elshtain, Jean Bethke ....... 250 (1-22), 361
(3-8), 362 (3-8)
Embry, Charles R. ...............271 (Panel 8)
Encarnacion, Omar G. .... 257 (44-16), 280
(44-19)
Ender, Morten G.........................284 (9-3)
Engel, Stephen M.......................323 (7-3)
Engeli, Isabelle.....277 (25-8), 342 (31-13)
Engster, Dan ............................242 (3-30)
Engstrom, Erik J........328 (34-5), 353 (3811)
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Enns, Peter ......... 279 (36-24), 290 (36-9),
309 (5-5)
Enos, Ryan D.........................278 (36-15)
Ensley, Michael J.............. 341 (22-7), 357
Enyedi, Zsolt ............................286 (13-5)
Epp, Charles R....................358 (Panel 2)
Epstein, Lee .............................341 (26-2)
Eralp, Pelin ............................287 (21-12)
Erdem, Ebru...........................388 (31-20)
Erickson, Jennifer L. ......... 291 (46-9), 340
(19-10)
Erie, Steven P. .........................277 (30-8)
Erikson, Robert S. .....268 (35-10), 337 (88)
Erisen, Cengiz..........295 (5-10), 373 (5-6)
Erisen, Elif..........................318, 373 (5-6)
Erk, Jan ...................................314 (28-2)
Erkulwater, Jennifer ............323 (9-4), 370
Erler, Edward J.................. 357 (Panel 11)
Erler, Helen Abbie ....................298 (22-8)
Errington, Jane...........................284 (9-3)
Ertan, Gunes ............................253 (14-6)
Esaiasson, Peter ....................379 (36-21)
Esarey, Justin E. ......310 (8-4), 323 (8-13)
Escobar, Gipsy ....................... 311 (12-42)
Escobar-Lemmon, Maria C. .....247 (34-9),
268 (31-12)
Escriba-Folch, Abel ....................374 (8-2)
Eshbaugh-Soha, Matthew....... 326 (23-11)
Eskew, Lina Rombalsky...................... 317
Espinoza Vasquez, Fatima K. ......329 (402)
Espirito-Santo, Ana.................394 (31-14)
Esquith, Stephen L. ..................361 (2-41)
Esser, Daniel E. ...296 (12-20), 330 (48-4)
Esteban, Miguel......................350 (18-23)
Esterling, Kevin M. ...................380 (40-3)
Estevez, Ariadna ......................330 (45-9)
Estevez, Federico.......................374 (8-2)
Estevez-Abe, Margarita .... 310 (11-2), 375
(11-43)
Estlund, David M. .....262 (3-10), 283 (3-6)
Etchemendy, Sebastian .......... 310 (11-26)
Ettin, Johanna L. ....................278 (31-16)
Etzioni, Amitai ......274 (15-13), 330 (45-9)
Euben, J. Peter ........294 (1-4), 384 (2-45)
Euben, Roxanne L....................272 (2-22)
Eun, Jonghoon ................................... 317
Evans, Diana............................288 (22-4)
Evans, Elizabeth Penelope ...... 320 (Panel
4)
Evans, Geoffrey........................286 (13-5)
Evans, Jocelyn ............ 280 (Panel 2), 319
Evans, Kevin ..........................393 (23-15)
Ewald, Alec ........................................319
Ewell, William ...........................246 (29-6)
Exadaktylos, Theofanis...........380 (46-10)
Ezrow, Natasha Marie ..............266 (21-5)
F
Fabbrini, Sergio ........... 271 (Panel 1), 293
(Panel 1), 381 (Panel 3)
Facchini, Giovanni ..................247 (37-19)
Fadel, Mohammad H. ...............308 (1-28)
Fagelson, David ..................249 (Panel 1)
Fair, C. Christine ....................298 (18-16)
Fair, Teri...............268 (32-2), 327 (30-10)
Fairdosi, Amir ..................................... 355
Fairfield, Tasha A..... 311 (12-18), 375 (1234)
Fajardo-Heyward, Paola ...........275 (17-4)
Falk, Barbara J....................... 311 (13-13)
Fang, Songying ........................297 (16-2)
Faraday, George .................281 (Panel 2)
Farhang, Sean .......277 (26-4), 309 (7-17)
Faricy, Christopher ............................. 318
Fariss, Christopher J. .................347 (8-6)
Farmer, Rick D. ....... 353 (38-11), 366 (2910), 367 (29-10)
Farney, James........262 (3-21), 355 (49-5)
Farnsworth, Stephen J...... 279 (38-7), 378
(25-12)
Farr, James ................................308 (1-6)
Farrand, Stuart ....................395 (Panel 1)
Farrar-Myers, Victoria A....... 319, 351 (2312)
Farrell, David M......289 (35-5), 379 (34-4)
Farrell, Henry ...........................279 (40-7)
Farrell, Katharine N. .................322 (2-19)
Farrier, Jasmine .....................313 (23-10)
Farris, Emily .............................248 (42-5)
Fatovic, Clement ......309 (2-42), 383 (1-7)
Fattore, Christina....................254 (21-13)
Fazal, Tanisha ........................393 (21-10)
Fearon, James D.......266 (21-5), 298 (218)
Feaver, Peter D. .......................298 (20-6)
Federici, Michael P. ..... 382 (Panel 2), 395
(Panel 1)
Federico, Christopher M. ........315 (37-17)
Feezell, Jessica Timpany..........354 (40-4)
Fehrs, Matthew ..................................258
Feiock, Richard C........... 351 (25-13), 378
(30-15), 394 (24-12)
Feit, Mario................................272 (2-31)
Feldman, Stanley ...................315 (37-17)
Feldmann, G. Magnus ............ 296 (11-32)
Felix, Adrian ........................308 (Panel 1)
Fenio, Kenly Greer .................330 (44-15)
Ferchen, Matthew Glen ..........349 (12-37)
Ferejohn, John .........................352 (26-3)
Ferguson, Janna ......................381 (49-6)
Ferguson, Kathy E....... 294 (Panel 3), 373
(2-16)
Ferguson, Kennan ....250 (2-7), 308 (2-12)
Ferguson, Margaret R.............327 (29-13)
Fernandez, Jose.........................310 (8-4)
Fernandez, Marco ... 315 (37-17), 385 (114)
Fernandez, Sergio ....................245 (24-9)
Fernandez Anderson, Cora.................259
Fernandez-Albertos, Jose .......253 (16-13)
Ferraz, Claudio....................... 363 (11-21)
Ferree, Karen E......................243 (12-21)
Ferry, Leonard Donald Gordon ........... 345
(Panel 1)
Fesnic, Florin Nicolae ..........293 (Panel 1)
Feuerstein, Derek............................... 319
Fey, Mark ...............287 (21-12), 347 (4-6)
Field, Bonnie N.......................286 (15-10)
Field, Laura K..................................... 270
Fieldhouse, Edward A......................... 355
Filipiak, Erik M..........................323 (7-18)
Findley, Michael..........................284 (8-3)
Fine, Janice..... 275 (16-10), 321 (Panel 3)
Finke, Daniel ............................ 263 (8-11)
Finn, John E.............................327 (27-4)
Finnemore, Martha ..............346 (Panel 1)
Fish, M. Steven ....... 285 (11-24), 310 (1127)
Fisher, Emily L. ......................315 (37-17)
Fisher, Justin T. ...................320 (Panel 4)
Fisher, Louis.............................377 (23-5)
Fisher, III, Samuel H...........295 (8-5), 327
(29-13)
Fishkin, James S............ 279 (44-11), 292
(Panel 1), 309 (5-5), 373 (5-6)
Fishman, Ethan ...................292 (Panel 8)
Fitzgerald, Jennifer .................265 (15-17)
Fix, Michael P.........................267 (26-13)
Flaherty, Anne FB................320 (Panel 1)
Flanagan, Thomas.....290 (38-3), 369 (4510)
Flanik, William M. ............................... 258
Flavin, Patrick......................... 255 (29-11)
Fleischmann, Arnold ......... 270 (47-5), 342
(30-16)
Fleming, James E.....................336 (3-27)
Flemming, Roy B..... 298 (26-12), 299 (2612)
Fletcher, Amy L. ..................390 (Panel 1)
Flibbert, Andrew J. .................393 (20-10)
Flores, Michelle ...................... 311 (12-31)
Flores, Thomas E. ....................362 (6-12)
Flores-Macias, Francisco ....................356
Fogarty, Edward A..................297 (17-10)
Follesdal, Andreas.......273 (3-31), 294 (313)
Ford, Lynne E.........263 (10-6), 327 (29-3)
Fording, Richard C. .....247 (32-9), 295 (711)
Forest, Benjamin ....................257 (44-16)
Forest, Pierre-Gerlier ................381 (49-6)
Forman, Michael.....369 (42-8), 391 (2-32)
Forman-Barzilai, Fonna ............283 (2-10)
Forni, Breanna Maria...........345 (Panel 2)
Fornieri, Joseph R. ..............292 (Panel 8)
Forst, Rainer ..............................346 (1-1)
Forster Rothbart, Amy ............330 (44-15)
Forsythe, David P. ....................269 (45-8)
Fortelny, Gregory.................260 (Panel 1)
Fortier, Jeremy ...........................262 (1-3)
Fortin, Jessica ............................ 259, 304
Fortna, Page ........ 312 (18-5), 393 (21-10)
Fortner, Michael Javen ..... 256 (32-8), 303
Fournier, Patrick .......................342 (34-7)
Fowler, James H. ...251 (5-9), 378 (26-10)
Fox, Justin .................251 (4-1), 362 (4-4)
Fox, Richard L..........................266 (22-6)
Fox, Russell Arben ...................336 (1-26)
Fraenkel, Jon ...........................328 (34-5)
Fraga, Luis Ricardo ..... 261 (Panel 1), 308
(Panel 1)
Franceschet, Susan.......... 247 (34-9), 367
(31-17)
Francia, Peter L...................321 (Panel 3)
Francis, Megan Ming ................384 (7-16)
Francisco, Ronald A. ..............302 (46-23)
Franck, Matthew J. ...... 249 (Panel 1), 304
(Panel 1)
Francois, Karen ..........................250 (1-9)
Frank, Jill ....... 321 (1-14), 322 (1-14), 372
(1-2)
Frank, Richard W. .................... 348 (11-5)
Franklin, Charles H.................290 (36-22)
Franklin, Mark N........367 (34-2), 379 (3630)
Franklin Fowler, Erika ....... 292 (48-2), 353
(38-11)
Franko, William W. ...................299 (29-8)
Fransen, Luc ..........................393 (17-15)
Frantz, Erica Emily ...................266 (21-5)
Franz, Michael G............... 292 (Panel 13)
Franzese, Jr., Robert J. .... 251 (6-17), 364
(14-5)
Frasure, Lorrie A. ......277 (30-8), 328 (3616), 352 (30-14)
Fravel, M. Taylor.....................393 (18-15)
Frazier, Mark W. ..................372 (Panel 1)
Frazier, Michael...................372 (Panel 2)
Frederick, Brian P. ....................278 (31-3)
Freeman, Gary P. ................... 274 (14-11)
Freeze, Kent E. ........................ 385 (11-4)
French-Hodson, Ruth Anne ..... 320 (Panel
1)
Fried, Brian ............................ 252 (11-40)
Friedberg, Aaron L. .............346 (Panel 1)
Frieden, Jeffry A. ......273 (11-6), 347 (6-9)
Friedenberg, Amanda Y. .............273 (4-7)
Friedman, Benjamin H. ........390 (Panel 1)
Friedman, Edward .......... 348 (12-37), 349
(12Friedman, Sally.... 290 (36-22), 351 (2212)
Friman, H. Richard ...................325 (16-6)
Fritsch, Oliver .........................380 (46-10)
Froitzheim, John................................. 370
Frost, Catherine........................391 (1-27)
Fry, Earl ...................................344 (49-8)
Frye, Timothy ......... 263 (11-3), 264 (11-3)
Frymer, Paul..... 243 (7-6), 273 (3-29), 321
(Panel 3)
Fuhrmann, Matthew.......... 276 (20-7), 340
(19-10)
Fujii, Lee Ann .........................261 (46-25)
Fukumoto, Kentaro .....................385 (8-9)
Fuller, Douglas .... 349 (12-37), 395 (Panel
4)
Fuller, Timothy....... 250 (1-22), 331 (Panel
6), 345 (Panel 3)
Fulton, Sarah .........................300 (36-13)
Fulwider, John ..........................314 (29-2)
Fung, Archon ........295 (3-13), 343 (38-6),
357 (Panel 1)
Funk, Carolyn L......................343 (37-12)
Funke, Peter N. ..................................356
G
Göbel, Christian..................................304
Gabel, Matthew ....... 246 (26-11), 328 (3623)
Gaboury, Jennifer .....................344 (42-7)
Gadarian, Shana Kushner ........295 (5-10)
Gailmard, Sean .....251 (4-1), 278 (35-12),
313 (23-10), 362 (4-4)
Gains, Francesca ...................342 (31-13)
Galeotti, Anna Elisabetta .......... 242 (3-11)
Gallagher, Katherine .................299 (31-4)
Gallagher, Mary E.....................375 (14-8)
Gallarotti, Giulio M...............371 (Panel 1)
Galligan, Yvonne ....................253 (15-15)
Galvan, Dennis C. ...............293 (Panel 3)
Galvin, Daniel...........................391 (7-13)
Gamble, Katrina L. ............................. 317
Gamble, Richard M. ............395 (Panel 1)
Gamm, Gerald......254 (22-2), 379 (35-17)
Gandhi, Jennifer .....................380 (44-23)
Gans, Chaim ............................273 (3-31)
Gans-Morse, Jordan Luc ........348 (12-24)
Garay, Maria Candelaria ......... 310 (11-26)
Garber, Judith A. ....................267 (30-12)
Garcia Bedolla, Lisa .... 262 (Panel 1), 308
Gardner, Joseph M. ....................263 (6-7)
Garretson, Jeremiah ...............379 (37-21)
Garriga, Ana Carolina ......................... 258
Garrison, Justin David .........395 (Panel 1)
Garsten, Bryan .......346 (2-13), 384 (3-28)
Gartenstein-Ross, Daveed....... 271 (Panel
3)
Gash, Alison.............................387 (26-5)
Gaskins, Ben...................................... 318
Gasper, John..........................327 (29-13)
Gatti, Donatella ..................................302
Gattinger, Monica ...................297 (17-10)
Gaubatz, Kurt Taylor...............380 (46-10)
Gauja, Anika .......................305 (Panel 1)
Gaus, Gerald F. ........................251 (3-19)
Gause, III, F. Gregory .............254 (18-10)
Gause, LaGina ................................... 357
Gavin, Jr., Francis J..................287 (18-7)
Gavrilis, George .....................393 (18-15)
Geddes, Barbara .......257 (44-22), 362 (612)
Geer, John G............................301 (38-4)
Gehlbach, Scott G. ......... 324 (11-16), 349
(13-6)
Gehring, Jacqueline S. ...........392 (15-16)
Geisler, William ........... 304 (Panel 1), 382
(Panel 2)
Gel’man, Vladimir .....................297 (13-7)
Gelb, Joyce ..... 280 (Panel 1), 342 (31-13)
Gelbman, Shamira M..............269 (44-10)
Geller, Daniel S. .....................340 (19-18)
Gelman, Andrew.....................389 (36-12)
Gendron, Richard .....................299 (30-4)
Genovese, Michael A. ..............351 (23-2)
Gent, Stephen E...... 313 (21-16), 387 (2114)
Georgakakis, Didier ..................349 (15-7)
George, Robert P......... 249 (Panel 1), 320
(Panel 2)
Gerber, Alan........ 256 (36-20), 309 (5-11),
379 (36-30)
Gerber, Elisabeth R. ............... 299 (30-11)
Gerdes, Christer ..................... 274 (14-11)
Gerlak, Andrea K....................366 (25-14)
Germain, Randall ........... 258, 325 (16-17)
Geron, Kim.......... 327 (30-10), 378 (32-7),
379 (32-7)
Gerring, John ....... 260 (Panel 1), 285 (1124)
Gershon, Sarah Allen .............368 (38-16)
Gerstmann, Evan .....................369 (47-3)
Gervasoni, Carlos...................385 (12-33)
Gheciu, Alexandra ..................325 (16-17)
Giannoni, Tonya Caprarola .... 317 (46-17),
355 (46-15)
Gibbons, Michael T......284 (3-22), 391 (127)
Gibney, Mark P. ......316 (45-5), 344 (45-6)
Gibson, Clark C......................243 (12-21)
Gibson, Rachel K. ............ 257 (40-6), 305
(Panel 1)
Gidengil, Elisabeth L......... 292 (49-7), 390
(47-6)
Gilabert, Pablo ....................331 (Panel 2)
Gilady, Lilach..........................254 (21-13)
Gilardi, Fabrizio ......244 (17-6), 325 (17-9)
Gilens, Martin .........................279 (37-16)
Gill, Jeff......................................374 (8-2)
Gillespie, Andra N. ...................277 (30-8)
Gillespie, Michael Allen..... 250 (1-22), 331
(Panel 6)
Gilley, Bruce...........................368 (37-14)
Gillies, Jamie.......................293 (Panel 1)
Gillion, Daniel Q. ....323 (8-13), 379 (32-7)
Gilljam, Mikael..........................266 (24-7)
Gimpel, James G. .....290 (36-9), 379 (3721)
Gingerich, Daniel W........ 338 (11-45), 392
(11-11)
Gingrich, Jane R. ...................312 (14-15)
Ginsberg, Beth .......................278 (36-15)
Ginsberg, Wendy R. ....... 313 (23-10), 351
(24-10)
Girth, Amanda M. .....................298 (24-8)
Gisselquist, Rachel M. ............ 311 (12-31)
Githens-Mazer, Jonathan ..........395 (46-8)
Giumelli, Francesco ................287 (20-13)
Giurcanu, Magda............ 274 (13-11), 304
Givens, Terri E. ........... 262 (Panel 1), 320
(Panel 1), 363 (11-14)
Glaser, James M. .......................374 (7-7)
Glass, James M. ......................262 (2-20)
Glassberg, Andrew .................378 (30-15)
Glatzer, Miguel .........................265 (14-4)
Glazier, Rebecca ....316 (38-9), 337 (10-7)
Gledhill, John G.................................. 303
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede......244 (12-43),
313 (21-16)
Glenn, Gary D. ....................382 (Panel 1)
Glick, David............................288 (26-14)
Glosny, Michael ........................279 (43-7)
Glynn, Adam ..............................362 (8-7)
Go, Min Hee....................................... 318
Goble, Hannah .......................353 (36-14)
Godbout, Jean-Francois ... 317 (49-4), 377
(22-10)
Goddard, Stacie E. ...................279 (43-7)
Godwin, Erik Kinji .....................337 (6-14)
Godwin, Kenneth......................337 (6-14)
Goelzhauser, Greg ............................. 318
Goemans, Hein Erich ....... 266 (21-5), 298
(21-8)
Goertz, Gary ........340 (21-6), 369 (46-21)
Goff, Patricia ............................244 (16-9)
Goi, Simona ...........242 (2-39), 361 (2-41)
Goidel, Robert Kirby ........................... 355
Gold, Thomas......................395 (Panel 4)
Goldberg, Robert.................321 (Panel 2)
Golden, Miriam A. ..... 301 (39-4), 392 (1111)
Golder, Matt .......................................318
Goldfield, Michael................321 (Panel 3)
Goldfinger, Johnny....................323 (10-5)
Goldford, Dennis J............ 267 (27-9), 305
(Panel 1)
Goldgeier, James M........ 265 (18-14), 298
(20-6)
Goldman, Harvey S. .................273 (3-29)
Goldman, Samuel............................... 270
Goldman, Seth K......................390 (47-6)
Goldstein, Joel K. .....................377 (23-5)
Goldstein, Judith Lynn .... 286 (17-18), 287
(17-18)
Goldstein, Leslie Friedman ......327 (27-4),
384 (7-8)
Goldstein, Seth.......................298 (21-18)
Goldstone, Jack A. ................. 252 (11-39)
Golob, Stephanie R. ....... 257 (44-16), 274
(16-4), 275 (16-4)
Golya, Tamas .....................................270
Gombin, Joel ..........................329 (36-32)
Gomes, Eduardo R.................264 (12-41)
Gonda, Joseph.................. 381 (Panel 10)
Gong, Abe..................................296 (8-5)
Gontier, Thierry ...................358 (Panel 5)
Good, Kristin Ruth ..................388 (30-13)
Goodchild, Philip ......................373 (2-16)
Goode, Paul ...........................380 (46-13)
Goodfield, Eric..........................335 (1-26)
Goodhart, Lucy M.....................347 (6-20)
Goodhart, Michael ..................369 (45-10)
Goodin, Robert E. ............ 262 (3-10), 331
(Panel 2)
Goodliffe, Gabriel .....................312 (15-9)
Goodliffe, Jay ...........................265 (17-8)
Goodman, Christopher B. .........245 (22-1)
Goodman, Ryan .....................254 (17-17)
Goodman, Sara Wallace........ 265 (15-17),
297 (14-13)
Goodwin, Matthew....................395 (46-8)
Goodyear-Grant, Elizabeth .... 290 (36-22),
368 (38-16)
Gordon, Neve.............................294 (2-9)
Gore, Christopher...................296 (12-20)
Goren, Lilly J. ........288 (23-7), 330 (41-5),
352 (31-8)
Goren, Paul N. .......256 (36-31), 322 (5-4)
Gorham, Eric ............................361 (2-41)
Goss, Kristin.............................388 (31-7)
Gossett, Charles W. ....... 303, 351 (24-10)
Gottesman, Blake.....................255 (23-4)
Gottfried, Jeffrey A. .......... 255 (26-6), 355
Gottlieb, Stuart ....................271 (Panel 3)
Gould, Andrew C..... 269 (44-21), 339 (156)
Gould, Carol C. ..........................373 (3-7)
Gourevitch, Alexander ........................ 270
Gourevitch, Peter A. ......... 273 (11-6), 310
(11-26), 339 (17-14), 340 (17-14)
Gowa, Joanne ........................287 (17-18)
Gower, Jeffrey L. .................292 (Panel 2)
Goyer, Michel .........................376 (15-12)
Graber, Mark A...... 246 (27-7), 281 (Panel
1), 358 (Panel 2)
Grafstrom, Cassandra Rose .....374 (6-15)
Graham, Katherine ..............292 (Panel 1)
Graham, Sarah.......................266 (19-16)
Grant, Audra K. ...................... 273 (11-15)
Grant, J. Tobin........266 (23-9), 288 (22-4)
Grant, John ..............................262 (1-21)
Grant, Wyn P. ......................271 (Panel 1)
Grasso, Kenneth L. .............382 (Panel 1)
399
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Gray, Julia................................265 (17-8)
Gray, Phillip W.................. 271, 291 (43-6)
Gray, Virginia H. ........246 (29-6), 278 (3512)
Greasley, Stephen ..................394 (24-12)
Green, Brendan R. ......... 245 (18-25), 356
Green, Donald P. .......280 (46-7), 290 (3611), 297 (12-25), 374 (11-28)
Green, Elliott D....................... 264 (11-25)
Green, Jane ...........................353 (35-14)
Green, Jennifer ......................296 (12-25)
Green, Jeremy .........................370 (48-3)
Green, Jessica F. ...................392 (17-15)
Green, John C..... 278 (33-3), 290 (37-15),
374 (7-7)
Green, Matthew N. ........... 317, 326 (22-9)
Greenberg, Miriam....................245 (25-6)
Greene, Kenneth F. ................ 310 (11-31)
Greene, Samuel R...............331 (Panel 3)
Greene, Stacey Ann .................277 (30-8)
Greene, Steven ......................343 (37-20)
Greenfest, Seth W. ............................. 318
Greenfield, Larry........ 357 (Panel 11), 395
(Panel 9)
Greenhill, Brian D. .....275 (17-4), 350 (2117)
Greenhill, Kelly M. .......... 380 (43-12), 393
(18Greenlee, Jill S. ....................278 (31-3)
Greenstein, Fred I. ...................351 (23-2)
Greer, Christina M. ....353 (36-14), 385 (716)
Greer, Scott L...........................349 (15-7)
Gregg, Benjamin ......................272 (1-19)
Grey, Robert D. ..................................358
Grieco, Joseph M. .......... 287 (20-13), 376
(16Grieco, Kelly A..... 245 (18-25), 316 (435), 350 (19-12)
Griffin, John D. .........................367 (32-5)
Griffin, Stephen M. ...................246 (27-7)
Griffin, Stuart ...... 340 (19-18), 377 (19-15)
Grigorescu, Alexandru ............ 338 (11-45)
Grigoryan, Arman ...................350 (18-18)
Grimes, William W. ........... 295 (6-21), 345
(Panel 3)
Grimmer, Justin ................ 323 (8-10), 370
Grindlife, Stonegarden ..............387 (22-5)
Grissom, Jason A................... 326 (24-11)
Grodsky, Brian K. ................... 243 (11-49)
Groeling, Tim..... 268 (38-13), 269 (38-13),
353 (38-11)
Groenendyk, Eric William............391 (5-7)
Grofman, Bernard N. ................252 (8-12)
Grogan, Colleen M. .......... 251 (7-15), 369
(48Gronke, Paul.... 367 (34-12), 371 (Panel
1)
Grose, Christian R..................353 (36-28)
Gross, Donald A................................. 355
Gross, Jill S............................388 (30-13)
Gross, Kimberly A. .................343 (38-15)
Grossman, Joel B................281 (Panel 1)
Grossmann, Matt..... 327 (25-11), 367 (3511)
Groth, Terrie R. ..................................271
Grotto, Andrew .........................287 (18-7)
Grove, Jairus V.........................255 (25-7)
Gruber, Lloyd ...........263 (6-19), 284 (6-8)
Grynaviski, Jeffrey D. .............315 (35-16)
Grzymala-Busse, Anna M. .......339 (13-9),
365 (22-3)
Gschwend, Thomas............................ 355
Guardino, Matthew P. ......................... 370
Guerra, Simona ......................328 (36-23)
Guerrero, Mario ........................354 (40-4)
Guillaud, Elvire ................................... 302
Guisinger, Alexandra G.............339 (16-3)
Gulati, Girish J. .....352 (31-8), 380 (40-3),
394 (36-17)
Guliuzza, III, Frank ..............249 (Panel 1)
Gundogdu, Ayten .....................322 (2-28)
Gunitskiy, Vsevolod ........ 269 (43-14), 369
(46-21)
Gunnell, John G. ...................... 272 (2-11)
Gunther, Richard ....................286 (15-10)
Gupta, Kuhika ........................ 338 (11-38)
Gupta, Madhvi..........................289 (33-6)
Gupta, Surupa.....................381 (Panel 1)
Gupta-Carlson, Himanee ....252 (9-1), 292
(Panel 1)
Gursoy, Yaprak.......................394 (44-13)
Gustavsson, Gina Linda .............322 (5-4)
Gutmann, Amy ................................... 358
Guy, Mary E. .......................... 326 (24-11)
Guzina, Dejan ........................ 285 (11-36)
400
H
Ha, Eunyoung ........................274 (12-17)
Haas, Mark L.......................... 252 (11-39)
Habel, Philip..... 242 (5-2), 314 (26-9), 322
(5-4)
Habib, Khalil........................271 (Panel 3)
Hacker, Jacob S. ......................347 (7-10)
Hacker-Cordón, Casiano A.W. .......347 (316), 373 (1-15)
Hackworth, Jason.....................299 (30-4)
Haegel, Florence .................280 (Panel 2)
Haenny, Sophia Melody ..........392 (12-16)
Haerpfer, Christian William .......338 (13-9)
Haeusermann, Silja ........ 312 (14-15), 339
(15-18)
Hafer, Catherine .......................284 (6-22)
Hafner-Burton, Emilie Marie....287 (17-18)
Haftel, Yoram Z. .....................339 (16-14)
Hagen, Michael G.....................342 (35-6)
Haggard, Stephan ..... 251 (6-11), 273 (116), 345 (Panel 3)
Haglund, Jillienne .....................316 (45-5)
Hahm, Sung Deuk ...............381 (Panel 3)
Hahn, Kyu S...........................329 (37-22)
Haider-Markel, Donald P. ....346 (Panel 2),
362 (5-12)
Haig, Ken ............................345 (Panel 3)
Haines, Jean-Yves...............381 (Panel 3)
Hajnal, Zoltan L. .....................247 (37-19)
Haklai, Oded ...... 252 (11-22), 296 (11-41)
Halberstam, Yosh ...................315 (36-34)
Hale, Henry E....... 264 (11-25), 297 (13-7)
Halfani, Mohamed ..................296 (12-20)
Halistoprak, Toygar...................278 (32-4)
Hall, Lauren K. .........................329 (39-7)
Hall, Mark David.....268 (33-9), 342 (33-2)
Hall, Melinda Gann...................255 (26-6)
Hall, Michael G..... 254 (16-13), 374 (6-15)
Hall, Peter A...........339 (15-6), 375 (14-8)
Hall, Rodney Bruce ................325 (16-17)
Hall, Rosalie Arcala ................ 311 (12-42)
Hall, Thad E. ..........................394 (36-17)
Hallin, Daniel C. .....................343 (38-15)
Halpern, Cynthia.....336 (2-23), 361 (2-24)
Halpin, Darren R. ................271 (Panel 1)
Hamann, Kerstin.....252 (9-1), 368 (36-19)
Hamayotsu, Kikue ..................364 (12-26)
Hamel, Pierre .........................378 (30-15)
Hamilton, Allison................................. 355
Hamilton, Lawrence ..................336 (2-44)
Hamm, Keith E. ....... 326 (22-13), 367 (2910)
Hammond, Daniel................372 (Panel 1)
Hammond, Thomas H.........251 (4-1), 288
(26-8)
Han, Hahrie C. .......................353 (36-28)
Han, Jongwoo ..........................329 (40-2)
Han, Lori Cox ....... 266 (23-9), 326 (23-11)
Han, Min-young ........................273 (6-16)
Han, Soo-Hye.........................268 (38-13)
Hanchar, Anna .......................376 (16-15)
Hancock, Ange-Marie ...............314 (31-9)
Hancock, Kathleen J.................386 (13-4)
Handley, Antoinette ................348 (12-24)
Handlin, Samuel .....................297 (12-32)
Hankla, Charles R. ......242 (6-13), 309 (618)
Hanmer, Michael J....................323 (8-13)
Hannagan, Rebecca J. ........390 (Panel 1)
Hanretty, Chris ....................... 274 (11-29)
Hansen, Ben ............................323 (8-13)
Hansen, Randall A. ..... 320 (Panel 1), 388
(30-13)
Hansen, Susan B. ....................327 (29-3)
Hansen, Wendy L...................365 (21-15)
Hanson, Peter ........................379 (35-17)
Hanson, Stephen E. ......... 339 (15-6), 381
(46-13)
Hanusch, Marek ................................. 370
Hanvelt, Marc ........................... 272 (1-11)
Hao, Yufan ..........................331 (Panel 3)
Haptonstahl, Stephen R......251 (4-1), 284
(8-3)
Harbeson, John W..................338 (12-40)
Harbridge, Laurel....................389 (36-12)
Harcourt, Bernard E................ 341 (27-11)
Hardiman, Niamh .....................265 (14-4)
Harding, Matthew C.......... 323 (8-13), 348
(11-34)
Hardy-Fanta, PH.D., Carol........299 (31-4)
Hargis, Jill E. .................... 270, 273 (2-35)
Harkness, Kristen A................385 (12-33)
Harmel, Robert.......................286 (13-14)
Harper, Robin A.................................. 317
Harris, Jean Wahl.....................263 (10-6)
Harris-Lacewell, Melissa V. .......247 (32-9)
Harrison, Brigid ..........................273 (9-2)
Harrison, Kathryn ...................267 (25-16)
Harrits, Gitte Sommer .............390 (46-12)
Harrop, William Scott...........331 (Panel 3)
Hart, Roderick P. ......................365 (23-6)
Hartlyn, Jonathan .... 264 (12-41), 354 (4418)
Hartman, Erin .............................363 (8-7)
Hartman, Thomas R. .......................... 258
Hartzell, Caroline A. ...............392 (16-18)
Harvey, Johanna ....................343 (38-15)
Harwood, Paul G......................390 (47-6)
Has, Yusuf ......................................... 270
Hasecke, Edward B. ....... 328 (36-16), 356
Hasen, Richard L. .......... 367 (34-12), 372
(Panel 1)
Hashimoto, Barry Masanori................. 259
Hassner, Ron E. .....................393 (18-15)
Hastedt, Glenn P. ................381 (Panel 1)
Hastings, Justin ......................340 (19-10)
Hatcher, Laura J.....................355 (46-15)
Hatemi, Pete ........ 309 (5-11), 343 (37-12)
Hathaway, Oona.....275 (17-4), 286 (17-7)
Hattam, Victoria........................250 (2-18)
Hauerwas, Stanley ...................352 (33-4)
Haufler, Virginia ....... 265 (16-22), 325 (1617)
Haugaard, Mark...................371 (Panel 1)
Haughton, Tim..........................253 (13-8)
Haunss, Sebastian ...................244 (16-9)
Hauptmann, Emily ..................261 (46-25)
Hausegger, Lori J. ..................299 (26-12)
Haussman, Melissa A. ...... 246 (31-6), 304
(Panel 2)
Hawes, Daniel P. ................................ 319
Hawkesworth, Mary ........ 261 (46-25), 272
(2-11), 352 (31-19)
Hawkins, Darren G. ..................265 (17-8)
Hay, Colin ................................324 (14-9)
Hay, Richard T........................ 311 (12-42)
Hayduk, Ron ............................316 (42-6)
Hayes, Danny.... 247 (36-18), 301 (37-13),
353 (36-14), 379 (37-21)
Hayes, Jarrod.........................254 (20-14)
Hayes, PhD, Robin J. ....... 278 (32-4), 344
(42-7)
Hayman, Rachel.....................354 (44-20)
Haynie, Kerry L. .....288 (29-4), 289 (29-4)
Hays, Jude C. ..... 325 (17-9), 363 (11-46),
385 (8-9)
Hayward, Clarissa R......... 322 (3-12), 371
(Panel 1)
Haywood, Keisha S. ........................... 259
Hazan, Miryam .........................316 (42-6)
Hazbun, Waleed ........269 (43-14), 308 (227)
Hazelton, Jacqueline L. .......292 (Panel 1)
He, Wenkai ........................................ 357
He, Yinan ...............................389 (43-18)
Healy, Andrew ..........................295 (5-10)
Heaney, Michael T. ........... 342 (35-6), 356
Heaven, Corinne ....................376 (18-13)
Hecht, Jason D.......................274 (15-13)
Heclo, Hugh .............................366 (28-3)
Hecock, Douglas ....................244 (12-39)
Hedge, David M. ..... 341 (23-13), 394 (297)
Hedlund, Ronald D. ................326 (22-13)
Heidbreder, Brianne................327 (29-13)
Heikkila, Tanya .......................366 (25-14)
Heilbrunn, John R...................338 (12-35)
Heilke, Thomas W. .... 280 (Panel 11), 293
(Panel 13)
Heinz, Dominic .........................300 (34-8)
Heith, Diane J. .........................365 (23-6)
Heitshusen, Valerie...................255 (22-2)
Helbling, Marc ..........................323 (8-10)
Held, Virginia............................295 (3-23)
Heldman, Caroline....................278 (31-3)
Heldt, Birger ...........................393 (21-10)
Helmke, Gretchen .....341 (26-2), 352 (263)
Helsloot, Ira..............................313 (24-5)
Hemze, Leah A. .........................336 (5-8)
Henderson, Michael B. ... 315 (36-10), 355
Henderson, Phillip G............292 (Panel 8)
Hendlin, Yogi .......................280 (Panel 1)
Hendrick, Rebecca .................342 (30-16)
Hendrickson, Petra ....244 (12-43), 284 (83)
Hendrix, Burke .......373 (2-43), 391 (3-25)
Hendrix, Cullen S. ... 254 (21-23), 313 (2116)
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Heniff, Jr., Bill ...........................255 (22-2)
Henig, Jeffrey R. ......................289 (30-9)
Hennessy, Cari Lynn ................245 (22-1)
Hennigar, Matthew..................299 (26-12)
Henry, Michael D. ................371 (Panel 9)
Hensel, Paul R. ........................377 (21-9)
Hensley, Jonathan ....................267 (27-9)
Hering, Martin......................259 (Panel 1)
Hermann, Margaret G..........321 (Panel 2)
Hero, Rodney E........................394 (29-7)
Herrera, Geoffrey .....................255 (25-7)
Herrera, Richard.......................323 (8-10)
Herrera, Veronica M. .............. 264 (11-50)
Herrera, Yoshiko M........... 344 (46-5), 375
(11-44)
Herrick, Rebekah........................296 (8-5)
Herring, Ronald J. ....................244 (16-9)
Herrmann, Richard K. ...............245 (20-9)
Herrnson, Paul S....................256 (36-20)
Herron, Erik S. .... 324 (13-10), 390 (Panel
1)
Herron, Michael C. ...................289 (29-4)
Hertel, Shareen ......330 (45-9), 344 (45-6)
Hertzoff, Andrew.......................336 (2-38)
Hetherington, Marc J. .............315 (36-10)
Heumann, Stefan .....................352 (27-3)
Hibben, Mark R. ................................. 303
Hibbing, John R.........326 (22-9), 343 (3712)
Hibbing, Matthew V........... 309 (5-11), 343
(37-12)
Hickey, Dennis ....................371 (Panel 4)
Hickey, Emily G. .................................370
Hicklin, Alisa..................... 245 (24-9), 319
Hicks, Alexander Michael........ 285 (11-13)
Hicks, Raymond ..... 251 (6-11), 339 (16-3)
Hicks, Tim ..............270 (48-5), 291 (48-2)
Hicks-Casey, Wendy...............392 (16-18)
Hidalgo, Fernando Daniel ...... 252 (11-40),
374 (11-28)
Highton, Ben ..........................301 (37-13)
Hilbink, Lisa............327 (26-7), 352 (26-3)
Hildingsson, Roger ..............358 (Panel 2)
Hill, David.................................352 (35-7)
Hill, Lisa Ellen .......................... 272 (1-11)
Hill, Seth J. ..............................347 (6-20)
Hill, Tony L. ........................................ 303
Hillebrecht, Courtney .......................... 304
Hillygus, Sunshine ..................315 (36-10)
Hiroi, Taeko ............................244 (12-43)
Hirsch, Alexander Victor .....251 (4-1), 362
(4-4)
Hirsch, H. N. .....267 (27-9), 331 (Panel 1)
Hirschl, Ran .............................327 (27-4)
Hirschmann, Nancy J. ...... 242 (3-30), 328
(31-11)
Hiskes, Richard P. ....................344 (45-6)
Hiskey, Jonathan T. ................247 (37-19)
Hite, Katherine ... 257 (44-16), 316 (44-14)
Hite, Nancy ............................296 (12-25)
Hix, Simon .............251 (6-17), 328 (34-5)
Ho, Karl...............................320 (Panel 2)
Hobolt, Sara Binzer ....................347 (6-9)
Hochschild, Jennifer L. ..... 295 (3-14), 350
(18-8)
Hochstetler, Kathryn ....... 330 (44-15), 354
(44-18), 380 (44-17)
Hoddie, Matthew ....................392 (16-18)
Hoechst, Emily Howden.... 242 (2-39), 262
(2-26)
Hoekstra, Valerie J. ..................327 (26-7)
Hoerl, Alexandra E. ....249 (1-9), 250 (1-9)
Hoffman, Aaron M. .................256 (31-10)
Hoffman, Barak ......................243 (12-21)
Hoffman, Donna R....................365 (23-6)
Hoffman, Karen S......288 (23-7), 326 (2311)
Hoffman, Lindsay ...................248 (38-12)
Hoffman, Marcelo .....................262 (2-26)
Hoffmann, Matthew J........ 286 (14-7), 350
(18-23), 364 (14-5), 386 (17-12)
Hofhansel, Claus ......................256 (33-7)
Hofmann, Stephanie Claudia ....291 (46-9)
Hofmann, Tobias ............ 258, 365 (21-15)
Hogan, Brendan Jerome.........344 (46-18)
Hogan, John W. .....................327 (25-15)
Hogan, Robert E. ...................367 (29-10)
Hojnacki, Marie ......................278 (35-12)
Holian, David B. .....246 (30-6), 276 (23-3)
Holleque, Matthew..................268 (36-35)
Hollifield, James F. ......... 275 (16-10), 312
(18-19), 376 (16-5)
Hollis-Brusky, Amanda............277 (27-10)
Holloway, Carson L..............382 (Panel 1)
Holman, Mirya R. ........ 280 (Panel 1), 289
(30-9)
Holmes, Lisa M. .......................314 (26-9)
Holmsten, Stephanie S. .... 258, 378 (31-5)
Holston, Ryan Robert .........382 (Panel 2),
395 (Panel 1)
Holzhacker, Ronald L. .........331 (Panel 1)
Holzner, Claudio A..................243 (12-21)
Homer-Dixon, Thomas F. .........255 (25-7),
286 (14-7)
Honda, Eric H..................................... 258
Honig, Bonnie.............294 (1-4), 346 (1-1)
Honohan, Iseult ........................384 (3-17)
Hooghe, Marc................... 256 (34-6), 271
Hooker, Juliet ...........................308 (1-13)
Hoon, Parakh ......................304 (Panel 2)
Hoornbeek, John ......................279 (40-7)
Hopf, Ted .................................395 (46-6)
Hopkin, Jonathan ......375 (14-8), 386 (1514)
Hopkins, Daniel J. ..... 299 (30-11), 323 (810)
Hopkins, David A....................315 (35-16)
Horak, Martin George ..... 267 (30-12), 314
(30-5)
Horiuchi, Yusaku .................... 337 (11-12)
Horne, Cale............................329 (37-23)
Horner, Debra.........................342 (30-16)
Horowitz, Donald L. ................ 285 (11-36)
Horowitz, Michael .... 298 (21-18), 330 (4313)
Hortala-Vallve, Rafael ....... 284 (6-22), 370
Horvath, Robert ........................269 (41-6)
Hou, Ying ............................331 (Panel 3)
Hough, Dan.........................249 (Panel 1)
Houle, David ...................................... 318
Houser, Linda ...........................247 (32-9)
Houston, Alan..........250 (3-18), 282 (1-5),
373 (1-23)
Hovde, Peter B................................... 318
Howard, Alison .........................365 (23-6)
Howard, Christopher................. 295 (7-11)
Howard, Lise Morjé ........ 325 (17-13), 376
(18-24)
Howard, Robert M. ................. 246 (26-11)
Howard-Hassmann, Rhoda E.......275 (174), 344 (45-6), 369 (45-10)
Howarth, David R. ....................373 (2-16)
Howell, Graham R. ..............281 (Panel 1)
Howes, Dustin ..........................294 (1-25)
Howk, Jennifer W. ...278 (31-16), 301 (394)
Hoye, Timothy ................... 390 (Panel 12)
Hoyland, Bjorn..........................374 (6-15)
Hsieh, John Fuh-sheng.......260 (Panel 1),
320 (Panel 2)
Hsieh, Michelle F. ................395 (Panel 4)
Hsiung, James C.................344 (Panel 1)
Hsu, Hsiao-Chi ....................345 (Panel 3)
Hsu, Jennifer Yuan-Jean ........ 279 (44-11)
Hsueh, Roselyn ......................264 (12-19)
Hsueh, Vicki .............................383 (1-24)
Htun, Mala N. .........................268 (31-12)
Hu, Mei-Chih .......................395 (Panel 4)
Hu, Xiaobo ..........................320 (Panel 2)
Hua, Shiping .......................371 (Panel 4)
Huang, Chang-Ling ............................ 318
Huang, Cheng-yi ....................378 (26-10)
Huang, Chi..........................320 (Panel 2)
Huang, Grace.........................296 (12-20)
Huang, Haifeng .................................. 271
Huang, Kwei-Bo .....................266 (19-16)
Huang, Reyko ..........................312 (18-5)
Huang, Yanzhong ................319 (Panel 2)
Huber, Bruce R. ................................. 318
Huber, Evelyne.... 261, 293 (Panel 3), 297
(12-32), 375 (12-34)
Huber, Gregory........ 256 (36-20), 289 (3515), 309 (5-11), 379 (36-30)
Huber, John D. ......................... 263 (11-3)
Huckfeldt, Robert....................368 (36-29)
Huddy, Leonie ........................265 (18-14)
Hudon, Raymond ............................... 356
Hudson, Valerie M. .................313 (20-15)
Hudson, William E. .....................374 (9-5)
Huerta, Juan Carlos .... 262 (Panel 1), 323
(9-4)
Huerta, Juan Enrique..............343 (38-15)
Hug, Simon ............251 (8-12), 323 (8-10)
Hugh-Jones, David ....273 (4-7), 322 (4-5),
347 (6-20)
Hughes, Glenn .......... 292 (Panel 13), 305
(Panel 1)
Hughes, Llewelyn ................345 (Panel 3)
Hughes, Melanie M. ......... 247 (34-9), 328
(32-6), 388 (31-20)
Huhe, Narisong ...................358 (Panel 2)
Hula, Richard C................ 255 (30-7), 358
Hull, Christopher C. ..................276 (23-3)
Hulnick, Arthur S. ................381 (Panel 1)
Hult, Karen M. .... 326 (24-11), 366 (23-14)
Hultman, Lisa ......................... 348 (11-17)
Hume, Robert J. .......................387 (26-5)
Hummel, Ralph P ................294 (Panel 3)
Humphreys, Macartan .... 257 (38-10), 297
(12-25), 312 (18-5)
Hunter, Wendy .......................375 (12-34)
Hurd, Kimberly Roxanne..................... 371
Hurl, Ryan R. ...........................323 (7-18)
Hurst, William ........................... 243 (11-1)
Hussin, Iza ...............................291 (43-6)
Hutchings, Vincent L...............379 (36-33)
Hwang, Sungsoo ......................394 (40-8)
Hyde, Susan Dayton....... 340 (17-14), 364
(18-4)
Hymans, Jacques E.C. ..... 287 (18-7), 350
(19-8)
I
Iacovino, Raffaele.....................246 (28-1)
Ichino, Nahomi ....................... 374 (11-28)
Ide, Hiroko .................................363 (8-7)
Idema, Timo .............................265 (14-4)
Ignazi, Piero ..... 271 (Panel 1), 305 (Panel
1)
Iida, Fumio ...............................384 (3-17)
Iida, Rentaro ............................310 (8-14)
Iida, Takeshi ...........................268 (36-25)
Ilgit, Asli .................................312 (18-19)
Illuzzi, Michael J. ......................262 (1-21)
Imai, Kosuke .......... 252 (11-40), 363 (8-7)
Imami, Arben.......................... 311 (13-13)
Imbroscio, David.......................299 (30-4)
Imerman, Dane K. ..................248 (43-15)
Inclan, Maria ..........................330 (46-14)
Ingebritsen, Christine...........241 (Panel 1)
Inglehart, Ronald ......................301 (38-8)
Ingram, Matthew C. ........ 244 (12-39), 280
(46-22)
Innes, Alexandria J. ..................337 (10-7)
Inoue, Kyoko ..................... 390 (Panel 12)
Invernizzi Accetti, Carlo ...................... 270
Irvine, J.A. Sandy ...................312 (18-19)
Ishiyama, John ............... 319, 365 (21-15)
Ito, Takeshi..........................259 (Panel 1)
Ivanova, Kate .........286 (16-7), 325 (16-6)
Iversen, Torben ....... 285 (11-13), 349 (1410)
Ivison, Duncan .........295 (3-24), 346 (1-1)
Iwanami, Yukari..........................310 (8-4)
Iyengar, Shanto .........301 (38-4), 329 (3722), 371
J
Jackman, Simon D. .......... 301 (38-4), 315
(36Jackson, Alice M. .............372 (Panel 2)
Jackson, Colin F. ....................380 (43-12)
Jackson, Natalie M. ................ 276 (22-11)
Jackson, Rhydon.................249 (Panel 4)
Jackson, Victoria Marie....................... 357
Jacobi, Tonja ............................288 (26-8)
Jacobs, Alan M...........................336 (5-8)
Jacobs, Lawrence R. ................343 (38-6)
Jacobs, Sean .........................389 (38-14)
Jacobsmeier, Matthew L. ........278 (36-15)
Jacobsohn, Gary J. ..................327 (27-4)
Jacobson, Gary C........... 266 (22-14), 301
(37-13), 347 (6-20)
Jacobson, Willow......................276 (24-2)
Jacoby, William G........... 256 (36-31), 315
(37-17)
Jakobi, Anja P. .........................325 (16-6)
Jakobsen, Uffe ............... 259, 389 (44-12)
Jalalzai, Farida .........................247 (34-9)
Jamal, Amaney ......................269 (44-21)
Jamal, Manal A. .....................253 (12-27)
James, Oliver ...........................288 (24-4)
James, Patrick......254 (20-14), 344 (49-8)
Janara, Laura A........................383 (1-24)
Jarman, Holly ...........................242 (6-13)
Jarvis, Sharon E.....................268 (38-13)
Jaschik, Scott .....................................306
Jaskoski, Maiah....... 252 (11-37), 311 (1242)
Jelen, Ted G................... 290 (37-15), 318
Jenco, Leigh K. ......273 (2-35), 308 (1-13)
Jenkins, Jeffery A. ....................255 (22-2)
Jenkins, Margaret............................... 270
Jennings, James ....................352 (31-19)
Jennings, Jeremy R....................308 (1-6)
Jennings, M. Kent ... 286 (13-14), 379 (3630)
Jensen, Carsten ..................... 385 (11-35)
Jensen, Christian B. ............... 273 (11-29)
Jensen, Jason ........................380 (46-10)
Jensen, Michael J......257 (40-6), 380 (403)
Jensen, Nathan ....... 264 (12-19), 338 (1235)
Jensen, Pamela K. ....329 (41-5), 330 (415)
Jentleson, Bruce W. ....... 254 (18-10), 287
(20-13)
Jeram, Sanjay ........................ 296 (11-41)
Jerez-Mir, Miguel ....................274 (15-13)
Jessee, Stephen........ 263 (8-11), 300 (3627)
Jetschke, Anja..........................350 (17-5)
Jhee, Byong-Kuen ..................339 (14-14)
Jimenez, Benedict ....................315 (38-5)
Jimenez, Luis F. ..................... 274 (11-42)
Jimeno, Rafael Augusto............378 (32-7)
Jividen, Jason .....................280 (Panel 5)
Jo, Hyeran ..... 265 (17-8), 325 (17-9), 350
(21-17)
Jo, Jinhee ..................................251 (4-1)
Joe, Wesley .... 259 (Panel 1), 366 (29-10)
Johansen, Morgen S. ......................... 317
John, Peter C. ......257 (40-6), 327 (30-10)
Johns, Leslie ..........................287 (17-18)
Johns, Robert.............. 304 (Panel 2), 345
(Panel 3)
Johnson, Candace....................246 (31-6)
Johnson, Carter R. ......... 338 (11-23), 363
(11-30)
Johnson, Cathy M. .................387 (25-17)
Johnson, Esq., Cris .............372 (Panel 2)
Johnson, Erica J.......................279 (40-7)
Johnson, James D....................250 (2-18)
Johnson, Jeremy ........................362 (7-5)
Johnson, Joshua ......................289 (29-4)
Johnson, Juliet .....257 (44-16), 375 (14-8)
Johnson, Kimberley S.................243 (7-6)
Johnson, Liz.............................389 (39-6)
Johnson, Loch K. ................381 (Panel 1)
Johnson, Martha C. ................274 (12-17)
Johnson, Neil .........................254 (21-23)
Johnson, Renée J. ........... 317, 394 (29-7)
Johnson, Susan W. ................299 (26-12)
Johnson, Tana........................312 (16-16)
Johnson, Tobe.....................372 (Panel 2)
Johnston, Christopher David ........315 (3717), 336 (5-8)
Johnston, Jocelyn M.................298 (24-8)
Johnston, Richard G.C. ......... 315 (36-10),
342 (35-6), 374 (7-7)
Johnston, Steven......361 (2-8), 383 (2-15)
Jolly, Seth Kincaid .......... 285 (11-36), 303
Jones, Alethia...........................369 (42-8)
Jones, Bryan D....................... 299 (30-11)
Jones, Charles .........................262 (3-21)
Jones, Clifford A. ............ 367 (34-12), 371
(Panel 1)
Jones, Mark P. .......................367 (31-17)
Jones, Jr., Randall J. .......................... 319
Jones, Toby C. ....................305 (Panel 1)
Jones Luong, Pauline ....... 274 (13-2), 338
(12-35)
Jones-Correa, Michael A. ...... 274 (11-42),
314 (30-5), 378 (32-7), 388 (30-13)
Jones-Rooy, Andrea E........................ 258
Joo, Hyung-Min ..................................303
Jordan, Grant ......................271 (Panel 1)
Jordan, Jason....... 349 (15-8), 375 (14-12)
Jordan, Jenna ........................298 (18-16)
Jordan, Sara R. ......277 (24-2), 291 (43-6)
Jordan, Stuart V.........251 (4-1), 310 (8-4),
341 (23-13), 362 (4-4)
Jordan-Zachery, Julia S. ........ 261 (46-25),
299 (31-4), 352 (31-19)
Joscelyn, Thomas ...............271 (Panel 3)
Joseph, Maya...........................389 (39-6)
Joseph, Richard .....................338 (12-40)
Joseph O’Connell, Anne M. ...... 263 (8-11)
Josephson, Jyl .......248 (42-5), 317 (47-2)
Joshi, Ishan.............258, 271, 326 (20-11)
Josiger, William J. ............ 258, 312 (15-9)
Joslyn, Mark R. ........................362 (5-12)
Joyce, Kyle A. ............................284 (8-3)
Judd, Dennis R....................... 299 (30-11)
Judd, Diana M........268 (33-9), 329 (39-7)
Jung, Changkuk ................................. 357
Jung, Courtney.... 262 (3-21), 285 (12-22),
320 (Panel 1)
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Jung, Heon Joo ...................292 (Panel 2)
Jungkunz, Vincent ......................309 (3-5)
Junio, Timothy J. ......................364 (14-5)
Junn, Jane Y. ......................335 (Panel 1)
Jusko, Karen Long .... 243 (11-19), 252 (812)
Just, Marion R..........................301 (38-4)
K
König, Thomas ....................... 274 (11-29)
Künkler, Mirjam .... 330 (46-14), 388 (33-5)
Kachi, Aya..................................385 (8-9)
Kadera, Kelly M.........245 (21-4), 298 (2118)
Kage, Rieko ...........................301 (43-10)
Kagotani, Koji ...........................377 (20-5)
Kaid, Lynda Lee .....................379 (37-21)
Kailitz, Steffen ..........................365 (22-3)
Kalandrakis, Tasos .....................310 (8-4)
Kalanges, Kristine J..................248 (45-7)
Kalinin, Kirill .............................251 (8-12)
Kalkan, Kerem Ozan ..............290 (37-15)
Kalmoe, Nathan P...................315 (37-17)
Kaltenthaler, Karl C. ....... 355, 386 (16-20)
Kalyvas, Andreas .....................346 (2-13)
Kalyvas, Stathis N. .... 296 (11-7), 375 (1223)
Kam, Cindy D...........251 (5-9), 295 (5-10)
Kamieniecki, Sheldon ..... 326 (25-11), 327
(25-11)
Kang, Alice.............................342 (31-13)
Kang, David C........................365 (19-13)
Kang, Myung-koo .....................295 (6-21)
Kang, Yi ............................................. 318
Kanthak, Kristin L. ..............................355
Kantola, Johanna Elina...........394 (31-14)
Kapiszewski, Diana ..................341 (26-2)
Kaplan, Cynthia S...................269 (46-20)
Kapstein, Ethan B........ 272 (Panel 1), 285
(11-24), 340 (19-18)
Karako, Thomas .......... 271 (Panel 3), 345
(Panel 12)
Karakoc, Ekrem.............. 274 (13-11), 304
Karch, Andrew J.......................314 (29-2)
Karcher, Sebastian ............................. 370
Karjala, Aleisha ......................353 (37-18)
Karnein, Anja ...........................241 (1-16)
Karnes, Kimberly A......... 300 (36-13), 378
(29-14), 391 (Panel 2)
Karol, David ... 245 (22-1), 343 (35-6), 356
Karp, Jeffrey A. .....300 (34-8), 316 (38-9),
379 (34-4), 389 (36-12)
Karp, Regina ..........................265 (19-14)
Karpf, David A........257 (40-6), 337 (7-12)
Karpowitz, Christopher F.............373 (5-6)
Kasahara, Yuri........................ 374 (11-28)
Kasara, Kimuli .... 264 (12-30), 324 (12-36)
Kasfir, Nelson ......................... 363 (11-30)
Kassekert, Anthony ........ 351 (25-13), 393
(24-12)
Kassiola, Joel J. ..................345 (Panel 2)
Kassop, Nancy .........................387 (23-8)
Kastellec, Jonathan P. ..............366 (26-1)
Kasza, Gregory J. .................... 272 (2-11)
Katada, Saori N......................386 (16-20)
Katagiri, Nori ...................................... 303
Katchanovski, Ivan ......... 248 (38-12), 279
(38-7)
Kates, Michael.................................... 271
Kathman, Jacob Daniel.............245 (21-4)
Kato, Junko ................................362 (8-7)
Katsanidou, Alexia..................368 (36-19)
Katsumata, Hiro........................350 (17-5)
Katz, Gabriel ............................323 (8-13)
Katz, Jonathan N.......266 (22-14), 323 (813)
Katz, Richard S. .......... 271 (Panel 1), 289
(35Katzenstein, Mary Fainsod .......341 (2711)
Katzenstein, Peter J. .......... 281, 305, 346
(Panel 1)
Katzenstein, Suzanne ....... 291 (43-6), 339
(16-14)
Katznelson, Ira ....273 (7-4), 321 (Panel 3)
Kaufman, Alison .....................287 (18-20)
Kaufman, Robert R........... 263 (6-19), 297
(12-32), 362 (6-12)
Kaufman, Stuart J........... 248 (43-15), 279
(43-7), 291 (43-8)
Kaufman-Osborn, Timothy V. .......261 (4625), 272 (2-11), 361 (2-8)
401
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Kaufmann, Eric P..... 252 (11-39), 352 (357), 376 (18-24)
Kaufmann, Karen M..................246 (30-6)
Kavakli, Kerim Can.................350 (21-17)
Kay, Barry J. ..........317 (49-4), 355 (49-5)
Kaye, Dalia Dassa.......... 254 (18-10), 273
(11-15)
Kaynak, M. Selcan .................343 (38-15)
Kayser, Mark Andreas ............340 (21-20)
Keane, Michael ..........................373 (5-6)
Kearn, Jr., David W. ...............393 (19-17)
Kearney, Richard C. .................387 (24-3)
Keck, Thomas M. ......267 (27-6), 277 (2710)
Kedziora, Jeremy ...350 (21-17), 384 (4-3)
Keefer, Philip......324 (11-16), 391 (11-11),
392 (11-11)
Keele, Luke .... 252 (11-40), 357, 363 (8-7)
Keepper, Kevin H. ..................296 (12-20)
Kehl, Jenny Rebecca...........390 (Panel 1)
Kehrberg, Jason .....................247 (37-19)
Keidel, Anne Gordon ...........305 (Panel 1)
Keiser, Lael R......................... 326 (24-11)
Kelanic, Rosemary ............................. 258
Kelemen, R. Daniel ..................327 (26-7)
Kellam, Marisa ................................... 357
Keller, Ann C. ...........................313 (24-5)
Keller, Catherine.......................373 (2-16)
Keller, William W. ...................349 (16-19)
Kelley, John Robert .............381 (Panel 3)
Kellough, J. Edward ......... 277 (24-2), 387
(24-3)
Kelly, Andrew P. ...... 248 (37-24), 279 (3716)
Kelly, Christine A. .....................301 (42-9)
Kelly, Duncan .............................372 (1-2)
Kelly, Gary M...................................... 270
Kelly, John E. .........................368 (36-19)
Kelly, Laura R..................................... 270
Kelly, Nathan ............288 (22-4), 296 (8-5)
Kemmerling, Achim ................312 (14-15)
Kendall-Taylor, Andrea Herschman .....275
(16-21)
Kendhammer, Brandon ....................... 302
Kendrigan, Mary Lou ..............388 (31-20)
Keng, Shu ...........................345 (Panel 3)
Kennedy, Brian T. ........ 271 (Panel 3), 331
(Panel 4)
Kennedy, John James .... 286 (13-14), 371
(Panel 4)
Kennedy, Ryan ................................... 303
Kennedy, Sheila Suess.............267 (24-7)
Kenny, Lawrence ......................252 (8-12)
Kent, C. Todd .........................313 (20-15)
Keohane, Nannerl O............... 253 (11-51)
Keohane, Robert O. ......... 295 (3-23), 364
(18-4)
Kernell, Samuel ........................263 (7-14)
Kerner, Andrew ........................325 (17-9)
Kerner, Ina ...............................314 (31-9)
Kerr, Nicholas......................... 392 (11-11)
Kersch, Ken I. ........246 (27-7), 310 (7-17)
Kersh, Rogan ...........................247 (32-9)
Kertzer, Joshua ..........................309 (5-5)
Kerwer, Dieter .... 297 (17-10), 298 (17-10)
Kesgin, Baris ........337 (10-7), 393 (20-10)
Kesler, Charles R. ....... 331 (Panel 4), 395
(Panel 9)
Kessel, Alisa ............................242 (2-39)
Kessler, Sanford .......................250 (2-37)
Khan, Waheed A. ...................313 (20-15)
Khmelko, Irina .... 324 (13-10), 364 (15-11)
Khory, Kavita R. .....................285 (12-22)
Kibbe, Jennifer ....................381 (Panel 1)
Kidd, Quentin ...........................337 (10-7)
Kienker, John B. .......... 280 (Panel 5), 331
(Panel 4)
Kier, Elizabeth ........................301 (43-10)
Kiersey, Nicholas J. .....262 (2-26), 283 (234)
Kifer, Martin..............................380 (40-3)
Kilcup, Rodney ....................358 (Panel 5)
Kilgour, Marc ......................336 (4-8), 355
Kilinc, Ramazan ............... 289 (33-6), 318
Kim, Dongryul..... 274 (12-17), 376 (16-15)
Kim, G. Jiyun .........................313 (20-15)
Kim, Hee-Kang................................... 318
Kim, Henry A........245 (22-1), 326 (22-13)
Kim, Inhan..............................316 (43-17)
Kim, Ji-Young ......................292 (Panel 2)
Kim, Man Kwon ................ 271, 366 (27-8)
Kim, Miduk ...............................352 (31-8)
Kim, Mikyoung.....................259 (Panel 1)
Kim, Moonhawk.... 339 (16-3), 364 (16-11)
Kim, Nuri ....................................309 (5-5)
Kim, So Young .........................301 (39-4)
402
Kim, Soo Yeon .........................339 (16-3)
Kim, Soohee ..........................248 (38-12)
Kim, Sung Chull .....................316 (43-17)
Kim, Sungmoon........................295 (3-23)
Kim, Sunhyuk .........................380 (44-17)
Kim, Tae-Hyung......................387 (20-16)
Kim, Wonik.............................380 (44-17)
Kim, Young Mie ........................354 (40-4)
Kim, Young-hwa (Diana) ..................... 302
Kim, Yu Nam..................... 390 (Panel 12)
Kimball, Anessa L........... 275 (18-17), 313
(21-22)
Kimssy, Bailey ..........................365 (20-4)
Kincaid, John ....... 304 (Panel 1), 378 (2914)
Kinder, Donald R. .... 315 (37-17), 343 (3720)
Kinderman, Daniel Phillip..... 258, 311 (143)
King, Desmond...........243 (7-6), 362 (7-5)
King, Elisabeth .........................312 (18-5)
King, Gary................................323 (8-10)
King, James D........................366 (23-14)
King, Loren A. ..........................322 (3-12)
King, Mae C. ...................................... 308
King, Ronald F....... 263 (7-14), 293 (Panel
1)
Kingston, Paul ........................ 311 (12-31)
Kirkey, Christopher ...................355 (49-5)
Kirkland, Anna R. .....................247 (32-9)
Kirkland, Justin.........................246 (29-6)
Kirkland, Paul E........................336 (2-23)
Kirkpatrick, Andrew...................263 (6-19)
Kirkpatrick, Jennet ....................346 (2-36)
Kirschner, Shanna A........................... 259
Kirshner, Jonathan....................297 (16-8)
Kisby, Ben................................263 (10-6)
Kitchen, Nicholas.................381 (Panel 3)
Kitschelt, Herbert..... 339 (15-18), 363 (1121), 385 (11-4)
Kittilson, Miki Caul ....................289 (35-5)
Klamler, Christian .......................336 (4-8)
Klarner, Carl E........246 (29-6), 299 (29-8)
Klein, David............................394 (26-15)
Kleinberg, Katja B......245 (21-4), 298 (2118)
Kleinerman, Benjamin A. ..........309 (2-42)
Klemp, Nathaniel ......................347 (3-16)
Kline, Reuben.........329 (37-22), 336 (4-8)
Klopp, Jacqueline ...................285 (12-38)
Klosko, George ..........................283 (1-5)
Klotz, Audie.......... 312 (18-19), 376 (16-5)
Klusmeyer, Douglas B. ........249 (Panel 1)
Knight, Jack ...........262 (3-10), 336 (3-27)
Knight, Kathleen ......253 (15-15), 290 (3622)
Knoll, Benjamin R............................... 355
Knopff, Rainer ..........................288 (27-5)
Knowles, Helen J. ....................267 (27-6)
Knutsen, Wenjue Lu .................277 (25-8)
Koch, Jeffrey W. .....................353 (37-18)
Koch, Michael T.......254 (20-14), 287 (2121), 340 (21-20)
Kochin, Michael S............................... 357
Kochtcheeva, Lada V........ 329 (39-7), 353
(39-8), 378 (25-12)
Kodolov, Oleg.........309 (6-18), 336 (6-14)
Koehler, Kevin ........................330 (46-14)
Koesel, Karrie J......................287 (18-20)
Kofman, Daniel.........................273 (3-31)
Koger, Gregory.....288 (22-4), 368 (35-13)
Koh, Geun...........................259 (Panel 1)
Kohler, Jillian Clare...................330 (48-4)
Kohli, Atul............. 324 (12-36), 362 (6-24)
Kohn, Margaret ......322 (3-12), 383 (2-15)
Kohno, Masaru....................... 311 (11-31)
Kokaz, Nancy ...........................373 (1-15)
Kolers, Avery............................391 (3-25)
Kolev, Kiril ................................ 385 (11-4)
Kollman, Kenneth W. ................286 (14-7)
Kolodny, Robin A.................... 353 (38-11)
Kompridis, Nikolas....................242 (2-21)
Konisky, David..... 367 (34-12), 371 (Panel
1)
Kopko, Kyle Casimir ...........................356
Kopstein, Jeffrey.....274 (13-2), 339 (15-6)
Koremenos, Barbara...............254 (17-17)
Korkut, Umut .......................... 311 (13-13)
Kornprobst, Markus ............................ 258
Korteweg, Anna......................265 (15-17)
Koski, Chris............................327 (29-13)
Koslowski, Rey.....244 (18-6), 297 (14-13)
Kostadinova, Petia A. ....... 286 (13-5), 364
(15-11), 389 (38-14)
Koter, Dominika...................371 (Panel 3)
Kotsovilis, Spyridon ..................310 (8-14)
Kotzev, Ivailo M .................................. 302
Koubi, Vally ............................254 (21-23)
Kousser, Thad ........................ 290 (36-11)
Koutalakis, Charalambos ........265 (16-22)
Kovenock, Dan...........................347 (4-6)
Kowalski, Maria G. ...................373 (1-15)
Kraft, Michael E...... 261, 267 (25-16), 366
(25-14)
Krane, Dale A...........................245 (24-9)
Krasner, Stephen D. ....... 254 (17-17), 321
(Panel 2), 364 (18-4)
Kraus, Neil J. ...........................255 (30-7)
Krause, George A..................... 263 (8-11)
Krause, Sharon R.....283 (2-10), 372 (1-2)
Krauss, Ellis S........................ 253 (11-51)
Kraynak, Robert P. ...................269 (41-6)
Krebs, Ronald R.....................301 (43-10)
Krebs, Timothy B......................246 (30-6)
Kreide, Regina ...................271, 373 (1-8)
Kreppel, Amie..... 324 (13-10), 364 (15-11)
Kreps, Sarah E........ 254 (21-13), 287 (1820)
Kreuzer, Marcus .......................268 (34-3)
Kricheli, Ruth..........297 (12-25), 322 (4-5)
Kriner, Douglas L......................377 (23-5)
Krishna, Anirudh...... 243 (12-21), 244 (1221)
Kroenig, Matthew ......276 (20-7), 298 (1816), 340 (19-10)
Kroh, Martin .........279 (36-24), 315 (38-5)
Krolikowski, Alanna ..................248 (39-5)
Krook, Mona Lena .....256 (34-6), 367 (3117)
Krosnick, Jon A. ........295 (8-5), 309 (5-5),
329 (37-22), 379 (36-33)
Krotz, Ulrich ....................................... 356
Krueger, Brian S.....................268 (38-13)
Krueger, Robert......................343 (37-12)
Kruks, Sonia...........................267 (31-12)
Krupnikov, Yanna..... 247 (36-18), 270 (475)
Kryder, Daniel...........................385 (7-16)
Kselman, Daniel Max................ 385 (11-4)
Kubicek, Brett V........................244 (18-6)
Kubik, Jan ............261 (46-25), 301 (46-4)
Kubota, Yuichi ........................ 392 (11-20)
Kucik, Jeffrey Robert ................325 (17-9)
Kuehn, David ...........................395 (46-6)
Kugler, Jacek .........................254 (21-23)
Kugler, Tadeusz....... 254 (21-23), 349 (1619)
Kuhn, Patrick Michael .............350 (21-17)
Kuhonta, Erik M....... 285 (12-38), 311 (1218)
Kukathas, Chandran ....250 (3-19), 283 (117), 308 (1-13)
Kulkarni, Anupma L. ............... 243 (11-49)
Kumagai, Naoko.....................393 (17-15)
Kumar, Martha Joynt ................255 (23-4)
Kume, Ikuo............................. 364 (16-11)
Kumlin, Staffan .......................368 (36-19)
Kung, Wen-Hsiang .................351 (25-13)
Kuo, Alexander..... 296 (11-32), 374 (11-9)
Kuppers, Amanda.....................316 (45-5)
Kurizaki, Shuhei .....365 (20-4), 377 (20-5)
Kurowska, Xymena..............293 (Panel 3)
Kurtoglu Eskisar, Gul M. ......... 363 (11-21)
Kurtz, Marcus J. .......................325 (17-9)
Kuru, Ahmet T. ... 269 (44-21), 310 (11-27)
Kushida, Kenji .....................345 (Panel 3)
Kuzio, Taras ........................390 (Panel 1)
Kuzma, Jennifer .......................248 (39-5)
Kvalvik, Kevin E. ................................ 319
Kwak, Jun-Hyeok .......................309 (3-5)
Kwatra, Neil.........................281 (Panel 2)
Kwon, Hyeok Yong .................279 (36-24)
Kydd, Andrew.........325 (18-9), 350 (19-8)
Kymlicka, Will ......................... 274 (14-11)
L
Lépinard, Eléonore ..............320 (Panel 1)
López-Varas, Miguel Ángel ...... 293 (Panel
3)
Löwenheim, Nava............................... 356
La Porte, Todd R. .....................313 (24-5)
La Raja, Raymond J......... 300 (35-8), 367
(29-10)
Lachapelle, Erick ....................267 (25-16)
Lackey, Gerald F. .....................268 (32-2)
Lacy, Dean P. ...... 255 (26-6), 279 (36-24),
309 (5-5)
Ladd, Jonathan McDonald ......379 (37-21)
Laden, Anthony Simon ...............346 (1-1)
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Ladewig, Jeffrey W. ................315 (35-16)
LaFay, Marilyn..........................361 (2-24)
Lafer, Gordon ......................281 (Panel 2)
Lafont, Cristina .........283 (3-6), 295 (3-13)
Lagaron, Ashley ................................. 357
Lagunes, Paul ........................ 252 (11-40)
Lahiri, Simanti ........................330 (44-15)
Lahman, Mary ............................252 (9-1)
Lai, Brian..............266 (21-5), 350 (21-17)
Laitin, David D.......................... 324 (11-8)
Lake, David A.......298 (18-16), 364 (18-4)
Laks, Jennifer Ann.............................. 303
Laliberte, Andre ... 296 (11-41), 371 (Panel
4)
Lam, Julia Y. ...................................... 357
Lam, Kenneth Cheak Kwan ......277 (25-8)
Lamarche, Carlos ................... 348 (11-34)
Lamb, Charles M......................267 (27-6)
Lamba, Rinku ...........................283 (1-17)
Lambach, Daniel ................................ 304
Lambacher, Jason ...............345 (Panel 2)
Lambert, Priscilla A. ................. 310 (11-2)
Lambert, Robert A. ...................395 (46-8)
Lamothe, Meeyoung .................298 (24-8)
Lamothe, Scott .......298 (24-8), 387 (24-3)
Lancaster, Thomas D. ............ 264 (11-50)
Landau, David ..........................246 (27-7)
Landauer, Matthew ............................. 270
Landemore, Helene E.................336 (3-9)
Landman, Todd ........................316 (45-5)
Landry, Pierre F. .......... 358 (Panel 2), 392
(13-12)
Lane, Jr., Joseph H. ............304 (Panel 1)
Lane, Melissa ...........294 (1-12), 372 (1-2)
Lang, Daniel G. ...................260 (Panel 7)
Langbein, Laura I. ..................351 (24-10)
Lange, Matthew......................324 (12-36)
Langenbacher, Eric.................389 (44-12)
Langfield, Danielle .............................. 303
Langston, Donna C. .................300 (32-1)
Langston, Joy.............................374 (8-2)
Lanoue, David J. ....................389 (36-12)
Lapinski, John ............................284 (7-9)
LaPira, Timothy M. .................368 (35-13)
Laponce, Jean A. ................304 (Panel 2)
Lapuente, Victor .......................377 (24-6)
Laracey, Melvin C......288 (23-7), 366 (278)
Larsen, Jeffrey A. ...................265 (19-14)
Larsen, Lars Thorup ............395 (Panel 2)
Larson, Deborah Welch ..........365 (19-13)
Lascurettes, Kyle M. ...............269 (43-14)
Lasley, Trace C. .................................258
Lau, Joanne ........................331 (Panel 2)
Lau, Richard R. ....268 (36-25), 301 (38-4)
Lauderdale, Benjamin ............... 263 (8-11)
Laugesen, Miriam J. .... 259 (Panel 1), 330
(48-4)
Laurence, Henry.........................284 (6-8)
Laurence, Jonathan A............. 363 (11-14)
Laurence, Mike.........................323 (10-5)
LaVaque-Manty, Mika ...............336 (2-44)
Lavariega Monforti, Jessica L. ............ 293
(Panel 1)
Lavelle, Kathryn C. .....................284 (6-8)
Lavine, Howard ..........................336 (5-8)
Law, Anna O. ...........................277 (26-4)
Lawler, Peter Augustine.... 305 (Panel 10),
381 (Panel 7)
Lawless, Jennifer L...................266 (22-6)
Lawlor, Andrea .......279 (38-7), 292 (49-7)
Lawrence, Andrew G. ...............253 (14-6)
Lawrence, Frederick G. ..... 381 (Panel 10)
Lawrence, Regina G......... 290 (38-3), 368
(38-16)
Lawrie, Newell, James Lawrie Newell
James..............................271 (Panel 1)
Lawson, Chappell................... 285 (11-24)
Lax, Jeffrey R. ..... 255 (29-11), 288 (26-8),
366 (26-1)
Lay, J. Celeste ...........................296 (8-5)
Layman, Geoffrey C. ........ 278 (33-3), 290
(37-15), 328 (35-9), 367 (33-10)
Layne, Christopher ....276 (19-9), 365 (1913)
Lazar, Nomi Claire......................383 (1-7)
Lazer, David ........ 257 (38-10), 310 (8-14),
380 (40-3), 394 (40-8)
Le, Loan...................................378 (32-7)
Le Foulon, Carmen.................351 (22-12)
Le Veness, Frank P. ............395 (Panel 1)
Leal, David L. .... 247 (37-19), 324 (12-28),
342 (32-3)
Leblang, David .... 253 (16-13), 323 (6-10),
347 (11-5)
Leblond, Patrick..........................347 (6-9)
Lebo, Matthew..........................301 (38-8)
Lebron, Christopher .....373 (2-43), 391 (320)
Lecea, Marisha......................... 310 (11-2)
Lecours, André.........................246 (28-1)
Ledvinka, Christine B..............351 (24-10)
Lee, Byoungha ......................... 310 (11-2)
Lee, Byung-Jae ..........................347 (8-6)
Lee, Choong Hoon ............................. 302
Lee, Christine M. ................................ 357
Lee, Chyungly ..... 326 (18-22), 345 (Panel
3)
Lee, Daniel J. .....................................317
Lee, Feng-yu ..............................385 (8-9)
Lee, Frances E.........284 (7-9), 326 (22-9)
Lee, Han Soo ......................... 326 (23-11)
Lee, Hyobin............................ 375 (11-43)
Lee, In Won ...........................394 (24-12)
Lee, Ji-Young .........................325 (18-22)
Lee, Jongsoo James ... 292 (Panel 2), 316
(43-17)
Lee, Sang Wan ......................316 (43-17)
Lee, Soo-Young........................377 (24-6)
Lee, Su-Hyun ...........................384 (6-23)
Lee, Su-Mi .............................287 (21-12)
Lee, Taeku ...... 268 (35-10), 335 (Panel 1)
Lee, Thea M........................281 (Panel 2)
Lee, Wei-chin ......................280 (Panel 1)
Lee, Yoonkyung.............. 253 (12-27), 381
(Panel 3)
Lee, Youngchae .......................242 (6-13)
Leeb, Claudia ................... 270, 384 (2-29)
Leech, Beth L.........................278 (35-12)
Leege, David C. .......................314 (33-1)
Lees, Charles ......................249 (Panel 1)
Lefkowitz, Joel.................................... 319
Lefler, Vanessa.......................254 (21-13)
Legler, Thomas ...................305 (Panel 1)
Legro, Jeffrey W. ... 291 (46-9), 346 (Panel
1)
Lehoucq, Fabrice....... 268 (34-3), 324 (1116)
Leibowitz, David ..................321 (Panel 2)
Leibowitz, Lisa.....................281 (Panel 1)
Leighley, Jan E.......................247 (36-18)
Leininger, Julia .........................388 (33-5)
Lelkes, Yphtach ......................329 (37-22)
Lemke, Douglas .......................340 (21-6)
Lemm, Vanessa Eva Maria .......262 (2-26)
Lenard, Patti Tamara ..................373 (1-8)
Lenz, Gabriel S. .......................251 (8-12)
Leo, Christopher........256 (30-7), 267 (3012)
Leonard, Meghan E. ............... 246 (26-11)
LeQuire, Peter Brickey.........358 (Panel 5)
Lerman, Amy E. ................................. 318
LeRoux, Kelly M. ......................246 (30-6)
Lester, Genevieve ...............381 (Panel 1)
Lettevall, Rebecka .................. 311 (13-13)
Leu, Guan-Yi ..........................386 (16-20)
Leuffen, Dirk...........................291 (46-16)
LeVan, Carl ..... 304 (Panel 2), 338 (12-40)
LeVeck, Brad.................. 275 (18-17), 317
Levendusky, Matthew S. ........ 298 (21-18),
389 (36-12)
Leventoglu, Bahar ..................276 (21-19)
Levi, Margaret ...... 252 (11-10), 324 (11-8)
Levin, Ines ......................................... 356
Levin, Jamie...........................275 (18-21)
Levin, Kelly ............................393 (17-15)
Levine, Adam Seth ...................270 (47-5)
Levine, Alan .............................354 (41-7)
Levine, Daniel J......................369 (46-21)
Levine, Meredith A. .................... 318, 370
Levine, Renan ......... 339 (14-14), 379 (3621), 384 (5-3)
Levinson, Nanette S. ................368 (40-5)
Levinson, Sanford ............ 273 (3-29), 292
(Panel 1), 383 (1-7)
Levitan, Lindsey C......................373 (5-6)
Levitt, Justin ...........................353 (37-18)
Levy, Gal.............................319 (Panel 1)
Levy, Jack S......... 298 (21-8), 369 (43-11)
Levy, Jacob T. ..........................283 (1-17)
Lewis, Andrew R. ............................... 356
Lewis, Angela K. .................345 (Panel 1)
Lewis, Daniel C. ... 255 (29-11), 270 (47-5)
Lewis, David E. ........................298 (24-8)
Lewis, Gregory B..... 351 (24-10), 390 (476)
Lewis, J.P. .......................................... 303
Lewis-Beck, Michael S........... 256 (36-31),
317 (49-4)
Li, Lianjiang.............................. 243 (11-1)
Liang, Julie...............................369 (47-3)
Liang, Wei ................................353 (39-8)
Liao, Da-Chi ........................345 (Panel 3)
Liaras, Evangelos................... 285 (11-36)
Liberman, Peter John ...............245 (20-9)
Licht, Amanda A.....365 (20-12), 385 (8-9)
Lichter, S. Robert ...................378 (25-12)
Liddle, R. William ...................364 (12-26)
Lieber, Keir A. ......276 (20-7), 330 (43-13)
Lieber, Robert J........................298 (20-6)
Lieberman, Evan S. ..................344 (46-5)
Lieberman, Robert C. ....242 (7-6), 362 (75)
Liebert, Jonah ........................ 255 (29-11)
Liebowitz, Debra J..................256 (31-10)
Lien, Pei-te........299 (31-4), 345 (Panel 3)
Lienesch, Michael.....................262 (3-21)
Liesen, Laurette T................390 (Panel 1)
Lieske, Joel A...... 246 (30-6), 328 (36-16),
356
Light, Matthew A. .....................339 (13-9)
Lightfoot, Sheryl R...............320 (Panel 1)
Lilja, Jannie ............................ 348 (11-17)
Lim, Claire..................................310 (8-4)
Lim, Elvin T. ...........351 (23-2), 384 (3-28)
Lim, Eunjung .......................... 243 (11-33)
Lim, Jamus Jerome ............................ 370
Lim, Kevin ................................251 (8-12)
Lima, Marcelo Jorge Figueiredo.......... 293
(Panel 3)
Lin, Tse-min................................385 (8-9)
Lin, Ying.................................274 (12-17)
Lindberg, Staffan I. ......... 303, 317 (46-17)
Lindley, Dan ...........................248 (43-15)
Lindrum, David ................................... 319
Lindsay, Brennan Tyler .............388 (26-5)
Lindsay, Peter ..........................391 (3-20)
Lindvall, Johannes..... 311 (14-3), 349 (158), 375 (14-12)
Linos, Katerina ....................... 348 (11-34)
Linzer, Drew ...........................329 (37-23)
Lipscomb, Michael....................316 (42-6)
Lipscy, Phillip Y............... 325 (18-22), 345
(Panel 3)
Lipsitz, Keena......................... 353 (38-11)
Lipsmeyer, Christine S..............339 (13-9)
Lipson, Daniel N................................. 318
Lipson, Michael L. ..................325 (17-13)
Lister, Andrew D.....273 (2-35), 335 (1-10)
Littvay, Levente ......................343 (37-12)
Liu, Amy H. ..............................263 (6-19)
Liu, Baodong Paul .............................. 319
Liu, Guoli.............................260 (Panel 1)
Liu, I-Chou ..........................320 (Panel 2)
Liu, Mingxing ............................ 243 (11-1)
Liu, Peng ............................320 (Panel 2)
Liu, Xinsheng .........................286 (13-14)
Liviatan, Ofrit ............................267 (27-9)
Livingston, Alex ........................242 (2-21)
Livne, Yair ..................................322 (4-5)
Llorens, Jared ......276 (24-2), 351 (24-10)
Lluch, Jaime Gerardo ...............246 (28-1)
Loaeza, Soledad ....................269 (43-14)
Lobell, Steven E. .................... 369 (43-11)
Locke, Jill L. .............................383 (2-15)
Lodge, Milton ...........................295 (5-10)
Loewen, Peter John ............... 290 (36-11)
Logan, Justin.......................390 (Panel 1)
Lohmann, Susanne .............390 (Panel 1)
Loizides, Neophytos ....... 252 (11-22), 285
(11-36)
Lomazoff, Eric ..........................323 (7-18)
Lombardo, Emanuela ...............314 (31-9)
Lomperis, Timothy J. ......... 390 (Panel 12)
Long, Andrew G. .......245 (21-4), 313 (2122)
Long, James D. ......................243 (12-21)
Long, William J.........................330 (48-4)
Lopez, Summer ..................................258
Lopreite, Debora.....................342 (31-13)
Lorber, Eric B. ........................287 (20-13)
Lorentzen, Peter L......................322 (4-5)
Lou, Diqing......................................... 304
Loury, Glenn C. ..................................307
Love, Nancy S............................250 (2-7)
Loveless, Matthew....................286 (13-5)
Low, Claire .............................343 (38-15)
Lowenstein, Daniel H........ 288 (27-5), 367
(34-12), 371 (Panel 1)
Lowery, David...........................246 (29-6)
Lowi, Theodore J.................293 (Panel 3)
Lowndes, Joseph E. ............293 (Panel 3)
Lowry, Robert C. ...... 319, 341 (29-9), 374
(6-15)
Lowry, William R.....................351 (25-13)
Lu, Catherine .............................309 (3-5)
Lu, Christopher.........................255 (23-4)
Lu, Xiaobo............ 251 (6-11), 392 (13-12)
Lubell, Mark N......... 267 (25-10), 366 (2514)
Lubkemann, Stephen C. ......... 392 (11-20)
Lublin, David I. .........................379 (34-4)
Ludwig, Mark D. .....................394 (36-17)
Ludwig, Paul W. ..................321 (Panel 2)
Luecke, Tim ........................... 326 (20-11)
Luetz, Susanne ......................265 (16-22)
Luke, Timothy W............... 255 (25-7), 280
(Panel 1), 322 (2-19), 346 (2-40)
Luna, Juan Pablo ...................297 (12-32)
Lupia, Arthur .... 242 (5-2), 270 (47-5), 379
(36-33)
Lupu, Noam ...........................386 (12-44)
Lupu, Yonatan ........................378 (26-10)
Luskin, Robert C. .......309 (5-5), 373 (5-6)
Lust, Aleksander................................. 303
Lustick, Ian S. ..... 252 (11-22), 286 (14-7),
355 (46-15)
Lutmar, Carmela..................... 291 (45-11)
Lyall, Jason ..... 292 (Panel 1), 375 (12-23)
Lyle, Monique L. .......................268 (32-2)
Lynch, Marc .... 273 (11-15), 361 (Panel 3)
Lynch, Meghan K. ....................316 (45-5)
Lynch, Orla...............................395 (46-8)
M
Ma, Bo ............................................... 303
Maas, Willem ................. 274 (15-13), 303
Macdonald, Bradley J. ...... 322 (2-19), 369
(42-8)
Macdonald, Douglas ........................... 318
MacDonald, Fiona ....................262 (3-21)
MacDonald, Jason A. ....... 298 (22-8), 317
MacDonald, Paul K...................279 (43-7)
Macdonald, Stuart Elaine........315 (36-10)
Macedo, Stephen ........251 (3-19), 336 (327)
MacGilvray, Eric .......262 (3-10), 373 (3-7)
Maciel, Robert ..........................278 (32-4)
MacKay, Joseph .....................275 (18-21)
MacKenzie, Megan H. ........................ 303
MacKenzie, Scott A. ......... 263 (7-14), 342
(30-16)
Mackie, Gerry.........250 (3-18), 272 (2-35)
Macklin, Audrey...................372 (Panel 1)
Mackow, Jerzy..........................264 (13-3)
MacLean, Lee ..........................314 (31-9)
Macleod, Colin ....................331 (Panel 2)
MacLeod, Michael R........................... 258
Macleod-Cullinane, Barry.................... 318
MacMullen, Ian R. ....................295 (3-14)
Madonna, Anthony ...................254 (22-2)
Madrid, Raul L........................ 310 (11-26)
Mady, Abdel-Fattah ............................ 303
Maeshima, Kazuhiro .................279 (38-7)
Maestas, Cherie ............... 317, 362 (5-12)
Magalhaes, Pedro C...........296 (8-5), 367
(34-2)
Magaloni, Beatriz....................297 (12-25)
Magar, Eric.................................374 (8-2)
Magen, Amichai A. ...................350 (17-5)
Maggio, J. ................250 (2-7), 283 (2-34)
Magnusson, Bruce A. ..........304 (Panel 2)
Magnusson, Rachel ..................323 (10-5)
Mahajan, Gurpreet....................295 (3-24)
Mahler, Julianne .......................279 (40-7)
Mahon, Jr., James E....... 274 (12-17), 309
(6-18), 375 (12-34)
Mahoney, Christine.................327 (25-15)
Mahoney, Daniel J.....269 (41-6), 291 (413), 371 (Panel 15)
Mahoney, James ..... 324 (12-36), 354 (439)
Mahoney-Norris, Kathleen A. ......284 (9-3)
Maier, Sylvia.............................350 (18-8)
Main, Jeremy W. ................................ 318
Mainwaring, Scott.... 354 (44-18), 385 (1118)
Maione, Angela .................................. 270
Maioni, Antonia ........................291 (48-2)
Majeski, Stephen J. ........ 261, 269 (43-14)
Makse, Todd....................................... 356
Malachuk, Daniel S. .................354 (41-7)
Malatesta, Deanna ...................267 (24-7)
Malbin, Michael J. ....... 260 (Panel 1), 366
(29-10)
Malecki, Michael.......................327 (26-7)
Malesky, Edmund J. ....... 258, 337 (11-12)
Malet, David ...........................354 (43-16)
Malhotra, Neil ....... 295 (5-10), 389 (36-12)
Malka, Ariel ................................295 (8-5)
Malloy, Jonathan ......................355 (49-5)
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Maloyed, Christie L............................. 370
Maltzman, Forrest ....................288 (26-8)
Mampilly, Zachariah Cherian........ 363 (1130)
Mandelbaum, Moran Moshe ...............259
Mandelkern, Ronen .................. 311 (14-3)
Manger, Mark S........................339 (16-3)
Mani, Kristina ......................... 252 (11-37)
Manion, Melanie Frances.... 358 (Panel 2),
392 (13-12)
Manjikian, Mary B................331 (Panel 3)
Mann, Christopher B.................299 (29-8)
Mann, Hollie Sue..... 289 (31-18), 378 (315)
Mann, Thomas E......................326 (22-9)
Manning, Carrie......................354 (44-20)
Manrique, Cecilia G. ......... 257 (40-6), 368
(40-5)
Manrique, Gabriel G. ................368 (40-5)
Mansbridge, Jane........... 278 (31-16), 292
(Panel 1)
Mansfield, Edward D. ..... 287 (17-18), 312
(18-5)
Mansfield, Harvey C. ......... 371 (Panel 15)
Mantilla, Luis F. ........................289 (33-6)
Mantzavinos, Chris .................344 (46-18)
Manzano, Sylvia .......................256 (32-8)
Mapel, David R...........................361 (3-8)
Mapps, Mingus.......................278 (36-15)
Mara, Gerald ............................336 (2-38)
Maranto, Robert .......................266 (23-9)
Marasco, Robyn .......................294 (2-17)
March, Andrew F. ... 242 (3-11), 308 (1-28)
Marcus, Richard R....... 304 (Panel 2), 338
(12-29)
Marcuzzi, Suzanne ...................373 (1-23)
Mardones, Rodrigo ....277 (28-4), 297 (1232)
Mares, Isabela...... 263 (11-3), 296 (11-32)
Margalit, Yotam M.....................253 (14-6)
Marian, Cosmin Gabriel .......293 (Panel 1)
Marini, John ..... 280 (Panel 5), 371 (Panel
15)
Marinov, Nikolay V. .................244 (12-43)
Mariotti, Shannon .....................354 (41-7)
Markell, Patchen.......283 (2-10), 372 (1-2)
Markovits, Elizabeth ...............289 (31-18)
Marlin-Bennett, Renee ...... 255 (25-7), 329
(40-2)
Marlowe, Melanie M. ..............341 (23-13)
Marmor, Theodore R. ...............291 (48-2)
Marquez, Frances ..................366 (23-14)
Marquez, Xavier ................ 320 (Panel 14)
Marres, Noortje S. ....................346 (2-40)
Marrus, Michael R. ...................273 (3-31)
Marshall, Monty G. .................302 (46-23)
Marshall, Nicole........................330 (45-9)
Marshall, Shana R.................. 252 (11-37)
Marshall, Stephen H. ..............352 (31-19)
Marso, Lori..........................294 (Panel 3)
Marsteintredet, Leiv ................354 (44-18)
Martel, James R. ......361 (2-8), 383 (1-24)
Marten, Kimberly ....................376 (18-24)
Martens, Allison M..................277 (27-10)
Marti, Jose Luis ........................295 (3-13)
Martin, Andrew ....................... 246 (26-11)
Martin, Andrew D. ......................374 (8-2)
Martin, Cathie Jo ..... 285 (11-13), 349 (158)
Martin, Janet M. .....277 (31-3), 278 (31-3)
Martin, Michael.......................378 (25-12)
Martin, Shane.......326 (22-13), 379 (34-4)
Martin, Susan F. .....................297 (14-13)
Martin, Susanne ................................. 259
Martin, Thomas M. .................351 (23-12)
Martin Cortes, Irene................286 (15-10)
Martinek, Wendy L. ...314 (26-9), 394 (2615)
Martinez, Michael D........ 247 (36-18), 367
(34-2)
Martinez Herrera, Enric.............246 (28-1)
Martinez-Ebers, Valerie J. ........ 293 (Panel
1), 352 (31-19)
Martinez-Gallardo, Cecilia......... 263 (11-3)
Martorano, Nancy......246 (29-6), 326 (2213)
Marwah, Inder Singh ................294 (1-25)
Masket, Seth E......342 (35-6), 343 (35-6),
368 (35-13)
Mason, T. David .....................313 (21-16)
Mastanduno, Michael................297 (16-8)
Masters, Marick ........................387 (24-3)
Masters, Roger D. ...............249 (Panel 1)
Masuoka, Natalie.................335 (Panel 1)
Mate, Manoj .............................366 (27-8)
Mathen, Carissima.............................. 360
403
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Index of Participants
Mathie, Mary ............................330 (41-5)
Mathiowetz, Dean.....................383 (1-24)
Matichescu, Marius Lupsa ....... 293 (Panel
1)
Matland, Richard E. ................290 (36-22)
Matsubayashi, Tetsuya ...........247 (36-18)
Matsuzaki, Reo ..................................302
Mattes, Michaela ..... 275 (18-17), 313 (2122)
Mattes, Robert Britt ................351 (22-12)
Matthes, Melissa Marie.............294 (2-17)
Matthew, Richard A. ...............265 (18-14)
Matthews, Emily Olivia........................ 356
Matthews, Katey..................344 (Panel 3)
Matthews, Scott..........................336 (5-8)
Mattli, Walter ..........................376 (17-16)
Mattox, Gale A. ......................265 (19-14)
Mauro, Robert M. ............................... 356
Maveety, Nancy........................267 (27-6)
Mayda, Anna Maria ................247 (37-19)
Mayer, Alex ..............................364 (14-5)
Mayer, Frederick W. .................275 (16-4)
Mayer, Kenneth R.....................367 (34-2)
Mayer, Nonna....... 280 (Panel 2), 329 (3632)
Mayer, William G. ......300 (35-8), 365 (236)
Mayers, David A..................260 (Panel 7)
Mayka, Lindsay Rose ......................... 259
Mazor, Joseph.................................... 271
Mazur, Amy G. ............... 302 (46-23), 318
Mazzucelli, Colette Grace .........349 (15-7)
McAllister, Ian.........257 (40-6), 289 (35-5)
McArthur, Denese......269 (45-8), 291 (4511)
McBride, Keally DeAnne ..........322 (3-12),
341 (27-11)
McCaffrey, Sara Jane ............. 375 (11-43)
McCann, James A. ......... 324 (12-28), 343
(38-15)
McCarney, Patricia .................296 (12-20)
McCarty, Nolan...........................251 (4-1)
McCauley, John F. ...............371 (Panel 3)
McClain, Linda C.................... 328 (31-11)
McClain, Paula D. ............ 268 (32-2), 308
(Panel 1)
McClerking, Harwood K. ...........342 (32-3)
McClintock, Cynthia..................328 (34-5)
McClure, Kirstie M. ......250 (1-22), 346 (213)
McClurg, Scott D. .... 268 (36-25), 368 (3629)
McCluskey, Michael ..................354 (40-4)
McCormick, Barrett..............371 (Panel 4)
McCormick, John P...................294 (2-17)
McCumbers, Rebecca Jean......346 (1-20)
McCurley, Carl.......................... 309 (5-11)
McDermott, Rose ......321 (T-19), 343 (3712), 375 (11-44)
McDonagh, Eileen .....268 (31-12), 337 (712)
McDonald, Bryan..... 265 (18-14), 350 (1823)
McDonald, Ian ..........................246 (30-6)
McDonald, Michael D. .... 315 (36-34), 353
(35-14)
McDonald, Michael P. ..... 247 (36-18), 329
(36-32)
McDowell, Bruce D..............304 (Panel 1)
McElwain, Kenneth Mori ...........365 (22-3)
McGahan, Kevin.....................312 (18-19)
McGann, Anthony J. ......... 298 (22-8), 328
(34-5)
McGhee, Eric .........................353 (36-28)
McGlinchey, Eric.......................354 (40-4)
McGovern, Clare Joanna ....304 (Panel 2),
317, 318
McGrath, Conor......................327 (25-15)
McGrath, Erin C. ......................253 (14-6)
McGraw, Bryan T.........247 (33-8), 284 (322), 342 (33-2)
McGraw, Kathleen ......................309 (5-5)
McGregor, Rob Roy....................263 (6-7)
McGuire, James W. ................ 311 (12-18)
McGuire, Kevin T. ......387 (26-5), 388 (265)
McGuire, Steven Francis .....371 (Panel 9)
McIlwain, Charlton D ..............343 (38-15)
McKay, Amy Melissa .............. 367 (35-11)
McKean, Benjamin ....346 (2-36), 389 (414)
McKee, Seth C. ....247 (36-18), 352 (35-7)
McKenna, Laura .......................354 (40-4)
McKie, Kristin A.......................... 259, 303
McKinlay, Patrick F. ..................322 (2-28)
McLaren, Lauren M. .................301 (38-8)
404
McLauchlin, Theodore D........ 287 (21-12),
326 (21-11)
McLaughlin, Jr., Joseph Paul ....366 (28-3)
McLean, Elena V. ............................... 259
McLendon, Michael L. ..............262 (1-21)
McMahon, Kevin J.....351 (23-2), 387 (238)
McMann, Kelly M..... 310 (11-27), 363 (1121)
McMichael, Taylor...................343 (36-26)
McNamara, Carol L. .................330 (41-5)
McNamara, Kathleen R. ... 291 (46-9), 324
(14-9), 361 (Panel 3)
McNamara, Peter ................381 (Panel 7)
McNulty, John E. .......256 (36-20), 323 (813)
McPartland, Thomas J........249 (Panel 4),
390 (Panel 12)
McQueeney, Kevin G.................. 318, 370
McThomas, Mary......................384 (3-17)
McWilliams, Susan Jane..........250 (2-37),
283 (2-34)
Mealy, Kimberly A.....................329 (40-2)
Mearsheimer, John J. .........272 (Panel 1),
340 (20-8)
Mebane, Jr., Walter R...............251 (8-12)
Mecham, Quinn ........................388 (33-5)
Meckstroth, Christopher...................... 270
Medeiros, Jillian......................247 (37-19)
Medler, Alex Leland ................ 249 (46-11)
Medvic, Stephen K. ................289 (35-15)
Meffert, Michael F. ..............................355
Meguid, Bonnie M. ...................246 (28-1)
Mehta, Uday........................... 341 (27-11)
Meier, Kenneth J. ......245 (24-9), 366 (259)
Meier, Patrick .........................316 (44-14)
Meier, Petra............314 (31-9), 379 (34-4)
Meirowitz, Adam H. ....273 (4-7), 347 (4-6)
Meisels, Tamar .........................391 (3-25)
Mejia, Carlos A.........................255 (26-6)
Melendez, Carlos ............................... 259
Melin, Molly M. .......................287 (21-12)
Melnick, R. Shep .............. 309 (7-17), 358
(Panel
Melton, James Douglas................... 370
Mena Aleman, David ...........305 (Panel 1)
Mena-Mora, Amalia ............................ 356
Menaldo, Mark .......................354 (43-16)
Menchik, Jeremy ..... 317 (46-17), 344 (4618)
Mendelberg, Tali .........................373 (5-6)
Mendeloff, David ....................380 (43-12)
Mendelsohn, Barak............................. 258
Meng, Chih-Cheng Almond................. 357
Mercer, Jonathan......................321 (T-19)
Meredith, Marc ................. 299 (29-8), 357
Mergel, Ines A..........................329 (40-2)
Merkel, Wolfgang .... 302 (46-23), 388 (335)
Mermat, Djamel ......................257 (46-19)
Merolla, Jennifer L.....278 (36-15), 295 (510)
Mershon, Carol A. ....................365 (22-3)
Mertha, Andrew ........................ 243 (11-1)
Mertus, Julie...........................369 (45-10)
Meseguer, Covadonga...... 323 (6-10), 374
(8-2)
Meserve, Stephen August................... 370
Messing, Solomon .............................. 371
Mettler, Suzanne .... 295 (7-11), 347 (7-10)
Metz, Tamara ...........................242 (3-30)
Metzer, Omri .......................... 285 (11-13)
Meuleman, Bart ..........................337 (8-8)
Meunier, Sophie .....................339 (14-14)
Mewes, Horst ......................331 (Panel 6)
Meyer, David J. ........... 303, 331 (Panel 3)
Meyer, John M. ........................283 (2-25)
Meyers, Peter A. ......................273 (3-29)
Mezey, Michael L..... 350 (22-12), 351 (2212)
Mezey, Susan Gluck......... 288 (27-5), 330
(47-4)
Michaelowa, Katharina............392 (12-16)
Michalak, Katja....293 (Panel 1), 322 (4-5)
Michalowitz, Irina....................327 (25-15)
Michaud, Kristy E.H. .................301 (39-4)
Michelbach, Philip A. ................391 (2-32)
Michener, Robert Gregory.... 259, 338 (1145), 389 (38-14)
Middlemass, Keesha M. ...........388 (29-5)
Middleton, Joel A..... 252 (11-40), 301 (384)
Midlarsky, Manus I.....291 (43-8), 316 (435)
Mikanagi, Yumiko ..................... 310 (11-2)
Milazzo, Caitlin .......................353 (35-14)
Mildenberger, Matto ............................ 258
Miler, Kristina ....... 266 (22-6), 367 (35-11)
Miles, E. Walter ...................372 (Panel 2)
Miles, Tom.......................................... 319
Miljanic, Andra Olivia .......................... 304
Milkis, Sidney M. ......................337 (7-12)
Miller, Benjamin....... 312 (19-11), 365 (1913)
Miller, Char Roone....................361 (2-30)
Miller, Colleen E. ............ 326 (20-11), 370
Miller, Edward A. ....369 (48-3), 394 (29-7)
Miller, Gregory D. ................... 338 (11-38)
Miller, Joanne ................. 268 (36-35), 355
Miller, Kenneth P. .....................288 (27-5)
Miller, Lisa L.............................388 (29-5)
Miller, Michael G.....................300 (36-13)
Miller, Michael K. ........................322 (4-5)
Miller, Raluca Viman............293 (Panel 1)
Miller, Susan ..........................379 (35-17)
Miller, William J. ......................... 318, 319
Milligan, Maren.......................317 (46-17)
Mills, Jesse John......................301 (38-4)
Milly, Deborah J........................ 310 (11-2)
Milne, Duane D. .......... 249 (Panel 1), 304
(Panel 1)
Milner, Helen V. ...... 251 (6-11), 273 (11-6)
Milner, Henry............................367 (34-2)
Milward, H. Brinton ...................298 (24-8)
Milyo, Jeffrey ....... 367 (34-12), 372 (Panel
1)
Min, Brian K. ........ 243 (11-19), 301 (39-4)
Min, Tae Eun ............................342 (32-3)
Mink, Joseph C. .......................391 (1-27)
Minkenberg, Michael.................350 (18-8)
Minkov, Svetozar .................321 (Panel 2)
Minozzi, William........................255 (22-2)
Mintrom, Michael ....248 (39-5), 314 (29-2)
Miroff, Bruce......... 253 (11-51), 266 (23-9)
Misawa, Buba......................395 (Panel 1)
Mishler, William ....... 257 (44-22), 368 (3714)
Misra, Shefali ...........................283 (1-17)
Mitchell, Charles L.......252 (9-1), 279 (407), 316 (42-6), 369 (46-21)
Mitchell, Dona-Gene ................. 309 (5-11)
Mitchell, Gladys ......278 (32-4), 300 (32-1)
Mitchell, James ...................304 (Panel 2)
Mitchell, Karen L. ...................300 (31-15)
Mitchell, Neil J..........................316 (45-5)
Mitchell, Sara McLaughlin......276 (21-19),
377 (21-9)
Mitnick, Barry M. ....245 (24-9), 263 (6-19)
Mitzen, Jennifer ........................325 (18-9)
Mo, Cecilia Hyunjung..............353 (36-14)
Mockabee, Stephen T. ..............314 (33-1)
Moe, Terry M. ......................308 (Panel 1)
Moehler, Devra Coren ............ 374 (11-28)
Moeller, Marie Oestergaard...... 395 (Panel
2)
Moffett-Bateau, Alexandra ........369 (47-3)
Mohan, Paula ......................320 (Panel 1)
Mohanty, Peter .........................272 (1-19)
Mohl, Phillip........................................ 302
Mohmand, Shandana Khan ................ 370
Mohr, Scott......................................... 258
Molas, Josep Monserrat ......345 (Panel 3)
Mondak, Jeffery........................ 309 (5-11)
Money, Jeannette .... 275 (16-10), 348 (115)
Monnoyer-Smith, Laurence .......394 (40-8)
Monroe, Burt L. ......300 (34-8), 341 (22-7)
Monroe, Kristen Renwick .........250 (3-18),
272 (Panel 1), 308 (Panel 1), 372
(Panel 1)
Monroe, Nathan W. ..................255 (22-2)
Monshipouri, Mahmood ............248 (45-7)
Monson, Joseph Quin....... 314 (33-1), 367
(33-10)
Montagnes, Brendan Pablo......... 271, 315
(36-34)
Monteiro, Nuno Peres...............276 (19-9)
Monten, Jonathan J. ......... 276 (19-9), 291
(46-9)
Montero, Alfred P.................... 264 (11-50)
Montinola, Gabriella R. .............377 (24-6)
Montoya, Celeste M.......... 256 (32-8), 272
(Panel 1)
Montoya, Orlando Lopez ..........248 (45-7)
Moon, J. Donald ..................249 (Panel 1)
Moon, M. Jae ...........................288 (24-4)
Moon, Richard........................369 (45-10)
Moore, Gregory J. ...............344 (Panel 1)
Moore, Margaret.......................391 (3-25)
Moore, Matthew......................365 (20-12)
Moore, Matthew J.....................308 (2-12)
KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number)
e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22)
Moore, Pete W. ......................385 (12-33)
Moore, Richard H. ....................248 (39-5)
Moore, Will H. ............................347 (8-6)
Moosbrugger, Lorelei ........ 329 (39-7), 379
(34-4)
Morales, Bernat Torres ........345 (Panel 3)
Moravcsik, Andrew ............................. 303
Morel, Lucas E. ...................292 (Panel 8)
Moreno-Riano, Gerson ........345 (Panel 1)
Morey, Daniel S.........245 (21-4), 267 (2613)
Morgan, Briana R. ....................276 (23-3)
Morgan, Jana .........................386 (12-44)
Morgan, Kimberly J. .................347 (7-10)
Morgenstern, Scott ................. 348 (11-48)
Moriarty, II, Jerome Thomas ...245 (18-25)
Morley, Alicen Rose..................279 (38-7)
Morrell, Michael E.....................242 (2-39)
Morris, Irwin L. .........................266 (23-9)
Morris, Lorenzo ...................372 (Panel 2)
Morris, Martin ...........................283 (2-34)
Morrisey, William ....... 271 (Panel 13), 390
(Panel 6)
Morrison, James Ashley .............347 (6-9)
Morrison, Kevin ...................... 337 (11-12)
Morrisroe, Darby.......................387 (23-8)
Morrow, James D. ....................365 (20-4)
Morrow, Johannes ....... 293 (Panel 3), 320
(Panel 1)
Morton, Rebecca B............................. 355
Moscardelli, Vincent G............366 (29-10)
Moser, Robert G...... 324 (13-10), 378 (315)
Moser, Scott ...............................336 (4-8)
Moses, Michael Valdez .............291 (41-3)
Moskop, Wynne Walker ............322 (2-28)
Mosley, Layna ........284 (6-8), 349 (16-19)
Mossberger, Karen ....315 (38-5), 342 (3016)
Mosser, Michael W. .............292 (Panel 1)
Mostov, Julie .........272 (2-31), 309 (3-15),
346 (2-36)
Moynagh, Patricia........ 294 (Panel 3), 361
(2-24)
Moynihan, Donald P.......... 313 (24-5), 367
(34-2)
Mozaffar, Shaheen ......... 351 (22-12), 375
(11-44)
Mu, Ren .................................286 (13-14)
Mucciar