Coming in the NEXT ISSUE

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Coming in the NEXT ISSUE Association News journal grew substantially,” emphasized chaired by Kay Scholzman to search for Coming Mansbridge. He currently serves on a a new executive director. The commit- number of editorial boards and has been tee included Margaret Levi, Search in the very involved in several academic associa- Committee Chair, University of Wash- NEXT tions. His extensive publishing portfolio ington; Kay L. Schlozman, Search includes Government and Regulation in the Committee Vice-Chair, Boston College; ISSUE Third Sector (2010); Old Assumptions, New Michelle D. Deardorff, Jackson State Realities: Economic Security for 21st Century University; Henry Farrell, George Wash- A preview of some of the articles in the Working Families (2010); and Nonprofits ington University; Stathis N. Kalyvas, October 2013 issue: for Hire: The Welfare State in the Age of Yale University; Walter R. Mebane, Jr., Contracting (1993). University of Michigan; Julie Novkov, syMPosiuM Mansbridge concluded, “Steve really University at Albany, SUNY; and Charles After the Arab Spring: Prospects for knows the world of professional associa- A. (Tony) Smith, University of California, (In)security tions and journals, and he is deeply aware Irvine. John Gledhill, guest editor of the challenges that all professional In a video, posted at on the APSA associations face.” website, Mansbridge details Smith’s FeatuRes Smith holds a PhD in political science strengths as the next executive director Socially Mediated Internet Surveys from MIT. His term begins in August and describes the process leading to his (SMIS): Recruiting Participants for 2013. selection. Also Smith introduces himself Online Experiments and his understanding of the challenges tHe seaRCH CoMMittee and Erin Cassese and opportunities facing the association. PRoCess Other details are available at http://www Katrina Seven Years On: Politics of In 2011 APSA president G. Bingham .apsanet.org/executivedirectorannounce Race and Recovery Powell, Jr., and then president-elect ment/. The announcement was also sent Christine L. Day Jane Mansbridge formed a search com- to all APSA members and included in the mittee chaired by Margaret Levi and vice- April all-member newsletter (e-mail). Support at Any Distance? The Role of Location and Prejudice in Public Opposition to the “Ground Zero Mosque” Brian F. Schaffner Misconceptions and Realities of the 2011 Tunisian Election Nawel Amrouche tHe PRoFession Book Citations Count David J. Samuels tHe teaCHeR The Short-Term ‘Bridge Model’ Study Abroad Program: Peacebuilding in Latin America Jeffrey Pugh The Settlement Game: A Simulation Teaching Institutions Theories of Public Law Dave Bridge Should “I” Be Avoided or Embraced? Exploring Divergence between Political Scientist and Student Writing Norms Edward L. Lascher assoCiation news APSA 2013 Annual Meeting Recap 680 PS • July 2013 © American Political Science Association, 2013.
Recommended publications
  • Competition and Cooperation
    CONTRIBUTORS JAMES E. ALT is Frank G. Thomson Professor of Government and director of the Center of Basic Research in the Social Sciences at Harvard University. MARGARET LEVI is professor of political science and Harry Bridges Chair in Labor Studies, University of Washington, Seattle. She is also director of the University of Washington Center for Labor Studies. ELINOR OSTROM is codirector of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis and the Center for the Study of Institutions, Population, and Environ- mental Change at Indiana University, Bloomington. She is also Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Political Science. KENNETH J. ARROW is Joan Kenney Professor of Economics Emeritus and profes- sor of Operations Research Emeritus at Stanford University. He is also director of the Stanford Center on Conflict and Negotiation. GARY S. BECKER is professor of economics and sociology at the University of Chicago. JAMES M. BUCHANAN is advisory general director of the Center for Study of Public Choice at George Mason University. NORMAN FROHLICH is professor of business administration at the University of Manitoba and senior researcher at the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy and Evaluation. BARBARA GEDDES is associate professor of political science at the University of California at Los Angeles. ROBERT E. GOODIN is professor of philosophy in the Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. RUSSELL HARDIN is professor of politics at New York University. BRYAN D. JONES is professor of political science at the University of Washington, Seattle. ROBERT O. KEOHANE is James B. Duke Professor of Political Science at Duke University. xi xii Contributors DAVID D.
    [Show full text]
  • Rewriting the Epic of America
    One Rewriting the Epic of America IRA KATZNELSON “Is the traditional distinction between international relations and domes- tic politics dead?” Peter Gourevitch inquired at the start of his seminal 1978 article, “The Second Image Reversed.” His diagnosis—“perhaps”—was mo- tivated by the observation that while “we all understand that international politics and domestic structures affect each other,” the terms of trade across the domestic and international relations divide had been uneven: “reason- ing from international system to domestic structure” had been downplayed. Gourevitch’s review of the literature demonstrated that long-standing efforts by international relations scholars to trace the domestic roots of foreign pol- icy to the interplay of group interests, class dynamics, or national goals1 had not been matched by scholarship analyzing how domestic “structure itself derives from the exigencies of the international system.”2 Gourevitch counseled scholars to turn their attention to the international system as a cause as well as a consequence of domestic politics. He also cautioned that this reversal of the causal arrow must recognize that interna- tional forces exert pressures rather than determine outcomes. “The interna- tional system, be it in an economic or politico-military form, is underdeter- mining. The environment may exert strong pulls but short of actual occupation, some leeway in the response to that environment remains.”3 A decade later, Robert Putnam turned to two-level games to transcend the question as to “whether
    [Show full text]
  • An Interview with Elinor Ostrom
    Annual Reviews Conversations Presents An Interview with Elinor Ostrom Annual Reviews Conversations. 2010 Host: You are listening to an Annual Reviews prefatory interview. In Annual Reviews Conversations interviews are online this interview, Margaret Levi, editor of the Annual Review of Political at www.annualreviews.org/page/audio Science, talks with Elinor Ostrom. Professor Ostrom is the cofounder, Copyright © 2010 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved with her husband, Vincent Ostrom, and longtime codirector of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis at Indiana University, and she now serves as its senior research director. She is currently the Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Political Science at Indiana University, as well as research professor and the founding director of the Center for the Study of Institutional Diversity at Arizona State University. She is cowinner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences. Margaret Levi: I have a couple questions that I am going to prime the pump with here, Lin, and then we can let conversation flow however it does. There are many things about your history and what you’ve done in your career that are immensely impressive and have broken all kinds of barriers. But one of the things that I’ve been most intrigued by, and which I know very few other people have achieved, is the way in which you have not only tolerated and encouraged a multiple-method 1 approach to how one does work, but how you’ve conquered so many different methods. You really are very au courant in just almost—first, you learned game theory, and you learned microeconomics.
    [Show full text]
  • American Political Science Review
    AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW AMERICAN https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055418000060 . POLITICAL SCIENCE https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms REVIEW , subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at 08 Oct 2021 at 13:45:36 , on May 2018, Volume 112, Issue 2 112, Volume May 2018, University of Athens . May 2018 Volume 112, Issue 2 Cambridge Core For further information about this journal https://www.cambridge.org/core ISSN: 0003-0554 please go to the journal website at: cambridge.org/apsr Downloaded from 00030554_112-2.indd 1 21/03/18 7:36 AM LEAD EDITOR Jennifer Gandhi Andreas Schedler Thomas König Emory University Centro de Investigación y Docencia University of Mannheim, Germany Claudine Gay Económicas, Mexico Harvard University Frank Schimmelfennig ASSOCIATE EDITORS John Gerring ETH Zürich, Switzerland Kenneth Benoit University of Texas, Austin Carsten Q. Schneider London School of Economics Sona N. Golder Central European University, and Political Science Pennsylvania State University Budapest, Hungary Thomas Bräuninger Ruth W. Grant Sanjay Seth University of Mannheim Duke University Goldsmiths, University of London, UK Sabine Carey Julia Gray Carl K. Y. Shaw University of Mannheim University of Pennsylvania Academia Sinica, Taiwan Leigh Jenco Mary Alice Haddad Betsy Sinclair London School of Economics Wesleyan University Washington University in St. Louis and Political Science Peter A. Hall Beth A. Simmons Benjamin Lauderdale Harvard University University of Pennsylvania London School of Economics Mary Hawkesworth Dan Slater and Political Science Rutgers University University of Chicago Ingo Rohlfi ng Gretchen Helmke Rune Slothuus University of Cologne University of Rochester Aarhus University, Denmark D.
    [Show full text]
  • Rochester Phd Program in Political Science
    Rochester PhD Program in Political Science Contents Introduction to the Program......................... 1 Main Fields of Study in Political Science American Politics............................... 5 Comparative Politics.......................... 6 Formal Political Theory...................... 7 International Relations....................... 8 Political Methodology......................... 9 Rochester Political Economy....................... 10 Selected Faculty Publications...................... 11 Rules & Requirements................................ 17 Timeline of Milestones................................ 28 Introduction to the Rochester PhD Program in Political Science Rigorous Analysis of Politics Introduction The Ph.D. program in Political Science at the University of Rochester is designed to train scholars to conduct rigorous analysis of politics at the highest level. Students learn the most advanced formal and statistical techniques to address substantive problems in political science, while some develop the technical skills needed to do work in pure formal theory or statistical methods, and others acquire skills for qualitative or historical work. The program has a storied history and long tradition of excellence. After joining Richard Fenno in Rochester in 1962, William Riker pushed the department – and the discipline – in a new direction, creating the field of “positive political theory,” which uses modeling techniques from mathematics, prob- ability theory, and game theory to study political phenomena of interest. To reflect
    [Show full text]
  • Government 601: Methods of Political Analysis I Fall 2003, Tueday 7:00–10:00P (WE 104)
    Government 601: Methods of Political Analysis I Fall 2003, Tueday 7:00–10:00p (WE 104) Professors: Walter R. Mebane, Jr. Jonas Pontusson 217 White Hall 205 White Hall 255-3868 255-6764 [email protected] [email protected] office hours: T 3–5, W 2–3 office hours: MW 10–11 Assignment Due Dates due date description TBA one weekly discussion paper as assigned (weeks 3–10, 12) October 28 “explanations” paper November 11 research pre-proposal November 18 Boolean exercise December 15 research proposal Reading Availability We will be reading large proportions of most of the following books, and most are worth having on the shelf, so you may want to buy them. On the other hand, several are expensive. Most of the books should also soon appear on reserve in the Government Reading Room in Olin (room 405). Photocopies of other required reading should also be available in the Reading Room. Browning, Christopher R. 2000. Nazi Policy, Jewish Workers, German Killers. New York: Cam- bridge UP. Browning, Christopher R. 1998. Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland. New York: HarperCollins. Campbell, Donald T., and Julian C. Stanley. 1966. Experimental and Quasi-experimental Designs for Research. Chicago: Rand McNally. Goldhagen, Daniel Jonah. 1996. Hitler’s Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holo- caust. New York: Knopf. Golden, Miriam. 1997. Heroic Defeats. New York: Cambridge UP. Hedstr¨om,Peter, and Richard Swedborg, eds. 1998. Social Mechanisms: An Analytical Approach to Social Theory. New York: Cambridge UP. King, Gary, Robert O. Keohane and Sidney Verba.
    [Show full text]
  • APSA Contributors AS of NOVEMBER 10, 2014
    APSA Contributors AS OF NOVEMBER 10, 2014 This list celebrates the generous contributions of our members in Jacobson Paul Allen Beck giving to one or more of the following programs from 1996 through 2014: APSA awards, programs, the Congressional Fellowship Pro- Cynthia McClintock John F. Bibby gram, and the Centennial Campaign. APSA thanks these donors for Ruth P. Morgan Amy B. Bridges ensuring that the benefi ts of membership and the infl uence of the Norman J. Ornstein Michael A. Brintnall profession will extend far into the future. APSA will update and print T.J. Pempel David S. Broder this list annually in the January issue of PS. Dianne M. Pinderhughes Charles S. Bullock III Jewel L. Prestage Margaret Cawley CENTENNIAL CIRCLE Offi ce of the President Lucian W. Pye Philip E. Converse ($25,000+) Policy Studies Organization J. Austin Ranney William J. Daniels Walter E. Beach Robert D. Putnam Ben F. Reeves Christopher J. Deering Doris A. Graber Ronald J Schmidt, Sr. Paul J. Rich Jorge I. Dominguez Pendleton Herring Smith College David B. Robertson Marion E. Doro Chun-tu Hsueh Endowment Janet D. Steiger for International Scholars Catherine E. Rudder Melvin J. Dubnick and Huang Hsing Kay Lehman Schlozman Eastern Michigan University Foundation FOUNDER’S CIRCLE ($5,000+) Eric J. Scott Leon D. Epstein Arend Lijphart Tony Affi gne J. Merrill Shanks Kathleen A. Frankovic Elinor Ostrom Barbara B. Bardes Lee Sigelman John Armando Garcia Beryl A. Radin Lucius J. Barker Howard J. Silver George J. Graham Leo A. Shifrin Robert H. Bates William O. Slayman Virginia H.
    [Show full text]
  • The Analytical Narrative Project
    The Analytical Narrative Project The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Bates, Robert H., Avner Greif, Margaret Levi, Jean-Laurent Rosenthal, and Barry R. Weingast. 2000. The Analytical Narrative Project. American Political Science Review 94(3): 696-702. Published Version http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2585843 Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:3710302 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA Analytic Narratives September 2000 TheAnalytic Narrative Project ROBERT H. BATES Harvard University AVNER GREIF Stanford University MARGARET LEVI Universityof Washington JEAN-LAURENT ROSENTHAL Universityof California, Los Angeles BARRY R. WEINGAST Stanford University In Analytic Narratives,we attempt to address several bounded rationality. We believe that each of these issues. First, many of us are engaged in in-depth perspectives brings something of value, and to different case studies, but we also seek to contribute to, and degrees the essays in our book represent an integration to make use of, theory. How might we best proceed? of perspectives. By explicitly outlining an approach that Second, the historian, the anthropologist, and the area relies on rational choice and mathematical models, we specialist possess knowledge of a place and time. They do not mean to imply that other approaches lack rigor have an understanding of the particular.
    [Show full text]
  • Politics of Political Economy: Revisiting Elinor Ostrom and Garrett Hardin
    POLITICS OF POLITICAL ECONOMY: REVISITING ELINOR OSTROM AND GARRETT HARDIN Will Parsley TC 660H Plan II Honors Program The University of Texas at Austin November 29, 2016 __________________________________________ Dr. Alexandra K. Wettlaufer French and Italian, Plan II Honors Supervising Professor __________________________________________ Joseph Bailey Jr. Plan II Honors Second Reader ABSTRACT Author: Will Parsley Title: Politics of Political Economy: Revisiting Elinor Ostrom and Garrett Hardin Supervising Professors: Dr. Alexandra K. Wettlaufer and Joseph Bailey Jr. The goal of this thesis is to provide perspective on Prof. Elinor Ostrom’s (d. 2012) challenges and achievements in the field of Political Economy. Her works, chiefly Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions of Collective Action published in 1990, are emblematic of a consensus change in the lens through which policy makers, economists, and everyday human beings view management of shared natural resources. Elinor “Lin” Ostrom’s thinking typifies that of the model 21st-century political economist: combining creative vision with dogged empirical research to address wholly new and distinctly modern sets of problems. Professor Ostrom tackled problems such as wildlife preservation, urban water management, and fishery conservation among others. Despite receiving the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2009, her body of work on institutions for collective action is often undercut by its unearned reputation as a direct rebuttal to Garrett Hardin’s controversial essay “The Tragedy of the Commons,” published in 1968. However, Ostrom's work stands alone. A clear-eyed review of political economics reveals the triumph of her indomitable conviction in her method over barriers created by gender- prejudice. 2 Introduction Political Economy is young academic field that features creative combinations of economics, political science, and ecology to solve humankind’s oldest resource problems.
    [Show full text]
  • William T. Bianco
    William T. Bianco Address Department of Political Science Phone 812-340-2568 Indiana University +975-50-1960-109 (2018-9) Bloomington, IN 47405-7110 Web Page www.williambianco.com e-mail [email protected] [email protected] Education Ph.D. Political Science, University of Rochester, 1987. Dissertation: Essays on Noncooperative Cooperation. Dissertation Committee: William Riker (Chair), Richard Fenno, David Austen-Smith, Marcus Berliant. M.A. Political Science, University of Rochester, 1986. B.A. (high honors) Political Science, SUNY Stony Brook, 1982. Academic Experience 2006-Present: Professor, Department of Political Science, Indiana University. Affiliated Faculty, Ostrom Workshop, Russian Eastern European Institute. Director, Indiana Political Analysis Workshop (iPAW), Department of Political Science 2018-2019 Visiting Professor, Zayed University, United Arab Emirates 2011-2012, Fulbright Senior Scholar, Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia. 1998-1999: Visiting Associate Professor, Department of Government, Harvard University. 1996-2006: Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, The Pennsylvania State University. 1994-1996: Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Duke University. (Assistant Professor, 1987-1994) Spring 1990: Guest Scholar, The Brookings Institution. Summer 1988: Instructor, ICPSR Summer Training Program, University of Michigan 1986-1987: Lecturer, Public Policy Program, Stanford University. 1 Publications Books and Edited Volumes American Politics Today, W. W. Norton, 2019 (6th
    [Show full text]
  • Governance in a Partially Globalized World Presidential Address, American Political Science Association, 2000 ROBERT O
    American Political Science Review Vol. 95, No. 1 March 2001 Governance in a Partially Globalized World Presidential Address, American Political Science Association, 2000 ROBERT O. KEOHANE Duke University acing globalization, the challenge for political science resembles that of the founders of the United States: how to design institutions for a polity of unprecedented size and diversity. Globalization F produces discord and requires effective governance, but effective institutions are difficult to create and maintain. Liberal-democratic institutions must also meet standards of accountability and participation, and should foster persuasion rather than rely on coercion and interest-based bargaining. Effective institutions must rely on self-interest rather than altruism, yet both liberal-democratic legitimacy and the meaning of self-interest depend on people’s values and beliefs. The analysis of beliefs, and their effect on institutional outcomes, must therefore be integrated into institutional analysis. Insights from branches of political science as diverse as game theory, rational-choice institutionalism, historical institutionalism, and democratic theory can help political scientists understand how to design institutions on a world—and human—scale. alk of globalization is common today in the press interdependence include war. As international rela- and increasingly in political science. Broadly tions “realists” have long recognized, interdependence T speaking, globalization means the shrinkage of and lack of governance make a deadly mixture. This distance on a world scale through the emergence and Hobbesian premise can be stated in a more positive thickening of networks of connections—environmental form: Globalization creates potential gains from coop- and social as well as economic (Held et al. 1999; eration.
    [Show full text]
  • Comparative Politics. the Core Reading List Is NOT Meant to Be Exhaustive Or to Substitute for Taking Seminars with CP Faculty
    COMPARATIVE POLITICS: CORE READINGS Department of Political Science, UCSB Fall 2017 This reading list is designed to assist students in identifying major works in the field of Comparative Politics in preparation for the comprehensive examination. The list is meant to serve as a guide to central works in comparative politics. The core reading list is NOT meant to be exhaustive or to substitute for taking seminars with CP faculty. In general, seminars offer you far better preparation for the exam than reading the items on your own, and will give you some suggestions for more recent works (since the last update of the core reading list). Furthermore, as students select sub-fields of special interest, they should supplement this list with recent articles, in depth case studies, or specialized works which might not be necessary for a student simply wishing to be generally informed about a sub-field. Finally, students should consult the CP faculty in preparing for their examinations, both for general advice and for supplementary readings. We recommend that you consult the anthologies published by Oxford University Press for a useful overview of topics listed below. The essays also provide additional references to the themes addressed. The series includes: Robert E. Goodin, ed. (2009) The Oxford Handbook of Political Science; Carles Boix, Susan C. Stokes, eds. (2009) The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Politics ; and David Collier, Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Henry E. Brady, eds. (2008), The Oxford Handbook of Political Methodology and (forthcoming) The Oxford Handbook of Electoral Systems. The list is organized in three broad sections: 1) the identification of examples of different approaches to the study of comparative politics, 2) works important to research design and methods, and 3) the sub-fields of comparative politics.
    [Show full text]