Kenneth F. Scheve, Jr. Department of Political Science Stanford

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Kenneth F. Scheve, Jr. Department of Political Science Stanford Kenneth F. Scheve, Jr. Department of Political Science Stanford University 616 Serra Mall Encina Hall West, Room 409 Stanford, CA 94305-6044 Email: [email protected] Web: http://scheve-research.stanford.edu/ Telephone: +1 650 497 9790 Fax: +1 650 723 1808 EDUCATION Ph.D., Political Science, Harvard University, November 2000 B.A. (Highest Honors), Economics, University of Notre Dame, May 1990 PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Stanford University, Stanford, California Professor of Political Science, 2012-current Senior Fellow, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, 2013-current Director of The Europe Center, 2013-2018 Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut Professor of Political Science, 2006-2012 Professor of International & Area Studies, 2007-2012 Co-Director of Leitner Program in International & Comparative Political Economy, 2008-2012 Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Political Science, 2006-2009 Assistant Professor of Political Science, 2001-2004 University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan Associate Professor of Public Policy 2004-2006 Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Palo Alto, California Fellow, 2005-2006 London School of Economics, London, United Kingdom Visiting Research Associate, STICERD, Fall 2004 Bank of England, London, United Kingdom Research Fellow, International Economic Analysis Division, 2000-2001 DeLaSalle Education Center, Kansas City, Missouri Math Teacher, Alta Vista Alternative School, 1992 - 1994 Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc., New York, New York Financial Analyst, Commercial Bank Group, 1990 - 1992 Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri Intern, Economic Research Department, Summer1989 GRANTS & AWARDS 2018 David A. Lake Award for best paper presented at the 2017 International Political Economy Society annual meeting for “The Economic Origins of Authoritarian Values: Evidence from Local Trade Shocks in the United Kingdom” 2017-2018 Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government, and Public Policy, Washington University in St. Louis, Faculty Research Grant, with Michael Bechtel 2015-2018 Swiss Network for International Studies Grant for “Intertemporal Fairness in Global Climate Cooperation,” with Michael Bechtel 2014 Hoagland Award Fund for Innovations in Undergraduate Teaching 2012 Michael Wallerstein Award for best article published in political economy for “The Conscription of Wealth: Mass Warfare and the Demand for Progressive Taxation,” International Organization Vol. 64 (Fall, 2010):529-61. 2011-2013 Swiss Network for International Studies Grant for “Individual Preferences over International Environmental Cooperation,” with Michael Bechtel 2010 Honorable Mention for best paper in Political Economy presented at the 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association for “Envy, Altruism, and International Distribution of Trade Protection.” 2008-2009 Russell Sage Foundation Grant for “The Conscription of Wealth: Mass Warfare and the Demand for Progressive Taxation,” with David Stasavage 2007 Franklin L. Burdette/Pi Sigma Alpha Award for best paper presented at previous APSA Annual Meetings for “Institutions, Partisanship, and Inequality in the Long Run” (co-winners) 2004 Robert O. Keohane Award for best research article published in International Organization by a junior scholar for “Public Inflation Aversion and the Political Economy of Macroeconomic Policymaking” National Science Foundation Grant, “Economic Insecurity and the Globalization of Production,” with Matthew Slaughter, 2002-2005 ISI Emerging Research Front Article, for co-authoring an article cited more often in the fields of Psychiatry and Psychology than any other article, October, 2002 (for Gary King, James Honaker, Anne Joseph, and Kenneth Scheve's “Analyzing Incomplete Political Science Data: An Alternative Algorithm for Multiple Imputation,” American Political Science Review). Yale University Center for the Study of Globalization Faculty Grant, 2002 Yale Center for International and Area Studies Globalization Research Grant, 2002 Yale University Leitner Program in International Political Economy Research Grant, 2002 Toppan Prize for best dissertation on the subject of political science at Harvard University, 2001 Bank of England Post-Doctoral Fellowship, 2000-2001 Mellon Dissertation Completion Fellowship, 1999-2000 MacArthur Fellowship in Transnational Security, 1998-1999 Mellon Dissertation Research Fellowship, 1998 National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship, 1995-1998 Harvard University Richard Neustadt Prize Fellow, 1994-1995 Derek Bok Certificate of Distinction for Excellence in Teaching, 1997 Weber Economics Award (Outstanding Senior in Economics (shared), University of Notre Dame), 1990 Phi Beta Kappa, 1990 PUBLICATIONS Journal Articles 2018. “Inequality and Redistribution Behavior in a Give-or-Take Game” (with Michael Bechtel and Roman Liesch). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2017. “Who Cooperates? Reciprocity and the Causal Effect of Expected Cooperation in Representative Samples” (with Michael Bechtel). Journal of Experimental Political Science 4:206-228. 2017. “Interests, Norms, and Support for the Provision of Global Public Goods: The Case of Climate Cooperation” (with Michael Bechtel and Federica Genovese). British Journal of Political Science. 2017. “The Structure of American Income Tax Policy Preferences” (with Cameron Ballard-Rosa and Lucy Martin). Journal of Politics Vol. 79 No. 1 (January):1-16. 2016. “Self-centered Inequity Aversion and the Mass Politics of Taxation” (with Xiaobo Lu). Comparative Political Studies Vol. 49 No. 14: 1965-1997. 2014. “Technology and the Era of the Mass Army” (with Massimiliano Onorato and David Stasavage). Journal of Economic History Vol. 74 No. 2 (June):449-481. 2013. “Mass support for global climate agreements depends on institutional design” (with Michael Bechtel). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Vol. 110 No. 34: 13763–13768. 2012. “Inequity Aversion and the International Distribution of Trade Protection” (with Xiaobo Lu and Matthew Slaughter). American Journal of Political Science Vol. 56 No. 3 (July):638-655. This paper was originally entitled “Envy, Altruism, and the International Distribution of Trade Protection” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper #15700. 2012. “Democracy, War, and Wealth: Evidence from Two Centuries of Inheritance Taxation” (with David Stasavage). American Political Science Review Vol. 106 No. 1 (February):82-102. 2010. “The Conscription of Wealth: Mass Warfare and the Demand for Progressive Taxation” (with David Stasavage). International Organization Vol. 64 (Fall):529-61. 2010. “Social Identity, Electoral Institutions, and the Number of Candidates” (with Eric Dickson). British Journal of Political Science Vol. 40 No. 2:349-375. 2009. “Institutions, Partisanship, and Inequality in the Long Run” (with David Stasavage). World Politics Vol. 61 No. 2 (April):215-53. 2007. “Estimating the Effect of Elite Communications on Public Opinion Using Instrumental Variables” (with Matthew Gabel). American Journal of Political Science Vol. 51 No. 4 (October):1013-1028. 2007. “Public Finance and Individual Preferences over Globalization Strategies” (with Gordon H. Hanson and Matthew J. Slaughter). Economics and Politics Vol. 19 No. 1 (March):1-33. 2007. “Mixed Messages: Party Dissent and Mass Opinion on European Integration” (with Matthew Gabel). European Union Politics Vol. 8 No. 1:37-59. 2006. “The Political Economy of Religion and Social Insurance in the United States, 1910-1939” (with David Stasavage). Studies in American Political Development Vol. 20 (Fall):132-159. 2006. “Religion and Preferences for Social Insurance” (with David Stasavage). Quarterly Journal of Political Science Vol. 1 No. 3:255-286. 2006. “Social Identity, Political Speech, and Electoral Competition” (with Eric Dickson). Journal of Theoretical Politics Vol. 18 No. 1:5-39. 2004. “Economic Insecurity and the Globalization of Production” (with Matthew J. Slaughter). American Journal of Political Science Vol. 48 No. 4 (October):662-674. Reprinted in David R. Cameron, Gustav Ranis, and Annalisa Zinn (eds.), Globalization and Self-Determination, New York: Routledge, 2006. 2004. “Public Inflation Aversion and the Political Economy of Macroeconomic Policymaking.” International Organization Vol. 58 No. 1 (Winter):1-34. 2001. "What Determines Individual Trade-Policy Preferences?" (with Matthew J. Slaughter). Journal of International Economics Vol. 54 No. 2 (August):267-292. 2001. "Analyzing Incomplete Political Science Data: An Alternative Algorithm for Multiple Imputation" (with Gary King, James Honaker, and Anne Joseph). American Political Science Review Vol. 95 No. 1 (March):49-69. 2001. "Labor Market Competition and Individual Preferences Over Immigration Policy" (with Matthew J. Slaughter). The Review of Economics and Statistics Vol. 83 No. 1 (February):133-145. 1999. "Electoral Surprise and the Midterm Loss in US Congressional Elections" (with Michael Tomz). British Journal of Political Science Vol. 29 (July):507-521. 1998. "Interstate Competition and Welfare Policy" (with Mark C. Rom and Paul E. Peterson). Publius: The Journal of Federalism Vol. 28 No. 3 (Summer):17-37. This article is also published in Sanford F. Schram and Samuel H. Beer (eds.), Welfare Reform: A Race to the Bottom?. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999, pp. 21-42. Books 2016. Taxing the Rich: A History of Fiscal Fairness in the United States and Europe (with David Stasavage). Princeton/New York: Princeton
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