Kolodny CV 18 July 14
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Curriculum Vitae ROBIN KOLODNY Department of Political Science Temple University Philadelphia, PA 19122 215-204-7709 email: [email protected] EDUCATION Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland Ph.D., 1992 Political Science Master of Arts, 1989, Political Science Doctoral Dissertation: “The Role of Congressional Campaign Committees in Party Development and Leadership Selection in Congress.” April 10, 1992, Advisory Committee: Richard S. Katz (Chair), Robert L. Peabody Florida International University, Miami, Florida Bachelor of Arts, 1985, Political Science ACADEMIC POSITIONS HELD Professor of Political Science, Temple University 2013- Associate Professor of Political Science, Temple University 1999-2013 Visiting Research Fellow, University of Sussex, United Kingdom 2008-09 and Fulbright Distinguished Scholar to the United Kingdom Assistant Professor of Political Science, Temple University 1992-99 Instructor, Temple University 1991-92 AWARDS The J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board 2008-09 Fulbright Scholar, United Kingdom Political Organizations and Parties (POP) Organized Section of the American Political Science Association 1999 Emerging Scholar Award American Political Science Association 2003 Rowman & Littlefield Award for Innovative Teaching in Political Science 1995 Fellow, Congressional Fellowship Program Temple University Kolodny Page 2 2011 The Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching 2010 Summer Research Grant 2008-2009 Study Leave Award (competitive sabbatical program) 2005-06 Mid-Career Fellowship (competitive course release award) 2001-02 Study Leave Award (competitive sabbatical program) 1998 Summer Research Grant 1998 College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Teaching Award 1994 Summer Research Grant 1993 Grant in Aid of Teaching Effectiveness 1992 Grant in Aid of Teaching Effectiveness Everett McKinley Dirksen Congressional Leadership Research Center 1990 Congressional Research Grant (for research on the dissertation project) PUBLICATIONS Book: Pursuing Majorities: Congressional Campaign Committees in American Politics. Congressional Studies Series, Volume 1. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, June 1998, xviii + 299 p. Articles: “The New Normal: Partisan Volatility and the US Midterm Elections of 2010.” Representation 47 (2011), no. 2: 231-239. *Invited submission to peer reviewed journal. “Paving the Road to “Too Big to Fail”: Business Interests and the Politics of Financial Deregulation in the U.S.” Politics and Society, 39 (2011), no. 1: 74-102. With Sandra Suarez. “Educating the Least Informed: Group Endorsements in a Grassroots Campaign.” The American Journal of Political Science, (2009), no. 4: 755-770. With Kevin Arceneaux. “The Effect of Grassroots Campaigning on Issue Preferences and Issue Salience.”Journal of Elections, Public Opinion, and Parties, 19 (2009), no. 3, 235-249. With Kevin Arceneaux. “Finding the Cost of Campaign Advertising.” The Forum, 6 (2008), no. 1, Article 11. Available at: http://www.bepress.com/forum/vol6/iss1/art11. With Michael G. Hagen. “Steady as She Goes: The US Elections of 2004.” Representation, 41 (2005), no. 2: 106-114. *Invited submission to peer reviewed journal. “Political Party Adaptation in Congressional Campaigns: Why Political Parties Use Coordinated Expenditures to Hire Political Consultants.” Party Politics, 9 (2003), no. 6: 729-746. With David A. Dulio. Kolodny Page 3 “The US Mid-term Elections of 2002.” Representation, 39 (2003), no. 4: 277-285. *Invited submission to peer reviewed journal. “Parties and Campaign Professionals in a Digital Age: Political Consultants in the United States and Their Counterparts Overseas.” Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, 6 (2001), no. 4: 11-30. With David M. Farrell and Stephen K. Medvic. “Party Orchestrated Activities for Legislative Party Goals: Campaigns for Majorities in the US House of Representatives in the 1990s.” Party Politics 4 (1998), no. 3: 275-295. With Diana Dwyre. “Political Consultants and the Extension of Party Goals.” PS: Political Science and Politics, 31 (1998), no. 2: 155-159. With Angela Logan. “The Several Elections of 1824.” Congress and the Presidency, 23 (1996), no. 2: 139-164. “The Art and Craft of Interviewing National Political Elites,” PS: Political Science and Politics, 23 (1990), no. 3: 451-455. With Robert L. Peabody, Susan Webb Hammond, Jean Torcom, Lynne P. Brown, and Carolyn R. Thompson. Book Chapters: “Political Party Activity in the 2012 Elections: Sophisticated Orchestration or Diminished Influence? ” Chapter 14 in The State of the Parties, 7th ed. Rowman & Littlefield, forthcoming 2014. With Diana Dwyre. “Party Money in the 2012 Elections,” Chapter 6 in Financing the 2012 Election, David B. Magleby, ed. Brookings Institution Press, forthcoming 2014 [under peer review]. With Diana Dwyre. “The Presidentialization of Party Leadership? Evaluating Party Leadership and Party Government in the Democratic World.” 2012. In Comparative Political Leadership. Ed. Ludger Helms. Hampshire, United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan. Pp. 77-98. With Paul Webb and Thomas Poguntke. “Toomey v. Sestak in Pennsylvania’s Senate Race: Moderation Doesn’t Pay.” 2012. In Cases in Congressional Campaigns: Riding the Wave, Second Edition. Eds. Randall E. Adkins and David A. Dulio. New York: Routledge, pp. 239-258. “Divided in Victory? The Conservatives and the Republicans.” 2011. In The Legacy of the Crash: How the Financial Crisis Changed America and Britain. Ed. Terrence Casey. Hampshire, United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 101-121. With Tim Bale. “Congressional Campaign Finance.” 2011. In The Oxford Handbook of Congress. Eds. Eric Kolodny Page 4 Schickler and Francis Lee. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 215-238. “What Drives the Cost of Political Advertising?” 2008. In The Routledge Handbook of Political Management. Ed. Dennis W. Johnson. New York: Routledge, pp. 194-207. With Michael G. Hagen. “Pennsylvania’s Sixth Congressional District.” 2008. In The Battle for Congress: Iraq, Scandal, and Campaign Finance in the 2006 Election. Eds. David B. Magleby and Kelly D. Patterson. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers, pp. 210-223. With Stephen Medvic. “The 2006 Pennsylvania Senate Race.” 2008. In The Battle for Congress: Iraq, Scandal, and Campaign Finance in the 2006 Election. Eds. David B. Magleby and Kelly D. Patterson, Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers, pp. 195-209. With Kyle Kreider, Stephen Medvic, and Daniel Shea. “United States. Using Power to Prosper: The American Two Party System.” 2007. In When Parties Prosper: The Uses of Electoral Success. Eds. Kay Lawson and Peter Merkl. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, pp.313-327. “Why Context Matters: The Pennsylvania Thirteenth Congressional District Race.” 2007. In Electing Congress: New Rules for an Old Game. Eds. David B. Magleby, J. Quin Monson and Kelly Patterson. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, pp. 97-113.With Justin Gollob and Sandra Suarez. “Committees and Candidates: National Party Finance after BCRA.” 2006. In The State of the Parties, fifth edition. Eds. John C. Green and Daniel Coffey. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, pp. 95-112. With Diana Dwyre, Eric Heberlig, and Bruce Larson. “A New Rule Book: Party Money after BCRA.” 2006. In Financing the 2004 Election. Eds. David B. Magleby, Kelly Patterson and Quin Monson. Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution Press, pp. 183-207. With Diana Dwyre. “The Parties’ Congressional Campaign Committees in 2004.” 2006. In The Election after Reform: Money, Politics, and the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act. Ed. Michael J. Malbin. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, pp. 38-56. With Diana Dwyre. “Professional Staff in Political Parties.” 2006. In Handbook of Party Politics. Eds. Richard S. Katz and William J. Crotty. London: Sage University Press, pp. 337-347. With Paul Webb. “National Political Parties after BCRA.” 2003. In Life After Reform: When the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act Meets Politics. Ed. Michael J. Malbin. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, pp. 83-99. With Diana Dwyre. Kolodny Page 5 “The Committee Shuffle: Major Party Spending in Congressional Elections.” 2003. In The State of the Parties, fourth edition. Eds. John C. Green and Richard Farmer. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, pp. 115-131. With Diana Dwyre. “Case: Incumbency and Issue Advocacy in Pennsylvania’s Thirteenth District.” 2003. In Campaigns and Elections: Issues, Concepts, and Cases. Eds. Robert P. Watson and Colton C. Campbell. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, pp. 57-66. With Sandra L. Suarez. “Political Parties’ Role in Fostering Ethical Campaigns: It’s the System, Stupid!” 2002. In Shades of Grey: Campaign Ethics in American Elections. Eds. Candice J. Nelson, Stephen K. Medvic, and David A. Dulio. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, pp. 110-127. “Throwing out the Rule Book: Party Financing of the 2000 Elections.” 2002. In Financing the 2000 Election. Ed. David B. Magleby. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, pp. 133- 162. With Diana Dwyre. “Electoral Partnerships: Political Consultants and Political Parties.” 2000. In Campaign Warriors: Political Consultants in Elections. Eds. James A. Thurber and Candace J. Nelson. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, pp. 110-132. “Moderate Success: Majority Status and the Changing Nature of Factionalism in the House Republican Party.” 1999. In New Majority or Old Minority? The Impact of the Republicans on Congress. Eds. Colton C. Campbell and Nicol C. Rae. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, pp.153-172. “Moderate Party