Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 446

GREAT

TRANSFORMATIONS:
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE
BIG QUESTIONS OF OUR TIME

2016 APSA ANNUAL MEETING AND EXHIBITION


PHILADELPHIA, PA | September 1-4

Access the latest


scholarship in political science.

JOIN THE
AMERICAN
POLITICAL
SCIENCE
ASSOCIATION.

Advance your career with


APSA scholarly teaching
resources & opportunities.
Learn more about APSA
programs, grants, awards, etc.
jobs post your CV and
Find jobs,
access APSA career services.
Network with more than
6,000+ political scientists at
the Annual Meeting!

Visit APSA online at www.apsanet.org.


Stay connected at www.politicalsciencenow.com.

1527 NEW HAMPSHIRE AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036-1206

TABLE OF CONTENTS
General Information & Highlights
Welcome Letter........................................................................................................... 2
APSA Anti-Harassment Policy................................................................................... 3
General Information
General Information Services and Hours........................................................................ 4
About APSA............................................................................................................. 7
Sponsors................................................................................................................. 8
Hotel Maps.............................................................................................................. 9
Restaurant List......................................................................................................... 14
Special Events and Highlights
Program Highlights.................................................................................................. 16
Short Courses......................................................................................................... 19
New Session Types................................................................................................. 21
Working Groups..................................................................................................... 23
Professional Development Panels................................................................................ 24
Poster Sessions........................................................................................................ 25
APSA Awards......................................................................................................... 39
Organized Section Awards....................................................................................... 42
Campus Teaching Award Recognition......................................................................... 63
APSA Lifetime Members............................................................................................ 64
Exhibits and Advertisers
Exhibit Hall Map..................................................................................................... 67
Exhibitor Directory................................................................................................... 68
Advertisements........................................................................................................ 80

2016 Annual Meeting Program


Theme, Division, Related Panels............................................................................... 155
Meetings and Receptions........................................................................................ 211
Detailed Daily Schedule......................................................................................... 221
Index of Participants.............................................................................................. 418

TABLE OF CONTENTS 1

Dear Colleagues,
Welcome to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for the 112th American Political Science Association Annual Meeting!
The 2016 theme is Great Transformations: Political Science and the Big Questions of Our Time. When
we selected this theme, we were thinking of transformations that occur through sudden and dramatic events, such as
terrorist attacks or nationwide protests erupting over phenomena such as police brutality, as well as transformations that
occur through cumulative, incremental developments, such as global warming and rising inequality. As we write this letter,
the news is dominated by the fallout from the Brexit referendum, the unexpected successes of Donald Trump and Bernie
Sanders, and terrorist attacks in Orlando, Florida and Istanbul, Turkey. Events such as these are both sudden developments
and products of transformations long in the making. We are, to put it bluntly, knee-deep (at least!) in great transformations
in our political landscape, and we very much look forward to the provocative presentations and discussions that will surely
take place at this years meeting.
We encourage you to attend the Presidential Address by APSA President Jennifer Hochschild, entitled
Left Pessimism and Political Science on Thursday, September 1, at 6:15 p.m. in Ballroom AB in the convention center.
The Opening Reception follows immediately at 7:30 p.m. in the Grand Hall of the convention center. Please also
attend the All-Member Meeting on Thursday, September 1, at 12:00 p.m. in room 114 in the convention center.
The meeting will give an update to members on APSA and its activities, provide a venue to express your views, vote on
new bylaws, and offer the opportunity to thank President Hochschild for her service, as well as welcome President-Elect
David Lake.
We also arranged for several theme panels and plenaries, which we hope you can attend. These include three breaking
news panels: Taking Stock of the Brexit Shock, Did the Party Decide? and Rageagainst theMachine: Populist
Politics intheU.S., Europe and Latin America. Other theme panels include To Stay Neutral or Not When Teaching the
2016 Election, Global Governance: Stagnation or Transformation? Great Transformations in Higher Education, and
Transforming Marriage and Religion in American Political Thought. A full list of the theme panels can be found on the
conference website and in the online program. We have two plenary sessions as well. The plenary roundtable on The
State of Race Relations in the U.S., featuring Vincent Hutchings, Paul Frymer, Melissa Harris-Perry, and Janelle Wong,
will be on Friday, September 2 at 2:00 p.m. in Ballroom AB in the convention center. Kathryn Sikkinks Are We Making
Progress on Human Rights? Transformations in Knowledge and Activism, takes place on Saturday, September 3 at 2:00
p.m. in Ballroom AB in the convention center.
This years conference also features some new presentation formats, such as mini-conferences, teaching cafs, and
30-minute paper presentations. We hope that you get a chance to participate in these new formats and support future
conference innovation. Speaking of innovation, dont forget to check out the iPosters. In addition to viewing the posters
on the monitors set up in room 204-A of the convention center, and the 200s hallway, you can also log into the iPoster
portal (apsa2016.ipostersessions.com) from your own computer or device and engage in discussions with and provide
feedback to iPoster presenters online pre- and post-conference. A list of poster authors giving presentations in room 204-A
will be posted in the room and on the conference website.
We are eternally grateful for the division chairs for all of the time and energy they devoted to creating an outstanding
program for the 2016 Annual Meeting. We are also very thankful for the expertise and assistance provided by the APSA
staff. We hope you enjoy the meeting!
Kimberly Morgan, George Washington University
Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University
2016 APSA Annual Meeting Program Co-Chairs

2 WELCOME LETTER

ANTI-HARASSMENT POLICY
APSA has received notice from several sources that graduate students and faculty have experienced sexual harassment at various
conference venues. APSA consequently reminds everyone:
The APSA annual meeting and related regional political science meetings are convened for the purposes of professional
development and scholarly and educational interchange in the spirit of free inquiry and free expression. Harassment of
colleagues, students, or other conference participants undermines the principle of equity at the heart of these professional fora
and is inconsistent with the principles of free inquiry and free expression. Consequently, harassment is considered by APSA to be
a serious form of professional misconduct.
The following Anti-Harassment Policy outlines expectations for all those who attend or participate in APSA meetings. It reminds
APSA meeting participants that all professional academic ethics and norms apply as standards of
behavior and interaction at these meetings.
1.Purpose
APSA is committed to providing a safe and welcoming conference environment for all participants, regardless of actual or
perceived gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, ability, socioeconomic status, age, or religion.
Participant in this policy refers to anyone present at APSA meetings, including staff, contractors, vendors, exhibitors, venue
staff, APSA members, and all other attendees.
2. Expected Behavior
All participants at APSA meetings are expected to abide by this Anti-Harassment Policy in all meeting venues including ancillary
events and official and unofficial social gatherings.


Abide by the norms of professional respect that are necessary to promote the conditions for free academic interchange.
If you witness potential harm to a conference participant, be proactive in helping to mitigate or avoid that harm.
Alert conference or security personnel if you see a situation in which someone might be in imminent physical danger.

3. Unacceptable Behavior
Unacceptable behaviors include:








persistent and unwelcome solicitation of emotional or physical intimacy


persistent and unwelcome solicitation of emotional or physical intimacy accompanied by real or implied threat of
professional harm
intimidating, harassing, abusive, derogatory or demeaning speech or actions by any participant in an APSA meeting
and/or at any related event.
prejudicial actions or comments related to actual or perceived gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity, sexual
orientation, ability, socioeconomic status, age, or religion that coerce others, foment broad hostility, or otherwise
undermine professional equity or the principles of free academic exchange.
deliberate intimidation, stalking or following;
harassing photography or recording;
sustained disruption of talks or other events;
physical assault (including unwelcome touch or groping)
real or implied threat of physical harm

ANTI-HARASSMENT POLICY 3

GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION


Meeting Schedule
Panel Locations

Panel sessions begin Thursday, September 1, at 8:00 a.m. and end on Sunday, September 4, at 11:30 a.m. All panel
sessions, business meetings, and receptions will be held at the Pennsylvania Convention Center, the Marriott Downtown
Philadelphia, and the Loews.

Thursday, September 1:
8:00 a.m. 9:30 a.m.
10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
2:00 p.m. 3:30 p.m.
4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m.

Friday, September 2 and Saturday, September 3:


8:00 a.m. 9:30 a.m.
10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
12:00 p.m. 1:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m. 3:30 p.m.
4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m.

Sunday, September 4:
8:00 a.m. 9:30 a.m.
10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.

Business Meetings
Business meetings for organized sections, related groups, committees, and affiliate groups will be held Wednesday through
Saturday, according to the following schedule:

Wednesday, August 31:


6:30 p.m. 9:00 p.m.

Thursday, September 1:
6:30 a.m. 7:30 a.m.
6:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.

Friday, September 2:
6:30 a.m. 7:30 a.m.
12:00 p.m. 1:30 p.m.
6:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.
7:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m.

Saturday, September 3:
6:30 a.m. 7:30 a.m.
12:00 p.m. 1:30 p.m.
6:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.

4 GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION

GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION


Receptions
Receptions hosted by organized sections, related groups, committees, and affiliate groups are open to all registered attendees,
unless otherwise noted, and will be held Wednesday through Saturday at the following times:
Wednesday, August 31
Thursday, September 1
Friday, September 2
Saturday, September 3

6:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.

8:00
9:00
9:00
9:00

p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.

Electronic Posters (iPosters)


Stop by the new electronic poster room in room 204 of the Pennsylvania Convention Center. Room 204 will have scheduled
poster presentations but you can always stop in to keyword search or browse all of this years posters. There will also be open
use iPoster kiosks in the hallway between the Grand Hall and Registration, outside Room 204. This years posters can also be
viewed in the online gallery, apsa2016.ipostersessions.com, both before and after the conference. Posters are searchable by
keyword, author name, division, and more. Attendees can send comments or messages directly to poster authors through the
kiosks onsite, or at any time from their own computer or device via the online gallery. See something that peaks your interest?
Reach out to the author to discuss! The full list of posters may be found on page 23 of the program book.

Exhibit Hall
The Exhibit Hall is located at the Pennsylvania Convention Center, Exhibit Hall A. The Exhibit Hall features the APSA lounge,
sponsored receptions, and coffee breaks. The hours are:
Thursday, September 1
Friday, September 2
Saturday, September 3

9:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m.


9:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m.

Coffee Breaks
During exhibit hall hours, stop by Routledges booth 510 for a Keurig coffee drink. Friday, September 2, grab a cup of coffee,
sponsored by Harvard University Press, at PCC 108-A before joining the Putting the Political Back into Political Philosophy
session on Friday at 10:00 a.m.

eJobs Annual Meeting Placement Service


The APSA eJobs Annual Meeting Placement Interview Service is located in the Marriott Salons E, F, G, and H on the 5th floor. All
participants were required to pre-register online at www.apsanet.org/ejobs.The hours are:
Thursday, September 1
Friday, September 2
Saturday, September 3

8:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m.


8:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m.
8:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m.

Conference Paper Uploads


Conference paper authors are required to post papers delivered at the Annual Meeting to the All Academic submission site in
the APSA Annual Meeting paper archive. APSA strongly encourages APSA Annual Meeting participants to upload their papers
to the Annual Meeting paper repository. Papers are available online through All Academic to attendees.
GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION 5

GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION


Play the Conference Mobile App Game and Win an Apple Watch!
Download the mobile app to play along with the APSA Annual Meeting Game. Complete challenges, such as visiting exhibitor
booths and attending events, to gain points. After each completed challenge, you will receive a passcode to enter into the
Game portion of the app, which will generate points. The winner will receive an Apple Watch. The challenge ends on Sunday,
September 4, at 12:00 p.m. If there is a tie, the tied leaders will be entered into a drawing for the prize.

Relax & Recharge


Attendees can charge their devices at charging stations throughout the conference. Cambridge University Press will have a
charging station with charging extensions for phones and tablets in their booth, #410, in the PCC Hall A, or, relax and put up
your feet at the Lynne Rienner Sponsored Lounge in the 600 aisle, near their booth #613.

Family Resources
Child Care

During the Annual Meeting, APSA offers daily child care service operated by ACCENT on Childrens Arrangements. On-site
registration for child care is based on availability. The hours are:
Wednesday, August 31
Thursday, September 1
Friday, September 2
Saturday, September 3
Sunday, September 4

8:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

a.m.
a.m.
a.m.
a.m.
a.m.

5:00 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
12:30 p.m.

Nursing Options

In addition to child care, the Pennsylvania Convention Center is the nation's first convention center to offer a portable Mamava
lactation suite for nursing mothers to breastfeed infants or to use breast pumps in privacy. The unit is a self-contained, mobile
pod with comfortable benches, an electrical outlet, and a door that can be locked for privacy. The 4 foot by 8 foot pod is
meant for individual use, but can fit more than one person, including parents with infants, breast pumps, or luggage. It is usually
positioned near the Concierge Desk on the Convention Center's second level near 12th and Arch Streets. Additionally, there will
be a nursing room in the Marriott Conference Suite 1 on the 3rd floor.

Registration and Badge Pick-Up Hours


Badge and program pick-up and on-site registration will be located in the Pennsylvania Convention Center, 200 Level Bridge
over Arch Street, near Exhibit Hall A, during the following times:
Wednesday, August 31
Thursday, September 1
Friday, September 2
Saturday, September 3

6 GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION

8:00
7:00
7:00
7:30

a.m.
a.m.
a.m.
a.m.

6:00
6:00
5:00
5:00

p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.

About APSA
Founded
in 1903, the American Political Science Association is the

leading professional organization for the study of political science and
serves more than 15,000 members in over 80 countries. With a range of
programs and services for individuals, departments, and institutions, APSA
brings together political scientists from all fields of inquiry, regions, and
occupational endeavors within and outside academe in order to expand
awareness and understanding of politics.
The direct advancement of knowledge is at the core of APSA activities.
We promote scholarly communication in political science through a variety
of initiatives including publishing three distinguished journals: American
Political Science Review, Perspectives on Politics, and PS: Political Science
and Politics.

Officers

Council

PRESIDENT

2014-2016

Jennifer Hochschild
Harvard University

PRESIDENT-ELECT

David Lake
University of California, San Diego

VICE-PRESIDENTS

Frank Baumgartner
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Martha Finnemore
George Washington University

David Obey
Former US Representative for Wisconsins 7th
Congressional District
University of Wisconsin

SECRETARY

Suzanne Mettler
Cornell University

TREASURER

Taeku Lee
University of California, Berkeley

PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS

Kimberly Morgan
George Washington University

Deborah J. Schildkraut
Tufts University

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, APSR
John Ishiyama
University of North Texas

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, PERSPECTIVES
Jeffrey Isaac
Indiana University

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Steven Rathgeb Smith


American Political Science Association

Michelle Deardorff
University of Tennessee, at Chattanooga

Maria Escobar-Lemmon
Texas A&M University

Frances Lee
University of Maryland, College Park

David Lublin
American University

Marc Lynch
George Washington University

Tasha Philpot
University of Texas, Austin

David Stasavage
New York University

Mark Warren
University of British Columbia

2015-2017

Roxanne Euben
Wellesley College

Amaney Jamal
Princeton University

Brett Ashley Leeds
Rice University

James Mahoney
Northwestern University

Byron DAndra Orey
Jackson State University

Bo Rothstein
University of Gothenburg

Cameron Thies
Arizona State University

Caroline Tolbert
University of Iowa

Former APSA Presidents


Frank J. Goodnow
Albert Shaw
Frederick N. Judson
James Bryce
A. Lawrence Lowell
Woodrow Wilson
Simeon E. Baldwin
Albert Bushnell Hart
W. W. Willoughby
John Bassett Moore
Ernst Freund
Jesse Macy
Munroe Smith
Henry Jones Ford
Paul S. Reinsch
Leo S. Rowe
William A. Dunning
Harry A. Garfield
James W. Garner
Charles E. Merriam
Charles A. Beard
William Bennett Munro
Jesse S. Reeves
John A. Fairlie
Benjamin F. Shambaugh
Edward S. Corwin
William F. Willoughby
Isidor Loeb
Walter Shepard
Francis W. Coker
Arthur N. Holcombe
Thomas Reed Powell
Clarence A. Dykstra
Charles Grove Haines
Robert C. Brooks
Frederic A. Ogg
William Anderson
Robert E. Cushman
Leonard D. White
John Gaus
Walter F. Dodd
Arthur W. MacMahon
Henry R. Spencer
Quincy Wright
James K. Pollock
Peter H. Odegard
Luther Gulick
Pendleton Herring
Ralph J. Bunche
Charles McKinley
Harold D. Lasswell
E. E. Schattschneider
V. O. Key Jr.
R. Taylor Cole
Carl B. Swisher

Emmette S. Redford
Charles S. Hyneman
Carl J. Friedrich
C. Herman Pritchett
David B. Truman
Gabriel A. Almond
Robert A. Dahl
Merle Fainsod
David Easton
Karl W. Deutsch
Robert E. Lane
Heinz Eulau
Robert E. Ward
Avery Leiserson
Austin Ranney
James MacGregor Burns
Samuel H. Beer
John C. Wahlke
Leon D. Epstein
Warren E. Miller
Charles E. Lindblom
Seymour Martin Lipset
William H. Riker
Philip E. Converse
Richard F. Fenno
Aaron B. Wildavsky
Samuel P. Huntington
Kenneth N. Waltz
Lucian W. Pye
Judith N. Shklar
Theodore J. Lowi
James Q. Wilson
Lucius J. Barker
Charles O. Jones
Sidney Verba
Arend Lijphart
Elinor Ostrom
M. Kent Jennings
Matthew Holden Jr.
Robert O. Keohane
Robert Jervis
Robert D. Putnam
Theda Skocpol
Susanne Hoeber Rudolph
Margaret Levi
Ira Katznelson
Robert Axelrod
Dianne M. Pinderhughes
Peter Katzenstein
Henry E. Brady
Carole Pateman
G. Bingham Powell, Jr.
Jane Mansbridge
John H. Aldrich
Rodney Hero



APSA | 1527 New Hampshire Avenue, NW | Washington, DC 20036 | 202-483-2512 | www.apsanet.org

2016 ANNUAL MEETING SPONSORS


APSA would like to thank the following sponsors
for their generous support:
Premier

Gold

Silver

Sponsored Events:
Throughout the Meeting:
Keurig Coffee Break
Sponsored by Routledge
PCC Hall A, Booth 510
Thursday, September 1
Headshot Lounge
Stop by the headshot lounge to have a complimentary
picture taken for your LinkedIn profile or website.
Sponsored by Pearson
10:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m. | PCC Hall A next to APSA Lounge
Ice Cream Break Reception
Sponsored by Routledge
3:30 p.m. | PCC Hall A, Booth 510
Friday, September 2
Putting the Political Back into Political Philosophy Session
Coffee Break
Sponsored by Harvard University Press
9:30 a.m. 10:00 a.m.| PCC 108A
Beer & Snacks Reception
Sponsored by The Agenda Game
3:30 p.m. | PCC Hall A, Booth 218
Beer, Wine & Sliders Reception
Sponsored by Routledge
4:00 p.m. | PCC Hall A, Booth 510
Wine & Cheese Reception
Sponsored by Cambridge University Press
4:00 p.m. | PCC Hall A, Booth 410

8 2016 ANNUAL MEETING SPONSORS

Wine & Cheese Reception


Sponsored by West Academic
4:00 p.m. | PCC Hall A, Booth 214
Beer & Snacks Reception
Sponsored by Oxford University Press
4:30 p.m. | PCC Hall A, Booth 600
Reception Honoring Teaching
Sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha
Co-Sponsored by the Political Science Education Section,
Committee on Teaching & Learning, and Status Committee of
Community Colleges in the Profession
7:30 p.m. | Loews, Congress C
Saturday, September 3
Film Premiere: Americas Diplomats
Sponsored by the Diplomacy Foundation Center and Foreign
Policy Association
4:00 p.m. | PCC 114

Sponsored Items:
Cambridge University Press (Booth 410):
Conference tote bags distributed at Registration.
Travel grants, which help US graduate students, international
graduate students studying in the US, unemployed political
scientists, and international scholars attend the event.
Cambridges sponsorship of the Ralph Bunche Summer Institute
scholars allows for scholars to attend the Annual Meeting, where
they will present in the iPosters on Saturday and attend panels.
Lynne Rienner Publishers (Booth 613): Take a break
in the lounge, sponsored by Lynne Rienner Publishers. The
lounge can be found at the end of aisle 600.

MARRIOTT DOWNTOWN PHILADELPHIA


Marriott 3rd Floor


Marriott 4th Floor


HOTEL MAPS 9

MARRIOTT DOWNTOWN PHILADELPHIA


Marriott 5th Floor

10 HOTEL MAPS

LOEWS PHILADELPHIA HOTEL


Loews 2nd Floor

Loews 3rd Floor

Loews 4th Floor

HOTEL MAPS 11

PENNSYLVANIA CONVENTION CENTER


100 LEVEL

STREET ACCESS

200 LEVEL

12 PENNSYLVANIA CONVENTION CENTER

PENNSYLVANIA CONVENTION CENTER


300 LEVEL

400 LEVEL

PENNSYLVANIA CONVENTION CENTER 13

RESTAURANT LIST: A GUIDE TO PHILADELPHIA CUISINE


Immediately north of the Convention Center is
Philadelphias Chinatown:
Sang Kee ($$)
Great traditional Chinese food. Reservations recommended for
large groups.
www.sangkeechinatown.com | (215) 925-7532
238 North 9th Street (.5 miles from PCC)
Rangoon Burma ($$)
Traditional Burmese; can host private parties
www.rangoonphilly.com | (215) 829-8939
112 North 9th Street (.3 miles)
Penang ($$)
Malaysian cuisine
(215) 413-2531 | 117 N 10th Street
(between Arch & Cherry, .2 miles)
Vietnam Restaurant ($$)
Vietnamese; can host private events
www.eatatvietnam.com | (215) 592-1163
221 North 11th Street (.3 miles)
Vietnam Palace ($$)
Vietnamese; can host private events
www.vietnampalace.net | (215) 592-19596
222 North 11th Street (.3 miles)
Terakawa Ramen ($$)
Ramen; great lunch place; BYO
www.terakaramenphilly.com | (267) 687-1355
204 North 9th Street (9th and Race; .4 miles)

Lolita ($$)
Mexican street food; can host private parties up to 45-85
people
www.lolitaphilly.com | (215) 546-7100
106 South 13th Street (.4 miles)
Amis ($$)
Italian; can host private events up to 26-100 people
13th and Pine
www.amisphilly.com | (215) 732-2647
412 South 13th Street (13th and Pine; .7 miles)
El Vez ($$)
Mexican; lively; can hold special events
www.elvezrestaurant.com | (215) 928-9800
121 South 13th Street (.4 miles)
Marathon Grill ($$)
American; can host private events
www.eatmarathon.com/16th-and-sansom/
(215) 569-3278
16th + Sansom, 121 S 16th Street (.7 miles)
To the East and South a bit of a longer walk,
but still walkable:
Fat Salmon ($$)
Sushi; reservation recommended
www.fatsalmonsushi.com | (215) 928-8881
719 Walnut Street (.7 miles)

To the immediate east of the Convention Center is:

LaBuca ($$)
Traditional Italian fare
www.ristlabuca.com |(215) 928-0556
711 Locust Street (.8 miles)

Reading Terminal Market ($)


Indoor market; great lunch place
www.readingterminalmarket.org
51 North 12th Street (.1 miles)

Talulas Garden ($$$)


Phillys take on Alice Waters and Chez Panisse
www.talulasgarden.com | (215) 592-7787
210 W. Washington Square (.8 miles)

To the south of the Convention Center (across


Market Street):

Russet ($$)
Farm to table BYO; can host private parties between 10 - 65
www.russetphilly.com | (215) 546-1521
1521 Spruce Street (Spruce and 15th; .8 miles)

Barbuzzo ($$)
Mediterranean; can host private events up to 55 (seated) or
85 (receptions)
www.barbuzzo.com | (215) 546-9300
110 South 13th Street (.4 miles)

Taquilas ($$$)
Haute Mexican; can host private events
www.tequilasphilly.com | (215) 546-0181
1602 Locust Street (16th and Locust; .8 miles)

Restaurant listings contributed by Kevin Arceneaux, Robin Kolodny, Gary Mucciaroni, and Sandra Suarez, Temple University.
14 RESTAURANT LIST: A GUIDE TO PHILADELPHIA CUISINE

RESTAURANT LIST: A GUIDE TO PHILADELPHIA CUISINE


Pumpkin ($$$)
BYOB
www.pumpkinphilly.com | (215) 545-4448
1713 South Street (11th and Pine; 1.2 miles)

Tria Cafe ($$)


https://www.triaphilly.com/tria-cafe/
(215) 972-8742
123 S. 18th Street (.8 miles)

A little farther away (20 minute walk or 5


minute cab ride):

Gran Cafe LAquila ($$)


Can host private events
www.grancaffelaquila.com | (215) 568-5600
1716 Chestnut Street (.7 miles)

Amada ($$$)
Tapas; can host private events
www.philadelphia.amadarestaurant.com
(215) 625-2450
217-219 Chestnut Street (1 mile)
Parc ($$$)
French bistro; can host large parties and events
www.parc-restaurant.com | (215) 545-2262 225
South 18th Street (Locust and 18th; .9 miles)
Estia ($$$)
Mediterranean; can host private events for groups 25 200
www.estiarestaurant.com |(215) 735-7700
1405-07 Locust Street (.7 miles)
Vernick Food and Drink ($$$)
Farm to table; can host parties 12-45
www.vernickphilly.com | (267) 639-6644
2031 Walnut Street (1.1 miles)
Zahav ($$$)
Israeli; can host special events for 9-50 guests
www.zahavrestaurant.com | (215) 625-8800
237 Saint James Place (1.2 miles)

Cab ride Distance:


Osteria ($$$)
Italian; can host private events
www.osteriaphilly.com | (215) 763-0920
640 North Broad (.9 miles)
Will ($$$)
French BYO; can hold a special event
www.Willbyob.com | (215) 271-7683
1911 East Passyunk Ave. (2 miles)
Fond ($$$)
New American
www.fondphilly.com | (215) 551-5000
1537 South 11th Street (1.7 miles)
Noord ($$$)
Haute Scandinavian
www.noordphilly.com | (267) 909-9704
1046 Tasker Street (1.9 miles)

Kanella ($$)
Greek/Cypriot
www.kanellarestaurant.com | (215) 644-8949
757 South Front Street (1.8 miles)

RESTAURANT LIST: A GUIDE TO PHILADELPHIA CUISINE 15

2016 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS


Wednesday, August 31
9:00 a.m.
Short Courses
These pre-conference, professional day features a variety of short courses sponsored by APSA Organized
Sections, Related Groups, and other affiliate organizations. They require pre-registration.

PCC & Marriott See Page 19 for Short Course Locations
6:30 p.m.
APSA Awards Ceremony

This exclusive ceremony recognizes excellence in the profession. Invitation Only.
Marriott, Liberty Ballroom

Thursday, September 1
12:00 p.m. All-Member Business Meeting
All APSA members are encouraged to attend the APSA General Membership Meeting, the official
business meeting of the Association. This event is an opportunity for members to learn about the business
of the Association, vote on proposed bylaws and express their views.
PCC, 114
2:00 p.m. Breaking News: Taking Stock of the Brexit Shock
PCC, 201-C
Chair: Susan Scarrow, University of Houston

Presenters:

Justin Fisher, Brunel University London

Liesbet Hooghe, UNC-Chapel Hill

Dan Kelemen, Rutgers University

Gary Marks, UNC-Chapel Hill

Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University
2:00 p.m. Diversity Recruitment and Retention Roundtable: Transformative Change
Roundtable featuring MSRP department chairs and grad directors, DSP, and others, sharing best practices
and strategies for effective recruitment and retention of women and individuals from under-represented
groups at the graduate student and junior faculty levels.
PCC, 112-B
4:00 p.m. Breaking News: Did the Party Decide?
PCC, Ballroom AB

Roundtable Moderator: John M. Sides, George Washington University
Presenters:

John Dickerson, Slate/CBS

Marjorie Hershey, Indiana University Bloomington

Jennifer Victor, George Mason University

Book author discussants:

Marty Cohen, James Madison University

David Karol, University of Maryland

Hans Noel, Georgetown University

John Zaller, University of California, Los Angeles
4:00 p.m. APSA Mentoring Roundtable: Mentoring for Success and Advancement
Roundtable featuring advice and best practices--for mentees and mentors--on getting the most out of the
mentoring experience. Panelists will share strategies for effective mentoring relationships for academic
and non-academic careers for graduate students, faculty members, and practitioners and for mentoring
women and individuals from underrepresented backgrounds. Research-based findings will be shared.
Loews, Commonwealth D
5:30 p.m. APSA Mentoring Networking Reception
Marriott, Room 410
16 2016 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

2016 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS


6:15 p.m. 112th APSA Annual Meeting Presidential Address: Left Pessimism and Political Science
Jennifer Hochschild, APSA President
PCC, Ballroom AB
7:30 p.m. 112th Annual Meeting Opening Reception
APSA hosts the Opening Reception. All attendees are invited to enjoy hors doeuvres and cocktails.
PCC, Grand Hall
7:30 p.m. International Attendees Reception
APSA invites all international attendees to this special reception as a welcome to Philadelphia and the
Annual Meeting.
Marriott, Independence Ballroom
8:30 p.m. APSA Committee on the Status of Black and NCOBPS Reception
Marriott, Franklin 9
8:30 p.m. APSA Reception Honoring Women in the Profession: Women & Politics Section,
Womens Caucus & Committee
Sponsored by the Women & Politics Research Section, the Womens Caucus, Cambridge University
Press, the Committee on the Status of Women in the Profession, and the APSA Status Committees
PCC 201-C

Friday, September 2
10:00 a.m. Breaking News: Rage against the Machine: Populist Politics in the U.S., Europe,
and Latin America
PCC, Ballroom AB

Chair: Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University
Presenters:

Justin Gest, George Mason University

David Art, Tufts University

Wendy M. Rahn, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities

Cynthia McClintock, George Washington University

Pippa Norris, Harvard University

Ronald Franklin Inglehart, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
2:00 p.m. Plenary Address: The State of Race Relations in the United States
Experts reflect on the state of race relations in the United States and on the pressing questions facing
political scientists who study race. Topics covered will include the presidential campaign, income
inequality, Black Lives Matter, criminal sentencing reform, policing, political participation, and more.
PCC, Ballroom AB
6:00 p.m. Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site (ESP) Reception and Tour
Tour the new exhibit on mass incarceration and learn about political science courses on the politics of
justice and punishment.
Off-site, RSVP Required
Sponsored by APSA Diversity and Inclusion Programs and the Swarthmore College Political Science
Department.
6:30 p.m. John Gaus Award Lecture

Marriott, Franklin 11
7:30 p.m. Reception Honoring Teaching
Everyone is invited to this reception honoring campus-wide teaching award recipients.
Loews, Congress C
Sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha
Co-sponsored by The Political Science Education Section, The Teaching & Learning Committee, & The
Committee on the Status of Community Colleges in the Profession
2016 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS 17

2016 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS


7:30 p.m. APSA Status Committee of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals and Transgenders in the
Profession, Sexuality and Politics Section, and LGBT Caucus Reception
Marriott, Salon J
7:30 p.m. APSA Status of Asian-Pacific Americans in the Profession Committee and Status of
Latinos y Latinas in the Profession Committee Reception
Marriott, Salon J
APSA Status of Asian-Pacific Americans in the Profession Committee and Status of
Latinos y Latinas in the Profession Committee Reception
Marriott, Room 410
8:30 p.m. APSA Reception Honoring Women of Color in the Profession: Women & Politics
Research Section, Womens Caucus & Committee, APSA Status Committees
Marriott, Independence Ballroom
Sponsored by the Women & Politics Research Section, the Womens Caucus, Cambridge University
Press, the Committee on the Status of Women in the Profession, and the APSA Status Committees

Saturday, September 3
12:00 p.m. Ithiel de Sola Pool Award and Lectureship
Loews, Commonwealth A2
2:00 p.m. Plenary Address: Are We Making Progress on Human Rights? Transformations in
Knowledge and Activism
In this talk, Professor Kathryn Sikkink from Harvard University will draw on material from her forthcoming
book Making Human Rights Work: Evidence for Hope. Recently, there has been a surge of pessimism
about the legitimacy and effectiveness of human rights law, institutions, and movements. She argues that
transformations in the world generated by human rights ideas and activism have paradoxically clouded
our ability to evaluate and measure progress because we now know more and care more about human
rights issues than even before. To engage in a more productive debate, the nature of the critique,
definitions of terms, and methods being used to measure progress all need to be clarified. She examines
these issues, and argue that careful issue-by-issue examination of the evidence on human rights progress
and decline offers a more complex and hopeful picture than that suggested by the pessimists.
PCC, Ballroom AB
2:00 p.m. RBSI 30th Anniversary Roundtable
The roundtable will address the legacy of Dr. Bunche and the RBSI program, and their impact upon the
discipline/profession. Panelists and audience members will also discuss the research, teaching and
service contributions to the profession of RBSI alumni and the future of the RBSI. Featuring profiles of the
RBSI: 30 for 30.
PCC, 202-A
6:30 p.m. Graduate Student Happy Hour
Graduate students are invited to network with each other and meet informally with APSA officers and
council members.
Marriott, Liberty Ballroom
7:30 p.m. RBSI 30th Anniversary Reception
Marriott, Independence Ballroom

18 2016 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

SHORT COURSES
Wednesday, August 31
Short Courses provide diverse opportunities for professional development and offer attendees the chance to connect with
scholars from a range of backgrounds. They are sponsored by APSA Organized Sections and other affiliated organizations.
Pre-registration for short courses is required, and each short course has a $25 fee. All short courses will be held on the
premises of the Annual Meeting, unless otherwise noted.
A Political Primer on the Periodic State Constitutional Convention Referendum
PCC, 202-B
Abolitionist Politics After Ferguson: Race, Prisons, Police, and Theorizing White Supremacy
PCC, 104-B
Assessing Political Science Civic Engagement and Pedagogy Initiatives: The Consortium for
Inter-Campus SoTL Research, the National Survey of Student Leaders
PCC, 203-A
Casual Case Studies: Comparing, Matching, and Tracing (QMMR2)
PCC, 201-B
Challenges of Electoral Integrity and the Construction and Use of Expert Indictors
Marriott, Franklin 2
City Politics in an Increasingly Urban World: Mainstreaming the Local in Scholarship and Policy Making
Offsite, Drexel University MacAlister 2019-2020 (3250-60 Chestnut Street)
Communicating Science in Politicized Environments
PCC, 108-A
Database and Website Development for Public Policy: The Comparative Policy Agendas Project
Offsite, Temple University Center City Campus
Designing and Conducting Field Research (QMMR5)
PCC, 201-B
Designing Multi-Method Research (QMMR1)
PCC, 201-A
Doing Political Science in the Field: Field Research, Ethics, Engagement, and Employability
PCC, 202-A
Embracing Applied Politics in the Classroom and Curriculum
PCC, 203-A
Managing and Sharing Qualitative Data and Qualitative Research Transparency (QMMR3)
PCC, 201-C
Mathematics and Democracy: Designing Better Voting and Fair-Division Procedures
PCC, 106-AB
Of Cities and Governance: New Theoretical Approaches to Urban Governance
Offsite, Drexel University MacAlister 2019-2020 (3250-60 Chestnut Street)
Process Tracing (QMMR 4)
PCC, 201-A
Protean and Control Power in Interaction
PCC, 111-A
Research Development Group: Emerging Research from MENA Workshops Alumni
PCC, 102-A
Researching the C-SPAN Video Library
PCC, 104-A
Set-Theoretic Multi-Method Research: Combining QCA and Process Tracing (QMMR6)
PCC, 201-C
Simulations and Games for International Relations
PCC, 204-B

2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.


2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.

9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.


9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
1:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.

SHORT COURSES 19

SHORT COURSES
The Methods Studio: WorkshopTextual Analysis and Critical Semioticsand Crit
PCC, 108-B
Understanding Complexity: A Simple Guide to Using & Developing ABMs & Networks for Research
PCC, 202-B
Unlocking Success with Failure
PCC, 203-B
You Have a Job Offer: Get the Most Out of It
PCC, 204-B
What? I Have to Lead a Program Assessment?!?
Leading Your Department or Program Assessment Process for Regional Accreditation
PCC, 203-B

2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.


9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.

Dissertation Workshops
Pre-registration and acceptance was required in advance of the conference.
Dissertation Workshop: Advances in Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy
PCC, 303-AB
Dissertation Workshop: On the Intersection of Race, Ethnicity and Gender in American Political Behavior
PCC, 107-A

20 SHORT COURSES

9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.


9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.

NEW SESSION TYPES


Mini-Conferences
A full day of content devoted to a theme. The mini-conference can be in pursuit of a larger cohesive goal than traditional panels provide,
such as an edited volume or an omnibus dataset. Sessions within the mini-conference might be comprised of other session formats.

Chinese Politics: Contestation from Within and Below

Division 13: The Politics of Communist and Former Communist Countries


Time: Thursday, September 1, 8:00 a.m. 5:30 p.m.
Location: Marriott Room 415

Global Assessment Power Mini-conference


Division 17: International Collaboration
Time: Friday, September 2, 8:00 a.m. 5:30 p.m.
Location: Loews Commonwealth D

Channeling Bureaucratic Ambition: Government Professions & Career Systems


Division 24: Public Administration
Time: Saturday, September 3, 8:00 a.m. 5:30 p.m.
Location: Marriott Room 415

Great Powers and Democracy: Congruities and Tensions


Division 18: International Security
Time: Saturday, September 3, 8:00 a.m. 5:30 p.m.
Location: Marriott Independence Ballroom

Outreach Caf
This session format incorporates a handful of topic clusters, each staffed with a moderator to discuss various outreach efforts in the field.
Members will share successful engagement methods and provide guidance to colleagues on ways to apply what theyve learned in
other ways.

Liaising with the Media: Tips and Tactics

Time: Saturday, September 3, 2016, 10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.


Place: PCC, 202-A

Research Caf
This session format incorporates a handful of topic clusters, each staffed with a scholar (or scholars) in the field that has successfully
used particular methodologies or epistemological frameworks. Attendees would group together to discuss research processes,
methodologies, ask questions, and brainstorm together around issues in the field.

Measuring Protest: A Comparison of Surveys and Variables

Division 8: Political Methodology


Co-Sponsors: Division 11: Comparative Politics and Division 12: Conflict Processes
Time: Thursday, September 1, 2:00 p.m. 3:30 p.m.
Location: Marriott Franklin 11

Christians in Political Science Research Roundtable


Christians in Political Science
Time: Friday, September 2, 10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
Location: Marriott Room 414
The Methods Cafe
Interpretive Methodologies & Methods
Time: Friday, September 2, 12:00 p.m. 1:30 p.m.
Location: Marriott Liberty Ballroom

NEW SESSION TYPES 21

NEW SESSION TYPES


Teaching Caf
This session format provides a discussion forum for scholars to participate in the scholarship of teaching and learning, share pedagogical
techniques, and discuss trends in political science education. Each topic cluster will be staffed with a scholar (or scholars) in the field that
has demonstrated success in the use of practical instructional methods to share with attendees to take with them to their home institutions.
Attendees will group together to ask questions and brainstorm around core opportunities and issues in the field.
Transforming Teaching, Transforming Society
Division 42: New Political Science
Time: Friday, September 2, 4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m.
Place: Marriott Salon KL
Using Simulations to Teach International Politics
Division 9: Teaching and Learning in Political Science
Time: Saturday, September 3, 12:00 p.m. 1:30 p.m.
Location: Marriott Room 305

30-Minute Paper Sessions


This format allows a scholar to present his or her work for a longer period of time and to have a dedicated discussant who isnt
overburdened by having to read multiple papers. One session chair would guide the time, but each paper would have its own
discussant. The sessions might follow the Brookings format, in which the discussant presents and then comments on the paper; the
author would then have a chance to respond.
Field Experiments on Security and Violence
Division 51: Experimental Research
Time: Thursday, September 1, 8:00 a.m. 9:30 a.m.
Location: Marriott, Room 409
Studying and Measuring Electoral Integrity
Division 8: Political Methodology
Co-Sponsor: Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
Time: Friday, September 2, 12:00 p.m. 1:30 p.m.
Location: Marriott Franklin 12
What We Know about What They Know: Influences on Political Knowledge
Division 38: Political Communication
Time: Friday, September 2, 12:00 p.m. 1:30 p.m.
Location: PCC 110-B
Controls, Cues, and Incentives: State Society Relations in U.K. Politics
British Politics Group
Time: Saturday, September 3, 10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
Location: Marriott, Room 414
Flip It and Reverse It: Media Effects on Political Elites
Division 38: Political Communication
Time: Saturday, September 3, 10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
Location: PCC 112-B
Nationalist Ideologies: Legacies of the Past and Implications for the Future
Division 43: International History and Politics
Time: Saturday, September 3, 10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
Location: Loews Commonwealth A2
Rethinking Epistemology & Methodology Assumptions in Race & Ethnic Studies
Division 32: Race, Ethnicity and Politics
Time: Saturday, September 3, 4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m.
Location: Marriott Room 303
Representation in Various Forms
Division 34: Representation and Electoral Systems
Time: Sunday, September 4, 10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
Location: Marriott Meeting Room 501

22 NEW SESSION TYPES

WORKING GROUPS
An Annual Meeting Working Group consists of a small group of meeting attendees who are interested in a common topic
and who agree to attend panels and plenary sessions aligned on a similar topic and to convene during the meeting for a
discussion. The idea is to simulate a working group conference experience amidst APSA panels. Pre-registration for working
groups was required.

Consolidating Databases on Political


Elites in China and Russia
Saturday, September 3, 10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
Marriott Room 301

Election Sciences, Election Law, and


Election Administration: Charting a
Research Agenda
Saturday, September 3, 4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m.
Loews Tubman

Historical Political Economy

Thursday, September 1, 2:00 p.m. 3:30 p.m.


Marriott Room 301

Intersectionality and Pedagogy

Saturday, September 3, 4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m.


Marriott Room 413

Philanthropy, Policy, and Power

Saturday, September 3, 10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m.


PCC 101-A

Practicing Politics: Political Science in


Government, Policy Centers and Other
Policy-Related Organizations
Thursday, September 1, 4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m.
Marriott Room 301

Social Policy in Non-Democracies


Saturday, September 3, 2:00 p.m. 3:30 p.m.
Marriott Room 301

WORKING GROUPS 23

APSA PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PANELS


Thursday, September 1
2:00 p.m., Marriott, Room 302
JPSE Editors Roundtable
Meet the new editors of the Journal of Political Science
Education. Learn about their plans for expanding this journal
submission process.
4:00 p.m., Marriott, Franklin II
Get the Grant: Finding Funding, Writing Proposals, and
Advancing Your Research at Every Career Stage
This session is aimed at researchers at all levels and in all
subfields. The panelists represent a diverse array of funding
organizations and agencies. Topics include: where to look for
funding; how to write proposals; and funding opportunities for
international scholars and graduate students.
4:00 p.m., Loews, Commonwealth D
Mentoring Roundtable: Mentoring for Success and
Advancement
Roundtable featuring getting the most out of the mentoring
experience. Sharing best practices and strategies for effective
mentoring relationships for academic and non-academic
careers. Research-based findings will be shared.
Friday, September 2
10:00 a.m., Marriott, Room 410
APSR Meet the Editors
Meet the new editors of the American Political Science
Review. Learn about their plans for expanding this journal
submission process.
12:00 p.m., Loews, Congress C
Department Chairs Workshop & Luncheon
The topic of this years workshop will be department
leadership strategies. Topics will include how best to identify,
recruit, and retain faculty leaders at all levels of department
administration; why leadership succession plans and
recruitment strategies are important; how to prevent burnout;
strategies for negotiating administrative leadership contracts;
and balancing research, teaching, and administrative
responsibilities.
2:00 p.m., Marriott, Franklin 13
Get the Job: Tips for the Academic Job Market
This session addresses strategies for success at all stages in
an academic job search. Topics include: when to go on the
market and what to expect; tips for job talks; how to write
effective application materials; and differences in applying to
liberal arts colleges versus research universities.

24 APSA PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PANELS

4:00 p.m., PCC, 202-A


First Year(s) on the Faculty: Advice for Early Career Success
This panel is aimed at early career professors in a range of
positions and institutions. Topics include: the transition from advisee
to advisor; balancing teaching, research, and service; working
towards tenure; understanding the parameters of non-tenure-track
positions.
4:00 p.m., Marriott, Room 302-A
Thinking Outside the Box: Non-Academic Jobs Roundtable
This roundtable addresses career opportunities outside the
academy. Topics include: strategies for identifying career
opportunities, how to develop skills and materials for a nonacademic job search, and tips for transitioning out of the
academy. Participants represent research organizations, think
tanks, the federal government, and non-profit organizations.
Saturday, September 3
10:00 a.m., PCC, 202-A
Liaising with the Media: Tips and Tactics
This outreach caf features participants who regularly liaise
with the media and who will provide their pointers for
successful media engagement. Topics covered in the session
will include: general strategies for communicating academic
research to non-academic audiences; navigating interviews
with print journalists; tips for writing op-eds and other nonacademic publications; and strategies for TV and radio
appearances.
4:00 p.m., PCC, 110-AB
Making Connections: How to Build a Professional Network
and Why You Need One
This session addresses networking at all career stages. Topics
include: the goals of networking; how to connect online and in
person; the importance of building a network with colleagues
at various points in their careers; the role of networking in
fostering diversity and inclusion; building connections outside
the academy; and the outcomes of networking on career
success.
4:00 p.m., PCC, 202-A
How to Thrive in Grad School: Strategies and Tips
This panel is aimed at current or potential graduate students.
Topics include: working towards the dissertation; finding
the right mentors; teaching and assistant teaching; securing
funding; the importance of publishing; and tips for how to
finish on time.

POSTER SESSIONS
Stop by the New Electronic Poster Presentations (iPosters) in room 204 of the Pennsylvania Convention Center. Room 204 will
have scheduled poster presentations but you can always stop in to keyword search or browse all of this years posters. There will
also be open use iPoster kiosks in the hallway between the Grand Hall and Registration, outside Room 204. This years posters
can also be viewed in the online gallery, apsa2016.ipostersessions.com, both before and after the conference. Posters are
searchable by keyword, author name, division, and more. Attendees can send comments or messages directly to poster authors
through the kiosks onsite, or at any time from their own computer or device via the online gallery. See something that peaks your
interest? Reach out to the author to discuss!
Poster Session: Class and Inequality
Achievement, Elite Identity, and Affluent Political
Behavior
Adam Thal, Princeton University
Wealthy Districts Dictate: Four Decades of Privilege
In Legislation
Maricella Foster-Molina
Poster Session: Comparative Democratization
Foreign Aid and Ruling Party Durability
Steven R. Hall, Ball State University; Misa
Nishikawa, Ball State University
Hell Chosun and Ghost Island: Discontent with
Democracy in S. Korea and Taiwan
Booseung Chang, Stanford University
International Conflict, Authoritarian Breakdown,
and Democratization
Joonbum Bae, Texas A&M
Local Enclave Politics: Hungarian-Majority Towns in
Romania and Serbia
Sherrill Stroschein, University College London
Mandatory Primaries and Satisfaction with
Democracy: Evidence from Argentina
Hirokazu Kikuchi, Institute of Developing
Economies, JETRO
System Transformation and Consolidation of
Democracy in Iraq
Alfio Cerami
Toppling Governments: Exclusionary and
Fragmented Regimes and Leaders Demise
Taeko Hiroi, University of Texas at El Paso
Turnover and Norm Development: The Effect of the
Political Elite Upon Democracy
Amanda E. Burke
Viewing the Effect of Civil Society on Democratic
Consolidation Using Two Cases
Jason Capote
What Does it Mean to Live in Democracy Around
the World?
Simeon Mitropolitski
Who Votes for Opposition in Autocracies? Rethink
the Role of Ethnicity in Taiwan
Chao-yo Cheng, University of California, Los
Angeles; Yi-tzu Lin, University of South Carolina

Poster Session: Comparative Politics


Absence Makes the Vote Grow Stronger
Inga A-L Saikkonen, Yale University; Allison C.
White, Colorado State University
Audacity of Hope in Autocracy: Merit-Based Elite
Recruitment & Regime Stability
Hanzhang Liu, Columbia University
Authoritarian Governing in China: Mandating
rather than Legislating
Mayling Birney, London School of Economics
Authoritarianism on Fire: Relief Aid, the Media &
Blame Attributions in Russia
Katerina Tertytchnaya, University of Oxford
Does Open Primary Increase Openness and
Possibility of Being Elected(ROKcase)
Jiyoung Lee
Does Ethnic Inequality Promote Ethnic Voting?
Paul D. Kenny, ANU; Christian Houle, Michigan
State University
Fail, Fumble, or Foil: The Sequencing of Ideational
and Institutional Change
Matthias Dilling, University of Oxford; Sukriti Issar,
Brown University
Finding Critical Citizens: A Response Pattern
Model of Political Support
Cary Wu, University of British Columbia; Rima
Wilkes
Government Formation and Political, Economic,
Social Development
Serap Gur, Northern Illinois University
How Arms Trade Networks Affect the Prospect and
Process of Democratization
Zuhaib Sheikh Mahmood
How Long Will It Last? Cabinet Termination in
Presidential Systems
Thiago Nascimento da Silva, Texas A&M
University
Judging Corruption: Judicial Activism against
Political Corruption in Italy
Lucia Manzi, University of Notre Dame
Making Friends and Making Enemies: How
Desecuritization Policies Fail
Douglas G. Byrd, Portland Community College
POSTER SESSIONS 25

POSTER SESSIONS






Multi-Party Cabinets Influence Presidential


Legislative Success in the Americas
Carlos Algara, University of California, Davis
Nation, Ethnicity, and Umma: Identity After State
Collapse in Syria
Victoria Gilbert
Party System Nationalization and Ethnic Rebellion
Sivagaminathan Palani
Production Regime, Business Influence, and Social
Welfare in China
Hao Chen, Boston University
Public Service Uptake in Multiethnic China
Sara A. Newland, The Harvard Kennedy School
Rain, Heat, and Violence: Microlevel Evidence
from Indonesia
Patrick Signoret, Princeton University
Reparations after Human Rights Violations: The
Role of Violence
Paula Mukherjee, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill; Claire Greenstein, University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill
Social Pressure and Protest Participation During the
2011 Egyptian Revolution
Rebecca Mix Bryan, University at Buffalo
Understanding Burma/Myanmars Political
Development
Tun Myint, Carleton College

Poster Session: Comparative Politics of


Developing Countries: Institutions and
Development
Dubious Models of the Future? Middle Eastern
Migration Regimes in Global Context
Justin Gest, George Mason University; Anna
Katherine Boucher, University of Sydney
Exposure to Trade and the Transformation of
Agrarian Society
Don Leonard, Tulane University
Foreign Aid Shocks and the Brain Drain
Jikuo Lu
Institutional Selection in Post-2001 Afghanistan
Marina Omar, University of Mary Washington
Institutions in Translation: Governing the Chinese
Stock Market
Allison Elizabeth Carroll Goldman, University of
Toronto
Internet, Political Instability and Foreign Direct
Investment Inflows
Surachanee Sriyai, Texas Tech University
Legacy Institutions: A Concept for When
Traditional and Informal Do Not Fit
Paul Thissen
26 POSTER SESSIONS

Manipulated Elections as Legitimation Strategy in


Non-Democratic Regimes
Nicholas Kerr, University of Alabama; Anna
Luehrmann
Migrant Bargaining Power and the Role of Firms in
Welfare
Trevor Johnston, Harvard Kennedy School of
Government
Opposition Forces and Destruction Chain: Egypts
2011 Securitization Strategy
Engy A. Moussa, Qatar University
Partition, Migration, and Ethnic Identities: Evidence
from Sudan
Bernd Beber, New York University; Philip Roessler,
College of William & Mary; Alexandra Scacco,
New York University
Political Crowding Out? Consequences of FDI for
Institutional Performance
James Conran
Rethinking Development and the Informal Economy
in the Global South
Stacey-Ann Wilson, University of the West Indies,
Mona
Rights, Money or Emotion: Disruptive Incidents in
Medical Disputes in China
Jing Zhang
Sisters Doing it for Themselves: Women
Independents in the Middle East
Bozena Christina Welborne, Smith College
Spending for Stability: Authoritarian Regimes and
Education
Fabiana Sofia Perera, George Washington
University
The Dragons Curse? Chinese Aid and Corruption
in Tanzania
Samuel Brazys, University College Dublin
The Effects of Foreign Direct Investment on Protests
in Developing Countries
Olena Nikolayenko, Fordham University
The Electoral Support for Pro-Poor Income Growth
in Latin America
Santiago Lpez-Cariboni, Catholic University of
Uruguay; Rosario Queirolo, Universidad Catlica
del Uruguay
The Financial Statecraft of Debtors: African
Sovereigns and Diversified Finance
Alexandra Olivia Zeitz, University of Oxford
The Impact of International and Colonial Institutions
on Overall Development
Stephen Michael Bagwell, University of Georgia

POSTER SESSIONS
The Influence of National Parliaments on
Caribbean Integration
Paul C. Clement, FIT-State University of New York
The Net Effect of Institutionalized Autocracy:
Internet Access in Dictatorships
Elizabeth A. Stein, Institute of Social and Political
Studies, State University of Rio de Janeiro
The New Politics of Patents in Development: The
Second Image Reversed, Revisited
Kenneth Shadlen, London School of Economics
Too Affluent to Vote? Evidence from 2015 Urban
Grass-root Election at Beijing
Ciqi Mei, Tsinghua University; Zhilin Liu, Tsinghua
University

Poster Session: Constitutional Law &


Jurisprudence
Deciding Not to Decide: Cert. Denials and the 1st
Amendment
Brandon Thomas Metroka, Syracuse University
Diffusion of Judicial Independence in New
Democracies
Yong-il Moon, George Washington University
Judicial Review, Supermajorities, and Supreme
Court Polarization
Jonathan Hensley
Mapping the U.S. Constitution
James ben-Aaron
Political Disagreements and Judicial Decision-making
Tanya Bagashka; Lydia Brashear Tiede, University
of Houston

Poster Session: Elections and Voting Behavior


Candidate Appearance and Attack Advertising
Kevin K. Banda, University of Nevada, Reno; Jason
H. Windett, Saint Louis University
Cross Pressured Voters and Voting
Kyle Endres, The University of Texas at Austin;
Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University
Designed to Win: The Visual Identities of American
Presidential Candidates
Thomas J Billard, University of Southern California;
Ruthie Kelly
Do Americans Respond to Presidential Pork?
Marcos Menchaca, University of California, Los
Angeles
Effects of Political TV Ads on Voter Turnout: A PostCitizens United Study
Elena Llaudet, Harvard University; Michael M.
Franz, Bowdoin College
Emotions and Voting for the Status Quo
Armando Nicolas Meier

Felon Disenfranchisement and Voter Turnout


Emily Beaulieu, University of Kentucky; Bridgett
King, Auburn University
iVote: E-Democracys Effect on Voter Turnout in the
2012 Presidential Election
Marty Patrick Jordan, Michigan State University;
William Samuel Isaac, Michigan State University
Partisans Projection Biases under External Threat:
Comparing the US and Korea
Jeeyoung Park, Stony Brook University; Kiyoung
Chang, University of Notre Dame
Personal Politicians: Strategic Use of Biography in
Congressional Campaigns
Stephen N. Goggin, University of California,
Berkeley
Preferences over Politicians Personal Attributes
Across Electoral Systems
Yusaku Horiuchi; Daniel M. Smith, Harvard
University; Teppei Yamamoto, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
Terror Attacks & Retrospective Voting
Graig R. Klein, New Jersey City University
The Consequence of Election Timing
Vladimir Kogan; Stephane Lavertu, The Ohio State
University; Zachary F. Peskowitz, Emory University
The Electoral Consequences of Ambiguity for U.S.
Presidential Candidates
Christine Cahill
When Labor Goes Away, Who is Left?: Race,
Class, and U.S. Voter Turnout
Laura Bucci, Indiana University, Bloomington

Poster Session: European Politics and Society


How France Handles Hate Speech: Judicial
Decision-making in the French High Court
Erik J. Bleich, Middlebury College
Identity & Human Rights in Eastern Europe
Catherine Scott, Cornell University
Norms as Incomplete Contracts: Contesting
Ambiguous Norms after EU Enlargement
Martijn Mos, Cornell University
Productive Parochialism: Regionalist Parties and
Social Spending in Spain
Elissa Berwick, MIT
Re-Imagining Europe: European Unity in a PostFederalist Era
Brent F. Nelsen, Furman University
Strength without Numbers: The Political Influence of
Europes Farmers
Alice Ciciora
The Political Economy of Anti-Immigrant Parties
Winston Chou, Princeton University
POSTER SESSIONS 27

POSTER SESSIONS

The Space Between: The Attitudinal Effects of


Unequal Institutions
Brett Meyer, Columbia University; Alexandra
Cirone, London School of Economics; Columbia
University, New York
The Transformative Power of Leadership: Four Case
Studies of Angela Merkel
Sarah Elise Wiliarty, Wesleyan University

Poster Session: Experimental Research


Corruption as a Criminal Network: Theory and
Evidence from the Lab
Romain Reda Ferrali, Princeton University
Mini-publics and Public Opinion: Two Surveybased Experiments
Shelley Boulianne, MacEwan University
Network Effects, Riskiness, and Cooperation
Norms: A Lab-in-the-field Study
Christine Gutekunst, Maastricht University
Taxes, Windfalls and Accountability: A
Behavioralist Perspective
Pedro Luis Rodriguez; Rodolpho Bernabel, New
York University
The Paradox of Confrontation: Experimental
Evidence on the Effects of Protests
Cassilde Schwartz, University College London
Poster Session: Federalism and
Intergovernmental Affairs
Dodging Dillon: Cooperation and Conflict between
States and Local Governments
Adam Eckerd, Virginia Tech
State Nullification of Federal Law: A Call for
Constitutional Change
Ilaria Di Gioia, Birmingham City University; Anne
Richardson Oakes, Birmingham City University
States and the Common Core: An Analysis of State
Experiences with Common Core
Matthew Allen Malone, Auburn University
The Causes of Political Decentralization
Peter G. Johannessen, Princeton University
The Unintended Consequences of Local Activism
Under Federalism
Min Hee Go, CUNY Brooklyn College
Poster Session: Foreign Policy
Blocking Issues: When Does a Bilateral Issue
Impede Cooperation?
Benjamin Bartlett
Chinas Motivation for Participation in UN
Peacekeeping Operations
Sunghee Cho, Syracuse University
28 POSTER SESSIONS

Diverted from the Correct Vote? Foreign Policy


Influence on Electoral Behavior
Nicholas Martini, University of Iowa
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Public and Private
Diplomatic Signals
Azusa Katagiri, Stanford University; Eric Min,
Stanford University
Justifying War: Presidential Rhetoric and Support
for Military Action
Sarah Maxey, Cornell University
Latin American Organizations Cast Small Powers
as Mediators
Mariana S. Leone, Universidad Autnoma de
Madrid
Reforming toward a Calmer Sea? The Source of
China-involved Incidents in the SCS
Ronan Tse-min Fu, University of Southern
California; Phoebe Mengxiao Tang, University
of Southern California; Yu-Ting Lin, University of
Southern California
Region, Reach, Rivalry, and Diversionary
Opportunity
Dennis M. Foster, VMI; J. Patrick Rhamey, Virginia
Military Institute
The Examination of Arab Attitudes towards Iran
and Saudi Arabia
Alireza Raisi
Threat Perception of People in Authoritarian
Countries against Democracies
Youcheer Kim, State University of New York

Poster Session: Formal Political Theory:


Developments in Formal Political Theory
Committees and Distortionary Vagueness
Nicole Rae Baerg, University of Mannheim; Colin
Krainin, Princeton University
Congressional Policies, Bureaucratic Implementation
Peter Bils
Export Lobbies, Trade Competition, and
International Conflict
Tyson Chatagnier, University of Houston
How Irreversibility Affects Emissions and Solar
Radiation Management
Aseem Kumar Mahajan
Social Expectations and Uninformed Leadership:
How Bouazizi Started a Revolution
Mauricio Fernandez Duque, Harvard Kennedy School
Poster Session: Foundations of Political Theory:
New Research
Young Thugs: Childhood, Criminality, and
Violence Against Black Youth
Toby Rollo, University of British Columbia

POSTER SESSIONS






A Democratic Theory of Self-Determination


Minh V Ly, Princeton University
Affect as Grounds for a Critical Public Reason
Aberdeen Berry
Antigone: A Tragedy of Human and Divine Law
Karen Taliaferro, Princeton University
Asian Thought and the Self-Reliant Citizen:
Emerson on Cross-Cultural Inquiry
Lincoln Rathnam
C. B. Macpherson and The Rise of the Far-right in
Europe
Karl Arvid Dahlquist, York University
Conscientious De-Democratization: Reconnecting
Neo- to Political Liberalism
Colin Kielty, University of Virginia
Crisis and the State: Claus Offes Theory and the
Current Transformation
Jens Borchert, University of Frankfurt; Stephan
Lessenich
Hannah Arendt, Tragedy, and the Public
Appearance of Death
Elizabeth Barringer
Hegel and Tocqueville on the American State
James Tussing, University of Notre Dame
Pluralizing Europe: A Reconceptualization from the
Periphery
Brendon Westler, Indiana University
Setting up an Ontological Interpretation of the
Phenomenon of Being-Political
Fernando Romero, Johns Hopkins University
The Value of Normative Freedom
Harrison Frye, University of Virginia
Theorizing the Ethics of Forced Migration Beyond
the State
Kiran Banerjee, University of Toronto
Uncertain Threats of Environmental Harm and
Obligations of Due Care
Lev Szentkirlyi, University of Colorado
What is at Stake in Discussing a Human Right to
Democracy?
Yunjeong Choi
Whose Apology? Apology as Recognition and the
Boundaries of Membership
Caitlin Tom, University of California, Berkeley

Poster Session: Health Politics and Health Policy:


The Politics of Health Care Delivery: Who Gets
Care (and Why)?
Obamacare Everywhere: The Politics of Policy
Intervention in the Submerged State
Sean Miskell, Georgetown University

Out of Sight, Out of Mind? Privatization, Medicaid


Reporting and Political Trust
Ashley Tallevi, University of Pennsylvania
Refugee Resettlement and Assimilation, and the
Role of Mental Health Care
Aubrey Leigh Grant, George Mason University
Services at What Price? The Effect of Ethnic
Diversity on Service Quality
Jessica Pickett; Emmerich Davies

Poster Session: Human Rights


A Study of the Implementation of Gender-Based
Violence Norms in Africa
Peace A. Medie
Amnesty International and the Politics of Sovereign
Independence
Swati Srivastava, Northwestern University
Criminalization of Civilizations Castoffs v.
Constructive Collaboration
Alyssa Webb, University of Connecticut
Enabling Justice? State Cooperation with the
International Criminal Court
Franziska Boehme, Syracuse University
Human Rights Reporting Bias
Susan Caldwell Mulesky, University of Southern
California
The Audience of Repression: Killings and
Disappearances in Pinochets Chile
Jane Esberg, Stanford University
The Role of Reputation in Human Right Institution
Adoption
Ryan M Welch, Arizona State University
Watch-lists, Sanctions, Trials: Can Child Soldiering
by Rebel Groups be Curbed?
Jennifer Anne Mueller
Poster Session: Information Technology & Politics
Evaluations About and Responses to Risks of
Online Political Engagement
Aysenur Dal, The Ohio State University
Power, Ideology and Digital Media: Case Study
Daesh
Jamileh Kadivar
Sinister Side of the Web: Principal-agent Model of
the Hacker-Government Contract
Nadiya Kostyuk, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Trolling Twitter: Social Network Polarization in the
2016 GOP Primary Elections
Eric C. Vorst
Who Influences the Twitter Event Stream? Partisan
Streams in the #SOTU Address
Sebastian Stier, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the
Social Sciences
POSTER SESSIONS 29

POSTER SESSIONS
Poster Session: International Collaboration
Changing the Rules to Win: International Financial
Reporting Regulation
Blair Niece, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Do Specialized Aid Agencies Actually Promote
Development?
Katherine Vera Bryant, Texas A&M University
Health Systems and the Efficacy of International
Institutions
Tracy Kuo Lin, University of California, San
Francisco
International Agreements and Buying Partners
against Transnational Terrorism
Henry Pascoe, University of Texas at Austin
Obstructing Integration: the European Court of
Justice and Domestic Veto Players
Lauren Peritz, University of California, Davis
Refugees and the UN Security Council
Moritz Marbach
Robust Commitments or Impotent Promises:
Variation in Treaty Ratification
Shaina Western, University of Oxford
Who Protects Natural Areas and Why? A CrossCountry Analysis
Darren G. Hawkins, Brigham Young University
Why Dictators Trade: The Origins of Autocratic
Trade Agreements
Susanne Mueller-Redwood, University of
Wisconsin-Madison
Poster Session: International History and Politics
Hierarchies Based on Ideational Power as the
Constant in Historical East Asia
Han-Hui Hsieh, University of Southern California
Johann Ewald, The American Revolution, and the
Origins of Counterinsurgency
Joseph MacKay, Columbia University
Socialization and Hegemonic Authority: Korea
under Chinese Hegemony
In Young Min, University of Southern California
Steppes to Success: Reassessing the Political
Dynamics of Nomadic Regimes
Daniel Smith, University of Maryland
Poster Session: International Political Economy
Buying Access: Host Country Corruption and
International Investment
Andrey Tomashevskiy, Washington University in St.
Louis
Chinas Aid Cycle
Tomoya Sasaki
30 POSTER SESSIONS

Do Conflicts Deter or Attract Foreign Direct


Investment? A Quasi Experiment
Hye Sung Kim, Emory University; Jeheung Ryu,
University of Rochester
How Does Partisan Politics Affect Transfer Pricing
Regulation?
Mi Jeong Shin, Washington University in St. Louis
Insulating for Investment: Regulatory Politics and
FDI in Public Infrastructure
Andrew F. Hart, University of Colorado-Boulder
Mass Mobilisations under IMF Programs: Labour
(Im)mobility and Conditionality
Saliha Metinsoy
The Effect of Legal Traditions on Greenfield
Investment and M&As
Youngchae Lee
The High-Skilled Immigration Visa Game
Neil G. Ruiz
The Impact of Diaspora Investments. A Survey of
FDI in Tunisia
Daniel Naujoks, Columbia University
The Impact of Domestic Reforms on Chinese SOEs
Overseas Expansion Strategies
Wendy Leutert; Youyi Zhang
Where You Work Is Where You Stand: A FirmBased Theory of Trade Opinion
Haillie Na-Kyung Lee; Yu-Ming Liou, Georgetown
University

Poster Session: International Security


A Vote for Freedom? The Effects of Partisan
Electoral Interventions on Democracy
Dov H. Levin, Carnegie Mellon University
Chinas Institutional Balancing to the International
Order
Kai He, Griffith University
Civil War Outcome and Institutional Change
Adrian Arellano, University of Michigan
Clausewitz and the Offence/Defence Balance
Mathias Ormestad Frendem, University of Oxford/
Harvard University
Concessions and Negotiations with Armed NonState Actors
Claire Tam, University of California, Berkeley
Constructivism and Rule-Following Skepticism in IR
Theory
Joseph MacKay, Columbia University
Covert Action and Audience Costs During the
Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan
Andrew Scott Bowen, Boston College
Democratic Transition and The Deadly Power of
Armed Groups Alliance Behavior
Irina A. Chindea, Harvard Kennedy School

POSTER SESSIONS




Do Ethnic & Nonethnic Civil Conflicts Have the


Same Effects? A Bayesian Analysis
Richard McAlexander, Columbia University
Do They Mean It?: Sincerity and the Limits of
Humanitarian Justifications
Sarah Maxey, Cornell University
Forced Migration and the Logic of Population Control
Fouad Pervez, Georgetown University; Cyrus
Mohammadian, University of Southern California
Foreign Policy and International Public Opinion
during Crises
Thomas Jamieson, University of Southern California
Market for Access: Outside Options and
Bargaining for Power Projection
Brian Blankenship, Columbia University; Renanah
Faith Miles
Network Analysis of Militant Factionalism in the
Syrian Civil War
Emily K. Gade, University of Washington; Michael
Gabbay, University of Washington; Mohammed
M. Hafez, Naval Postgraduate School
Promises Under Pressure: Reassurance and BurdenSharing in U.S. Alliances
Brian Blankenship, Columbia University
Rebels Without Borders: Examining the Spread and
Success of Rebel Movements
Silvana A. Toska
Strategies of State Accommodation and The
Occurrence of Intraethnic Conflict
Fanglu Sun, Rice University
The Strategic Logic of Military Transfers
Marc Toby Grinberg, Stanford University
To Balance or Not to Balance: How States Respond
to Potential Hegemons
Mathias Ormestad Frendem, University of Oxford/
Harvard University

Poster Session: International Security and Arms


Control
Alls Unfair in Love and War: Small Allies and
Patron-Adversary Rapprochement
Audrye Y. Wong, Princeton University
Gambling for Resurrection vs. Bleeding the Army:
Explaining Risk in Failing Wars
Shawn Cochran
Maos China Opposing Nonproliferation A
Rational Policy with an Ideological Mask
Hongyu Zhang, University of Georgia
NGOs and Arms Control: From Banning Mines to
Killer Robots and Nuclear Weapons
Margarita H. Petrova, Institut Barcelona dEstudis
Internacionals (IBEI)

Nuclear Latency and the Role of Leaders


Molly Berkemeier
Private Contract, Public Violence: PMC violence in
the Iraq War
Austin Knuppe, Ohio State University
Signaling Deterrence: Coercive Statecraft and the
Global Weapon Transfer Network
Jennifer Spindel, University of Minnesota
The New Regional Order? China, the United
States, and East Asian Security
Kenneth J. Boutin, Deakin University
The Role of Confidence-Building Measures in the
Western Pacific
David W. Kearn, Saint Johns University
Poster Session: Law and Courts
Bounding Democracy Through the Courts: the Case
of Mexicos Electoral Tribunal
Jos Luis Enriquez, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Criminal Justice Practice and Homicide:
Subnational Evidence from Mexico
Erin Terese Huebert, University of Colorado, Boulder
Deference to Whom? The Importance of Certainty
in Executive Preferences
Thomas Gray, University of Virginia
Disenchantment with the Rule of Law: Legal Agency
and Informal Justice in DRC
Holly Matthew Dunn
Forging Global Judicial Independence: National
Bias & Institutional Preference in ICJ
Yong-il Moon, George Washington University
Gender and Justices: Behavior During Oral
Arguments and Case Outcome
Joseph L. Smith, University of Alabama; Dana
Patton, University of Alabama
Should We Call for the Solicitor General?
Sinead Redmond, University of Michigan
The Mystery of Fisher II and Supreme Courts Futile
Attempt at Control
Peter R. Yacobucci, Buffalo State College
While Marriage Was Won: Examining the Priority
Setting and Tactical Choices of LGBTQ Legal
Organizations
David L. Jones, University at Albany SUNY

Poster Session: Legislative Studies


Campaign Finance Transparency and Legislative
Candidate Performance at the Polls
Abby K. Wood; Christian R. Grose, University of
Southern California
Chamber Competitiveness, Polarization, and
Candidate Decisions to Run for Office
Jacob Forrest Harrison Smith
POSTER SESSIONS 31

POSTER SESSIONS

How Do Interest Groups Seek Access to


Committees?
Alexander Fouirnaies, Nuffield College; Andrew B
Hall, Stanford University
In Pursuit of Power: The Effects of Competition for
Congressional Control
Jeremy Gelman, University of Michigan
Institutional Change and Floor Speech in the U.S.
Congress
David A. Gelman, University of Rochester
Negative Representation in the U.S. House
Jennifer L. Brookhart, University of Wisconsin,
Madison; Regina Wagner
Policy Typology and Co-sponsorship: A Study of
Taiwan Legislative Yuan
Chien-Shih Huang
Remedy or Not? Social Movements to
Representative Deficit
Da-Chi Liao, National Sun Yat-sen University
The Role of Organized Party Factions in Driving
Institutional Reform in Congress
Emily Baer, University of Minnesota

Poster Session: Migration and Citizenship


A Network Approach to Studying Immigrants
Political Participation
Sara Pavan, Queens University
Localized Citizenships: Defining Sub-national
Citizenship in China
Samantha Vortherms, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Measuring Party Positions on Immigration
Kimberly Twist, University of California, Irvine
The Neighborhood Effect: Liberians Civic
Engagement in New York and Minnesota
Janet Elizabeth Reilly, Sarah Lawrence College
The Ties that Blind: Settlers and Reactionary
Political Violence
Lachlan McNamee
Poster Session: New Political Science: Activism,
Race, and Political Identity in an Era of
Neoliberalism
Decentering Our Political Selves: The New Political
Subject in Uncertain Times
Chelsea DeCarlo, Colorado State University
Race, Imperialism, and Regional Alignment:
Bargaining and Leveraging for Power
Vanessa Quince, University of Washington;
Stephen Winkler, University of Washington
Social Movements and the New Spirit of Capitalism
Blair Taylor
32 POSTER SESSIONS

The Affect of Veteran Activism


Benjamin Thomas Grant Schrader, Colorado State
University
The New Politics of Labor: An Ethnographic Study
of an Alt-Labor Organization
Biko Koenig

Poster Session: Normative Political Theory


Acknowledgment as an Idiom for Theorizing Latino
Politics
Anthony Badami, University of Chicago
Arendts Cave: Rethinking the Relation Between
Theory and Practice.
Lucas Entel, Yale University
Good Ways of Being Passive
Michael Kenneth MacKenzie, University of
Pittsburgh; Alfred Moore, University of Cambridge
Have Indigenous Rights Always Existed?
Timothy P. Waligore, Pace University
Paternalism and the Autonomy Interests of
Children
Samantha Godwin
Political Ethics
Chad Lavin, University at Buffalo
Political Theory and the Activist Turn of the 1960s
Jason Toby Reiner, Dickinson College
Practicing Justice: Impartiality as Democratic
Listening
Jacob Garrett
Rawls Kantian Fraternity-Difference Principle
Correspondence
Adam Scott Kunz, University of California, Davis
Sufficientarianism for the Desperately Badly Off
Anders Herlitz
The Aesthetics of Nature: Theoretical Foundations
For Environmental Action
Eric Rosset, University of Toronto
The Audacity of Anonymous
Ashley Elizabeth Gorham
The Feminization of Political Alternatives in the
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Noa Balf, University of Maryland College Park
The Insurance Approach to Climate Change
Ross Mittiga, University of Virginia
The Widest Public is the Wisest: Diversity, Voting,
and Epistemic Democracy
Kevin J. Elliott, Columbia University
Why No One Is Free while Others Are Oppressed:
The Authority of Injustice
Thomas J. Donahue, Haverford College

POSTER SESSIONS
Poster Session: Political Communication
Beyond the Bars: Elite and Media Framing of
Prisoner Treatment at Guantnamo Bay
Kristen Traynor, Kent State University
Communication Density, Conflict and Military
Intervention
Min Jeong Kim, University of Illinois at Chicago
Deliberative Signals: Incivilitys Role in Highlighting
Anti-Democratic Rhetoric
Emily Sydnor
Does Screen Size Matter? Making Trait Inferences
on Mobile Devices
Lena Masch, University of Trier
Personalization of Politics: A Novel Method to
Explain Media Coverage Patterns
Ana Ines Langer, University of Glasgow
Presidential Particularism and Congressional Credit
Claiming: An RD Design
Erin Cikanek, University of Michigan; Patrick Y. Wu,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Sticks, Stones, and Words: Strategic Uses of
Propaganda as Tools of Rebellion
Sherry Zaks, University of California, Berkeley;
Roxanna Rachel Ramzipoor, University of
California, Berkeley
The Iran Nuclear Deal: How Global Power Relations
Shape Global News
Saif Shahin, The University of Texas at Austin; Pei
Zheng, The University of Texas at Austin
Trends in News Media Portrayals of the U.S.
Supreme Court
Leeann Bass
When Information Overcomes Predispositions:
Episodic Frames and Public Opinion
Thomas Jamieson, University of Southern California
Poster Session: Political Economy
BITs, the Credibility Threshold, and FDI
Terence Teo, Seton Hall University
Causal Estimation of Electoral System Effects on
Public Spending
Colleen Elizabeth Driscoll, Harvard University
FDI, Political Risk, and Private Infrastructure Projects
Srividya Jandhyala, ESSEC Business School
Globalization and Corruption: An Industry-Level Test
Dina Balalaeva, National Research University
Higher School of Economics; Evgeny Sedashov,
SUNY at Binghamton; Andrei Zhirnov
Greenfield or Acquisitions: Foreign Direct Investment
and US Industry Lobbying
Hak-Seon Lee, James Madison University
Institutional & Economic Mobilization in Russian
Party Politics 1906-17
Navid Hassanpour, Columbia University

Polarization and Inequality: Towards a Mechanistic


Account
Joanna Bryson; Nolan McCarty
Preference Formation, Demand Heterogeneity, and
Public Goods Provision
Neeraj Vimal Prasad, The Fletcher School, Tufts
University
The Illusion of Higher Education
Yeon Soo Park, Korea University

Poster Session: Political Methodology


A Graph Based Approach to Estimating Actor
Influence on Policy Decisions
Fin Bauer, Technical University of Munich
Common Space for Candidates across Districts and
Elections
Fang-Yi Chiou, Academia Sinica; Mau-Ting Lin,
National Taipei University
Estimating Signaling Games with Multiple Equilibria
Casey Crisman-Cox, University of Rochester;
Michael Gibilisco, University of Rochester
Field Experiment on the Impact of Issue Advocacy
on Media Coverage
Michael C. Dougal, University of California,
Berkeley
Gender Gap in Voter Turnout by Moon Age: A
Circular Data Analysis
Kentaro Fukumoto, Gakushuin University
Generalized Trust and Oxytocin: Validating Survey
Questions by Neuropeptides
Sebastian Oskar Lundmark, University of
Gothenburg; Peter Esaiasson, University of
Gothenburg; Andrej Kokkonen, University of
Gothenburg
Ideological Distance and Strategic Decision-Making
on the US Supreme Court
Alison Higgins, Texas A&M University
Synthetic Control Methods for Diffusion Outcomes
Yunkyu Sohn, University of California, San Diego
The Complex Voter: A Method for Determining
Dimensionality of Policy Space
Kevin McAlister, University of Michigan; Alejandro
Pineda, University of Michigan
Unpacking the Unknown: A Method for Deriving
Status Quo Distributions
Ryan J. Vander Wielen, Temple University
What If? A Method to Study Counterfactual Political
Behavior
Stephanie Dornschneider, Graduate Institute of
International and Development Studies; Nicholas
Wayne Henderson, Stanford University

POSTER SESSIONS 33

POSTER SESSIONS
Poster Session: Political Networks
A Comparative Study of Local Water Policy
Networks in China and US
Hongtao Yi, The Ohio State University; Ramiro
Berardo, Ohio State University; Tao Chen, Huazhong
University of Science & Technology; Xiaolin Xu,
Huazhong University of Science & Technology
More Links, More Votes? Overlapping Ties and
Legislative Vote Shares in Brazil
Stefan J. Wojcik, University of Colorado, Boulder
Networks and Loyalties: Drivers of Military
Disobedience in the Sino-French War
Eric Hundman, University of Chicago
Poster Session: Political Organizations and Parties
A Space Irony: Political Parties, New Policy Areas,
and US Space Policy
Wendy Whitman-Cobb, Cameron University
Beyond Jacksonian Spoils: The Gilded Age
Transformation of Political Patronage
Jeffrey Broxmeyer
Beyond One-Party Rule: Factional Politics in
American Local Government
Peter Bucchianeri, Harvard University
Do Party Careers Matter for Party Switching? : Subnational Comparison in India
Ajit Phadnis, IIM Bangalore
Electoral Effects of Presidential Grassroots Lobbying
Organizations
Jonathan David Klingler, Institute for Advanced
Study in Toulouse
Quite Contrary: An Empirical Evaluation of
Libertarian-Republican Fusionism
C.M. Sukala, Louisiana State University; Gabriela
G. Vitela, Louisiana State University; Jacob Daniel
Ball, Louisiana State University
The Problem of Public Interest Participation in
Consumer Credit Regulation
Mallory SoRelle, Cornell University
The Run to Fund: How Political Parties Compete to
Fund Religious Organizations
Noa Cnaan-On, Duke University
Why do Republicans Nominate More Extremists?
Bradley T Spahn, Stanford University
Poster Session: Political Psychology
Changing Attitudes or Persistent Prejudice? Disgust
Toward LGBT People & Issues
Logan S. Casey, University of Michigan
Coping with Terrorism: Combining Behavioral and
Attitudinal Responses to Threat
Brianna A. Smith, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities

34 POSTER SESSIONS

Flagging Democrats: The Authoritarian Disposition


and the Arab Spring
Matthew Ward, University of Houston
Inducing Hope for Peace: An Experimental
Intervention
Oded Adomi Leshem, George Mason University
Linguistics for Leaders: Party, Gender, and the
Subtle Cues that Give Them Away
Jennifer Jean Jones, University of California, Irvine
My Kind of Partisan - The Role of Party Leaders in
Shaping Partisanship
Alexa Bankert, University of Georgia
The Determined Motivated Reasoner: Issue
Dynamics in Presidential Campaigns
Benjamin R. Kantack, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
The Impact of Transitional Justice on Political Trust
Risa Kitagawa, Stanford University
The Role of the Information Environment in Partisan
Voting
Erik Peterson, Stanford University
Threat of Violence and Support for Strong Leadership
Anup Phayal, University of Kentucky

Poster Session: Political Science Education:


Transformative Experiences in and outside the
Classroom
Empowering Students through Teaching Activism
and Advocacy
Heather Heckel
Growing Voters & Political Media Literacy Skills:
Spin Room Simulation Activity
Jo-Anne Hart, Lesley University
What (More) Can Political Science Do To Educate
Democratic Citizens?
Jyl J. Josephson, Rutgers University-Newark
Poster Session: Political Thought and Philosophy:
Historical Approaches
Adornos Critique and Rescue of Liberal
Individualism
Fabian N. Arzuaga
Human History in Rousseau
John Harpham, Harvard University
Problem of Socrates and the Role of Political
Philosophy: Nietzsche and Strauss
Sungwoo Park, Seoul National University
Protreptic Strategies of The Art of Rhetoric and
Dilemmas of Liberal Democracy
Daniel DiLeo, Pennsylvania State University,
Altoona

POSTER SESSIONS

Rich Public and Poor Citizens: Machiavelli and the


Economic Question
Faisal Baluch, College of the Holy Cross
Tasteful Citizenship: Hume on the Role of Judgment
and Sentiment in Politics
Brianne Michelle Walsh Wolf, University of
Wisconsin, Madison
The Citizenship of Children: Civic Education Before
the Nation State
Alexandra Oprea, Duke University
The Paranoid Style of Tyranny: Rule, Faction, and
Emergent Equality
Jordan Jochim, Cornell University
The Politics of Rebirth in the Mortal World of
Machiavelli
Katherine Bermingham, University of Notre Dame
The Shattered Soul: Labor in the Digital Era
David Peter Palazzo
The Threat of Anomie Responses and Solutions in
Early Liberal Thought
Luise Papcke
Thomas Jefferson and the Intellectual Origins of
Herrenvolk Democracy
Michael Gorup, Cornell University
Two Concepts of Dignity: Isaiah Berlin and the
Seduction of Militant Liberalism
Aaron Gavin
What If They Dont Listen? Persuasion and Force in
Platos Republic
Colleen Mitchell

Poster Session: Politics of Communist and Former


Communist Countries Division
A Genealogy of Scientific Policy-Making in China
Yimin Li, The New School
Adaptation by Imitation: Governance Innovation by
Mutual Learning in China
Xiaohong Yu; Szu-chien Hsu
Agrarian Origins of Political Instability in Rural
Central Asia
Farhod Yuldashev, University of Pittsburgh
Blurring the Lines: Measuring Self-censorship in
China and Belarus
Dimitar D. Gueorguiev, Syracuse University;
Charles David Crabtree, Pennsylvania State
University
Foreign Media, Knowledge Elite and Repression
Strategies
Mengyang Zhao, New York University; Ye Wang
The Nationalist Capture Central European
Comparative Analysis
Hadas Aron, Columbia University

The Variation of Repression Intensity under


Authoritarianism
Ye Wang; Mengyang Zhao, New York University
Which Factors Drive Protest Behavior in the PostCommunist World Today?
Peter Chereson, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign

Poster Session: Presidents & Executive Politics


Immigration Policy in the 2016 Presidential
Nomination Process
Sean D. Foreman, Barry University
Prime Ministers, Core Executives, Governance and
Politics
Chris Eichbaum
Strategically Empty? Vacancies and Nomination
Delay in Presidential Appointments
Evan Haglund, US Coast Guard Academy
The Influence of Political Dynamics on Presidents
Critical Executive Orders
Gilbert David Nunez, University of Maryland
The Media and the Message: The Content of
Presidential Speeches and Tweets
James Michael McQuiston, The University of Akron Wayne College
The Priorities of a President: Understanding Policy
Attention
Rebecca Eissler, University of Texas, Austin
Poster Session: Public Administration
Citizen Participation and Decentralized Service
Delivery: The Case of Vietnam
Diep Thi Ngoc Duong, Department of Political
Science
Have Performance Agreements Improved Service
Delivery in Brazil?
Lorena Vinuela, Syracuse University
Performance Funding in Higher Education:
Exploring Unintended Consequences
Christopher Birdsall, American University
Tech-savvy Government? A Multi-agency Study of IT
Spending and Performance
Alex Ingrams, Rutgers University - Newark
The Influence of State Politics on Higher Education
Governance Structures
Tracey Bark, University of Oklahoma
Poster Session: Public Opinion
Citizenship Perceptions in Turkey
Bengi Ruken Cengiz, Sabanci University
Creating Complexity: Opinion Leaders Efforts to
Activate the Status Quo Bias
Andrew Tyner, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
POSTER SESSIONS 35

POSTER SESSIONS

Diminished Voices: Polling, the Press, and Minority


Representation
Shakari Byerly, University of California, Los Angeles
Exploring Political Polarization in Russia Using
Social Media Data
Daria Kharkina, National Research University
Higher School of Economic
Political Knowledge Batteries: Scaling and Best
Practices in Online Surveys
Douglas Ahler, University of California, Berkeley;
Stephen N. Goggin, University of California,
Berkeley
Public Opinion Polarization in Ecuador, Venezuela,
and Turkey
Orcun Selcuk, Florida International University
Question Format, Measurement Effects, and Voters
Evaluations of Party Leaders
Amanda Bittner, Memorial University of
Newfoundland
Television News Content Predicts Political
Knowledge
Robert Bond, The Ohio State University; Matthew
Sweitzer, The Ohio State University
The Politics Behind Perceptions of Political Bias
Omer Yair, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Poster Session: Public Policy: New Research on


Public Policies and Policymaking
A Policy Analysis Framework for Cyber Security
Operations
Amy Sliva, Charles River Analytics; Richard Andres
Accountability in Distance: The Political Economy
of Affordable Housing in China
Xin Sun
Assessing Representative Bureaucracy in the
Middle East
Ginger Silvera, Zayed University; Joana Stocker,
Zayed University
Citizen Perceptions of Corruption in the Public
Service
Nurgul R. Aitalieva, Indiana University-Purdue
University Fort Wayne
Ethnic Resistance to Language Policy in China
2001-2010
Lina Wang, University of Washington
Exploring Mid-level Bureaucracy: A Tentative
Typology
Pedro Cavalcante, University of Brasilia (UnB);
Gabriela Lotta, Federal University of ABC; Erika
Yamada
Oversight, Accountability, and Compliance in
Federal Corporations
Dana D. Dyson
36 POSTER SESSIONS

Redistribution or Recognition? Legislating the


Womens Issues in Croatia
Nikolina Jozanc, Faculty of Political Science
University of Zagreb
Registration Innovation: What Improves Voter List
Accuracy?
Holly Ann Garnett, McGill University
Rules Matter: Profit Repatriation and the Central
Banks Interest Rates Policies
Huan-Kai Tseng, George Washington University
The Politics of Trial and Error: Medicare
Demonstrations and Policy Change
Andrew S. Kelly, Johns Hopkins University; Philip
B. Rocco, Marquette University

Poster Session: Qualitative Methods


A Critical Realist Explanatory Framework Drawing
on a Grammar Model
Bruno Da Rocha Braga, Braslia Federal Institute of
Education, Science and Technology
The Case of Rome: Institutional Continuity and Change
in Early Principate Rome
Mattias Ottervik, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Poster Session: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
California v. Texas: The Voter Initiative & the Politics
of Bilingual Education
Girma Elyot Alifeyo Parris, Rockefeller College of
Public Affairs & Policy at the University at Albany,
(SUNY)
Escaping Hispanophobia: Can Circular Migration
Improve Latino Immigrant Health?
Melina Juarez, University of New Mexico
How Facing Uncertainty Makes People Better
Citizens
Joe Roberto Tafoya, The University of Texas at
Austin
Issue Based or Partisan Voting? Vote Choice,
Immigration, & Group Consciousness
Angela Gutierrez, UCLA
Minority Representation and Local Engagement:
Gaining Credit for Informal Action
Erik Grant Hanson, University of California, Los
Angeles
Missing Black Americans and Representation in
Political Institutions
David Cottrell, University of Michigan; Michael C.
Herron, Dartmouth College; Javier M. Rodriguez,
University of Michigan; Daniel A. Smith, University
of Florida
Mobilizing the Opposition: Campaign Activity and
Minority Opponents
Hans J.G. Hassell, Cornell College

POSTER SESSIONS

Talking the Talk? Descriptive Representation of


Latinos and Congressional Speech
Michael S. Kowal, Bowdoin College

Poster Session: Ralph Bunche Summer Institute


Scholars Poster Session
Contributions in Politics: Congressman, Constituent
and Donor Ideological Relationships
Jose S. Gomez, SUNY Binghamton University
The Effect of Socioeconomic Factors on News
Media Source Preference and African American
Political Knowledge
Jasmine Jackson, Jackson State University
Its Not Women or Men, Its Balance
Heidi Obediente, University of Central Florida
Linked Fate and Latinos: Another American
Invention?
Renzo Olivari, James Madison University
Divided on Racial Lines: The Emergence of New
Racism in Modern Public Opinion
Danielle Russell, University of Connecticut
Racial Biases in Sentencing? A Comparative
Analysis of Sentence Length between African
American and White Women
Jasmine Smith, Indiana University
Beyond Victimization: Assessing Relief and
Recovery Under UNSCR 1325
Priscilla Torres, Loyola Marymount University
Poster Session: Religion and Politics
Where Do We Go From Here?: The Varying
Electoral Fates of Islamist Parties
Ashley Anderson; Gabriel Koehler-Derrick
Do Sheep Follow the Shepherds? Evangelical
Clergy Influence Cross-Nationally
Amy Erica Erica Smith, Iowa State University
Issue Attitudes and Issue Salience Among Liberal
Young Evangelicals
Jeremiah Castle, University of Notre Dame
Mass Attitudes about Muslim-American Candidates
Nazita Lajevardi, UCSD
Poster Session: Representation and Electoral
Systems
Bypassing Parliament: Why Proportional Elections
Produce Majoritarian Results
Mattan Sharkansky, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
Constituency Diversity, Representation, and
Polarization in State Legislatures
Eric Hansen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Female Political Representation and Prevalence of
Sexual Violence in the US
Susanne Schwarz, Harvard University

Narrow Representation? Racialized Issues and


Representation
Franchesca Victoria Nestor
Reforming Representative Democracies:
Determinants of Legislative Responsiveness
Miriam Sorace, Trinity College, Dublin

Poster Session: Science, Technology &


Environmental Politics
Cultural Influences on Taiwanese Perceptions of
Environmental Activism
Li-Yin Liu, Northern Illinois University; Brendon
Swedlow, Northern Illinois University
National Styles of Science? Political Correlates of
Science Funding
So Young Kim, KAIST
Policy Punctuation or Politics As Usual?: The
Dynamics of Science Policymaking
Rene J. Johnson, Rhodes College; Erin A Dolgoy,
Rhodes College
The Effects of Learning about Genopolitics
Alexandre Morin-Chass, Universit de Montral
The Inconvenient Truth of the Political
Environmental Cycle
Shiran Shen
Tweeting the Policy Narrative: The Case of
Environmental Policy Groups
Matthew Barnes, West Virginia University
Poster Session: Sexuality and Politics:
Comparative Case Studies in Gay Rights
Norms of Contention: Examining Nepali Public
Opinion on Sexual Norms
Sarah Rich-Zendel, University of Toronto
The Global Controversy: Polish Nationalism and
the LGBT Movement in Warsaw
Nawojka Lesinski
The Spread of Same-sex Unions Policies in Latin
America
Kelly Kollman, University of Glasgow; Inaki
Sagarzazu, Texas Tech University
Poster Session: State Politics and Policy: Politics
and Policy in the American States
Diversity and the State: Do Rules at the State Level
Hurt Local Governments?
Karin Kitchens, Georgetown University
Ideology and Learning in State Legislator Attention
to Policy Innovations
Daniel J. Mallinson, Stockton University; Charles
David Crabtree, Pennsylvania State University
POSTER SESSIONS 37

POSTER SESSIONS


Judicial Federalism, School Finance Decisions, and


Policy Learning
James C. Clinger, Murray State University
Quantifying Tradeoffs in Redistricting through
Clustering
Justin Levitt
Turning Out to Vote: Increased Costs for Minority
Voters at Polling Places
Patricia Posey, University of Pennsylvania

Poster Session: Teaching & Learning


Integration through Education? The Brko Model in
Post-war Bosnia-Herzegovina
Mary Kate Schneider, University of Maryland
Learning from What International Students Think
about Democracy
Catherine Bartch
Using Web Archives to Teach Climate Justice
Politics
Ted Perlmutter, Columbia University
Poster Session: The African Politics Conference
Group
The Impact of Voter Emigration on Party Survival:
Evidence from Zimbabwes ZANUPF
Chipo Dendere
Trust is a Must: The Impact of Political Trust on
Protest Behavior in Africa
Patience Kapfer, University at Buffalo
Voting for Social Protection: Evidence from Ghana
Rachel Strohm
Poster Session: The Politics of Advanced
Industrialized Countries
Norm Diffusion & Gender Equality - The Case of
Corporate Board Quotas
Malliga Och, Idaho State University
Now or Later: Tradeoffs in Implementation Among
European Union Member Sates
Jean Clipperton
Occasional Watchdogs or Coalition Pork?
Oversight and Policy in Coalitions
Christine S. Lipsmeyer, Texas A&M University;
Mallory E. Compton, Texas A&M University

38 POSTER SESSIONS

Poster Session: Urban and Local Politics


Market or Government? A Comparison of
Metropolitan Governance in Latin America
Jia Tian
Poster Session: Women and Politics
An Experimental Evaluation of the Effect of
Masculinity on Political Ambition
Sarah Oliver, St. Lawrence University
Gender Quotas and Their Long-Term Consequences
for Womens Political Careers
Yann Kerevel, Louisiana State University
How Gender & Newsroom Culture Shape Media
Framing of Violence Against Women
Holly Jeanine Boux, Georgetown University; Shirley
Adelstein, U.S. Office of Personnel Management;
Megan Ruxton, Colorado State University
Legal Strategies to Combat Violence against
Women in Politics in Latin America
Juliana Restrepo Sanin, Rutgers University
Legislative Patterns and Performance of Female
Legislators in East Asia
Jaemin Shim
Mayoral Office Prestige and the Intersectionality of
Gender and Race
Twyla Blackmond Larnell
Men and Gendered Advocacy in the European
Parliament, and Beyond
Mary Nugent
Reexamining the Link Between Descriptive
Representation and Political Efficacy
Katelyn E. Stauffer, Indiana University
The War on Women: An Analysis of American
Social Policies
Laura U. Schneider, Grand Valley State University
Why Do the Peacemakers Talk So Much About
War?
Madison V. Schramm, Georgetown University;
Alexandra Stark, Georgetown University
Womens Representation: Field Experiments from
Latin America and Europe
Zoila Ponce de Leon Seijas, University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill; Gabriele Magni, University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

2016 APSA AWARDS


DISSERTATION AWARDS
Gabriel A. Almond Award
The Gabriel A. Almond prize is awarded annually for the
best dissertation in the field of comparative politics.
Award Committee:
Arthur Spirling, New York University (Chair)
Lisa Blaydes, Stanford University
Marc Howard, Georgetown University
Recipient: Dawn Teele, Yale University
Title: The Logic of Womens Enfranchisement: A
Comparative Study of the United States, France and the
United Kingdom
William Anderson Award
The William Anderson prize is awarded annually for
the best dissertation in the general field of federalism or
intergovernmental relations, state and local politics.
Award Committee:
Liesbet Hooghe, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
(Chair)
Yoshiko Herrera, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Shanna Rose, Claremont McKenna College
Recipient: Philip Rocco, University of California, Berkeley
Title: Reorganizing the Activist State: Conservatives,
Commissions, and the Politics of Federalism, 1947-1996

Helen Dwight Reid Award


The Helen Dwight Reid prize is awarded annually for the
best dissertation successfully defended during the previous
two years in the field of international relations, law, and
politics.
Award Committee:
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex (Chair)
Susan Hyde, Yale University
Paul Poast, University of Chicago
Recipient: Melissa Lee, Stanford University
Title: Mind the Gap? The International Sources of
Sovereignty and State Weakness
E.E. Schattschneider Award
The E.E. Schattschneider prize is awarded annually for the
best doctoral dissertation completed and accepted during
that year or the previous year in the field of American
government.
Award Committee:
Lina Newton, Hunter College (Chair)
Dan Hopkins, Georgetown University
Kent Portney, Texas A&M University
Recipient: Rachel Potter, University of Michigan
Title: Writing the Rules of the Game: The Strategic Logic of
Agency Rulemaking

Edward S. Corwin Award


The Edward S. Corwin prize is awarded annually for the
best dissertation in the field of public law.

Leo Strauss Award


The Leo Strauss prize is awarded annually for the best
dissertation in the field of political philosophy.

Award Committee:
Amy Steigerwalt, Georgia State University (Chair)
Gretchen Helmke, University of Rochester
Anthony Lang, University of St Andrews
Recipient: Jud Mathews, Yale University
Title: Constitutional Rights, Private Law, and Judicial
Power

Award Committee:
Jill Hargis, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
(Chair)
Leigh Jenco, London School of Economics
Lars Tnder, University of Copenhagen
Recipient: Matthew Longo, Yale University
Title: Sovereignty in the Age of Securitization: A Study on
Borders and Bordering in the United States after 9/11

Harold D. Lasswell Award


The Harold D. Lasswell prize is awarded annually for the
best dissertation in the field of public policy. The award is
co-sponsored by the Policy Studies Organization.
Award Committee:
Jennifer Clark, University of Houston (Chair)
Christian Breunig, University of Konstanz
Chris Koski, Reed College
Recipient: Brian Palmer-Rubin, University of California,
Berkeley
Title: Evading the Patronage Trap: Interest Organizations
and Policymaking in Mexico

Leonard White Award


The Leonard D. White prize is awarded annually for the
best dissertation successfully defended during the previous
two years in the field of public administration.
Award Committee:
Rosemary OLeary, University of Kansas (Chair)
Sergio Fernandez, Indiana University
Susan Miller, University of South Carolina
Recipient: Bruce Jones, University of Texas at Dallas
Title: An fMRI Study of the Reward Preferences of
Government and Business Leaders
2016 APSA AWARDS 39

2016 APSA AWARDS


PAPER/ARTICLE AWARDS

BOOK AWARDS

Franklin L. Burdette/Pi Sigma Alpha Award


The Franklin L. Burdette/Pi Sigma Alpha prize is awarded
annually for the best paper presented at the previous years
annual meeting. The award is supported by Pi Sigma
Alpha.

Ralph J. Bunche Award


The Ralph Bunche Award is given annually for the best
scholarly work in political science that explores the
phenomenon of ethnic and cultural pluralism.

Award Committee:
Carol Nackenoff, Swarthmore College (Chair)
Jake Bowers, University of Illinois
Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva
Recipients: John Voorheis, University of Oregon, Nolan
McCarty, Princeton University, Boris Shor, Georgetown
University
Title: Unequal Incomes, Ideology and Gridlock: How
Rising Inequality Increases Political Polarization
Recipient: Pablo Barber, New York University
Title: How Social Media Reduces Mass Political
Polarization: Evidence from Germany, Spain, and the U.S.
Heinz Eulau Award American Political Science
Review
The Heinz Eulau Award is awarded annually for the best
article published in the American Political Science Review
in the past calendar year. The award is supported by
Cambridge University Press.
Award Committee:
Aseem Prakash, University of Washington (Chair)
Michelle Dion, McMaster University
Martin Gilens, Princeton University
Recipients: Ariel White, Harvard University, Noah
Nathan, Harvard University and Julie Faller, Harvard
University
Title: What Do I Need to Vote? Bureaucratic Discretion
and Discrimination by Local Election Officials
Heinz Eulau Award Perspectives on Politics
The Heinz Eulau Award is awarded annually for the best
article published in Perspectives on Politics in the past
calendar year. The award is supported by Cambridge
University Press.
Award Committee:
Aseem Prakash, University of Washington (Chair)
Virginie Guiraudon, Sciences Po
Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University
Recipient: Rebecca Thorpe, University of Washington
Title: Perverse Politics: The Persistence of Mass
Imprisonment in the Twenty-first Century

40 2016 APSA AWARDS

Award Committee:
Christina Greer, Fordham University (Chair)
Kanchan Chandra, New York University
Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center WZB
Recipients: Marisa Abrajano, University of California,
San Diego and Zoltan Hajnal, University of California,
San Diego
Title: White Backlash: Immigration, Race, and American
Politics (Princeton University Press)
Gladys M. Kammerer Award
The Gladys M. Kammerer Award is given annually for the
best book published during the previous calendar year in
the field of U.S. national policy.
Award Committee:
Eleanor Powell, University of Wisconsin-Madison (Chair)
Sarah Anzia, University of California, Berkeley
Andrew Rudalevige, Bowdoin College
Recipients: Helen Milner, Princeton University and
Dustin Tingley, Harvard University
Title: Sailing the Waters Edge: The Domestic Politics of
American Foreign Policy (Princeton University Press)
Victoria Schuck Award
The Victoria Schuck Award is given annually for the best
book published on women and politics.
Award Committee:
Jill Vickers, Carleton University (Chair)
Fiona Mackay, University of Edinburgh
Shauna Shames, Rutgers University, Camden
Recipient: Sarah Deer, Mitchell Hamline School of Law
Title: The Beginning and End of Rape: Confronting Sexual
Violence in Native America (University of Minnesota Press)
Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award
The Woodrow Wilson Award is given annually for the
best book on government, politics, or international affairs.
The award, formerly supported by the Woodrow Wilson
Foundation, is sponsored by Princeton University.
Award Committee:
John Mollenkopf, City University of New York (Chair)
James Robinson, University of Chicago
Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
Recipient: Prerna Singh, Brown University
Title: How Solidarity Works for Welfare: Subnationalism
and Social Development in India (Cambridge University
Press)

2016 APSA AWARDS


CAREER AWARDS
Distinguished Teaching Award
The APSA Distinguished Teaching Award honors the
outstanding contribution to undergraduate and graduate
teaching of political science at two- and four-year
institutions. The contribution may span several years or an
entire career, or it may be a single project of exceptional
impact.
Award Committee:
Sherri Wallace, University of Louisville (Chair)
Jacqui Briggs, University of Lincoln
Richard Holtzman, Bryant University
Recipient: Dewey Clayton, University of Louisville
John Gaus Award
The John Gaus Award and Lectureship honors the
recipients lifetime of exemplary scholarship in the joint
tradition of political science and public administration and,
more generally, recognizes and encourages scholarship in
public administration.
Award Committee:
Lael Keiser, University of Missouri (Chair)
Frances Berry, Florida State University
Dan Carpenter, Harvard University
Recipient: Rosemary OLeary, University of Kansas
Frank J. Goodnow Award
The Frank Johnson Goodnow Award was established by the
APSA Council in 1996 to honor service to the community of
teachers, researchers, and public servants who work in the
many fields of politics. Frank J. Goodnow, the first president
of the American Political Science Association, a pioneer in
the development of judicial politics, and former president
of Johns Hopkins University, is an exemplar of the public
service and volunteerism that this award represents.

Hubert H. Humphrey Award


The Hubert H. Humphrey Award is awarded annually in
recognition of notable public service by a political scientist.
Award Committee:
Raphael Sonenshein, California State University, Los
Angeles (Chair)
Anthony King, University of Essex
Les Lenkowsky, Indiana University
Recipient: Edwin Dorn, University of Texas at Austin
Ithiel de Sola Pool Award
The Ithiel de Sola Pool Award and Lectureship was
established in 1995 by the Association to honor the
memory and contributions of Ithiel de Sola Pool. The award
honors a scholar whose research explores a broad range
of fields pursued by Ithiel de Sola Pool including political
theory, political behavior, political communication, science
and technology policy, and international affairs.
Award Committee:
Danielle Vinson, Furman University (Chair)
Matt Baum, Harvard Kennedy School
Andy Gelman, Columbia University
Recipient: Robert Huckfeldt, University of California,
Davis
Carey McWilliams Award
The Carey McWilliams Award is given annually to honor
a major journalistic contribution to our understanding of
politics.
Award Committee:
Steve Livington, George Washington University (Chair)
Andrew Chadwick, Royal Holloway, University of London
Josh Tucker, New York University
Recipient: Alan Rusbridger, Oxford University and The
Guardian

Award Committee:
Anne Schneider, Arizona State University (Chair)
Richard Johnson, University of British Columbia
Tom Remington, Emory University
Recipient: Virginia Sapiro, Boston University

2016 APSA AWARDS 41

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


SECTION 01. Federalism &
Intergovernmental Relations
Publius, The Journal of Federalism Best Article
Award
This award is for the best article published in Publius, The
Journal of Federalism in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Michael Gusmano, Chair, The Hastings
Center; Paul Manna, College of William & Mary; Frank J.
Thompson, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Newark
Recipient: Gwen Arnold, University of California, Davis
Title: When Cooperative Federalism Isnt: How U.S.
Federal Interagency Contradictions Impede Effective
Wetland Management. Publius, The Journal of Federalism
45(2): 244-269.

SECTION 02. Law and Courts


Best Graduate Student Paper Award
The Best Graduate Student Paper Award is given annually
for the best paper on law and courts written by a graduate
student.
Award Committee: Justin Wedeking, Chair, University
of Kentucky; Martha Ginn, Augusta University; Morgan
Hazelton, St. Louis University; Matthew Hitt, Louisiana State
University; Alicia Uribe, University of Illinois
Recipient: Thomas Gray, University of Virginia
Title: Executive Influence on State Supreme Court Justices:
Strategic Deference in Reappointment.
Teaching and Mentoring Award
The Teaching and Mentoring Award recognizes innovative
teaching and instructional methods and materials in
law and courts. Examples of innovations that might
be recognized by this award include (but are not
limited to) outstanding textbooks, websites, classroom
exercises, syllabi, or other devices designed to enhance
the transmission of knowledge about law and courts to
undergraduate or graduate students.

lasting impression on the field of law and courts.


Award Committee: Ryan Owens, Chair, University
of WisconsinMadison; Chris Bonneau, University of
Pittsburgh; Gbemende Johnson, Hamilton College; Maya
Sen, Harvard University; Patrick Schmidt, Macalester
College
Recipients: Andrew D. Martin, University of Michigan
and Kevin M. Quinn, University of California, Berkeley
Title: Dynamic Ideal Point Estimation via Markov Chain
Monte Carlo for the U.S. Supreme Court, 1953-1999.
2002. Political Analysis. 10:134-153
Lifetime Achievement Award
The Lifetime Achievement Award is an award for a lifetime
of significant scholarship, teaching and service to the law
and courts field.
Award Committee: Susan Haire, Chair, University of
Georgia; Rachel Caufield, Drake University; Ken Kersch,
Boston College; David Law, University of Hong Kong;
Christine Nemacheck, College of William & Mary
Recipient: Lee Epstein, Washington University in St. Louis
Best Conference Paper Award
The Law and Courts Best Conference Paper Award
(formerly the American Judicature Society Award) is given
annually for the best paper on law and courts presented
at the previous years annual meetings of the American,
international, or regional political science associations.
Single and co-authored papers, written by political
scientists, are eligible. Papers may be nominated by any
member of the Section.
Award Committee: Paul Collins, Chair, University of
Massachusetts Amherst; Rachael Hinkle, University at
Buffalo; Scott Lemieux, College of St. Rose; Salmon
Shomade, University of New Orleans; Jeffrey Yates,
Binghamton University
Recipient: Jonathan P. Kastellec, Princeton University
Title: Empirically Evaluating the Counter-Majoritarian
Difficulty: Public Opinion, State Policy, and Judicial Review
Before Roe v. Wade

Award Committee: Richard Pacelle, Chair, University of


Tennessee; Jennifer Bowie, University of Richmond; Alyx
Mark, North Central College; Laura Moyer, University of
Louisville; Teena Wilhelm, University of Georgia

Best Journal Article Award


The Best Journal Article Award recognizes the best journal
article on law and courts written by a political scientist and
published during the previous calendar year.

Recipient: Susan Haire, University of Georgia

Award Committee: Lori Hausegger, Chair, Boise State


University; Drew Lanier, University of Central Florida;
Danny Lempert, State University of New York at Potsdam;
Kelly Rader, Yale University; Albert Yoon, University of
Toronto

Lasting Contribution Award


The Lasting Contribution Award is given annually for a
book or journal article, 10 years or older, that has made a
42 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Recipient: Rachael Hinkle, University at Buffalo
Title: Legal Constraint in the U.S. Courts of Appeals.
Journal of Politics 77(3):721-735
Law and Courts Service Award
The Law and Courts Service Award recognizes service to
the section in the literal sense, as in service on committees
and in leadership positions, as well as service within the
section, as in service to the profession within the field of
law and courts in the form of archiving data, promoting
infrastructure, representing the profession in the media, etc.
Award Committee: Matthew Hall, Chair, University of
Notre Dame; Bethany Blackstone, University of North
Texas; Rebecca Gill, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Kirk
Randazzo, University of South Carolina; Susanne Schorpp,
Georgia State University
Recipient: Christine Harrington, New York University

SECTION 03. Legislative Studies


Richard F. Fenno Prize
In the tradition of Professor Fennos work, this prize is
designed to honor work that is both theoretically and
empirically strong. Moreover, this prize is dedicated
to encouraging scholars to pursue new and different
avenues of research in order to find answers to previously
unexplored questions about the nature of politics.
Award Committee: Craig Volden, Chair, University of
Virginia; Leslie Schwindt-Bayer, Rice University; Andrew
Taylor, North Carolina State University
Recipients: Sven-Oliver Proksch, McGill University and
Jonathan B. Slapin, University of Essex
Title: The Politics of Parliamentary Debate: Parties, Rebels
and Representation. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Carl Albert Dissertation Award
The Carl Albert Dissertation Award is given annually for
the best dissertation in legislative studies. Topics may be
national or subnational in focus on Congress, parliaments,
state legislatures, or other representative bodies.
Award Committee: Michael Barber, Chair, Brigham Young
University; Jennifer Clark, University of Houston; Jason
Windett, Saint Louis University
Recipient: Molly E. Reynolds, Brookings Institution
Title: Exceptions to the Rule: Majoritarian Procedures and
Majority Party Power in the U.S. Senate. University of
Michigan, 2015

CQ Press Award
The CQ Press Award for the best paper on legislative
studies presented at the previous years APSA Annual
Meeting.
Award Committee: Daniel Magleby, Co-chair, Binghamton
University; Pamela McCann, Co-chair, University of
Southern California; Ben Highton, University of California,
Davis
Recipients: John Voorheis, University of Oregon; Nolan
McCarty, Princeton University; Boris Shor, Georgetown
University
Title: Unequal Incomes, Ideology and Gridlock: How
Rising Inequality Increases Political Polarization.
Jewell-Loewenberg Award
The Jewell-Loewenberg Paper Award for the best article in
the Legislative Studies Quarterly in the previous year.
Award Committee: Barry Burden, Chair, University of
Wisconsin; Jason Casellas, University of Houston; Susan
Miller, University of South Carolina
Recipients: Janet Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State
University; Josh M. Ryan, Utah State University; Anand
Edward Sokhey, University of Colorado at Boulder
Title: Examining Legislative Cue-Taking in the US Senate.
Legislative Studies Quarterly 40 (2015):13-53.
Alan Rosenthal Prize
In the spirit of Alan Rosenthals work, this prize is dedicated
to encouraging young scholars to study questions that
are of importance to legislators and legislative staff and
to conduct research that has the potential application to
strengthening the practice of representative democracy.
Award Committee: Gisela Sin, Chair, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign; Sunil Ahuja, The Higher Learning
Commission; Seth Masket, University of Denver
Recipient: James M. Curry, University of Utah
Title: Legislating in the Dark. University of Chicago Press,
2015

SECTION 04. Public Policy


Aaron Wildavsky Enduring Contribution Award
The Aaron Wildavsky Enduring Contribution Award is
given for the best book or article published in the general
area of public policy during the past twenty (20) plus years.
Award Committee: Paul Quirk, University of British
Columbia; Ann Bowman, Texas A&M University; Isabela
Mares, Columbia University

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 43

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Recipient: Robert D. Putnam, Harvard University
Title: Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American
Community. Simon and Schuster, 2001
Best Comparative Policy Paper Award
Given to a scholar who has received his or her PhD within
the last five years and whose career to date demonstrates
unusual promise.
Award Committee: Karen Jusko, Stanford University; Brian
Min, University of Michigan; Jacinct Jordana Casajuana,
Pompeu Fabra University; Klaus Schubert, University of
Muenster; Zach Elkins, University of Texas at Austin
Recipients: Vladimir Gimpelson, Higher School of
Economics, Moscow and Daniel Treisman, University of
California, Los Angeles
Title: Misperceiving Inequality
Best Poster on Public Policy Award
The Best Poster on Public Policy Award is given for the
best paper or poster presented at the poster session at the
previous APSA meeting.
Award Committee: Sarah Anzia, University of California,
Berkeley; Hongtao Yi, The Ohio State University; Christian
Breunig, University of Konstanz; Edella Schlager, University
of Arizona
Recipient: Alexander Bolton, Duke University
Title: Ideological Diversity and Policymaking in the United
States
Recipients: Delphia Shanks-Booth and Mallory
SoRelle, Cornell University
Title: Information v. Ideology: Recognizing (Government)
Benefits in the Submerged State
Best Paper on Public Policy Award
The Best Paper on Public Policy Award recognizes the best
paper on Public Policy given at the previous APSA Annual
Meeting.
Award Committee: Samuel Workman, University of
Oklahoma; Jeronimo Cortina, University of Houston; R.
Kent Weaver, Georgetown University
Recipient: Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University
Title: Wage Theft, Public Policy, and the Politics of
Workers Rights
Theodore J. Lowi Policy Studies Journal Best
Article Award
The Theodore J. Lowi Policy Studies Journal Best Article
Award is given to recognize an article of particular
distinction published at any time in Policy Studies Journal.
Award Committee: Susan Moffitt, Brown University;
Graeme Boushey, University of California, Irvine; Laura
Evans, University of Washington
44 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

Recipients: Megan E. Hatch, Cleveland State University


and Elizabeth Rigby, George Washington University
Title: Laboratories of (In)equality? Redistributive Policy and
Income Inequality in the American States Policy Studies
Journal. 43(2): 163-187. May 2015

SECTION 05. Political


Organizations and Parties
Emerging Scholars Award
Given to a scholar who has received his or her PhD within
the last five years and whose career to date demonstrates
unusual promise.
Award Committee: Christina Wolbrecht, Chair, University
of Notre Dame; Heath Brown, CUNY, John Jay College
and Graduate Center; Michael T. Heaney, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor
Recipient: Samara Klar, University of Arizona
Jack Walker Award
The Jack Walker Award recognizes an article published
in the last two calendar years that makes an outstanding
contribution to research and scholarship on political
organizations and parties.
Award Committee: Florence Faucher, Chair, Science
Politique-Paris; Robert G. Boatright, Clark University; AnnKristin Klln, University of Gothenburg
Recipient: Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University
Title: Brand Dilution and the Breakdown of PoliticalParties
in Latin America,World Politics 66, no. 4 (October
2014), 561602
Leon D. Epstein Outstanding Book Award
Recognizes a book published in the last two calendar years
that made an outstanding contribution to research and
scholarship on political organizations and parties.
Award Committee: Peter Francia, Chair, East Carolina
University; Marie Hojnacki, Pennsylvania State University;
Markus Wagner, University of Vienna
Recipients: Sven-Oliver Proksch, McGill Universityand
Jonathan B. Slapin, University of Essex
Title: The Politics of Parliamentary Debate: Parties, Rebels
and Representation. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Recipients: Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor and Fabio Rojas, Indiana University,
Bloomington
Title: Party in the Street: The Antiwar Movement and the
Democratic Party after 9/11. Cambridge University Press,
2015

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Samuel J. Eldersveld Career Achievement Lifetime
Award
Recognizes a scholar whose lifetime professional work has
made an outstanding contribution to the field.
Award Committee: Jeffrey M. Berry, Chair, Tufts University;
Paul Webb, University of Sussex; Hal Bass, Ouachita
Baptist University
Recipient: Kay L. Schlozman, Boston College

SECTION 06. Public Administration


John Gaus Award
The John Gaus Award honors the recipients lifetime of
exemplary scholarship in the joint tradition of political science
and public administration. The winner delivers the Gaus
Award at the Annual Conference. This year, the Gaus Lecture
is scheduled for 6:30 7:30PM on Friday, September 2nd,
followed by a reception, all at the conference in Philadelphia.

new light on important public administration questions, their


scholarly and methodological rigor and their promise for
advancing practice and theory development.
Award Committee: John Bryson, Chair, University of
Minnesota; Amanda Girth, Ohio State University; Amanda
Rutherford, Indiana University
Recipient: Jennifer Dodge, Rockefeller College,
University at Albany, State University of New York
Title: Technological controversies and emerging governance:
The case of fracking in New York and Pennsylvania.
Recipient: Sanghee Park, Boise State University,
Title: Cutback or Collaboration? Finding a tipping point
for saving without damaging performance.
Recipient: Agustin Leon-Moreta, University of New
Mexico
Title: Inequality and the Quality of Local Government in
the United States.

Award Committee: Lael Keiser, University of Missouri;


Frances Berry, Florida State University; Dan Carpenter,
Harvard University

Best Poster Award


Awarded for the best poster presented at the 2015 APSA
Conference.

Recipient: Rosemary OLeary, University of Kansas

Award Committee: Manny Teodoro, Texas A&M University


and Scott Robinson, University of Oklahoma

Herbert Kaufman Best Paper Award


Awarded to the best paper presented on a panel sponsored
(or co-sponsored) by the Public Administration section at the
previous APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Scott Robinson, University of Oklahoma;
Dominic Bearfield, Texas A&M University; Claudia
Avellaneda, Indiana University
Recipient: Asmus Leth Olsen, University of Copenhagen
Title: Negative Performance Information Causes
Asymmetrical Evaluations and Elicits Strong Responsibility
Attributions.
Herbert A. Simon Best Book Award
The Herbert A. Simon Book Award is for significant
contributions to public administration scholarship.
Award Committee: Rich Fording, University of Alabama;
Ann Bowman, Texas A&M University; Scott Lamothe,
University of Oklahoma
Recipient: Manuel Teodoro, Texas A&M University
Title: Bureaucratic Ambition: Careers, Motives, and
the Innovative Administrator. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins
University Press.
Paul A. Volcker Junior Scholar Research Grant
Award
Awarded to junior scholars researching public administration
issues that affect governance in the United States and
abroad. Proposals will be judged on their potential to shed

Recipients: Simon Haeder, Susan Webb Yackee and


Jason Webb Yackee, University of Wisconsin
Title: Coalition Drift? Congressional accountability and
government regulation, 1950-1987.

SECTION 07. Conflict Processes


Best Paper Award
This award is given annually for the best paper written
by one or more untenured scholars (graduate students,
post-docs, or faculty) and presented as part of a conflict
processes sponsored panel or poster session at the previous
Annual Meeting. Papers are eligible only if all authors are
untenured at the time the paper is presented. Nominations
must be made by a member of the Conflict Processes
section; self-nominations are encouraged.
Award Committee: Michael Colaresi, Chair, Michigan
State University; David B. Carter, Princeton University; Erica
Chenoweth, University of Denver
Recipient: Zachary C. Steinert-Threlkeld, University of
California, San Diego
Title: Spontaneous Collective Action: Peripheral Mobilization
during the Arab Spring. APSA Annual Meeting, 2015
Best Book Award
Given annually for the best book in conflict processes that
was published in the two calendar years prior to the year
2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 45

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


in which the award is given. Edited volumes and textbooks
are not eligible for the award. Nominations must be
made by a member of the Conflict Processes section; selfnominations are encouraged.
Award Committee: Lars-Erik Cederman, Chair, ETH
Zurich; Kyle Beardsley, Duke University; Zaryab Iqbal,
Pennsylvania State University
Recipient: Scott Strauss, University of Wisconsin
Title: Making and Unmaking Nations: The Origins and
Dynamics of Genocide in Contemporary Africa. Cornell
University Press, 2015

SECTION 08. Representation and


Electoral Systems
George H. Hallet Award
The George H. Hallett Award is presented annually to
the author of a book published at least ten years ago
that has made a lasting contribution to the literature on
representation and electoral systems.
Award Committee: G. Bingham Powell, Chair, University of
Rochester; Ken Kollman, University of Michigan; Susan E.
Scarrow, University of Houston
Recipient: Susan Stokes, Yale University
Title: Mandates and Democracy: Neoliberalism by Surprise
in Latin America. Cambridge University Press, 2001
Lawrence Longley Award
The Lawrence Longley Award is given for the best article
published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Guy Grossman, Chair, University of
Pennsylvania; Lucas Leemann, University College London;
Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Recipients: Rafaela M. Dancygier, Princeton University;
Karl-Oskar Lindgren, Uppsala University; Sven
Oskarsson, Uppsala University; Kre Vernby,
Stockholm University
Title: Why Are Immigrants Underrepresented in Politics?
Evidence from Sweden. American Political Science
Review, 2015
Leon Weaver Award
The Leon Weaver Award is given for the best paper
presented at the previous years annual meeting at a
panel sponsored by the Representation and Electoral
Systems Division.
Award Committee: Jonathan Slapin, Chair, University
of Essex; Justin Kirkland, University of Houston; Robin
Kolodny, Temple University

46 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

Recipient: Amy Catalinac, New York University


Title: Positioning Under Alternative Electoral Systems:
Evidence From 7,497 Japanese Candidate Election
Manifestos.

SECTION 09. Presidents and


Executive Politics
Neustadt Award for the Best Book on the
Presidency
The Richard E. Neustadt Award is given for the best book
published during the year that contributed to research and
scholarship in the field of American presidency.
Award Committee: Julia Azari, Chair, Marquette University;
Joseph Pika, University of Delaware; Jon Rogowski,
Washington University, St. Louis; Mariah Zeisberg,
University of Michigan
Recipients: Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University and
Andrew Reeves, Washington University, St. Louis
Title: The Particularistic President: Executive Branch Politics
and Political Inequality, Cambridge University Press, 2015
The Legacy Award
The Legacy Award will be given to a living author for a
book, essay, or article, published at least 10 years prior to
the award year that has made a continuing contribution to
the intellectual development of the fields of presidency and
executive politics.
Award Committee: Raymond Tatalovich, Chair, Loyola
University of Chicago; Magna Inacio, Universidade Federal
de Minas Gerais, Brazil; Dan Ponder, Drury University;
Rebecca U. Thorpe, University of Washington
Recipient: Samuel Kernell, University of California, San
Diego
Title: Going Public: New Strategies of Presidential
Leadership. CQ Press, 1986
Founders Best Paper Award
The Founders Award honoring Lester Seligman will be
given for the best paper on executive politics authored by
a PhDholding scholar at the previous years (2015) APSA
Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Janet Martin, Chair, Bowdoin College;
Andrew Dowdle, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville; Lilly
Goren, Carroll University; William Mayer, Northeastern
University
Recipient: Jasmine Farrier, University of Louisville
Title: Judicial Restraint and the New War Powers

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Founders Best Graduate Student Paper Award
The Founders Award honoring Stephen Wayne will be
given for the best paper on executive politics presented
by a graduate student at either the preceding years APSA
Annual Meeting or at any of the regional meetings.
Award Committee: Michelle Belco, Chair, University of
Houston; Graham Dodds, Concordia University, Montreal;
Joshua Kennedy, Georgia Southern University; Jeffrey
Peake, Clemson University
Recipient: Kenneth Lowande, University of Virginia
Title: Delegation or Unilateral Action?
George C. Edwards III Dissertation Award
The George C. Edwards III Dissertation Award is given for
the best dissertation in presidency research completed and
accepted during the previous two calendar years (January
1, 2014 December 31, 2015).
Award Committee: Matthew Beckmann, Chair, University
of California, Irvine; Lara Brown, George Washington
University; Anthony Madonna, University of Georgia
Recipient: Rachel Augustine Potter, University of
Michigan
Title: Writing the Rules of the Game: The Strategic Logic of
Agency Rulemaking

Excellence in Mentoring Award


The Society for Political Methodology Excellence in
Mentoring Award honors members of the Society for
Political Methodology who have demonstrated an
outstanding commitment to mentoring and advising
graduate and/or undergraduate studentsparticularly
those from underrepresented groups.
Award Committee: R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute
of Technology; D. Sunshine Hillygus, Duke University; F.
Daniel Hidalgo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Recipient: Janet Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State
University
Warren Miller Prize
Given for the best article in political analysis.
Award Committee: Neil Malhotra, Stanford University;
Megan Shannon, Colorado University; Arthur Spirling,
New York University; Thad Dunning, University of
California, Berkeley
Recipient: Pablo Barber, New York University
Title: Birds of the same feather tweet together: Bayesian
ideal point estimation using Twitter data. Political Analysis,
23(1): 76-91

SECTION 10. Political Methodology

Statistical Software Award


Recognizes statistical software that has made a significant
contribution to the advancement of political science.

Society for Political Methodology Poster Award


Recognizes the best political methodology poster given at
any political science conference in the preceding year.

Award Committee: Mike Ward, Duke University; Matt


Blackwell, Harvard University; Alexander Tahk, University
of Wisconsin

Award Committee: Erin Hartman, University of California,


Los Angeles; Richard Nielsen, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology; Shana Gadarian, Syracuse University; Karen
Jusko, Stanford University; Maya Sen, Harvard University

Recipients: Jirka Lewandowski, Nicolas Merz, Sven


Regel, and Pola Lehmann, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin
fr Sozialforschung
Title: manifestoR: Access and Process Data and Documents
of the Manifesto Project

Recipient: Yuki Shirito, Princeton University


Title: Topical N-Gram Citation Model.
Recipient: Anton Strezhnev, Harvard University
Title: A New Method for Estimating Treatment Effects
under `Truncation-by-Death
Career Achievement Award
The Career Achievement Award honors an outstanding
career of intellectual accomplishment and service to the
profession in the Political Methodology field.
Award Committee: Robert J. Franzese, Jr., University
of Michigan; Wendy K. Tam Cho, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign; Lonna Atkeson, University of New
Mexico; Kosuke Imai, Princeton University; Simon Jackman,
Stanford University
Recipient: Keith T. Poole, University of Georgia

Emerging Scholar Award


The Emerging Scholar Award honors a young researcher,
within ten years of their degree, who is making notable
contributions to the field of Political Methodology.
Award Committee: Josh Clinton, Vanderbilt University;
Adam Berinsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Jas
Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley
Recipient: Rocio Titiunik, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Harold F. Gosnell Prize
The Harold Gosnell Prize recognizes the best work of
Political Methodology presented at a political science
conference in the previous year.
2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 47

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Award Committee: Michael Peress, Stony Brook University;
Suzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State University; Brandon
Stewart, Princeton University
Recipients: Marc Ratkovic, Princeton University and
Dustin Tingley, Harvard University
Title: Sparse Estimation with Uncertainty: Subgroup
Analysis in Large Dimensional Designs.
John T. Williams Dissertation Prize
In recognition of John T. Williamss contribution to graduate
training, the John T. Williams Award has been established
for the best dissertation proposal in the area of political
methodology.
Award Committee: Justin Grimmer, Stanford University;
Matt Blackwell, Harvard University; Teppei Yamamoto,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Recipient: Dean Knox, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Title: Essays on Modeling and Causal Inference in
Network Data.

SECTION 11. Religion and Politics


Aaron Wildavsky Dissertation Award
Recognizes the best dissertation on religion and politics
successfully defended within the last two years.
Award Committee: Hanna Lerner, Chair, Tel Aviv University;
Amelie Barras, York University; Robert Braithwaite,
Michigan State University
Recipient: Shoaib A. Ghias, UC-Berkeley.
Title: Defining Sharia: The Politics of Islamic Judicial Review.
Honorable Mention: Alicia D. Forster, University of Florida.
Title: "American Political Behavior and the Role of Religious
Context."
Honorable Mention: Jonathan S. Blake, Columbia
University.
Title: Ritual Contention in Divided Societies: Participation
in Loyalist Parades in Northern Ireland.
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award recognizes the best paper dealing
with religion and politics presented at the previous years
APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Jonathan Laurence, Chair, Boston
College; Ted Jelen, University of Nevada; Ruth Marshall,
University of Toronto
Recipient: Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois, Chicago.
Title: The Elusive Structure of State Secularism and its
Disguised Critics.
48 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

SECTION 13. Urban and Local Politics


Dennis Judd Best Book Award
The Best Book Award recognizes the best book on urban
politics published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Jeff Henig, Chair, Columbia University;
Hal Wolman, George Washington University; Juliet
Gainsborough, Bentley College
Recipient: Lorrie Frasure-Yokely, University of
California, Los Angeles
Title: Racial and Ethnic Politics in American Suburbs.
Cambridge University Press, 2015
Best Dissertation on Urban Policy
The Best Dissertation Award is given annually for the best
dissertation on urban politics accepted in the previous year.
Award Committee: Mara Sidney, Chair, Rutgers University;
Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University; Allison
Bramwell, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Recipient: Zachary Todd Taylor, Western University
Title: The Politics of Metropolitan Development: Institutions,
Interests, and Ideas in the Making of Urban Governance in the
United States and Canada, 1800-2000. University of Toronto
Byran Jackson Dissertation Research on Minority
Politics Award
The Byran Jackson Award recognizes the outstanding
scholarship by a graduate student in the area of race and
urban politics.
Award Committee: Paru Shah, Chair, University of
Wisconsin Milwaukee; Kristin Good, Dalhousie
University; Marquita Bowers-Brown, Lindenwood University
Recipient: Diane Wong, Cornell University
Title: Disappearing Chinatowns: The Struggle Against
Gentrification in San Francisco, New York City, and Boston.
Norton Long Career Achievement Award
The Norton Long Career Achievement Award is presented
annually to a scholar who has made distinguished
contributions to the study of urban politics over the course
of a career through scholarly publication, the mentoring of
students, and public service.
Award Committee: Michael Rich, Chair, Emory University;
Megan Mullin, Duke University; Timothy Krebs, University of
New Mexico
Recipient: Steve Erie, University of California, San Diego
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper given at
an Urban Politics Section panel at the previous years APSA
Annual Meeting.

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Award Committee: Woody Sanders, Chair, University of
Texas at San Antonio; Neil Kraus, University of Wisconsin
at River Falls; Scott Minkoff, State University of New York at
New Paltz; Vladimir Kogan, Ohio State University

Recipient: Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland,


College Park
Title: Networks in Contention: The Divisive Politics of
Climate Change. Cambridge University, 2015

Recipients: Patricia Strach, University at Albany, State


University of New York; Kathleen Sullivan, Ohio
University; Elizabeth Prez-Chiqus, University at
Albany, State University of New York
Title: Trash: A Political History, 1880-1920.

Recipient: Graeme Auld, Carleton University


Title: Constructing Private Governance: The Rise and
Evolution of Forest, Coffee, and Fisheries Certification. Yale
University Press, 2014

Clarence Stone Scholar Award


The Clarence Stone Scholar Award recognizes up to two
young scholars who are making a significant contribution to
the study of urban politics. The award is to be given to up
to two post-PhD scholars who are in their career (pre-tenure,
or recently advanced within the last 3 years).
Award Committee: Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri,
St. Louis
Recipients: Danielle Resnick, International Food
Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC and Amy
Widestrom, Arcadia University

SECTION 15. Science, Technology &


Environmental Politics
Elinor Ostrom Career Achievement Award
The Career Achievement Award is given to an individual
in recognition of their lifetime contribution to the study of
science, technology, and environmental politics.
Award Committee: Dorothy Daley, University of Kansas;
Helen Ingram, University of California, Irvine; Eric Smith,
University of California, Santa Barbara
Recipient: Margaret Keck, Johns Hopkins University

Virginia M. Walsh Dissertation Award


The Virginia M. Walsh Dissertation Award in honor of a
young scholar who tragically passed away, is given for
the best dissertation in the field of science, technology and
environmental politics.
Award Committee: Tabitha Benney, University of Utah;
Stefan Renckens, University of Toronto; Graeme Auld,
Carleton University
Recipient: Matto Mildenberger, University of California,
Santa Barbara
Title: Fiddling While the World Burns: The Double
Representation of Carbon Polluters in Comparative Climate
Policymaking. Yale University, 2015
Don K. Price Award
The Don K. Price Award recognizes the best book on
science, technology, and environmental politics published
in the last year.
Award Committee: Thomas Birkland, North Carolina State
University; Stephen Ansolabehere, Harvard University;
Bentley Allan, Johns Hopkins University
Recipient: Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland
Title: Networks in Contention: The Divisive Politics of
Climate Change. Cambridge University Press

Emerging Young Scholar Award


The Emerging Young Scholar Award is given in recognition
of a researcher, within ten years of their PhD degree, who
is making notable contributions to the field of science,
technology, and environmental politics.

Best Paper Award


The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper published
in a relevant journal in the last two years. Relevant journals
include political science, public administration, public
policy, interdisciplinary environmental science, and science
and technology studies journals.

Award Committee: Ronald Mitchell, University of Oregon;


Kathy Hochstedler, University of Waterloo; David Konisky,
Indiana University

Award Committee: Neil Carter, University of York; Heather


Hodges, Reed College; Matthew Arbuckle, University of
Cincinnati

Recipient: Graeme Auld, Carleton University

Recipients: Arun Agrawal, University of Michigan;


Ashwini Chhatre, Indian School of Business; Elisabeth
R. Gerber, University of Michigan
Title: Motivational Crowding in Sustainable Development
Interventions. American Political Science Review 109 (3):
470-487.

Lynton K. Caldwell Award


The Lynton Keith Caldwell Prize is given for the best book
on environmental politics and policy published in the past
three years.
Award Committee: Jessica F. Green, New York University;
David Shafie, Chapman University; Daniel Deudney, Johns
Hopkins University

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 49

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Sabatier Best Conference Paper Award
The Paul A. Sabatier Best Conference Paper Award is given
for the best paper on science, technology, and environmental
politics presented at the previous years APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Deserai A Crow, University of Colorado
Boulder; Elizabeth A. Albright, Duke University; Matto
Mildenberger, University of California, Santa Barbara
Recipients: Sarah E. Anderson, University of California,
Santa Barbara; Heather Hodges, Reed College;
Andrew J. Plantinga, University of California, Santa
Barbara; Matthew Wibbenmeyer, University of
California, Santa Barbara
Title: Salience of Wildfire Risks and the Management of
Public Lands. APSA Annual Meeting, 2015

SECTION 16. Women and Politics


Research
Best Dissertation Award
Given for the best dissertation on women and politics
completed and accepted in the previous year.
Award Committee: Alice Kang, Chair, University of
Nebraska-Lincoln; Rosanne Kennedy, New York University;
Samantha Majic, CUNY-John Jay College
Recipient: Dawn Teele, Yale University (PhD); University
of Pennsylvania (assistant professor)
Title: The Logic of Womens Enfranchisement: A
Comparative Study of the United States, France, and the
United Kingdom. Yale University, 2015
Honorable Mention: Hrcan Asli Aksoy, University of
Tbingen
Title: Engendering Democracy in Turkey: Participation and
Inclusion of Womens Civil Society Organizations under
AKP Rule. University of Tbingen, 2015
Best Paper Award
Given for the best paper presented at the previous years
annual meeting in the field of women and politics.
Award Committee: Meg Rincker, Purdue University
Northwest; Tiffany Barnes, University of Kentucky
Recipients: Sarah Bush, Temple University and Lauren
Prather, University of California, San Diego
Title: How Gender Stereotypes Can Increase Engagement
with Female Officeholders: Evidence from a Field
Experiment in Tunisia
Honorable Mentions: Abigail S. Post and Paromita
Sen, University of Virginia
Title: A Woman in a Mans World: A Gendered
Understanding of Crisis Bargaining
50 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

Okin-Young Award
The Okin-Young Award in Feminist Political Theory, cosponsored by Women and Politics, Foundations of Political
Theory, and the Womens Caucus for Political Science,
commemorates the scholarly, mentoring, and professional
contributions of Susan Moller Okin and Iris Marion Young
to the development of the field of feminist political theory.
This annual award recognizes the best paper on feminist
political theory published in an English language academic
journal during the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Shatema Threadcraft, Rutgers University;
Jill Locke, Gustavus Adolphus College; Karen Celis, Vrije
Universiteit Brussel
Recipient: Jakeet Singh, Illinois State University
Title: Religious Agency and the Limits of Intersectionality.
Hypatia, Volume 30, Issue 4, pages 657674, Fall 2015

SECTION 17. Foundations of


Political Theory
David Easton Award
The David Easton Award is given for a book that broadens
the horizons of contemporary political science by engaging
issues of philosophical significance in political life through
any of a variety of approaches in the social sciences and
humanities.
Award Committee: Wendy Brown, University of California,
Berkeley; Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania; Joe
Carens, University of Toronto
Recipient: Patrick Wolfe, past university affiliations

include: University of Melbourne, Victoria University and La


Trobe University

Title: Traces of History: Elementary Structures of Race.


Verso, 2015

First Book Award


The First Book Award is given for a first book by a scholar
in the early stages of his or her career in the area of
political theory or political philosophy.
Award Committee: John Seery, Pomona College; Joan
Tronto, University of Minnesota; David Gutterman,
Willamette University
Recipient: Neil Roberts, Williams College
Title: Freedom as Marronage. University of Chicago Press
Recipient: Shalini Satkunanandan, University of
California, Davis
Title: Extraordinary Responsibility: Politics Beyond the Moral
Calculus. Cambridge University Press

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper presented
on a foundations panel at the previous years APSA Annual
Meeting.

Best Conference Paper Award


The Best Conference Paper Award recognizes the best
conference paper in the area of Information Technology
and Politics.

Award Committee: Karuna Mantena, Yale University; Craig


Borowiak, Haverford College; Antonio Y. Vzquez-Arroyo,
Rutgers University

Award Committee: Jessica Feezell, Chair, University of


New Mexico; Kevin Wallsten, California State University,
Long Beach; Brian Krueger, University of Rhode Island;
Cecilia Manrique, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse

Recipient: Josh Simon, Columbia University


Title: Jose Martis Immanent Critique of American Imperialism

SECTION 18. Information


Technology and Politics
Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation
in the area of Information Technology and Politics.
Award Committee: Michael Jensen, Chair, University of
Canberra; Lauren Copeland, Baldwin Wallace University;
Ken Rogerson, Duke University
Recipient: David Benson, Southern Methodist University
Title: The Internet Effect: How Authoritarian Governments
use Internet Communication Technologies to Maintain
Control of States.
Best Book Award
The Best Book Award recognizes the best book in the area
of Information Technology and Politics. The contest is limited
to books published in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Catie Bailard, Chair, George
Washington University; Jeff Gulati, Bentley University;
Laurie Freeman, University of California, Santa Barbara;
Alan Steinberg, Rice University
Recipient: Eitan Hersch, Yale University
Title: Hacking the Electorate: How Campaigns Perceive
Voters. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Best Information Technology & Politics Article Award
The Best Published Article Award recognizes the best
scholarly article published about Information Technology
and Politics. The contest is limited to articles published in
the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Rachel Gibson, Chair, University of
Manchester; Dachi Liao, National Sun Yat-sen University,
Kaohsiung,Taiwan; Gerhard Fuchs, Universitt Stuttgart,
Stuttgart
Recipient: Pablo Barber, New York University
Title: Birds of the Same Feather Tweet Together: Bayesian
Ideal Point Estimation Using Twitter Data. Political
Analysis, 23(1), 76-91.

Recipients: Yannis Theocharis, Mannheim Centre for


European Social Research; Pablo Barber, New York
University; Zoltn Fazekas, University of Southern
Denmark; Sebastian Adrian Popa, Mannheim Centre
for European Social Research
Title: A Bad Workman Blames his Tweets.

SECTION 19. International Security


and Arms Control
Kenneth N. Waltz Dissertation Award
Kenneth N. Waltz Dissertation Award is awarded to a
successfully defended doctoral dissertation on any aspect
of security studies, which has been submitted in final,
library copy in the previous calendar year. The committee
welcomes nominations for dissertations employing any
approach (historical, quantitative, theoretical, policy
analysis, etc.) to any topic in the field of security studies.
Manuscripts are judged according to (1) originality in
substance and approach; (2) significance for scholarly or
policy debate; (3) rigor in approach and analysis; and (4)
power of expression.
Award Committee: Michael Horowitz, Chair, University
of Pennsylvania; J.D. Kenneth Boutin, Deakin University;
David Edelstein, Georgetown University; Stacie Goddard,
Wellesley College
Recipient: Daniel Krcmaric, Duke University
Title: The Justice Dilemma: International Criminal
Accountability, Mass Atrocities, and Civil Conflict.
Honorable Mention: Carrie Lee, Stanford University
Title: The Politics of Military Operations

SECTION 20. Comparative Politics


Sage Best Paper Award
The Sage Best Paper Award is given to the best paper in
the field of comparative politics presented at the previous
years APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Susan Woodward, Chair, City
University of New York, Graduate School; Rebecca Weitz2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 51

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Shapiro, Brown University; Amit Ahuja, University of
California, Santa Barbara
Recipients: Vladimir Gimpelson, Higher School of
Economics, Moscow and Daniel Triesman, University of
California, Los Angeles
Title: Misperceiving Inequality.
Leubbert Best Book Award
The Luebbert Book Award is given for the best book in the
field of comparative politics published in the previous two
years.
Award Committee: Dan Slater, Chair, University of Chicago;
Marius Busemeyer, University of Konstanz; Melanie Cammett,
Harvard University; David Rueda, Oxford University
Recipient: Michael Albertus, University of Chicago
Title: Autocracy and Redistribution: The Politics of Land
Reform. Cambridge University Press 2015
Recipient: Catherine Boone, London School of
Economics
Title: Property and Political Order in Africa: Land Rights
and the Structure of Politics. Cambridge University Press,
2014
Greg Luebbert Best Article Award
The Luebbert Article Award is given for the best article in
the field of comparative politics published in the previous
two years.
Award Committee: Vivien Schmidt, Chair, Boston
University; Jane Gingrich, Oxford University; Guillermo
Trejo, University of Notre Dame
Recipient: Perna Singh, Brown University
Title: Subnationalism and Social Development in India:
A Comparative Analysis of Indian States. World Politics,
June 2015
Lijphart/Przeworski/Verba Data Set Award
The Data Set Award recognizes a publicly available data
set that has made an important contribution to the field of
comparative politics.
Award Committee: Carsten Jensen, Chair, Aarhus
University; Joe Wright, Pennsylvania State University; Dawn
Brancati, Washington University, St. Louis
Recipients: Michael Coppedge, University of Notre
Dame; John Gerring, Boston University; Staffan
I. Lindberg, University of Gothenburg; Svend-Erik
Skaaning, Aarhus University; Jan Teorell, Lund
University; David Altman, Pontificia Universidad Catolica
de Chile; Michael Bernard, University of Florida;
Steven Fish, University of California, Berkeley; Adam
Glynn, Emory University; Allen Hicken, University
52 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

of Michigan; Carl Henrik Knutsen, Oslo University;


Kyle L. Marquardt, University of Gothenburg; Kelly
McMann, Case Western Reserve University; Farhad
Miri, University of Gothenburg; Pamela Paxton,
University of Texas at Austin; Daniel Pemstein,
North Dakota State University; Jeffrey Staton, Emory
University; Eltan Tzelgov, University of East Anglia;
Yi-ting Wang, National Cheng Kung University;
Brigitte Zimmerman, University of North Carolina;
Frida Andersson, University of Gothenburg; Josefine
Pernes, University of Gothenburg; Natalia Stepanova,
University of Gothenburg; Valeriya Mechkova,
University of Gothenburg
Title: Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) Data Set,
https://v-dem.net/en/data
Powell Graduate Mentoring Award
This prize, introduced in 2012, will be awarded on a biannual basis to a political scientist who throughout his or
her career has demonstrated a particularly outstanding
commitment to the mentoring of graduate students in
comparative politics. The prize was named in honor of
G. Bingham Powell and was initiated by his students,
presented at the previous years APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Evelyne Huber, Chair, University of
North Carolina; Anke Hassel, Hertie School, Berlin; Mona
Leena Krook, Rutgers University
Recipient: Suzanne Berger, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology

SECTION 21. European Politics and


Society
Best Article Award
This award is given for the best article dealing with
European Politics & Society published in the last year.
Award Committee: Lenka Bustikova, Arizona State
University; Lucy Barnes, University of Kent; Mareike Kleine,
London School of Economics
Recipients: Evgeny Finkel, George Washington
University; Scott Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin
Madison; Tricia D. Olsen, University of Denver
Title: Does Reform Prevent Rebellion? Evidence from
Russias Emancipation of the Serfs.
Comparative Political Studies, 2015, Vol. 48 (8), 984
1019
Best Book Award
The Best Book Award is given for the best book on European
Politics and Society published in the previous year.

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Award Committee: Kathleen Thelen, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology; Mitchell Orenstein, University of Pennsylvania;
Sara Goodman Wallace, University of California, Irvine
Recipient: Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of
Michigan
Title: Nations under God: How Churches Use Moral
Authority to Influence Policy. Princeton University Press, 2015
Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation Award
The Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation Award is given for the
best dissertation on European Politics and Society filed
during the previous year.
Award Committee: Jane Gingrich, Oxford University; Sarah
Wiliarty, Wesleyan University; Scott Abramson, University
of Rochester
Recipient: Dawn Langan Teele, University of
Pennsylvania
Title: The logic of womens enfranchisement: A
comparative study of the United States, France, and the
United Kingdom Yale University, 2015
Peter Mair Award
The Peter Mair Memorial Award will fund the travel of
two young scholars to attend the APSA meeting. Named
in memory of Professor Peter Mair, one of the foremost
scholars of European politics, the award is meant explicitly
to enable young scholars of European politics without
adequate funding to present a paper in one of the panels
organized by the EPS section.
Award Committee: Matthias Matthijs, Chair, Johns Hopkins
University; Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan;
Duane Swank, Marquette University
Recipients: Bjrn Bremer, European University Institute
and Magda Giurcanu, Charles University, Prague
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper given on
EPS-sponsored panels at the previous annual meetings.
Award Committee: Antonis Ellinas, Chair, University of
Cyprus; Klaus Armingeon, University of Bern; Milada
Vachudova, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Recipients: Stanislav Markus, University of Chicago
and Volha Charnysh, Harvard University
Title: Big Business and the Politics of Wealth Defense: The
Case of Ukrainian Oligarchs
Recipients: Daphne Halikiopoulou and Tim Vlandas,
University of Reading
Title: Risks, Costs and Labour Markets: Explaining CrossNational Patterns of Far Right Party Success in European
Parliament Elections.

SECTION 22. State Politics and


Policy
Career Achievement Award
The Career Achievement Award is given every biennium
to a political scientist who has made a significant lifetime
contribution to the study of politics and public policies in
the American states.
Award Committee: Michael Berkman, Chair, Pennsylvania
State University; James Garand, Louisiana State University;
Virginia Gray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Recipient: Melinda Gann Hall, Michigan State University
Christopher A. Mooney Dissertation Award
This award is given for the best dissertation in American
state politics and policy completed during the previous
calendar year.
Award Committee: Keith Hamm, Chair, Rice University;
Lael Keiser, University of Missouri, Columbia; Jeffrey Yates,
Binghamton University
Recipient: Chidambaram Parinandi(directed by Jenna
Bednar and Charles Shipan), University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Title: Devolution and Policy Experimentation under Federalism:
Essays on Innovation and Emulation in the American States.
Best Article Award
The award recognizes the best journal article on U.S. state
politics or policy published during the previous calendar
year in any peer-reviewed journal.
Award Committee: Tom Carsey, Chair, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill; Bob Erikson, Columbia University;
Chris Reenock, Florida State University
Recipients: Frederick J. Boehmke, University of
Iowa; Tracy L. Osborn, University of Iowa; Emily U.
Schilling, University of Tennessee
Title: Pivotal Politics and Initiative Use in the American
States. Political Research Quarterly, 2015, 68(4), 665-677
Virginia Gray Best Book Award
To be awarded annually to the best political science book
published on the subject of U.S. state politics or policy in
the preceding three calendar years. Thus, books would be
eligible to be considered for the award for three years.
Award Committee: Jennifer Wolak, Chair, University of
Colorado; Jennifer Hayes Clark, University of Houston;
Susan Miller, University of South Carolina
Recipients: Christopher W. Bonneau, University of
Pittsburgh and Damon M. Cann, Utah State University
2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 53

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Title: Voters Verdicts: Citizens, Campaigns, and Institutions
in State Supreme Court Elections.
University of Virginia Press
Recipients: Ray La Raja and Brian Schaffner,
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Title: Campaign Finance and Political Polarization: When
Purists Prevail. University of Michigan Press
SPPQ Best Paper Award
The State Politics and Policy Award is given for the best
paper on state politics and policy presented at any
professional meeting in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Tracy Osborn, Chair, University of
Iowa; Daniel Lewis, Siena College; Kerri Melitta, Illinois
State University
Recipient: Mona Vakilifathi, University of California,
San Diego
Title: Constraining Bureaucrats Today Knowing Youll Be
Gone Tomorrow: The Effect of Legislative Term Limits on
Statutory Discretion.

SECTION 23. Political Communication


Timothy E. Cook Best Graduate Student Paper
Award
The Cook Award recognizes the best paper on Political
Communication presented by a graduate student at the
previous years APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Brian Harrison, Northwestern
University; Shannon McGregor, University of Texas; Alan
Steinberg, Rice University
Recipient: Nick Anspach, Temple University
Title: The Inadvertent Audience: How Online Peer
Influence Mitigates Selective Exposure.
David Swanson Career Achievement
(jointly administered with the International
Communication Association)
The David Swanson Career Achievement Award recognizes
distinguished and sustained contributions to the field as
planners, editors, and leaders and in roles that require
time and energy, innovation, and personal dedication.
The award honors David Swanson, one of the founders of
Political Communication who gave exemplary service to the
ICA Political Communication Division and the APSA
Political Communication Section. In his memory, the ICA
division presents the award every other year.
Award Committee: Gianpietro Mazzoleni, University
of Milan; David L. Paletz, Duke University; Lindsay H.
Hoffman, University of Delaware; Steven Livingston,
54 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

George Washington University; Magdalena Wojcieszak,


University of Amsterdam
Recipient: Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
Paul Lazarsfeld Best Paper Award
The Paul Lazarsfeld Award recognizes the best paper on
political communication presented at the previous years
APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Georgia Kernell, Northwestern
University; Shelley J. Boulianne, MacEwan University; Betty
Hanson, University of Connecticut
Recipients: Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University;
Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University
Title: Citizen Engagement (and Disengagement) in
Response to Social Ills.
Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award
One outstanding doctoral dissertation award in political
communication may be given annually. To be considered
for the award, the dissertation research must pertain to
some aspect of political communication.
Award Committee: Kathleen Hall Jamieson, University of
Pennsylvania; Johanna Dunaway, Texas A&M University;
Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University
Recipient: Emily Sydnor, Southwestern University
Title: Fighting Words and Fiery Tone: The Interaction of
Political Incivility and Psychological Conflict Orientation

SECTION 24. Politics and History


J. David Greenstone Book Prize
The J. David Greenstone Book Prize recognizes the best
book in history and politics in the past two calendar years.
Award Committee: Erik J. Engstrom, Chair, University of
California, Davis; K. Orfeo Floretos, Temple University;
Adria Lawrence, Yale University
Recipient: Robert Mickey, University of Michigan
Title: Paths Out of Dixie: The Democratization of
Authoritarian Enclaves in Americas Deep South, 19441972. Princeton University Press, 2015
Mary Parker Follett Award for Best Article
The Mary Parker Follett Prize recognizes the best article on
politics and history published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Daniel Carpenter, Chair, Harvard
University; Tulia Faletti, University of Pennsylvania; Jason
Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley
Recipient: Prerna Singh, Brown University
Title: Subnationalism and Social Development: A
Comparative Analysis of Indian States. World Politics, Vol.
67, No. 3(2015), pp. 506-562

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Walter Dean Burnham Dissertation Award
The Walter Dean Burnham Award is given for the best
dissertation in the field of politics and history.
Award Committee: Evelyne Huber, Chair, University of
North Carolina; Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of
Michigan; Jonathan M. Obert, Amherst College
Recipient: Sarah Johnson, University of Chicago
Title: The Ages We Live By: Historical Periodization in
Social and Political Thought

is given for the best dissertation in political economy


completed in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Victor Shih, University of California,
San Diego; Cheryl Schonhard-Bailey, London School of
Economics; Scott Gates, Peace Research Institute Oslo
Recipient: Charlotte Cavaill, Institute for Advanced
Study in Toulouse
Title: Demand for redistribution in the age of inequality.

SECTION 25. Political Economy

Recipient: Rachel Augustine Potter, University of


Virginia
Title: Writing the Rules of the Game: The Strategic Logic of
Agency Rule Making.

Michael Wallerstein Award


The Michael Wallerstein Award is given for the best
published article in political economy in the previous
calendar year.

Fiona McGillivray Prize Best Paper Award


The Fiona McGillivray Prize is given for the best paper in
political economy presented at the previous years APSA
Annual Meeting.

Award Committee: Stephanie Rickard, London School of


Economics; Carie Steele, Texas Tech University; Soo Yeon
Kim, National University of Singapore

Award Committee: Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown


University; Oeindrila Dube, New York University; Antoinette
Handley, University of Toronto

Recipients: Ernesto Calvo, University of Maryland,


College Park and Jonathan Rodden, Stanford
University
Title: The Achilles Heel of Plurality Systems: Geography and
Representation in Multiparty Democracies. American Journal
of Political Science, 59/4 (October) 2015: 789-805

Recipient: Francisco Garfias, Stanford University


Title: Elite Competition and State Capacity Development:
Theory and Evidence from Post-Revolutionary Mexico.

William H. Riker Book Award


The Best Book Award, named for William H. Riker, is given
for the best book on political economy published during the
past three calendar years.

Christian Bay Best Paper Award


The Christian Bay Award recognizes the best paper
presented on a New Political Science panel at the previous
years annual meeting.

Award Committee: Miriam Golden, University of California,


Los Angeles; Assema Sinha, Claremont McKenna College;
Charles Shipan, University of Michigan

Award Committee: Robert Kirsch, Chair, Arizona State


University; Lucrecia Iommi, Fairfield University; Joshua
Yesnowitz, Williams College

Recipient: David Skarbek, Kings College London


Title: The Social Order of the Underworld: How Prison
Gangs Govern the American Penal System
Oxford University Press, 2014

Recipient: Jocelyn Boryczka, Fairfield University


Title: An Anatomy of Sexism: The Colonized Vagina.

Honorable Mention: Megumi Naoi, University of


California, San Diego
Title: Building Legislative Coalitions for Free Trade in Asia:
Globalization as Legislation, Cambridge University Press
2015
Honorable Mention: David A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins
University
Title: Demanding Devaluation: Exchange Rate Politics in the
Developing World, Cornell University Press, 2015
Mancur Olson Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award, named for Mancur Olson,

SECTION 27. New Political Science

Michael Harrington Book Award


The Michael Harrington Book Award is given for an
outstanding book that demonstrates how scholarship can
be used in the struggle for a better world.
Award Committee: Heike Schotten, Chair, University of
Massachusetts, Boston; Laurence Davis, University College
Cork; Jeff Broxmeyer, University of Toledo
Recipient: Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania
Title: Caught:The Prison State and the Lockdown of
American Politics. Princeton University Press, 2015
Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven Award
The Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven Award
recognizes an activist group, in the region of the annual
2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 55

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


meeting that puts the ideals of the New Political Science
Section, to make the study of politics relevant to the
struggle for a better world, into practice.

Award Committee: David Redlawsk, Rutgers University;


Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College; Michael Tesler,
University of California, Irvine

Award Committee: Maggie Gray, Chair, Adelphi University;


Andrew Scerri, Virginia Tech; Jennifer Lawrence, Virginia
Tech; Frances Piven, Honorary, CUNY-Graduate Center

Recipients: Eric Groenendyk, University of Memphis and


Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
Title: What Motivates Reasoning? A Goal-Oriented
Theory of Political Evaluation.

Recipient: Urban Tree Connection


Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement Award
The Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement Award
recognizes a progressive political scientist who has had a
long, successful career as a writer, teacher and activist.
Award Committee: Terrell Carver, Chair, University
of Bristol; Timothy Luke, Virginia Tech; Nancy Love,
Appalachian State University
Recipient: V. Spike Peterson, University of Arizona
Stephen Eric Bronner Dissertation Award
For an outstanding Political Science dissertation finished
within the previous year of the APSA Meeting which
exemplifies the commitment to use scholarship in the
struggle for a better world.
Award Committee: Manfred Steger, Chair, University
of Hawaii, Manoa; Isaac Kamola, Trinity College; John
Ehrenberg, Long Island University; Stephen Eric Bronner,
Honorary, Rutgers University
Recipient: Dean Snyder, Antioch College
Title: Commercial Capital and the Political Economy of
Agricultural Overproduction. Syracuse University, 2015

SECTION 28. Political Psychology


Robert E. Lane Best Book Award
The Robert E. Lane Award for the best book in political
psychology published in the past year.
Award Committee: Kent Jennings, University of California,
Santa Barbara; Beth Miller Vonnahme, University of
Missouri Kansas City; Daniel Myers, University of
Minnesota
Recipients: Bethany Albertson, University of Texas at
Austin and Shana Gadarian, Syracuse University
Title: Anxious Politics: Democratic Citizenship in a
Threatening World. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Recipient: Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware
Title: Nationalist Passions. Cornell University Press, 2015
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given to the most outstanding
paper in political psychology delivered at the previous
years Annual Meeting.
56 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

Best Dissertation Award


The Best Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation
in political psychology filed during the previous year.
Award Committee: Zoe Oxley, Union College; Elizabeth
Suhay, American University; Timothy Ryan, University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Recipient: Eun Bin Chung, University of Utah
Title: Overcoming the History Problem: Group-Affirmation
in International Relations.
Distinguished Junior Scholars Award
The APSA Political Psychology section will give up to five
$400 grants, meant for travel to the APSA, for junior
scholars (graduate students or those no more than seven
years since receiving their PhD).
Award Committee: Casey Klofstad, University of Miami;
Monica Schneider, Miami University; Cengiz Erisen, TOBB
University of Economics and Technology
Recipients: Matthew Ward, University of Houston;
D.J. Flynn, Northwestern University; Tarah Williams,
University of Illinois

SECTION 29. Political Science


Education
Craig L. Brians Award for Excellence in
Undergraduate Research and Mentorship
Established in 2014, this award will be awarded annually
at the Teaching and Learning Conference, with recognition
also given at the APSA annual PSE section reception.
Award Committee: Victor Asal, Chair, University at Albany,
SUNY; Mitchell Brown, Auburn University; Steve Greene,
North Carolina State University
Recipients: Elizabeth Matto, Rutgers University and
Jeffrey Fine, Clemson University
Best APSA Conference Paper Award
The Best Paper Presentation Award is given for the best
presentation on undergraduate education at the past years
APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Bobbi Gentry, Chair, Bridgewater
College; Diane Lowenthal, American University; Jeffrey
Sosland, American University

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Recipients: Eric Michael French, Oklahoma State
University and Brendon Wrestler, Indiana State University
Title: How to Lose a Class in Ten Days: The Link between
Pedagogy and Student Retention.
Lifetime Achievement Award
The Lifetime Achievement Award is given to a person
whose lifetime contributions to political science have had a
significant impact on undergraduate education.
Award Committee: Sherri L. Wallace, Chair, University of
Louisville; Patrick McKinlay, Morningside College; Joseph
Roberts, Roger Williams University; Victor Asal, University
at Albany, SUNY; Terry Gilmour, Midland College; Bobbi
Gentry, Bridgewater College; Ex-Officio: Renee Van
Vechten, University of the Redlands
Recipient: Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida

SECTION 30. Politics, Literature


and Film
Wilson Carey McWilliams Best Paper Award
The Wilson Carey McWilliams Best Paper Award is given
for the best paper presented at the previous years APSA
Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Claudia Franziska Brhwiler, University
of St.Gallen, Switzerland; Davide Panagia, University of
California, Los Angeles; Carl Scott, Utah Valley University;
Ann Ward, University of Regina, Canada

Recipient: Danielle Lupton, Colgate University


Title: Military Experience and Congressional Oversight of
the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Best Graduate Student Paper Award
Panel chairs from any division are invited to nominate
outstanding graduate student papers presented at the APSA
Annual Meeting that are relevant to the study of foreign policy.
Award Committee: Bridget Coggins, University of
California, Santa Barbara; Dennis Foster, Virginia Military
Institute; Brendan Green, University of Cincinnati
Recipient: Mark Bell, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Title: What Do Nuclear Weapons Offer States? A Theory
of State Foreign Policy Response to Nuclear Acquisition.
Recipient: Lina Benabdallah, University of Florida
Title: Emerging Powers as Socializers: Examining Norm
Diffusion and KnowledgeProduction in Chinas Security
Strategy.

SECTION 32. Elections, Public


Opinion, and Voting Behavior
Warren E. Miller Prize
The Warren E. Miller Prize is awarded every two or three
years for an outstanding career of intellectual accomplishment
and service to the profession in the Elections, Public Opinion,
and Voting Behavior field.

Recipient: Arlene Saxonhouse, University of Michigan


Title: Save Our City: The Curious Absence of Aeschylus in
Modern Political Thought. APSA Annual Meeting, 2015

Award Committee: Cindy Kam, Chair, Vanderbilt


University; Ted Brader, University of Michigan; Robert Van
Houweling, University of California, Berkeley

SECTION 31. Foreign Policy

Philip E. Converse Best Book Award


The Philip E. Converse Book Award is given for an outstanding
book in the field published at least five years before.

Distinguished Scholar Award


Recognizes a history of distinguished scholarship in the
field of foreign policy.
Award Committee: Cameron Thies, Arizona State
University; Susan Allen, University of Mississippi; James
Scott, Texas Christian University
Recipient: Robert Jervis, Columbia University

Recipient: John Aldrich, Duke University

Award Committee: Tatishe Nteta, Chair, University


of Massachusetts, Amherst; William Bianco, Indiana
University; John Ryan, Stony Brook University
Recipients: Marc Hetherington, Vanderbilt University
and Jonathan Weiler, University of North Carolina
Title: Authoritarianism and Polarization in American
Politics. Cambridge University Press, 2009

Best Paper Award


The Best Paper on foreign policy presented at the previous
years APSA Annual Meeting.

Emerging Scholar Award


The Emerging Scholar Award is awarded to the top scholar
in the field who is within 10 years of her or his PhD.

Award Committee: Desha Girod, Georgetown University;


Alexandra Guisinger, Temple University; Elizabeth
Saunders, George Washington University

Award Committee: Cherie Maestas, Chair, University of


North Carolina, Charlotte; Steve Nicholson, University of
California, Merced; Mark Peffley, University of Kentucky
2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 57

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Recipients: Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
and Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper delivered
at the previous years APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Anand Sokhey, Chair, University of
Colorado; Jessica Preece, Brigham Young University; Adam
Levine, Cornell University
Recipients: David A.M. Peterson, Iowa State University;
Kyle Saunders, Colorado State University; Scott
McClurg, Southern Illinois University; Joanne Miller,
University of Minnesota
Title: Macrointerest: The Public as Attentive Gods of Vengeance
but Lazy Gods of Reward (with Apologies to V.O. Key).
Best Article in Political Behavior Award
This award is for the best article published in Political
Behavior in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: David Peterson, Chair, Iowa State
University; Nichole Bauer, University of Alabama; Zeynep
Somer-Topcu, University of Texas at Austin
Recipient: Cecelia Mo, Vanderbilt University
Title: The Consequences of Explicit and Implicit Gender
Attitudes and Candidate Quality in the Calculation of Voters.

SECTION 33. Race, Ethnicity and


Politics

Best Book Award for Race & U.S. Electoral Politics


The Best Book Award is given for the best book in the field
of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics.
Award Committee: Natasha Altema McNeely, University
of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Ivy Cargile, California State
University Bakersfield; Tony Affigne, Providence College
Recipient: Christopher T. Stout, Southern Illinois
University, Carbondale
Title: Bringing Race Back In: Black Politicians,
Deracialization, and Voting Behavior in the Age of
Obama. University of Virginia Press
Best Book Award for Inter-Race Relations in the
United States
The Best Book Award is given for the best book in the field
of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics.
Award Committee: Natasha Altema McNeely, University
of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Ivy Cargile, California State
University Bakersfield; Tony Affigne, Providence College
Recipient: Betina Cutaia Wilkinson, Wake Forest University
Title: Partners or Rivals?: Power and Latino, Black, and White
Relations in the Twenty-First Century. University of Virginia Press

SECTION 34. International History


and Politics

Best Book Award for Race Relations in the United


States
The Best Book Award is given for the best book in the field
of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics.

Jervis and Schroeder Best Book Award


This award may be granted to a single-authored or multiauthored book, or to an edited volume. The award will be
given to works published in the calendar year prior to the
year of the APSA meeting at which the award is presented.
The copyright date of a book will establish the relevant year.

Award Committee: Natasha Altema McNeely, University


of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Ivy Cargile, California State
University, Bakersfield; Tony Affigne, Providence College

Award Committee: Jonathan Kirshner, Chair, Cornell


University; Stacie Goddard, Wellesley College; Erik
Grynaviski, George Washington University

Recipient: Lorrie Frasure-Yokley, University of


California, Los Angeles
Title: Racial and Ethnic Politics in American Suburbs.
Cambridge University Press

Recipients: Andrew Phillips, University of Queensland


and Jason Sharman, Griffith University, Queensland
Title: International Order in Diversity: War, Trade and Rule
in the Indian Ocean. Cambridge University Press, 2015

Best Book Award for Race Theory & Racial


Construction
The Best Book Award is given for the best book in the field
of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics.

Recipient: Ronald Krebs, University of Minnesota


Title: Narrative and the Making of U.S. National Security.
Cambridge University Press, 2015

Award Committee: Natasha Altema McNeely, University


of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Ivy Cargile, California State
University, Bakersfield; Tony Affigne, Providence College
Recipient: Claire Jean Kim, University of California, Irvine
Title: Dangerous Crossings: Race, Species, and Nature in a
Multicultural Age. Cambridge University Press
58 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

Outstanding Article Award


The Outstanding Article Award in International History and
Politics recognizes exceptional peer-reviewed journal articles
representing the mission of the International History and
Politics Section of the American Political Science Association,
including innovative work that brings new light to events and
processes in international politics, encourages interdisciplinary conversations between political scientists and historians,

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


and advances historiographical methods. The Outstanding
Article Award is given to a published article that appeared
in print in the calendar year preceding the APSA meeting at
which the award is presented. It may be granted to an article
that is single- or co-authored. The year of final journal publication, as detailed by print citation, establishes eligibility.
Award Committee: Henry Nau, Chair, George Washington
University; Hyon Joo Yoo, Trinity University; Jeff Colgan,
Brown University
Recipients: Andrew Phillips, University of Queensland
and Jason Sharman, Griffith University, Queensland
Title: Explaining Durable Diversity in International Systems:
State, Company, and Empire in the Indian Ocean.
International Studies Quarterly, (2015), 59, 436-448
Honorable Mention: Michael Beckley, Tufts University
Title: The Myth of Entangling Alliances: Reassessing the
Security Risks of U.S. Defense Pacts. International Security,
39, 4 (Spring 2015), 7-48

SECTION 35. Comparative


Democratization
Juan Linz Best Dissertation Award
Given for the best dissertation in the Comparative Study of
Democracy completed and accepted in the two calendar
years immediately prior to the APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Henry Thomson, Nuffield College,
University of Oxford; Mai Hassan, University of Michigan;
Christian von Soest, German Institute of Global and Area
Studies
Recipient: Bryn Rosenfeld, Nuffield College, University
of Oxford
Title: Varieties of Middle Class Growth and Democratic
Preference Formation
Best Book Award
Given for the best book in the field of Comparative
Democratization published in 2015 (authored, co-authored
or edited).
Award Committee: Kurt Weyland, University of Texas at
Austin; Sheena Chestnut Greitens, University of Missouri;
Rachel Beatty Riedl, Sciences Po Bordeaux
Recipient: Kenneth Roberts, Cornell University
Title: Changing Course in Latin America: Party Systems in
the Neoliberal Era. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Best Article Award
Single-authored or co-authored articles focusing directly on the
subject of democratization and published in 2015 are eligible.
Award Committee: Jordan Gans-Morse, Northwestern
University; Sebastian Mazzuca, Johns Hopkins University;
Simeon Nichter, University of California, San Diego

Recipient: Daniel Treisman, University of California, Los


Angeles
Title: Income, Democracy, and Leader Turnover. American
Journal of Political Science Volume 59, Issue 4, pages
927942, October 2015
Best Field Work Award
This prize rewards dissertation students who conduct
especially innovative and difficult fieldwork. Scholars who
are currently writing their dissertations or who completed
their dissertations in 2015 are eligible.
Award Committee: Barry Driscoll, Grinnell College;
Michael Broache, University of Tampa; Colm Fox,
Singapore Management University
Recipient: Pia Raffler, Yale University
Title: Bureaucrats versus Politicians: A Field Experiment on
Political Oversight and Local Public Service Provision
Recipient: Kathleen Klaus, University of WisconsinMadison
Title: Claiming Land: Institutions, Narratives, and Political
Violence in Kenya
Best Paper Award
Given to the best paper on Comparative Democratization
presented at the previous years APSA Convention. Papers
must be nominated by panel chairs or discussants.
Award Committee: Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas
at Austin; Allen Hicken, University of Michigan; Edmund
Malesky, Duke University
Recipient: Anne Meng, University of California, Berkeley
Title: Ruling Parties in Authoritarian Regimes: A Theory of
Endogenous Institutional Change

SECTION 37. Qualitative and


Multi-Method Research
Giovanni Sartori Book Award
The Giovanni Sartori Book Award honors Giovanni
Sartoris work on qualitative methods and concept
formation, and especially his contribution to helping
scholars think about problems of context as they refine
concepts and apply them to new spatial and temporal
settings. The award is intended to encompass two types of
contributions: new research on methodology per se, i.e.,
studies that introduce specific methodological innovations
or that synthesize and integrate methodological ideas in
a way that is in itself a methodological contribution; and
substantive work that is an exemplar for the application of
qualitative methods.
Award Committee: Macartan Humphreys, Columbia
University; Katerina Linos, University of California,
Berkeley; Craig Parsons, University of Oregon
2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 59

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Recipient: Ronald R. Krebs, University of Minnesota
Title: Narrative and the Making of US National Security.
Cambridge University Press, 2015

innovative application of qualitative and multi-method


approaches in substantive research, and/or institutional
contributions to this area of methodology.

Honorable Mention: Anna Grzymaa-Busse, University


of Michigan
Title: Nations under God: How Churches Use Moral
Authority to Influence Policy. Princeton University Press, 2015

Award Committee: Peter Hall, Harvard University; Lisa


Wedeen, University of Chicago; John Gerring, Boston
University; James Mahoney, Northwestern University

Alexander L. George Article Award


The Alexander L. George Article Award honors Alexander
Georges contributions to the comparative case-study
method, including his work linking that method to a
systematic concern with research design, and his contribution
of developing the idea and the practice of process tracing.
This award may be granted to a journal article or to a
chapter in an edited volume that stands on its own as an
article. The award will be given to an article or book chapter
published in the calendar year prior to the year of the APSA
meeting at which the award is presented, with the date of
publication being established by the journal issue for articles
and the copyright date of the book for chapters.
Award Committee: Carolyn Warner, Arizona State
University; Sarah Parkinson, University of Minnesota;
Jonathan Mercer, University of Washington
Recipients: Thomas Rixen, University of Bamberg and
Lora Anne Viola, Free University of Berlin
Title: Putting path dependence in its place: toward a
Taxonomy of institutional change. Journal of Theoretical
Politics 27(2) (April 2015): 301-323
Sage Paper Award
The Sage Paper Award honors Sara and George McCune,
who founded and sustained Sage Publications as a leading
publisher of social science methodology -- including very
centrally qualitative methods. This award will be given to
a paper presented at the previous Annual Meeting of the
American Political Science Association.
Award Committee: Rasmus Brun Pedersen, Aarhus
University; Ramazan Kilinc, University of Omaha; Daniel
Beland, University of Saskatchewan
Recipients: Erica S. Simmons, University of Wisconsin
Madison and Nicholas Rush Smith, City University of
New York - City College
Title: Comparison and Ethnography: What Each Can
Learn from the Other.
David Collier Mid-Career Achievement Award
The Award honors David Colliers contributions through
his research, graduate teaching, and institution-buildingas a founder of the qualitative and multi-method research
movement in contemporary political science. The award
will be presented annually to a mid-career political scientist
to recognize distinction in methodological publications,
60 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

Recipient: Lauren Mathews Morris MacLean, Indiana


University

SECTION 38. Sexuality and Politics


Cynthia Weber Best Conference Paper Award
The Best Conference Paper Award recognizes the best
paper exploring sexuality and politics presented at the
previous years APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Helma de Vries-Jordan, Chair, University
of Pittsburgh at Bradford; Julie Moreau, Northern Arizona
University; Drew Walker, Brown University
Recipients: Joseph J. Fischel, Yale University and Hilary
R. OConnell, AccessMatters.Org
Title: Disabling Consent, or Reconstructing Sexual Autonomy.
Columbia Journal of Gender Equality (vol. 30, no. 2, 2015)
Kenneth Sherrill Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation
on sexuality and politics completed and successfully
defended in the previous two calendar years.
Award Committee: Tiffany Willoughby-Herard, Chair,
University of California, Irvine; Jeremiah Garretson, California
State University at East Bay; Bogdan Popa, Oberlin College
Recipient: Satoko Itani, University of Toronto
Title: Japanese Female and Trans Athletes: Negotiating
Subjectivity and Media Constructions of Gender, Sexuality,
and Nation. University of Toronto, 2015
Recipient: Carly Thomsen, University of California,
Santa Barbara
Title: Unbecoming: Visibility Politics and Queer Rurality.
University of California, Santa Barbara, 2014

SECTION 39. Health Politics and


Policy
Leonard S. Robins Best Paper Award
The Len Robins Best Paper on Health Politics and Policy Award,
honors the late Len Robins, who through his presence and gentle
questioning at virtually every health politics panel graciously
nurtured the scholarship of both junior and senior scholars.
Award Committee: Shanna Rose, Claremont McKenna
College; James Brasfield, Webster University; Miriam
Laugeson, Columbia University

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Recipients: Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota
and Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University
Title: The Contingency of Policy Feedback Effects: How
Policy Features Interact with Political Conditions and
Motivations to Shape Public Opinion.
Outstanding Public Engagement in Health Policy
Awarded to an individual who has been working to
improve health and the health care system by actively
engaging in politics and policy making.
Award Committee: Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University
Newark; Michael S. Sparer, Columbia University; Sarah
Gollust, University of Minnesota; Bert Rockman, Purdue
University; Karen Baird, SUNY at Purchase; David Jones,
Boston University; Shanna Rose, Claremont McKenna College
Recipient: Bruce C. Vladeck, Nexera, Inc.

SECTION 40. Canadian Politics


Mildred Schwartz Lifetime Achievement
The Mildred A. Schwartz Lifetime Achievement Award
recognizes scholarship and leadership in bringing the study
of Canadian Politics to the international political science
community.
Award Committee: Scott Matthews, Chair, Memorial
University of Newfoundland; Kent Weaver, Georgetown
University; Denis Saint Martin, University of Montreal;
Anthony Sayers, University of Calgary; Mildred Schwartz,
University of Illinois, Chicago
Recipient: Keith Banting, Queens University

SECTION 41. Political Networks

political science conference in the previous year.


Award Committee: Samara Klar, University of Arizona; Philip
Leifeld, University of Glasgow; Skylar Cranmer, Ohio State
Recipients: Jennifer M. Larson, New York University
and Janet I. Lewis, U.S. Naval Academy
Title: Ethnic Networks. APSA Annual Meeting, 2015
John Sprague Award
This award is given annually to the best paper on political
networks presented by a graduate student delivered at a
political science conference in the previous year. There is
a fund that supports this award and the award includes a
cash award that comes from the fund.
Award Committee: Sandra Gonzalez-Bailon, University of
Pennsylvania; Jungmoo Woo, University of Kentucky
Recipient: Mia Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Title: Sharing Constituencies: Polarization and
Representation in the Extended Party Network. Midwest
Political Science Association Annual Meeting, 2016
Best Book Award
The best book award is given on a biennial basis to the
best book published on political networks.
Award Committee: Justin Gross, Chair, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill; Gwen Arnold, University of
California, Davis; Sarah Parkinson, University of Minnesota
Recipient: Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland,
College Park
Title: Networks in Contention: The Divisive Politics of
Climate Change. Cambridge University Press, 2015

SECTION 42. Experimental Research

Political Ties Award


This award is given on a biennial basis to the best article
published on political networks.

Best Paper Award


The Best Paper Award recognizes a paper that was
scheduled to be presented at APSA and features
experimental research.

Award Committee: Pablo Barber, New York University;


Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth University; Jacob Montgomery,
Washington University in St. Louis

Award Committee: Josh Kertzer, Harvard University; Jeff


Conroy-Krutz, Michigan State University; Sean Westwood,
Dartmouth College; Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania

Recipients: Skyler J. Cranmer, Ohio State University;


Elizabeth J. Menninga, University of Iowa; Peter J.
Mucha, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Title: Kantian fractionalization predicts the conflict
propensity of the international system, Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences (Vol. 112, No. 38).

Recipients: David Broockman, Stanford University and


Daniel Butler, Washington University
Title: The Causal Effects of Elite Position-Taking on Voter
Attitudes: Field Experiments with Elite Communication.

Best Conference Paper Award


This award is given annually to the best paper on political
networks presented by a faculty person delivered at a

Best Book Award


The Best Book Award recognizes the best book published
in 2015 that either uses or is about experimental research
methods in the study of politics.
Award Committee: Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham
2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 61

2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS


Young University; Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University;
Daniel Butler, Washington University
Recipient: Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University
Title: American Insecurity: Why Our Economic Fears Lead
to Political Inaction. Princeton University Press, 2015
Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation
completed in calendar year 2015 that utilizes experimental
methods on substantive questions about politics or makes a
fundamental contribution to experimental methods.
Award Committee: Jonathan M. Ladd, Georgetown
University; Antoine Banks, University of Maryland; Kathleen
Searles, Lousiana State University
Recipient: Eun Bin Chung, Ohio State University
Title: Overcoming the History Problem: Group-Affirmation
in International Relations.
Public Service Award
Many experiments only occur thanks to the assistance of
non-researchers who provide access to resources and data.
This award recognizes a special form of public service, the
facilitation of randomized experiments in political science
by those outside the academy.
Award Committee: Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College;
Samara Klar, University of Arizona; Kristin Kanthak,
University of Pittsburgh
Recipient: Dave Fleischer, Leadership Lab of the Los
Angeles LGBT Center

SECTION 43. Migration and


Citizenship
Best Paper Award
Award for best paper on migration and/or citizenship
presented at the previous APSA Annual Meeting (either as
part of a panel or poster session).
Award Committee: James Hollifield, Chair, Southern
Methodist University; Mara Sidney, Rutgers University;
Fiona Adamson, University of London
Recipients: Antje Ellermann, University of British
Columbia and Agustin Goenaga Orrego, Lund
University
Title: Race, Gender, Class, Disability, and the Ethics of
Immigrant Selection.
Best Dissertation Award
Award for best dissertation on migration and/or citizenship
accepted in the previous calendar year.

62 2016 APSA ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS

Award Committee: David FitzGerald, Chair, University of


California, San Diego; Taeku Lee, University of California,
Berkeley; Helen Marrow, Tufts University
Recipient: Gerasimos Tsourapas, University of London
Title: Trading People, Consolidating Power: Emigration &
Authoritarianism in Modern Egypt.
Recipient: Daisy Kim, Johns Hopkins University
Title: Bargaining Citizenship: Womens Organizations, the
State, and Marriage Migrants in South Korea.
Best Article Award
Award for best article on migration and/or citizenship
accepted in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Julie Novkov, Chair, University of
Albany, SUNY; Maria Koinova, University of Warwick;
Cara Wong, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Recipient: Sara Goodman, University of California,
Irvine
Title: Conceptualizing and Measuring Citizenship and
Integration Policy: Past Lessons and New Approaches.
Comparative Political Studies, 48, 2015
Best Book Award
Best Book Award for the best book on migration and/or
citizenship published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Jacqueline Stevens, Chair, Northwestern
University; Elizabeth Cohen, Syracuse University; H.
Richard Friman, Marquette University
Recipient: Leila Kawar, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Title: Contesting Immigration Policy in Court: Legal Activism
and Its Radiating Effects in the United States and France.
Cambridge University Press, 2015

SECTION 45. Class and Inequality


Best Paper Award
Awarded to the best paper presented on the topic of
economic or social class inequality at the American Political
Science Associations Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Jacob Hacker, Yale University; Peter
Enns, Cornell University; Martin Gilens, Princeton University
Recipient: Eleanor Neff Powell, University of Wisconsin
Title: Legislative Consequences of Fundraising Influence
Recipients: Tali Mendelberg, Katherine McCabe, and
Adam Thal, Princeton University
Title: The Rich are Different from You and Me: How
Wealthy Student Bodies Foster Economically Conservative
Students

ACADEMIC YEAR 2015-2016


CAMPUS TEACHING AWARD RECIPIENTS
Harold Bass, Ouachita Baptist University
Most Inspirational Faculty Member
Mitchell Brown, Auburn University
Student Government Association Outstanding Faculty
Member, College of Liberal Arts
Christopher Butler, University of New Mexico
Outstanding Teacher of the Year Award
Sabri Ciftci, Kansas State University
2016 Stamey Award for Undergraduate Teaching
Joe Clare, Louisiana State University
Tiger Athletic Foundation Outstanding Undergraduate
Teaching Award

Matthew LeRiche, Memorial University of


Newfoundland
Presidents Award for Outstanding Teaching
Mona Lyne, University of Missouri-Kansas City
College of Arts & Sciences Alumni Outstanding Teaching
Award
Mark Fathi Massoud, University of California, Santa
Cruz, Excellence in Teaching Award
Melissa Miller, Bowling Green State University
2016 Master Teacher Award
Janine Parry, University of Arkansas
Imhoff Award for Outstanding Teaching and Mentorship

Courtenay Daum, Colorado State University


Ann Gill Excellence in Teaching Award

Joshua Potter, Louisiana State University


Tiger Athletic Foundation Undergraduate Teaching Award

Matthew Dickinson, Middlebury College


The Marjorie Lamberti Faculty Appreciation Award

Charles Ripley, Arizona State University


Michael Mitchell Best Teaching Award

Andrew Dowdle, University of Arkansas


Sponsored Student Programs Outstanding Faculty Member

Carrie Russell, Vanderbilt University


Harriet S. Gilliam Award for Excellence in Teaching

Joe Dunn, Converse College


Cato Award for Faculty Excellence

Houman Sadri, University of Central Florida


Teaching Incentive Award

Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University


Merrill Presidential Scholar Recognition

Nukhet Sandal, Ohio University


Jeanette G. Grasselli Brown Teaching Award in the Social
Sciences

Joseph Fitsanakis, Coastal Carolina University


Apple Award for Outstanding Teaching
Donald Haider-Markel, University of Kansas
2016 Byron A. Alexander Outstanding Graduate Mentor
Award
Jaira Harrington, Wake Forest University
The Wayne C. Booth Graduate Student Prize for Excellence
in Teaching (University of Chicago)
Murray Jardine, Auburn University
Daniel T. Nelson Outstanding Political Science Professor
Aubrey Jewett, University of Central Florida
Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching
Thomas Keck, Syracuse University
Excellence in Graduate Education Faculty Recognition
Award

Keith Shimko, Purdue University


Charles B. Murphy Award for Outstanding Undergraduate
Teaching
Landry Sign, University of Alaska Anchorage
Order of Excellence
Andrea Simpson, University of Richmond
Distinguished Educator Award
Benjamin Storey, Furman University
Alester G. Furman Jr. and Janie Earle Furman Meritorious
Teaching Award
Jeffrey Tulis, University of Texas at Austin
Outstanding Faculty Award
Anca Turcu, University of Central Florida
Teaching Incentive Program Award

Brinck Kerr, University of Arkansas


Fulbright College Master Teacher

Marc Weiner, Rutgers University-New Brunswick


Graduate Faculty Teaching Award

Michael Lamb, University of Oxford


Humanities Teaching Excellence Award

Elizabeth Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University


Award for Excellence in Graduate Teaching
2015-2016 CAMPUS TEACHING AWARD RECIPIENTS 63

APSA LIFETIME MEMBERS 2016


Dr. William W. Adams
Dr. Bernabe Africa
Dr. Jamil F. Al-Dandany
Dr. John H. Aldrich
Mohammed Alsaud
Lisa Anderson
Myrta J. Anderson
Dr. James H. Anderson
Peter Andreas
Stephen D. Ansolabehere
Dr. Harriet B. Applewhite
Dr. Kevin Arceneaux
Dr. Klaus Armingeon
Dr. Myron J. Aronoff
Dr. Walter F. Baber
Dr. Benjamin R. Barber
Larry M. Bartels
Dr. Brandon L. Bartels
Elizabeth Beaumont
Dr. Adam J. Berinsky
Wallace H. Best
Mr. C. W. Boodey
Dr. Steven J. Brams
Dr. William P. Brandon
Christian Breunig
Dr. Michael A. Brintnall
Professor Thomas L. Brunell
Professor Bruce J. Bueno de Mesquita
Dr. Charles S. Bullock
Dr. Jonas Bunte
Dr. Frances Burke
Dr. James MacGregor Burns
Dr. Mark Burns
Dr. Tim Buthe
Daniel M. Butler
Dr. Edward G. Carmines
Dr. Daniel P. Carpenter
Dr. Cliff Carrubba
Dr. Loren R. Cass
Dr. Samuel A. Chambers
Feryal M. Cherif
Ronald H. Chilcote
Dr. Wendy K. Tam Cho
Dennis Chong
Dr. John A. Clark
Professor Tom Clark
Dr. Bridget Coggins
64 APSA LIFETIME MEMBERS 2016

Dr. Leonard A. Cole


Josep M. Colomer
Dr. Freddie C. Colston
Professor John Craig
Dr. Tom E. Cronin
Dr. Bob Darcy
Dr. Roger H. Davidson
Dr. Maria E. De Franciscis
Dr. Claes H. de Vreese
Dr. Eliot Dickinson
Dr. Bruce J. Dickson
Professor Jameson W. Doig
Professor Jorge I. Dominguez
Dr. John Andrew Donaldson
Dr. Thad Dunning
Dr. George C. Edwards
Dr. Faith H. Eikaas
Frederick E. Ellis
Dr. Tulia G. Falleti
Michaele L. Ferguson
Leonel Fernandez
Dr. Martha Finnemore
Morris Paul Fiorina
Dr. H. Edward Flentje
Dr. Patricia Florestano
Dr. Page Fortna
Dr. Luis Ricardo Fraga
Gerald Gamm
Professor Scott Sigmund Gartner
Dr. John Gasper
Dr. James L. Gibson
William A. Glaser
Brian J. Glenn
Catherine Goetze
Dr. Leonard E. Goodall
Mr. Donald P. Green
Christian R. Grose
Lewis Gulick
Dr. Amy Gutmann
Dr. Dorothy Guyot
Charles D. Hadley
Dr. Michael W. Hail
Jens Hainmueller
Dr. Welling Hall
Harry H. Hall
Dr. Hahrie C. Han
Dr. Chris Hanretty

APSA LIFETIME MEMBERS 2016


Dr. Robert Harmel
Mr. Roy A. Harrell
Dr. Brian F. Harrison
Dr. Moshe Haspel
Dr. Wu Teh-Yao Head
Dr. Lenneal J. Henderson
Dr. PJ Henry
Dr. Clement M. Henry
Kinch Hoekstra
Dr. Ole R. Holsti
Professor Marc Hooghe
Dr. Chi Huang
Dr. Christopher C. Hull
Dr. Macartan Humphreys
Dr. William Hurst
Simon D. Jackman
Victor V. James
Dr. Kathleen Hall Jamieson
Dr. Jennifer M. Jensen
Dr. Jennifer Jerit
Dr. Charles O. Jones
Professor Michael A. Jones-Correa
Michael Jordan
Professor Jai Kwan Jung
Ikuo Kabashima
Dr. Masaaki Kataoka
Professor Sota Kato
Dr. James E. Katz
Professor Richard S. Katz
Dr. William R. Keech
Dr. Robert E. Kelly
Nathan J. Kelly
Chris Kendall
Samuel Kernell
Dr. Alisa Kessel
Christina Seung-Mee Kim
Dr. Gary King
Dr. David H. Koehler
Dr. Barbara Koremenos
Peter J. Kosiba
Dr. Chris Koski
Gerald H. Kramer
Dr. Ronald R. Krebs
Keith Krehbiel
Dr. Douglas L. Kriner
Dr. Vance Krites
Raoul Kulberg

David A. Lake
Dr. Vickie Langohr
Dr. Joseph LaPalombara
Dr. James H. Lare
Anthony L. Larson
Dr. Eric D. Lawrence
David C. Leege
David Leheny
Dr. Roy Licklider
Dr. Pei-te Lien
Dr. Adam P. Liff
Shmuel Lock
Dr. Stephen B. Long
Dr. Diqing Lou
Professor Roger C. Lowery
Scott Mainwaring
Professor Michael J. Malbin
Forrest Maltzman
Jane Mansbridge
Dr. James G. March
Professor Isabela Mares
Kenneth P. Martin
Dr. Andrew D. Martin
Dr. Charles T. Mathewes
Mary R. Mattingly
Dr. Gale A. Mattox
Dr. Nolan McCarty
Dr. Quinn Mecham
Mark Mellman
Mr. William C. Mithoefer
Barry M. Mitnick
Dr. James Edward Monogan
Dr. Tomonori Morikawa
Dr. Tamir Moustafa
Dr. Cas Mudde
Dr. Megan Mullin
Dr. Emily Nacol
Hirofumi Nakano
Dr. Karl H. Nassmacher
Michael Nelson
Richard G. Niemi
Dr. Hans Noel
Dr. Lillian F. Noyes
Dr. Diana Z. O Brien
Dr. Rosemary OLeary
Dr. Douglas A. Ollivant
Dr. Lynette H. Ong
APSA LIFETIME MEMBERS 2016 65

APSA LIFETIME MEMBERS 2016


Ian Ostrander
Curtis H. OSullivan
Chieko Kitagawa Otsuru
Robert A. Packenham
Dr. Costas Panagopoulos
Dr. Sonal S. Pandya
Dr. Samuel C. Patterson
Mr. Anibal Perez-Linan
Dr. Anne Permaloff
Paul E. Peterson
Evan Pivonka
Dr. Charles Press
Markus Prior
Dr. Linda K. Quest
Dr. Joseph R. Reisert
Dr. Dan Reiter
Dr. Moon-Cho Rhee
Dr. Paul J. Rich
Dr. Robert B. Richert
John H. Romani
Dr. Lawrence E. Rose
Dr. Allan Rosenbaum
Dr. Lawrence S. Rothenberg
Catherine E. Rudder
Dr. Nita Rudra
Dr. Mark E. Rush
Dr. Larry J. Sabato
Mr. Andrew Sabl
Dr. Idean Salehyan
Jose J. Sanmartin
Dr. Dolph Santello
Virginia Sapiro
Dr. Howard A. Scarrow
Dr. Kenneth F. Scheve
Allen Schick
Dr. Joseph A. Schlesinger
Robert Scigliano
Dr. Jeffrey A. Segal
Dr. Ludek Sekyra
Professor Holli A. Semetko
Dr. Donna E. Shalala
Dr. Mary L. (Molly) Shanley
Dr. Min Shu
Alan Siaroff

66 APSA LIFETIME MEMBERS 2016

Dr. John M. Sides


Dr. Ulrich Sieberer
Dr. David A. Siegel
Dr. Kathryn Sikkink
Dr. Evelyn M. Simien
David Andrew Singer
Dr. Henry B. Sirgo
Mr. Brian A. Smith
Dr. Daniel M. Smith
John W. Smith
Bruce L.R. Smith
Guacayarima Sosa Machado
James H. Steele
Dr. R. Vladimir Steffel
Dr. Otis H. Stephens
Dr. Peter C. Stone
Randall W. Stone
Jonathan Lee Strano
Dr. Philippa Strum
Dr. Dae-Sook Suh
Seiichi Sumi
Rex J. Swartz
Dr. Strom Thacker
Dr. Ward J. Thomas
Dennis F. Thompson
Dr. Mary C. Thornberry
Joan C. Tronto
Dr. George Tsebelis
Dr. Chikako Kawakatsu Ueki
Craig Volden
Dr. Harold M. Waller
Dr. David L. Weimer
Dr. Herbert F. Weisberg
Dr. Susan Welch
Dr. Gordon P. Whitaker
Lynn T. White
Duane E. Wilder
James B. Williams
Dr. David C. Wilson
Dr. Maurice C. Woodard
John T. Woolley
Dali L. Yang
Dr. Carl Zachrisson
Dr. Quansheng Zhao

EXHIBIT HALL FLOOR PLAN


Visit the Exhibit Hall and gain points in the Mobile App Game for each booth you visit!
The attendee with the most points will win an Apple Watch!

Hours

Thursday, September 1 and Friday, September 2: 9:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m.


Saturday, September 3: 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m.

Exhibit Hall Floor Plan


2016 APSA ANNUAL MEETING & EXHIBITION

BUILDING LEGEND
- CATEGORY 6 DATA JACK
- FIBER OPTIC JACK
- AUDIO VISUAL TIE LINE
- TELEPHONE JACK
- ELECTRICAL OUTLET
- ELECTRICAL FLOOR PORT

SEPTEMBER 1 - 4, 2016

F
A

PENNSYLVANIA CONVENTION CENTER - EXHIBIT HALL A


PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA

T
E

T - TELEPHONE
R - RESTROOM
W - WATER FOUNTAIN
E - ELEVATOR
FRE - FREIGHT ELEVATOR
C - CONCESSIONS
F - FIRE HOSE CONNECTION
}

LYNNE RIENNER SPONSOR LOUNGE

EXHIBITOR SPONSOR
LOUNGE

SPACE SELECTION/HEADSHOT LOUNGE

Inventory as of 07/11/2016
Dimension
10'x10'
10'x20'
10'x30'
10'x40'
20'x30'
20'x80'

80'

A3

720

621

620

521

FEB

718

619

618

A7
APSA LOUNGE

20'

220

FEB

218

519

121 Lifestyle 120


Pavilion
119

713

Qty
61
11
7
1
1
1

Sq
6,1
2,2
2,1
4
6
1,6

Totals:

82

13,0

Dimension
10'x10'

Size
100

Qty
5

SqF
500

Totals:

500

118
116

717
715

Size
100
200
300
400
600
1,600

Class Inventory as of 07/11/2016


WORK/LIFE BALANCE PAVILION

FEB

FEB

KEEP CLEAR AREAS

30' CEILING HEIGHT IN HALLS


18' CEILING HEIGHT AT ENTRAN

20' 20'

20'

613

712

612

30'

30' 30'

30'

315

314

215

214

115

313

312

213

212

113

20'

112
07/28/15

Drawing Started on:

REVISIONS

711

20'

710

706

611

20'

610

507

607

705

511

30'
20'

20'

701

601

600

501

411

311

410

307

20' 20'

504

40'

30'

510

500

405
403

30'

402

310

211

306

207

210

206

111

107

110

NUMBER

DATE

04/20/16

05/12/16

12/09/15

JB

11

07/08/16

EC

12

07/11/16

EC

JB

BOSTON

305
303

400

JB

106

304

NORTH EAST REGIONAL


DESIGN CENTER

205

302

203

20'
30'

103

20'

102

File Name:

APSA16 FP

Show Name:

AM POLITICAL SCIE
ASSOC. EXHIBITION

Show Dates:

September 1 - 4, 2

Facility:

401

INITI

301

300

201

200

101

100

Pennsylvania
Convention Cent

Job Number:

--

Acct. Exec.:

Tina Bressert

Acct. Loc.:

Freeman New Yo
DISCLAIMER

FEB

A4

ENTRANCE

FEB

EVERY EFFORT HAS BEEN MADE TO


ENSURE THE ACCURACY OF ALL
INFORMATION CONTAINED ON THIS
FLOORPLAN. HOWEVER NO WARRANTIES,
EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED ARE
MADE WITH RESPECT TO THIS FLOORPLAN
IF THE LOCATION OF BUILDING COLUMNS,
UTILITIES OR OTHER ARCHITECTURAL
COMPONENTS OF THE FACILITY IS
A CONSIDERATION IN THE CONSTRUCTION
OR USAGE OF AN EXHIBIT, IT IS THE SOLE
RESPONSIBILITY OF THE EXHIBITOR TO
PHYSICALLY INSPECT THE FACILITY TO
VERIFY ALL DIMENSIONS AND LOCATIONS.

22'-6"

A8

COPYRIGHT 2007, FREEMAN CO.


ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

EXHIBIT HALL FLOOR PLAN 67

EXHIBIT LISTING
The Agenda Game #218
Silver Sponsor
www.theagendagame.com

Introducing... The Agenda Game. The game will take you on


a journey to discover a way for politics and the political games
people play to become better understood and fun at the same
time. Use it outside the classroom as an extracurricular activity
for your students. Available on Amazon for $34.99.

Diplomacy Center Foundation #314


Silver Sponsor
www.diplomacycenterfoundation.org

The Diplomacy Center Foundation (DCF) shares a publicprivate partnership with the U.S. Department of State that
is designing and building the United States Diplomacy
Center, the first museum and educational outreach hub
focused upon American diplomacy.

Association Book Exhibit #312

Duke University Press


www.dukeupress.edu

Brave New Films #718


www.bravenewfilms.org

East View Information Services #211


www.eastview.com

Brookings Institution Press #610


www.brookings.edu/press

Edward Elgar Publishing #620


www.e-elgar.com

Cambria Press #621


www.cambriapress.com

FairVote #621
www.fairvote.org

Cambridge University Press



Premier Sponsor
www.cambridge.org/us

Foreign Policy Association #314


Silver Sponsor
www.fpa.org

#410, 411, 412,


413, 414, 415

Cambridge University Press dates from 1534 and is part of


the University of Cambridge. Our mission is to unlock peoples
potential with the best learning and research solutions. Given
the Universitys and the Presss commitment to excellence
over many centuries, our vision is to be the most respected
academic and educational publisher, providing authoritative
knowledge and learning for the world.
Columbia University Press #400
www.cup.columbia.edu
Cornell University Press
www.cornellpress.cornell.edu

#701, 703

Council on Foreign Relations #206


www.cfr.org

The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) is an independent,


nonpartisan membership organization, think tank, and
publisher ofForeign Affairsmagazine.CFR provides free
programming and multimedia resources for teaching and
learning about U.S. foreign policy and global affairs.
Visit Booth 206 to meet CFR representatives, collect free
publications, and learn about fellowship opportunities.
68 EXHIBIT LISTING

#306

The Foreign Policy Association (FPA), celebrating its 97th


year, serves as a catalyst for developing awareness,
understanding, and informed opinion on U. S. foreign
policy and global issues, encouraging citizen participation
in the foreign policy process.
Fulbright Scholar Program/IIE #521
www.cies.org
Gallup #720
www.gallup.com
Georgetown University Press
www.press.georgetown.edu

#519

Harvard University Press #611


www.hup.harvard.edu

ICPSR Summer Program in Quantitative


Methods of Social Research #111
www.icpsr.umich.edu/sumprog
Institute for the Study of Diplomacy,
Georgetown University #213
isd.georgetown.edu

EXHIBIT LISTING
International Public Policy Association #220
www.icpublicpolicy.org
JSTOR #215
www.jstor.org
Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy #220
www.lkyspp.nus.edu.sg
Lexington Books
www.rowman.com/lexington

#405, 406

Liberty Fund, Inc. #710


www.libertyfund.org
Lynne Rienner Publishers
Silver Sponsor
www.rienner.com

#613, 615

Oxford University Press


Silver Sponsor
www.oup.com

#600, 602, 604, 606

As the largest university press, Oxford University Press is a


truly global brand, recognized throughout the world as an
authoritative and trusted provider of quality research. Our
collection includes numerous leading journals in diverse
areas, as well as authoritative scholarly works, international
reference works, online products, handbooks, textbooks,
and consumer titles
Palgrave Macmillan
www.palgrave.com

#305, 307

Pearson Sponsor
Silver Sponsor
www.pearson.com
Celebrating 32 years of independent publishing, Lynne
Rienner Publishers is known for its cutting-edge, high-quality
scholarly books, textbooks, and journals in politics, the
social sciences, and the humanities.
McGill-Queens University Press #302
www.mqup.ca
Mercatus Center at GMU #713
www.mercatus.org
MPSA - Midwest Political
Science Association #205
www.mpsanet.org

The Midwest Political Science Association (MPSA) was


founded in 1939 and is dedicated to the advancement of
scholarship in all areas of political science. The purposes
of the MPSA are to promote the professional study and
teaching of political science, to facilitate communications
between those engaged in such study, and to develop
standards for and encourage research in theoretical and
practical political problems.
The MIT Press #706
http://mitpress.mit.edu
National Endowment for the Humanities #100
www.neh.gov
National Science Foundation #101
www.nsf.gov
Nonproliferation Policy Education Center #203
www.npolicy.org
NYU Press #311
www.nyupress.org

As the worlds learning company, Pearson is devoted to


preparing students to compete in an ever-changing, global
economy by using technology more effectively and by making
learning personal. Our products and services help educators
and institutions translate academic achievement to success.
Penguin/Knopf Doubleday #401
http://us.penguingroup.com
Pew Research Center #212
www.pewresearch.org
Pi Sigma Alpha Sponsor
Silver Sponsor
www.pisigmaalpha.org

Pi Sigma Alpha, the National Political Science Honor


Society, is the only honor society for college students of
political science and government in the United States. The
organization hosts more than 800 chapters on college
campuses across the United States and Canada and offers
a set of unique programs to support student members. Pi
Sigma Alpha will celebrate its centennial in 2020.
Polity #313
www.polity.co.uk
Princeton University Press
http://press.princeton.edu

#500, 502

Provalis Research #210


www.provalisresearch.com
EXHIBIT LISTING 69

EXHIBIT LISTING
The Quality of Government Institute #106
www.qog.pol.gu.se

Transaction Publishers #304


www.transactionpub.com

RAND Corporation #207


www.rand.org

United for Human Rights #115


www.humanrights.com

Random House, LLC #403


www.randomhouse.com

University of Chicago Press


www.press.uchicago.edu

Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and


Institute, the #715
www.reaganfoundation.org

University of Michigan Press #303


www.press.umich.edu

Roper Center #711


ropercenter.cornell.edu
Routledge
Gold Sponsor
www.routledge.com

#510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515

#501, 503, 505

University of Missouri Press #110


www.upress.missouri.edu
University of Notre Dame Press #618
www.undpress.nd.edu
University of Pennsylvania Press #619
www.pennpress.org
University of Toronto Press #201
www.utppublishing.com

Routledge, a division of Taylor & Francis, is a leading


publisher of scholarly research in political science. Visit the
Routledge booths to browse our new books, pick up a sample
journal copy, or for information on how to submit to a journal.
Rowman & Littlefield
www.rowman.com

#402, 404, 406

Russell Sage Foundation #311


www.russellsage.org
SAGE/CQ Press
www.sagepub.com

#601, 603, 605, 700, 702, 704

Southern Political Science Association #107


www.spsa.net
Springer
www.springer.com

#200, 202, 204

Stata statistical software provides everything research


professionals need for statistical analysis, data management,
graphics, and statistical programming. Whether you prefer
a point-and-click interface, a command line, or scripts, Stata
puts the statistics you want at your fingertips. One complete
package -- no separate modules to buy. Perpetual licenses.
SUNY Press #301
www.sunypress.edu
Temple University Press #300
www.temple.edu/tempress
70 EXHIBIT LISTING

University Press of Kansas


www.kansaspress.ku.edu

#705, 707

Varieties of Democracy (V-DEM) #106


https://v-dem.net
W.W. Norton
www.wwnorton.com

#612, 614

West Academic #214


Silver Sponsor
http://westacademicforcollege.com

#712, 714

Stanford University Press #310


www.sup.org
StataCorp LP
www.stata.com

University of Virginia Press #618


www.upress.virginia.edu

West Academic is a leading publisher of casebooks,


treatises, study aids and other legal education materials
in the U.S. Founded on the principle of making legal
information more accessible, and rooted in a long history
of legal expertise and innovation, weve been a leader in
legal education publishing for more than 100 years.Our
content is published under three brands: West Academic
Publishing, Foundation Pressand Gilbert. Please visit us
to learn more about West Academic and CasebookPlus!
Western Political Science Association (WPSA) #113
http://wpsa.research.pdx.edu
Westview Press
www.westviewpress.com

#504, 506

Wiley #315
www.wiley.com
Yale University Press #607
www.yalebooks.com
YouGov #507
www.yougov.com

JOIN THE
AMERICAN
POLITICAL
SCIENCE
ASSOCIATION.

Access the latest


scholarship in
political science.
Advance your career with
APSA scholarly teaching
resources & opportunities.
Learn more about APSA
programs, grants, awards, etc.
Find jobs, post your CV and
access APSA career services.
Network with more than
6,000+ political scientists at
the Annual Meeting!

Visit APSA online at www.apsanet.org.


Stay connected at www.politicalsciencenow.com.

1527 NEW HAMPSHIRE AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036-1206


JOIN APSA 71

APSA Congressional Fellowship for


Political Scientists
Apply this fall for the 20172018 fellowship year

Apply This Fall!


Since 1953, the APSA
Congressional Fellowship
Program has brought
more than 2,200 scholars
and professionals to
Washington, DC, to gain
a hands-on understanding
of Congress and the
legislative process. Fellows
begin their fellowship
year with a comprehensive
four-week orientation with
leading congressional
experts and policy leaders.
Fellows then serve fulltime placements of their
choosing in the House of
Representatives or Senate.
The fellowship year also
includes:
A winter and spring
seminar series on
Congress
A trip to the district or
state of a Member of
Congress
Optional study visits to
Annapolis, Maryland, and
Ottawa, Canada

QUALIFICATIONS: Applications are welcome from political


scientists who have completed a PhD in the last 15 years or will
have defended a dissertation in political science by November
2017. Candidates must be US citizens or permanent residents. The
e
who can show a scholarly interest in Congress and the legislative
process.
FELLOWSHIP YEAR: Orientation begins in November 2017.
programs precede the main fellowship year. Candidates may
apply to take a course on Congress and Foreign Policy taught
in September and October 2017, as well as apply to spend up to
two months as a Visiting Scholar at the APSA Centennial Center,
supported by the William A. Steiger Fund for Legislative Studies,
also immediately before the main fellowship year.
STIPEND: $50,000 for the 9.5-month fellowship period, plus a
travel allowance.
SELECTION: Preference is given to those who have not had
extensive Capitol Hill experience.
APPLICATION PROCEDURE: The application period opens
in September 2016, and applications are due December 1, 2016.
Applications must be submitted online and include:
a detailed CV
a 500-word personal statement explaining how the fellowship
relates to professional goals
the names and contact information for three professional
references who have agreed to write letters of recommendation
a writing sample

Learn more at www.apsanet.org/cfp

72 CALL FOR APPLICATIONS

2015-16 APSA Congressional Fellows

Top Row: (left to right): Dayna Matthew, David Keahey, Thomas Mayes, Mark Owens, Yushi Alex Saito, Nicholas Howard, Robert
Ferguson, Randy Cartwright
Fourth Row: Lisa Hager, Sarah Khasawinah, Jamie Kuhne, Julie Bobitt, Christopher Burdick, Shannon Dorsey, Brian Alexander
Third Row: Megan Christensen, Jacquelyn Kung, Robert Mabry, Clayton Swope, Nathan Paxton, Elliot Mamet, Stephen Dietz
Second Row: Kara Abramson, Hiral Shah, Y. Claire Wang, Stephanie Firestone, Ryan Matheny, Brian McCuen, Maria M. Givens
Bottom Row: Teri Kennedy, Hillary Lum, Jamie Davis, Latrice Vinson, Jeanette Roberts, Nattamon Punbhochar, Rebecca Mabe
Not pictured are Gene Gerzhoy, Travis Johnston, Thomas Ringenberg, Joel Walsh, Justin Brown, Tamara Harris, Gina McCaskill,
Julie Carter, Aditi Sen, and La Rissa Ferrell.

APSA CONGRESSIONAL FELLOWSHIP 73

APSA Mentoring Program

BECOME A MENTOR
FIND A MENTOR
The APSA Mentoring Program is an opportunity for all political scientists to network and
share experiences, advice and insights about career planning, scholarship, and a variety
of professional issues such as:

Selecting a dissertation committee


Publishing and research
Non-academic careers
Life as junior faculty member
Balancing family and work

The APSA mentoring database includes mentors with a wide variety of expertise and
fields of interest. APSA is looking for additional mentors specifically in non-academic
careers and international relations, and to mentor Ralph Bunche Scholars (RBSI) and/or
APSA Minority Fellows (MFP).

Use the online submission form to become or request a mentor!

Sign up at www.apsanet.org/mentor.

APSA MENTORING PROGRAM 74

Achieving Diversity and Inclusion


in Political Science

Diversity and Inclusion Programs


The American Political Science Association has several major programs aimed at enhancing diversity within
the discipline and identifying and aiding students and faculty from under-represented backgrounds in the
political science field. These programs include:
Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) (Undergraduate Juniors)
The RBSI Program celebrating its 30th anniversaryis an annual five-week program designed to
introduce undergraduate students from under represented racial/ethnic groups, or students interested in
broadening participation in political science and pursuing scholarship on issues affecting under-represented
groups, to the world of graduate study and to encourage application to PhD programs. Application deadline:
January of each year. For more information, visit www.apsanet.org/rbsi.
APSA Minority Fellows Program (MFP) (Undergraduate Seniors or MA Students)
(Fall Cycle for seniors and MA Students, Spring Cycle for PhD students) MFP is a fellowship competition for
those applying to graduate school, designed to increase the number of individuals from under-represented
backgrounds with PhDs in political science. Application deadline: October and March of each year. For
more information, visit www.apsanet.org/mfp.
Minority Student Recruitment Program (MSRP) (Undergraduates and departmental members)
The MSRP was created to identify undergraduate students from under-represented backgrounds who are
interested in, or show potential for, graduate study and, ultimately, to help further diversify the political
science profession. For more information, visit www.apsanet.org/msrp.
APSA Mentoring Program (APSA Members)
The Mentoring Program connects undergraduate, graduate students, and junior faculty to experienced
and senior members of the profession for professional development mentoring. This program is a member
benefit. To request a mentor or be a mentor, visit www.apsanet.org/mentor.
APSA Status Committees
APSA Status Committees develop and promote agendas and activities concerning the professional
development and current status of under-represented communities within the political science discipline. For
a listing of all APSA status committees, visit www.apsanet.org/status-committees.
For more information on all Diversity and Inclusion Programs, visit us online at www.apsanet.org/
diversityprograms. Please contact Kimberly Mealy, PhD, Director of Diversity and Inclusion Programs with
any questions: kmealy@apsanet.org.
To contribute to an APSA Fund, such as the RB Endowment Fund or the Hanes Walton Jr. Fund, visit us at
www.apsanet.org/donate.

75 DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION PROGRAMS

Celebrating the 30th Anniversary


of the APSA Ralph Bunche Summer
Institute: Thirty Years of Excellence

Named in honor of the 1950 Nobel Peace Prize winner, former APSA
President, and the first African American to receive a PhD in political
science, Dr. Ralph J. Bunche, the RBSI encourages students to pursue
academic careers in political science. The RBSI program was created in
1986 through a partnership between APSA, the Committee on the Status
of Blacks in the Profession, and faculty members Jewel L. Prestage of
Southern University and Peter Zwick of Louisiana State University.

During the program, RBSI Scholars take graduate level political science
and methods courses and engage in original research, culminating in a
research paper and poster presentation at the APSA Annual Meeting.
To date there are over 500 RBSI Alumni, many of whom are on faculty at colleges and
universities across the country. APSA would like to thank the faculty, staff and students
who have participated in the RBSI program over the last thirty years, for their service to the
discipline and beyond.
Congratulations to the APSA Ralph Bunche Summer Institute!

2016 APSA RBSI Scholars, Faculty & Staff, Photo Credit: Shaun King

76 RALPH BUNCHE FELLOWS

APSA Task Force Reports Available

Each APSA task force report applies political science expertise


to explore a critical issue with major public policy implications. The
reports share political science research with broader society and
expand the public presence of political science.

APSAs most recent task force report is The Double Bind: The

Politics of Racial and Class Inequalities in the Americas. The


task force investigates the relationship between race and class in

producing tangible, political, and social inequalities in the 55 nations


of the Americas as well as the political systems in these countries
that either foments and/or ameliorates these inequalities. Read it
today at http://www.apsanet.org/inequalities.

PS
AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION

PS | Political Science & Politics

Political Science & Politics

S P E C I A L I S S U E 2 0 1 5, VO L . 4 8, N O . S 1

Lets Be Heard! How to Better


Communicate Political Sciences
Public Value
John H. Aldrich and Arthur Lupia, guest editors

with Brian Baird, Adam J. Berinsky, Cheryl Boudreau, Khalilah


L. Brown-Dean, James N. Druckman, Steve Friess, Melissa
Harris-Perry, Sara B. Hobolt, Jennifer Hochschild, Bruce W.
Jentleson, Rose McDermott, Diana C. Mutz, Brendan Nyhan,
Dan Schnur, Daron Shaw, John Sides, Rogers M. Smith, Steven
Rathgeb Smith, Victoria M. DeFrancesco Soto, Carol M. Swain,
Joshua A. Tucker, and Lynn Vavreck

APSA also offers other task force reports as free PDFs for

download as well as select print reports for purchase. You can


find these at http://www.apsanet.org/reports.
For questions about task force reports or other APSA materials,
please contact publications@apsanet.org.
APSA Task Forces Reports include:

SPECIAL ISSUE 2015

Lets Be Heard!
Political Science, Electoral Rules, and
Democratic Governance
Democratic Imperatives
Interdisciplinarity
Political Science in the 21st Century
US Standing in the World

A M E R I C A N

P O L I T I C A L

S C I E N C E

A S S O C I A T I O N

APSA TASK FORCE REPORTS 77

PS: Political Science & Politics

New Virtual Issues from APSA Now Available!

Free Virtual Issues Available!

APSA has released two free virtual issues! This new publishing feature combines related

research and essays from previous issues of APSA journals. These virtual issues from PS are
made available online in partnership with Cambridge University Press. Read them today!

Navigating the Profession: Sage Advice from the


Pages of PS

The first virtual issue of PS: Political Science & Politics brings
together some of PSs most highly cited articles about the
profession. This practical material spans numerous topics that

especially apply to young scholars. From ideas and debates of


political science as a vocation, to the nuts and bolts of preparing
a literature review and publishing as a graduate student, this virtual
issue boasts something both for scholars just beginning their
studies and for academics early in their careers.
Read Navigating the Profession today at
journals.cambridge.org/ps/virtualissue/1.

Capitol Hill Insights: Voices from the Congressional


Fellowship Program

The second virtual issue of PS: Political Science & Politics is


Capitol Hill Insights. The issue features articles written by alumni
of APSAs Congressional Fellowship Program and published in PS
between 2010 and 2015. Each of the 24 articles pivots to a unique
perspective of the fellowship experience, providing rich details and
first-hand anecdotes that clarify and explain how Congress and
government work.
Read Capitol Hill Insights today for free at
journals.cambridge.org/ps/virtualissue/2.

Questions? Comments? Let us know at publications@apsanet.org.

78 PS VIRTUAL ISSUES

SAVE THE DATE

14th Annual

APSA Teaching & Learning Conference


The 21st Century Classroom: Creating an Engaging Environment for All Students

Long Beach, California | February 1012, 2017


**Proposal Submissions are due September 15, 2016!**
Visit www.apsanet.org/tlc for more information!

APSA 2017 TLC SAVE THE DATE 79

ADVERTISEMENT LISTING
Thank You to Our Advertisers!
Agenda Game, The

Oxford University Press

American University

Pearson

Association for Asian Studies

Penguin Random House

Berghahn Books

Policy Studies Organization

Blue Dome Press

Princeton University Press

Brookings Institution Press

Routledge, Taylor & Francis

Cambridge University Press

Rowman & Littlefield

Center for International and Regional Studies,


Georgetown University in Qatar

Russell Sage Foundation

Columbia University Press

Rutgers School of Public Affairs and Administration


(SPAA)

Cornell University Press

SAGE/CQ Press

Diplomacy Center Foundation

Stanford University Press

Drexel University, Department of Politics

StataCorp, LP

DuBois Review

SUNY Press

Duke University Press

Temple University Press

East View Information Services

University of Chicago Press

European Consortium for Political Research

University of Georgia, The

Foreign Policy Association

University of Michigan Press

Georgetown University Press

University of Missouri Press

Harvard University Press

University of Notre Dame Press

Horowitz Foundation for Social Policy, The

University of Pennsylvania Press

International Public Policy Association

University of Virginia Press

Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and


Practice

University Press of Kansas

Liberty Fund, Inc.

W.W. Norton

Lynne Rienner Publishers


McGill-Queens University Press
MIT Press
NYU Press

80 ADVERTISEMENT LISTING

USC Sol Price School of Public Policy


West Academic
Westview Press
Yale University Press

CAMBRIDGE STUDIES
IN INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS

CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN
COMPARATIVE
POLITICS

POLITICAL ECONOMY
OF INSTITUTIONS AND
DECISIONS

A Theory of World
Politics

Autocracy and
Redistribution

Above Politics

Mathias Albert

The Politics of Land Reform

Affective
Communities in
World Politics

Information for
Autocrats

Collective Emotions after


Trauma

Michael Albertus

Representation in Chinese Local


Congresses

Emma Hutchison

Melanie Manion

Co-Winner, 2016 Robert


L. Jervis and Paul W.
Schroeder Best Book
Award, International
History and Politics Section,
APSA

Organized Violence
after Civil War

Narrative and
the Making of US
National Security

The Geography of Recruitment


in Latin America

Sarah Zukerman Daly

The Paradox of
Traditional Chiefs in
Democratic Africa

Ronald R. Krebs

Kate Baldwin

Co-Winner, 2016 Robert


L. Jervis and Paul W.
Schroeder Best Book
Award, International
History and Politics Section,
APSA

The Political Logic


of Poverty Relief

International Order
in Diversity
War, Trade and Rule in the
Indian Ocean

Andrew Phillips and


J. C. Sharman

A Darkling Plain

Brantly Womack

Before Anarchy
Hobbes and his Critics in Modern
International Thought

Accommodating Rising
Powers
Past, Present, and Future

Edited by T. V. Paul

African Coalitions
and Global Economic
Governance
Michael Byron Nelson

Theodore Christov

Building an
Authoritarian Polity
Russia in Post-Soviet Times

Graeme Gill

C. S. Lewis on Politics
and the Natural Law

Chinas Crisis Behavior

Alberto Diaz-Cayeros,
Federico Estvez, and
Beatriz Magaloni

Robert Singh

Political Survival and Foreign Policy


after the Cold War

Aid for Elites

Kai He

Building Partner Nations and Ending


Poverty through Human Capital

Chinas Military Power

The Price of a Vote


in the Middle East
Clientelism and Communal
Politics in Lebanon and Yemen

Winner, 2016 George H.


Hallett Award, Representation and Electoral
Systems Section, APSA

Susan C. Stokes

Colin Farrelly

Gary W. Cox

Asymmetry and
International
Relationships

Renewing American Leadership,


Restoring Global Order

Kristen Renwick Monroe, with


Chloe Lampros-Monroe and
Jonah Pellecchia

Biologically Modified
Justice

Monopoly Brokerage and the


Growth of the English State

Bethany Albertson and Shana


Kushner Gadarian

Electoral Strategies and Social


Policy in Mexico

Mandates and
Democracy

Frank Lovett

Marketing
Sovereign Promises

Democratic Citizenship in a
Threatening World

Justin Buckley Dyer and


Micah J. Watson

Stories of Conflict and Humanity


during War

A Republic of Law

Gary J. Miller and


Andrew B. Whitford

Anxious Politics

After Obama

Daniel Corstange

Honorable Mention, 2016


Prose Awards, Government and
Politics

Bureaucratic Discretion and


Credible Commitment

Co-Winner, 2016 Robert E. Lane


Award, Political Psychology
Section, APSA

Neoliberalism by Surprise in
Latin America

Winner, 2016 Distinguished


Book Award, Ethnicity,
Nationalism, and Migration
Section, International Studies
Association

Mark Moyar

Assessing Current and Future


Capabilities

Americas War on
Same-Sex Couples and
their Families

Roger Cliff

And How the Courts Rescued Them

Daniel R. Pinello

Anatomy of
Authoritarianism in the
Arab Republics

Chinas Party Congress


Power, Legitimacy, and Institutional
Manipulation

Guoguang Wu

Chinas Troubled Waters


Maritime Disputes in Theoretical
Perspective

Joseph Sassoon

Steve Chan

American Gridlock

Clarity of Responsibility,
Accountability, and
Corruption

The Sources, Character, and Impact of


Political Polarization

Edited by James A. Thurber


and Antoine Yoshinaka

A Right to Flee

Refugees, States, and the Construction


of International Cooperation

Phil Orchard

Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer and


Margit Tavits

Commanding Military
Power
Organizing for Victory and Defeat on
the Battlefield

Ryan Grauer

www.cambridge.org/politics
@CUP_PoliSci
33770_BOOKS.indd 1

facebook.com/CambridgeUniversityPressPolitics
03/06/2016 14:42

CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN
GENDER AND POLITICS

Counting Womens
Ballots
Female Voters from Suffrage
through the New Deal

J. Kevin Corder and


Christina Wolbrecht

Inclusion without
Representation in
Latin America
Gender Quotas and Ethnic
Reservations

Mala Htun

Women and Power


in Postconflict
Africa
Aili Mari Tripp

Communal Violence,
Forced Migration and
the State
Gujarat since 2002

Sanjeevini Badigar Lokhande

Confounding Powers
Anarchy and International Society
from the Assassins to Al Qaeda

William J. Brenner

Congress and Policy


Making in the 21st
Century
Edited by Jeffery A. Jenkins
and Eric M. Patashnik

Cyber Security and the


Politics of Time

ANALYTICAL METHODS
FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH

Computational
Social Science
Discovery and Prediction

Edited by
R. Michael Alvarez

Spatial Analysis for


the Social Sciences
David Darmofal

Crossing the Aisle


Party Switching by US Legislators in
the Postwar Era

Antoine Yoshinaka

Deadly Impasse
Indo-Pakistani Relations at the Dawn
of a New Century

The Logic of Local Democracy in the


Developing World

The Power of Political Arguments in


Shaping European Integration

Anjali Thomas Bohlken

Ece zlem Atikcan

Dictators and their


Secret Police

From Conflict to
Coalition

Coercive Institutions and State


Violence

Profit-Sharing Institutions and the


Political Economy of Trade

Sheena Chestnut Greitens

Adam Dean

Economic Ideas in
Political Time

Gendering Legislative
Behavior

The Rise and Fall of Economic Orders


from the Progressive Era to the Global
Financial Crisis

Institutional Constraints and


Collaboration

Wesley W. Widmaier

Elections in Hard Times


Building Stronger Democracies in the
21st Century

Thomas Edward Flores and


Irfan Nooruddin

Deliberative Democracy
between Theory and
Practice

Electoral Reform and


National Security in
Japan

Michael A. Neblo

Democracy and the


Death of Shame
Political Equality and Social
Disturbance

From Pork to Foreign Policy

Amy Catalinac

Emotions in
International Politics

Jill Locke

Beyond Mainstream International


Relations

Democracy in
Moderation

Edited by Yohan Ariffin,


Jean-Marc Coicaud, and
Vesselin Popovski

Montesquieu, Tocqueville, and


Sustainable Liberalism

Paul O. Carrese

Democratic Dynasties
State, Party and Family in
Contemporary Indian Politics

Edited by Kanchan Chandra

Democracy Protests
Origins, Features, and Significance

Extraordinary
Responsibility

Dawn Brancati

Politics beyond the Moral Calculus

Contested
Transformation

T E XT B OOK

Carol Hardy-Fanta, Pei-te Lien,


Dianne M. Pinderhughes, and
Christine Marie Sierra

Framing the European


Union

Sumit Ganguly

Tim Stevens

Race, Gender, and Political Leadership


in 21st Century America

Democratization from
Above

Shalini Satkunanandan

Democratic
Policymaking
An Analytic Approach

Charles Barrilleaux,
Christopher Reenock, and
Mark A. Souva

Environmental and
Nuclear Networks in the
Global South
How Skills Shape International
Cooperation

Isabella Alcaiz

Tiffany D. Barnes

Governing with Words


The Political Dialogue on Race, Public
Policy, and Inequality in America

Daniel Q. Gillion

Gerrymandering in
America
The House of Representatives, the
Supreme Court, and the Future of
Popular Sovereignty

Anthony J. McGann,
Charles Anthony Smith,
Michael Latner, and Alex
Keena

Globalizing India
How Global Rules and Markets are
Shaping Indias Rise to Power

Aseema Sinha
Business and Public Policy

Governing in a
Polarized Age
Elections, Parties, and Political
Representation in America

Edited by Alan S. Gerber


and Eric Schickler

Christine Mahoney

Hamilton versus
Jefferson in the
Washington
Administration

TEXTBOOK

Completing the Founding or Betraying


the Founding?

Failure and Hope


Fighting for the Rights of the
Forcibly Displaced

Foundations of
Comparative Politics

Carson Holloway

Third Edition

Heidegger and Politics

Kenneth Newton and


Jan W. van Deth
Cambridge Textbooks in
Comparative Politics

The Ontology of Radical Discontent

Alexander S. Duff

www.cambridge.org/politics
@CUP_PoliSci
33770_BOOKS.indd 2

facebook.com/CambridgeUniversityPressPolitics
03/06/2016 14:42

Informal Order and the


State in Afghanistan

Multidimensional
Democracy

Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili

A Supply and Demand Theory


of Representation in American
Legislatures

CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN
CONTENTIOUS POLITICS

SOUTH ASIA IN THE


SOCIAL SCIENCES

Honorable Mention, 2016


Harold & Margaret Sprout
Award, Environmental
Studies Section,
International Studies
Association
Winner, 2015 Best Book
Award, Political Networks
Section, APSA
Co-Winner, 2016 Lynton
Keith Caldwell Prize,
Science, Technology, and
Environmental Politics
(STEP) Section, APSA

Government as
Practice

Information, Power, and


Democracy

Democratic Left in a
Transforming India

Nico Stehr

Nietzsches Culture of
Humanity

Margaret Thatcher and


the Middle East

Beyond Aristocracy and Democracy in


the Early Period

Networks in
Contention
The Divisive Politics of Climate
Change

Jennifer Hadden

Force and
Contention in
Contemporary
China
Memory and Resistance in
the Long Shadow of the
Catastrophic Past

Dwaipayan
Bhattacharyya

Politics of the Poor


Negotiating Democracy in
Contemporary India

Indrajit Roy

Hizbullah and
the Politics of
Remembrance

Liberty is a Daughter of Knowledge

Azriel Bermant
TEX TBOOK

International
Negotiation
Process and Strategies

Jeffrey J. Harden

Jeffrey Church

Nuclear Weapons and


Coercive Diplomacy
Todd S. Sechser and Matthew
Fuhrmann

Ho-Won Jeong

Party Brands in Crisis

Writing the Lebanese Nation

International Pecking
Orders

Partisanship, Brand Dilution, and the


Breakdown of Political Parties in Latin
America

Bashir Saade
Cambridge Middle East Studies

The Politics and Practice of


Multilateral Diplomacy

Noam Lupu

Vincent Pouliot

Plutarchs Politics

Human Beings in
International Relations
Edited by Daniel Jacobi and
Annette Freyberg-Inan

Imagined Sovereignties
The Power of the People and Other
Myths of the Modern Age

Islamic Populism in
Indonesia and the
Middle East

Between City and Empire

Hugh Liebert

Politics without Stories

Vedi R. Hadiz

The Liberal Predicament

James Madison
and Constitutional
Imperfection

Political Opportunities
for Climate Policy

David Ricci

Ralph A. Thaxton, Jr

Kevin Olson

Meaningful
Resistance

Knowing China

Jeremy D. Bailey

California, New York, and the Federal


Government

A Twenty-First Century Guide

Land Bargains and


Chinese Capitalism

Roger Karapin

Market Reforms and the Roots


of Social Protest in Latin
America

Erica S. Simmons

Sandinista
Nicaraguas
Resistance to US
Coercion
Revolutionary Deterrence in
Asymmetric Conflict

Hctor Perla, Jr

When States Come


Out
Europes Sexual Minorities and
the Politics of Visibility

Phillip M. Ayoub

Frank Pieke

In Defense of Pluralism
Policy Disagreement and Its Media
Coverage

ric Montpetit
Cambridge Studies in Comparative
Public Policy

Independent Politics
How American Disdain for Parties
Leads to Political Inaction

Samara Klar and Yanna


Krupnikov

IndiaEU People
Mobility
Historical, Economic and Regulatory
Dimensions

Edited by Rupa Chandra and


Pralok Gupta

The Politics of Property Rights under


Reform

Meg E. Rithmire

Latin America Confronts


the United States
Asymmetry and Influence

Tom Long

Mobilising the Diaspora

Politicising Europe
Integration and Mass Politics

Edited by Swen Hutter, Edgar


Grande, and Hanspeter Kriesi

Politicized Enforcement
in Argentina
Labor and Environmental Regulation

Matthew Amengual

How Refugees Challenge


Authoritarianism

Popular Sovereignty in
Historical Perspective

Alexander Betts and


Will Jones

Edited by Richard Bourke,


Quentin Skinner

Multi-Method Social
Science

Power Plays

Combining Qualitative and


Quantitative Tools

Jason Seawright
Strategies for Social Inquiry

How International Institutions


Reshape Coercive Diplomacy

Allison Carnegie

Power and Global


Economic Institutions
Ayse Kaya

www.cambridge.org/politics
@CUP_PoliSci
33770_BOOKS.indd 3

facebook.com/CambridgeUniversityPressPolitics
03/06/2016 14:42

CAMBRIDGE STUDIES
IN SOCIAL THEORY,
RELIGION AND POLITICS

Co-Winner, 2016 Religion


and International Relations
Book Award, Religion and
International Relations
Section, International
Studies Association

Free Trade
and Faithful
Globalization
Saving the Market

Amy Reynolds

Islam and
Democracy in
Indonesia
Tolerance without Liberalism

Jeremy Menchik

Religious
Persecution and
Political Order in
the United States
David T. Smith

The Politics of
Desecularization in
Pakistan
National Identity, Law, and
Religious Difference

Sadia Saeed

COMMUNICATION,
SOCIETY AND POLITICS

CAMBRIDGE TEXTS IN
THE HISTORY OF
POLITICAL THOUGHT

Winner, 2016 Goldsmith


Book Prize, The Shorenstein
Center on Media, Politics
and Public Policy

More: Utopia

Political Journalism
in Comparative
Perspective
Erik Albk, Arjen van
Dalen, Nael Jebril, and
Claes H. de Vreese

Winner, 2015 Frank Luther


Mott/Kappa Tau Alpha
Research Award

Americas Battle
for Media
Democracy

Elections and Electricity in the


Developing World

Brian Min

Presidential Campaigns
in Latin America
Electoral Strategies and Success
Contagion

Taylor Boas

Prisoners of Reason
Game Theory and Neoliberal Political
Economy

S. M. Amadae

Thomas More, Edited by


George M. Logan,
Translated by
Robert M. Adams

Plato: Laws
Plato, Edited by Malcolm
Schofield,
Translated by Tom
Griffith

Racial and Ethnic


Politics in American
Suburbs
Lorrie Frasure-Yokley

Rebel Governance in
Civil War

Victor Pickard

Edited by Ana Arjona, Nelson


Kasfir, and Zachariah Mampilly

Winner, 2016 Donna Lee Van Cott


Book Award, Political Institutions
Section, Latin American Studies
Association

Private Wealth and


Public Revenue in Latin
America
Business Power and Tax Politics

Public Reason
Confucianism
Democratic Perfectionism and
Constitutionalism in East Asia

Sungmoon Kim

Winner, 2016 Dennis Judd Best


Book Award, Urban and Local
Politics Section, APSA

Racial and Ethnic


Politics in American
Suburbs

Regional Development
Banks in Comparison

Edited by Emil J. Kirchner,


Thomas Christiansen, and
Han Dorussen

State and Capital in


Independent India
Institutions and Accumulations

Chirashree Das Gupta

Sweatshop Regimes
in the Indian Garment
Industry
Taking Rites Seriously
Law, Politics, and the Reasonableness
of Faith

Francis J. Beckwith

Taming the Imperial


Imagination
Colonial Knowledge, International
Relations, and the Anglo-Afghan
Encounter, 18081878

Martin J. Bayly

Targeted Sanctions

Banking Strategies versus


Development Goals

The Impacts and Effectiveness of


United Nations Action

Ruth Ben-Artzi

Edited by Thomas J. Biersteker,


Sue E. Eckert, and Marcos
Tourinho

Religious Liberty
Essays on First Amendment Law

Edited by Daniel N. Robinson


and Richard Williams

Retreat and its


Consequences
American Foreign Policy and the
Problem of World Order

Robert J. Lieber

Risk Inequality and


Welfare States
Social Policy Preferences,
Development, and Dynamics

Philipp Rehm

Lorrie Frasure-Yokley

Rival Reputations

Security

Coercion and Credibility in US-North


Korea Relations

Dialogue across Disciplines

Van Jackson

Edited by Philippe Bourbeau

From Convergence to Cooperation?

Alessandra Mezzadri

The Triumph of Corporate


Libertarianism and the Future
of Media Reform

Tasha Fairfield

Power and the Vote

Third Edition

Security Relations
between China and the
European Union

Taxation,
Responsiveness and
Accountability in
Sub-Saharan Africa
The Dynamics of Tax Bargaining

Wilson Prichard

The Advance of the


State in Contemporary
China
State-Market Relations in the
Reform Era

Sarah Eaton

Winner, 2016 Best Book


Award, Israeli Political Science
Association

The Arab-Israeli Conflict


in American Political
Culture
Jonathan Rynhold

www.cambridge.org/politics
@CUP_PoliSci
33770_BOOKS.indd 4

facebook.com/CambridgeUniversityPressPolitics
03/06/2016 14:42

PROBLEMS OF
INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS

Winner, 2016 ISA Annual


Best Book Award,
International Studies
Association
Winner, 2016 Yale H.
Ferguson Book Award,
Northeast Section,
International Studies
Association
Honorable Mention, 2015
Chadwick Alger Prize,
International Organization
Section, International
Studies Association
Honorable Mention, 2014
African Arguments Book of
the Year

Peaceland
Conflict Resolution and
the Everyday Politics of
International Intervention

Sverine Autesserre

The Roots of Ethnic


Cleansing in Europe
H. Zeynep Bulutgil

The Wartime
Origins of
Democratization

The Everyday Political


Economy of Southeast
Asia

The Politics of
Corruption in
Dictatorships

Edited by Juanita Elias and


Lena Rethel

Vineeta Yadav and Bumba


Mukherjee

Waller R. Newell

The Evolution
and Legitimacy of
International Security
Institutions

The Politics of Military


Coalitions

Understanding Modern
Warfare

M. Patrick Cottrell

The Federal Design


Dilemma
Congress and Intergovernmental
Delegation

Pamela J. Clouser McCann

The Female Voice of


Myanmar
Khin Myo Chit to Aung San Suu Kyi

Nilanjana Sengupta

The French War on Al


Qaida in Africa
Christopher S. Chivvis

The Indian Economy in


Transition
Globalization, Capitalism and
Development

Anjan Chakrabarti, Anup K.


Dhar, and Byasdeb Dasgupta

The Institutions Curse

Civil War, Rebel Governance,


and Political Regimes

Natural Resources, Politics, and


Development

Reyko Huang

Victor Menaldo
Business and Public Policy

The Cambridge
Companion to The
Communist Manifesto
Edited by Terrell Carver and
James Farr
Cambridge Companions to
Philosophy

The Continent of
International Law
Explaining Agreement Design

The Legacies of
Totalitarianism
A Theoretical Framework

Aviezer Tucker

The Party Politics of


Presidential Rhetoric
Amnon Cavari

The Politics of AfricanAmerican Education

Barbara Koremenos

Representation, Partisanship, and


Educational Equity

The Europeanization of
Politics

Kenneth J. Meier and


Amanda Rutherford

The Formation of a European


Electorate and Party System in
Historical Perspective

Scott Wolford

The Politics of Sharia


Law
Islamist Activists and the State in
Democratizing Indonesia

Michael Buehler

Winner, 2016 Richard F. Fenno


Prize, Legislative Studies Section,
APSA

The Politics of
Parliamentary Debate
Parties, Rebels and Representation

Sven-Oliver Proksch and


Jonathan B. Slapin

The Power of
Deterrence
Emotions, Identity and American and
Israeli Wars of Resolve

Amir Lupovici

The Salvador Option


The United States in El Salvador,
19771992

Russell Crandall

The Schematic State


Race, Transnationalism, and the
Politics of the Census

Debra Thompson

The South China Sea


A Crucible of Regional Cooperation or
Conflict-making Sovereignty Claims?

Edited by C. J. Jenner and


Tran Truong Thuy

Tyrants
A History of Power, Injustice, and
Terror

TEX TBOOK

Second Edition

David Jordan, James D. Kiras,


David J. Lonsdale, Ian Speller,
Christopher Tuck, and
C. Dale Walton

Unspoken Politics
Implicit Attitudes and Political
Thinking

Efrn O. Prez
Cambridge Studies in Public Opinion
and Political Psychology

Violence and
Civilization in the
Western States-Systems
Andrew Linklater

Violence and Restraint


in Civil War
Civilian Targeting in the Shadow of
International Law

Jessica A. Stanton

Violent Order
Understanding Rebel Governance
through Liberias Civil War

Nicholai Hart Lidow

Welfare for the Wealthy


Parties, Social Spending, and
Inequality in the United States

Christopher G. Faricy

Why Govern?
Rethinking Demand and Progress in
Global Governance

Edited by Amitav Acharya

The Worlds Search


for Sustainable
Development

Why Leaders Fight

A Perspective from the Global South

Why Regional Parties?

Mukul Sanwal

Tides of Consent
How Public Opinion Shapes American
Politics
Second Edition

James A. Stimson

Michael C. Horowitz, Allan C.


Stam, and Cali M. Ellis
Clientelism, Elites, and the Indian
Party System

Adam Ziegfeld

Women on the Run


Gender, Media, and Political
Campaigns in a Polarized Era

Danny Hayes and


Jennifer L. Lawless

Daniele Caramani

www.cambridge.org/politics
@CUP_PoliSci
33770_BOOKS.indd 5

facebook.com/CambridgeUniversityPressPolitics
03/06/2016 14:42

Research Methods
from Cambridge University Press
From discipline-defining journals like Political Analysis, new to Cambridge in 2017,
to renowned series such as Analytical Methods for Social Research
and Strategies for Social Inquiry,
and new author opportunities in our developing Elements Series
Quantitative and Computational Methods for Social Science,
Cambridge is your source for the latest in research methods.
Join us for a reception celebrating our
RESEARCH METHODS PUBLISHING
on Friday in the Cambridge University Press booth.

VOLUME 4 | ISSUE 2

MAY 2016

Experimental Political Science


VO LU M E 2

NUMBER 2

E D I TO R S N OT E

Farewell to JEPS!
Rebecca B. Morton and Joshua A. Tucker

107

A RT I C L E S

RESPONSE

139
152
164
172
183

192

Reporting Balance Tables, Response Rates and Manipulation Checks in Experimental


THE JOURNAL OF THE EUROPEAN
SCIENCE
ASSOCIATION
Research: APOLITICAL
Reply from the
Committee
that Prepared the Reporting Guidelines
216
Alan S. Gerber, Kevin Arceneaux, Cheryl Boudreau, Conor Dowling
and D. Sunshine Hillygus
ISSN 2049-8470

NU M BE R 2

Political Science
Research and Methods

109

VOLU M E 2

The Generalizability of Survey Experiments


Kevin J. Mullinix, Thomas J. Leeper, James N. Druckman and Jeremy Freese
When Do Conicting Parties Share Political Power?
Marco Battaglini and Lydia Mechtenberg
Do Better Committee Assignments Meaningfully Benet Legislators? Evidence
from a Randomized Experiment in the Arkansas State Legislature
David E. Broockman and Daniel M. Butler
Foreign Aid and Government Legitimacy
Simone Dietrich and Matthew S. Winters
Its a Mad, Mad World: Using Emotion Inductions in a Survey
Kathleen Searles and Kyle Mattes
Encouraging Small Donor Contributions: A Field Experiment Testing the Eects
of Nonpartisan Messages
Donald P. Green, Jonathan S. Krasno, Costas Panagopoulos, Benjamin Farrer
and Michael Schwam-Baird
Standards for Experimental Research: Encouraging a Better Understanding
of Experimental Methods
Diana C. Mutz and Robin Pemantle

JO U R NA L O F E XP ER IM E NTA L PO LI T ICAL S CI ENC E

JOURNAL OF

JEPS
JOURNAL OF

Experimental
Political Science
Official journal of the APSA Organized
Section on Experimental Research

VOLU M E 2
N U MBER 2
W IN TER 2 015

CAM BRIDG E JO URN AL S O N L IN E


For further information about this journal please go to
the journal website at:
journals.cambridge.org/xps

20522630_2-2.indd 1

33770_BOOKS.indd 6

1/8/16 3:02 PM

03/06/2016 14:42

Cutting Edge Research in

Political Science
Politics and the Life Sciences
journals.cambridge.org/pls

PLS is the official journal of the Association for


Politics and the Life Sciences, an American Political Science
Association (APSA) Related Group and an American Institute of Biological
Sciences (AIBS) Member Society. PLS publishes original scholarly research
at the intersection of political science and the life sciences.

PS: Political Science Research


and Methods
journals.cambridge.org/psrm

A new journal from the European Political Science Association,PSRM is a


general political science journal dedicated to publishing original scholarly
work of the highest quality from all sub field of political science. The journal
specifically focuses on research applying rigorous methods to empirical or
theoretical problems and promotes an exacting scientific approach to the
study of politics. PSRM welcomes work at the intersection of political
science and related disciplines.

British Journal of
Political Science
journals.cambridge.org/pps

British Journal of Political Science (BJPolS) is a broadly based


journal aiming to cover developments across a wide range of
countries and specialisms. Contributions are drawn from all
fields of political science and articles from scholars in related
disciplines appear frequently.

Explore the full catalog at journals.cambridge.org/politics

Contact us

Tel: 800 872 7423 | Fax: 845 353 4141


journals.subscriptions@cambridge.org

33770_JOU copy.indd 1

www.cambridge.org

27/05/2016 14:24

@CUP_PoliSci

American Political Science Association &


Cambridge University Press
A committed partnership producing leading scholarship

American Political Science Review


journals.cambridge.org/psr

APSR is political sciences premier scholarly research journal.


Featuring the highest quality peer-reviewed articles and review
essays from subfields throughout the discipline, the APSR has
been continuously publishing since 1906.

PS: Political Science & Politics


journals.cambridge.org/psc

PS provides peer-reviewed critical analyses of contemporary


political phenomena and is the journal of record for the discipline,
reporting on research, teaching, and professional development.
PS has been publishing since 1968.

Perspectives on Politics
journals.cambridge.org/pps

Perspectives provides a space for broad and synthetic


discussion within the political science profession and between
the profession and the broader scholarly and reading publics.
The journal seeks to nurture a political science public sphere,
publicizing important scholarly topics, ideas, and innovations.

Explore the full catalog at journals.cambridge.org/politics

Contact us

Tel: 800 872 7423 | Fax: 845 353 4141


journals.subscriptions@cambridge.org

33770_JOU copy.indd 2

www.cambridge.org

27/05/2016 14:24

Discipline-Defining Journals
in International Relations

Explore the full catalog at journals.cambridge.org/politics

Contact us

Tel: 800 872 7423 | Fax: 845 353 4141


journals.subscriptions@cambridge.org

33770_JOU copy.indd 3

www.cambridge.org

27/05/2016 14:24

Section Journals from APSA


N E W I N 2 0 1 65

Journal of
Race, Ethnicity
and Politics

The Journal of
Experimental
Political Science

Politics
& Gender

Politics and
Religion

Published for the Women


and Politics Research
Section of APSA

A journal of the
Religion and Politics
section of APSA

Explore the full catalog at journals.cambridge.org/politics


Contact us
Tel: 800 872 7423 | Fax: 845 353 4141
journals.subscriptions@cambridge.org
33770_JOU copy.indd 4

27/05/2016 14:24

Explore the Full Catalog at


journals.cambridge/politics

Explore the full catalog at journals.cambridge.org/politics

Contact us

Tel: 800 872 7423 | Fax: 845 353 4141


journals.subscriptions@cambridge.org
33770_JOU.indd 5

www.cambridge.org

03/06/2016 11:18

APSA

Routledge Politics,
International Relations and
Strategic Studies journals
Routledge partner with prestigious societies and think tanks across
the world to publish highly-cited journals. Join our community
and partner with the top publisher of ranked titles across the
Thomson Reuters Journal Citation Reports Political
Science and International Relations categories.

Read our Most Read collection for FREE!


In a year where migration, terrorism, conflict and elections continued to dominate the
mainstream media, our journals continued to publish relevant and highly popular articles.
Read the most read paper from each of our journals for free by visiting bit.ly/RoutledgeMR.

Get in touch
Sign up to our newsletter bit.ly/RoutledgeNewsletter
Like us on Facebook bit.ly/RoutledgeFacebook
Follow us on Twitter bit.ly/RoutledgeTwitter

bit.ly/RoutledgeMR

APSA prgm ad '16_7.1875 x9.75 inches 5/19/16 11:20 AM Page 1

BOOTH

613/615
20 50 %

Celebrating 33 Years of Independent Publishing

NEW3RD

Ending Homelessness:

EDITION !

Doing Comparative Politics:

Why We Havent, How We Can

An Introduction to Approaches and Issues

DONALD W. BURNES

TIMOTHY C. LIM pb $28.50

AND

RICHARD G. NIEMI,

The Global Barometers Series

Curtailing Corruption:

ROBERT C. SMITH

AND

RICHARD A. SELTZER hc $68.50

Latin America in International Politics:


Challenging US Hegemony

People Power for Accountability and Justice


SHAAZKA BEYERLE hc $65 pb $25

JOSEPH S. TULCHIN hc $62

Recycling Dictators in Latin American


Elections: Legacies of Military Rule

Political Islam and Democracy


in the Muslim World

BRETT J. KYLE hc $68.50 A FirstForumPress Book

PAUL KUBICEK hc $72

Building Rule of Law in the Arab World:


Tunisia, Egypt, and Beyond
HEIDI E. LANE,

EDITORS hc $39.95

From FDR to Barack Obama

DAVID DENEMARK, ROBERT MATTES,

AND

DAVID L. DILEO,

Polarization and the Presidency:

Does It Make a Difference?

EVA BELLIN

AND

CHOICE OUTSTANDING ACADEMIC BOOK!

Growing Up Democratic:
EDITORS hc $75

DISCOUNT

EDITORS hc $72

CHOICE OUTSTANDING ACADEMIC BOOKNOW

IN PAPERBACK !

Movies, Myth, and the


National Security State
DAN OMEARA, ALEX MACLEOD, FRDRICK GAGNON,
AND D AVID G RONDIN hc $68.50
NEW6TH

EDITION !

Power Politics in Zimbabwe

Introducing Global Issues

MICHAEL BRATTON hc $68 pb $28.50

MICHAEL T. SNARR

AND

D. NEIL SNARR,

EDITORS pb $28.50

Coping with Crisis in African States

Russias Far East:

PETER M. LEWIS

New Dynamics in Asia Pacific and Beyond

AND

JOHN W. HARBESON,

EDITORS hc $57

Rwandas Popular Genocide:


A Perfect Storm

ARTYOM LUKIN hc $68

EDITION !

DEREK MCDOUGALL pb $27.50

Taiwan's Democracy Challenged:


The Chen Shui-bian Years
EDITORS hc $75 pb $32.50

NEW2ND

AND

Asia Pacific in World Politics

JEAN-PAUL KIMONYO hc $67

YUN-HAN CHU, LARRY DIAMOND,

RENSSELAER LEE

AND

KHARIS TEMPLEMAN,

Democratization in Hong Kong


and China?
LYNN T. WHITE III hc $69.95

1800 30 TH S TREET , S UITE 314 B OULDER , CO 80301 T EL : 303-444-6684

w w w. r i e n n e r. co m

Policy Studies Organization

The International Association for Decision Makers


1527 New Hampshire Ave NW, Washington DC, 20036

The PSO publishes the following titles with Wiley-Blackwell:


Policy Studies Journal

Asian Politics & Policy

University of Arizona

University of the Philippines

Review of Policy Research

Policy & Internet

Carlton University

University of Oxford

Politics & Policy

World Medical & Health Policy

Universidad IberoAmericana-Mexico City

George Mason University

Digest of Middle East Studies

Risk, Hazards & Crisis in Public Policy

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

University of Oklahoma

Latin American Policy

Poverty & Public Policy

ITESM-Mexico City

University of Missouri-Kansas City

Others are open-access and can be viewed at:


www.ipsonet.org/publications/open-access
Policy Studies Yearbook

World Food Policy

University of Oklahoma

Chulalongkorn University-Bangkok

Proceedings of the PSO

Journal on Policy & Complex Systems

Policy Studies Organization

University of North Carolina-Charlotte

Internet Learning

New Water Policy & Practice

American Public University

University of Western Australia,


Technical University of Lisbon

Ritual, Secrecy & Civil Society

Sexuality, Gender & Public Policy

Grand Orient de France

University of Houston

International Journal on Criminology


National Conservatory for Arts and Crafts,
Paris, New York, and Beijing.

Journal of Global Security and Intelligence Studies

Arts & International Affairs

European Policy Analysis

George Mason University

University of Muenster, Germany

Popular Culture Review

China Policy Journal

University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

American Public University

PSO, in cooperation with SAGE publishing, are proud to be the new publishers of the
World Affairs Journal, previously published by the World Affairs Institute. SAGE will also
be publishing a collection of videos from PSO conferences.
Visit our website for information on all PSO publications, conferences, and our book
publishing program, Westphalia Press:

www.ipsonet.org

PUBLISHING WITH PURPOSE

The Dictators Dilemma


The Chinese Communist
Partys Strategy for Survival

Political Vices

Asymmetric Politics
Ideological Republicans
and Group Interest Democrats

lisa l. Miller

Bruce Dickson

Matt GrossMan and


DaviD a. Hopkins

Mark e. Button

The Myth of Mob Rule


Violent Crime and Democratic Politics
The Politics of Innovation
Why Some Countries Are Better Than
Others at Science and Technology
Mark ZacHary taylor

The Inevitable Party


Why Attempts to Kill the Party System Waging Insurgent Warfare
Fail and How they Weaken Democracy Lessons from the Vietcong
to the Islamic State
setH Masket
The Crimean Tatars
From Soviet Genocide to Putins
Conquest
Brian Glyn WilliaMs

America Abroad
The United States Global Role
in the 21st Century
stepHen Brooks and
WilliaM WoHlfortH

setH G. Jones

Vanguard of the Imam


Religion, Politics, and Irans
Revolutionary Guards
afsHon ostovar

The Shadow of Unfairness


A Plebeian Theory of Liberal
Democracy
Jeffrey eDWarD Green

The Tea Party and the Remaking


of Republican Conservatism
Revised Second Edition

The New Power Politics


Networks and Transnational Security
Governance

tHeDa skocpol and vanessa


WilliaMson

edited by DeBoraH avant


and oliver WesterWinter

Mr. Mothercountry
The Man Who Made the Rule of Law

Black Natural Law

keally McBriDe

Join the conversation!


@OUPPolitics
#APSA2016

Twists of Fate
Multiracial Coalitions and Minority
Representation in the US. House
of Representatives
vanessa c. tyson

Freedom Without Violence


Resisting the Western Political Tradition
Dustin ells HoWes

Damn Great Empires!


William James and the Politics
of Pragmatism
alexanDer livinGston

Hiding Politics in Plain Sight


Cause Marketing, Corporate Influence,
and Breast Cancer Policymaking
patricia stracH

Neoclassical Realist Theory


of International Politics

norrin M. ripsMan, Jeffrey W.


taliaferro, and steven e. loBell

The New Minority


White Working Class Politics in an
Age of Immigration and Inequality
Justin Gest

The Death and Life of the


Urban Commonwealth
MarGaret koHn

vincent W. lloyD

Intersectionality
An Intellectual History

anGe-Marie Hancock

Visit us at BOOTHS 600-606 in the exhibit


hall to explore these and other exciting
books, journals, and online resources.

oup.com/academic

OUP is the proud distributor of Hurst


Publishers, The American University of
Cairo Press, Edinburgh University Press,
Liverpool University Press, Manchester
University Press, and Fordham University
Press.

PUBLISHING WITH PURPOSE


Checkbook Elections?
Political Finance
in Comparative Perspective
edited by pippa norris
and anDrea aBel van es

Sustainable Security
Rethinking American National
Security Strategy
edited by JereMi suri
and BenJaMin valentino

The Oxford Handbook


of Feminist Theory

edited by lisa DiscH


and Mary HaWkesWortH

Altered States
Changing Populations, Changing
Parties, and the Transformation of
the American Political Landscape
tHoMas M. HolBrook

Politics, Theory, and Film


Critical Encounters with Lars von Trier

HIGHER EDUCATION

The Politics of Energy Crises

By the People
Debating American Government,
Second Edition

edited by Bonnie HoniG and


lori J. Marso

eric r.a.n. sMitH, Juliet e. carlisle,


Jessica t. feeZell, and kristy e.H.
MicHauD

Prototype Politics
Technology-Intensive Campaigning
and the Data of Democracy

Daniel kreiss
(Oxford Studies in Digital Politics)

The Other Rights Revolution


Conservative Lawyers and the
Remaking of American Government

Jefferson Decker
(Studies in Postwar American
Political Development)

JaMes a. Morone and roGan kersH

Comparative Politics
Integrating Theories, Methods,
and Cases, Second Edition
J. tyler Dickovick
and JonatHan eastWooD

Introduction to Global Politics


Third Edition

steven l. laMy, JoHn Baylis,


steve sMitH, and patricia oWens

International Relations
Second Edition

eric B. sHiraev
and vlaDislav M. ZuBok

OxFORD ONLINE RESOURCES


STOP by bOOTHS 600-606 fOr A guIdEd TOur
OxFORD BIBLIOGRAPHIES

oxfordbibliographies.com
Expert Recommendations. Instant Access.

OxFORD HANDBOOkS:
POLITICAL SCIENCE

political science

oxfordhandbooks.com
Scholarly Research Reviews

editor in chief: l. sandy Maisel,


colby college

editor in chief: Desmond king,


university of oxford

international relations
editor in chief: patrick James,
university of southern california

OxFORD RESEARCH ENCyCLOPEDIAS:


POLITICS

politics.oxfordre.com
A Community of Experts

universitypressscholarship.com

editor in chief: William r. Thompson,


indiana university

Visit us at BOOTHS 600-606 in the exhibit


hall to explore these and other exciting
books, journals, and online resources.

UNIVERSITy PRESS
SCHOLARSHIP ONLINE:
POLITICAL SCIENCE

Delivering the best scholarly


publishing from around the world

oup.com/academic

OxFORD JOURNALS
CONTENT WITH IMPACT

JOURNAL OF PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION RESEARCH
AND THEORy

POLITICAL ANALySIS

PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL


OF FEDERALISM

pan.oxfordjournals.org

publius.oxfordjournals.org

jpart.oxfordjournals.org

AFRICAN AFFAIRS

afraf.oxfordjournals.org

JOURNAL OF SURVEy STATISTICS


AND METHODOLOGy

PUBLIC OPINION QUARTERLy


poq.oxfordjournals.org

GLOBAL SUMMITRy:
POLITICS, ECONOMICS, AND LAW
IN INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE
globalsummitry.oxfordjournals.org

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF
PUBLIC OPINION RESEARCH
ijpor.oxfordjournals.org

jssam.oxfordjournals.org

OUP IS PROUD TO PUBLISH THE INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION JOURNALS


http://bit.ly/ISAjournals

Visit us at BOOTHS 600-606 in the exhibit


hall to explore these and other exciting
books, journals, and online resources.

oup.com/academic

Association for Asian Studies


JOIN TODAY!

The Three
Pillars of

REVEL

Membership offers:
Community
Fellowship and intellectual exchange with your peers
Stay current on the latest research and methodology

Interactive Learning
REVEL seamlessly blends authors
narrative, media, and assessment,
enabling students to read, practice, and
study in one continuous experience.

Current Events Bulletins


Updated twice a year, these chapter
openers highlight recent news items,
engaging students by keeping course
material current and relevant.

Exceptional Value

Privileges
Eligibility for grant programs and book subventions
Special rates on all AAS publications, i.e. Education About Asia
Reduced Annual Conference registration fee
Complimentary annual subscriptions to the print and online
Journal of Asian Studies and the online Asian Studies E-Newsletter

networking
Connect with 7,000 scholars across all disciplines

exClusive online Benefits


Search and contact current members in the AAS Member Directory
View articles in the Journal of Asian Studies since 1941
Access job listings

REVEL is more affordable than comparable


print and digital options, and long-term
access for students is part of the deal.

Attend the 2017


AAS Annual Conference
For more information, visit:

pearsonhighered.com/revel
Copyright 2016 Pearson and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. HESTR16330 DU 0616

March 16-19, 2017


Toronto, Canada

www.asian-studies.org

Special
conference
discount

KANSAS
Spying Through a
Glass Darkly

American Espionage against


the Soviet Union, 19451946
David Alvarez and Eduard Mark
360 pages, Cloth $34.95

The White House


Vice Presidency
The Path to Significance,
Mondale to Biden
Joel K. Goldstein
440 pages, 2 tables, Cloth $34.95

Liberty and Union


Bully Nation
How the American Establishment Creates a Bullying Society
Charles Derber and Yale R. Magrass
280 pages, Cloth $24.95

Bill Clinton
New Gilded Age President
Patrick J. Maney
344 pages, 25 photos, Cloth $34.95

Battleground Alaska
Fighting Federal Power in
Americas Last Wilderness
Stephen Haycox

The Civil War Era and American


Constitutionalism

Congress

Timothy S. Huebner

Protecting Individual Rights

544 pages, 41 illustrations, 5 maps,


Cloth $34.95

Louis Fisher
208 pages, Cloth $29.95

Obamacare Wars

The Heir Apparent


Presidency

Federalism, State Politics, and


the Affordable Care Act
Daniel Bland, Philip Rocco, and
Alex Waddan
232 pages, 10 illustrations, 12 tables,
Cloth $29.95

Winning Elections in
the 21st Century

272 pages, 11 photos, 1 map, Cloth $27.95

Dick Simpson and Betty


OShaughnessy

God Hates

256 pages, 25 illustrations, Cloth $45.00,


Paper $22.95

Westboro Baptist Church,


American Nationalism, and the
Religious Right

Branding Hoovers FBI

Rebecca Barrett-Fox

How the Bosss PR Men Sold


the Bureau to America

296 pages, 15 photos, Cloth $24.95

Matthew Cecil
344 pages, 16 photos, Cloth $29.95

Donald A. Zinman
216 pages, 5 tables, Cloth $29.95

The Fourth
Amendment in Flux
The Roberts Court, Crime
Control, and Digital Privacy
Michael C. Gizzi and R. Craig Curtis
200 pages, Cloth $39.95, Paper $19.95

Disqualifying the
High Court
Supreme Court Recusal and
the Constitution
Louis J. Virelli III
296 pages, Cloth $39.95

University Press of Kansas


Phone (785) 864-4155 Fax (785) 864-4586 www.kansaspress.ku.edu

KANSAS

BOOTHS
705 & 707

Presidents on Political
Ground
Leaders in Action and What
They Face
Bruce Miroff
208 pages, Cloth $29.95

The American Political


Pattern
Stability and Change,
19322016
Byron E. Shafer
312 pages, 18 illustrations, Cloth $45.00,
Paper $22.95

The Coming of the


Nixon Court

The Contract Clause

The 1972 Term and the Transformation of Constitutional Law

A Constitutional History
James W. Ely, Jr.

John G. Grove

Earl M. Maltz

336 pages, 18 photos, Cloth $39.95

256 pages, Cloth $37.50

256 pages, Cloth $34.95

Two Cities

The Courts, the Ballot


Box, and Gay Rights

John C. Calhouns
Theory of
Republicanism

The Political Thought of


American Transcendentalism
Daniel S. Malachuk
320 pages, 6 illustrations, Cloth $39.95

Democratic Religion
from Locke to Obama
Faith and the Civic Life of
Democracy
Giorgi Areshidze
224 pages, Cloth $29.95

Right-Wing Critics of
American Conservatism

How Our Governing Institutions


Shape the Same-Sex Marriage
Debate
Joseph Mello
240 pages, 7 illustrations, Cloth $34.95

Railroads and American


Political Development
Infrastructure, Federalism, and
State Building
Zachary Callen
264 pages, 26 illustrations, Cloth $39.95

376 pages, Cloth $34.95

Explicit and Authentic


Acts

The Jury in America

Amending the U.S. Constitution


17762015

George Hawley

The American Dream


In History, Politics, and Fiction
Calvin C. Jillson
336 pages, Cloth $45.00, Paper $22.95

Military Service and


American Democracy
From World War II to the Iraq
and Afghanistan Wars
William A. Taylor
336 pages, 25 photos, Cloth $34.95

The First Modern Clash


over Federal Power
Wilson versus Hughes in the
Presidential Election of 1916
Lewis L. Gould
192 pages, 20 photos, Cloth $34.95

With a New Afterword

Abraham Lincoln and


Liberal Democracy

Dennis Hale

David E. Kyvig

Nicholas Buccola

478 pages, Cloth $39.95

668 pages, Paper $35.00

256 pages, Cloth $35.00, Paper $17.95

Triumph and Decline

Special
conference
discount
Watergate
The Presidential Scandal That
Shook America
Keith W. Olson
With a New Afterword by Max Holland
264 pages, 20 photos, Cloth $34.95,
Paper $18.95

New in Paperback

Unlikely
Environmentalists
Congress and Clean Water,
19451972

KANSAS
Landmark Law Cases and American Society
Peter Charles Hoffer and N.E.H. Hull, series editors

Rutgers v. Waddington
Alexander Hamilton, the End of
the War for Independence, and
the Origins of Judicial Review
Peter Charles Hoffer
168 pages, Cloth $39.95, Paper $18.95

Discrediting the
Red Scare

Paul Charles Milazzo

The Cold War Trials of James


Kutcher, The Legless Veteran

352 pages, 7 photos, Paper $24.95

Robert Justin Goldstein

American Burke
The Uncommon Liberalism of
Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Greg Weiner
208 pages, Paper $19.95

The First Presidential


Contest
1796 and the Founding of
American Democracy
Jeffrey L. Pasley
528 pages, 19 photos, Paper $28.95

Antonin Scalias
Jurisprudence
Text and Tradition
With a New Afterword

Ralph A. Rossum

240 pages, Cloth $39.95, Paper $19.95

The Great Yazoo


Lands Sale
The Case of Fletcher v. Peck
Charles F. Hobson
256 pages, 1 map, Cloth $45.00,
Paper $19.95

Constitutional Thinking
Jeffrey K. Tulis and Sanford
Levinson, series editors

Nullification and
Secession in Modern
Constitutional Thought
Sanford Levinson
356 pages, Cloth $45.00, Paper $24.95

308 pages, Paper $22.95

Ebook editions available from your favorite ebook retailer.


Publisher of these series: American Political Thought American Presidency Series
American Presidential Elections Studies in Government and Public Policy Landmark Law Cases
and American Society Constitutional Thinking Modern First Ladies CultureAmerica

University Press of Kansas


Phone (785) 864-4155 Fax (785) 864-4586 www.kansaspress.ku.edu

New from

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS


Staying with the Trouble

Making Kin in the Chthulucene

DONNA HARAWAY

Experimental Futures
31 illustrations, incl. 2 in color, paper,
$26.95

Biocultural Creatures

Visionary Pragmatism

Radical and Ecological Democracy


in Neoliberal Times
ROMAND COLES
6 illustrations, paper, $23.95

Ingenious Citizenship

Toward a New Theory of the Human

Recrafting Democracy for


Social Change

paper, $22.95

paper, $25.95

The Minor Gesture

Januss Gaze

Thought in the Act


22 photographs, $24.95

paper, $23.95

SAMANTHA FROST

ERIN MANNING

CHARLES T. LEE

Essays on Carl Schmitt

CARLO GALLI

What Is a World?

Islam and Secularity

PHENG CHEAH

Public Planet Books


paper, $23.95

The Sublime Perversion of


Capital

Moral Economies of Corruption

GAVIN WALKER

4 illustrations, paper, $25.95

On Postcolonial Literature as
World Literature
paper, $28.95

Marxist Theory and the Politics of


History in Modern Japan
Asia-Pacific: Culture, Politics, and Society
paper, $24.95

The Future of Europes Public Sphere

NILFER GLE

State Formation and Political Culture


in Nigeria

STEVEN PIERCE

Pipe Politics, Contested Waters

Diaspora and Trust

Embedded Infrastructures of
Millennial Mumbai

ADRIAN H. HEARN

18 illustrations, paper, $25.95

Cuba, Mexico, and the Rise of China


29 illustrations, paper, $24.95

From Washington to Moscow

US-Soviet Relations and the Collapse


of the USSR

LOUIS SELL

paper, $27.95

Now in Paper!

Hillary and Bill

The Clintons and the Politics of the


Personal

WILLIAM H. CHAFE

Revised and Expanded Edition


paper, $21.95

LISA BJRKMAN

The Minor Gesture


ERIN MANNING

Thought in the Act


22 photographs, $24.95

Now published by
Duke University Press:

Waking from the Dream

The Struggle for Civil Rights in the


Shadow of Martin Luther King, Jr.

DAVID L. CHAPPELL

20 photographs, paper, $23.95

Forthcoming from

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS


Facing the Planetary

Sovereignty in Ruins

WILLIAM E. CONNOLLY

GEORGE EDMONDSON and


KLAUS MLADEK, editors

Entangled Humanism and the Politics


of Swarming

A Politics of Crisis

paper, $23.95
February, 2017

paper, $26.95
April 2017

Cultural Studies 1983

Citizenship in Question

A Theoretical History

STUART HALL

JENNIFER DARYL SLACK and


LAWRENCE GROSSBERG, editors
Stuart Hall: Selected Writings
paper, $23.95
October 2016

Vulnerability in Resistance
JUDITH BUTLER,
ZEYNAP GAMBETTI, and
LETICIA SABSAY, editors

29 illustrations, paper, $26.95


October 2016

Geontologies

A Requiem to Late Liberalism

ELIZABETH A. POVINELLI

9 illustrations, paper, $22.95


October 2016

The Misinterpellated Subject


JAMES R. MARTEL

paper, $25.95
February, 2017

Evidentiary Birthright and


Statelessness

BENJAMIN N. LAWRANCE and


JACQUELINE STEVENS, editors

paper, $25.95
December 2016

The War on Sex

TREVOR HOPPE and


DAVID M. HALPERIN, editors

6 illustrations, paper, $29.95


March 2017

Waves of Knowing

A Seascape Epistemology

KARIN AMIMOTO INGERSOLL

12 illustrations, paper, $23.95


November 2016

Gramsci's Common Sense


Inequality and Its Narratives

KATE CREHAN

6 photographs, paper, $23.95


October 2016

Decolonizing Dialectics

GEORGE CICCARIELLO-MAHER

Radical Amricas
paper, $23.95
February, 2017

#ReadUP
Save 30% online with
coupon code APSA16
dukeupress.edu

888-651-0122

Follow us on Twitter! @DUKEpress

A key forum for the scholarly


analysis of health policy politics
Introducing new editor Eric M. Patashnik
Julis-Rabinowitz Professor of Public Policy, Brown University

A leading journal in its field, and the primary source of


communication across the many disciplines it serves, the
Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law focuses on the
initiation, formulation, and implementation of health policy
and analyzes the relations between government and health
past, present, and future.
Two new special sections
The Politics and Policy of Health Reform
This section provides useful information for practitioners,
stakeholders, and academics involved in national- and statelevel health reform legislation, regulation, implementation,
and policy evaluation in the United States.
The editorial office is based

Beneath the Surface

at the Watson Institute for

This section analyzes and challenges empirical claims,

International and Public Affairs,


Brown University.

theoretical assumptions, and taken-for-granted terms and


concepts in health policy debates and literature to promote
a better understanding of health policy realities.

Journal of
Health Politics,
Policy
and Law

Subscription information
Six issues annually
Individuals: $60
Students: $35
Members of APSA receive
a 25% discount on subscriptions.

dukeupress.edu/jhppl

To place your order, please call 888-651-0122 (toll-free in the US


and Canada) or +1-919-688-5134, e-mail subscriptions@dukeupress.edu,
or order online at dukeupress.edu/jhppl.

New from Princeton


Democracy for Realists

Polarized

Why Elections
Do Not Produce
Responsive Government

Making Sense of a
Divided America

Christopher H. Achen
& Larry M. Bartels

Cloth $29.95

James E. Campbell

The Tyranny
of the Ideal
Justice in a Diverse Society

Gerald Gaus
Cloth $39.50

Princeton Studies in Political Behavior

Cloth $29.95

Power and
International Relations
A Conceptual Approach

David A. Baldwin
Paper $29.95

How Armies
Respond to
Revolutions and Why
Zoltan Barany
Cloth $35.00

Powerplay
The Origins of the
American Alliance
System in Asia

Victor D. Cha

Princeton Studies in International History


and Politics

Cloth $35.00

A History of the
Foreign Policies of
American Jews

Michael N. Barnett
Cloth $35.00

Unequal Democracy
The Political Economy
of the New Gilded Age
Second Edition

Larry M. Bartels

Copublished with the Russell Sage


Foundation
Cloth $29.95

State and
Commonwealth
The Theory of the State
in Early Modern England,
15491640

Noah Dauber

The Right Wrong Man


John Demjanjuk and
the Last Great Nazi War
Crimes Trial

Lawrence Douglas

Jason Brennan
Cloth $29.95

Political Economy
for Public Policy
Ethan Bueno de Mesquita
Paper $45.00

Fawaz A. Gerges
Cloth $27.95

Winner, 2016Ellis W. Hawley Prize,


Organization of American Historians

The Paradox of
American Government
from the Founding
to the Present

Gary Gerstle
Cloth $35.00

The Unquiet Frontier


Rising Rivals, Vulnerable
Allies, and the Crisis of
American Power

Jakub J. Grygiel & A. Wess


Mitchell
Cloth $29.95

Cloth $29.95

Nietzsches Great Politics


Hugo Drochon
Cloth $45.00

Predicting the Presidency


The Potential
of Persuasive Leadership

George C. Edwards III

Against Democracy

A History

Liberty and Coercion

Cloth $45.00

The Star and


the Stripes

ISIS

Paper $29.95

Dictators and Democrats


Masses, Elites,
and Regime Change

Stephan Haggard
& Robert R. Kaufman
Paper $29.95

Adam Smith
His Life, Thought, and Legacy

Edited by Ryan Patrick Hanley


Cloth $45.00

Engineers of Jihad
The Curious Connection
between Violent Extremism
and Education

Diego Gambetta
& Steffen Hertog
Cloth $29.95

A World of Struggle
How Power, Law,
and Expertise Shape Global
Political Economy

David Kennedy
Cloth $29.95

Booth No. 500


30% Discount Offer EX100
press.princeton.edu

New from Princeton


Resolve in
International Politics
Joshua D. Kertzer

Princeton Studies in Political Behavior

Cloth $39.50

An Age of Risk

The Kerner Report

Politics and Economy in Early


Modern Britain

The National
Advisory Commission
on Civil Disorders

Emily C. Nacol

With an introduction
by Julian E. Zelizer

Cloth $39.95

The James Madison Library


in American Politics

Investigating
the President
Congressional Checks on
Presidential Power

Douglas L. Kriner
& Eric Schickler

Becoming Black
Political Subjects
Movements and Ethno-Racial
Rights in Colombia and Brazil

Tianna S. Paschel
Cloth $39.50

Paper $29.95

Paper $35.00

How to Choose
a Leader
Machiavellis Advice
to Citizens

Maurizio Viroli

On War
and Democracy
Christopher Kutz

Good Neighbors
The Democracy of Everyday
Life in America

Nancy L. Rosenblum

Cloth $16.95

Trouble in the Tribe


The American
Jewish Conflict
over Israel

Cloth $39.95

Cloth $35.00

Our Compelling
Interests

The Sunni Tragedy


in the Middle East

The Value of Diversity


or Democracy and a
Prosperous Society

Northern Lebanon
from al-Qaeda to ISIS

Edited by Earl Lewis


& Nancy Cantor

Bernard Rougier

Princeton Studies in Muslim Politics

And Other Essays

Cloth $35.00

Sheldon S. Wolin

Dov Waxman
Cloth $29.95

Fugitive Democracy

Our Compelling Interests

Edited by Nicholas Xenos

Cloth $27.95

Cloth $39.95

Taxing the Rich


Religious Difference
in a Secular Age
A Minority Report

Saba Mahmood
Paper $24.95

A History of Fiscal Fairness


in the United States and Europe

New in Paper

Kenneth Scheve
& David Stasavage

NATO in Afghanistan

Copublished with the


Russell Sage Foundation
Cloth $29.95

Political Turbulence
How Social Media Shape
Collective Action

Helen Margetts,
Peter John,
Scott Hale
& Taha Yasseri
Cloth $29.95

DO NOT PRINT THIS INFORMATION

Fighting Together,
Fighting Alone

David P. Auerswald
& Stephen M. Saideman
Paper $22.95

Racial Realignment
The Transformation
of American Liberalism,
19321965

Eric Schickler

Princeton Studies in American Politics: Historical,


International, and Comparative Perspectives

The Ethics
of Democracy

Eric Beerbohm
Paper $29.95

Paper $35.00

LEFT PAGE2-OF-3

In Our Name

APSA PROGRAM AD

2017

New from Princeton


The China Model

In-Your-Face Politics

How Propaganda Works

Political Meritocracy
and the Limits
of Democracy

The Consequences of Uncivil Media

Jason Stanley

Diana C. Mutz

Paper $19.95 November 2016

Paper $23.95

Daniel A. Bell

With a new preface


by the author
Paper $19.95

Politics and Vision

The Rise and Fall of


Classical Greece

Continuity and Innovation in


Western Political Thought

Josiah Ober

Currency Politics
The Political Economy
of Exchange Rate Policy

Jeffry A. Frieden
Paper $22.95

Sheldon S. Wolin

The Princeton History of the Ancient World

Expanded Edition

Paper $18.95

With a new foreword by Wendy Brown


Princeton Classics

Confronting Political Islam

Paper $24.95

Six Lessons from the Wests Past

John M. Owen IV

Ruling Russia

Paper $22.95

Authoritarianism from the


Revolution to Putin

Caught
The Prison State and
the Lockdown of
American Politics

The Machiavellian Moment

Marie Gottschalk

J.G.A. Pocock

With a new preface


by the author
Paper $24.95

Florentine Political Thought and the


Atlantic Republican Tradition

With a new afterword


by the author
Paper $24.95

With a new introduction


by Richard Whatmore
Princeton Classics

After Victory
Institutions, Strategic Restraint,
and the Rebuilding of Order
after Major Wars
New Edition

Paper $35.00

Forthcoming

What Is Your Race?

John Adams and the Fear


of American Oligarchy

The Census and Our Flawed


Efforts to Classify Americans

Kenneth Prewitt

G. John Ikenberry

Paper $22.95

Princeton Studies in International


History and Politics

Paper $19.95 January 2017

Winner, 2015 Myres S. McDougal Prize,


Society of Policy Scientists
Winner, 2014 Louis Brownlow
Book Award, National Academy
of Public Administration

The Birth of Politics

Secrets and Leaks

Eight Greek and


Roman Political Ideas
and Why They Matter

Rahul Sagar

With a new preface by the author

Melissa Lane
Paper $19.95

Sailing the Waters Edge


The Domestic Politics
of American Foreign Policy

Helen V. Milner
& Dustin Tingley
Paper $27.95

William Zimmerman

The Dilemma of State Secrecy


With a new preface
by the author

Luke Mayville
Cloth $29.95

Marxs Inferno
The Political Theory of Capital

William Clare Roberts


Cloth $37.50

Free Time
Julie L. Rose
Cloth $35.00

Paper $19.95

A Matter of Interpretation
Federal Courts and the Law
New Edition

Antonin Scalia

With a new foreword

Why Wilson Matters


The Origin of American
Liberal Internationalism and
Its Crisis Today

Tony Smith

University Center for Human Values Series

Princeton Studies in International


History and Politics

Paper $18.95

Cloth $35.00

Booth No. 500


30% Discount Offer EX100
press.princeton.edu

DO NOT PRINT THIS INFORMATION

RIGHT PAGE 3-OF3

APSA PROGRAM AD

2017

NEW
I

from

NORTON

Visit us in Booth 612/614


World Politics

Political Games

INTERESTS, INTERACTIONS,
INSTITUTIONS

MATHEMATICAL INSIGHTS
ON FIGHTING, VOTING, LYING,
& OTHER AFFAIRS OF STATE

Third Edition
JEFFRY A. FRIEDEN
DAVID A. LAKE
KENNETH A. SCHULTZ
NEW
EDITION

MACARTAN HUMPHREYS
NEW
EDITION

NEW

Essentials of
International
Relations

International
Political Economy
PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL
POWER AND WEALTH

Seventh Edition

Sixth Edition

KAREN A. MINGST
IVAN M. ARREGUN-TOFT

NEW
EDITION

JEFFRY A. FRIEDEN
DAVID A. LAKE
J. LAWRENCE BROZ
COMING
SOON

Essentials of
Comparative Politics

Constitutional
Law and Politics

Fifth Edition

Tenth Edition

PATRICK H. ONEIL

DAVID M. OBRIEN

ALSO AVAILABLE:

Cases in Comparative Politics,


Fifth Edition
Essential Readings in
Comparative Politics,
Fourth Edition

NEW
EDITION
COMING

B INDEPENDENT AND EMPLOYEE-OWNED

| WWNORTON.COM

NEW

from

NORTON

COMING WINTER 201617


American
Politics Today

We the People
AN INTRODUCTION TO
AMERICAN POLITICS

Fifth Edition

Eleventh Edition

DAVID T. CANON
WILLIAM T. BIANCO

BENJAMIN GINSBERG
THEODORE J. LOWI
MARGARET WEIR
CAROLINE TOLBERT

American
Government

The American
Political System

POWER AND PURPOSE

Third Edition

Fourteenth Edition

KEN KOLLMAN

THEODORE J. LOWI
BENJAMIN GINSBERG
KENNETH A. SHEPSLE
STEPHEN ANSOLABEHERE

Full and Core Editions

Full, Core, and Brief Editions

HIJK helps students


master core concepts.
InQuizitive is a formative, adaptive quizzing tool that
is built like a game. It personalizes quiz questions to
give students the help they need for the topics they
struggle with the most.
Available with all versions of We the People and
American Politics Today. Contact Erin Brown
(ebrown@wwnorton.com) for more information or
stop by the Norton booth.

B INDEPENDENT AND EMPLOYEE-OWNED

| WWNORTON.COM

New and forthcoming titles in Political Science from

CORNELL UNIVERSITY PRESS


CHINESE ECONOMIC
STATECRAFT

Commercial Actors, Grand


Strategy, and State Control
WILLIAM J. NORRIS
$39.95 cloth

THE POWER OF SYSTEMS

How Policy Sciences Opened Up


the Cold
. War World.

EGLE RINDZEVICIUTE
$49.95 cloth

THE INVISIBLE CAMORRA

Neapolitan Crime Families across


Europe
FELIA ALLUM
$45.00 cloth

ACCIDENTAL ACTIVISTS

Victim Movements and


Government Accountability in
Japan and South Korea
CELESTE L. ARRINGTON

$39.95 cloth | Studies of the


Weatherhead East Asian Institute,
Columbia University

EYEWITNESS TO A
GENOCIDE (WITH A NEW
AFTERWORD)
MICHAEL BARNETT
$22.95 paper

THE GUMILEV MYSTIQUE

Biopolitics, Eurasianism, and the


Construction of Community in
Modern Russia

MARK BASSIN
FOREWORD BY RONALD GRIGOR
SUNY

$29.95 paper | Culture and Society


after Socialism

VIOLENCE AS A
GENERATIVE FORCE

Identity, Nationalism, and


Memory in a Balkan Community
MAX BERGHOLZ
$35.00 cloth

MAKING THE UNIPOLAR


MOMENT

U.S. Foreign Policy and the Rise


of the PostCold War Order
HAL BRANDS
$29.95 cloth

IMMIGRANTS AND
ELECTORAL POLITICS

Nonprofit Organizing in a Time of


Demographic Change
HEATH BROWN
$26.95 paper

THE WAR AFTER THE WAR

The Struggle for Credibility during


Americas Exit from Vietnam

THE FIGHT FOR LOCAL


CONTROL

JOHANNES KADURA

Schools, Suburbs, and American


Democracy

MY NUCLEAR NIGHTMARE

$35.00 cloth | American Institutions


and Society

$45.00 cloth

CAMPBELL F. SCRIBNER

HOW STATES PAY FOR


WARS

Leading Japan through the


Fukushima Disaster to a NuclearFree Future

CONSTRUCTIVE FEMINISM

$45.00 cloth

NAOTO KAN
TRANSLATED BY JEFFREY S. IRISH

DAPHNE SPAIN

ROSELLA CAPPELLA ZIELINSKI

Womens Spaces and Womens


Rights in the American City

$24.95 cloth

$24.95 paper

MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO


TRANSLATED BY BENJAMIN
PATRICK NEWTON

THE STATEBUILDERS
DILEMMA

BUILDING THE CITY OF


SPECTACLE

RAPE DURING CIVIL WAR

DAVID A. LAKE

COSTAS SPIROU AND DENNIS R.


JUDD

ON DUTIES

$22.95 paper | Agora Editions

DARA KAY COHEN


$26.95 paper

MAKING IMMIGRANT
RIGHTS REAL

Nonprofits and the Politics of


Integration in San Francisco
ELS DE GRAAUW
$22.95 paper

SAVING OUR CITIES

A Progressive Plan to Transform


Urban America
WILLIAM W. GOLDSMITH
$29.95 cloth

RELIGION ON THE
BATTLEFIELD
RON E. HASSNER
$24.95 cloth

A MOST ENTERPRISING
COUNTRY
North Korea in the Global
Economy

JUSTIN V. HASTINGS
$29.95 cloth

On the Limits of Foreign


Intervention
$24.95 paper

MOURNING IN AMERICA

Mayor Richard M. Daley and the


Remaking of Chicago
$27.95 cloth

DAVID W. MCIVOR

SPHERES OF
INTERVENTION

$49.95 cloth

US Foreign Policy and the


Collapse of Lebanon, 19671976

UNSETTLED AMERICANS

JAMES R. STOCKER

Race and the Politics of Loss

Metropolitan Context and


Civic Leadership for Immigrant
Integration

EDITED BY JOHN MOLLENKOPF


AND MANUEL PASTOR
$24.95 paper

$45.00 cloth

WHO CARES?

How to Reshape a Democratic


Politics

JOAN C. TRONTO

42

$4.99 paper | Cornell Selects | Brown


Democracy Medal

EDITED BY MICHAEL NELSON,


BARBARA A. PERRY, AND
RUSSELL L. RILEY

Americans, Arabs, and U.S.


Middle East Relations in the
1970s

Inside the Presidency of Bill


Clinton

$24.95 paper | Miller Center of Public


Affairs Books

IMPERFECT STRANGERS

SALIM YAQUB

$35.00 cloth | The United States in


the World

Browse our titles at booth 701

WWW.CORNELLPRESS.CORNELL.EDU

CORNELL STUDIES
IN MONEY
CENTRAL BANKS AND
GOLD

How Tokyo, London, and New


York Shaped the Modern World
SIMON JAMES BYTHEWAY AND
MARK METZLER
$39.95 cloth

PRIESTS OF PROSPERITY

How Central Bankers Transformed


the Postcommunist World
JULIET JOHNSON

CORNELL STUDIES
IN SECURITY
AFFAIRS
UNCLEAR PHYSICS

Why Iraq and Libya Failed to


Build Nuclear Weapons
MALFRID BRAUT-HEGGHAMMER
$39.95 cloth

INSIDER THREATS

EDITED BY MATTHEW BUNN AND


SCOTT D. SAGAN
$22.95 paper

PEACEMAKING FROM
ABOVE, PEACE FROM
BELOW

Ending Conflict between Regional


Rivals
NORRIN M. RIPSMAN
$45.00 cloth

IN THE HEGEMONS
SHADOW

Leading States and the Rise of


Regional Powers

EVAN BRADEN MONTGOMERY


$45.00 cloth

Labor Markets and the Instability


of the Euro
ALISON JOHNSTON
$39.95 cloth

DEVELOPMENTAL
MINDSET

The Revival of Financial Activism


in South Korea
ELIZABETH THURBON
$24.95 paper

CORNELL STUDIES
IN POLITICAL
ECONOMY
HOW CHINA ESCAPED THE
POVERTY TRAP

YUEN YUEN ANG


$27.95 cloth

ASIAN DESIGNS

Governance in the Contemporary


World Order

SAADIA M. PEKKANEN
$29.95 paper

STRATEGIC COUPLING

East Asian Industrial


Transformation in the New Global
Economy
HENRY WAI-CHUNG YEUNG
$29.95 paper

I LOVE LEARNING;
I HATE SCHOOL

An Anthropology of College
SUSAN D. BLUM
$24.95 cloth

WHAT UNIVERSITIES CAN


BE

A New Model for Preparing


Students for Active Concerned
Citizenship and Ethical
Leadership
ROBERT J. STERNBERG
$29.95 cloth

$35.00 cloth

FROM CONVERGENCE TO
CRISIS

ALSO OF INTEREST

ILR PRESS

DEADLY RIVER

ACHIEVING WORKERS
RIGHTS IN THE GLOBAL
ECONOMY

RALPH R. FRERICHS

Cholera and Cover-Up in PostEarthquake Haiti


$29.95 cloth | The Culture and
Politics of Health Care Work

EDITED BY RICHARD
APPELBAUM AND NELSON
LICHTENSTEIN

THE SUPREME COURT ON


UNIONS

$26.95 paper

Why Labor Law Is Failing


American Workers

A FIGHT FOR THE SOUL


OF PUBLIC EDUCATION

JULIUS G. GETMAN

The Story of the Chicago


Teachers Strike

STEVEN K. ASHBY AND ROBERT


BRUNO
$35.00 cloth

THIRD WAVE
CAPITALISM

How Money, Power, and the


Pursuit of Self-Interest Have
Imperiled the American Dream
JOHN EHRENREICH
$29.95 cloth

$29.95 cloth

THE CHALLENGE TO
CHANGE

Reforming Health Care on the


Front Line in the United States
and the United Kingdom
REBECCA KOLINS GIVAN

$45.00 cloth | The Culture and


Politics of Health Care Work

HARD SELL

Work and Resistance in Retail


Chains

CURING MEDICARE

A Doctors View on How Our


Health Care System Is Failing
Older Americans and How We
Can Fix It
ANDY LAZRIS
FOREWORD BY SHANNON
BROWNLEE

$24.95 cloth | The Culture and


Politics of Health Care Work

THE RISE AND FALL


OF THE MIRACULOUS
WELFARE MACHINE
Immigration and Social
Democracy in TwentiethCentury Sweden

CARLY ELIZABETH SCHALL


$55.00 cloth

OUR UNIONS, OUR


SELVES

The Rise of Feminist Labor


Unions in Japan
ANNE ZACHARIAS-WALSH
$29.95 paper

PETER IKELER
$24.95 paper

Visit us and browse our titles at booth 701


WWW.CORNELLPRESS.CORNELL.EDU

Stop by booth #402 for a 30% conference discount

STATE TAX POLICY


A Primer
FOURTH EDITION

By David Brunori

SUPREMELY PARTISAN
How Raw Politics Tips the Scales in
the United States Supreme Court
By James D. Zirin. Foreword
by Kermit Roosevelt

THE POLITICAL SCIENCE STUDENT


WRITERS MANUAL AND READERS GUIDE
EIGHTH EDITION

By Gregory M. Scott and


Stephen M. Garrison

THE IMPERILED PRESIDENCY


Leadership Challenges in the
Twenty-First Century
By G. Calvin Mackenzie

PRESIDENTIAL DOCTRINES
U.S. National Security from George
Washington to Barack Obama

AMERICAN POLITICAL RHETORIC


Essential Speeches and Writings

PARTY AND PROCEDURE IN THE


UNITED STATES CONGRESS

A COMPARATIVE INTRODUCTION
TO POLITICAL SCIENCE
Contention and Cooperation

By Joseph M. Siracusa
and Aiden Warren

SECOND EDITION

Edited by Jacob R. Straus and


Matthew E. Glassman

POLARIZED
The Rise of Ideology in American Politics
By Steven E. Schier and
Todd E. Eberly

POLITICAL CAMPAIGN COMMUNICATION


Principles and Practices
EIGHTH EDITION

By Judith S. Trent, Robert


V. Friedenberg and
Robert E. Denton Jr.

DEBATING THE OBAMA PRESIDENCY


Edited by Steven E. Schier

PUBLIC OPINION
Measuring the American Mind
FIFTH EDITION

SEVENTH EDITION

Edited by Peter Augustine Lawler


and Robert Martin Schaefer

HACKED
The Inside Story of Americas
Struggle to Secure Cyberspace
By Charlie Mitchell

NO SIMPLE SOLUTIONS
Transforming Public Housing in Chicago
By Susan J. Popkin

By Alan G. Smith

E-GOVERNMENT FOR PUBLIC MANAGERS


Administering the Public Sphere
By Robert A. Cropf

AMERICAN INDIAN POLITICS AND


THE AMERICAN POLITICAL SYSTEM
FOURTH EDITION

By David E. Wilkins and Heidi


Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark

NONPROFITS AND GOVERNMENT


Collaboration and Conflict

LATINO POLITICS IN AMERICA


Community, Culture, and Interests

By Elizabeth Boris and


C. Eugene Steuerle

By John A. Garcia

THIRD EDITION

POLITICS AND FILM


The Political Culture of
Television and Movies
SECOND EDITION

By Daniel P. Franklin

By Barbara A. Bardes and


Robert W. Oldendick

www.rowman.com

THIRD EDITION

THE THREAT FROM WITHIN


Recognizing Al Qaeda-Inspired
Radicalization and Terrorism in the West
By Phil Gurski

Stop by booth #402 for a 30% conference discount

CHALLENGES OF THE
DEVELOPING WORLD
EIGHTH EDITION

By Howard Handelman

GLOBALIZATION AND MILITARISM


Feminists Make the Link
SECOND EDITION

By Cynthia Enloe

GLOBALIZATION AND MIGRATION


A World in Motion

THE DRONE DEBATE


A Primer on the U.S. Use of
Unmanned Aircraft Outside
Conventional Battlefields

By Avery Plaw, Matthew S.


Fricker and Carlos Colon

THIRD EDITION

By Lui Hebron and John F. Stack Jr.

THE ETHICS OF INTERDEPENDENCE


Global Human Rights and Duties
By William F. Felice

THE DEMOCRATIZATION DISCONNECT


How Recent Democratic Revolutions
Threaten the Future of Democracy
By Brian Grodsky

SECURITY 2.0
Dealing with Global Wicked Problems
By Charles Hauss

WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT CIVIL WARS?

By Bruce Maddy-Weitzman

Edited by T. David Mason and


Sara McLaughlin Mitchell

POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT IN ISRAEL


The Maturation of a Modern State

DRUG TRAFFICKING AND


INTERNATIONAL SECURITY

THIRD EDITION

By Gregory S. Mahler

SEEKING SECURITY IN AN
INSECURE WORLD
THIRD EDITION

CHINESE FOREIGN RELATIONS


Power and Policy since the Cold War

By Dan Caldwell and


Robert E. Williams Jr.

FOURTH EDITION

By Eliot Dickinson

GLOBALIZATION
Debunking the Myths

A CENTURY OF ARAB POLITICS


From the Arab Revolt to the Arab Spring

By Robert G. Sutter

THE MIDDLE EAST, OIL, AND THE


U.S. NATIONAL SECURITY POLICY
Intractable Conflicts,
Impossible Solutions
By Donald M. Snow

RUSSIAS FOREIGN POLICY


Change and Continuity in
National Identity
FOURTH EDITION

By Andrei P. Tsygankov

IRAN DIVIDED
The Historical Roots of Iranian Debates
on Identity, Culture, and Governance
in the Twenty-First Century
By Shireen T. Hunter

EMERGING SECURITY THREATS


IN THE MIDDLE EAST
The Impact of Climate Change
and Globalization
By Ashok Swain and
Anders Jgerskog

By Paul Rexton Kan

WAR, ARMED FORCE, AND THE PEOPLE


State Formation and Transformation
in Historical Perspective
By Walter C. Opello Jr.

MASS-MEDIATED TERRORISM
Mainstream and Digital Media in
Terrorism and Counterterrorism
THIRD EDITION

By Brigitte Nacos

PUTINS PROPAGANDA MACHINE


Soft Power and Russian Foreign Policy

TOWARDS AN IMPERFECT UNION


A Conservative Case for the EU

AFRICAN INSTITUTIONS
Challenges to Political, Social,
and Economic Foundations
of Africas Development

MORNING IN SOUTH AFRICA

By Marcel H. Van Herpen

By Ali A. Mazrui and


Francis Wiafe-Amoako

www.rowman.com

By Dalibor Rohac

By John Campbell

N E W FROM STAN FO R D U N IVE RSIT Y PR E SS

CONTESTED EMBRACE

THE CASE FOR U.S. NUCLEAR WEAPONS IN


THE 21ST CENTURY
BRAD ROBERTS

JAEEUN KIM

DIGGING FOR THE DISAPPEARED

Transborder Membership Politics in TwentiethCentury Korea


ARMS AND INFLUENCE

Forensic Science after Atrocity

JEFFREY S. LANTIS

N O W I N PA P E R B AC K
GRUESOME SPECTACLES

U.S. Technology Innovations and the Evolution


of International Security Norms
TAIWANS CHINA DILEMMA

Contested Identities and Multiple Interests in


Taiwans Cross-Strait Economic Policy
SYARU SHIRLEY LIN

ADAM ROSENBLATT

Botched Executions and Americas Death


Penalty
AUSTIN SARAT
RELIABILITY AND RISK

THE POLITICS OF MAJORITY NATIONALISM

The Challenge of Managing Interconnected


Infrastructures

NEOPHYTOS LOIZIDES

EMERY ROE and PAUL R. SCHULMAN

COALITION CHANGES IN AFGHANISTAN

GLOBAL RESPONSES TO MARITIME


VIOLENCE

Framing Peace, Stalemates, and Crises

The Politics of Alliance

Edited by GALE A. MATTOX and STEPHEN M. GRENIER


THE POLYTHINK SYNDROME

U.S. Foreign Policy Decisions on 9/11,


Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Syria, and ISIS

Cooperation and Collective Action


Edited by PAUL SHEMELLA
DIVERGENT MEMORIES

Opinion Leaders and the Asia-Pacific War

ALEX MINTZ AND CARLY WAYNE

GI-WOOK SHIN and DANIEL SNEIDER

THE GLOBAL RISE OF POPULISM

DEMOCRACY AND POLITICAL IGNORANCE

Performance, Political Style, and Representation


BENJAMIN MOFFITT
CITIES, BUSINESS, AND THE POLITICS OF
URBAN VIOLENCE IN LATIN AMERICA
EDUARDO MONCADA
THE POLITICS OF LOCAL PARTICIPATORY
DEMOCRACY IN LATIN AMERICA

Institutions, Actors, and Interactions


FRANOISE MONTAMBEAULT

MY JOURNEY AT THE NUCLEAR BRINK


WILLIAM J. PERRY

Why Smaller Government Is Smarter


Second Edition
ILYA SOMIN
INTRA-INDUSTRY TRADE

Cooperation and Conflict in the Global Political


Economy
CAMERON G. THIES and TIMOTHY M. PETERSON
THE COLONIAL ORIGINS OF ETHNIC
VIOLENCE IN INDIA
AJAY VERGHESE
THE NEW STATES OF ABORTION POLITICS
JOSHUA C. WILSON
Stanford Briefs

Most Stanford titles are


available as e-books:
sup.org/ebooks

S TA N F O R D
UNIVERSITY

PRESS

800.621.2736 | sup.org

N E W FROM STAN FO R D U N IVE RSIT Y PR E SS

MORBID SYMPTOMS

Relapse in the Arab Uprising


GILBERT ACHCAR
A HISTORY OF THE MODERN MIDDLE EAST

Rulers, Rebels, and Rouges


BETTY S. ANDERSON
SNAP MATTERS

THE NEW GREAT GAME

China and South and Central Asia in the Era


of Reform
Edited by THOMAS FINGAR
VIOLENCE AND THE CITY IN THE MODERN
MIDDLE EAST
Edited by NELIDA FUCCARO

How Food Stamps Affect Health and Well-Being

SETTLERS IN CONTESTED LANDS

Edited by JUDITH BARTFELD, CRAIG GUNDERSEN,


TIMOTHY M. SMEEDING, and JAMES P. ZILIAK

Territorial Disputes and Ethnic Conflicts


Edited by ODED HAKLAI and NEOPHYTOS LOIZIDES

THE RIGHTS FIRST AMENDMENT

BEYOND THE EUROMAIDAN

WAYNE BATCHIS

Edited by HENRY E. HALE and ROBERT W. ORTTUNG

The Politics of Free Speech & the Return of


Conservative Libertarianism
LEARNING FROM A DISASTER

Comparative Perspectives on Advancing Reform


in Ukraine
THE ORDERLY ENTREPRENEUR

Improving Nuclear Safety and Security after


Fukushima

Youth, Education, and Governance in Rwanda

Edited by EDWARD D. BLANDFORD and SCOTT D. SAGAN

BREAKING THE WTO

HOW CIVILITY WORKS


KEITH J. BYBEE

CATHERINE A. HONEYMAN

How Emerging Powers Disrupted the Neoliberal


Project

Stanford Briefs

KRISTEN HOPEWELL

LOSING AFGHANISTAN

An Obituary for the Intervention

STATE FAILURE IN THE MODERN WORLD


ZARYAB IQBAL and HARVEY STARR

NOAH COBURN

FORGING THE SWORD

COURTING SCIENCE

Securing the Foundation for a Second American


Century

Doctrinal Change in the U.S. Army


BENJAMIN M. JENSEN

STATE PHOBIA AND CIVIL SOCIETY

REGIONAL MISSILE DEFENSE FROM A GLOBAL


PERSPECTIVE
Edited by CATHERINE MCARDLE KELLEHER
and PETER DOMBROWSKI

MITCHELL DEAN and KASPAR VILLADSEN

CLASSICAL GEOPOLITICS

NO MIRACLES

PHIL KELLY

DAMON V. COLETTA

The Political Legacy of Michel Foucault

The Failure of Soviet Decision-Making in the


Afghan War
MICHAEL R. FENZEL

A New Analytical Model

THE SUPPLY SIDE OF SECURITY

A Market Theory of Military Alliances


TONGFI KIM

VISIT US AT BOOTH 310 AND TAKE 20-30% OFF ALL TITLES ON DISPLAY.

POLITICAL SCIENCE New from Chicago

Chicago Studies in American Politics


BENJAMIN I. PAGE, SUSAN HERBST, LAWRENCE R. JACOBS, and ADAM J. BERINSKY, Series Editors

The Politics of Resentment


Rural Consciousness in Wisconsin and
the Rise of Scott Walker
Katherine J. Cramer
Paper $30.00

Post-Racial or
Most-Racial?

Forthcoming in December

Race and Politics in the Obama Era

Strategic Party
Government

Michael Tesler

Why Winning Trumps Ideology

Paper $25.00

Gregory Koger and Matthew J. Lebo


Paper $30.00

Insecure Majorities

Sophistry and Political


Philosophy

Moral Politics

Congress and the Perpetual Campaign


Frances E. Lee

Protagoras Challenge to Socrates

Third Edition

Paper $30.00

Robert C. Bartlett

George Lakoff

Cloth $40.00

Paper $26.00

Policing Immigrants
Local Law Enforcement on the Front Lines
Doris Marie Provine, Monica W. Varsanyi,
Paul G. Lewis, and Scott H. Decker
Chicago Series in Law and Society
Paper $25.00

Working Law
Courts, Corporations, and Symbolic Civil
Rights

On the Happiness of the


Philosophic Life
Reflections on Rousseaus Rveries in
Two Books
Heinrich Meier
Translated by Robert Berman
Cloth $50.00

How Liberals and Conservatives Think

Ambiguities of Domination
Politics, Rhetoric, and Symbols in
Contemporary Syria
Lisa Wedeen
With a New Preface by the Author
Paper $25.00

Forthcoming

Tenth Edition

Political Philosophy and


the Challenge of Revealed
Religion

W. Lance Bennett

Heinrich Meier

The Myth of the Litigious


Society

Paper $35.00

Translated by Robert Berman

Why We Dont Sue

Reason in Law
Ninth Edition

Thinking Like a Political


Scientist

David M. Engel

Lief H. Carter and Thomas F. Burke

A Practical Guide to Research Methods

Chicago Series in Law and Society


Cloth $24.00

Paper $35.00

Christopher Howard

Lauren B. Edelman
Chicago Series in Law and Society
Paper $30.00

Democracy and Trade Policy


in Developing Countries
Bumba Mukherjee
Chicago Series on International and Domestic
Institutions
Paper $30.00

News
The Politics of Illusion

The American Supreme Court


Sixth Edition

Robert G. McCloskey and Sanford Levinson


The Chicago History of American Civilization
Paper $25.00

Chicago Guides to Writing, Editing, and Publishing

Visit our booth for a 20% discount on


these and related titles, including
books from Policy Press, Zed Books,
Pluto Press, and other publishers.

THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS www.press.uchicago.edu

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY PRESS BOOTH 300

The Politics of Staying Put


Condo Conversion and Tenant
Right-to-Buy in Washington, DC
CAROLYN GALLAHER

Urban Life, Landscape, and Policy series

Choosing State
Supreme Court Justices

Merit Selection and the Consequences of


Institutional Reform
GREG GOELZHAUSER

New Advances in the Study


of Civic Voluntarism
Resources, Engagement,
and Recruitment
EDITED BY CASEY A. KLOFSTAD

The Social Logic of Politics series

The Great Refusal

Herbert Marcuse and


Contemporary Social Movements
EDITED BY ANDREW T. LAMAS,
TODD WOLFSON, AND PETER N. FUNKE
WITH A FOREWORD BY ANGELA Y. DAVIS
Available January

Undocumented Fears

Immigration and the Politics of Divide


and Conquer in Hazleton, Pennsylvania
JAMIE LONGAZEL
Nationalism, Mass Militarization, and
the Education of Eritrea
JENNIFER RIGGAN

Terrorizing Latina/o Immigrants


Race, Gender, and Immigration
Politics in the Age of Security
ANNA SAMPAIO

Free copies available for


Course Adoption consideration

The Gendered Executive

A Comparative Analysis of Presidents,


Prime Ministers, and Chief Executives
EDITED BY JANET MARTIN
AND MARYANNE BORRELLI

The Muslim Question in Europe

Somalis in the Twin


Cities and Columbus

Political Controversies and


Public Philosophies
PETER OBRIEN

Immigrant Incorporation in
New Destinations
STEFANIE CHAMBERS

Getting Paid While Taking Time

Spring 2017

Shaming the Constitution

The Detrimental Results of Sexual


Violent Predator Legislation
MICHAEL PERLIN
AND HEATHER CUCOLO

The Womens Movement and the


Development of Paid Family Leave
Policies in the United States
MEGAN A. SHOLAR

About Philadelphia:

Seeking proposals:

Religious Engagement in Democratic Politics series


series editor

EDITED BY JOHN TORPEY


AND DAVID JACOBSON

Politics, History, and Social Change series

The Struggling State

Spring 2017

Transformations of Warfare in
the Contemporary World

Paul Djupe denison university

Books in the series will demonstrate application of one


or more of a variety of quantitative and qualitative
methodologies to explore the robust and highly variable
presence of religion in democracies.
For more information scan the QR code.

Take 30% off when you order online or at our American Political Science Association booth
Enter promo code: TAPSA16 for discount Offer expires 10/31/16
Applies to all Political Science and Public Policy titles

City in a Park

A History of Philadelphias
Fairmount Park System
JAMES MCCLELLAND
AND LYNN MILLER

Philadelphia
Mural Arts @ 30

EDITED BY JANE GOLDEN


AND DAVID UPDIKE

www.temple.edu/tempress

Karl Marx

War by Other Means

Global Inequality

Greatness and Illusion

Geoeconomics and Statecraft

Gareth Stedman Jones

Robert D. Blackwill

A New Approach for the Age


of Globalization

BELKNAP PRESS

Jennifer M. Harris

$35.00

BELKNAP PRESS

Why Do We Still Have


the Electoral College?
Alexander Keyssar

$29.95

The Highest Glass


Ceiling

Branko Milanovic
BELKNAP PRESS

Raymond Geuss
$35.00

The Taming of Free


Speech

Ellen Fitzpatrick

Exemptions

Laura Weinrib
$45.00

What Works

Kent Greenawalt

Desire and Disobedience in


the Digital Age

$49.95

Bernard E. Harcourt

A New Deal for Old Age

$26.95

Black Silent Majority


The Rockefeller Drug Laws
and the Politics of Punishment

Corruption in America
From Benjamin Franklins
Snuff Box to Citizens United
Zephyr Teachout
$18.95

Too Big to Jail


How Prosecutors
Compromise with
Corporations
Brandon L. Garrett
BELKNAP PRESS

Strangers in Our Midst

Anne L. Alstott

Coup dtat

The Political Philosophy of


Immigration

$29.95

A Practical Handbook,
Revised Edition

David Miller

How the Other Half


Banks

Edward N. Luttwak

$35.00

Michael Javen Fortner

After Nature

$29.95

A Politics for the


Anthropocene

Political Political
Theory

Jedediah Purdy
$29.95

Exclusion, Exploitation, and


the Threat to Democracy
Mehrsa Baradaran
$29.95

Adultery

Essays on Institutions

Infidelity and the Law

Jeremy Waldron

Deborah L. Rhode

$35.00

$28.95

www.hup.harvard.edu

$35.00

Toward a Progressive
Retirement

Gender Equality by Design


BELKNAP PRESS

Necessary, Justified, or
Misguided?

Exposed

$35.00

Iris Bohnet

BELKNAP PRESS
$29.95

Reality and Its Dreams

Womens Quest for the


American Presidency

Americas Civil Liberties


Compromise

Ian Shapiro

New in Paperback

$29.95

$25.95

Politics against
Domination

Tel 800.405.1619

$21.95

$24.95

The Black Box Society


The Secret Algorithms
That Control Money and
Information
Frank Pasquale
$19.95

Please visit booth 611 for a 20% conference discount

WESTVIEW PRESS
#BooksThatMatter

Visit booths #504 and #506 for


$5 paperbacks, $10 hardcovers, and free exam copies!

NEW
Third Edition

Tenth Edition

The Public Policy Theory Primer


Kevin B. Smith and
Christopher W. Larimer

American Constitutional Law

Presidential Power

Tenth Edition

July 2016, 288 pages, Paper and e-Book

Theories and Dilemmas

John P. Burke

March 2016, 270 pages, Paper and e-Book

Political Advertising in
the United States
Erika Franklin Fowler, Michael M.
Franz, and Travis N. Ridout

Volume I: The Structure of Government

Ralph A. Rossum and G. Alan Tarr


July 2016, 704 pages, Paper and e-Book

American Constitutional Law


Volume II: The Bill of Rights and
Subsequent Amendments

Ralph A. Rossum and G. Alan Tarr


July 2016, 952 pages, Paper and e-Book

*Also available as a 2-Volume Set

February 2016, 216 pages, Paper and e-Book

BESTSELLERS
US Immigration in the
Twenty-First Century

Making Americans, Remaking America

Louis DeSipio and


Rodolfo O. de la Garza

2015, 288 pages, Paper and e-Book


Third Edition

The Nature of the


Nonprofit Sector
Edited by J. Steven Ott and
Lisa A. Dicke
2015, 440 pages, Paper
Third Edition

Understanding Nonprofit
Organizations
Governance, Leadership,
and Management

Edited by J. Steven Ott and


Lisa A. Dicke
2015, 350 pages, Paper

*Also available as a 2-Volume Set

www.westviewpress.com

Third Edition

The Public Administration


Theory Primer
H. George Frederickson, Kevin B.
Smith, Christopher W. Larimer, and
Michael J. Licari
2015, 320 pages, Paper and e-Book
Third Edition

Public Opinion
Carroll J. Glynn, Susan Herbst,
Mark Lindeman, Garrett J. OKeefe,
and Robert Y. Shapiro,
2015, 480 pages, Paper and e-Book

Inequality in America

Race, Poverty, and Fulfilling


Democracys Promise

Stephen M. Caliendo

2014, 288 pages, Paper and e-Book


Third Edition

Theories of the Policy Process


Edited by Paul A. Sabatier and
Christopher M. Weible
2014, 432 pages, Paper and e-Book

Booths #504 and #506

The Parliaments of
Autonomous Nations

Going to War?
Trends in Military Interventions

Edited by Guy Laforest and Andr Lecours

Edited by Stfanie von Hlatky


and H. Christian Breede

978-0-7735-4740-7 $34.9 5 paper


978-0-7735-4739-1 $110.00 cloth

This is a comprehensive treatment of an original and important topic. The contributors are
respected scholars in the field and together the
collection greatly advances our understanding
of how sub-state legislatures function within
multinational states.

Awkward Politics
Technologies of
Popfeminist Activism
Carrie Smith-Prei and Maria Stehle

978-0-7735-4758-2 $34.95 paper


978-0-7735-4757-5 $110.00 cloth

978-0-7735-4747-6 $34.95 paper


978-0-7735-4746-9 $110.00 cloth

A sophisticated exercise in foreign and defence policy analysis, Going toWar? provides
clear and vivid ideas on how to optimize
future Western military interventions.

By using the concept of awkwardness


to dramatically shift how we talk about
activism, Awkward Politics brings a new
perspective to the field of feminist theory.
Margaret R. McCarthy, Davidson College

Stephen Tierney, University of Edinburgh

M c G I L L - Q U E E N S U N I V E R S I TY P R E S S | mqup.ca
Follow us on Facebook.com/McGillQueens and Twitter @Scholarmqup

Please visit us at booth #302

U.S. Foreign Policy

International Studies

Misunderstanding
Terrorism

Slums
How Informal Real Estate
Markets Work
Edited by Eugenie L. Birch,
Shahana Chattaraj, and
Susan M. Wachter
2016 | Cloth | $55.00

Marc Sageman
Oct 2016 | Cloth | $24.95

Political Theory

Human Rights

U.S. Domestic Policy

Faces of Moderation

Human Rights in the


World Community

Equality on Trial

The Art of Balance in an


Age of Extremes
Aurelian Craiutu
Dec 2016 | Cloth | $49.95

Genocide
The Act as Idea
Berel Lang
Dec 2016 | Cloth | $24.95

What Is Populism?
Jan-Werner Mller
Sep 2016 | Cloth | $19.95

Arendts Judgment
Freedom, Responsibility,
Citizenship
Jonathan Peter Schwartz
2016 | Cloth | $55.00

Founding Acts
Constitutional Origins in
a Democratic Age
Serdar Tekin
2016 | Cloth | $47.50

Raphal Lemkin
and the Concept of
Genocide
Douglas Irvin-Erickson
Nov 2016 | Cloth | $59.95

New in Paperback
Looting and Rape in
Wartime
Law and Change in
International Relations
Tuba Inal
2016 | Paper | $24.95

Issues and Action


Fourth Edition
Edited by Burns H. Weston
and Anna Grear
2016 | Paper | $37.50

The Human Rights


State
Justice Within and Beyond
Sovereign Nations
Benjamin Gregg
2016 | Cloth | $59.95

The Promise of
Human Rights
Constitutional Government,
Democratic Legitimacy,
and International Law
Jamie Mayerfeld
2016 | Cloth | $65.00

Koreas Grievous War


Su-kyoung Hwang
2016 | Cloth | $65.00

Human Rights or
Global Capitalism

American Justice
2016
The Political Supreme Court
Lincoln Caplan
Oct 2016 | Cloth | $24.95

In the Heat of the


Summer
The New York Riots of 1964
and the War on Crime
Michael W. Flamm
Sep 2016 | Cloth | $34.95

Blazing the Neoliberal


Trail
Urban Political
Development in the United
States and the United
Kingdom
Timothy P. R. Weaver
2016 | Cloth | $69.95

Globalized Fruit,
Local Entrepreneurs

Robert E. Hannigan
Oct 2016 | Cloth | $69.95

Benevolent Empire
U.S. Power,
Humanitarianism, and the
Worlds Dispossessed
Stephen R. Porter
Oct 2016 | Cloth | $65.00

Counter Jihad
Americas Military
Experience in Afghanistan,
Iraq, and Syria
Brian Glyn Williams
Nov 2016 | Cloth | $39.95

U.S. Party Politics


Embracing Dissent
Political Violence and Party
Development in the United
States
Jeffrey S. Selinger
2016 | Cloth | $55.00

Governing the
Fragmented
Metropolis

Seeing the Myth in


Human Rights

Planning for Regional


Sustainability
Christina D. Rosan
Sep 2016 | Cloth | $59.95

Conservative Media and the


Transformation of American
Politics
Nicole Hemmer
2016 | Cloth | $34.95

Shared Prosperity
in Americas
Communities

New in Paperback

Jenna Reinbold
Dec 2016 | Cloth | $45.00

Human Rights
and War Through
Civilian Eyes

New in Paperback
All Necessary
Measures

Antigay Bias in RoleModel Occupations

Edited by Susan M. Wachter


and Lei Ding
2016 | Cloth | $59.95

E. Gary Spitko
2016 | Cloth | $65.00

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS

How One BananaExporting Country


Achieved Worldwide Reach
Douglas Southgate and
Lois Roberts
2016 | Cloth | $59.95

The Nigerian Rice


Economy
Policy Options for
Transforming Production,
Marketing, and Trade
Edited by Kwabena
Gyimah-Brempong,
Michael Johnson, and
Hiroyuki Takeshima
2016 | Cloth | $75.00

The Internet, Social


Media, and a
Changing China
Edited by Jacques deLisle,
Avery Goldstein, and
Guobin Yang
2016 | Paper | $49.95

Black Republicans and


the Transformation of
Consociation and
the GOP
Voting in Northern
Joshua D. Farrington
Ireland
Oct 2016 | Cloth | $45.00

The Limits of Privatization


Manfred Nowak
Nov 2016 | Cloth | $59.95

Thomas W. Smith
Nov 2016 | Cloth | $59.95

The United Nations and


Humanitarian Intervention
Carrie Booth Walling
2016 | Paper | $24.95

Gender and Rights in


the Modern American
Workplace
Katherine Turk
2016 | Cloth | $45.00

The Great War and


American Foreign
Policy, 191424

Messengers of the
Right

Competitive Elections
and the American
Voter

Party Competition and


Electoral Behavior
John Garry
Sep 2016 | Cloth | $79.95

Armies and
Insurgencies in the
Arab Spring
Edited by Holger Albrecht,
Aurel Croissant, and
Fred H. Lawson
Sep 2016 | Cloth | $65.00

Keena Lipsitz
2016 | Paper | $24.95

Visit us at Booth 619 at the book exhibit


and receive a 20% discount.

www.pennpress.org

Visit us at Booth 610


3050% OFF ALL BOOKS!

Primary Politics

Everything You Need to Know


about How America Nominates
Its Presidential Candidates
Elaine C. Kamarck
$20

Billionaires

Reections on the Upper Crust


Darrell M. West
$21

Financing the 2012 Election


David Magleby, ed.

Public Policymaking
by Private Organizations

Challenges to Democratic Governance


Catherine E. Rudder, A. Lee Fitschler,
Yon Jung Choi
$29

$40

The American Political Party System


Continuity and Change Over
Ten Presidential Elections
John S. Jackson
$36

Escaping Jurassic Government


How to Recover Americas Lost
Commitment to Competence
Donald F. Kettl

Political Negotiation
A Handbook

Jane Mansbridge and Cathie Jo Martin


$32

$25

Show Me the Evidence

Obamas Fight for Rigor and Results


in Social Policy
Ron Haskins and Greg Margolis
$32

Why Presidents Fail

and How They Can Succeed Again


Elaine C. Kamarck
$22

Get Out the Vote

How to Increase Voter Turnout, 3rd Edition


Donald P. Green and Alan S. Gerber

Marijuana

A Short History
John Hudak
$14.95

Handcuffed

What Holds Policing Back,


and the Keys to Reform
Malcolm Sparrow
$25

Diversity Explosion

How New Racial Demographics


Are Remaking America
William H. Frey

$22

$24

brookings.edu/press

May16_APSA_BrookingsFP.indd 1

5/24/16 12:35 PM
DATE:

05/24/16

PUBLICATION:

APSA Conference Program

FILE NAME:

May16_APSA_BrookingsFP

FILE TYPE:

PDF X1A

PAGE SIZE:

FULL PAGE, non-bleed


7 3/16" x 9 3/4" trim

COLORS:

B/W

Ad submitted by:
Carrie Engel
202-797-4364
cengel@brookings.edu
Questions about electronic art:
Pattie Covert
703-371-5503
pattiecovert@gmail.com

NYU PRESS

VISIT BOOTH #311 FOR


A SPECIAL DISCOUNT!
Tea Party Women

Preventive Force

The Race Whisperer

Mama Grizzlies, Grassroots


Leaders, and the Changing Face
of the American Right
MELISSA DECKMAN

Drones, Targeted Killing, and the


Transformation of Contemporary
Warfare
EDITED BY KERSTIN FISK
AND JENNIFER M. RAMOS

Barack Obama and the


Political Uses of Race
MELANYE T. PRICE

PAPER $35.00

PAPER $30.00

Fragmented Citizens
The Changing Landscape of
Gay and Lesbian Lives
STEPHEN M. ENGEL
CLOTH $35.00

The Utopia Reader,


Second Edition
EDITED BY GREGORY CLAEYS
AND LYMAN TOWER SARGENT
FORTHCOMING FEBRUARY
PAPER $40.00

Women as Wartime Rapists


Beyond Sensation and
Stereotyping
LAURA SJOBERG

Obamas Guantnamo
Stories from an Enduring Prison
EDITED BY JONATHAN HAFETZ

FORTHCOMING NOVEMBER
PAPER $30.00

Vaccine Court
The Law and Politics of Injury
ANNA KIRKLAND
FORTHCOMING DECEMBER
CLOTH $40.00

Deported
Immigrant Policing, Disposable
Labor and Global Capitalism
TANYA MARIA GOLASH-BOZA
PAPER $28.00
In the Latina/o Sociology series

Understanding the
U.S. Wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan
EDITED BY BETH BAILEY AND
RICHARD H. IMMERMAN
PAPER $30.00

CLOTH $30.00

Drawdown
The American Way of Postwar
EDITED BY JASON W. WARREN
FORTHCOMING OCTOBER
PAPER $30.00
In the Warfare and Culture series

Japan
The Precarious Future
EDITED BY FRANK BALDWIN
AND ANNE ALLISON
PAPER $35.00
In the Possible Futures series

Middle East Studies for the


New Millennium
Infrastructures of Knowledge
EDITED BY SETENY SHAMI
AND CYNTHIA MILLER-IDRISS
FORTHCOMING NOVEMBER
CLOTH $55.00
Co-published with the
Social Science Research Council

PAPER $27.00

The Public Professor


How to Use Your Research to
Change the World
M. V. LEE BADGETT
PAPER $24.00

The Presidents and the


Constitution
A Living History
EDITED BY KEN GORMLEY
CLOTH $45.00

American Conservatism
NOMOS LVI
EDITED BY SANFORD V.
LEVINSON, JOEL PARKER AND
MELISSA S. WILLIAMS
CLOTH $65.00
In the NOMOS series

Unfit for Democracy


The Roberts Court and the
Breakdown of American Politics
STEPHEN E. GOTTLIEB
CLOTH $55.00

Inequality, Democracy,
and the Environment
LIAM DOWNEY
PAPER $30.00

www.nyupress.org

NEW in PAPERBACK

Female Soldiers in Sierra


Leone
Sex, Security, and Post-Conflict
Development
MEGAN H. MACKENZIE
PAPER $28.00
In the Gender and Political Violence
series

Modern Albania
From Dictatorship to
Democracy in Europe
FRED C. ABRAHAMS
PAPER $25.00

Contagious
Representation
Womens Political
Representation in Democracies
around the World
FRANK C. THAMES AND
MARGARET S. WILLIAMS
PAPER $27.00

The Tolerance Trap


How God, Genes, and Good
Intentions are Sabotaging
Gay Equality
SUZANNA D. WALTERS
PAPER $17.95
In the Intersections series

The Wrongs of the Right


Language, Race, and the
Republican Party in the Age
of Obama
MATTHEW W. HUGHEY AND
GREGORY S. PARKS
PAPER $22.00

All books also available as e-books.

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS

The China Boom

Why China Will Not


Rule the World
HO-FUNG HUNG
cloth - $35

Dying to Forget

Oil, Power, Palestine,


and the Foundations
of U.S. Policy
in the Middle East
IRENE L. GENDZIER
cloth - $4 0
p ap e r - $2 8

NEW IN
PAPERBACK,
WITH A NEW
PREFACE BY
THE AUTHOR

Why America
Misunderstands
the World

National Experience
and Roots
of Misperception
PAUL R. PILLAR

Recognition
or Disagreement

A Critical
Encounter on the
Politics of Freedom,
Equality, and Identity
AXEL HONNETH AND
JACQUES RANCIRE
c loth - $30

The End
of Progress

Decolonizing
the Normative
Foundations of
Critical Theory
AMY ALLEN
c loth - $35

From Resilience
to Revolution
How Foreign
Interventions
Destabilize the
Middle East
SEAN L. YOM

cloth - $2 9.95

c loth - $55

Pakistan at
the Crossroads

Religion,
Secularism,
and Constitutional
Democracy

Domestic Dynamics
and External Pressures
EDITED BY
CHRISTOPHE JAFFRELOT
cloth - $60

Left-Wing
Melancholia

Marxism, History,
and Memory
ENZO TRAVERSO
cloth - $35

EDITED BY
JEAN L. COHEN AND
CCILE LABORDE
c loth - $120
pa per - $40

Karl Polanyi

A Life on the Left


GARETH DALE
c loth - $40

Ethnic Conflict
and Protest in
Tibet and Xinjiang

The Origins
of Neoliberalism

Presidential
Debates

EDITED BY
BEN HILLMAN
AND GRAY TUTTLE

DOTAN LESHEM

ALAN SCHROEDER

cloth - $60

cloth - $90
p a p er - $ 3 0

cloth - $60

A Political
Economy of
the Senses

Mormonism and
American Politics

ANITA CHARI

cloth $90
p a p er - $ 3 0

Unrest in Chinas West

Race
and Secularism
in America
EDITED BY
JONATHON S. KAHN
AND
VINCENT W. LLOYD
cloth - $90
p a p er - $ 3 0

The Making
of Salafism

Islamic Reform in the


Twentieth Century
HENRI LAUZIRE
c l o t h - $ 55

Political
Responsibility
Responding
to Predicaments
of Power

ANTONIO Y.
VZQUEZ-ARROYO
cloth - $65

Centrifugal Empire
CentralLocal
Relations in China
JAE HO CHUNG
cloth - $60

Modeling the Economy


from Jesus to Foucault

Neoliberalism,
Reif ication, Critique
cloth - $90
p a p er - $ 3 0

Chinas Hegemony
Four Hundred Years
of East Asian
Domination
JI-YOUNG LEE
cloth - $60

Relativism
and Religion

Why Democratic
Societies Do Not Need
Moral Absolutes
CARLO
INVERNIZZI ACCETTI
cloth - $65

Democracy
A Reader
2nd Edition

EDITED BY
RICARDO BLAUG AND
JOHN SCHWARZMANTEL
c l o t h - $ 12 0
p a p er - $ 40

Risky Business
on the Campaign Trail

EDITED BY
RANDALL BALMER AND
JANA RIESS

EU:
Beyond the Crisis
A Debate
on Sustainable
Integrationism

EDITED BY
NIKOLAOS PAPAKOSTAS
AND NIKOS PASAMITROS
p a p er - $ 39

Revolutions
as Organizational
Change

The Communist Party


and Peasant
Communities in South
China, 1926-1934
BAOHUI ZHANG
cloth - $50

A Spectre Is
Haunting Arabia

How the Germans


Brought Their
Communism to Yemen
MIRIAM M. MLLER
p a p er - $ 4 0

50% off all titles at booth 400


8 0 0 . 3 4 3 . 4 4 9 9 C U P.C O L U M B I A . E D U C U P B LO G .O R G @ CO LU M B I AU P C I AO N E T.O R G

Please visit Columbia University Press in Booth #400


to learn more about CIAO, see whats new, and meet
Yoram Allon our new Content Curator
Columbia International Affairs Online (CIAO) is the worlds largest online resource of documents and articles devoted to
research, analysis, and scholarship on international politics and related fields, including security studies, global finance,
diplomatic practice, humanitarian law, global governance, development studies, and environmental studies.
With more than 500,000 pages aggregated from 300 international publishing institutions, CIAO is a unique and valuable archive and cross-searchable library of full-text articles from government research organizations, independent think
tanks, university analysis centers, and scholarly journals.
The material in CIAO encompasses working papers, policy briefs, and current analysis and commentary, as well as
scholarly journal articles, e-books, and videos. The Economist Intelligence Unit supplies comprehensive country surveys,
including in-depth political and economic data and detailed maps.
More than 700 institutions currently subscribe to CIAO. University libraries, high schools, government agencies,
and global research institutions all benefit from this ever-growing resource
with more than 40,000 new pages added each year.
AdvIsOry bOArd: Ronald J. Deibert, University of Toronto Allan E. Goodman, Institute of International Education
Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego Bruce W. Jentleson, duke University
Peter Katzenstein, Cornell University R. Ned Lebow, Dartmouth College Helen Milner, Princeton University
Thomas Risse, Freie Universitt Berlin Jack Snyder, Columbia University Etel Solingen, University of California, Irvine
Steven Weber, University of California, berkeley

www.ciaone t.org

columbia university press


cup.columbia.e d u

NEW FROM
GEORGETOWN
UNIVERSITY PRESS
The Federal
Management Playbook

Leading and Succeeding in


the Public Sector
Ira Goldstein
Foreword by Tom Davis,
former US Congressman
9781626163720, paper, $19.95
Public Management and Change Series

Governing under Stress

The Implementation of Obamas


Economic Stimulus Program
Timothy J. Conlan, Paul L. Posner,
and Priscilla M. Regan, Editors
9781626163690, cloth, $64.95
9781626163706, paper, $32.95

Collaborative Innovation in
the Public Sector
Jacob Torfing

9781626163591, cloth, $69.95


9781626163607, paper, $34.95
Public Management and Change Series

American Power and


Liberal Order

A Conservative Internationalist
Grand Strategy
Paul D. Miller
9781626163423, cloth, $32.95

Crude Strategy

Rethinking the US Military Commitment to Defend Persian Gulf Oil


Charles L. Glaser and
Rosemary A. Kelanic, Editors
9781626163348, cloth, $64.95

9781626163355, paper, $32.95

Cheap Threats

Why the United States Struggles to


Coerce Weak States
Dianne Pfundstein Chamberlain
9781626162822, cloth, $64.95

9781626162815, paper, $32.95

China in the Era of Xi Jinping


Domestic and Foreign Policy
Challenges
Robert S. Ross and
Jo Inge Bekkevold, Editors
9781626162976, cloth, $64.95

9781626162983, paper, $32.95

Participatory Budgeting and


Civic Tech

The Revival of Citizen Engagement


Hollie Russon Gilman
9781626163409, paper, $9.95

High-Table Diplomacy

The Reshaping of International


Security Institutions
Kjell Engelbrekt
9781626163133, paper, $29.95
9781626163126, cloth, $59.95

Mexicos Illicit Drug Networks


and the State Reaction
Nathan P. Jones

9781626162945, cloth, $59.95


9781626162952, paper, $27.95

Arab Fall

How the Muslim Brotherhood Won


and Los Egypt in 891 Days
Eric Trager
9781626163621, cloth, $32.95

Asia-Pacific Security
An Introduction
Joanne Wallis and
Andrew Carr, Editors

9781626163447, cloth, $69.95


9781626163454, paper, $34.95

Booth #607

The Progressives
Century
Political Reform,
Constitutional
Government,
and the Modern
American State

Edited by
Bruce Ackerman,
Stephen M. Engel, and
Stephen Skowronek
The Institution for Social and
Policy Studies

The End of the


Asian Century
War, Stagnation,
and the Risks to
the Worlds Most
Dynamic Region
Michael R. Auslin

North Koreas
Hidden Revolution

Closing the
Courthouse Door
How Your
Constitutional
Rights Became
Unenforceable

Erwin Chemerinsky
Forthcoming in 2017

Dictators Without
Borders
Power and Money in
Central Asia

Alexander Cooley and


John Heathershaw

Citizens Wealth

Why (and How)


Sovereign Funds
Should be Managed
by the People for
the People
Angela Cummine

Presidential
Government

Benjamin Ginsberg
Paper

Plutocrats United

Campaign Money,
the Supreme Court,
and the Distortion of
American Elections
Richard L. Hasen
Paper

The Impossibility
of Palestine

History, Geography,
and the Road Ahead
Mehran Kamrava

Europes Deadlock
How the Euro Crisis
Could Be Solved
And Why It Still
Wont Happen

The Heart of the


Declaration
The Founders Case
for an Activist
Government
Steve Pincus

The Lewis Walpole Series in


Eighteenth-Century Culture
and History

The Less You Know,


The Better You
Sleep
Russias Road to
Terror and
Dictatorship under
Yeltsin and Putin
David Satter

The Most Good


You Can Do

How Effective
Altruism Is Changing
Ideas About Living
Ethically

How the Information


Underground Is
Transforming a
Closed Society

Bad Moon Rising

Wollstonecraft,
Mill, and Womens
Human Rights

Arthur M. Eckstein

The Tragedy of U.S.


Modernity and Its
Foreign Policy
Discontents
How Americas Civil

Europe Isnt
Working

Walter A. McDougall

Jieun Baek

Eileen Hunt Botting

The Moral
Economy

Why Good Incentives


Are No Substitute for
Good Citizens
Samuel Bowles
Castle Lectures Series

The Bigot

Why Prejudice Persists


Stephen Eric Bronner
Paper

Black Wind,
White Snow

The Rise of Russias


New Nationalism
Charles Clover

How the Weather


Underground Beat
the FBI and Lost
the Revolution

Larry Elliott and


Dan Atkinson

The Master Plan

ISIS, al-Qaeda, and


the Jihadi Strategy for
Final Victory
Brian Fishman

Welcome to the
Poisoned Chalice
The Destruction of
Greece and the
Future of Europe
James K. Galbraith

Free Speech

Ten Principles for a


Connected World

Timothy Garton Ash

David Marsh

Peter Singer

Paper

Paper

Religion Betrayed the


National Interest

Dangerous Years

Climate Change, the


Long Emergency, and
the Way Forward
David W. Orr

The Crimean
Nexus

Steven B. Smith

The Colonel Who


Would Not Repent

The Bangladesh War


and Its Unquiet Legacy
Salil Tripathi

Putins War and the


Clash of Civilizations

Constantine Pleshakov
Forthcoming in 2017

23/7

Making and
Unmaking the
Bourgeois from
Machiavelli to Bellow

Pelican Bay Prison


and the Rise of
Long-Term Solitary

The Paradox of
Liberation

Secular Revolutions
and Religious
Counterrevolutions
Michael Walzer
Paper

Keramet Reiter

Yale university press

www.YaleBooks.com

The MIT Press

WHAT A CITY IS FOR


Remaking the Politics of
Displacement
Matt Hern
An investigation into
gentrification and displacement, focusing on the
case of Portland, Oregons
systematic dispersal of black
residents from its Albina
neighborhood.
Hardcover | $27.95 | 19.95

DRONE
Remote Control Warfare
Hugh Gusterson
Gusterson makes it clear
why we dont speak clearly
about drones. Only by
muddying the waters can
we bear to acknowledge
what we have invented: a
new and oddly intimate
waystation in the mechanization of death.
Sherry Turkle

SUSTAINABILITY
Kent E. Portney

Hardcover | $24.95 | 18.95

A concise and accessible


examination of sustainability
in a range of contemporary
contexts, from economic
development to government policy.

BETWEEN
PRESERVATION AND
EXPLOITATION
Transnational Advocacy
Networks and Conservation
in Developing Countries
Kemi Fuentes-George

The MIT Press Essential Knowledge series


Paperback | $15.95 | 11.95

VISIT BOOTH

#706
FOR A 30%

DISCOUNT

A study of biodiversity
governance analyzes the
factors that determine the
effectiveness of transnational advocacy networks and
the importance of justice
claims to conservation.
Politics, Science, and the Environment
series | Paperback | $32 | 23.95

A WORLD TO LIVE IN
An Ecologists Vision for
a Plundered Planet
George M. Woodwell
Very few have devoted
careers as long or as
eminent to the preservation of the planet. George
Woodwell has earned the
right to sum up a lifetimes
worth of thinking, and he
does so here with precision
and panache.
Bill McKibben, author
of The End of Nature
Hardcover | $29.95 | 19.95

NEW EARTH POLITICS


Essays from the Anthropocene
edited by
Simon Nicholson and
Sikina Jinnah
Prominent scholars and
practitioners consider the
role of global environmental
politics in the face of increasing environmental stress.
Earth System Governance series
Paperback | $34 | 24.95

THE ARID LANDS


History, Power, Knowledge
Diana K. Davis
An argument that the
perception of arid lands
as wastelands is politically
motivated and that these
landscapes are variable,
biodiverse ecosystems,
whose inhabitants must
be empowered.
History for a Sustainable Future series
Hardcover | $32 | 23.95

ECUADORS
ENVIRONMENTAL
REVOLUTIONS
Ecoimperialists,
Ecodependents, and
Ecoresisters
Tammy L. Lewis
An account of the movement for sustainable
development in Ecuador
through four eras: movement origins, neoliberal
boom, neoliberal bust, and
citizens revolution.
Paperback | $30 | 22.95

Now in Paper

LEE KUAN YEW


The Grand Masters Insights
on China, the United States,
and the World
Interviews and Selections
by Graham Allison
and Robert D. Blackwill,
with Ali Wyne
foreword by Henry A. Kissinger
Grand strategist and founder
of modern Singapore offers
key insights and controversial
opinions on globalization,
geopolitics, economic
growth, and democracy.
Belfer Center Studies in International
Security | Paperback | $18.95 | 14.95
Now in Paper

ECO-BUSINESS
A Big-Brand Takeover
of Sustainability
Peter Dauvergne and
Jane Lister
Two experts explain the
consequences for the
planet when corporations
use sustainability as a business tool.
Paperback | $17.95 | 13.95

mitpress.mit.edu

universit y of michigan press

campaign finance and


political polarization

remaking the
democratic party

When Purists Prevail


Raymond J. La Raja, and
Brian F. Schaffner

Lyndon B. Johnson as a Native-Son


Presidential Candidate
Hanes Walton Jr. et al

An illuminating perspective on the


polarizing effects of campaign finance
reform

Examining Southern support for Johnson


throughout his political career and
his transformative leadership of the
Democratic Party

6 x 9 Inches, 208pp, 30 figures, 9 tables


Hardcover $75.00, Paper $39.95, Ebook
$39.95, Open Access Ebook available

6 x 9 Inches, 440pp, 39 tables,


18 figures, 18 halftones
Hardcover $90.00, Ebook $75.00

the chief justice


Appointment and Influence
David J. Danelski and Artemus Ward,
editors
Scholars use the most advanced methods
in judicial studies to examine the role of
Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
6 x 9 Inches, 464pp, 20 tables, 52 figures
Hardcover $90.00, Ebook $70.00

leadership organizations
in the house of
representatives

undertaking discourse
analysis for social
research

alignment, alliance, and


american grand strategy

Kevin C. Dunn and Iver B. Neumann

Zachary Selden

Party Participation and


Partisan Politics
Scott R. Meinke

An indispensable guide to the theory,


concept, and application of discourse
analysis in the social sciences
6 x 9 Inches, 152 pp, 2 figures
Hardcover $60.00, Paper $29.95,
Ebook $29.95

Joining the debates about preserving


US military power abroad, Selden
recommends encouraging security
alliances

Electoral competition and polarization


transformed leadership organizations
and the nature of party participation in
the House

6 x 9 Inches, 280pp, 27 Figures, 5 Tables


Hardcover $75.00, Ebook $60.00

6 x 9 Inches, 248pp, 28 tables, 13 figures


Hardcover $70.00, Ebook $60.00

causal case
study methods

the modern
legislative veto

Foundations and Guidelines for


Comparing, Matching, and Tracing
Derek Beach and
Rasmus Brun Pedersen

Macropolitical Conflict and the


Legacy of Chadha
Michael J. Berry

An introduction to causal case study


methods, complete with step-by-step
guidelines and examples
6 x 9 Inches, 416pp, 40 figures, 26 tables
Hardcover $80.00, Paper $39.95,
Ebook $39.95

An important examination of the


legislative veto and the ongoing battle
between the executive and the legislature
to control policy
6 x 9 Inches, 352pp, 25 tables, 14 figures
Hardcover $80.00, Ebook $64.95

visit us at booth #303


for a 30% discount
on all titles

To order call 800.621.2736


or go to
www.press.umich.edu

VISIT US AT BOOTH #403

AMERICAS WAR FOR THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST


A Military History

LIGHTS OUT
A Cyberattack, A Nation Unprepared, Surviving the Aftermath

Random House HC 978-0-553-39393-4 480pp. $30.00

Crown HC 978-0-553-41996-2 288pp. $26.00

by ANDREW J. BACEVICH

ALTER EGOS
Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and the Twilight Struggle
Over American Power

UNITED STATES OF JIHAD


Investigating Americas Homegrown Terrorists
by PETER BERGEN

by MARK LANDLER

Crown HC 978-0-8041-3954-0 400pp. $28.00

Random House HC 978-0-8129-9885-6 432pp. $28.00

KNOWN AND STRANGE THINGS: Essays

FAILURES OF IMAGINATION
The Deadliest Threats to Our Homeland
and How to Thwart Them

by TEJU COLE

Random House TR 978-0-8129-8978-6 400pp. $16.00

by MICHAEL MCCAUL

THE CONSERVATARIAN MANIFESTO


Libertarians, Conservatives, and the Fight
for the Rights Future

Crown Forum HC 978-1-101-90541-8 304pp. $26.00


GOING RED
The Two Million Voters Who Will Elect the Next President
and How Conservatives Can Win Them

by CHARLES C.W. COOKE

Crown Forum TR 978-0-8041-3974-8 256pp. $14.00

by ED MORRISSEY

INCARCERATION NATIONS
A Journey to Justice in Prisons Around the World

Crown Forum HC 978-1-101-90566-1 240pp. $24.00

by BAZ DREISINGER

TRUMP: A Graphic Biography

Other Press HC 978-1-59051-727-7 336pp. $27.95

by TED RALL

THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN


Central Banks, Instability, and Avoiding the Next Collapse
by MOHAMED A. EL-ERIAN

Random House HC 978-0-8129-9762-0 320pp. $28.00


THE UTOPIA OF RULES
On Technology, Stupidity, and the Secret Joys of
Bureaucracy
by DAVID GRAEBER

Melville House TR 978-1-61219-518-6 272pp. $16.95


ROGUE JUSTICE
The Making of the Security State

by TED KOPPEL

Seven Stories Press TR 978-1-60980-758-0 144pp. $14.95


THE GREAT SUPPRESSION
Voting Rights, Corporate Cash, and the Conservative Assault
on Democracy
by ZACHARY ROTH

Crown HC 978-1-101-90576-0 288pp. $26.00


OUTSIDER IN THE WHITE HOUSE
by BERNIE SANDERS
Afterword by JOHN NICHOLS

Verso TR 978-1-78478-418-8 368pp. $16.95


OBJECTIVE TROY
A Terrorist, a President, and the Rise of the Drone

by KAREN J. GREENBERG

Crown HC 978-0-8041-3821-5 320pp. $28.00

by SCOTT SHANE

IN EUROPES SHADOW
Two Cold Wars and a Thirty-Year Journey
Through Romania and Beyond

JACKSON, 1964
And Other Dispatches from Fifty Years of Reporting
on Race in America

by ROBERT D. KAPLAN

Random House HC 978-0-8129-9681-4 336pp. $28.00

Tim Duggan Books TR 978-0-8041-4031-7 432pp. $17.00

by CALVIN TRILLIN

Random House HC 978-0-399-58824-2 304pp. $27.00

CONNECTOGRAPHY
Mapping the Future of Global Civilization

THE WIKILEAKS FILES


The World According to US Empire

Random House HC 978-0-8129-8855-0 496pp. $30.00

Verso TR 978-1-78478-621-2 624pp. $19.95

by PARAG KHANNA

by WIKILEAKS

Many books are also available in Audio and e-Book formats.

Penguin Random House Academic Marketing Department 1745 Broadway New York, NY 10019

m www.randomhouseacademic.com

/RandomHouseAcademic

@RHacademic

/commonreads

TEACHER
S
GUIDE
AVAILABL
E

Horowitz Foundation for Social Policy

Grant Winners
2015

Eman Abdelhadi

Elizabeth Koebele

The Counterfactual Self

Collaborative Water Governance in the Colorado River Basin

Community and Identity Pathways among


American Muslims

Understanding Coalition Dynamics and


Processes of Policy Change

Lauren Apgar

Ashley Muchow

Indiana University, Sociology

Pardee RAND, Policy Analysis

The Economic Incorporation of Immigrants


Across the 50 United States

Local Immigration enforcement


Have Local Initiatives Made Us Safer or Driven Us Apart?

Rebecca Ayifah

Fay Niker

Conditional Cash Transfer, Child Labor and


Educational Outcomes

Transformative Nudging

New York University, Sociology

University of Colorado Boulder, Environmental Studies

University of Warwick, Politics and International Studies

University of Cape Town, South Africa, Economics

A Framework for Designing Policy Ecologies


that Support Living Well

Evidence from Ghana

Kerry Persen

Franziska Boehme

Stanford University, Political Science

Syracuse University, Political Science

Exit, Voice, Loyalty

Enabling Justice
State Cooperation with the International Criminal Court

Indiana University, Public and Environmental Affairs

Paid Family Leave and Infant Health


Evidence From State Programs

Responses to Islamist Political Violence

George Washington University, Political Science


Eli
Ginzberg
Award

Hebatalla Gowayed

WHO's In Charge?
The World Health Organization (WHO)
Confronts Private Authority

Ronna Popkin

Princeton University, Sociology

Columbia University, Sociomedical Sciences

Making a New Life


Syrian Refugee Resettlement in the USA and Canada

Lori Holleran

Variants of Significance?

Martinus
Nijhoff
Award

Constructions and Understandings of


Genetic Risk for Cancer

Palo Alto University and Harvard University, Psychology


and Health Policy (respectively)

Margarita Rayzberg

A Partnership to Prevent Suicide in


Homeless Individuals

Controlling the Field

Northwestern University, Sociology

Robert K.
Merton
Award

The History and Contemporary Practices of


Social Experimentation in International Development

Katrin Katz

Nationalism and Territorial Conflict


in an Era of Interdependence

Irving Louis
Horowitz
Award

Mara Pillinger

Lindsey Bullinger

Northwestern University, Political Science

Celene Reynolds

Harold D.
Lasswell
Award

Yale University, Sociology

From Unequal Play to Unwanted Contact

Explaining the Dynamics of Northeast Asia's


Island Disputes

Title IX in American Universities, 1972-2014

Arvind Karunakaran

Kings College, London, Defence Studies Department

Kirk Ross

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Management


(Information Technologies and Organizational Studies)

Examining How Big Data and Analytics


Shape Coordination and Decision Making
Evidence from Law Enforcement and
Emergency Management Organizations

John L.
Stanley
Award

Donald R.
Cressey
Award

We Are Not Sorry for the People We Kill


The Ideology, Targets, and Intentions of
Nigeria's Boko Haram Insurgency

Danielle Vance-McMullen

Duke University, Sanford School of Public Policy

The Nonprofit Organization Boom


and Its Consequences for Charitable Giving

Applications for 2016 grants are now available at www.horowitz-foundation.org


For more information, visit Transaction Publishers booth #304

ee

excelsior editions
An imprint of State University of NewYork Press
www.sunypress.edu

AmericAn Politics
Constitutionalism,
Executive Power, and the
Spirit of Moderation

Murray P. Dry and the Nexus


of Liberal Education
and Politics
Giorgi Areshidze,
Paul O. Carrese, and
Suzanna Sherry, editors

Urban Citizenship and


American Democracy

Amy Bridges and


Michael Javen Fortne, editors

New Yorks Broken


Constitution

The Governance Crisis


and the Path to
Renewed Greatness
Peter J. Galie,
Christopher Bopst, and
Gerald Benjamin, editors
Available December 2016

The Phantom
of a Polarized America
Myths and Truths
of an Ideological Divide
Manabu Saeki

Innovative Congressional
Minimum Standards
Preemption Statutes
Joseph F. Zimmerman

educAtion Policy
And leAdershiP
Higher Education
Reconsidered

Executing Change
to Drive Collective Impact
Jason E. Lane, editor
Foreword by
Nancy L. Zimpher

New in Political Science


Visit booth #301 for a 20% pb / 40% hc conference discount
Free shipping to the contiguous U.S. for orders placed at the conference
environmentAl Politics
American Politics
and the Environment,
Second Edition
Byron W. Daynes,
Glen Sussman, and
Jonathan P. West

GlobAl Politics
Human Rights Standards
Hegemony, Law, and Politics
Makau Mutua

lAw
Legal Path Dependence
and the Long Arm
of the Religious State

Sodomy Provisions and Gay


Rights across Nations
and over Time
Victor Asal and Udi Sommer
Available December 2016

PoliticAl PhilosoPhy
Power
Oppression,
Subservience, and Resistance
Raymond Angelo Belliotti

Philosophy, History,
and Tyranny

Reexamining the Debate


between Leo Strauss
and Alexandre Kojve
Timothy W. Burns and
Bryan-Paul Frost, editors
Available December 2016

Chinese Thought
as Global Theory

Diversifying Knowledge
Production in the Social
Sciences and Humanities
Leigh Jenco, editor

Leo Strauss, Philosopher


European Vistas
Antonio Lastra and
Josep Monserrat-Molas, editors

Visit us online at
www.sunypress.edu

Principle and Prudence in


Western Political Thought
Christopher Lynch and
Jonathan Mark, editors

Leo Strauss on Science

Thoughts on the Relation


between Natural Science
and Political Philosophy
Svetozar Y. Minkov
Available December 2016

PoliticAl PsycholoGy
Meaning-Making,
Internalized Racism,
and African American
Identity
Jas M. Sullivan and
William E. Cross, Jr., editors

PoliticAl socioloGy
Anarchism in Korea

Independence, Transnationalism,
and the Question of National
Development, 19191984
Dongyoun Hwang

Race Still Matters

The Reality of African


American Lives and the Myth
of Postracial Society
Yuya Kiuchi, editor
Available November 2016

PoliticAl theory
Political Theory
and the Animal/Human
Relationship

Judith Grant and


Vincent G. Jungkunz, editors

Trendy Fascism

White Power Music and the


Future of Democracy
Nancy S. Love

Anarchism and Art

Democracy in the Cracks


and on the Margins
Mark Mattern

Public Policy
Elder Care Journey

A View from the Front Lines


Laura Katz Olson

womens studies
Are All the
Women Still White?
Rethinking Race,
Expanding Feminisms
Janell Hobson, editor

Rethinking
Sexual Citizenship
Jyl J. Josephson

UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI PRESS

ANNOUNCING THE FIRST VOLUMES IN THE NEW SERIES

STUDIES IN CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRACY


SUPPORTED BY THE KINDER INSTITUTE ON CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRACY
Lloyd Gaines and the Fight to End Segregation
James W. Endersby and William T. Horner
In 1936, Lloyd Gainess application to the University of Missouri law school was denied based on his race. Gaines and the NAACP challenged the universitys decision.
Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada (1938) was the first in a long line of decisions by the
U.S. Supreme Court regarding race, higher education, and equal opportunity.
u $36.95 | 336 pp.

John Henry Wigmore and the Rules of Evidence


Andrew Porwancher
John Henry Wigmore single-handedly modernized the jury trial with his 1904-5
Treatise on evidence. He inspired generations of progressive juristsamong
them Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Benjamin Cardozo, and Felix Frankfurterto
reshape American law to meet the demands of a new era. This book provides a
radical reappraisal of his place in the birth of modern legal thought.
u $40.00 | 243 pp.

Visit us at booth #110 to meet our editors,


see more books of interest
and receive a discount on your order!

u Orders: 800.621.2736
u Questions: 573.882.9672
u Review & Desk Copies: umpmarketing@missouri.edu

Charles K. McClatchy and the Golden Era of American Journalism


Steven M. Avella
Charles K. McClatchy was twenty-five when he inherited The Sacramento Bee from his
father, and his ensuing career as the papers editor extended well beyond the newsroom.
Until his death in 1936, McClatchy was a consistent advocate for Progressive politics, a
crusader for urban reform, a staunch isolationist, and a voice for Northern California. This
biography explores his career as the long-time editor of the Bee in a work that weaves
the history of Northern California with that of American newspapers.
u $36.95 | 414 pp.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Challenge of Religion
Johannes Morsink
Repulsed by evil Nazi practices and desiring to create a better world after the
devastation of World War II, in 1948 the UN General Assembly adopted the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). This book mixes philosophical, legal, and archival arguments to make the point that the language of human rights is a valid one to
address the worlds disputes. It updates the rationale used by the early UN visionaries
and makes it available to twenty-first-century believers and unbelievers alike.
u $65.00 | 386 pp.

Online Teaching Resources from SAGE!


SAGE has been committed to supporting education and scholarship for more than
50 years! Stop by our booth to see how these remarkable products can support your
teaching and guide students through every stage of their academic career.

Bringing teaching, learning and research to life


The SAGE Video Politics & International Relations Collection features more than 130 hours of video that reinforces course
fundamentals, introduces new perspectives and brings theory to life with in-practice examples. With content types designed to
fit a variety of learning and research needs, interviews with renowned experts cover subjects including international migration,
political philosophy and the international relations of China. Discover seminal documentaries from BBC Worldwide and footage
of famous political speeches from Martin Luther King and John F. Kennedy among others.

sk.sagepub.com/video

Easily discover and compare complex data on Congress, the Supreme Court, and the Presidency
U.S. Political Stats is a data visualization and manipulation tool that aids student researchers in finding and understanding
data on the three branches of U.S. Government: Legislative, Executive, and Judicial. This powerful tool lets users compare
different types of data to create datasets and visualizations that bring unique insight into the political process.

library.cqpress.com/uspoliticalstats

What every researcher needs


SAGE Research Methodsprovides your department with a universe of peer-reviewed
resources covering the entire research methods and statistics curriculum, allowing
you to create a custom reading and resource list for your course. The platform holds
more than 1,000 books, reference works, and journal articles; more than 500 case
studies written by researchers in the field; more than 120 teaching datasets optimized
to allow students to practice analytical methods; and 120 hours of streaming video
showing research in action. Its the only platform where you can find all of these
research methods resources together in one place, indexed by method, discipline,
and keyword, saving you time searching multiple databases or websites.

methods.sagepub.com
Stop by the SAGE booths#601, 603, 605, 700, 702 & 704for more information
or visit our website at www.sagepublishing.com

NEW FROM LIBERTY FUND


Collected Works of Roger Sherman
Edited and with an Introduction by
Mark David Hall
Collected Works of Roger Sherman brings together essays, documents, records of his remarks in
the Constitutional Convention and in the First
Federal Congress, and important representative
letters Sherman wrote to a variety of correspondents, including William Samuel Johnson, Joseph
Bellamy, Richard Henry Lee, and John Adams.

Cloth. ISBN 978-0-86597-893-5.


$30.00 / 24.95 / C$40.50.
Paperback. ISBN 978-0-86597-894-2.
$14.50 / 10.95 / C$19.50.

As a representative and senator in the new


republic, Roger Sherman (17211793) played
critical roles in debates over the Bill of Rights,
the assumption of state debts, and the creation of
a national bank.

www.libertyfund.org | books@libertyfund.org
Encyclopedic Liberty
Political Articles in the Dictionary of
Diderot and DAlembert
By Denis Diderot and Jean Le Rond dAlembert
Translated by Henry C. Clark and Christine
Dunn Henderson
This collection is the first to bring together the
most significant political writing from the entire
Encyclopdie and includes eighty-one of the
most controversial and representative articles on
political ideas, practices, and institutions, many
translated into English for the first time.
Encyclopedic Liberty contains a panoramic
lexicon of the political discourse of the middle
of the eighteenth century in Europes leading
country, on the very eve of the age of the
Atlantic revolutions.

Cloth. ISBN 978-0-86597-854-6.


$30.00 / 24.95 / C$40.50.
Paperback. ISBN 978-0-86597-856-0.
$14.50 / 10.95 / C$19.50.

COMING SOON:
Essays by The Free Republican, 17841786. By Benjamin Lincoln, Jr. Edited by Philip Mead and Gordon Wood. Available October 2016.
This is the first modern publication of essays from the popular Boston newspaper, The Independent Chronicle. Their original publication was a significant intellectual event in
Massachusetts politics.
The Crisis: A British Defense of American Rights, 17751776. Edited by Neil York. Available November 2016.
These writings represent the earliest and most critical English voice against imperial British policy with respect to the American Colonies.

Stop by our booth to browse through our collection.


50% off all display copies.

al
Gener e
renc
Confe
2017
sity
Univer
of Oslo

Take the next step in your career


with ECPRs exclusive benefits
The European Consortium for Political Research is a global network
of institutions engaged in the teaching and research of political
science. Our conferences and events bring scholars together to
explore this complex, changing landscape. Ask your institution to join!
ECPR Conferences and
events are a forum for lively
and fruitful idea exchange,
while our biannual Methods
School invites you to hone
your research skills under the
tutelage of internationally
renowned experts.
Around 15,000 staff and
students at more than
350 institutions worldwide
enjoy the superb,
tangible benefits of ECPR
membership. Why not join
them? Your institution gets:

APSA ECPR ad June 2016.indd 5

Reduced fees for all


ECPR conferences

Free access to three


leading pol sci journals

Eligibility for funding


to attend ECPR events

The chance for young


scholars to join our thriving
Graduate Student Network

Big savings on ECPR Press


book titles (print and digital)

Opportunities to win

Opportunities to join
a Standing Group or
Research Network of scholars
who share your interests

prizes and awards

Online MyECPR account,


where you can register
for events, and propose
Workshops, Sections,
Panels and Papers

Regular e-bulletins,
including job alerts

Eligibility to edit a co-

published ECPR journal or to


convene a Standing Group

www.ecpr.eu
6/10/2016 4:19:06 PM

Visit press.ecpr.eutofindbargains
on these books and many other
titles in the ECPR Press catalogue

Citizens in Europe:
Essays on Democracy,
Constitutionalism and
European Integration
Claus Offe
Ulrich K. Preu

Interdisciplinary essays by
a constitutionalist and a political
sociologist examining how
fragmented societies can be
held together by constitutional
arrangements providing for
bonds of democratic citizenship.
The authors address moral
and institutional prerequisites
on which the deepening of
European integration depends.
The desirability of such deepening
is now contested, with some
states' membership, and EU treaty
compliance, at stake.
ISBN 9781785522383
512pp, March 2016
RRP 65 / 89

APSA ECPR ad June 2016.indd 2

People, States &


Fear: An Agenda for
International Security
Studies in the
Post-Cold War Era

Institutional Innovation
and the Steering
of Conflicts in
Latin America

Barry Buzan

Jorge P. Gordin
Lucio Renno (Eds)

This acclaimed book examines


how states and societies pursue
freedom from threat where
competitive relations are
inescapable across the political,
economic, military, societal and
environmental landscapes. Buzan
focuses on the interplay of threats
and vulnerabilities, and the
consequences of overemphasising
one over the other. In 2007 the
author added new introduction
placing this classic text in a current
context. This landmark book
remains as vital today as when
itwasfirstpublished.

Opening a Pandoras box of


conflictmanagement,thisbook
asks: To what degree do Latin
American political contexts create
institutionsthatdealwithconflict
in a feasible, legitimate way?
How can institutional architects
exploit such spaces to manage
conflictinnovatively?Inlightof
the socioeconomic challenges in
most of Latin America, institutional
designers are confronted with
the fact that nothing inherent in
institutionsguaranteesthatconflict
is processed in ways which tackle
distributive and ethnic inequalities.

ISBN 9781785522444
318pp, May 2016
RRP 65 / 89

ISBN 9781785522314
260pp, August 2016
RRP 65 / 89

6/10/2016 4:17:06 PM

University of VIRGINIA Press


Partners or Rivals?
Power and Latino, Black,
and White Relations in
the Twenty-First Century
Betina Cutaia Wilkinson

VI S I
T US
AT E
XH I B
IT
BOO
TH
# 61 8

$39.50 | CLOTH | RACE, ETHNICITY, AND


POLITICS

Keep On Keeping On
The NAACP and the Implementation
of Brown v. Board of Education in
Virginia
Brian J. Daugherity
Of Courtiers and Kings
More Stories of Supreme Court Law
Clerks and Their Justices
Edited by Todd C. Peppers and
Clare Cushman
$34.95 | CLOTH | CONSTITUTIONALISM AND
DEMOCRACY

Recollections
The French Revolution of 1848 and
Its Aftermath
Alexis de Tocqueville
Edited by Olivier Zunz
Translated by Arthur Goldhammer

The War Bells Have Rung


The LBJ Tapes and the
Americanization of the Vietnam War
George C. Herring
$7.95 | DIGITAL SHORT | MILLER CENTER
STUDIES ON THE PRESIDENCY

The Dangerous First Year


National Security at the Start
of a New Presidency
Edited by William I. Hitchcock and
Melvyn P. Leffler
$5.95 | DIGITAL SHORT | MILLER CENTER
STUDIES ON THE PRESIDENCY

$39.50 | CLOTH

$45.00 | CLOTH | CARTER G. WOODSON


INSTITUTE SERIES

The Risen Phoenix


Black Politics in the PostCivil War
South
Luis-Alejandro Dinnella-Borrego
$49.50 | CLOTH | THE AMERICAN SOUTH SERIES

The Geometry of
Genocide
A Study in Pure
Sociology
Bradley Campbell
$39.50 | CLOTH | STUDIES IN
PURE SOCIOLOGY

VIRGINIA.EDU
W W W . U P R E S S .V I R G I N I A . E D U

Department of

Public Administration and Policy

#1: University of Georgia MPA students won first prize at the 4th Annual Public Policy Challenge
hosted by the Fels Institute of Government with Governing Magazine.

M P A #1
&P H D #4
TOP RANKED

PROGRAMS

Worldwide in two recent studies


of scholarly productivity in PA
research
Among more than 250 public
affairs graduate programs*

Now home to #1 ranked

#2
#2

Nationally in the public


management specialization*
Nationally in the public
budgeting and finance
specialization*

Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory


*According to U.S. News and World Report (2016)

padp.uga.edu

THE DEPARTMENT OF POLITICS


CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO OUR APSA RECEPTION

Featuring two distinguished guest speakers who will showcase their current work in Social Movements and Contentious
Politics and in International Law and Organizations the two new research clusters in the Department of Politics.

Saturday, September 3rd


RSVP requested: drexel.edu/politics/apsa

5-6pm

Sidney Tarrow, PhD


Cornell University

Wars, Peace, and Social Movements

6-7pm

Cocktail Reception
7-8pm

Ian Hurd, PhD

Northwestern University
The Return of History and Politics to International Law and International Organizations

Courtyard Philadelphia Downtown, Juniper Ballroom, 2nd Floor


21 North Juniper Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107
One block from the Convention Center
Food and beverages will be served

Shaping the world since 1929


Ranked fourth among 272 schools of public affairs nationwide,
according to U.S. News & World Report, the USC Sol Price
School of Public Policy has defined excellence and innovation
in public affairs education for more than 85 years. The school
is committed to teaching and research that advance society
through stronger democratic governance, effective social
policy, and sustainable urban development. Our graduates
shape the world by leading in government, nonprofit agencies,
and the private sector.
The imperative of todays challenges dictates that solutions will be
obtained only if we reach across disciplines; across the public, private
and nonprofit spheres; and across local, national and international
boundaries. The Price Schools faculty, students and alumni do exactly
that in fulfilling this imperative and shaping our world for the better.
Jack H. Knott, Dean, USC Sol Price School of Public Policy

INTERDISCIPLINARY. INNOVATIVE. IMPACTFUL.


The Price School integrates the strategic and intellectual problem-solving
resources of six primary areas of expertise:
Public Administration
Public Policy
Nonprofit Leadership and Management

Health Policy and Administration


Urban Planning
Real Estate Development

The Price Schools world-class faculty and 13 research centers conduct groundbreaking studies that are cited by elected and appointed officials at all levels.
Price faculty advise members of Congress and federal agencies, head commissions,
and provide expert information to the national news media on a daily basis.

priceschool.usc.edu

We Know Elections
Decades of globally recognized leadership from SPAs Center for Congressional and Presidential
Studies. Expert testimony to six major congressional committees. A steady stream of books and
scholarly articles. More than 2,500 students trained in our Campaign Management Institute and
Public Affairs Advocacy Institute.
People dont think about the fact that the presidential election boils down to nine
states. Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia
and Wisconsin. Distinguished Professor James A. Thurber, Founding Director, SPAs Center
for Congressional and Presidential Studies in Parade Magazine.

When women run, they do just as well as men. Female incumbents are re-elected
at the same rate as male incumbents. Female challengers win just as much as male
challengers. Professor Jennifer Lawless, Director, SPAs Women in Politics Institute,
author of Women on the Run, on NBC News.

The early 1980s were the height of weak partisanship with voters much more willing
to defect from their party in elections than today. Professor David Lublin, author of
Minority Rules: Electoral Systems, Decentralization, and Ethnoregional Party Success, in The Atlantic.

In June, Right to Rise had $100 million, and everyone thought that that coupled
with the Bush name would catapult him to the front of the pack. Once Trump became
a force, it all went out the window. Professor Candice Nelson, Interim Director, SPAs
Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies (search for permanent director is underway)
in Bloomberg Politics.

We Know Presidential Transitions


The tone that is set at the beginning of a transition is absolutely essential, and
that responsibility falls on the incumbent president. It is then up to the incoming
administration to handle the transition with the utmost care. SPA Executive in
Residence Anita McBride in Bloomberg Government.

AU School of Public Affairs experts are supporting the presidential administration transition though
partnerships and initiatives with National Academy of Public Administration, the American Society
for Public Administration, and the Center for the Presidential Transition at the Partnership for
Public Service.

www.american.edu/spa

AU_ASPA_7.1875x9.75_bw_FINAL.indd 1

6/9/16 4:46 PM

Submit your article online:


journals.cambridge.org/dbr/submit

Featured Articles

The Last Stand?: Shelby County v. Holder, White Political Power, and Americas Racial
Policy Alliances
Desmond King and Rogers M. Smith
Volume 13 Issue 1
To Test or Not? Singular or Multiple Heritage?: Genomic Ancestry Testing and Americans
Racial Identity
Jennifer L. Hochschild and Maya Sen
Volume 12 Issue 2
How Racial Attitudes and Ideology Affect Political Rights for Felons
David C. Wilson, Michael Leo Owens, and Darren W. Davis
Volume 12 Issue 1
Racism, Group Position, and Attitudes about Immigration among Blacks and Whites
Vincent L. Hutchings and Cara Wong
Volume 11 Issue 2
Unthinking Racial Realism: A Future for Reparations?
Lawrie Balfour
Volume 11 Issue 1

berghahn journals
New iN 2015!

CONFLICT AND SOCIETY


Advances in Research
Editorial Team: Erella Grassiani, Alexander
Horstmann, Lotte Buch Segal, Ronald S. Stade, and
Henrik Vigh
Conflict and Society expands the field of conflict studies
by using ethnographic inquiry to establish new fields of
research and interdisciplinary collaboration.
Volume 2/2016, 1 issue p.a.

DEMOCRATIC THEORY

An Interdisciplinary Journal

THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL


OF SOCIAL QUALITY
Published in partnership with the International Association
on Social Quality.
Volume 6/2016, 2 issues p.a.

ISRAEL STUDIES REVIEW

An Interdisciplinary Journal
Editor: Yoram Peri

Israel Studies Review is the journal of the Association for


Israel Studies (AIS), an international and interdisciplinary
scholarly organization dedicated to the study of all aspects
of Israeli society, history, politics, and culture.

Editors: Mark Chou and Jean-Paul Gagnon

Volume 31/2016, 2 issues p.a.

Democratic Theory encourages philosophical and


interdisciplinary contributions that critically explore
democratic theoryin all its forms.

ITALIAN POLITICS

Volume 3/2016, 2 issues p.a.

FRENCH POLITICS, CULTURE &


SOCIETY
Editor: Herrick Chapman
FPC&S is the journal of the Conference Group on French
Politics & Society. It is jointly sponsored by the Institute
of French Studies at New York University and the Minda
de Gunzburg Center for European Studies at Harvard
University.
Volume 34/2016, 3 issues p.a.

Published in association with the Istituto Cattaneo and in


collaboration with the Johns Hopkins University SAIS Europe
at Bologna.
Volume 31/2016, 1 issue p.a.

LEARNING AND TEACHING

The International Journal of Higher Education


in the Social Sciences
Editors: Penny Welch and Susan Wright
Volume 9/2016, 3 issues p.a.

REGIONS AND COHESION

Regiones y Cohesin / Rgions et Cohsion


Editors: Harlan Koff and Carmen Maganda

GERMAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY


Editor: Jeffrey J. Anderson
German Politics and Society is a joint publication of the
BMW Center for German and European Studies (of the
Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown
University) and the German Academic Exchange Service
(DAAD).
Volume 34/2016, 4 issues p.a.

The journal of the Consortium for Comparative Research


on Regional Integration and Social Cohesion (RISC), a
cross-regional, interdisciplinary, and multi-lingual network
of socially conscious and prestigious research institutes in
Europe, North America, South America, Africa, and Asia.
Volume 6/2016, 3 issues p.a.

THEORIA
A Journal of Social and Political Theory
Editor-in-Chief: Lawrence Hamilton
Volume 63/2016, 4 issues p.a.

berghahn

NEW YoRK . oxfoRd

Follow us on Twitter: @BerghahnBooks

www.berghahnjournals.com

Alasdair MacIntyre,
Charles Taylor, and the
Demise of Naturalism
Reunifying Political Theory
and Social Science

Jason Blakely

136 pp $35.00 cl |

The Shamrock and the Cross


Irish American Novelists
Shape American
Catholicism

Eileen P. Sullivan

376 pp $30.00 pa |

Debating Medieval
Natural Law

Public Intellectuals in
the Global Arena

A Survey

Professors or Pundits?

Riccardo Saccenti
144 pp $45.00 cl |
Available October 2016

Edited by
Michael C. Desch

418 pp $55.00 cl |
Available November 2016

Available October 2016

V I S I T U S AT

BOOTH #618

Journal of
Comparative poliCy analysis:
researCh and praCtiCe

The JCPA has pioneered comparative policy studies since 1998 and is the only
explicitly comparative journal of policy analytic studies. It aims to stimulate the
intellectual development of comparative policy studies and the growth of an
international community of scholars who research the challenges and benefits of
global inter- and intra-policy making. The JCPA is published five times per year, is
double-blind peer reviewed, and adheres to the highest quality of scholarship. It is
indexed in Thomson Reuters SSCI as well as in five other main abstracts/indices.
Publish in the JCPA by visiting bit.ly/JCPAsubmissions

BEST COMPARATIVE PAPER PRESENTED AT THE AMERICAN


POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE
The Best Comparative Policy Paper Award recognizes an article of particular
distinction published in the area of comparative public policy, awarded in
collaboration with the International Comparative Policy Analysis Forum. This award
carries a prize of $500. Find out more about the prize at bit.ly/jcpa-apsa-prize
Follow us @JCPA_ICPA

www.tandfonline.com/jcpa

LISTED IN THE THOMSON REUTERS


JOURNAL CITATION REPORTS

BECOME A MEMBER
OF THE ICPA-FORUM &
RECEIVE A FREE ANNUAL
SUBSCRIPTION TO JCPA
The ICPA-Forum offers
memberships for individuals
associated with one of our
international professional
associations, or with our gold- or
silver-sponsoring institutions
spanning 5 continents. The
ICPA-Forum encourages the
involvement of graduate students
in the comparative policy analysis
dialogue and in publications.
Explore the myriad of benefits by
visiting bit.ly/JCPA-Member

International
Public Policy
Association
presents

28 30
june 2017
singapore

lee kuan yew school


of public policy

Timeline of the conference


CALL FOR PANELS |
1st September 2016 14th October 2016
CALL FOR PAPERS |
1st November 2016 16th January 2017
Preconference | 27th June 2017

www.icpublicpolicy.org

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

9.3

Theme Panels
9.1

Room:
20.1

Room:
90.1

Room:
74.1
Room:
20.2

Room:

20 YEARS AFTER WELFARE


REFORM: 20 YEARS AFTER
WELFARE REFORM
PCC, Ballroom AB
30 YEARS AFTER THE
IMMIGRATION REFORM AND
CONTROL ACT
PCC, Ballroom AB
ADVANCING PHILANTHROPIC
SCHOLARSHIP: THE
IMPLICATIONS OF
TRANSFORMATION
PCC, 204-C
AFFECT, POLARIZATION AND
PARTISAN IDENTITY
PCC, 114
BREAKING NEWS PANEL:
TAKING STOCK OF THE BREXIT
SHOCK
PCC, 201-C

Thu 8:00 am
Room:
81.1
Thu 2:00 pm
Room:
49.2

Room:
43.1

Room:
86.1
Room:
38.1

Room:
9.2

Room:
58.1
Room:
49.1

Room:

BREAKING NEWS: DID THE


PARTY DECIDE?
PCC, Ballroom AB
BREAKING NEWS: RAGE
AGAINST THE MACHINE:
POPULIST POLITICS IN THE
U.S., EUROPE, AND LATIN
AMERICA
PCC, Ballroom AB
CONTENTIOUS POLITICS AND
THE INTERNET
PCC, Ballroom AB
CYBER AND CONFLICT:
TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE OR
STATUS QUO DYNAMICS?
PCC, Ballroom AB
DATA ACCESS, TRANSPARENCY,
AND REPLICATION IN
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PCC, 114
ELECTIONS, PARTIES, AND
INSTITUTIONS IN AFRICA
PCC, 204-C
FORECASTING THE U.S.
PRESIDENTIAL AND
CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS
PCC, 204-C
GENDER TRANSFORMATIONS
PCC, 204-C

JUDICIAL NETWORKS
PCC, 204-C

54.1

NEW PERSPECTIVES ON 'SONS


OF THE SOIL' CONFLICT
PCC, 114

74.2

90.2
Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am
Room:
54.2

Room:
Sat 12:00 pm

15.1

Fri 8:00 am
Room:
49.3
Thu 8:00 am

Room:
38.3
Room:

Fri 4:00 pm

74.3
Room:

Fri 12:00 pm

90.3

Room:

Co-sponsored by Political Forecasting Group

38.2
Room:

43.2
Room:

Room:

Co-sponsored by British Politics Group

24.1

Room:

Room:
Thu 2:00 pm

GREAT TRANSFORMATIONS IN
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
PCC, 114
HIGHER EDUCATION
DISRUPTED: THE POLITICS AND
POLICIES OF
TRANSFORMATION
PCC, Ballroom AB

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

GLOBAL GOVERNANCE:
STAGNATION OR
TRANSFORMATION?
PCC, 204-C

58.2
Fri 8:00 am
Room:

PARTY SYSTEM
NATIONALIZATION: NEW
RESEARCH FRONTIERS
PCC, 204-C
PLENARY SESSION 1 TBD:
PLENARY SESSION: ARE WE
MAKING PROGRESS ON HUMAN
RIGHTS? TRANSFORMATIONS
IN KNOWLEDGE AND ACTIVISM
PCC, Ballroom AB
PLENARY SESSION: THE STATE
OF RACE RELATIONS IN THE
U.S.
PCC, Ballroom AB
POLICING IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE: POLICE
VIOLENCE, CORRUPTION AND
DEMOCRACY
PCC, Ballroom AB
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE
STUDY OF CLIMATE CHANGE
PCC, 114
POLITICAL THEORY AND
POLITICAL TRANSFORMATION
PCC, 114
RACE AND CITIZENSHIP AFTER
FERGUSON
PCC, Ballroom AB
STATE CAPACITY, STRATEGIES
OF GOVERNANCE AND
DEVELOPMENT
PCC, 114
TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION IN
RESEARCH AND TEACHING
PCC, 114

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : 4001

Page 155

155

Division Panels

T indicates a Theme Panel


See Page 179 for Meetings and Receptions Details

94.1
Room:
24.2

Room:
81.2

Room:
20.3
Room:
94.2

Room:
15.2

Room:
86.2

Room:
24.3

Room:

TERRORISM AND POLITICAL


TRANSFORMATIONS
PCC, 204-C
THE 'ANXIETIES OF
DEMOCRACY:' DIAGNOSES AND
PRESCRIPTIONS
PCC, 204-C
THE 2015 TERROR ATTACKS IN
PARIS AND THE FRENCH
RESPONSE
PCC, Ballroom AB
THE BIG NEXT QUESTIONS IN
GENDER AND POLITICS
PCC, 114
THE DYNAMICS AND
CONSEQUENCES OF PARTISAN
POLARIZATION
PCC, Ballroom AB
THE QUALITATIVE
TRANSPARENCY
DELIBERATIONS: AN INTERIM
REPORT
PCC, 204-C
THE RISE OF THE RADICAL
RIGHT IN EUROPE AFTER THE
MIGRANT CRISIS AND PARIS
PCC, 204-C
THE SLOW PACE OF BIG
TRANSFORMATIONS IN
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
PCC, 114

Sat 4:00 pm

Room:
Thu 4:00 pm

Room:
81.3

Room:
90.4

Room:
54.3

Room:
15.3

Room:

156

THEORIZING BORDERS:
CONSIDERATIONS ON THE
DEHUMANIZING CHARACTER
OF BORDERS
PCC, 114
THEORY MEETS CRISIS: WHAT
DOES THE EUROCRISIS SAY TO
COMPARATIVE POLITICS?
PCC, 204-C
TO STAY NEUTRAL OR NOT
WHEN TEACHING THE 2016
ELECTION: ETHICAL AND
PEDAGOGICAL CHALLENGES
Marriott, Room 407
TRANSFORMATIONS DURING
PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITIONS:
HOW SCHOLARS CAN HELP
PCC, 204-C
TRANSFORMATIONS IN HIGHER
EDUCATION: PERSPECTIVES
FROM SCHOLARPRACTITIONERS
PCC, 114

Page 156

Fri 10:00 am

Room:

UNIPOLARITY AND THE NEW


WORLD ORDER
PCC, Ballroom AB

Fri 4:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am
20.4

Thu 2:00 pm
Room:

Thu 10:00 am

URBANIZATION IN SUBSAHARAN AFRICA: A GREAT


TRANSFORMATION IN THE
MAKING
PCC, 204-C

Thu 2:00 pm

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND


PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL
APPROACHES

Sat 4:00 pm
26.1
Room:

ADAM SMITH
PCC, 111-B

51.1
Room:

AGENCY AND DECISIONMAKING IN ROUSSEAU


PCC, 106-AB

109.1
Room:

ARISTOTLE
PCC, 106-AB

88.1

AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS:


STEVEN B. SMITH, MODERNITY
AND ITS DISCONTENTS
PCC, 106-AB

Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Sun 10:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:

Sat 12:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm
96.6

Room:

BEYOND THE SOCIAL


CONTRACT: LIBERALISM
WITHOUT CONSENT
PCC, 107-B

Sat 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL


THEORY

Sat 12:00 pm
92.1

Room:
Sat 10:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

107.1

CRITIQUES OF LIBERALISM IN
AMERICAN POLITICAL
THOUGHT
PCC, 105-AB

Sat 2:00 pm

Room:

EARLY MODERN POLITICAL


THOUGHT
PCC, 113-B

83.1
Room:

HEGEL PLUS ONE


PCC, 106-AB

Sat 10:00 am

26.2
Room:

HOBBES
PCC, 102-A

Thu 4:00 pm

56.1

INEQUALITY, PATRIOTISM, AND


PROGRESS: ADAM SMITH'S
MORAL ECONOMY
PCC, 106-AB

Fri 2:00 pm
Room:
40.1

Room:

INSINCERITY AND
AUTHENTICITY IN AMERICAN
POLITICAL THOUGHT
PCC, 106-AB

96.1
Room:

KANT
PCC, 106-AB

26.3
Room:

LABOR AND COMMERCE


PCC, 106-AB

Thu 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

TRANSFORMING MARRIAGE
AND RELIGION IN AMERICAN
POLITICAL THOUGHT
PCC, 114
Co-sponsored by American Political Thought

58.3

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL


HISTORY AND POLITICS

86.3

43.3

Sun 8:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:

LEADERSHIP AND
GOVERNANCE
PCC, 102-A

17.1
Room:

MACHIAVELLI IN CONTEXT(S)
PCC, 106-AB

11.1
Room:

MACHIAVELLIS "FLORENTINE
HISTORIES"
PCC, 102-A

60.1
Room:

NIETZSCHE RECONSIDERED
PCC, 106-AB

Fri 4:00 pm

76.2

60.2
Room:

PLATO
PCC, 102-A

Fri 4:00 pm

Room:

22.1

POLITICAL JUDGMENT:
RECOVERING THE ANCIENTS
PCC, 106-AB

Room:
45.1
Room:
76.1
Room:

REALISM
PCC, 102-A

109.2

REPUBLICANISM ANCIENT AND


MODERN
PCC, 102-A

11.2
Room:
92.2
Room:
88.2
Room:

Room:
26.7
Thu 8:00 am
Room:

Thu 2:00 pm
Room:

Fri 10:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

THE POITICAL THEORY OF


SHELDON WOLIN (1922-2015)
PCC, 107-B

Room:
11.3
Room:

ACTION AND SKEPTICISM: THE


POLITICAL THEORY OF
HANNAH ARENDT AND
STANLEY CAVELL
PCC, 108-B
AMERICAN POLITICAL
THOUGHT AT THE MARGINS
PCC, 108-B

Room:
17.2

Room:
26.4
Room:

BEYOND CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE:


NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
POLITICAL TRANSFORMATION
PCC, 108-A
BEYOND CRITIQUE:
REVITALIZING FEMINIST
POLITICAL THEORY
PCC, 108-B
BLACK FREEDOM AND BLACK
THOUGHT
PCC, 108-B

Thu 4:00 pm

CONDITIONS OF AGONISTIC
POLITICS 1
PCC, 108-B
CONDITIONS OF AGONISTIC
POLITICS 2
PCC, 108-B

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

17.3
Room:

CULTURAL FORMATIONS OF
NEOLIBERALISM
PCC, 108-A

40.2
Room:

DEMOCRACY NOW
PCC, 108-A

109.4

DEMOCRACY AND
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL
THOUGHT
PCC, 108-A

Room:
Sat 12:00 pm

40.3
Room:
60.3
Room:

Sun 10:00 am

CRITICAL THEORY IN THE 21ST


CENTURY: NEW CHALLENGES
AND DIRECTIONS
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Sat 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

Sat 2:00 pm

60.4

Room:

DEMOCRATIC ENGAGEMENT
AND DISENGAGEMENT
PCC, 108-B
DEMOCRATIC THEORY
REINVIGORATED
PCC, 108-B
FEMINIST TRANSFORMATIONS
OF POLITICAL THEORY: THE
OXFORD HANDBOOK
PCC, 108-A

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Thu 8:00 am
11.4

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL


THEORY

107.2

CONCENTRATED POWER AND


DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS
PCC, 105-AB

Co-sponsored by Political Studies Association

76.50

Room:

THE USE AND ABUSE OF


RATIONALITY
PCC, 102-A

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL


THEORY

Sat 8:00 am

ROUSSEAU AND HIS


PREDECESSORS
PCC, 107-B

COMPLEXITY, PROCESS AND


DISRUPTION: POLITICAL
THEORY UNDER PRESSURE
PCC, 108-B

Thu 10:00 am

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY
109.3

22.2

83.2

RE-IMAGINING THE
CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL IN 2016
PCC, 106-AB

Room:

Sat 4:00 pm

Room:
56.39

Sun 8:00 am
Room:

FRENCH LIBERALISM AND THE


BIG PICTURE
PCC, 108-A
GENDER AND THE GREAT
MAN I: RECOVERING THE
WIVES OF THE CANON
Marriott, Franklin 7

Thu 8:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Thu 10:00 am
96.3
Room:
Thu 4:00 pm

51.2
Room:

GENRES OF
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
PCC, 108-B
GLOBAL NATIONALISMS AND
ANTAGONISMS
PCC, 108-B

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 157

157

Division Panels

96.2

76.3

Room:

GOVERNING GREAT
TRANSFORMATIONS:
TRANSPARENCY,
ACCOUNTABILITY, RULES:
GOVERNING GREAT
TRANSFORMATIONS:
TRANSPARENCY,
ACCOUNTABILITY, LANGUAGE
PCC, 113-A

Sat 8:00 am

107.5

Room:
40.4

Room:
45.2
Room:
83.3
Room:
88.3
Room:
56.2

Room:
107.3

GUNS AND DEMOCRATIC


CITIZENSHIP
PCC, 108-B
HOME IS WHERE THE
POLITICS IS
PCC, 108-A
IN MEMORIAM: SHELDON S.
WOLIN
PCC, 108-B
INVISIBLE SUBJECTS: PERSONS
HAUNTING THE MARGINS OF
MODERN POLITICAL THEORY
PCC, 108-A

Room:

JUDGEMENT AND
RESPONSIBILITY
PCC, 113-C

56.3
Room:

KATEB ON LINCOLN
PCC, 108-B

109.5
Room:

LIBERALISM REVISITED
PCC, 113-C

45.3
Room:

MARKETS AND ECONOMIES


PCC, 113-A

92.3
Room:

NATURE, ANIMAL, AND THE


NONHUMAN
PCC, 113-A

76.4
Room:

NEW MATERIALISMS
PCC, 108-A

96.4
Room:

NEW THEOLOGIES
PCC, 108-A

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 10:00 am
Room:
26.5
Sat 12:00 pm
Room:

60.5
Room:
Sun 8:00 am

Room:

OUT OF THE PAST: RACE,


AFFECT, AND RADICAL
FUTURES
PCC, 108-B

92.4
Room:

POLITICAL AFFECTS
PCC, 108-A

96.5

POLITICAL THEOLOGY AND


CIVIL RELIGION
PCC, 113-A

Room:

Room:
88.4
Room:

158

POLITICIZING THE
ALGORITHM
PCC, 108-A
POWER AND CONTROL ACROSS
SPACE
PCC, 108-A

Room:

Page 158

PUBLIC POSTHUMANISM:
STRATEGIES TOWARD THE
NEXT GREAT
TRANSFORMATION
PCC, 108-A
REIMAGINING DEBT:
INDEBTEDNESS, SABBATH, AND
ETERNITY
PCC, 108-A

THE BIOS: FOOD, BODIES, LIFE


ITSELF
PCC, 108-B
THE CHALLENGE OF THE
OTHER: EUROPEAN IDENTITY
AND THE REFUGEE CRISIS
PCC, 113-A

Room:
17.4
Room:

THE POLITICS OF PLACE


PCC, 113-A

Sat 8:00 am

109.6

Sat 4:00 pm

Room:

THINKING ANEW WITH


FRANTZ FANON
PCC, 114

Sat 2:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

11.5

REVOLUTIONS AND
COUNTERREVOLUTIONS
PCC, 113-A

THE LIFE AND WORK OF


RICHARD E. FLATHMAN
PCC, 113-C

Fri 10:00 am

56.4

Room:
51.4

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:

TRANSFORMING VIOLENCE:
"DIVINE" VIOLENCE, PEACE,
AND DIPLOMACY.
PCC, 113-C
YOU CANT BE SERIOUS:
UNDERSTANDING POLITICS
THROUGH COMEDY AND
LAUGHTER
PCC, 113-A

Fri 4:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Thu 10:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL


THEORY
26.6

Thu 2:00 pm
Room:
11.3
Sat 12:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

22.4

Sun 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND


POLITICS

22.3

92.5
Room:

Fri 2:00 pm

PROTESTS AND PUBLICS:


REVISITING MARGINALIZED
GROUPS STANDING AND
UPTAKE
PCC, 113-C

Sun 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND


POLITICS

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND


POLITICS

107.4

51.3

PRIMITIVE ACCUMULATION
AND THE GREAT
TRANSFORMATION
PCC, 114

Room:

1996: A GOOD YEAR FOR


DELIBERATIVE THEORY, 20
YEARS LATER
PCC, 103-B
AMERICAN POLITICAL
THOUGHT AT THE MARGINS
PCC, 108-B

Thu 4:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF


POLITICAL THEORY

ASSESSING DELIBERATION
PCC, 107-B

51.5

AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS:


STEPHEN MACEDO'S "JUST
MARRIED"
PCC, 107-B

Room:
109.7

Room:
96.6

Room:

AUTHOR-MEETS-CRITICS ON
DAVID MILLER'S STRANGERS
IN OUR MIDST
PCC, 107-B
BEYOND THE SOCIAL
CONTRACT: LIBERALISM
WITHOUT CONSENT
PCC, 107-B

Fri 8:00 am

Room:

Room:

CARE ETHICS, PUBLIC POLICY,


AND HUMAN DIGNITY
PCC, 107-B

76.6
Room:
Sun 10:00 am

Room:
26.7
Room:

COLLECTIVE ACTION,
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS,
AND (NONHUMAN) ANIMAL
RIGHTS
PCC, 107-B
CONCENTRATED POWER AND
DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS
PCC, 105-AB

109.8

Room:
Sat 4:00 pm

17.6
Room:
51.6
Room:

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

22.5

Thu 2:00 pm

56.6

Room:
40.6
Room:
88.5

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:
45.5

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF


POLITICAL THEORY

17.5
Room:

DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY IN
EVERYDAY POLITICS
PCC, 105-AB

Room:
76.5
Room:
83.4
Room:
60.6

Room:
45.4
Room:
17.50
Room:

DEMOCRATIC VALUES:
KNOWLEDGE, FLEXIBILITY,
AND POLITICAL EQUALITY
PCC, 105-AB
DOMINATION AND INJUSTICE:
NEW PERSPECTIVES
PCC, 107-B
EQUALITY, EQUITY, AND
DELIBERATION
PCC, 105-AB
FUNDING NGO ADVOCACY:
ETHICAL AND POLITICAL
DIMENSIONS
PCC, 107-B
GENDER, THE FAMILY, AND
FEMINIST POLITICAL THEORY
PCC, 105-AB
HUMAN RIGHTS AS
EMANCIPATORY POLITICS?
PCC, 104-B

Sat 10:00 am

Room:

JUSTICE, CITIZENSHIP, AND


IMMIGRATION
PCC, 105-AB
LOTTERIES AND THE
TRANSFORMATION OF
DEMOCRATIC THEORY
PCC, 105-AB
MARKETS, JUSTICE AND
CITIZENSHIP
PCC, 107-B
NATIONALISM, IDENTITY, AND
GROUP SELF-DETERMINATION
PCC, 105-AB
NEW DIRECTIONS IN
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRATIC
THEORY
PCC, 105-AB
NORMATIVE THEORIZING
WITH THOSE WHO STRUGGLE
PCC, 105-AB
POLITICAL THEORY BEYOND
THE NATION-STATE
PCC, 105-AB
PUTTING THE POLITICAL BACK
INTO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY:
FIVE NEW WORKS
PCC, 108-A

Sat 8:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

Thu 10:00 am
26.8

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS

107.6

IDEAL AND NON-IDEAL


POLITICAL AUTHORITY
PCC, 107-B

Fri 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT


AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES

56.5

83.5

Room:
22.6

Sun 8:00 am
Room:
11.6
Sat 8:00 am

Room:
96.7

Sat 10:00 am
Room:
56.56
Fri 4:00 pm
Room:

REASON, RHETORIC, AND


TRANSLATION
PCC, 107-B
REPRESENTATION AND
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
PCC, 105-AB
RETHINKING HISTORICAL AND
STRUCTURAL INJUSTICE
PCC, 105-AB
THE PERSONAL IS THE
NEOLIBERAL: FEMINISM,
MARKETS, AND FAMILIES
PCC, 105-AB
THE POLITICAL THEORY OF
HUMAN RIGHTS
Marriott, Room 310

Thu 4:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS

107.7
Fri 10:00 am
Room:
45.6
Thu 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS

Room:
60.7

Room:

THEORY AND METHODS /


METHODS OF THEORY
PCC, 106-AB
WHAT CAN POLITICAL THEORY
TELL US ABOUT ELECTIONS?
PCC, 107-B
WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE
FREE? AGENCY, AUTONOMY,
ANTIPOWER
PCC, 105-AB

Sun 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 159

159

Division Panels

40.5
Room:

88.6

Room:

WHAT IS NEOLIBERALISM, AND


WHY DOES IT MATTER?
AUTHORS MEET/AS CRITICS
PCC, 107-B

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:
109.15

DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL


THEORY
83.6
Room:
40.7

Room:
88.7

Room:
22.7
Room:
11.7

BEHAVIORAL POLITICAL
THEORY
PCC, 107-A
DELEGATION AND THE
MANAGEMENT OF EVIDENCE
AND INFORMATION
PCC, 107-A
HOW AUTOCRATS HOLD
POWER: FORMAL THEORIES
AND EMPIRICAL TESTS
PCC, 107-A
INSTITUTIONS, BARGAINING,
AND INFLUENCE
PCC, 107-A

Room:

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
THEORY
PCC, 107-A

109.9
Room:

POLITICS OF EXTREMISM
PCC, 107-A

96.8

SOCIAL CHOICE,
INFORMATION AGGREGATION,
AND WELFARE
PCC, 107-A

Room:
60.8
Room:

THEORIES OF AUTHORITARIAN
POLITICS
PCC, 107-A

107.8
Room:

THEORY OF ELECTIONS
PCC, 107-A

11.9

Room:

Room:
109.10

ANGRY AND ANXIOUS


POLITICS
Marriott, Room 408

Room:

ELITE PERSONALITY AND


POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
Marriott, Franklin 9

92.6
Room:

EMPATHY IN POLITICS
Marriott, Franklin 10

17.7

EVALUATIONS AND
INFERENCES IN CAMPAIGN
ENVIRONMENTS
Marriott, Franklin 10

Room:
56.7

Room:

EXPLAINING LEADERS'
INFLUENCE IN INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS
Marriott, Room 408

11.8
Room:

GENDER AS A CAMPAIGN CUE


Marriott, Franklin 10

Sat 10:00 am
83.7
Fri 8:00 am
Room:
26.9
Room:
22.8
Room:
Thu 2:00 pm

76.7
Room:

Thu 8:00 am

60.9
Room:

Sun 10:00 am

96.9

NEW FRONTIERS IN THE STUDY


OF SOCIAL CONTEXT
Marriott, Franklin 10

Sat 10:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

PARTISAN WAR AND PEACE IN


A POLARIZED WORLD
Marriott, Franklin 10
PERCEPTIONS AND
MISPERCEPTIONS
Marriott, Franklin 10
PERSUASION: WHAT AND WHO
MOVES OPINIONS
Marriott, Room 408

Room:
88.8
Room:

RACIALIZED POLITICS
Marriott, Franklin 10

83.44

SURPRISES: A MAGICAL
MYSTERY TOUR OF PUBLIC
OPINION AND POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY
Marriott, Salon I

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Room:
109.11

Sun 8:00 am
Room:
40.8
Sun 10:00 am
Room:
45.7
Sat 2:00 pm
Room:
96.10

THE EFFECTS OF
PERSONALITY ACROSS
CONTEXTS
Marriott, Room 408
THE POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
OF DELIBERATING GROUPS
Marriott, Room 408
THE POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
OF POVERTY AND INEQUALITY
Marriott, Room 408

Room:

THE POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY


OF RELIGIOSITY AND
RELIGIOUS IDENTITY
Marriott, Franklin 10

76.8
Room:

US VERSUS THEM
Marriott, Room 408

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Sun 8:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY


96.11
Thu 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

Page 160

NATURE, NURTURE, AND


POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION
Marriott, Franklin 10

POLITICAL VALUES OVER TIME


AND ACROSS GROUPS
Marriott, Franklin 8

Room:

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Sun 10:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

160

MEASUREMENT ISSUES IN
SURVEY RESEARCH
Marriott, Franklin 11

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY


107.9

ISSUES, PARTIES, AND BELIEF


SYSTEMS
Marriott, Room 408

ACCOUNTABILITY AND
TRANSPARENCY IN
DEMOCRACIES AND
AUTOCRACIES
PCC, 103-B

Sat 4:00 pm

Room:
17.8
Room:
88.9

Room:
109.12

AUTHORITARIAN CONTROL
AND AUTOCRATIC SURVIVAL
PCC, 103-C
BUREAUCRACY AND STATE
CAPACITY
PCC, 103-C
BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT
LINKAGES AND POLITICAL
RISK
PCC, 103-B

Room:

COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
ON EMPLOYEE AND EMPLOYER
POLITICAL VOICE AND POWER
PCC, 103-C

51.7
Room:

FIRMS AS POLITICAL ACTORS


PCC, 103-C

60.10

Room:

HOLDING GOVERNMENTS TO
ACCOUNT: VARIATION IN
INSTITUTIONAL AND CITIZEN
OVERSIGHT
PCC, 103-C

26.10
Room:

LAND AND CONFLICT


PCC, 103-C

45.8

MAKING POLITICS WORK FOR


ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT,
NOT AGAINST IT
PCC, 103-C

Thu 8:00 am

11.11
Room:

Thu 10:00 am

107.11
Room:

Sat 12:00 pm

83.8
Room:
56.9

Sun 10:00 am
Room:
107.10

40.9
Room:
109.13

Room:
45.9
Room:
51.8
Room:
96.12
Room:
92.7
Room:

NEW THEORIES AND EVIDENCE


ON PROPERTY RIGHTS
PCC, 102-A
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL
DEMOCRACIES
PCC, 103-B
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
CORRUPTION
PCC, 102-A
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
INEQUALITY
PCC, 102-A
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
LOCAL DEVELOPMENT
PCC, 103-C
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
LOCAL POLITICS
PCC, 103-C

Room:
76.9

Room:
56.8

Room:

POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
PUBLIC GOODS PROVISION
PCC, 103-C
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
REDISTRIBUTIVE
PREFERENCES
PCC, 103-C
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
SOCIAL POLICY IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
PCC, 102-A

POLITICAL ECONOMY OF VOTE


BUYING AND CLIENTELISM
PCC, 103-C
POLITICAL FOUNDATIONS OF
ECONOMIC POLICY
PCC, 103-C

Fri 12:00 pm

Room:

Fri 4:00 pm

92.8
Room:

QUADRATIC VOTING
PCC, 103-B

40.10

SOCIAL POLICY IN NONDEMOCRACIES: RUSSIA &


CHINA
PCC, 103-C

Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

22.9
Room:

WOMEN AND GENDER IN


POLITICAL ECONOMY
PCC, 103-C

Thu 8:00 am

Sun 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY


88.11
Fri 8:00 am
Room:
Sun 10:00 am

45.10

Room:
Fri 10:00 am

76.10
Room:

Fri 12:00 pm

11.12

Room:

"CAUGHT: THE PRISON STATE


AND THE LOCKDOWN OF
AMERICAN POLITICS"
PCC, 113-C
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: FED
POWER BY LAWRENCE JACOBS
AND DESMOND KING
Marriott, Franklin 8
CITIZENS, STATES, AND
MARKETS
PCC, 202-A
COLONIAL INSTITUTIONS,
STATE CAPACITY, AND
CONFLICT
PCC, 203-B

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm
56.38

Sat 2:00 pm

Room:
88.10

POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
VIOLENCE
PCC, 102-A

POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS
PCC, 103-C

Room:

Room:

POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
SOVEREIGN RISK
PCC, 103-B

DEVELOPMENTAL AND
HISTORICAL
INSTITUTIONALIST
PERSPECTIVES ON URBAN
POLITICS
Marriott, Room 307

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

Sat 12:00 pm
83.9
Sat 8:00 am
Room:
96.13
Fri 2:00 pm
Room:

ELITE POLITICS AND EARLY


POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
PCC, 113-C
HISTORICAL ORIGINS OF
POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC
INSTITUTIONS
PCC, 112-A

Sat 10:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 161

161

Division Panels

11.10

17.32
Room:

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
PUBLIC POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 4

Thu 10:00 am

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

107.12
Room:
56.10

Room:
60.11
Room:
92.9
Room:
17.9
Room:
88.12

Room:
45.11

Room:
92.30
Room:

HISTORY, POLITICS, AND LAND


CONFLICT
PCC, 112-A
IMPOSED REGIMES AND
ENDURING PATTERNS OF
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Loews, Commonwealth C
INEQUALITY: CAUSES AND
CONSEQUENCES
PCC, 203-A
LAW AND PATTERNS OF
POLITICAL CONTESTATION
PCC, 112-A
MENUS OF (ELECTORAL)
MANIPULATION
PCC, 203-B
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
WELFARE STATE
DEVELOPMENT
PCC, 112-A
RACE, CITIZENSHIP, AND
AMERICAN POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
PCC, 203-B
RELIC, AUTHORS WILLIAM
HOWELL AND TERRY MOE
Marriott, Franklin 12

Room:
109.14
Room:
92.10

Room:
96.14

RELIGION AND POLITICAL


DEVELOPMENT IN THE WEST
PCC, 203-B
STATE-LEVEL ORIGINS OF
AMERICAN POLITICS
PCC, 112-A
THE FAMILY AND THE STATE:
THE POLITICS AND POLICIES
OF PUBLIC/PRIVATE
BOUNDARIES
Marriott, Room 310

Room:

THE INTERPLAY OF STATES


AND MARKETS
PCC, 113-C

26.11
Room:

THE MAKING OF NATIONS


PCC, 203-B

11.13

Sun 8:00 am
Room:

17.10
Room:

17.11
Sat 2:00 pm
Room:

Room:

Thu 8:00 am

CAUSAL INFERENCE IN
RANDOMIZED EXPERIMENTS
Marriott, Franklin 3

Thu 10:00 am

CODING AND VALIDATING


POLITICAL EVENT DATA
Marriott, Franklin 11

Thu 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES

Thu 10:00 am
60.12
Sat 12:00 pm
Room:

CONVENIENCE SAMPLING AND


REPRESENTATIVENESS OF
PUBLIC OPINION SURVEYS
Marriott, Franklin 12

Fri 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

76.11
Fri 10:00 am

Room:

109.15
Room:

Sat 8:00 am

MEASUREMENT ISSUES IN
SURVEY RESEARCH
Marriott, Franklin 11

Sun 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY

Thu 2:00 pm

Sun 10:00 am

ESTIMATING SUB-NATIONAL
PREFERENCES: COMPLEX
APPLICATIONS &
IMPROVEMENTS OF MRP
Marriott, Franklin 11

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Sat 2:00 pm

22.11

Room:

MEASURING PROTEST: A
COMPARISON OF SURVEYS AND
VARIABLES
Marriott, Franklin 11

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES

Sat 2:00 pm

56.11
Sat 4:00 pm
Room:
92.11
Thu 4:00 pm
Room:

ADVANCES IN IDEAL POINT


ESTIMATION
Marriott, Franklin 11

AGGREGATE DATA IN THE


STUDY OF POLITICAL
BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Franklin 11

Fri 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL


RESEARCH

Fri 4:00 pm

METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES
IN CAUSAL MEDIATION
ANALYSIS
Marriott, Franklin 12
METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES
IN MODELING LEGISLATIVE
SPEECH
Marriott, Franklin 11

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY
107.13

ADVANCES IN TIME SERIES


AND DYNAMIC MODELING
Marriott, Franklin 12

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND


EXECUTIVE POLITICS

22.10

45.12

Sun 8:00 am

11.14

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

Room:

METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES
IN SOCIAL NETWORK
ANALYSIS
Marriott, Room 306

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS

162

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 162

Room:

METHODOLOGICAL
CHALLENGES AND ADVANCES
USING THE CSES
Marriott, Salon D

Fri 12:00 pm

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

40.11
Room:
83.10

Room:
26.43

Room:

MODEL SPECIFICATION:
METHODS AND APPLICATIONS
Marriott, Franklin 12
NEW TOOLS AND STANDARDS
FOR RESEARCH
TRANSPARENCY
Marriott, Franklin 11
ORDERS OF MAGNITUDE: BIG
DATA APPLICATIONS IN
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Marriott, Salon D

Room:
109.16
Room:
11.15
Room:
51.9
Room:

ROUNDTABLE ON MENTORING
AND DIVERSITY IN POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY
Marriott, Franklin 11
ROUNDTABLE ON REPLICATION
AND PREREGISTRATION
Marriott, Franklin 3
SPATIAL DATA ANALYSIS:
METHODS AND APPLICATIONS
Marriott, Franklin 3
STUDYING AND MEASURING
ELECTORAL INTEGRITY
Marriott, Franklin 12

17.12

TEXT ANALYSIS: APPLICATIONS


Marriott, Franklin 13

40.12
Room:

TEXT ANALYSIS: METHODS


Marriott, Franklin 3

88.14

THE STATISTICS OF CAUSAL


INFERENCE: A VIEW FROM
POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Marriott, Franklin 11

Room:
26.12

Sat 4:00 pm

Room:

Thu 8:00 am

76.13

40.13

Room:

Fri 12:00 pm

96.16

Room:

Room:
107.14
Room:

11.16
Room:

USING AUXILIARY
INFORMATION AND EXPERT
KNOWLEDGE
Marriott, Franklin 3
VARIABLE SELECTION:
METHODS AND APPLICATIONS
Marriott, Franklin 3

PROMOTION LETTERS:
PROBLEMS OF SELFSELECTION & 'DEVALUATION'
Marriott, Room 305
TEACHING INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Marriott, Room 305

Thu 10:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

TEACHING POLITICAL SCIENCE


STUDENTS ABOUT ANALYTICS,
POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
Marriott, Room 305
TRANSFORMATIONAL
LEARNING IN DIVERSE
CONTEXTS
Marriott, Room 305

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

TRANSFORMATIONAL
LEARNING IN THE US POLITICS
CLASSROOM
Marriott, Room 305

Sat 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE


EDUCATION

Sat 12:00 pm
88.15
Fri 8:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

92.12

Room:
76.12

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE


EDUCATION

Room:

Room:

MAINSTREAMING GENDER IN
THE TEACHING AND LEARNING
OF POLITICS
Marriott, Room 305

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE


EDUCATION

Room:
Sun 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE


EDUCATION

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

88.13
Room:

22.12

Room:

Thu 4:00 pm

ENHANCING TEACHING AND


LEARNING
Marriott, Room 305

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE


EDUCATION

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

96.15

51.10

USING SIMULATIONS TO
TEACH INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS
Marriott, Room 305
VALUES, PARTICIPATION, AND
TEACHING AND LEARNING IN
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Marriott, Room 305

Sat 12:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE


EDUCATION
11.16
Sun 8:00 am
Room:

BEST PRACTICES IN POLITICAL


SCIENCE ASSESSMENT
Marriott, Room 305

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND


LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND


LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

83.11

BEST PRACTICES IN POLITICAL


SCIENCE ASSESSMENT
Marriott, Room 305

Room:

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE


EDUCATION

45.13
Room:

CIVIC ENGAGEMENT AND


DEMOCRATIC PRACTICE
BEYOND THE CLASSROOM
Marriott, Room 305
EMBRACING TECHNOLOGY TO
ENHANCE STUDENT LEARNING
Marriott, Room 305

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 163

163

Division Panels

51.43

51.10
Room:

ENHANCING TEACHING AND


LEARNING
Marriott, Room 305

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL


METHODOLOGY

Fri 12:00 pm
83.33

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND


LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

22.12

Room:

MAINSTREAMING GENDER IN
THE TEACHING AND LEARNING
OF POLITICS
Marriott, Room 305

Thu 2:00 pm

Room:
88.16

Room:

Room:

TEACHING INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Marriott, Room 305

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND


LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

40.13

Room:

TRANSFORMATIONAL
LEARNING IN DIVERSE
CONTEXTS
Marriott, Room 305

Fri 8:00 am

Room:

TRANSFORMATIONAL
LEARNING IN THE US POLITICS
CLASSROOM
Marriott, Room 305

Room:

WHOS CHARLIE? TEACHING


THE 2015 PARIS ATTACKS &
OTHER DRAMATIC CURRENT
EVENTS
Marriott, Room 305

Room:
17.13

Room:
76.14

Room:
51.11
Room:
83.12
Room:
17.11
Room:

ACCOUNTABILITY AND
CORRUPTION: POLITICAL
ELITES IN DEVELOPING
DEMOCRACIES
PCC, 204-B
ARMED GROUP
TRANSFORMATION AND THE
TRANSITION TO POLITICS
AFTER CIVIL WARS
PCC, 204-B
BARRIERS TO INSTITUTIONAL
CHANGE
PCC, 204-B
CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS
AND REGIME DURABILITY
PCC, 204-B
CODING AND VALIDATING
POLITICAL EVENT DATA
Marriott, Franklin 11

Room:
17.5

Page 164

Room:

COMPARATIVE POLITICAL
ECONOMY OF
REPRESENTATION
PCC, 204-B
CORRUPTION AND
CORRUPTION CONTROL IN THE
ASIA-PACIFIC REGION
PCC, 201-C
CORRUPTION: CAUSES AND
EFFECTS
PCC, 204-B
DA-RT AND QUALITATIVE
METHODS: THE CASE OF
PROCESS TRACING
PCC, 204-B

Sat 12:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Sun 10:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

DEFINING AND DEPLOYING


POLITICAL SPACE IN ASIA
PCC, 201-C
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY IN
EVERYDAY POLITICS
PCC, 105-AB

Thu 10:00 am

Thu 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL


THEORY

Thu 8:00 am
96.17
Room:
Thu 10:00 am

COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
ON CHINAS REGULATORY
STATE
PCC, 204-B

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE


METHODS

17.14

56.12

Room:

DEMOCRACY AND
DEVELOPMENT
PCC, 204-B
EMPIRICAL & NORMATIVE
IMPLICATIONS OF
DELIBERATIVE
CONSTITUTIONS IN
DEMOCRACIES
PCC, 201-C

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am
109.18
Room:
40.14
Fri 12:00 pm

Room:

EXPLAINING TRANSITIONS TO
PROGRAMMATIC POLITICS
PCC, 201-C
EXTRACTIVES IN CONTEXT:
COMMUNITIES AND THE
LOCAL POLITICS OF
DISTRIBUTION
PCC, 201-C

Sun 10:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am
11.41

Thu 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Room:

Fri 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES

164

109.17

26.13

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


25 YEARS OF CRITICAL
JUNCTURES: COLLIER &
COLLIER'S SHAPING THE
POLITICAL ARENA
PCC, 204-B

88.17

Room:

Co-sponsored by French Politics Group

11.17

Room:

Sat 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND


LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

60.13

22.13

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND


LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

96.16

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND


LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

26.12

COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF
RULEMAKING, REGULATION,
AND POLICYMAKING
Marriott, Franklin 6

Room:

FEMINIST INSTITUTIONALISM
AT 10 YEARS: NEW
PERSPECTIVES ON
TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE
Marriott, Franklin 7

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

22.14
Room:
60.14

Room:
107.15

Room:
96.18

Room:
11.18
Room:
107.16

Room:
40.15
Room:
22.11

Room:

GANGS, VIGILANTES, AND


VIOLENCE
PCC, 202-A
GLOBAL EXPERIMENTS
EXPLAINING HETEROGENEITY
IN CITIZEN RESPONSES TO
CORRUPTION
PCC, 204-B
HOW CULTURAL
FRAMEWORKS SHAPE THE
POLITICS OF CRISIS
PCC, 204-B
IMMIGRATION AND IDENTITY:
PROCESSES OF ASSIMILATION
AND DISCRIMINATION
PCC, 201-C
INEQUALITY, REDISTRIBUTION,
AND DEMOCRACY
PCC, 201-B
INFORMAL INSTITUTIONS OF
GOVERNANCE: ORIGINS,
DYNAMICS, AND
CONSEQUENCES
PCC, 201-B
INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE
UNDER AUTHORITARIAN RULE
PCC, 201-B
MEASURING PROTEST: A
COMPARISON OF SURVEYS AND
VARIABLES
Marriott, Franklin 11

56.13
Thu 2:00 pm
Room:
Fri 4:00 pm

Room:

Room:

MECHANISMS AND PROCESSTRACING WHAT ARE WE


ACTUALLY TRACING?
Marriott, Franklin 13

Sun 8:00 am

96.19
Room:
56.14

Sat 4:00 pm
Room:
83.13
Thu 8:00 am
Room:
26.14
Sun 8:00 am

Room:
92.13
Fri 8:00 am
Room:
26.15
Thu 2:00 pm

Room:

Sun 10:00 am

107.17

Room:
51.13

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE


METHODS

92.11

Room:

METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES
IN MODELING LEGISLATIVE
SPEECH
Marriott, Franklin 11

Room:
Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

40.16

Room:
51.12
Room:
76.15

Room:

MILITARY COUPS,
DEMOCRATIC EROSION, AND
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
Marriott, Franklin 13
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON PARTY
INSTITUTIONALIZATION
PCC, 201-C
NEW WAYS TO THINK ABOUT
COMPARATIVE POLITICS: THE
RUDOLPHS' INTELLECTUAL
LEGACY
PCC, 201-C

NON-STATE PROVISION AND


CITIZEN CLAIM-MAKING IN
LOCAL PUBLIC GOODS
PCC, 201-B

Fri 2:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

109.53

22.15

NON-STATE ACTORS AND


POLICYMAKING IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
PCC, 204-B

Fri 8:00 am

17.15

POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF
SOCIAL POLICIES
PCC, 201-B
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
PCC, 201-B
POLITICAL VIOLENCE,
CIVILIAN SENTIMENTS, AND
CONFLICT OUTCOMES
PCC, 201-C
POLITICS AND IDENTITY
CHANGE IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
PCC, 113-B
POPULAR MOBILIZATION AND
REGIME CHANGE
PCC, 201-C
SECESSIONIST VIOLENCE: THE
PERSPECTIVE OF THE STATE
AND THE SECESSIONIST
REGION
PCC, 201-C
STATE BUILDING AND
DEVELOPMENT: THEORY AND
METHOD
PCC, 201-C
SUBNATIONAL POLITICS IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES:
POLICY, INSTITUTIONS AND
CONFLICT
PCC, 201-B

Room:

SURVEY AND LABORATORY


EXPERIMENTS IN THE MIDDLE
EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
PCC, 201-B

45.14
Room:

TAXATION
PCC, 201-B

92.45

THE (COMPARATIVE)
STRANGER: PERSPECTIVES ON
REGIME SUPPORT AND
REPRESENTATION
Marriott, Salon I

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

109.19
Sat 8:00 am

Room:

THE GREAT
TRANSFORMATION: THE
ORIGINS OF THE STATE IN
EUROPE AND CHINA
PCC, 201-B

Sun 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 165

165

Division Panels

Co-sponsored by Political Studies Association

92.14

Room:

THE ORIGINS OF
COLONIALISM: INVESTMENTS,
INSTITUTIONS AND THEIR
LONG-TERM IMPACT
PCC, 204-B

22.16

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

40.17
Room:

THE PERSISTENCE OF
CLIENTELISM
PCC, 204-B

76.16
Room:

THE POLITICS OF CITIZENSHIP


PCC, 201-B

83.14

THE POLITICS OF
INFORMALITY
PCC, 201-B

Room:
88.18

Room:
107.18
Room:
88.19

THE POLITICS OF POLICY


REFORM IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
PCC, 109-AB
THE POLITICS OF PUBLIC
GOODS
PCC, 109-AB

Room:

THE POLITICS OF RELIGION AS


IDENTITY, IDEOLOGY, AND
INSTITUTION
PCC, 201-B

60.15
Room:

THE POLITICS OF RESOURCES


PCC, 201-C

92.15

THE RELATIONAL-CULTURAL
APPROACH TO POPULISM IN
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
PCC, 201-B

Room:
40.18
Room:
109.20

Room:
17.16

THE ROLE OF ELECTIONS IN


REGIME TRANSFORMATIONS
PCC, 109-AB
TRANSFORMATIONS FOR
UNDERSTANDING STATE
CAPITALISM
PCC, 109-AB

Room:

TRANSITIONS FROM
CLIENTELISTIC TO
PROGRAMMATIC PARTY
COMPETITION
PCC, 109-AB

45.15
Room:

UNDERSTANDING ELECTIONS
PCC, 109-AB

45.16

UNIONS AND POLITICS IN


ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL
SOCIETIES
PCC, 201-C

Room:
92.16
Room:

WHY AUTHORITARIAN
REGIMES ENDURE (OR NOT)
PCC, 109-AB

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Room:
26.16
Room:

Sat 8:00 am

107.19
Room:
76.17

Page 166

AUTHORITARIAN
LEGISLATURES
PCC, 201-A

Thu 4:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Room:

AUTHORITARIAN RESILIENCE
AND WEAKNESS
PCC, 109-AB

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm
26.17

Sun 8:00 am
Room:
11.19
Sat 12:00 pm
Room:
51.14
Room:

BEYOND THE NEW NEW


INSTITUTIONALISM: DEBATING
THE POLITICS OF
DEVELOPMENT
PCC, 201-A
CIVIL SOCIETY AND AGENCY
OUTSIDE THE STATE
PCC, 109-AB
COLONIALISM AND
HISTORICAL LEGACIES
PCC, 109-AB

Thu 4:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm
76.18
Sat 2:00 pm
Room:
109.21
Fri 8:00 am
Room:
11.20
Sun 10:00 am
Room:
40.19
Thu 10:00 am
Room:
83.15

Fri 10:00 am
Room:
96.20
Fri 10:00 am
Room:
56.15
Sat 2:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: A


PANEL ON GLOBALIZING INDIA
PCC, 109-AB

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Room:

166

ARMED AND UNARMED


POLITICS IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
PCC, 109-AB

COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
ON INDIVIDUAL
PARTICIPATION IN CONFLICT
PCC, 201-A
COMPARATIVE STATE
FORMATION: BRIDGING IR AND
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
PCC, 201-A
COMPETING AND GOVERNING
IN MULTIETHNIC SOCIETIES
PCC, 201-A
CONTENTION AND REPRESSION
IN AFRICA AND SOUTH
AMERICA
PCC, 201-A
CONTEXT AND CAUSATION OF
ANTI-EXTRACTIVE CONFLICTS
IN LATIN AMERICA
PCC, 201-A
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
DEMOCRACY
PCC, 109-AB
CYCLES OF CONTENTION: THE
GROWTH AND REGROWTH OF
ISLAMISM IN THE MIDDLE
EAST
PCC, 201-A

Sat 8:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Room:
76.19
Room:
40.20
Room:
11.21
Room:
45.17

Room:
11.22

DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION,
GENDER, AND ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT IN LATIN
AMERICA
PCC, 109-AB
DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS IN
INDIA
PCC, 111-B
DYNAMICS OF PARTICIPATION
AND ENGAGEMENT
PCC, 111-B
ETHNIC POLITICS IN PAKISTAN,
AFRICA, AND CHINA
PCC, 112-B
FILLING EMPTY GLASSES:
INSTITUTIONAL
PERFORMANCE IN INDIA
PCC, 201-A

Room:

GOVERNANCE AND STATE


PERFORMANCE
PCC, 111-B

56.17
Room:

INEQUALITY & DISTRIBUTION


PCC, 111-B

83.16

LAND AND CONFLICT: RURAL


POLITICS IN CHINA, INDIA,
AND AFRICA
PCC, 109-AB

Room:
17.17

Room:
109.22

Room:
22.15

Room:

LEGACIES OF HISTORICAL AND


COLONIAL PAST IN SOUTH
ASIA
PCC, 111-B
LOCAL SERVICE PROVISION:
INSTITUTIONS, SOCIAL
IDENTITIES, AND CLIENTELISM
PCC, 111-B
NON-STATE PROVISION AND
CITIZEN CLAIM-MAKING IN
LOCAL PUBLIC GOODS
PCC, 201-B

Fri 2:00 pm

Room:
17.18
Sat 8:00 am

Room:

Room:
22.17
Room:
96.21

Room:
88.20

Room:

ORIGINS AND
TRANSFORMATIONS OF
GENDER GAPS
PCC, 111-B
PATTERNS AND IMPLICATIONS
OF POLITICAL VIOLENCE
PCC, 111-B
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
DEVELOPMENT AND FULLER'S
PAPER TIGERS, HIDDEN
DRAGONS
PCC, 201-A
POLITICAL PARTIES IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES:
LOCAL VS. NATIONAL
DIMENSIONS
PCC, 201-A

POLITICAL PARTIES IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES:
ALIGNMENTS AND LEADERSHIP
PCC, 111-B
POLITICS OF CHINAS
INVESTMENT AND RESOURCE
EXTRACTION IN AFRICA &
LATIN AMERICA
PCC, 201-A

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 8:00 am
96.22

Thu 8:00 am
Room:
107.20
Fri 10:00 am
Room:
22.18

Thu 8:00 am
Room:
51.16
Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Room:
60.16

Thu 10:00 am
Room:
83.17
Sun 10:00 am
Room:
109.23
Thu 2:00 pm
Room:

POLITICS OF SOCIAL AND


ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS IN
CHINA
PCC, 111-B
POST-CONFLICT PUBLIC
GOODS PROVISION
PCC, 111-B
RESOURCE ALLOCATION AND
DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
PCC, 201-A
RESURGENCE OF INDUSTRIAL
POLICY: NETWORKS,
CLUSTERS, AND PRODUCTION
FRAGMENTATION
PCC, 201-A
REVISITING DEPENDENCY AND
THE INTERNATIONAL
CONSTRAINTS ON NATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
PCC, 111-B
RIGHT-SIZING THE RESOURCE
'CURSE': OIL'S VARYING
POLITICAL DYNAMICS
PCC, 111-B
SELECTED ISSUES IN
SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS
AND POLITICAL ECONOMY
PCC, 113-A

Sat 4:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics Group

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS

45.18

51.15

11.23

Fri 10:00 am
Room:
88.21

Thu 2:00 pm
Room:
56.18

SOCIAL PROTECTION,
CONFLICT, AND THE
INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM
PCC, 111-B

Room:

SUBNATIONAL POLITICS:
LOCAL PATTERNS AND
PUZZLES
PCC, 113-A

26.18
Room:

THE LOGICS OF CLIENTELISM


PCC, 113-A

40.21

THE NATURE OF INDIAN


DEMOCRACY
PCC, 113-A

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND


CONTENTIOUS POLITICS
ACROSS REGIONS
PCC, 113-A

Room:

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 167

167

Division Panels

56.16

92.14

Room:

THE ORIGINS OF
COLONIALISM: INVESTMENTS,
INSTITUTIONS AND THEIR
LONG-TERM IMPACT
PCC, 204-B

Sat 2:00 pm

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS

107.21

Room:
92.17

Room:
83.18
Room:
45.19

Room:
92.18

Room:
60.17
Room:
60.18

Room:

THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF


UPS AND DOWNS: THE
BRAZILIAN CASE
PCC, 113-A
THE POLITICAL LOGIC(S) OF
ANTI-CORRUPTION CAMPAIGNS
IN ASIA
PCC, 111-B
THE ROLE OF IDEAS IN LATIN
AMERICAN JUSTICE REFORMS
PCC, 113-A
URBANIZATION,
DEVELOPMENT, AND SOCIAL
DISLOCATION
PCC, 113-C
VARIETIES OF COLLECTIVE
ACTION: EXPLAINING LABOR
MOBILIZATION IN LATIN
AMERICA
PCC, 201-A

Room:
107.22

Sat 2:00 pm

Room:
40.22

Room:
13.1

Room:
96.23
Room:
88.22

Room:

168

CHALLENGES OF
POSTCOMMUNIST
GOVERNANCE
PCC, 202-B
CHINESE POLITICS:
CONTESTATION FROM WITHIN
AND BELOW
Marriott, Room 415
ECONOMIC INFLUENCES ON
POSTCOMMUNIST POLITICS
PCC, 202-B
GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN
THE RUSSIAN POLITICAL
LANDSCAPE
PCC, 202-B

Page 168

POPULAR PROTEST IN CHINA


PCC, 202-B

51.17

POST-COMMUNIST SOCIAL
POLICY
PCC, 202-B

56.19
Room:
92.19
Room:
88.23
Room:
60.19
Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Room:
60.20
Room:

SECURITY IN UKRAINE AND


BEYOND
PCC, 202-B
STATE POWER AND DISCOURSE
IN CONTEMPORARY RUSSIA
PCC, 202-B
THE BEHAVIOR OF THE NEW
WELFARE STATE IN CHINA
PCC, 202-A
THE CHANGING POLITICAL
ECONOMIES OF
AUTHORITARIANISM IN
CENTRAL ASIA
PCC, 202-B
THE LIMITS OF LIBERALISM IN
EASTERN EUROPE
PCC, 113-C

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Sun 8:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL
SOCIETIES
26.19

Fri 10:00 am
Room:
22.19
Fri 8:00 am

Room:
40.23

Thu 8:00 am
Room:
45.21
Sat 4:00 pm
Room:
Sat 12:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

109.24
Room:

Fri 10:00 am

WHITHER AUTHORITARIAN
RESILIENCE: CHALLENGES
FACING THE CHINESE PARTYSTATE
PCC, 201-A

OLIGARCHS AND ENERGY IN


RUSSIA
PCC, 202-B

Room:

Room:

Sat 2:00 pm

GOVERNING MARKETS &


POLITICS IN INFORMATION
COMMUNICATIONS IN CHINA &
RUSSIA
PCC, 202-B

POLITICAL CHANGE IN
EASTERN EUROPE
PCC, 202-B

Sat 10:00 am

WELFARE POLITICS IN INDIA,


CHINA, AND BEYOND
PCC, 109-AB

AUTOCRACIES ON SOCIAL
MEDIA: GOALS, TOOLS,
LESSONS OF KREMLINS
ONLINE OFFENSIVE
PCC, 202-B

83.19

Sun 8:00 am

DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF


COMMUNIST AND FORMER
COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
45.20

76.20

17.19
Room:

DEMOCRACY,
REDISTRIBUTION, AND
INEQUALITY
PCC, 110-AB
DYNAMICS OF COALITION
GOVERNMENTS
PCC, 110-AB
GREAT TRANSFORMATIONS IN
WORLD POL. 1: PROTEAN AND
CONTROL POWER IN
INTERACTION
Loews, Commonwealth A2
GREAT TRANSFORMATIONS IN
WORLD POL. 2: PROTEAN AND
CONTROL POWER IN
INTERACTION
Loews, Commonwealth A2
MIGRATION, ETHNICITY AND
PROTEST
PCC, 110-AB

Thu 4:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Thu 10:00 am

Room:
56.20
Room:
11.24
Room:

PARTY POLITICS, ELECTORAL


SYSTEMS, AND POLICY
PCC, 112-A
POLITICAL PARTIES, POLICIES,
AND POLITICIANS IN JAPAN
Loews, Commonwealth A2
WELFARE STATE AND
INSTITUTIONS
PCC, 110-AB

Fri 4:00 pm

Room:
Fri 2:00 pm

Room:
107.23

Room:
56.21
Room:
40.24
Room:
26.20

Room:
107.24
Room:
17.20
Room:
88.24
Room:
60.22

Room:
17.30

Room:
45.22

Room:

CONTENTIOUS POLITICS IN
EUROPE
PCC, 201-C
DEMOCRACY AND
LEGITIMACY IN THE
EUROZONE
PCC, 203-B
DEMOCRATIC POLITICS IN THE
AGE OF AUSTERITY
PCC, 203-B
ECONOMIC PREFERENCES AND
ECONOMIC VOTING IN EUROPE
PCC, 203-B
ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL
INTEGRATION OF IMMIGRANTS
IN EUROPE
PCC, 202-A
EMPLOYERS, LABOR, AND
POLICY REFORMS IN EUROPE
PCC, 203-A
EUROPE'S INTERSECTING
CRISES
PCC, 203-A
IMMIGRATION AND POLITICAL
BEHAVIOUR IN CONTEXT
PCC, 203-B
INSTITUTIONS AND
INSTITUTIONAL EVOLUTION IN
THE EU
PCC, 203-B
LEGISLATIVE ORGANIZATION
AND IMMIGRANT-ORIGIN
REPRESENTATIVES IN EUROPE
Marriott, Room 303

96.24

Room:
76.22

Room:
51.18

Thu 8:00 am

Sun 8:00 am
Room:
109.25
Fri 2:00 pm
Room:
92.20
Fri 8:00 am
Room:

88.25
Sun 8:00 am

Room:
22.21

Thu 10:00 am

Room:
17.21

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:
109.26

Fri 4:00 pm
Room:
17.22
Thu 10:00 am

Room:
107.25

Sat 4:00 pm

SOURCES OF OPPOSITION AND


SUPPORT FOR EUROPEAN
INTEGRATION
PCC, 203-B

THE POLITICS OF CREDIT AND


DEBT IN EUROPE
PCC, 203-B

ATTITUDES TOWARD
IMMIGRATION
PCC, 103-A
CONTEMPORARY POLITICS OF
SOVEREIGN DEBT
PCC, 103-A
DISPUTES IN THE WORLD
TRADE ORGANIZATION
PCC, 103-A
DISTRIBUTIVE CONFLICTS AND
GLOBAL FINANCIAL
(IM)PRUDENCE
PCC, 103-A
ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION
AND PUBLIC OPINION
PCC, 103-B

MIGRATION AND ITS EFFECTS


ON EUROPEAN POLITICS AND
SOCIETY
PCC, 112-B

45.23
Room:

EXCHANGE RATE POLITICS


PCC, 103-A

56.22

GREY TRANSFORMATIONS:
COMMERCIAL SMUGGLING
AND SECURITY
PCC, 103-A

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Sun 10:00 am

WHO DOESN'T VOTE?


TURNOUT AND ABSTENTION IN
EUROPE
PCC, 203-B

Room:

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

HOW THE CRISIS AND THE


GREAT RECESSION AFFECTED
EUROPEAN POLITICS: THE
MISSING LEFT? THE RESPONSE
OF LEFT-WING PARTIES TO
THE GREAT RECESSION
PCC, 203-B

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

Room:

Room:

REGIONALIST POLITICS IN
EUROPE: CAUSES AND
CONSEQUENCES
PCC, 203-B

EMERGING FRONTIERS IN THE


GLOBAL ECONOMY
PCC, 103-A

NATIONAL PARLIAMENTS,
PREFERENCES, AND THE
EUROPEAN UNION
PCC, 203-A

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL


POLITICAL ECONOMY

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND


CITIZENSHIP

76.21

RADICAL RIGHT PARTIES AND


EUROPEAN POLITICS
PCC, 203-A

Thu 8:00 am

DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS


AND SOCIETY
11.25

22.20

92.21

Room:

MEMBERSHIP POLITICS OF
INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATIONS
PCC, 103-A

Sat 12:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Thu 10:00 am

Sun 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 169

169

Division Panels

60.21

26.21

Room:
96.25
Room:
51.19
Room:
56.23

Room:
45.24

Room:
107.26
Room:
76.23
Room:
88.26
Room:
60.23

Room:
22.22

Room:
60.24
Room:
40.25

Room:
40.26

Room:
11.26

Room:
107.27
Room:

170

NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN
MONETARY AND FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS
PCC, 103-A
NEW FRONTIERS IN WTO
RESEARCH
PCC, 103-A
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
FOREIGN AID
PCC, 103-A
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON THE
POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL
TRADE
PCC, 103-B
OUTWARD AID, FINANCE AND
INVESTMENT FLOWS FROM
RISING ECONOMIC POWERS
PCC, 103-B
POLICY DIFFUSION IN THE
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY
PCC, 103-B
POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS AND
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
PCC, 103-B
POLITICS AND FOREIGN
DIRECT INVESTMENT
PCC, 104-A
PROPERTY RIGHTS, RISK, AND
THE POLITICS OF A
NETWORKED GLOBAL
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
PCC, 103-A
PROTECTING PEOPLE
THROUGH INTERNATIONAL
TRADE AGREEMENTS
PCC, 103-B
PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR TRADE
POLICY
PCC, 103-B
THE EVOLUTION OF
FINANCIAL REGULATIONS:
INTERNATIONAL AND
COMPARATIVE CONTEXTS
PCC, 103-B
THE IMPACT OF
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC
INSTITUTIONS AND EVENTS
PCC, 103-A
THE POLITICS OF CENTRAL
BANKING IN ADVANCED
ECONOMIES
PCC, 103-A
THE POLITICS OF FOREIGN
DIRECT INVESTMENT
PCC, 104-A

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:
83.21
Sat 4:00 pm
Room:
76.24
Fri 12:00 pm
Room:
Fri 2:00 pm

Page 170

THE POLITICS OF GLOBAL


CAPITAL FLOWS
PCC, 103-B

Sat 10:00 am

THE POLITICS OF TRADE AND


INVESTMENT AGREEMENTS
PCC, 103-A

Sat 10:00 am

TRANSFORMATIONS AND
VARIETIES OF GLOBAL
GOVERNANCE
PCC, 103-A

Sat 8:00 am

DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL


COLLABORATION
17.23

Fri 10:00 am
Room:
40.27
Room:

BARGAINING AND
NEGOTIATION
PCC, 102-A
COMPLIANCE AND
ENFORCEMENT
PCC, 104-A

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Sun 8:00 am
22.23
Room:

FORMAL INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATIONS
PCC, 102-A

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am
42.1
Room:

GLOBAL ASSESSMENT POWER


MINI-CONFERENCE
Loews, Commonwealth D

45.25
Room:

HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES


PCC, 104-A

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm
Fri 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS

Fri 4:00 pm
83.22
Room:
26.22

INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN IN
WORLD POLITICS
PCC, 102-A

Room:

LOBBYING INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATIONS
PCC, 104-A

92.22
Room:

NGO-STATE RELATIONS
PCC, 102-A

Fri 4:00 pm

88.27

Fri 8:00 am

Room:

ROUNDTABLE ON THE OXFORD


HANDBOOK OF COMPARATIVE
REGIONALISM
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Thu 2:00 pm

96.26

Room:
Fri 8:00 am

107.28
Room:
56.24

Thu 8:00 am
Room:
88.28
Sun 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

83.20

Room:

STABILITY AND CHANGE IN


THE GLOBAL ORDER: THE
ROLE OF THE UNITED STATES
PCC, 104-A
THE DESIGN OF
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
PCC, 104-B
THE JUDICIALIZATION OF
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
PCC, 104-A
THE MORE THINGS CHANGE:
GLOBAL TRANSFORMATIONS
AND INSTITUTIONAL
COMPLIANCE
PCC, 104-B

Sat 10:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:

TRESPASSING OR
TRANSFORMATION: HUMAN
RIGHTS AND STATE
SOVEREIGNTY
Loews, Commonwealth A2

Sun 10:00 am

92.23

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS

76.25

DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL


SECURITY
Room:
51.20

Room:
40.28

Room:
45.26

AUTHORS MEET CRITICS:


"WAR AND DEMOCRATIC
CONSTRAINT" BY BAUM AND
POTTER
Marriott, Franklin 1
BLURRED LINES IN
REPERTOIRES OF POLITICAL
VIOLENCE AND REPRESSION
Marriott, Franklin 1

Room:

BRIDGING LEVELS OF
ANALYSIS: THEORETICAL
APPROACHES TO
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Marriott, Franklin 1

17.24
Room:

CHINA IN THE WORLD


Marriott, Franklin 1

60.25

CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS
AND DOMESTIC STABILITY
Marriott, Franklin 1

Room:
22.24
Room:

CLIMATE, ENERGY, AND


SECURITY
Marriott, Franklin 1

83.23
Room:

COMPLEXITIES OF COERCION
Marriott, Franklin 1

107.29

Room:

CULTURE IN POWER
TRANSITIONS: SINO-AMERICAN
CONFLICT IN THE 21ST
CENTURY
Marriott, Franklin 1

11.27
Room:

DETERRENCE AND COERCION


Marriott, Franklin 2

56.25

DRONES AND THE NATURE OF


WARFARE
Marriott, Franklin 1

Fri 12:00 pm

107.30
Room:
40.29

Fri 8:00 am
Room:
83.24

Fri 10:00 am
Room:
96.27
Room:
22.25
Fri 4:00 pm
Room:
26.24
Thu 2:00 pm
Room:
92.24
Sat 10:00 am

Sun 8:00 am

Room:
17.25
Room:
22.26

Thu 8:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

76.26
Room:

22.39
Room:

GENDERED WAR; GENDERED


PEACE
Marriott, Franklin 7

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

26.23

Room:
78.1

Room:

GREAT POWER POLITICS AND


GRAND STRATEGY: BRIDGING
THEORY, HISTORY, AND
PRACTICE
Marriott, Franklin 1
GREAT POWERS AND
DEMOCRACY: CONGRUITIES
AND TENSIONS
Marriott, Independence Ballroom

INTERNATIONAL
INTERVENTION AND
STATEBUILDING
Marriott, Franklin 1
LEADER SURVIVAL, COUPS AND
MASS PROTESTS
Marriott, Franklin 13
LEADERS IN THE
INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM
Marriott, Franklin 2
LOCAL PEACE,
INTERNATIONAL BUILDERS:
PEACEBUILDING THROUGH
LOCAL ENGAGEMENT
Marriott, Franklin 2
NEW RESEARCH ON
TERRORISM
Marriott, Franklin 1

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

Sun 8:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Room:

Room:

HOW IS INTERNATIONAL
POLITICAL HIERARCHY
PRODUCED AND WHAT IS IT
MADE OF?
Marriott, Franklin 1

Thu 4:00 pm

45.27

Room:
109.27
Room:
109.28

Sat 8:00 am

Room:
11.28
Room:

NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION,
NON-PROLIFERATION, AND THE
NUCLEAR REVOLUTION
Marriott, Franklin 2
NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Marriott, Franklin 2
PEACEKEEPING AND
MULTILATERAL
INTERVENTION
Marriott, Franklin 2
PUBLIC OPINION AND
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Marriott, Franklin 2
PUBLIC OPINION AND THE USE
OF MILITARY FORCE
Marriott, Franklin 8
SECURITY DYNAMICS IN EAST
ASIA
Marriott, Franklin 2
SOUTH CHINA SEA
FLASHPOINT: TINDERBOX OR
TEMPEST IN A TEA CUP?
Marriott, Franklin 2
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 1
THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Marriott, Franklin 2
THE DYNAMICS OF CIVIL
CONFLICT
Marriott, Franklin 1

Thu 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 171

171

Division Panels

109.52

51.21
Room:
88.29
Room:
76.27

Room:
56.26
Room:
60.26

Room:
107.31

Room:

THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF


INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Marriott, Franklin 8
THE POLITICS OF MILITARY
LABOR
Marriott, Franklin 2
TRANSFORMATIONS IN ASIAN
SECURITY: MULTIPLE
CHALLENGES FOR THE 21ST
CENTURY
Marriott, Franklin 8
TRANSFORMATIONS IN
MILITARY TECHNOLOGY
Marriott, Franklin 8
WHY SO MUCH TALK?
DIPLOMACY, RHETORIC AND
CREDIBLE COMMUNICATION
Marriott, Franklin 8
WOMEN, THE STATE, AND WAR:
NEW RESEARCH ON WOMEN IN
COMBAT
Marriott, Franklin 2

Fri 12:00 pm

Room:
22.27

Sat 8:00 am
Room:
45.28
Room:
Fri 2:00 pm

Room:

88.30
Room:

Fri 4:00 pm

51.22
Room:

Room:

EXPLAINING THE VIOLENCE IN


SYRIA
PCC, 104-A

83.26

Room:
40.30
Room:
96.28

Sat 10:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

51.23
Room:

92.25
Room:

HOW TO GET DOCTRINE


RIGHT?
PCC, 104-A

Sat 2:00 pm

17.27
Room:

109.29

Room:
76.28
Room:

INFORMATION AND
SIGNALLING: DISTORTION,
TRANSMISSION, AND
MALFEASANCE
PCC, 104-B
LAW AND NORMS... PROGRESS
OR RETREAT?
PCC, 104-A

Sun 10:00 am

26.25

Room:
22.28
Sat 8:00 am

Room:
60.27

Room:

NEW RESEARCH ON CHINA


AND NUCLEAR
NONPROLIFERATION
PCC, 104-B

Fri 4:00 pm

11.30

Room:
56.27

Room:

NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION
CHALLENGES: PAST, PRESENT,
AND FUTURE
PCC, 104-B

Fri 2:00 pm

109.31

Room:
17.26
Room:

NUCLEAR SECURITY: PAST AND


PRESENT
PCC, 104-A

Thu 10:00 am

45.29
Room:

172

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 172

POWER AND PEACE: SYSTEMIC


CONSTRAINTS AND DOMESTIC
CONDITIONS
PCC, 104-A
SOURCES OF EXTREMISM AND
VIOLENCE
PCC, 107-A
THE POLITICS OF SECRECY
AND UNCERTAINTY
PCC, 110-AB
THE POWER OF GREAT
POWERS?
PCC, 107-A

Thu 2:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY

Room:
11.29

Sun 10:00 am

Sun 8:00 am

DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL


SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL
ASSESSING THE RISE OF
CHINA: FROM SUPPLY CHAINS
TO CHINA'S ECONOMIC
STRUCTURE
PCC, 104-A

NUCLEAR STRATEGY AND


NONPROLIFERATION POLICY
RECONSIDERED
PCC, 110-AB

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

83.25

109.30

ANALYZING FOREIGN POLICY


CHANGE: TURNABOUTS AND
TRANSFORMATIONS
Marriott, Franklin 5
BEIJING, TAIPEI, TOKYO: EAST
ASIAN SECURITY RELATIONS
Marriott, Franklin 5
CHINA AND ITS NEIGHBORS:
REGIONAL DIPLOMACY AND
CHINAS FOREIGN POLICY
CHOICES: CHINA AND ITS
NEIGHBORS
Marriott, Franklin 5
CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES
FOR U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 5
CRITIQUING CORE CONCEPTS
IN FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS
Marriott, Franklin 5
ECONOMIC SANCTIONS:
OBJECTIVES, INFLUENCE, AND
UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES
Marriott, Franklin 5
ECONOMIC STATECRAFT:
NAVIGATING REGIONS AND
RESOURCES
Marriott, Franklin 5
GRAND STRATEGIES, GREAT
POWERS, COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVES
Marriott, Franklin 5
IDEAS, PERCEPTIONS, AND
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Franklin 6
IMAGE AND IDENTITY IN
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Marriott, Franklin 5

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Room:
26.26

Room:

KIN AND COUNTRIES:


ETHNICITY AND FOREIGN
RELATIONS
Marriott, Franklin 5
LEADERS AND EXECUTIVE
INSTITUTIONS IN FOREIGN
POLICY MAKING
Marriott, Franklin 8

Fri 4:00 pm

Room:

Room:

MULTILATERAL AND
UNILATERAL PRESIDENTIAL
DIPLOMACY AND FOREIGN
POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 12

88.33

56.28

Room:

RISING INDIA AND THE


CHANGING CHARACTER OF
INDIAN FOREIGN POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 5

Room:
83.27

Thu 4:00 pm
Room:
56.30

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND


EXECUTIVE POLITICS

Room:
17.28

Fri 2:00 pm

Room:
92.26

Room:
56.29

Room:
107.32
Room:
96.29

Room:
88.31

Room:
76.29

Room:
88.32
Room:

ROUNDTABLE HONORING FP
SECTION DISTINGUISHED
SCHOLAR ROBERT JERVIS
Marriott, Franklin 5
STATE FORMATION,
SOVEREIGNTY, AND THEIR
OBSTACLES
Marriott, Franklin 4
STATUS, POWER TRANSITION,
AND CONFLICT
Marriott, Franklin 6
TAKING LEGISLATURES AND
PARTIES SERIOUSLY IN
FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Marriott, Franklin 4
THE MICROFOUNDATION OF
FOREIGN POLICY ATTITUDE:
EXPERIMENTAL
INVESTIGATIONS
Marriott, Franklin 5
THE PRACTICAL POLITICS OF
GRAND STRATEGIC ISSUES AND
CHOICES
Marriott, Franklin 5
VOX POPULI: PUBLIC OPINION,
SOCIETAL ACTION, AND WAR
Marriott, Franklin 4

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

17.29

CRIME AND POLITICAL


VIOLENCE
Marriott, Salon B
DATA AND METHODOLOGY OF
CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon A
DATA, CHALLENGES, &
OPPORTUNITIES IN THE
EMPIRICAL STUDY OF
SUBNATIONAL VIOLENCE
Marriott, Salon B

Sat 12:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

11.31
Room:

DISASTERS AND VIOLENCE


Marriott, Salon A

40.31
Room:

DOMESTIC AUDIENCE COSTS


Marriott, Salon B

92.27
Room:

DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon A

11.32
Room:

ECONOMICS OF WAR
Marriott, Salon B

Thu 8:00 am

22.29
Room:

ELECTIONS AND VIOLENCE


Marriott, Salon B

Thu 2:00 pm

56.31

ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES AND


CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon B

109.32
Room:

ETHNIC CONFLICT AND


SEPARATISM
Marriott, Salon B

83.28
Room:

FOREIGN AID AND SECURITY


Marriott, Salon A

22.30

GRIEVANCE, OPPORTUNITY,
AND CONTENTIOUS ACTION
Marriott, Salon A

Room:

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES

26.27

76.30
Room:

BARGAINING MODEL AND WAR


Marriott, Salon A

Sat 8:00 am
Room:

76.31
Room:

CIVIL WARS AND INSURGENCY


Marriott, Salon B

Sat 8:00 am

60.29
Room:

CIVILIAN TARGETING AND


VICTIMIZATION
Marriott, Salon A

60.30
Room:

COALITIONS AND ALLIANCES


Marriott, Salon B

22.11

Fri 4:00 pm

CONFLICT MANAGEMENT AND


MEDIATION
Marriott, Salon A

Room:

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

DISAGGREGATING
PEACEKEEPING: NEW DATA ON
OPERATION ATTRIBUTES
Marriott, Salon A

Room:

Sat 12:00 pm

CODING AND VALIDATING


POLITICAL EVENT DATA
Marriott, Franklin 11

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND


EXECUTIVE POLITICS

26.30

17.11

Room:

MANAGEMENT OF
TERRITORIAL DISPUTES
Marriott, Salon B
MEASURING PROTEST: A
COMPARISON OF SURVEYS AND
VARIABLES
Marriott, Franklin 11

Thu 10:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Sun 10:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 173

173

Division Panels

60.28

51.24
Room:
26.28
Room:
107.33

Room:
51.25

MOBILIZING AGAINST THE


"STATE"
Marriott, Salon A
NEGOTIATING CIVIL WAR
PEACE
Marriott, Salon A
NEW DATA ON MILITANT
GROUPS: A SURVEY OF
FORTHCOMING DATASETS
Marriott, Salon A

Room:

NEW RESEARCH IN
QUANTITATIVE TERRORISM
STUDIES
Marriott, Salon B

45.30
Room:

PEACEKEEPING
Marriott, Salon A

109.33
Room:

POST-CONFLICT POLITICS
Marriott, Salon A

45.31

QUASI-EXPERIMENTS OF
CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon B

Room:
88.34
Room:
92.28

REBEL GROUPS AND THE LAWS


OF WAR
Marriott, Salon B

Room:

REFUGEES AND ARMED


CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon B

51.26
Room:

SURVEYS IN CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon C

40.32

THE CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF


GOVERNMENT-SPONSORED
MASS KILLING
Marriott, Salon A

Room:
83.29

Room:
96.30

THE CHANGING DYNAMICS OF


NEGOTIATION AND MEDIATION
IN ARMED CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon C

Room:

THE INFLUENCE OF
TERRITORIAL CONTROL ON
CIVIL VIOLENCE
Marriott, Salon B

107.34
Room:

THE LOGIC OF TERRORISM


Marriott, Salon B

96.31

THE MICRO-FOUNDATIONS OF
INTERNATIONAL COMMERCE
AND CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon A

Room:
109.34

Room:
11.33
Room:

THE ORGANIZATIONAL
CAPACITY OF ARMED GROUPS
DURING AND AFTER CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon C
THE STRATEGY OF
NONVIOLENCE
Marriott, Salon C

Fri 12:00 pm

107.35

Room:

DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES


107.13
Sun 8:00 am
Room:

Page 174

ADVANCES IN IDEAL POINT


ESTIMATION
Marriott, Franklin 11

Sun 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL


METHODOLOGY

Fri 12:00 pm

83.30
Room:
92.29

Fri 10:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Room:
26.29

Fri 10:00 am
Room:
60.31
Sat 12:00 pm
Room:
26.36
Sat 2:00 pm
Room:

AMERICAN POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT AND CONGRESS
Marriott, Room 306
ASSESSING CONGRESS'S
CAPACITY TO SOLVE
PROBLEMS
Marriott, Room 303
CONGRESS AND THE
BUREAUCRACY
Marriott, Room 303
COOPERATION AND CONFLICT
WITHIN LEGISLATURES
Marriott, Room 303
GENDERED LEADERSHIP IN
CONGRESS AND ON COURTS
Marriott, Room 304

Sat 10:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

45.32
Room:

LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR IN
EUROPE
Marriott, Room 303

51.27
Room:

LEGISLATIVE CAREERS
Marriott, Room 303

Fri 12:00 pm

83.31
Room:

LEGISLATIVE EFFECTIVENESS
Marriott, Room 304

Sat 10:00 am

17.30

LEGISLATIVE ORGANIZATION
AND IMMIGRANT-ORIGIN
REPRESENTATIVES IN EUROPE
Marriott, Room 303

Sat 4:00 pm
Room:

Fri 10:00 am

Thu 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS


AND SOCIETY

107.36
Sun 8:00 am
Room:
Sat 4:00 pm

96.32
Room:
92.11

Sun 10:00 am
Room:

LEGISLATIVE PARTY
DISCIPLINE
Marriott, Room 303
LEGISLATIVE PROCEDURES:
LESSONS FROM BRAZIL
Marriott, Room 304
METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES
IN MODELING LEGISLATIVE
SPEECH
Marriott, Franklin 11

Sun 8:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

Thu 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Sun 8:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

22.31

Room:

174

VIOLENT AND NONVIOLENT


MOBILIZATION PROCESSES IN
ARMED CONFLICT
Marriott, Salon C

PARTY AND PROCEDURES IN


THE UNITED STATES
CONGRESS: A VIEW IN 2016
Marriott, Room 306

Thu 2:00 pm

POLARIZATION IN CONGRESS
Marriott, Franklin 8

45.44

POLICY PREFERENCES AND


POLICY OUTCOMES
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Room:

Thu 8:00 am

60.32
Room:

PRESIDENTIAL RHETORIC
Marriott, Franklin 9

Fri 10:00 am

83.32

PRESIDENTS, THE COURTS,


AND THE LAW
Marriott, Franklin 12

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

40.33

Room:

PRIMARIES, CANDIDATES, AND


BALLOTS: ELECTORAL
COMPETITION IN THE UNITED
STATES
Marriott, Room 306

92.30

Fri 8:00 am
Room:

Room:

RACE, CLASS, GENDER AND


POLITICAL REPRESENTATION
Marriott, Room 304

88.36

Sun 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND


POLITICS

88.35
Room:

STATE AND LOCAL POLITICS


Marriott, Room 306

56.32

THE EVOLUTION OF
PARLIAMENTARISM
Marriott, Room 304

Room:
76.32
Room:

THE POLITICS OF COMMITTEE


ASSIGNMENTS
Marriott, Room 306

92.37

Room:

107.37

DYNAMICS OF UNILATERAL
POWER
Marriott, Franklin 10

Room:
76.33
Room:
26.26

Room:

INSTITUTIONAL POWER OF
COMPARATIVE EXECUTIVES
Marriott, Franklin 12

79.1
Sat 8:00 am
Room:

LEADERS AND EXECUTIVE


INSTITUTIONS IN FOREIGN
POLICY MAKING
Marriott, Franklin 8

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:

Room:

MAYORAL POLITICS IN
AMERICAN CITIES
Marriott, Room 304

Room:

MULTILATERAL AND
UNILATERAL PRESIDENTIAL
DIPLOMACY AND FOREIGN
POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 12

Room:
96.33
Room:

PERSPECTIVES ON EXECUTIVE
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
Marriott, Franklin 9
POLITICAL ANGLES OF THE
MODERN PRESIDENCY
Marriott, Franklin 12

INNOVATIVE TEACHING
METHODS IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE AND PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION
Marriott, Franklin 2

40.34
Room:

OF AGENTS AND PRINCIPALS


Marriott, Franklin 10

83.36
Room:

POLICING CITIES
Marriott, Room 310

17.31
Room:
60.33

Sat 2:00 pm
Room:
51.29

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Room:

PRIVATE MANAGEMENT |
PUBLIC VALUE
Marriott, Franklin 12
PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
STRATEGY & PERFORMANCE
Marriott, Franklin 10
REPRESENTATIVE
BUREAUCRACY
Marriott, Franklin 10

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm
87.13

Room:

THE APSA PRACADEMIC


FELLOWSHIP: EXPERIENCE
FROM THE FIRST YEAR
PCC, 113-A

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY

45.33

CHANNELING BUREAUCRATIC
AMBITION: GOVERNMENT
PROFESSIONS & CAREER
SYSTEMS
Marriott, Room 415

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

26.30

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY

92.36

TRANSFORMING AND
GENDERING THE EXECUTIVE
BRANCH
Marriott, Franklin 7

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions

Sun 8:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

THE PRESIDENT AS PUBLIC


AGENT
Marriott, Franklin 12

DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION

Fri 2:00 pm

95.3

AGENCIES AND APPOINTEES


Marriott, Franklin 9

Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Sat 12:00 pm

DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND


EXECUTIVE POLITICS
51.28
Room:

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY

Room:
109.35

RELIC, AUTHORS WILLIAM


HOWELL AND TERRY MOE
Marriott, Franklin 12

Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am
51.31
Sat 4:00 pm
Room:

THE COMPLEX INFLUENCES OF


LEGISLATOR AND
BUREAUCRAT
CHARACTERISTICS ON POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 6

Fri 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 175

175

Division Panels

11.34
Room:

22.32
Room:
45.34
Room:
56.33

Room:

THE POLITICS OF AGENCY


BUDGETS AND SPENDING
Marriott, Franklin 12
THE POLITICS OF
RULEMAKING
Marriott, Franklin 10
TRUST IN PUBLIC
MANAGEMENT AROUND THE
WORLD
Marriott, Franklin 10

Thu 2:00 pm

22.34

Room:

Room:
107.38

Room:

A ROUNDTABLE ABOUT POLICY


FEEDBACK, PATH
DEPENDENCY, & POLITICAL
BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Franklin 8
AUTHOR MEETS CRITIC:
PATRICIA STRACHS HIDING
POLITICS IN PLAIN SIGHT
Marriott, Franklin 8

17.32
Room:
Fri 2:00 pm

Room:

83.33

Room:

22.33
Room:

CLIMATE ACTION AT STATE


AND LOCAL LEVELS
Marriott, Room 407

Room:
Sun 10:00 am

11.35
Room:
45.35

Room:
26.31

Room:
92.31
Room:

Room:
51.30

Fri 8:00 am
Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,


TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

92.32

COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF
RULEMAKING, REGULATION,
AND POLICYMAKING
Marriott, Franklin 6

Room:

Sat 10:00 am

40.35

CRISIS AND DISASTER


RESPONSE
Marriott, Franklin 6

Room:

DYNAMICS OF COALITIONS
AND COLLABORATION IN
MULTIPLE POLICY AREAS
Marriott, Franklin 6
DYNAMICS OF RACE, GENDER,
AND PUBLIC POLICIES
Marriott, Franklin 6

Thu 2:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

76.34

ENERGY POLITICS AND POLICY


Loews, Commonwealth A1

Room:

176

EXAMINING THEORIES ABOUT


POLICYMAKING
Marriott, Franklin 6

Page 176

NEW DIRECTIONS IN POLICY


FEEDBACK RESEARCH
Marriott, Franklin 3
NEW RESEARCH ON CRIMINAL
JUSTICE AND THE CARCERAL
STATE
Marriott, Franklin 8

SCHOOL POLITICS
Marriott, Room 309

Sat 12:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Sat 2:00 pm
Room:

STATE AND LOCAL


ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
AND POLICY
Marriott, Room 307

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,


TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

87.13
Sun 10:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

NEW RESEARCH ON THE


POLITICS OF POLICYMAKING
PROCESSES
Marriott, Franklin 9

26.35
Room:

26.47

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

NEW DIRECTIONS IN
EDUCATION POLICY RESEARCH
Marriott, Franklin 6

Room:

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,


TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

88.37

INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN AND


RESOURCES REDISTRIBUTION
Marriott, Franklin 12

POLICY FEEDBACKS IN
EDUCATION
Marriott, Franklin 6

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND


POLITICS

109.47
Room:

IMPROVING DEMOCRACY
WITH NEW TECHNOLOGIES,
CIVIC ACTION, & SOCIAL
SCIENCE
Marriott, Franklin 1

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND


POLITICS

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS

DYNAMICS BETWEEN LABOR


AND PUBLIC POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 6

Thu 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Sun 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,


TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

60.34

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
PUBLIC POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 4

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY

88.38

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND


HEALTH POLICY

40.51

Thu 2:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY


109.36

EXPERIMENTS ABOUT POLICY


FEEDBACKS ON MASS
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Franklin 4

Room:

THE APSA PRACADEMIC


FELLOWSHIP: EXPERIENCE
FROM THE FIRST YEAR
PCC, 113-A

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION

Room:

THE COMPLEX INFLUENCES OF


LEGISLATOR AND
BUREAUCRAT
CHARACTERISTICS ON POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 6

Fri 12:00 pm

Room:
107.39

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC


ADMINISTRATION

11.36

Room:
26.32

Room:
56.34

Room:

96.34

Room:

THE DYNAMICS OF
INSTITUTIONAL,
ORGANIZATIONAL, AND
POLICY RESPONSIVENESS
Marriott, Franklin 6
THE EFFECTS OF POLICY
DESIGN ON TAKE-UP AND MASS
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Franklin 4
THE POLITICS OF
ENVIRONMENTAL, ENERGY,
AND FOOD POLICY ISSUES
Marriott, Franklin 9

76.36

Room:
Thu 8:00 am

22.35
Room:
92.33

51.33
Room:

LAW, COURTS, AND POLICY


PCC, 113-C

107.40

LEGAL MOBILIZATION IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Loews, Commonwealth B

Room:
11.37

UNDERSTANDING MASS
OPINION ABOUT PUBLIC
POLICIES
Marriott, Franklin 6

Room:

Sat 4:00 pm

83.34

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Room:
40.36

Room:

COURTING THE PUBLIC:


JUDICIAL REVIEW AND
INDEPENDENCE IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
PCC, 113-B

60.35

Fri 8:00 am
Room:
22.36
Room:

96.35
Room:

COURTS AND REGIME


POLITICS
PCC, 113-B

Sat 4:00 pm

88.39
Room:

45.36

Room:

COURTS AS CATALYSTS OF
POLICY CHANGE:
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
PCC, 113-B

51.32
Room:

COURTS IN A POLARIZED ERA


PCC, 113-B

76.35

CRIMINALITY AND RACIAL


SUBORDINATION:
PERSPECTIVES FROM LAW AND
SOCIETY
PCC, 113-C

Fri 10:00 am

26.33

Room:

Room:
109.37

Room:
56.35
Room:
17.33

Room:

DIVERSIFICATION OF THE
BENCH: MECHANISMS AND
EFFECTS
PCC, 113-B
EXPLAINING JUDICIAL
DECISION MAKING (SCOTUS)
PCC, 113-B
EXPLAINING JUDICIAL
DECISION MAKING (USCOA
AND US STATE COURTS)
PCC, 113-B

Fri 12:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

11.38
Room:
92.34

Sun 10:00 am

LAW AND POLITICS OF THE US


COURTS OF APPEALS
PCC, 113-C

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,


TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS

JUDICIAL SELECTION IN US
STATES
PCC, 204-C

LAW IN LAWLESS PLACES:


INSTITUTIONS OF JUSTICE IN
NON-DEMOCRACIES
PCC, 113-B

Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

HORIZONTAL AND VERTICAL


INSTITUTIONAL RELATIONS OF
COURTS
PCC, 113-B

Room:

NEW DATA, NEW METHODS IN


THE STUDY OF LAW AND
COURTS
PCC, 113-B
ON PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR LAW
AND COURTS
PCC, 113-B
POLITICS OF LAW, COURTS,
AND ISLAM
PCC, 113-B
THE DOMESTICATION OF
INTERNATIONAL LAW
PCC, 113-B
THE EUROPEAN COURT OF
JUSTICE AND BEYOND
PCC, 113-B
THE EXPANSION AND
CONTRACTION OF AMERICAN
CITIZENSHIP RIGHTS
PCC, 113-C
WORKING AROUND PUBLIC
LAW AND COURTS
PCC, 203-A
WORKING LAW: COURTS,
CORPORATIONS, AND
SYMBOLIC CIVIL RIGHTS
READERS MEET AUTHOR
PCC, 113-C

Sat 8:00 am

Sun 8:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW


AND JURISPRUDENCE
Fri 2:00 pm

6.1

Thu 10:00 am
Room:

A POLITICAL PRIMER ON THE


PERIODIC STATE
CONSTITUTIONAL
CONVENTION REFERENDUM
PCC, 202-B

Wed 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 177

177

Division Panels

51.31

17.34

Room:
51.34
Room:
11.39
Room:
22.37
Room:
45.37

Room:
40.37
Room:

AMERICAN CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT: ACTORS,
ORDERS, AND CONFLICTS
Marriott, Room 304
COMPARATIVE
CONSTITUTIONALISM
Marriott, Room 304
CONSTRUCTING RIGHTS, LAW,
AND COMMUNITIES
Marriott, Room 304
IS THE FEDERALIST RELEVANT
TO 21ST CENTURY CONCERNS
Marriott, Room 304
JUDICIAL DECISION-MAKING:
ASSESSING INFLUENCES AND
CONSTITUTIONAL
IMPLICATIONS
Marriott, Room 304
THE FIRST AMENDMENT IN A
DIVERSE AGE
Marriott, Room 304

Thu 10:00 am

Room:

Room:
56.36
Room:
26.34

Room:
61.1
Room:

COMMUNITY, SCALE AND


REGIONAL GOVERNANCE
Marriott, Room 309
DECENTRALIZATION AND
POWER SHARING
Marriott, Room 306
DEVOLUTION, FRAGMENTED
POWER, AND ELECTORAL
ACCOUNTABILITY
Marriott, Room 306
DYNAMIC DE/CENTRALIZATION
IN FEDERATIONS
Marriott, Room 414

Fri 12:00 pm

Room:
11.40

Room:
51.35
Room:

FEDERALISM IN GOOD TIMES


AND BAD
Marriott, Room 309
GREAT TRANSFORMATIONS IN
GERMAN POLITICS: BETWEEN
REFORM AND CHANGE
Marriott, Room 303
INTERGOVERNMENTAL
POLITICS AND PERCEPTIONS
Marriott, Room 306

Room:

ISSUES IN FISCAL FEDERALISM


Marriott, Room 306

27.4

MARTHA DERTHICK'S
FEDERALISM SCHOLARSHIP
Marriott, Room 411

Room:

Thu 2:00 pm
Room:
Fri 10:00 am

60.37

Sat 8:00 am

Page 178

Room:
92.35
Room:

Fri 2:00 pm

POLARIZATION AND
(DE)CENTRALIZATION
Marriott, Franklin 8

Fri 8:00 am

THE FEDERAL DESIGN


DILEMMA: CONGRESS AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL
DELEGATION
Marriott, Room 304
UNDERSTANDING THE POSTDECENTRALIZATION SCENARIO
IN LATIN AMERICA
Marriott, Room 306

Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND


POLICY

Fri 8:00 am

96.36

Room:

DIFFUSION AND POLICY


VARIATION IN THE AMERICAN
STATES
Marriott, Room 306
DIRECT DEMOCRACY AND
STATE CONSTITUTIONS
Marriott, Room 306
ELECTIONS, VOTING, AND
PUBLIC OPINION IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Marriott, Room 306

Fri 4:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm
40.39
Room:
Fri 4:00 pm

76.38
Room:
88.40

Thu 2:00 pm
Room:
Thu 8:00 am

51.36

Room:
Fri 12:00 pm

56.37
Room:
83.35

Thu 10:00 am
Room:
45.39
Thu 4:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

45.38

Room:

Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism

178

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism

60.36

Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism


Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism

17.35
Room:

40.38

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism

22.38

NEIGHBORHOOD-LEVEL
POLITICAL DYNAMICS
Marriott, Room 409

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND


INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
76.37

40.40

Room:

GOVERNORS IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Marriott, Room 307
INEQUALITY IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Marriott, Room 304
INTEREST GROUPS AND
LOBBYING IN THE AMERICAN
STATES
Marriott, Room 304
LEGISLATORS AND
LEGISLATURES IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Marriott, Room 307
POLITICAL PARTIES IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Marriott, Room 305
PUBLIC POLICY IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Marriott, Room 307
VARIATIONS IN STATE-LEVEL
INEQUALITY POLICY AND
POLITICS
Marriott, Room 307

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Room:

WOMEN AND POLICYMAKING


IN THE U.S. STATES
Marriott, Franklin 7

Sat 4:00 pm

76.39
Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS
60.38
Room:

ALTERNATIVES TO THE
NEOLIBERAL CITY
Marriott, Room 307

Room:

CITIES, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND


SUSTAINABILITY POLICY
Marriott, Room 310

26.35
Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,


TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

93.3

Room:

CONSULTING THE PEOPLE ON


URBAN ISSUES: PARTICIPATION
AND INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN
Marriott, Room 412

Room:

DEMOCRACY AND
ENGAGEMENT IN URBAN AND
LOCAL POLITICS
Marriott, Room 307

35.2

Room:

Room:

DEVELOPMENTAL AND
HISTORICAL
INSTITUTIONALIST
PERSPECTIVES ON URBAN
POLITICS
Marriott, Room 307

71.1

Sat 4:00 pm

Room:

Fri 2:00 pm

Room:

EXPLORING SOURCES OF BIAS


IN LOCAL POLITICAL
OUTCOMES
Marriott, Room 307

Room:

MAYORAL POLITICS IN
AMERICAN CITIES
Marriott, Room 304

56.5

60.43

Sat 12:00 pm
Room:

Room:

NEIGHBORHOOD-LEVEL
POLITICAL DYNAMICS
Marriott, Room 409

45.41

Sat 2:00 pm
Room:

Fri 8:00 am

11.41

Room:

Room:

83.36
Room:

Fri 2:00 pm

ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS
AND REPRESENTATION OF
MINORITIES AND WOMEN
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Fri 4:00 pm

FEMALE CANDIDATES: VOTER


ATTITUDES AND ELECTORAL
SUCCESS
Marriott, Franklin 7

Fri 10:00 am

FEMINIST INSTITUTIONALISM
AT 10 YEARS: NEW
PERSPECTIVES ON
TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE
Marriott, Franklin 7

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by Political Studies Association

OF CITIES AND GOVERNANCE:


Wed 9:00 am
NEW THEORETICAL
APPROACHES TO URBAN
GOVERNANCE
Offsite, Drexel University MacAlister 2019-2020 (325060 Chestnut Street)

60.4

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions

Room:

POLICING CITIES
Marriott, Room 310

CARE ETHICS, PUBLIC POLICY,


AND HUMAN DIGNITY
PCC, 107-B

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND


INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS

2.7

Fri 8:30 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND


EXECUTIVE POLITICS

40.40

APSA RECEPTION HONORING


WOMEN OF COLOR IN THE
PROFESSION: WOMEN & POL.
SECTION, WOMENS CAUCUS &
COMM.
Marriott, Independence Ballroom

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL


THEORY

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY

92.36

Thu 8:30 pm

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY

88.41

APSA RECEPTION HONORING


WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION:
WOMEN & POL. SECTION,
WOMENS CAUCUS & COMM.
PCC, 201-C

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science

Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

56.38

Thu 4:00 pm

DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics

96.37

SCHOOL POLITICS
Marriott, Room 309

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,


TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

45.40

POLITICS AND POLICY OF


URBAN TRANSIT
Marriott, Room 307

FEMINIST TRANSFORMATIONS
OF POLITICAL THEORY: THE
OXFORD HANDBOOK
PCC, 108-A

Fri 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF


POLITICAL THEORY

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC


ADMINISTRATION

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 179

179

Division Panels

96.38

22.42

Room:

GENDER & REPRESENTATION


IN LATIN AMERICAN
LEGISLATURES, PARTIES, AND
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Thu 2:00 pm

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

26.40

Room:

GENDER AND EXECUTIVE


REPRESENTATION IN LATIN
AMERICA
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Room:

GENDER AND POLITICAL


ATTITUDES
Marriott, Franklin 7

83.37

Room:

Room:

GENDER AND POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION
PCC, 112-B

45.47

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:

Room:

11.8
Room:

GENDER AND THE GREAT


MAN I: RECOVERING THE
WIVES OF THE CANON
Marriott, Franklin 7

51.38
Room:

Room:

92.37

Room:

GENDER AS A CAMPAIGN CUE


Marriott, Franklin 10

88.42

Room:
26.36
Room:

GENDERED LEADERSHIP IN
CONGRESS AND ON COURTS
Marriott, Room 304

Room:

GENDERED WAR; GENDERED


PEACE
Marriott, Franklin 7

Thu 10:00 am

Room:
92.38

Room:

INNOVATIONS IN ASSESSING
GENDER GAPS AND ATTITUDES
Marriott, Franklin 7

96.38
Room:

Room:

JIHADI BRIDES: SOURCES AND


OUTCOMES OF FEMALE
RADICALIZATION
Marriott, Franklin 7

107.41
Room:
Thu 2:00 pm
56.40

Room:
107.31
Fri 4:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 180

VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN:


POLICY, PASSION, AND THE
POLICE
Marriott, Franklin 7
WHEN WOMEN RUN: NEW
PERSPECTIVES ON GENDER
AND POLITICAL RECRUITMENT
Marriott, Franklin 4

Sat 12:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

WOMEN AND POLICYMAKING


IN THE U.S. STATES
Marriott, Franklin 7

Sat 4:00 pm

WOMEN AND POLITICAL


PARTICIPATION
Marriott, Franklin 7

Sun 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION

180

Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND


POLICY

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

60.39

TRANSFORMING AND
GENDERING THE EXECUTIVE
BRANCH
Marriott, Franklin 7

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

Sat 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL


SECURITY

40.41

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

22.39

THE POLITICS OF WOMEN'S


HEALTH POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 4

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND


EXECUTIVE POLITICS

Room:
GENDERED ACTIVISM:
PROTEST, COLLECTIVE
ACTION, AND GOOD
GOVERNANCE
Marriott, Franklin 7

Fri 10:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND


POLITICS

76.40

THE POLITICAL BEHAVIOR


AND REPRESENTATION OF
WOMEN
Marriott, Salon D

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND


HEALTH POLICY

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF


POLITICAL THEORY

GENDER, RACE, AND


POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS
Marriott, Franklin 7

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL


PSYCHOLOGY

17.36

STRUCTURING DISADVANTAGE:
THE FAMILY, PRISONS, AND
THE UNIVERSITY
Marriott, Franklin 7

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION

56.39

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

40.50

REPRESENTING WOMEN,
REPRESENTING WOMEN'S
INTERESTS
Marriott, Franklin 7

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

51.37

26.37

Room:

WOMEN'S SUBSTANTIVE
REPRESENTATION AND POLICY
SUCCESS
Marriott, Franklin 6
WOMEN, THE STATE, AND WAR:
NEW RESEARCH ON WOMEN IN
COMBAT
Marriott, Franklin 2

Fri 2:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL


SECURITY

Room:

WOMENS PARTIES AROUND


THE WORLD: ORIGINS,
SUBSTANCE AND IMPACT
Marriott, Franklin 6

Fri 8:00 am

50.8

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 35: POLITICAL


ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES

109.38

Room:

WOMENS PRESENCE AND


PERFORMANCE: QUOTAS,
PARTIES, AND
INTERSECTIONALITY
Marriott, Franklin 7

Sun 10:00 am

40.44
Room:
92.32

Room:

Room:
26.38
Room:
40.43

"UN-SETTLING" CHALLENGES
BY TRIBAL GOVERNMENTS TO
THE FEDERALISM DYNAMIC
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Room:
17.37
Room:

RACE & RELIGION


Marriott, Meeting Room 501

109.39

RACE AND AMERICAN


POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
Marriott, Room 303

22.40
Room:

DEHUMANIZING POLITICS
Marriott, Room 303

11.42

DESCRIPTIVE
REPRESENTATION
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Room:

DYNAMICS OF RACE, GENDER,


AND PUBLIC POLICIES
Marriott, Franklin 6

Fri 10:00 am

Room:

51.39

Room:
17.36
Room:

ELECTORAL RULES AND


ETHNIC GROUP
REPRESENTATION
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Room:
107.42

Room:
60.40
Thu 2:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am
Room:
109.35
Sat 2:00 pm
Room:

Room:

96.39

Sun 8:00 am

Room:

Room:

RACE AND POPULAR


SOVEREIGNTY IN THE
AMERICAN POLITICAL
IMAGINARY
Marriott, Meeting Room 501
RACE, CLASS, GENDER AND
POLITICAL REPRESENTATION
Marriott, Room 304
RETHINKING
EPISTEMOLOGY &
METHODOLOGY ASSUMPTIONS
IN RACE & ETHNIC STUDIES
Marriott, Room 303

EMOTIONAL POLITICS:
MOBILIZING RACIAL
RESENTMENT
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Room:

THE NEW POLITICS OF


IMMIGRATION
Marriott, Room 303

76.42
Room:

THE POLITICS OF IDENTITY


Marriott, Room 303

56.41

VOTER ACESS: PERSISTANCE


OF RACE AND VOTER
RESTRICTIONS
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:

IT'S WHERE YOU'RE FROM


THAT MATTERS: GEORGRAPHY
INFOMRING THE POLITICAL
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Sun 10:00 am

Sun 8:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

Sun 10:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS


92.40
Room:

92.39

RACE AND PARTY


IDENTIFICATION AT THE
BALLOT BOX
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

83.38

HOW POLICY SHAPES RACIAL


POLITICS
Marriott, Room 303

Thu 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

88.43

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

GENDER, RACE, AND


POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS
Marriott, Franklin 7

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

107.44

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

PROTEST AND REVOLT: FROM


RESPECTABILTY TO OUTRAGE
POLITICS
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Room:

92.31

NEW RESEARCH ON CRIMINAL


JUSTICE AND THE CARCERAL
STATE
Marriott, Franklin 8

76.41

CONTESTED
TRANSFORMATION: RACE
GENDER & POLITICAL
LEADERSHIP IN 21ST CENTURY
USA
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Room:

MEDIA PRIMING OF RACIST


SENTIMENTS
Marriott, Room 303

DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND


POLITICS

CONSTRUCTING THE
IMMIGRANT "OTHER"
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Fri 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

45.42

JOURNAL OF RACE, ETHNICITY


AND POLITICS BUSINESS
MEETING
PCC, 104-A

AUTHORITY IN ISLAMIC
POLITICAL THOUGHT
Marriott, Franklin 9

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 181

181

Division Panels

40.42

45.43

Room:
88.44

BEYOND SECULAR
DEMOCRACY: POLITICAL
INSTITUTIONS AND THE
REGULATION OF RELIGION
Marriott, Room 415

Room:

ETHNIC, RACIAL, RELIGIOUS,


AND SECULAR BELONGING
Marriott, Franklin 9

11.43
Room:

EVANGELICAL CHRISTIANITY
Marriott, Franklin 9

22.41

FRAMING AND TESTING


RELIGIOUS BELIEFS AND
RESPONSES
Marriott, Franklin 9

Room:
83.39

Room:
17.38
Room:
26.39

Room:

GLOBALIZATION,
DEVELOPMENT, AND
RELIGIOUS PLURALISM IN ASIA
Marriott, Franklin 9
ISLAM AND POLITICS BEFORE
AND AFTER THE ARAB SPRING
Marriott, Franklin 9
NATIONALISM, INTOLERANCE,
AND ANTI-MINORITY
MOBILIZATION IN ASIA
Marriott, Franklin 9

Fri 10:00 am

109.40
Room:
107.43

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:
60.42

Thu 8:00 am
Room:
Thu 2:00 pm

Room:

NEW APPROACHES TO
RELIGION AND VIOLENCE
Marriott, Franklin 9

96.4
Room:

NEW THEOLOGIES
PCC, 108-A

96.5
Room:

17.39
Sat 10:00 am
Room:
96.37
Thu 10:00 am
Room:

Thu 4:00 pm

60.43

Room:
26.5

92.41
Sat 4:00 pm
Room:
107.44

POLITICAL THEOLOGY AND


CIVIL RELIGION
PCC, 113-A

Room:

Room:

REIMAGINING DEBT:
INDEBTEDNESS, SABBATH, AND
ETERNITY
PCC, 108-A

Sat 4:00 pm

Room:
56.42

Room:
51.40
Room:

182

RELIGION AND PUBLIC


AUTHORITY
Marriott, Room 415
RELIGIOUS POLITICAL
PARTIES: NORMATIVE AND
EMPIRICAL PERSPECTIVES
Marriott, Room 415
RELIGIOUS/SECULAR
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
Marriott, Room 415

Page 182

76.11

Room:

DEMOCRACY AND
ENGAGEMENT IN URBAN AND
LOCAL POLITICS
Marriott, Room 307

Thu 10:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS
AND REPRESENTATION OF
MINORITIES AND WOMEN
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Fri 4:00 pm

ELECTORAL REFORM AND


RULE CHOICE
Marriott, Meeting Room 502
ELECTORAL RULES AND
ETHNIC GROUP
REPRESENTATION
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Sat 2:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

ESTIMATING SUB-NATIONAL
PREFERENCES: COMPLEX
APPLICATIONS &
IMPROVEMENTS OF MRP
Marriott, Franklin 11

Sat 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

Thu 4:00 pm

22.42

Fri 4:00 pm
Room:

GENDER & REPRESENTATION


IN LATIN AMERICAN
LEGISLATURES, PARTIES, AND
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Fri 2:00 pm
26.40

Room:
Fri 12:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

CONGRUENT
REPRESENTATION?
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND


POLITICS

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF


POLITICAL THEORY

60.41

Fri 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Sat 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF


POLITICAL THEORY

RACIAL, ETHNIC, AND


RELIGIOUS DIVISIONS
Marriott, Room 415

THE CAUSES AND


CONSEQUENCES OF RELIGION
DURING CONFLICT
Marriott, Room 309

Sun 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF


POLITICAL THEORY

40.45

ROMAN CATHOLICISM BEFORE


AND AFTER FRANCIS
Marriott, Franklin 9

Sun 10:00 am

DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

Room:
96.40

RIGHTS CLAIMS, RELIGION,


AND THE LAW
Marriott, Franklin 10

GENDER AND EXECUTIVE


REPRESENTATION IN LATIN
AMERICA
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Room:
45.44
Room:

METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES
IN THE STUDY OF DISTRICTING
AND APPORTIONMENT
Marriott, Meeting Room 502
POLICY PREFERENCES AND
POLICY OUTCOMES
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

88.45

Room:
56.43
Room:

PROPORTIONAL
REPRESENTATION IN NEW
ZEALAND AFTER TWENTY
YEARS
Marriott, Meeting Room 502
REDISTRICTING IN THE US AND
ABROAD
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:
26.37

Room:

REPRESENTATION IN VARIOUS
FORMS
Marriott, Meeting Room 501
REPRESENTING WOMEN,
REPRESENTING WOMEN'S
INTERESTS
Marriott, Franklin 7

Room:

SECOND ORDER ELECTIONS


AND BEYOND: THE 2014 AND
2015 FRENCH LOCAL
ELECTIONS
Loews, Commonwealth D

Room:
109.38

Room:

THE IMPACT OF DELIBERATIVE


MINI-PUBLICS
Marriott, Meeting Room 502
WOMENS PRESENCE AND
PERFORMANCE: QUOTAS,
PARTIES, AND
INTERSECTIONALITY
Marriott, Franklin 7

LOBBYING
Marriott, Salon J

11.44

NEW FRONTIERS IN GROUPPARTY INTERACTIONS


Marriott, Salon J

Room:

109.43
Fri 2:00 pm
Room:

Sun 10:00 am

83.41
Room:
51.42

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:
92.42
Room:
96.41

Sun 8:00 am
Room:
56.44

Co-sponsored by French Politics Group

51.41

60.44
Room:

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

108.4

Room:

FORMS OF PARTY
ORGANIZATION AND
LEADERSHIP
Marriott, Salon J

76.43

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

109.41

88.46

Room:
Fri 12:00 pm

40.46
Room:

Sun 10:00 am

45.45
Room:
76.44

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Room:

26.41

Room:
109.42
Room:
17.40
Room:
22.43
Room:

DIVISION 35: POLITICAL


ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES

40.42

COALITION IMPLICATIONS OF
RANKED CHOICE VOTING
ELECTIONS
Marriott, Salon J

Room:

CONCEPTUALIZING POLITICAL
PARTIES
Marriott, Salon I
DYNAMICS OF MULTIPARTY
SYSTEMS
Marriott, Salon J
ENGINES OF PARTY COALITION
CHANGE
Marriott, Salon J

Thu 4:00 pm

PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN
AMERICAN POLITICS
Marriott, Salon J
POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS
AND POLICY
Marriott, Salon J
PRIMARIES AND CANDIDATE
SELECTION
Marriott, Salon J
SETH MASKET'S "THE
INEVITABLE PARTY"
Marriott, Salon J
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND
INTEREST GROUPS
Marriott, Salon J
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND
POLITICAL PARTIES
Marriott, Salon J
THE DYNAMICS AND
CONSEQUENCES OF INTERNAL
PARTY POLITICS
Marriott, Salon J
THE GEOGRAPHY OF PARTY
POLITICS
Marriott, Salon J
THE POLITICS OF AMERICAN
PARTY IDEOLOGIES
Marriott, Salon J
U.S. FEDERAL CAMPAIGN
FINANCE IN A TIME OF
TRANSITION
Marriott, Salon KL
WOMENS PARTIES AROUND
THE WORLD: ORIGINS,
SUBSTANCE AND IMPACT
Marriott, Franklin 6

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING


BEHAVIOR

Sun 10:00 am
76.45
Thu 10:00 am
Room:

ACCOUNTABILITY AND
ATTRIBUTION OF
RESPONSIBILITY IN ELECTIONS
Marriott, Salon C

Sat 8:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 183

183

Division Panels

83.40

88.47

Room:

ACHEN AND BARTELS'


DEMOCRACY FOR REALISTS:
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS
Marriott, Salon D

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

107.45
Room:
109.44

Room:
11.13

Room:

ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF


PARTISAN POLARIZATION
Marriott, Salon D
ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF
PARTISANSHIP AND PARTISAN
BIASES
Marriott, Salon D
AGGREGATE DATA IN THE
STUDY OF POLITICAL
BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Franklin 11

Room:

CAMPAIGN DYNAMICS, SOCIAL


MEDIA AND VOTER
PREFERENCES
Marriott, Salon C

Room:

Room:

CAMPAIGNING, PRIMING AND


VOTE CHOICES
Marriott, Salon C

26.43

Thu 8:00 am
Room:

Room:
109.45

Room:
22.44

CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES


OF TURNOUT
Marriott, Salon D
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
ON POLITICAL BEHAVIOUR:
NOVEL INSIGHTS USING THE
CSES
Marriott, Salon KL

Room:

CORRUPTION, CLIENTELISM
AND VOTE BUYING
Marriott, Salon D

96.42
Room:

ECONOMIC VOTING
Marriott, Salon D

88.48

ELECTORAL RULES, ELITE


STRATEGIES AND VOTE
CHOICES
Marriott, Salon C

Room:
22.45

Room:
45.41

Room:

11.46

Room:

ELITE POLARIZATION AND THE


EFFECTS ON VOTING
BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Salon C
FEMALE CANDIDATES: VOTER
ATTITUDES AND ELECTORAL
SUCCESS
Marriott, Franklin 7

92.43
Room:
96.43
Room:
83.42

Thu 10:00 am
Room:
60.45

Thu 10:00 am
Room:
56.43
Sun 10:00 am
Room:

45.46
Thu 2:00 pm
Room:

Thu 4:00 pm

PARTY COMPETITION AND


VOTER RESPONSES
Marriott, Salon C

Sat 2:00 pm

PARTY COMPETITION IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Marriott, Salon C
POLITICAL PREFERENCES AND
ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR IN THE
ARGENTINE 2015 ELECTIONS
Marriott, Salon D
POPULISM AND VOTING FOR
THE EXTREMES
Marriott, Salon C
REDISTRICTING IN THE US AND
ABROAD
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

SOCIAL IDENTITY AND


POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Salon C

Fri 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Sat 4:00 pm

56.45
Room:

STRATEGIC VOTING
Marriott, Salon D

51.9

STUDYING AND MEASURING


ELECTORAL INTEGRITY
Marriott, Franklin 12

Sat 12:00 pm
Room:

Fri 2:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL


METHODOLOGY

Thu 2:00 pm

40.47

Room:
Fri 10:00 am

45.47

Room:

GET IT RIGHT THE FIRST


TIME: PREFERENCES FOR
LEADER RESPONSIVENESS AND
REFORM
Marriott, Salon I

40.48

Thu 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

Page 184

ORDERS OF MAGNITUDE: BIG


DATA APPLICATIONS IN
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Marriott, Salon D

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

184

METHODOLOGICAL
CHALLENGES AND ADVANCES
USING THE CSES
Marriott, Salon D

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL


METHODOLOGY

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

17.42

HOW DOES ELECTORAL


CONTEXT AFFECT VOTER AND
CANDIDATE BEHAVIOR?
Marriott, Salon D

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL


METHODOLOGY

Sun 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

17.41

51.43

Sun 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL


METHODOLOGY

26.42

11.45

THE CAUSES AND POLITICAL


CONSEQUENCES OF PARTIES'
POLICY IMAGES
Marriott, Salon C
THE POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
AND REPRESENTATION OF
WOMEN
Marriott, Salon D

Fri 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Room:

TURNOUT, POLITICAL
PARTICIPATION, AND
ENGAGEMENT
Marriott, Salon D

Fri 8:00 am

Room:
92.44
Room:
56.46
Room:
107.46
Room:
92.38

Room:

TURNOUT: CAUSES AND


CONSEQUENCES
Marriott, Salon D

Sat 8:00 am

VARIETIES OF ELECTORAL
CLIENTELISM AND COERCION
Marriott, Salon D

Sat 2:00 pm
Room:
51.37

VOTE CHOICES, IDEOLOGY


AND POLITICAL PARTIES
Marriott, Salon C

Fri 2:00 pm
Room:

Room:

VOTER PERCEPTIONS OF
POLITICIANS' COMPETENCE
Marriott, Salon J

Sun 8:00 am

WHEN WOMEN RUN: NEW


PERSPECTIVES ON GENDER
AND POLITICAL RECRUITMENT
Marriott, Franklin 4

11.46

Sat 2:00 pm
Room:

WOMEN AND POLITICAL


PARTICIPATION
Marriott, Franklin 7

17.43

Sun 8:00 am
Room:
22.46

DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Room:

ACHEN AND BARTELS'


DEMOCRACY FOR REALISTS:
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS
Marriott, Salon D

Room:
26.42

Room:

AUTHORS MEET CRITICS:


"WHO GOVERNS?" BY JACOBS
AND DRUCKMAN
Loews, Commonwealth A1
CAMPAIGN DYNAMICS, SOCIAL
MEDIA AND VOTER
PREFERENCES
Marriott, Salon C

Room:
40.41
Room:

Fri 4:00 pm

Room:

CAMPAIGNING, PRIMING AND


VOTE CHOICES
Marriott, Salon C

Room:

CONVENIENCE SAMPLING AND


REPRESENTATIVENESS OF
PUBLIC OPINION SURVEYS
Marriott, Franklin 12

Room:

ESTIMATING SUB-NATIONAL
PREFERENCES: COMPLEX
APPLICATIONS &
IMPROVEMENTS OF MRP
Marriott, Franklin 11

40.49

76.47

Room:
88.49

Thu 10:00 am
Room:
107.47

Fri 4:00 pm

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL


METHODOLOGY

76.11

Thu 8:00 am

HONESTY: EFFECTS OF
SCANDALS AND CORRUPTION
ON TRUST, ATTITUDES, AND
BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Salon I
I GO TO EXTREMES: SOCIAL
AND AFFECTIVE BASES FOR
POLITICAL POLARIZATION
Marriott, Salon I

Thu 10:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

INNOVATIONS IN ASSESSING
GENDER GAPS AND ATTITUDES
Marriott, Franklin 7

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

60.12

GET IT RIGHT THE FIRST


TIME: PREFERENCES FOR
LEADER RESPONSIVENESS AND
REFORM
Marriott, Salon I

IT'S A MATTER OF TRUST:


INSTITUTIONAL AND
ATTITUDINAL EFFECTS ON
TRUST
Marriott, Salon I

Fri 8:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

17.41

Fri 12:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

60.46

GENDER AND POLITICAL


ATTITUDES
Marriott, Franklin 7

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

88.47

EVERYBODY HAS A DREAM:


EFFECTS OF RACE AND
RACIALIZATION ON PUBLIC
OPINION
Marriott, Franklin 8

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

107.41

83.43

109.15
Sat 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

Room:

JUST THE WAY YOU ARE:


IMMIGRATION AND POLITICAL
TOLERANCE
Marriott, Salon I
KEEPING THE FAITH:
RESISTANCE TO FACTS AND
EFFECTS OF MISINFORMATION
Marriott, Salon I
LAST OF THE BIG TIME
SPENDERS: THE ATTITUDINAL
EFFECTS OF SES AND
INEQUALITY
Marriott, Salon I
MEASUREMENT ISSUES IN
SURVEY RESEARCH
Marriott, Franklin 11

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL


PSYCHOLOGY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

45.46
Room:

SOCIAL IDENTITY AND


POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Marriott, Salon C

Fri 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 185

185

Division Panels

76.46

26.44

Room:
83.44

Room:

SOMETIMES A FANTASY:
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
OF CONSPIRACY
ENDORSEMENT
Marriott, Salon I
SURPRISES: A MAGICAL
MYSTERY TOUR OF PUBLIC
OPINION AND POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY
Marriott, Salon I

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:

Room:
92.45

Room:

TARGETED SURVEYS: HOW TO


STUDY THE UNDERSTUDIED
Marriott, Salon I
THE (COMPARATIVE)
STRANGER: PERSPECTIVES ON
REGIME SUPPORT AND
REPRESENTATION
Marriott, Salon I

Sat 10:00 am

Room:
45.48

Room:
96.34

Room:

THE STRANGER: ASSESSING


POLICY RESPONSIVENESS AND
ISSUE OWNERSHIP
Marriott, Franklin 8
TOMORROW IS TODAY: CAUSES
AND CONSEQUENCES OF
POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION
Marriott, Salon I
UNDERSTANDING MASS
OPINION ABOUT PUBLIC
POLICIES
Marriott, Franklin 6

Room:
96.44

Room:

WE DIDN'T START THE FIRE:


EMOTIONAL AND ATTITUDINAL
EFFECTS OF TERRORISM
Marriott, Salon I
YOU'RE ONLY HUMAN:
ANTECEDENTS AND
CONSEQUENCES OF POLITICAL
POLARIZATION
Marriott, Salon I

COVERING CAMPAIGNS
PCC, 112-A

60.47

DOES THE INFORMATION


ENVIRONMENT POLARIZE?
PCC, 112-B

83.45
Fri 12:00 pm
Room:
40.50
Sat 2:00 pm
Room:

56.48

Thu 10:00 am
Room:
88.38
Fri 10:00 am

Room:

26.45

Fri 2:00 pm

Room:
60.39

Room:

22.47

A POTPOURRI OF FRAMING
AND RHETORICAL EFFECTS
PCC, 112-A

Room:

88.50

26.46
Thu 10:00 am

Room:

Room:
22.48

Room:

186

CAN THE MEDIA PUNISH AND


SUPPRESS BAD BEHAVIOR?
PCC, 112-B
COMMUNICATION AND THE
DYNAMICS OF
AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES
Marriott, Room 408

Thu 2:00 pm

109.46

Page 186

Fri 8:00 am

HOW WE USE THE NEWS NOW:


MEDIA CONSUMPTION AND
ATTENTION IN THE 21ST
CENTURY
PCC, 112-B
IMPROVING DEMOCRACY
WITH NEW TECHNOLOGIES,
CIVIC ACTION, & SOCIAL
SCIENCE
Marriott, Franklin 1

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

INNOVATIONS IN MEASURING
POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
PCC, 112-B
JIHADI BRIDES: SOURCES AND
OUTCOMES OF FEMALE
RADICALIZATION
Marriott, Franklin 7

Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

MEDIA COVERAGE OF
INSTITUTIONS AND POLICY
DEBATES
PCC, 112-B
POLITICAL ELITES AND
SOCIAL MEDIA
PCC, 112-A

Sat 12:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
AND THE INTERNET
PCC, 112-B

Sun 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION


TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Sun 8:00 am
92.48
Thu 2:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION


TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Room:
107.48

GENDER AND POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION
PCC, 112-B

Fri 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Sat 4:00 pm

Room:

A MYRIAD OF MEDIA EFFECTS


PCC, 112-A

FLIP IT AND REVERSE IT:


MEDIA EFFECTS ON POLITICAL
ELITES
PCC, 112-B

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Sat 4:00 pm

DIVISION 38: POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION
17.45
Room:

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

56.47

11.47
Room:

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS

17.44

COMPARING AMERICAN AND


FRENCH PRESIDENTIAL
CAMPAIGNS
Marriott, Room 412

Co-sponsored by Association Franaise de Science Politique

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL


PSYCHOLOGY

51.44

57.1

Room:

SOCIAL MEDIA AND


ELECTORAL CAMPAIGNS
Marriott, Salon KL

Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION


TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Room:

SOCIAL MEDIA AND POLITICAL


CONVERSATION ONLINE
Marriott, Salon KL

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION


TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

96.45
Room:
76.48
Room:
92.46

Room:
83.46
Room:
56.49

Room:
51.45

Room:

THE EFFECTS OF CAMPAIGN


ADVERTISING
PCC, 112-B
THE MAKING OF MODERN
CAMPAIGN COMMUNICATION
PCC, 112-B
THE POWERS THAT BE: MEDIA
SYSTEMS AND REGULATIONS
AROUND THE WORLD
PCC, 112-B
VOICE, DELIBERATION,
DISCUSSION, EXPRESSION
PCC, 112-A
WHAT DRIVES ECONOMIC
NEWS? DISTRIBUTIVE,
COMPARATIVE, AND NEWMEDIA PERSPECTIVES
PCC, 112-A
WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT WHAT
THEY KNOW: INFLUENCES ON
POLITICAL KNOWLEDGE
PCC, 110-AB

Room:
45.40
Room:

ACTOR INTERESTS IN
INTERNATIONAL
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Marriott, Room 407
CITIES, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND
SUSTAINABILITY POLICY
Marriott, Room 310

22.49
Room:
92.47
Sat 8:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Room:

CLIMATE ACTION AT STATE


AND LOCAL LEVELS
Marriott, Room 407

Sat 10:00 am

Room:
22.33
Room:

CONSTITUENCIES IN
ENVIRONMENTAL
MANAGEMENT
Marriott, Room 407
CRISIS AND DISASTER
RESPONSE
Marriott, Franklin 6

Fri 2:00 pm

Room:

DISASTERS, RISK AND


GOVERNMENT DECISIONS
Marriott, Room 307

109.47
Room:

ENERGY POLITICS AND POLICY


Loews, Commonwealth A1

Room:
51.46
Room:
76.39

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:

ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEM
FRAMES AND PUBLIC
PERCEPTIONS
Marriott, Room 307

Thu 10:00 am

GLOBAL POLITICS AND


ENERGY TRANSITIONS
Marriott, Room 307
INFORMATION, INVESTMENT,
AND VOLUNTARINESS IN
ENVIRONMENTAL
GOVERNANCE
Marriott, Room 307
INSTITUTIONS AND
COOPERATION IN WATER
GOVERNANCE
Marriott, Room 407
INTERNATIONAL CLIMATE
CHANGE POLITICS
Marriott, Room 310
KNOWLEDGE AND IDEOLOGY
IN ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Marriott, Room 310
POLITICS AND POLICY OF
URBAN TRANSIT
Marriott, Room 307

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

26.35
Room:

SCHOOL POLITICS
Marriott, Room 309

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL
POLITICS

Fri 2:00 pm
26.47

Fri 10:00 am
Room:

STATE AND LOCAL


ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
AND POLICY
Marriott, Room 307

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

76.49

Fri 8:00 am
Room:
56.34

Fri 4:00 pm
Room:

THE CAUSES AND OUTCOMES


OF DIVERSE NATIONAL AND
SUB-NATIONAL CLIMATE
POLICIES
Marriott, Room 310
THE POLITICS OF
ENVIRONMENTAL, ENERGY,
AND FOOD POLICY ISSUES
Marriott, Franklin 9

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

DIVISION 40: INFORMATION


TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

11.48

Room:
96.46

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

60.48

Room:
45.49

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

40.51

Room:

Sat 4:00 pm

DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY


AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
56.50

17.46

40.52

Thu 8:00 am

Room:
Sun 10:00 am

109.48

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

Room:

AUTHORS/CRITICS
ROUNDTABLE: INTERNET
GOVERNANCE RESEARCH
METHODS
Marriott, Salon KL
DIGITAL ADAPTATIONS:
INSTITUTIONS AND BEHAVIOR
IN THE DIGITAL AGE
PCC, 104-A

Fri 8:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 187

187

Division Panels

88.51

26.48
Room:
88.38

Room:

DIGITAL PROTEST AND


POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
Marriott, Salon KL
IMPROVING DEMOCRACY
WITH NEW TECHNOLOGIES,
CIVIC ACTION, & SOCIAL
SCIENCE
Marriott, Franklin 1

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:

Room:

INTERNET POLITICS BEYOND


WESTERN DEMOCRACIES
Marriott, Salon KL

40.53
Room:

22.50
Room:

INTERNET [AND] GOVERNANCE


Marriott, Salon KL

22.54

MEDIA, TECHNOLOGY AND


HUMAN RIGHT ADVOCACY
PCC, 104-B

Room:

Fri 12:00 pm

88.52

Room:
45.51

Thu 2:00 pm
Room:
Thu 2:00 pm

92.49

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS

Room:
45.50
Room:
26.46
Room:

POLICY RESPONSES TO THE


INTERNET
Marriott, Salon KL
POLITICAL ELITES AND
SOCIAL MEDIA
PCC, 112-A

Fri 10:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

60.49

Room:

Room:

POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
AND THE INTERNET
PCC, 112-B

60.38
Sun 10:00 am
Room:

Room:

SOCIAL MEDIA AND


ELECTORAL CAMPAIGNS
Marriott, Salon KL

83.47
Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION

88.51
Room:

SOCIAL MEDIA AND POLITICAL


CONVERSATION ONLINE
Marriott, Salon KL

Room:

Room:

THE PAST, PRESENT, AND


FUTURE OF DIGITAL POLITICS
RESEARCH: A ROUNDTABLE
Marriott, Salon KL

56.52
Room:

Room:

THE POLITICAL EFFECTS OF


SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE MIDDLE
EAST
Marriott, Salon KL

22.51

Thu 8:00 am

76.50

Room:

DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE,


AND FILM
56.51
Room:
96.48
Room:

188

AMERICA IN LITERATURE'S
HALL OF MIRRORS
PCC, 110-AB
BEYOND POWER: WOMEN,
POLITICS, AND DEMOCRACY
PCC, 111-A

Page 188

POLITICS AT THE THRESHOLD:


MIGRATION, IDENTITY, AND
STATEHOOD
PCC, 107-A
WILLINGLY SUSPENDING OUR
DISBELIEF: THE POWER OF
ART AND FICTION
PCC, 110-AB

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

ALTERNATIVES TO THE
NEOLIBERAL CITY
Marriott, Room 307

Fri 4:00 pm

BORDER POLITICS AND


ACTIVISM: MIGRANTS,
REFUGEES, DRUG
TRAFFICKING
Marriott, Salon KL

110.4
Room:

CRITICAL EXPLORATIONS OF
CULTURE AND MEDIA
Marriott, Salon KL

CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
INCARCERATION IN THE U.S.
Marriott, Meeting Room 502
CRITICAL THEORY IN THE 21ST
CENTURY: NEW CHALLENGES
AND DIRECTIONS
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

INTERROGATING THE
ANTHROPOCENE
Marriott, Room 411
Co-sponsored by Green Politics and Theory

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF


POLITICAL THEORY

Fri 2:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

POLITICAL LITERATURE IN
THE TRANSFORMATION TO
THE DEMOCRATIC AGE
PCC, 110-AB

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE,


AND FILM

Sat 4:00 pm

Room:
11.49

HOUELLEBECQS SUBMISSION:
POLITICS, LITERATURE AND
THE CLASH OF CIVILIZATIONS
PCC, 111-A

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND


CITIZENSHIP

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION

96.47

HONOR, EXCELLENCE, AND


THE RELATIVITY OF VALUES
PCC, 110-AB

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION

92.48

Fri 2:00 pm

DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL


COMMUNICATION

109.46

CRITICAL EXPLORATIONS OF
CULTURE AND MEDIA
Marriott, Salon KL

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION

51.47

56.52

Sun 10:00 am

Room:
17.47

Room:
26.49
Room:
11.50

Room:

NEW GLOBAL POLITICS?:


INTERNATIONALIZING THE
CAUCUS FOR A NEW
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Marriott, Meeting Room 502
POLITICIZING THE CAMPUS:
EDUCATIONAL SPACES AND
NEOLIBERALISM
Marriott, Salon KL

Fri 8:00 am

11.53

Room:

Room:

Thu 10:00 am

POPULISM AND BIGOTRY IN A


TIME OF INEQUALITY
Marriott, Room 408

Thu 4:00 pm

60.51

Room:
40.55

PRESENT ENVIRONMENTAL
INEQUALITIES AND
TRANSFORMATIVE
POTENTIALITIES
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Thu 8:00 am
Room:
83.48

SOCIAL MOVEMENTS, LABOR,


AND HUMAN RIIGHTS
PCC, 110-AB

Sat 10:00 am
Room:
51.48

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS

83.37

Room:

STRUCTURING DISADVANTAGE:
THE FAMILY, PRISONS, AND
THE UNIVERSITY
Marriott, Franklin 7

Room:
Sat 10:00 am
76.51

Room:
109.49

Room:

TRANSFORMING TEACHING,
TRANSFORMING SOCIETY
Marriott, Salon KL
WHERE IS THE
COUNTERMOVEMENT? LABOR
MOBILIZATION IN AN ERA OF
PRECARIOUSNESS
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Room:

Room:
24.3

Sun 10:00 am
Room:
26.50

WORKERS, CORPORATIONS,
AND POLICY: GLOBAL
PERSPECTIVES ON LABOR AND
CAPITAL
Marriott, Room 410

Room:
17.48

Room:

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
NATIONALISM, SELFDETERMINATION AND
SOVEREIGNTY
Loews, Commonwealth A1

NEW RESEARCH IN GENOCIDE


AND MASS KILLING
Loews, Commonwealth A1

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

THE INSTRUMENTAL USES OF


NORMS IN INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Loews, Commonwealth A2

Sat 8:00 am

THE SLOW PACE OF BIG


TRANSFORMATIONS IN
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
PCC, 114

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:

THE STORIES WE TELL:


HISTORY, IDENTITY, IMAGE
AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Loews, Commonwealth A2

Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am
45.52

DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL


HISTORY AND POLITICS
CONFLICT AND COOPERATION:
POWER TRANSITIONS AND THE
INTERNATIONAL ORDER
Loews, Commonwealth A1

NATIONALIST IDEOLOGIES:
LEGACIES OF THE PAST AND
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE
FUTURE
Loews, Commonwealth A2

Fri 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by Theme Panel

Co-sponsored by Labor Project

56.53

MODERNIST
INTERNATIONALISMS AND NEW
WORLD ORDERS
Loews, Commonwealth A1

Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by Labor Project

77.6

INNOVATION AND EVOLUTION


IN INTERNATIONAL LAW,
NORMS AND THE LAWS OF
WAR
Loews, Commonwealth A2

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE


METHODS

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

60.50

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE


METHODS

Co-sponsored by Green Politics and Theory

83.51

HOW TO BUILD A NATIONAL


IDENTITY DATABASE (LIKE A
CONSTRUCTIVIST)
Marriott, Franklin 13

Room:

UNDERSTANDING US FOREIGN
POLICY: NEW RESEARCH WITH
HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS
Loews, Commonwealth A1

22.52
Room:

WHERE IDEAS MATTER


Loews, Commonwealth A2

Thu 2:00 pm

DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE


DEMOCRATIZATION

Fri 2:00 pm
56.54

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Room:
22.53

Room:

ANALYZING THE
INTERNATIONAL DIMENSION
OF AUTHORITARIAN RULE
Marriott, Franklin 2
BREAKING THE BOUNDS:
CONTENTIOUS POLITICS AND
THE TRANSITION TO
DEMOCRACY
Marriott, Franklin 3

Fri 2:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 189

189

Division Panels

40.54

107.49

Room:
40.56
Room:
26.51
Room:
92.50
Room:
96.49

Room:
107.50

Room:
45.53

Room:
17.49
Room:
45.54

Room:
109.50

Room:
83.49

Room:
56.55

Room:
88.53
Room:
76.52
Room:

190

CONFLICT, COOPTATION, AND


MANIPULATION: THE POLITICS
OF NON-DEMOCRATIC
ELECTIONS
Marriott, Franklin 4
CONSTITUTION MAKING AND
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE
Marriott, Franklin 4
CONTENTION, INEQUALITY
AND DEMOCRATIZATION
Marriott, Franklin 3
DEMOCRATIC BACKSLIDING:
CURRENT AND PAST
Marriott, Franklin 3
DICTATORS, REBELS, AND
MILITIAS PARTICIPATION IN
POLITICS: CAUSES AND
EFFECTS
Marriott, Franklin 3
EFFECTIVE DEMOCRACY AID?
EXPLORING FAVORABLE AND
UNFAVORABLE CONDITIONS
Marriott, Franklin 5
ELITES, MASSES, AND
CULTURE: THE ARAB SPRING
IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Marriott, Franklin 3
FORMAL MODELS OF
AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS
Marriott, Franklin 6
HOW SUCCESSFUL
TRANSFORMATIONS
OVERCOME SOCIAL DILEMMAS
Marriott, Franklin 4
INSTITUTIONS, ECONOMIC
RESOURCES AND THE
DURABILITY OF
AUTHORITARIANISM
Marriott, Franklin 5
PATRIMONIALISM,
DEMOCRACY, STABILITY AND
GROWTH: CROSS-REGIONAL
PERSPECTIVES
Marriott, Franklin 3
POLITICAL TRUST ACROSS
DEMOCRACIES OLD & NEW:
CAUSES, CONSEQUENCES,
COMPARISONS
Marriott, Franklin 3
POPULAR SUPPORT FOR
AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES
Marriott, Franklin 3
PROBLEMS OF
AUTHORITARIAN STABILITY
Marriott, Franklin 4

Sun 8:00 am

Room:
83.50
Fri 8:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm
Room:
109.51
Sat 2:00 pm
Room:
60.52
Sat 4:00 pm

Room:
11.51
Sun 8:00 am
Room:
60.53

Fri 10:00 am
Room:

Page 190

SOURCES OF REGIME
DURABILITY AND
TRANSFORMATION IN CHINA
Marriott, Franklin 2
THE CAUSES AND
CONSEQUENCES OF
DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE:
NEW QUANTITATIVE
RESEARCH
Marriott, Franklin 4
THE INTERNATIONAL SOURCES
OF DEMOCRATIZATION AND
AUTHORITARIANISM
Marriott, Franklin 4
THE QUALITY OF ELECTIONS:
MANIPULATION AND
MONITORING
Marriott, Franklin 2
THE QUESTION OF
DEMOCRACY IN ASIA
Marriott, Franklin 4
THE STATE AND
PARTICIPATION IN NEW
DEMOCRACIES
Marriott, Franklin 4

Fri 12:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Sun 10:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

Thu 8:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS


92.51

Room:

EXPANDING THE SCOPE OF


HUMAN RIGHTS AND
HUMANITARIANISM: NEW
DIRECTIONS
PCC, 104-B

45.25
Room:

HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES


PCC, 104-A

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL


COLLABORATION

Sun 10:00 am

40.57
Room:
17.50

Sat 10:00 am

Room:

HUMAN RIGHTS AND FOREIGN


POLICY
PCC, 104-B
HUMAN RIGHTS AS
EMANCIPATORY POLITICS?
PCC, 104-B

Fri 8:00 am

Thu 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL


THEORY

11.52
Fri 2:00 pm
Room:
60.54

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:
22.54

Sat 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

51.49

Room:

IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
CELEBRITIES IN US AND
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
PCC, 104-B
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
AND HUMAN RIGHTS
COMPLIANCE
PCC, 104-A
MEDIA, TECHNOLOGY AND
HUMAN RIGHT ADVOCACY
PCC, 104-B

Thu 8:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION


TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Room:

MIGRATION AND HUMAN


RIGHTS
PCC, 106-AB

Sat 8:00 am

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND


CITIZENSHIP

26.52
Room:
83.51
Room:

MONITORING AND ENFORCING


HUMAN RIGHTS
PCC, 104-B
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS, LABOR,
AND HUMAN RIIGHTS
PCC, 110-AB

40.58

11.53

Thu 4:00 pm
Room:

Room:

56.57

109.53

Room:

Room:
109.52

Room:

76.54

Room:
45.55

Room:
107.51

Room:

THE ROLE OF NORMS AND


MEDIA IN FULFILLING HUMAN
RIGHTS
PCC, 104-B
TRESPASSING OR
TRANSFORMATION: HUMAN
RIGHTS AND STATE
SOVEREIGNTY
Loews, Commonwealth A2

17.51

83.52
Room:
51.48

UNITED STATES FOREIGN


POLICY ON TRANSITIONAL
JUSTICE
PCC, 112-A

Room:

WHAT FACTORS AID IN HUMAN


RIGHTS ACCEPTANCE AND
FULFILLMENT?
PCC, 110-AB

60.55
Fri 10:00 am
Room:
22.55
Sun 8:00 am

Room:
107.52
Room:
57.5

Room:

APPROACHES TO
ETHNOGRAPHY AND
INTERVIEWING
Marriott, Franklin 13
CAUSAL INFERENCE AND
BAYESIAN ANALYSIS
Marriott, Franklin 12
COLORING THE FIELD:
EXAMINING POSITIONALITY IN
FIELD RESEARCH
Marriott, Room 414

Room:

Room:

DA-RT AND QUALITATIVE


METHODS: THE CASE OF
PROCESS TRACING
PCC, 204-B

Sun 10:00 am

MIXED METHOD RESEARCH


DESIGNS
Marriott, Franklin 13
NEW ETHNOGRAPHIC
APPROACHES
Marriott, Franklin 13
NEW RESEARCH IN GENOCIDE
AND MASS KILLING
Loews, Commonwealth A1

Thu 10:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

NON-TRANSPARENCY AND
THEORY GENERATION IN THE
STUDY OF AUTHORITARIANISM
Marriott, Franklin 11
ON THE ETHNOGRAPHIC
PROOF
Marriott, Franklin 13

Fri 4:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods

45.56

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:

PROMISES AND PITFALLS OF


ECLECTICISM IN IR
Marriott, Franklin 11

76.55
Room:

PUTTING CONCEPTS TO WORK


Marriott, Franklin 13

92.52

QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO
CAUSAL INFERENCE
Marriott, Franklin 13

Room:

Fri 10:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am
96.51

Fri 2:00 pm
Room:
107.53

Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods

26.13

MECHANISMS AND PROCESSTRACING WHAT ARE WE


ACTUALLY TRACING?
Marriott, Franklin 13

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL


HISTORY AND POLITICS

Sat 8:00 am

DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS


26.53

Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL


COLLABORATION

VIOLENCE,
HUMANITARIANISM, AND
HUMAN RIGHTS
PCC, 104-B

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS

Sat 4:00 pm

Sun 10:00 am

INTERPRETING POLITICAL
IDEAS, BELIEFS, AND
DISCOURSES
Marriott, Franklin 11

Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL


THEORY

96.50

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL


HISTORY AND POLITICS

Room:
THE POLITICAL THEORY OF
HUMAN RIGHTS
Marriott, Room 310

HOW TO BUILD A NATIONAL


IDENTITY DATABASE (LIKE A
CONSTRUCTIVIST)
Marriott, Franklin 13

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

56.56

ETHNIC IDENTIFICATION IN
SOCIAL CONTEXT
Marriott, Franklin 11

Thu 4:00 pm
Room:

QUALITATIVE METHODS IN
THE POLITICAL SCIENCE
DISCIPLINE
Marriott, Franklin 13
REVIVING CONCEPT
FORMATION. OR, RETURNING
TO BIG QUESTIONS IN
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Marriott, Salon KL

Sat 4:00 pm

Sun 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 191

191

Division Panels

76.53

109.54

Room:

WHEN, WHERE, AND HOW TO


ADOPT MIXED-METHODS
RESEARCH DESIGNS
Marriott, Franklin 12

Sun 10:00 am

Room:

56.59

11.54
Room:

CONTROLLING THE BODY


PCC, 111-A

Thu 8:00 am

56.58
Room:

IDENTITY AND SEXUALITY


PCC, 111-A

Fri 2:00 pm

22.56
Room:

LOVE, SEX, AND MARRIAGE


PCC, 111-A

Thu 2:00 pm

17.52

SEXUALITY AND
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN
RIGHTS
PCC, 111-A

51.50

Room:
60.56
Room:

SEXUALITY AND POLITICS:


VARIOUS METHODOLOGICAL
APPROACHES
PCC, 111-A
TRANSGENDER POLITICS
PCC, 111-A

Room:

Room:
107.38

Room:

AUTHOR MEETS CRITIC:


PATRICIA STRACHS HIDING
POLITICS IN PLAIN SIGHT
Marriott, Franklin 8

Room:
88.54

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:

Room:
26.54

Room:
96.52

Room:
11.55

Room:
51.51

Room:

192

CITIZENS, COMMUNITIES, AND


CONSUMERS: THE POLITICS OF
GRASSROOTS HEALTH
ADVOCACY
PCC, 110-AB
OBAMACARE WARS:
FEDERALISM, STATE POLITICS,
AND THE AFFORDABLE CARE
ACT
PCC, 107-A
PUBLIC OPINION, POLICY
FEEDBACK AND THE
TRANSFORMING HEALTH
SYSTEM
Marriott, Meeting Room 501
THE POLITICS OF PUBLIC
HEALTH IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
PCC, 106-AB
THE POLITICS OF PUBLIC
HEALTH: TRANSFORMATION
OR STATUS QUO?
Marriott, Room 309

Fri 4:00 pm

Page 192

11.14

Thu 10:00 am
Room:

IDENTITIES, PUBLIC POLICIES


AND PARTICIPATION IN
CANADA
Marriott, Room 309

Sat 10:00 am

LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND


NATIONAL UNITY: POLICY
PREFERENCES AND PARTY
POLITICS
Marriott, Room 309

Sat 12:00 pm

ELITE NETWORKS AND


AUTHORITARIAN STABILITY
PCC, 111-A
METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES
IN SOCIAL NETWORK
ANALYSIS
Marriott, Room 306

Fri 10:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL


METHODOLOGY

26.55
Sun 8:00 am
Room:
40.59

Sat 8:00 am
Room:
83.54
Room:
Thu 4:00 pm

76.57

Room:
92.53
Sat 4:00 pm

Room:

17.10
Room:
Fri 12:00 pm

METHODOLOGICAL AND
EMPIRICAL APPLICATIONS OF
POLITICAL NETWORKS
PCC, 111-A
POLITICAL NETWORKS:
ESTIMATION, MEASUREMENT
AND INFERENCE
PCC, 111-A
POLITICAL NETWORKS:
LEADERSHIP NETWORKS
PCC, 111-A
POLITICAL NETWORKS:
POLITICAL DISCUSSION AND
SOCIAL INFLUENCE
PCC, 111-A
ROUNDTABLE: THE UPSIDES
AND DOWNSIDES OF STUDYING
POLITICS AS NETWORKS
PCC, 111-A

Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL


RESEARCH

Thu 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Fri 2:00 pm

DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS


45.57

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

76.56

THE TRANSFORMING HEALTH


SYSTEM: NEW ROLES FOR OLD
PLAYERS?
PCC, 107-A

Thu 10:00 am

DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND


HEALTH POLICY
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE: THE
ACA, MEDICAID, AND THE
POLITICS OF HEALTH CARE
PCC, 107-A

Fri 12:00 pm

DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS


83.53

Room:

17.53

THE POLITICS OF WOMEN'S


HEALTH POLICY
Marriott, Franklin 4

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND


POLITICS

Room:

51.38

CAUSAL INFERENCE IN
RANDOMIZED EXPERIMENTS
Marriott, Franklin 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

Thu 10:00 am

Room:
45.58

Room:
60.57
Room:
88.55
Room:
11.56
Room:
17.54
Room:
26.56
Room:
51.52
Room:
76.58

Room:
56.60

Room:

EXPERIMENTAL
INVESTIGATIONS IN VOTER
BEHAVIOR IN AFRICA
Marriott, Room 406

Fri 8:00 am

EXPERIMENTAL
INVESTIGATIONS OF HUMAN
RIGHTS
Marriott, Room 406

Fri 10:00 am

CONSTRUCTING MIGRANTS
PCC, 202-A

51.53

EMPLOYING MIGRANTS:
MULTIPLE PERSPECTIVES
PCC, 203-A

Room:
88.56

EXPERIMENTS ON GENDER
AND SEXUALITY
Marriott, Room 406

Fri 4:00 pm
Room:
56.61

EXPERIMENTS WITH ELITE


SUBJECTS
Marriott, Room 408

Sat 12:00 pm
Room:
22.57

FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON
SECURITY AND VIOLENCE
Marriott, Room 409
INNOVATIONS IN LAB AND
SURVEY EXPERIMENTS
Marriott, Room 409

109.55
Room:

Thu 8:00 am
Room:
11.57
Thu 10:00 am
Room:

METHODOLOGICAL
INNOVATIONS IN EXPERIMENTS
Marriott, Room 409

Thu 4:00 pm

76.53
Room:
88.57

17.55

Room:
83.55

Room:
45.22

Room:

ROUNDTABLE ON THE CPS


SPECIAL ISSUE ON
TRANSPARENCY IN THE
SOCIAL SCIENCES
Marriott, Room 406

Room:

92.54

17.56
Room:
83.56

Room:
26.57

CATEGORICAL PRECISION IN
THE STUDY OF IMMIGRANT
INTEGRATION
Loews, Commonwealth D

Room:

Room:

CONSTITUTING THE GLOBAL:


MIGRATION AS CRITICAL
GEOPOLITICS
PCC, 203-A

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 8:00 am

MIGRATION AND HUMAN


SECURITY
PCC, 203-A

Sat 12:00 pm

MIGRATION AND ITS EFFECTS


ON EUROPEAN POLITICS AND
SOCIETY
PCC, 112-B

Fri 10:00 am

MUSLIM IMMIGRANTS:
MULTIPLE PERSPECTIVES
PCC, 203-A
SUBNATIONAL IMMIGRATION
POLICY MAKING
PCC, 202-B

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Sat 10:00 am

Thu 10:00 am
96.53
Sat 10:00 am

Room:
40.61

Room:
45.59

MIGRATION AND HUMAN


RIGHTS
PCC, 106-AB

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS


AND SOCIETY

Fri 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
OF SENDING STATES
ENGAGEMENT WITH
DIASPORAS ABROAD
PCC, 203-A

HOST SOCIETY ATTITUDES


TOWARDS IMMIGRANTS:
MIGRANTS & HOST SOCIETIES
PCC, 202-B

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND


CITIZENSHIP

Room:

IMMIGRANT-RELATED
POLICIES AND THEIR EFFECTS
PCC, 202-B

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

NEW DIRECTIONS IN
EXPERIMENTS ON VOTING AND
ELECTIONS
Marriott, Room 407

BORDER POLITICS AND


ACTIVISM: MIGRANTS,
REFUGEES, DRUG
TRAFFICKING
Marriott, Salon KL

IMMIGRANT POLITICAL
BEHAVIOR
PCC, 203-A

Fri 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS

NATURAL AND QUASI


EXPERIMENTS
Marriott, Room 409

Room:

83.47

FREE MOVEMENT AND


INTERNAL BORDER
POLITICS: EUROPE IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Marriott, Franklin 8

Sun 10:00 am

THE EFFECTS OF CONTEXTS


AND POLICIES ON IMMIGRANT
INTEGRATION
PCC, 203-B
THE FUTURE OF IDENTITY
POLITICS IN THE UNITED
STATES
PCC, 202-B
THE REFUGEE CRISIS: THEORY
AND PRACTICE
PCC, 203-A
VARIETIES OF CITIZENSHIP:
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
AND POLITICAL OUTCOMES
PCC, 203-A

Sat 10:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 193

193

Division Panels

40.60

60.58

Room:
88.58
Room:
45.60

Room:
83.57
Room:
22.58

Room:
26.58
Room:
76.59

Room:
56.62
Room:

DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS

88.41

AFROBAROMETER AND
CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN
ISSUES
Marriott, Room 409

Room:

CONFLICT AND VIOLENCE:


ISSUES AND INTERVENTIONS
Marriott, Room 409
DEVELOPMENT DISCOURSES:
GLOBAL, REGIONAL, AND
LOCAL ACTORS
Marriott, Room 409
ELECTORAL STRATEGIES IN
AFRICA
Marriott, Room 409
ETHNICITY, PUBLIC GOODS,
AND ELECTORAL LOGICS IN
AFRICA
Loews, Commonwealth A1
POLITICS IN AUTHORITARIAN
STATES IN AFRICA
Loews, Commonwealth A1
PRECARIOUS RELATIONS
BETWEEN STATE AND SOCIETY
IN AFRICA'S SAHEL
Marriott, Room 409
YOUTH POLITICS AND
ACTIVISM IN AFRICA
Marriott, Room 409

Fri 4:00 pm

Room:
56.63

Room:
96.54

Room:
40.62

Room:

ADVANCES AND LIMITS IN


EPISTEMIC DEMOCRACY
Marriott, Room 309
DISCOURSE, CONFLICT, AND
INSTITUTIONS IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Marriott, Room 309
IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND THE
PROMISE OF A POLITICAL
'SCIENCE'
Marriott, Room 309
IDEATIONAL POLITICS: NEW
DIRECTIONS IN POLITICS AND
EPISTEMOLOGY
Marriott, Room 310

Sat 12:00 pm

Room:
17.57

Room:

194

AUTHORS MEET CRITICS:


HACKER AND PIERSON ON
AMERICAN AMENSIA
Marriott, Room 309
CLASS AND INEQUALITY IN
THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL
THOUGHT
Marriott, Room 309

Page 194

40.63

Room:
Sat 10:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

Thu 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

45.61
Room:

Fri 10:00 am

DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY


11.58

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE


AND POLITICS
92.55

EXPLORING SOURCES OF BIAS


IN LOCAL POLITICAL
OUTCOMES
Marriott, Room 307

UNEQUAL RESPONSIVENESS:
NEW EVIDENCE
Marriott, Room 309
WEALTHY DONORS,
ORGANIZED INTERESTS, AND
AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
Marriott, Room 309

Fri 10:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

RELATED GROUP PANELS


AGING POLICY AND POLITICS GROUP
12.1

Room:

POPULATION AGING:
CHALLENGES TO SOCIAL
POLICY
Marriott, Room 410

Thu 8:00 am

Room:

AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT

Room:

Room:
89.1

Room:
77.1

Room:
84.1

Room:
43.3

Room:

CARRESE, DEMOCRACY IN
MODERATION: MONTESQUIEU,
TOCQUEVILLE, AND
LIBERALISM: CARRESE'S
"DEMOCRACY IN
MODERATION: MONTESQUIEU,
TOCQUEVILLE, AND
LIBERALISM"
Loews, Commonwealth D
HOLLOWAY, HAMILTON V.
JEFFERSON: COMPLETING OR
BETRAYING THE FOUNDING?:
HOLLOWAY'S HAMILTON V.
JEFFERSON: COMPLETING OR
BETRAYING THE FOUNDING?
Loews, Commonwealth D
THE CONSTITUTION AND
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 2016:
WOULD A DOSE OF IT HELP?
Loews, Commonwealth D
THE JURISPRUDENCE AND
AMERICAN LEGACY OF
JUSTICE ANTONIN SCALIA
Loews, Commonwealth D
TRANSFORMING MARRIAGE
AND RELIGION IN AMERICAN
POLITICAL THOUGHT
PCC, 114

57.1
Sat 4:00 pm
Room:

23.1

Room:

Sat 12:00 pm

TRANSFORMATIONS IN THE
STATE AND NATIONAL
BOUNDARIES OF ISRAEL
Marriott, Room 410

Thu 2:00 pm

ASSOCIATION FOR POLITICS AND THE LIFE


SCIENCES
ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF
NATIONALITIES
52.1

Sat 8:00 am
Room:

Sat 10:00 am

97.2

Fri 10:00 am

CONFLICT AND IDENTITY IN


POSTCOMMUNIST STATES: NEW
RESEARCH ON POLITICS,
NATIONALISM, AND VIOLENCE
Marriott, Room 412

Fri 12:00 pm

ASSOCIATION OF CHINESE POLITICAL


STUDIES

Room:

CONFLICT AND COOPERATION:


STATE AND SOCIETY IN
CONTEMPORARY CHINA
Marriott, Room 412

Sat 4:00 pm

ASSOCIATION OF KOREAN POLITICAL


STUDIES
97.3
Room:

ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS

Room:

Fri 2:00 pm

ASSOCIATION FOR ISRAEL STUDIES

AMERICAN PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY INSTITUTE


APSA STATUS OF ASIANPACIFIC AMERICANS IN THE
PROFESSION COMMITTEE AND
STATUS OF LATINOS Y LATINAS
IN THE PROFESSION
COMMITTEE RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 410

COMPARING AMERICAN AND


FRENCH PRESIDENTIAL
CAMPAIGNS
Marriott, Room 412
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION

Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by Theme Panel

70.3

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 7:30 pm

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions
Co-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science

POLITICS OF KOREAN
PENINSULA
Marriott, Room 411

Sat 4:00 pm

BRAZILIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE


ASSOCIATION
89.2
Room:

DEMOCRACY IN LATIN
AMERICA
Marriott, Room 412

Sat 12:00 pm

BRITISH POLITICS GROUP


20.2

Room:

BREAKING NEWS PANEL:


TAKING STOCK OF THE BREXIT
SHOCK
PCC, 201-C

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by Theme Panel

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : 5001

Page 195

195

Related Group Panels

93.1

CAN THE LEFT GET RIGHT


WITH THE FOUNDING?
Loews, Commonwealth D

CONTEXUALIZING RACE
NARRATIVES IN ASIAN
AMERICAN POLITICAL
ACTIVISM
Marriott, Room 412

ASSOCIATION FRANAISE DE SCIENCE


POLITIQUE

AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE


97.1

84.2

84.3

Room:

CONTROLS, CUES, AND


INCENTIVES: STATE - SOCIETY
RELATIONS IN U.K. POLITICS
Marriott, Room 414

Sat 10:00 am

Room:

CAMPAIGN FINANCE RESEARCH GROUP


89.3
Room:

41.1

ROUND TABLE: MONEY AND


POLITICS, 2016
Marriott, Room 411

23.2

Sat 12:00 pm
Room:
77.2

CATO INSTITUTE
52.2

Room:

COLLABORATION BETWEEN
ACADEMIA AND POLITICAL
PRACTITIONERS
Marriott, Room 414

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:
52.3
Room:

CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM


61.1
Room:

DYNAMIC DE/CENTRALIZATION
IN FEDERATIONS
Marriott, Room 414

61.2

Fri 4:00 pm
Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND


INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS

93.2
Room:

51.35
Room:

INTERGOVERNMENTAL
POLITICS AND PERCEPTIONS
Marriott, Room 306

Fri 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND


INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism

CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF THE


CONSTITUTION

27.1

46.1

Room:

CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE RESEARCH
ROUNDTABLE
Marriott, Room 414

Room:

WINSTON S. CHURCHILL ON
THE BIG QUESTIONS OF
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Loews, Commonwealth B

Room:

CICERONIAN SOCIETY 2016


APSA RELATED GROUP PANEL
Marriott, Room 414

Room:
18.1

Room:

196

CONGRESS AS ENABLER OF
THE ADMINISTRATIVE STATE:
CAN IT BE REFORMED?
Loews, Commonwealth B
DO ADMINISTRATIVE
AGENCIES GET TOO MUCH
DEFERENCE? 30 YEARS OF
CHEVRON
Loews, Commonwealth B

Page 196

ROUNDTABLE ON THE CAMPUS


PROTESTS
Loews, Commonwealth B

84.4

THE IMPERIAL PRESIDENCY


REVISITED
Loews, Commonwealth B
THOMAS WEST ON MORALITY
AND THE FAMILY IN LOCKE
AND THE FOUNDERS
Loews, Commonwealth B

Fri 8:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

COMMITTEE FOR ANALYSIS OF MILITARY


OPERATIONS AND STRATEGY
Sat 12:00 pm

COMMITTEE FOR POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY


41.2

Room:
Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

MIGRANTS REPRESENTATION:
PARTIES, ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
AND MOBILIZATION
Marriott, Room 411

Fri 8:00 am

COMMITTEE ON VIABLE CONSTITIONALISM


COMMITTEE ON THE POLITICAL ECONOMY
OF THE GOOD SOCIETY
COMMUNITARIAN NETWORK
COMPARATIVE URBAN POLITICS
93.3

Thu 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
ROUNDTABLE
Loews, Commonwealth B

SUPREME COURT ROUNDTABLE


Loews, Commonwealth B

Room:

CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF


STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY
57.2

MACHIAVELLI ON WAR, PEACE,


AND REPUBLICANISM
Loews, Commonwealth B

97.5
Room:

46.2

CICERONIAN SOCIETY
97.4

HOBBES, ROUSSEAU, AND


BURKE ON RELIGION AND THE
STATE
Loews, Commonwealth B

Room:

Fri 10:00 am

CHURCHILL CENTRE, THE


89.4

GUNS ON CAMPUS? THE


PROFESSION AND CAMPUS
CARRY
Loews, Commonwealth B

STRAUSS ON PHILOSOPHY,
RELIGION, AND MORALITY
Loews, Commonwealth B

Room:

CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

FREEDOM OF RELIGION AND


SPEECH IN THE AMERICAN
SOCIAL COMPACT
Loews, Commonwealth B

Room:

CONSULTING THE PEOPLE ON


URBAN ISSUES: PARTICIPATION
AND INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN
Marriott, Room 412

Sat 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

COMPLEXITY AND PUBLIC POLICY GROUP


108.1

Room:

COMPLEXITYTHE SECRET:
TO UNIFY & IMPROVE
POLITICAL SCIENCE & POLICY
RESEARCH
Marriott, Room 414

Sun 8:00 am
Room:
61.3
Room:

CONFERENCE GROUP ON ITALIAN POLITICS


AND SOCIETY
12.2

Room:

ITALIAN POLITICS UNDER


RENZI AND BEYOND:
TRANSFORMATION OR
STAGNATION?
Marriott, Room 412

41.4

Thu 8:00 am

77.3
Room:
84.6

Room:
93.5

CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES

Room:

110.1
Room:
93.4
Room:

CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS AND


ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
Marriott, Room 414
PREFERENCES, IDENTITY, AND
TAIWAN'S 2016 ELECTION
Marriott, Room 414

27.2

Sun 10:00 am
Room:
89.5
Sat 2:00 pm
Room:
110.2

CONFERENCE GROUP ON THE MIDDLE EAST


84.5

Room:

SECTARIANISM AND FUTURE


OF RELIGIOUS AND ETHNIC
MINORITIES IN THE ARAB
WORLD
Marriott, Room 410

Room:
110.3
Room:
46.3
Room:

Room:

EMOTIONS AND DISCOURSE IN


PUBLIC POLICY
Marriott, Room 412

Room:

FRONTIERS IN DISASTER
RESEARCH: THE POLITICS OF
CATASTROPHE
Loews, Commonwealth A1

Room:
18.2
Room:
52.4

Room:
23.3
Room:

APOCALYPTIC INFLUENCES IN
CONTEMPORARY POLITICS
Loews, Commonwealth C
CONSTITUTIONS AND
FOUNDATIONS
Loews, Commonwealth C
DEMOCRATIZATION AND THE
EXPERIENCE OF FREEDOM IN
CENTRAL EASTERN EUROPE
Loews, Commonwealth C
EDUCATION AND HUMAN
NATURE
Loews, Commonwealth C

ROUNDTABLE: LEON CRAIG'S


THE PHILOSOPHER'S ENGLISH
KING
Loews, Commonwealth C
ROUNDTABLE: VACLAV
HAVEL'S LEGACY TODAY.
Loews, Commonwealth C
THE CHALLENGE OF
SPIRITUAL DISCERNMENT
Loews, Commonwealth C
THE POLITICAL PERSISTENCE
OF RELIGION
Loews, Commonwealth C

Sat 10:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Sun 10:00 am

TRANSCENDENCE AS THE
HORIZON OF POLITICS
Loews, Commonwealth B
UNIVERSAL HUMANITY AND
HISTORY
Loews, Commonwealth C

Sun 10:00 am

Fri 10:00 am

EUROPEAN CONSORTIUM FOR POLITICAL


RESEARCH
77.4
Sun 8:00 am

Room:

MIGRATION AND THE


MIGRATION CRISIS TODAY:
POLICIES, EXPERIENCES,
IMPACT
Loews, Commonwealth A1

Sat 8:00 am

FEDERALIST SOCIETY FOR LAW AND


POLITICS

ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY


108.3

ROUNDTABLE ON DAVID
WALSHS POLITICS OF THE
PERSON AS THE POLITICS OF
BEING
Loews, Commonwealth C

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 8:00 am

DISASTERS AND CRISES


108.2

REPRESENTING THE REAL:


VOEGELINIAN PERSPECTIVES
Loews, Commonwealth C

Fri 4:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

CRITICAL POLICY STUDIES


41.3

POLITICAL SCIENCE AND


METHODOLOGICAL LIMITS
Loews, Commonwealth C

Fri 8:00 am

Sun 8:00 am

41.5

Thu 10:00 am
Room:

ROUNDTABLE: CONGRESS,
DELEGATION, AND THE
ADMINISTRATIVE STATE
Marriott, Room 410

Fri 8:00 am

FRENCH POLITICS GROUP


Fri 12:00 pm

108.4

Thu 2:00 pm

Room:

SECOND ORDER ELECTIONS


AND BEYOND: THE 2014 AND
2015 FRENCH LOCAL
ELECTIONS
Loews, Commonwealth D

Sun 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 197

197

Related Group Panels

CONFERENCE GROUP ON JURISPRUDENCE


AND PUBLIC LAW

ELECTION 2016: ANALYSIS AND


PREDICTIONS
Loews, Commonwealth C

60.13

Room:

WHOS CHARLIE? TEACHING


THE 2015 PARIS ATTACKS &
OTHER DRAMATIC CURRENT
EVENTS
Marriott, Room 305

Fri 4:00 pm

IBERIAN POLITICS
23.4
Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE


EDUCATION

77.5

Room:
57.3
Room:

COMPETING INTERESTS AND


PARADIGMS IN EAST ASIAN
POLITICAL ECONOMY
Marriott, Room 414
LOCAL GOVERNANCE IN A
GLOBALIZED WORLD
Marriott, Room 410

Sat 8:00 am

Room:

Room:
110.4
Room:

GREEN POLITICAL THOUGHT:


THE POLITICS OF
TRANSFORMATION
Marriott, Room 412
INTERROGATING THE
ANTHROPOCENE
Marriott, Room 411

46.4

Room:

PRESENT ENVIRONMENTAL
INEQUALITIES AND
TRANSFORMATIVE
POTENTIALITIES
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Room:

84.7
Sun 10:00 am

Thu 8:00 am

Room:

Room:

SOCIAL TRANSFORMATIONS
AND THE CHANGING FACES OF
POWER
Marriott, Room 409

Room:

56.57

22.55

Sat 4:00 pm
Room:

97.6

Room:

SOCIAL TRANSFORMATIONS
AND THE CHANGING FACES OF
POWER
Marriott, Room 409

Page 198

Fri 2:00 pm

INTERPRETING POLITICAL
IDEAS, BELIEFS, AND
DISCOURSES
Marriott, Franklin 11

Fri 2:00 pm

ON THE ETHNOGRAPHIC
PROOF
Marriott, Franklin 13

Thu 2:00 pm

JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP

Room:

JAPANS SECURITY
CHALLENGES IN A CHANGING
WORLD
Marriott, Room 412

Fri 10:00 am

LABOR PROJECT
109.49
Sat 4:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

COLORING THE FIELD:


EXAMINING POSITIONALITY IN
FIELD RESEARCH
Marriott, Room 414

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee #36 (Power)

198

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE


METHODS

46.5

Room:

TRANSFORMING GERMAN
POLITICS: NEW IMPULSES IN
THE NEW MILLENNIUM
Marriott, Room 411

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE


METHODS

IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE 1 (CONCEPTS


AND METHODS)
CONCEPTUALIZING
DIFFERENCE
Marriott, Room 414

Fri 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE


METHODS

Room:

Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee 1 (Concepts


and Methods)

89.6

INTELLIGENCE
ACCOUNTABILITY AT A
CROSSROADS
Marriott, Room 411

INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES AND


METHODS

Fri 2:00 pm

IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #36 (POWER)


97.6

Room:

57.5

IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #12 (BIOLOGY


AND POLITICS)
NEW DIRECTIONS IN BIOLOGY
AND POLITICS
Marriott, Room 411

Thu 10:00 am

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE


STUDY OF GERMAN POLITICS

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

57.4

HAMILTON: THE MUSICAL


Marriott, Room 412

Fri 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

11.50

Thu 2:00 pm

INTELLIGENCE STUDIES GROUP

GREEN POLITICS AND THEORY


61.4

INDIGENOUS POLITICS IN
NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA
Marriott, Room 412

INSTITUTE FOR CONSTITUTIONAL STUDIES


18.3
Room:

Fri 2:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

INDIGENOUS STUDIES NETWORK


23.5

GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICAL


SCIENTISTS

CHANGE AND CONTINUITY IN


IBERIAN POLITICS
Marriott, Room 414

Room:

WHERE IS THE
COUNTERMOVEMENT? LABOR
MOBILIZATION IN AN ERA OF
PRECARIOUSNESS
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Sun 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

77.6

Room:

WORKERS, CORPORATIONS,
AND POLICY: GLOBAL
PERSPECTIVES ON LABOR AND
CAPITAL
Marriott, Room 410

Sat 8:00 am

MCCONNELL CENTER FOR POLITICAL


LEADERSHIP
18.5

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL


SCIENCE

Room:

STATESMANSHIP AND
FRIENDSHIP IN AN AGE OF
TRANSFORMATION
Loews, Commonwealth A2

LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION

NATIONAL HUMANITIES INSTITUTE

61.5

52.5

Room:

INEQUALITY, CRIME, AND


VIOLENCE IN LATIN AMERICA
Marriott, Room 411

Fri 4:00 pm

Room:

THE HISTORICAL MIND:


REFLECTIONS ON THE
THINKING OF CLAES G. RYN
Marriott, Room 410

Thu 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

LATINO CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE


70.3

Fri 7:30 pm

POLITICA: STUDY OF MEDIEVAL POLITICAL


THOUGHT
52.6

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions
Co-sponsored by Asian Pacific American Caucus

18.4

Room:

LIVING LATINO IMMIGRATION:


KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDES, AND
BELONGING
Marriott, Room 411

Room:
97.7

Room:

BUCKLEY V. VALEO AT 40: NEW


THINKING, NEW DIRECTIONS
ON CAMPAIGN FINANCE
Marriott, Room 414
REDISTRICTING AFTER
EVENWEL: THE PROSPECTS
FOR ONE PERSON, ONE VOTE
Marriott, Room 410

Room:

APSA STATUS COMMITTEE OF


LESBIANS, GAYS, BISEXUALS
AND TRANSGENDERS IN THE
PROFESSION, SEXUALITY AND
POLITICS SECTION, AND LGBT
CAUCUS RECEPTION
Marriott, Salon J

Room:

Room:

AFTER MARRIAGE EQUALITY:


WHAT IS NEXT FOR THE LGBT
MOVEMENT?
PCC, 203-A

Fri 12:00 pm

FORECASTING THE U.S.


PRESIDENTIAL AND
CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS
PCC, 204-C

Fri 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by Theme Panel

77.7

Thu 8:00 am
Room:

METHODOLOGICAL
INNOVATIONS IN ELECTION
FORECASTING
Marriott, Room 412

Sat 8:00 am

POLITICAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION


83.2
Sat 4:00 pm
Room:

CONDITIONS OF AGONISTIC
POLITICS 2
PCC, 108-B

Sat 10:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF


POLITICAL THEORY

11.41

Fri 7:30 pm
Room:

FEMINIST INSTITUTIONALISM
AT 10 YEARS: NEW
PERSPECTIVES ON
TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE
Marriott, Franklin 7

Thu 8:00 am

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions

27.3

WHITHER ARISTOTLE?
MEDIEVAL ARISTOTELIANISMS
Marriott, Room 411

POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP


49.1

LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, AND


TRANSGENDER CAUCUS
70.2

Room:

Thu 10:00 am

LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDY


GROUP
12.3

POLICY STUDIES ORGANIZATION

POLITICAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION OF


IRELAND
18.6

Thu 4:00 pm
Room:

IRELAND AND THE 2016


ELECTION
Marriott, Room 414

Thu 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 199

199

Related Group Panels

Room:

APSA STATUS OF ASIANPACIFIC AMERICANS IN THE


PROFESSION COMMITTEE AND
STATUS OF LATINOS Y LATINAS
IN THE PROFESSION
COMMITTEE RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 410

POVERTY, INEQUALITY, AND PUBLIC POLICY


CAUCUS

108.6

PRACTICING POLITICS
93.6

Room:

PUBLISHING CHALLENGES:
PRODUCING ACADEMICALLY
RIGOROUS PRACTICABLE
RESEARCH
Marriott, Room 410

Room:

SOCIETY FOR ROMANIAN STUDIES


84.8

PROJECT ON THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION

Room:

FROHNEN'S AND CAREY'S


CONSTITUTIONAL MORALITY
AND RISE OF QUASI-LAW
Marriott, Room 411

Sun 8:00 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Room:
108.5

VISIONS OF CITIZENSHIP IN
PLATO AND THEIR ROLE IN
CONTEMPORARY
DEMOCRACIES
Marriott, Room 412

Sun 8:00 am

SOCIETY FOR ROMANIAN


STUDIES
Loews, Commonwealth A1

Sat 10:00 am

SOCIETY OF CATHOLIC SOCIAL SCIENTISTS


18.7
Room:

REVOLUTIONARY NATURAL
LAW
Marriott, Room 410

Thu 10:00 am

PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL OF FEDERALISM

SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS GROUP

51.35

23.6

Room:

INTERGOVERNMENTAL
POLITICS AND PERCEPTIONS
Marriott, Room 306

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:

Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS

27.4
Room:

MARTHA DERTHICK'S
FEDERALISM SCHOLARSHIP
Marriott, Room 411

Thu 4:00 pm

Room:

POLARIZATION AND
(DE)CENTRALIZATION
Marriott, Franklin 8

Room:

Fri 8:00 am

27.5

RUSSIAN POLITICS GROUP


WHITHER RUSSIA?
Marriott, Room 411

Room:
Sat 8:00 am

Room:

CHALLENGES FOR POLITICAL


LEADERS IN CENTRAL AND
EASTERN EUROPE:
CHALLENGES FOR POLITICAL
LEADERS IN CENTRAL AND
EASTERN EUROPE
Marriott, Room 414

35.2

Fri 8:00 am

Room:

Room:
89.7

Room:

200

DEMOCRATIC ARGUMENTS IN
THE PEDAGOGY OF PLATO'S
"REPUBLIC"
Marriott, Room 411
THE PROBLEM OF VIRTUE AND
THE LIMITS OF REASON IN
CLASSICAL POLITICAL
THOUGHT
Marriott, Room 410

71.1

Sat 2:00 pm
Room:

Page 200

APSA RECEPTION HONORING


WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION:
WOMEN & POL. SECTION,
WOMENS CAUCUS & COMM.
PCC, 201-C

Thu 8:30 pm

APSA RECEPTION HONORING


WOMEN OF COLOR IN THE
PROFESSION: WOMEN & POL.
SECTION, WOMENS CAUCUS &
COMM.
Marriott, Independence Ballroom

Fri 8:30 pm

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Sat 12:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Thu 4:00 pm

Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and


Receptions
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT


93.7

AMERICAN SECURITY
CHALLENGES IN AN AGE OF
POLARIZATION AND
POLITICAL DISTRUST
Marriott, Room 414

WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE

SLOVENIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE


ASSOCIATION
41.6

Sun 10:00 am

WALTER BAGEHOT RESEARCH COUNCIL ON


NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND


INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS

77.8
Room:

SELECTED ISSUES IN
SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS
AND POLITICAL ECONOMY
PCC, 113-A

Thu 2:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND


INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS

40.38

109.23

POLITICAL DIVERSITY IN
SOUTHEAST ASIA
Marriott, Room 411

12.4

Room:

THE TASK FORCE ON


POLITICAL SCIENCE IN THE
21ST C 5 YEARS LATER
Marriott, Room 411

Thu 8:00 am

APSA PANELS AND ALL MEETINGS


AND RECEPTIONS
29.1

Room:
34.1
Room:
70.1

Room:

Room:
6.1

Room:

112TH ANNUAL MEETING


OPENING RECEPTION
PCC, Grand Hall
2016 GESIS KLINGEMANN PRIZE
FOR THE BEST CSES
SCHOLARSHIP
PCC, 112-B
2017 DIVISION CHAIRS PROGRAM COMMITTEE
MEETING
Marriott, Liberty Ballroom
A POLITICAL PRIMER ON THE
PERIODIC STATE
CONSTITUTIONAL
CONVENTION REFERENDUM
PCC, 202-B

Thu 6:15 pm
Room:
101.1

Room:

Room:
28.1

APSA ALL-MEMBER BUSINESS


MEETING
PCC, 114

Room:

APSA ASIA COMMITTEE


PLANNING MEETING
PCC, 101-A

7.1
Room:

APSA AWARDS CEREMONY


Marriott, Liberty Ballroom

14.1

APSA COMMITTEE ON THE


STATUS OF ASIAN PACIFIC
AMERICANS BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 308

Room:
35.1

Room:
87.1

Room:
50.1

Room:

APSA COMMITTEE ON THE


STATUS OF BLACKS AND
NCOBPS RECEPTION
Marriott, Franklin 9
APSA COMMITTEE ON THE
STATUS OF BLACKS IN THE
PROFESSION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 301
APSA COMMITTEE ON THE
STATUS OF FIRST GENERATION
HIGHER EDUCATION
SCHOLARS IN THE PROFESSION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 302

APSA CONGRESSIONAL
FELLOWS, ALUMNI, AND
FRIENDS HAPPY HOUR
Marriott, Circ Bar

Sat 7:00 am

Sat 6:30 pm

Thu 7:30 pm
102.1
Room:

APSA GRADUATE STUDENT


HAPPY HOUR
Marriott, Liberty Ballroom

Sat 6:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm
10.1

Room:

APSA INTERNATIONAL
COMMITTEE BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 302

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 7:00 am
72.3

Room:

APSA JOURNAL EDITORS


MEETING: APSA JOURNAL
EDITORS BREAKFAST MEETING
Marriott, Room 302

Sat 7:00 am

Wed 2:00 pm
28.2
Room:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW


AND JURISPRUDENCE

19.1

APSA COMMITTEE ON THE


STATUS OF WOMEN IN THE
PROFESSION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 301

35.2

Thu 12:00 pm
Room:

APSA MENTORING
NETWORKING RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 410
APSA RECEPTION HONORING
WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION:
WOMEN & POL. SECTION,
WOMENS CAUCUS & COMM.
PCC, 201-C

Thu 5:30 pm

Thu 8:30 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science

Thu 5:30 pm
71.1
Wed 6:30 pm

Thu 8:30 am
Room:

APSA RECEPTION HONORING


WOMEN OF COLOR IN THE
PROFESSION: WOMEN & POL.
SECTION, WOMENS CAUCUS &
COMM.
Marriott, Independence Ballroom

Fri 8:30 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science

98.1
Thu 8:30 pm
Room:
62.1
Sat 12:00 pm

Room:
70.2
Fri 12:00 pm

Room:

APSA STATUS COMMITTEE


CHAIRS MEETING
Marriott, Room 301
APSA STATUS COMMITTEE OF
LESBIANS, GAYS, BISEXUALS
AND TRANSGENDERS IN THE
PROFESSION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 308
APSA STATUS COMMITTEE OF
LESBIANS, GAYS, BISEXUALS
AND TRANSGENDERS IN THE
PROFESSION, SEXUALITY AND
POLITICS SECTION, AND LGBT
CAUCUS RECEPTION
Marriott, Salon J

Sat 5:30 pm

Fri 5:00 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender


Caucus

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 201

201

Related Group Panels

72.1

112TH APSA PRESIDENTIAL


ADDRESS: 112TH APSA
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: LEFT
PESSIMISM AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE
PCC, Ballroom AB

72.2

70.3

Room:

APSA STATUS OF ASIANPACIFIC AMERICANS IN THE


PROFESSION COMMITTEE AND
STATUS OF LATINOS Y LATINAS
IN THE PROFESSION
COMMITTEE RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 410

Fri 7:30 pm

Co-sponsored by Asian Pacific American Caucus


Co-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science

25.1

Room:
91.1
Room:
63.1
Room:
50.2

APSA TASKFORCE REPORT ON


INEQUALITY AND AMERICAN
DEMOCRACY: AFTER A
DECADE
PCC, 201-B
APSA TECHNOLOGY TASK
FORCE MEETING
Marriott, Room 302
APSA/ASA AFRICA PLANNING
COMMITTEE MEETING
PCC, 101-A

Room:

APSR EDITORIAL BOARD


MEETING
Loews, Washington C

44.1
Room:

APSR MEET THE EDITORS


Marriott, Room 410

6.2

ABOLITIONIST POLITICS
AFTER FERGUSON: RACE,
PRISONS, POLICE, AND
THEORIZING WHITE
SUPREMACY
PCC, 104-B

Room:
95.1
Room:
36.1
Room:
6.3

Room:
44.2
Room:
33.2
Room:
101.2

Room:

202

AMERICA'S DIPLOMATS:
AMERICA'S DIPLOMATS FILM
PCC, 114
ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN
CAUCUS BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 302
ASSESSING POLITICAL
SCIENCE CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
AND PEDAGOGY INITIATIVES:
THE CONSORTIUM FOR INTERCAMPUS SOTL RESEARCH, THE
NATIONAL SURVEY OF
STUDENT LEADERS
PCC, 203-A
ASSOCIATION LEADERS
MEETING
PCC, 101-A
BYU POLITICAL AFFAIRS
SOCIETY RECEPTION
Marriott, Meeting Room 501
BOOK RECEPTION FOR
CONTESTED
TRANSFORMATION: RACE,
GENDER AND POLITICAL
LEADERSHIP IN 21ST CENTURY
AMERICA
Marriott, Room 308

Thu 4:00 pm

Page 202

Room:

BRITISH POLITICS GROUP


RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 307

64.1
Room:

CQ PRESS EVENT
Loews, Congress A

30.1

CANADIAN POLITICS SECTION


BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 304

Room:
2.1

Room:
3.1
Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 5:30 pm

Room:
101.3

Fri 12:00 pm

Room:
4.1

Fri 10:00 am

Wed 2:00 pm
Room:
70.4
Room:
Sat 4:00 pm

70.5

Room:
Fri 7:00 am

67.1
Room:

Wed 2:00 pm

70.6

Room:
8.1

Fri 10:00 am
Room:
6.4
Thu 7:30 pm
Room:
85.1
Sat 6:30 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

33.1

Room:
101.4

Room:

CAUSAL CASE STUDIES:


COMPARING, MATCHING, AND
TRACING (QMMR2)
PCC, 201-B
CHALLENGES OF ELECTORAL
INTEGRITY AND THE
CONSTRUCTION AND USE OF
EXPERT INDICATORS
Marriott, Franklin 2
CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 104-B

Thu 7:30 pm

Fri 5:30 pm

Thu 6:30 pm

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Sat 6:30 pm

CITY POLITICS IN AN
Wed 1:00 pm
INCREASINGLY URBAN WORLD:
MAINSTREAMING THE LOCAL
IN SCHOLARSHIP AND POLICY
MAKING
Offsite, Drexel University MacAlister 2019-2020 (325060 Chestnut Street)
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE
RECEPTION
Loews, Commonwealth B
CLASS AND INEQUALITY
RECEPTION AND OUTREACH
EVENT
Marriott, Franklin 6
CLASS AND INEQUALITY
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 407
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE RECEPTION
PCC, 105-AB
COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS
OF LATINOS IN THE
PROFESSION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 301
COMMUNICATING SCIENCE IN
POLITICIZED ENVIRONMENTS
PCC, 108-A
COMMUNITY COLLEGE STATUS
COMMITTEE BUSINESS
MEETING
PCC, 101-A
COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 309

Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Thu 7:00 am

Wed 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Sat 6:30 pm

104.1

Room:
101.5
Room:
104.2
Room:
67.2

Room:
105.1

102.2
Room:
33.3

Room:
67.3
Room:
68.1

Room:
5.1

Room:
59.1

Room:
50.3
Room:
2.2
Room:
6.5
Room:

COMPARATIVE POLITICS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Meeting Room 501
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
SECTION RECEPTION
Marriott, Meeting Room 502
CONFERENCE GROUP ON
ITALIAN POLITICS AND
SOCIETY BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 413
CONFERENCE GROUP ON
TAIWAN STUDIES BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 410
CONFERENCE GROUP ON
TAIWAN STUDIES RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 411
CONFERENCE FOR THE STUDY
OF POLITICAL THOUGHT
(CSPT) ANNUAL RECEPTION
Marriott, Salon J
CONFLICT PROCESSESS
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 9

Sat 7:30 pm

Sat 6:30 pm
Room:
3.2
Sat 7:30 pm

Room:
Fri 6:30 pm

Room:
21.1
Sat 6:30 pm
Room:
2.3
Thu 7:30 pm

Room:
Fri 6:30 pm

DATABASE AND WEBSITE


Wed 1:30 pm
DEVELOPMENT FOR PUBLIC
POLICY: THE COMPARATIVE
POLICY AGENDAS PROJECT
Offsite, Temple University Center City Campus

DEPARTMENT CHAIRS
LUNCHEON
Loews, Congress C
DESIGNING MULTI-METHOD
RESEARCH (QMMR1)
PCC, 201-A
DESIGNING AND CONDUCTING
FIELD RESEARCH (QMMR5)
PCC, 201-B

3.3

Sat 8:00 pm

CORNELL UNIVERSITY
Fri 7:00 pm
DEPARTMENT OF
GOVERNMENT RECEPTION
Offsite, Pennsylvania 6 (114 S. 12 St. at Sansom St.)

DEFENDING DEMOCRACY:
HOW POLITICAL SCIENTISTS
ARE ENGAGING IN THE FIGHT
OVER VOTING RIGHTS (AND
WHY YOU AND YOUR DEPT.
SHOULD TOO), PRESENTED BY
THE SCHOLARS STRATEGY
NETWORK
Marriott, Franklin 3

73.1

Fri 4:00 pm

59.2

Room:
67.4
Room:
70.7
Room:

DISSERTATION WORKSHOP:
ADVANCES IN SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY, AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
PCC, 303-AB
DISSERTATION WORKSHOP: ON
THE INTERSECTION OF RACE,
ETHNICITY AND GENDER IN
AMERICAN POLITICAL
BEHAVIOR
PCC, 107-A
DIVERSITY RECRUITMENT AND
RETENTION ROUNDTABLE:
TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE
PCC, 112-B
DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE IN
THE FIELD: FIELD RESEARCH,
ETHICS, ENGAGEMENT, AND
EMPLOYABILITY
PCC, 202-A
DONORS ANSWER CRITICS
PHILANTHROPIC INVESTMENT
AND POLITICAL CHANGE
Marriott, Salon I

Sat 7:30 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Thu 2:00 pm

Wed 9:00 am

Fri 4:00 pm

DREXEL CENTER FOR PUBLIC


Fri 6:30 pm
POLICY BUSINESS MEETING
Offsite, Three Parkway Building (1601 Cherry Street,
6th Fl., Ste. 612)
DREXEL CENTER FOR PUBLIC
Fri 7:30 pm
POLICY RECEPTION
Offsite, Three Parkway Building (1601 Cherry Street,
6th Fl., Ste. 612)

3.4
Room:

EIP BREAKOUT 1
Marriott, Franklin 3

Wed 9:00 am

3.5
Room:

EIP BREAKOUT 2
Marriott, Franklin 4

Wed 9:00 am

101.6
Room:

EITM BUSINESS MEETING


Marriott, Room 408

66.1

EASTERN STATE PENITENTIARY


Fri 6:00 pm
HISTORIC SITE (ESP)
RECEPTION AND TOUR
Offsite, 2027 Fairmont Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19130

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:
67.5
Wed 9:00 am
Room:
Wed 2:00 pm

FEMALE WORKING GROUP ON


AFRICAN POLITICS (INVITE
ONLY): DISCUSSION ON SUBSAHARAN AFRICAN POLITICS
(INVITE ONLY)
PCC, 303-AB

70.8

Room:

ELECTIONS, PUBLIC
OPINION, & VOTING BEHAVIOR
SECTIONS BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 3
ELECTIONS, PUBLIC OPINION,
AND VOTING BEHAVIOR &
POLITICAL COMMUNICATIONS
SECTIONS JOINT RECEPTION
Marriott, Salon C

Sat 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 203

203

Related Group Panels

Room:

COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION SECTION
RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 310

2.4

Room:
101.7
Room:
104.3
Room:
50.4

Room:
30.2
Room:
50.5

Room:
67.6
Room:
10.2

Room:
59.3

Room:
8.2
Room:
53.1
Room:
66.2

Room:
70.9
Room:
101.8

Room:
67.7
Room:

EMBRACING APPLIED POLITICS


IN THE CLASSROOM AND
CURRICULUM
PCC, 203-A
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY
BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth C
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY
RECEPTION
Loews, Tubman
EUROPEAN POLITICS AND
SOCIETY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Loews, Congress A
EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 7
FEDERAL BUDGET PROCESS
REFORM: THE SOLUTION
STREAM MEETS THE
POLITICAL STREAM
PCC, 112-B
FEDERALISM AND IGR
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 411
FIRST GENERATION SCHOLARS
IN THE PROFESSION
ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
PCC, 202-A
FIRST YEAR(S) ON THE
FACULTY: ADVICE FOR EARLY
CAREER SUCCESS
PCC, 202-A
FIRST-TIME ATTENDEE
BREAKFAST
Marriott, Liberty Ballroom
FOREIGN POLICY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 408
FOUNDATIONS PLENARY
SPEAKER SESSION:
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL
THEORY PLENARY SPEAKER
SESSION
PCC, 204-C
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL
THEORY RECEPTION
Marriott, Liberty Ballroom
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL
THEORY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 305
FRENCH POLITICS GROUP
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Wed 9:00 am

30.3

Room:
Sat 6:30 pm

70.10

Room:
75.1

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:
55.1

Page 204

Fri 7:30 pm

Room:

GENDER INEQUALITY IN THE


US: BEYOND POLITICAL
REPRESENTATION
Marriott, Franklin 9
GENDER, PARENTHOOD, AND
SUCCESS IN THE ACADEMY
PCC, 202-A

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Thu 6:30 pm
25.2

Fri 12:00 pm

Room:
55.2
Fri 6:30 pm
Room:
16.1
Thu 8:00 am
Room:
101.9
Room:

GET THE GRANT: FINDING


FUNDING, WRITING
PROPOSALS, AND ADVANCING
YOUR RESEARCH AT EVERY
CAREER STAGE
Marriott, Franklin 11
GET THE JOB: TIPS FOR THE
ACADEMIC JOB MARKET
Marriott, Franklin 13
GOVERNANCE REFORM
ROUNDTABLE
PCC, 113-C
HEALTH POLITICS & POLICY
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A1

Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Thu 10:00 am

Sat 6:30 pm

Fri 4:00 pm
104.4
Room:
Thu 7:00 am

95.2

Room:

HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY


SECTION RECEPTION
Loews, Congress C
HOW TO THRIVE IN GRAD
SCHOOL: STRATEGIES AND
TIPS
PCC, 202-A

Sat 7:30 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 12:30 pm
44.3

Fri 6:00 pm
Room:
50.6
Room:
67.8
Fri 7:30 pm
Room:
67.12
Sat 6:30 pm
Room:
53.2
Fri 6:30 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

GAUS RECEPTION - PUBLIC


ADMINISTRATIVE SECTION
RECEPTION
Marriott, Franklin 10

Thu 6:30 pm

Sat 7:30 pm

Room:
70.11
Room:

204

FUTURE DIRECTIONS OF THE


AMERICAN NATIONAL
ELECTION STUDIES
PCC, 106-AB

HOW TO WRITE ABOUT YOUR


RESEARCH FOR THE MONKEY
CAGE
PCC, 202-A
HUMAN RIGHTS SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 407
HUMAN RIGHTS SECTION
RECEPTION
Offsite, Caribou Cafe
IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE
#12 (BIOLOGY AND POLITICS)
BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 111-A
IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND
POLITICS BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 308
IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND
POLITICS RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 310

Fri 10:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 12:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

59.4

Room:
101.10
Room:
30.4
Room:
69.1

Room:
95.3

IN THE FIELD: POLITICAL


SCIENCE MEETING
Marriott, Room 409
INDIGENOUS STUDIES
NETWORK BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 111-A
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
AND POLITICS SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth C
INNOVATIVE TEACHING
METHODS IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE AND PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION
Marriott, Franklin 2

Fri 4:00 pm

101.11
Room:
67.13

Sat 6:30 pm
Room:
87.3
Thu 6:30 pm
Room:
55.3
Fri 7:00 pm
Room:
87.4
Sat 4:00 pm
Room:
21.2

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC


ADMINISTRATION

32.1
Room:
50.7
Room:
33.4
Room:
67.9

Room:
67.10

Room:
70.12

Room:
67.11

Room:
30.5

Room:
87.2
Room:
70.13
Room:

INSTITUTE FOR HUMANE


STUDIES RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 413
INTEREST GROUPS &
ADVOCACY BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 406
INTERNATIONAL ATTENDEE
RECEPTION
Marriott, Independence Ballroom
INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND
POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Loews, Tubman
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
AND ARMS CONTROL SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 306
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
AND ARMS CONTROL SECTION
RECEPTION
Marriott, Franklin 4
INTERPRETIVE
METHODOLOGIES AND
METHODS BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 304
ITALIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE
REVIEW, EDITORIAL BOARD
MEETING
Marriott, Room 302
ITHIEL DE SOLA POOL AWARD
AND LECTURESHIP
Loews, Commonwealth A2
JACK MILLER CENTER
RECEPTION
PCC, 103-C

Room:
Thu 7:00 pm

50.8

Fri 12:00 pm
Room:

JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES


GROUP BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 303
JOHN GAUS AWARD AND
LECTURESHIP
Marriott, Franklin 11
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE
POLITICS BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 413
JOURNAL OF CONFLICT
RESOLUTION EDITORIAL
BOARD MEETING
PCC, 101-A
JOURNAL OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE EDUCATION
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Loews, Tubman
JOURNAL OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE EDUCATION MEET
THE EDITORS ROUNDTABLE
Marriott, Room 409
JOURNAL OF RACE, ETHNICITY
AND POLITICS BUSINESS
MEETING
PCC, 104-A

Sat 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND


POLITICS

Thu 7:30 pm

67.14

Room:

JOURNAL OF WOMEN,
POLITICS & POLICY
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
PCC, 303-AB

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm
50.9
Room:
Fri 6:30 pm

30.6
Room:
67.15

Fri 7:30 pm
Room:
59.5
Fri 6:30 pm
Room:
67.16
Thu 6:30 pm

Room:
31.1

Sat 12:00 pm
Room:
Fri 7:30 pm

70.14
Room:

LGBT CAUCUS BUSINESS


MEETING
Marriott, Room 413
LABOR PROJECT BUSINESS
MEETING AND KEYNOTE
PCC, 105-AB
LATINO CAUCUS IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 414
LATINO/A SCHOLARS
TRANSFORMING POLITICAL
SCIENCE
Marriott, Franklin 13
LAW & COURTS SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 204-B
LAW AND COURTS SECTION &
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND
JURISPRUDENCE SECTION
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT
PANEL
PCC, 204-B
LAW AND COURTS SECTION
RECEPTION
PCC, 201-B

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Thu 6:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 205

205

Related Group Panels

Room:

IN MEMORY OF DON
NAKANISHI: ASIAN AMERICAN
VOTING AND EMPOWERMENT
Marriott, Room 410

36.2

Room:
67.17
Room:
70.15
Room:
82.1
Room:
100.1
Room:
70.17

Room:
48.1
Room:
95.4

Room:
2.5

Room:
2.6

Room:
1.1

Room:
25.3

Room:
67.18
Room:
70.16
Room:
10.3

Room:

206

LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
QUARTERLY EDITORIAL
BOARD BREAKFAST MEETING
Marriott, Room 413
LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 7
LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
SECTION RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 406
LIAISING WITH THE MEDIA:
TIPS AND TACTICS
PCC, 202-A
MENA WORKSHOPS ALUMNI
AND FRIENDS RECEPTION
Offsite, Offsite TBD
MIT DEPARTMENT OF
POLITICAL SCIENCE
RECEPTION
PCC, 107-A
MPSA EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
MEETING
Offsite, MPSA Offsite Location
MAKING CONNECTIONS: HOW
TO BUILD A PROFESSIONAL
NETWORK AND WHY YOU
NEED ONE
PCC, 110-AB
MANAGING AND SHARING
QUALITATIVE DATA AND
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
TRANSPARENCY (QMMR3)
PCC, 201-C
MATHEMATICS AND
DEMOCRACY: DESIGNING
BETTER VOTING AND FAIRDIVISION PROCEDURES
PCC, 106-AB
MEETING OF COMPARATIVE
STUDY OF ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS (CSES) PROJECT
PCC, 204-C
MENTORING ROUNDTABLE:
MENTORING FOR SUCCESS AND
ADVANCEMENT
Loews, Commonwealth D
MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 1
MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
SECTION RECEPTION
Offsite, Asian Arts Initiative
MINORITY STUDENT
RECRUITMENT PROGRAM
(MSRP) BEST PRACTICES
MEETING
Marriott, Room 301

Fri 7:00 am

Room:

Page 206

MOVING FORWARD ON
IMPROVING THE STATUS OF
COMMUNITY COLLEGES IN
THE PROFESSION
Marriott, Franklin 13

Fri 10:00 am

Fri 6:30 pm
39.1

Fri 7:30 pm
Room:
30.7
Sat 10:00 am
Room:
87.5
Sat 6:00 pm
Room:
100.2
Fri 7:30 pm
Room:
36.3

Fri 11:45 am
Room:
104.5
Sat 4:00 pm
Room:
2.7

Wed 9:00 am
Room:

NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF
BLACK POLITICAL SCIENTISTS
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
PCC, 101-A
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 111-B
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Marriott, Room 302
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
INVITED LECTURE
Marriott, Franklin 1
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
PUBLICATIONS EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 308
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
RECEPTION
Marriott, Franklin 2

Fri 8:00 am

Thu 6:30 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Sat 6:00 pm

Fri 7:00 am

Sat 7:30 pm

OF CITIES AND GOVERNANCE:


Wed 9:00 am
NEW THEORETICAL
APPROACHES TO URBAN
GOVERNANCE
Offsite, Drexel University MacAlister 2019-2020 (325060 Chestnut Street)
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL
POLITICS

Wed 9:00 am

36.4
Room:
87.9

Wed 8:00 am

ORGANIZED SECTION CHAIRS


BREAKFAST
Marriott, Liberty Ballroom

Room:

PRQ EDITORIAL BOARD


MEETING
Marriott, Room 308

33.5
Room:

PRQ RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 414

36.5
Room:

PS EDITORIAL BOARD
MEETING
Marriott, Room 301

87.6
Room:

PEARSON FOCUS GROUP


PCC, 303-AB

99.1
Room:

PEARSON RECEPTION
PCC, 303-AB

87.7

PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Loews, Washington C

Thu 4:00 pm

Fri 7:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Thu 7:30 pm

Fri 7:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Room:
Thu 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

44.4

65.1
Room:

PI SIGMA ALPHA BUSINESS


MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 8

Sat 5:30 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 6:00 pm

82.2

Room:
67.19
Room:
67.20
Room:
67.21
Room:
50.10

30.8
Room:

POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 5
POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 309
POLITICAL FORECASTING
GROUP BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 305
POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 112-A
POLITICAL NETWORKS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 305

Sat 10:00 am

59.6
Room:
67.24

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 6:30 pm

Room:
72.4
Room:

POLITY BUSINESS MEETING


Marriott, Room 413

Sat 7:00 am

75.2
Room:

POVERTY, POLICE, AND RACE


PCC, 107-A

Sat 8:00 am

87.8
Room:

PRESIDENCY AND EXECUTIVE


POLITICS BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A1

6.6
Room:

PROCESS TRACING (QMMR 4)


PCC, 201-A

3.6

PROTEAN AND CONTROL


POWER IN INTERACTION
PCC, 111-A

Room:
34.2
Room:

POLITICAL NETWORKS
SECTION RECEPTION
Offsite, Vintage Wine Bar & Bistro

Thu 7:30 pm

50.11
Room:

69.2

Room:

POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS
AND PARTIES SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 112-A

Fri 7:00 pm

50.12

Room:
30.9

Room:

POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS
AND PARTIES SECTION
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
PCC, 107-A

Thu 6:30 pm

30.11

Room:
30.10
Room:
67.22

Room:
47.1
Room:
70.18

Room:
70.19

Room:
67.23
Room:

POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 309
POLITICAL SCIENCE
EDUCATION SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A2
POLITICS & GENDER JOURNAL
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Loews, Tubman
POLITICS AND ART IN
PHILADELPHIA - A RECEPTION
SPONSORED BY THE SITING
AND ENGAGEMENT
COMMITTEE AND ORGANIZED
SECTION ON POLITICS,
LITERATURE, AND FILM
Loews, Washington C
POLITICS AND HISTORY
SECTION & INTERNATIONAL
HISTORY AND POLITICS
SECTION JOINT RECEPTION
Loews, Washington A
POLITICS AND HISTORY
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A1

Thu 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

30.12

Room:
33.6

Fri 10:30 am

Room:
91.2

Fri 7:30 pm

Room:
101.12

Room:
104.6

Fri 7:30 pm
Room:
39.2

Room:
Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 4:00 pm

POLITICS, LITERATURE AND


FILM SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 408

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

POLITICS, ART, AND


COMMUNITY
Marriott, Salon D

16.2

Room:

PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 11
PUBLIC POLICY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING AND
AWARD CEREMONY
PCC, 202-A
PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL OF
FEDERALISM EDITORIAL
BOARD MEETING
Marriott, Room 306
QUALITATIVE AND MULTIMETHOD RESEARCH SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth D
QUALITATIVE AND MULTIMETHOD RESEARCH SECTION
RECEPTION
Marriott, Salon KL
RBSI 30TH ANNIVERSARY
ROUNDTABLE
PCC, 202-A
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND
POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Loews, Washington C
RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER
INSTITUTE (RBSI) 30TH
ANNIVERSARY RECEPTION
Marriott, Independence Ballroom
RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER
INSTITUTE (RBSI) ADVISORY
COMMITTEE MEETING
Marriott, Room 302
RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER
INSTITUTE (RBSI)
ORIENTATION MEETING
Marriott, Room 301

Fri 6:30 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 9:00 am

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 6:30 pm

Thu 6:30 pm

Thu 7:30 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 6:30 pm

Sat 7:30 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Thu 10:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 207

207

Related Group Panels

Room:

POLICY STUDIES, WICKED


PROBLEMS AND POLICY
CHANGE?
Marriott, Meeting Room 501

70.20
Room:

RECEPTION HONORING
TEACHING
Loews, Congress C

87.10
Room:

RELATED GROUP MEETING


Loews, Congress C

30.13

RELIGION AND POLITICS


SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 104-A

Room:
33.7
Room:
101.13

Room:
3.7

Room:
3.8
Room:
67.25
Room:
37.1
Room:
87.11

Room:
6.7

Room:
67.26
Room:
2.8
Room:
87.12

Room:
30.14
Room:
70.21
Room:

RELIGION AND POLITICS


SECTION RECEPTION
PCC, 104-B
REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING AND
AWARDS CEREMONY
Loews, Commonwealth A2
RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT
GROUP: EMERGING RESEARCH
FROM MENA WORKSHOPS
ALUMNI
PCC, 102-A
RESEARCHING THE C-SPAN
VIDEO LIBRARY
PCC, 104-A
RUSSIAN POLITICS GROUP
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 412
SWPSA EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
MEETING
PCC, 303-AB
SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 310
SET-THEORETIC MULTIMETHOD RESEARCH:
COMBINING QCA AND PROCESS
TRACING (QMMR6)
PCC, 201-C
SEXUALITY AND POLITICS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 308
SIMULATIONS AND GAMES FOR
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
PCC, 204-B
SITING AND ENGAGEMENT
COMMITTEE BUSINESS
MEETING
Offsite, Offsite TBD
SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS
OPEN MEETING
Marriott, Room 301
STANFORD POLITICAL SCIENCE
DEPARTMENT RECEPTION
PCC, 104-A

Fri 7:30 pm

30.15
Room:

Sat 12:00 pm

33.8
Room:
106.1

Thu 7:30 pm
Room:
70.22
Sat 6:30 pm
Room:
21.3

Wed 9:00 am

Room:
8.3

Fri 6:30 pm

Page 208

TEACHING CIVIC
ENGAGEMENT ROUNDTABLE:
TEACHING CIVIC
ENGAGEMENT ACROSS THE
DISCIPLINES IN THE TWENTYFIRST CENTURY
Loews, Commonwealth D

70.23
Room:

TEXAS RECEPTION
PCC, 103-A

91.3

THE 114TH CONGRESS:


OBSERVATIONS FROM THE
2015-16 APSA CONGRESSIONAL
FELLOWS
Loews, Commonwealth A2

Room:
87.13

Wed 2:00 pm

SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY
POLITICAL SCIENCE
DEPARTMENT RECEPTION
PCC, 108-A

Room:

Fri 7:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm

STRUCTURES OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE REVOLUTIONS: DA-RT
AND AUDIT CULTURES
Loews, Commonwealth A2

TEACHING AND LEARNING


COMMITTEE BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 308

Wed 9:00 am

Thu 7:30 pm

Room:

THE APSA PRACADEMIC


FELLOWSHIP: EXPERIENCE
FROM THE FIRST YEAR
PCC, 113-A

Sun 8:00 am

Fri 7:30 pm

Thu 2:00 pm

Thu 7:00 am

Fri 7:30 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC


ADMINISTRATION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

30.16
Fri 6:30 pm
Room:
33.9
Wed 9:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm
Room:
50.13
Room:
Thu 6:30 pm

80.1

Fri 7:30 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

STATE POLITICS AND POLICY


SECTION RECEPTION
Loews, Congress A

Thu 6:30 pm

Thu 6:30 pm

Room:

208

STATE POLITICS AND POLICY


SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A2

THE AFRICAN POLITICS


CONFERENCE GROUP BUSINESS
MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A1
THE CHURCHILL CENTRE
ANNUAL BLACK TIE ACADEMIC
DINNER, HONORING MICHAEL
BARONE
Offsite, Union League of Philadelphia
THE FUTURE OF
TRANSGENDER RIGHTS
Marriott, Franklin 13
THE FUTURE OF U.S. HIGHER
EDUCATION AND THE FUTURE
OF AMERICAN POLITICAL
SCIENCE AS A MODE OF
SCHOLARSHIP, TEACHING, AND
WORKING
PCC, 104-B

Thu 6:30 pm

Thu 7:30 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Sat 9:30 am

103.1

Room:
70.24

THE INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATION FOUNDATION
BOARD OF EDITORS ANNUAL
MEETING
Marriott, Salon A

Room:

THE JOURNAL OF POLITICS


RECEPTION
PCC, 110-AB

50.14
Room:

THE METHODS CAFE


Marriott, Liberty Ballroom

6.8

THE METHODS STUDIO:


WORKSHOPTEXTUAL
ANALYSIS AND CRITICAL
SEMIOTICSAND CRIT
PCC, 108-B

Room:

Room:
33.10

Room:
104.7

Room:
59.7

Room:
44.5

Room:
70.25
Room:
70.28

Room:
2.9

Room:
70.26
Room:
102.3

Room:

THE PARTISAN DIVIDE AND


THE 2016 ELECTION
Loews, Commonwealth A2
THE REVIEW OF POLITICS,
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME
RECEPTION
Loews, Congress B
THE WILF FAMILY
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICS
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
RECEPTION
Loews, Commonwealth D
THINKING OUTSIDE THE BOX:
NON-ACADEMIC JOBS
ROUNDTABLE
Marriott, Room 302
TO HELL AND BACK: BLACK
POLITICAL SCIENTISTS,
DISPOSSESSION, DISABILITY,
AND THE QUOTIDIAN
VIOLENCE OF ACADEMIC LIFE
PCC, 112-A
UCLA POLITICAL SCIENCE
DEPARTMENT RECEPTION
PCC, 106-AB
UW-MADISON POLITICAL
SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
RECEPTION
PCC, 104-B
UNDERSTANDING
COMPLEXITY: A SIMPLE GUIDE
TO USING & DEVELOPING
ABM'S & NETWORKS FOR
RESEARCH
PCC, 202-B
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA,
BERKELEY RECEPTION
Marriott, Salon I
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE RECEPTION
Loews, Congress B

33.11

Room:
102.4
Fri 7:30 pm
Room:
Fri 12:00 pm

71.2

Wed 2:00 pm
Room:
6.9
Room:

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE RECEPTION
Marriott, Meeting Room 502
UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE RECEPTION
Loews, Congress A
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE RECEPTION, HOSTED
BY LOUIS PAULY, CHAIR
PCC, 102-A
UNLOCKING SUCCESS WITH
FAILURE
PCC, 203-B

Thu 7:30 pm

Sat 6:30 pm

Fri 8:30 pm

Wed 2:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm
67.27
Room:
Thu 7:30 pm
70.27
Room:
Sat 7:30 pm

URBAN & LOCAL POLITICS


Fri 6:30 pm
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Offsite, Drexel University Stiles Hall Multipurpose
Room (325 N. 15th St.)
URBAN & LOCAL POLITICS
Fri 7:30 pm
SECTION RECEPTION
Offsite, Drexel University Stiles Hall Multipurpose
Room (325 N. 15th St.)

50.16
Room:

W.W. NORTON FOCUS GROUP


Marriott, Room 301

30.17

WESTERN POLITICAL SCIENCE


ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL MEETING
Marriott, Room 308

Fri 4:00 pm
Room:
95.5
Fri 10:00 am

Room:
50.17
Fri 7:30 pm
Room:
67.28
Fri 7:30 pm
Room:
101.14
Wed 9:00 am
Room:
82.3

Fri 7:30 pm
Room:
95.6
Sat 6:30 pm

Room:

WHO PUBLISHES, WHO


PERISHES? CHALLENGES IN
RESEARCH WITH VULNERABLE
POPULATIONS
Loews, Commonwealth C
WHY RECONSTRUCTION
MATTERS TO POLITICAL
SCIENCE
PCC, 103-B
WOMEN AND POLITICS
RESEARCH SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 13
WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR
POLITICAL SCIENCE BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 306
WORKING GROUP:
CONSOLIDATING DATABASES
ON POLITICAL ELITES IN
CHINA AND RUSSIA
Marriott, Room 301
WORKING GROUP: ELECTION
SCIENCES, ELECTION LAW, AND
ELECTION ADMINISTRATION:
CHARTING A RESEARCH
AGENDA
Loews, Tubman

Fri 12:00 pm

Thu 6:30 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Sat 6:30 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Sat 4:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 209

209

Related Group Panels

50.15

Sat 6:30 pm

21.4

Room:
95.7

Room:
82.4

Room:
25.4

Room:
91.4
Room:
104.8
Room:
6.10
Room:
2.10

Room:

210

WORKING GROUP:
HISTORICAL: WORKING
GROUP: HISTORICAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY
Marriott, Room 301
WORKING GROUP:
INTERSECTIONALITY AND
PEDAGOGY
Marriott, Room 413
WORKING GROUP:
PHILANTHROPY, POLICY, AND
POWER
PCC, 101-A
WORKING GROUP:
PRACTICING POLITICS:
POLITICAL SCIENTISTS IN
GOVERNMENT, POLICY
CENTERS, AND OTHER POLICYRELATED ORGANIZATIONS
Marriott, Room 301
WORKING GROUP: SOCIAL
POLICY IN NON-DEMOCRACIES
Marriott, Room 301
YALE UNIVERSITY, POLITICAL
SCIENCE RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 407
YOU HAVE A JOB OFFER: GET
THE MOST OUT OF IT
PCC, 204-B
WHAT? I HAVE TO LEAD A
PROGRAM ASSESSMENT?!?
LEADING YOUR DEPARTMENT
OR PROGRAM ASSESSMENT
PROCESS FOR REGIONAL
ACCREDITATION
PCC, 203-B

Thu 2:00 pm

Sat 4:00 pm

Sat 10:00 am

Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 7:30 pm

Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 9:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 210

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 (ALPHA)


APSA Meetings and Receptions by Alpha
Thu 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Sat 7:00 am
Thu 12:00 pm
Thu 5:30 pm
Wed 6:30 pm
Thu 8:30 am

Thu 8:30 pm
Sat 12:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm

Sat 7:00 am

Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Thu 8:00 am
Sat 7:00 am
Thu 5:30 pm
Thu 8:30 pm

Fri 8:30 pm

Sat 5:30 pm
Fri 5:00 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Sat 2:00 pm
Fri 5:30 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 7:00 am
Fri 10:00 am
Thu 7:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm

Thu 7:30 pm
Fri 5:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Thu 7:00 am

Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : 5001

Page 211

211

Meetings and Receptions

112th Annual Meeting Opening Reception


(PCC, Grand Hall)
2016 GESIS Klingemann Prize for the Best
CSES Scholarship (PCC, 112-B)
2017 Division Chairs - Program Committee
Meeting (Marriott, Liberty Ballroom)
APSA All-Member Business Meeting (PCC,
114)
APSA Asia Committee Planning Meeting (PCC,
101-A)
APSA Awards Ceremony (Marriott, Liberty
Ballroom)
APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific
Americans Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
308)
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks and
NCOBPS Reception (Marriott, Franklin 9)
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the
Profession Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
301)
APSA Committee on the Status of First
Generation Higher Education Scholars in the
Profession Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
302)
APSA Committee on the Status of Women in
the Profession Business Meeting (Marriott,
Room 301)
APSA Congressional Fellows, Alumni, and
Friends Happy Hour (Marriott, Circ Bar)
APSA Graduate Student Happy Hour (Marriott,
Liberty Ballroom)
APSA International Committee Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 302)
APSA Journal Editors Meeting (Marriott, Room
302)
APSA Mentoring Networking Reception
(Marriott, Room 410)
APSA Reception Honoring Women in the
Profession: Women & Pol. Section, Womens
Caucus & Comm. (PCC, 201-C)
APSA Reception Honoring Women of Color in
the Profession: Women & Pol. Section,
Womens Caucus & Comm. (Marriott,
Independence Ballroom)
APSA Status Committee Chairs Meeting
(Marriott, Room 301)
APSA Status Committee of Lesbians, Gays,

Bisexuals and Transgenders in the Profession


Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 308)
APSA Status Committee of Lesbians, Gays,
Bisexuals and Transgenders in the Profession,
Sexuality and Politics Section, and LGBT
Caucus Reception (Marriott, Salon J)
APSA Status of Asian-Pacific Americans in the
Profession Committee and Status of Latinos y
Latinas in the Profession Committee Reception
(Marriott, Room 410)
APSA Technology Task Force Meeting
(Marriott, Room 302)
APSA/ASA Africa Planning Committee Meeting
(PCC, 101-A)
APSR Editorial Board Meeting (Loews,
Washington C)
Asian Pacific American Caucus Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 302)
Association Leaders Meeting (PCC, 101-A)
BYU Political Affairs Society Reception
(Marriott, Meeting Room 501)
Book Reception for Contested Transformation:
Race, Gender and Political Leadership in 21st
Century America (Marriott, Room 308)
British Politics Group Reception (Marriott,
Room 307)
CQ Press Event (Loews, Congress A)
Canadian Politics Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 304)
Christians in Political Science Business Meeting
(PCC, 104-B)
Claremont Institute Reception (Loews,
Commonwealth B)
Class and Inequality Reception and Outreach
Event (Marriott, Franklin 6)
Class and Inequality Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 407)
Columbia University Department of Political
Science Reception (PCC, 105-AB)
Committee on the Status of Latinos in the
Profession Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
301)
Community College Status Committee Business
Meeting (PCC, 101-A)
Comparative Democratization Section Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 309)
Comparative Democratization Section Reception
(Marriott, Room 310)
Comparative Politics Section Business Meeting

(Marriott, Meeting Room 501)


Comparative Politics Section Reception
(Marriott, Meeting Room 502)
Conference Group on Italian Politics and
Society Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 413)
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 410)
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Reception
(Marriott, Room 411)
Conference for the Study of Political Thought
(CSPT) Annual Reception (Marriott, Salon J)
Conflict Processess Business Meeting (Marriott,
Franklin 9)
Cornell University Department of Government
Reception (Offsite, Pennsylvania 6 (114 S. 12
St. at Sansom St.))
Department Chairs Luncheon (Loews, Congress
C)
Drexel Center for Public Policy Business
Meeting (Offsite, Three Parkway Building (1601
Cherry Street, 6th Fl., Ste. 612))
Drexel Center for Public Policy Reception
(Offsite, Three Parkway Building (1601 Cherry
Street, 6th Fl., Ste. 612))
EITM Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 408)
Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site (ESP)
Reception and Tour (Offsite, 2027 Fairmont
Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19130)
Elections, Public Opinion, & Voting Behavior
Sections Business Meeting (Marriott, Franklin 3)
Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting
Behavior & Political Communications Sections
Joint Reception (Marriott, Salon C)
Eric Voegelin Society Business Meeting
(Loews, Commonwealth C)
Eric Voegelin Society Reception (Loews,
Tubman)
European Politics and Society Section Business
Meeting (Loews, Congress A)
Experimental Research Section Business
Meeting (Marriott, Franklin 7)
Federalism and IGR Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 411)
Female Working Group on African Politics
(invite only) (PCC, 303-AB)
First-Time Attendee Breakfast (Marriott, Liberty
Ballroom)
Foreign Policy Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 408)
Foundations Plenary Speaker Session (PCC,
204-C)
Foundations of Political Theory Reception
(Marriott, Liberty Ballroom)
Foundations of Political Theory Section
Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 305)
French Politics Group Business Meeting
(Marriott, Meeting Room 502)
Future Directions of the American National
Election Studies (PCC, 106-AB)
Gaus Reception - Public Administrative Section
Reception (Marriott, Franklin 10)
Health Politics & Policy Section Business

212

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 212

Sat 7:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Sat 8:00 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 7:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Sat 6:30 pm
Fri 6:00 pm

Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm

Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Sat 7:30 am
Thu 7:00 am
Fri 12:30 pm
Fri 6:00 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm

Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A1)


Health Politics and Policy Section Reception
(Loews, Congress C)
Human Rights Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 407)
Human Rights Section Reception (Offsite,
Caribou Cafe)
IPSA Research Committee #12 (Biology and
Politics) Business Meeting (PCC, 111-A)
Ideas, Knowledge and Politics Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 308)
Ideas, Knowledge and Politics Reception
(Marriott, Room 310)
In The Field: Political Science Meeting
(Marriott, Room 409)
Indigenous Studies Network Business Meeting
(PCC, 111-A)
Information Technology and Politics Section
Business Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth C)
Institute for Humane Studies Reception
(Marriott, Room 413)
Interest Groups & Advocacy Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 406)
International Attendee Reception (Marriott,
Independence Ballroom)
International History and Politics Section
Business Meeting (Loews, Tubman)
International Security and Arms Control Section
Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 306)
International Security and Arms Control Section
Reception (Marriott, Franklin 4)
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 304)
Italian Political Science Review, Editorial Board
Meeting (Marriott, Room 302)
Ithiel de Sola Pool Award and Lectureship
(Loews, Commonwealth A2)
Jack Miller Center Reception (PCC, 103-C)
Japan Political Studies Group Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 303)
John Gaus Award and Lectureship (Marriott,
Franklin 11)
Journal of Comparative Politics Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 413)
Journal of Conflict Resolution Editorial Board
Meeting (PCC, 101-A)
Journal of Political Science Education Editorial
Board Meeting (Loews, Tubman)
Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics Business
Meeting (PCC, 104-A)
Journal of Women, Politics & Policy Editorial
Board Meeting (PCC, 303-AB)
LGBT Caucus Business Meeting (Marriott,
Room 413)
Labor Project Business Meeting and Keynote
(PCC, 105-AB)
Latino Caucus in Political Science Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 414)
Law & Courts Section Business Meeting (PCC,
204-B)
Law and Courts Section & Constitutional Law
and Jurisprudence Section Lifetime Achievement

Sat 7:30 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 12:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Fri 7:00 pm
Thu 7:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Fri 2:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:00 am
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Sat 6:00 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 11:45 am
Wed 8:00 am
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Thu 8:00 am
Fri 8:00 am
Thu 6:30 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 6:00 pm
Fri 7:00 am

Sat 7:30 pm
Fri 7:00 am
Sat 12:00 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Fri 7:00 am
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 5:30 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Fri 6:00 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm

Political Organizations and Parties Section


Business Meeting (PCC, 112-A)
Political Organizations and Parties Section
Executive Council Meeting (PCC, 107-A)
Political Psychology Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 309)
Political Science Education Section Business
Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A2)
Politics & Gender Journal Editorial Board
Meeting (Loews, Tubman)
Politics and Art in Philadelphia - A Reception
Sponsored by the Siting and Engagement
Committee and Organized Section on Politics,
Literature, and Film (Loews, Washington C)
Politics and History Section & International
History and Politics Section Joint Reception
(Loews, Washington A)
Politics and History Section Business Meeting
(Loews, Commonwealth A1)
Politics, Literature and Film Section Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 408)
Polity Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 413)
Presidency and Executive Politics Business
Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A1)
Public Administration Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Franklin 11)
Public Policy Section Business Meeting and
Award Ceremony (PCC, 202-A)
Publius: The Journal of Federalism Editorial
Board Meeting (Marriott, Room 306)
Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Section
Business Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth D)
Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Section
Reception (Marriott, Salon KL)
Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Section Business
Meeting (Loews, Washington C)
Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) 30th
Anniversary Reception (Marriott, Independence
Ballroom)
Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI)
Advisory Committee Meeting (Marriott, Room
302)
Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI)
Orientation Meeting (Marriott, Room 301)
Reception Honoring Teaching (Loews, Congress
C)
Related Group Meeting (Loews, Congress C)
Religion and Politics Section Business Meeting
(PCC, 104-A)
Religion and Politics Section Reception (PCC,
104-B)
Representation and Electoral Systems Section
Business Meeting and Awards Ceremony
(Loews, Commonwealth A2)
Russian Politics Group Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 412)
SWPSA Executive Council Meeting (PCC, 303AB)
Science, Technology and Environmental Politics
Section Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 310)
Sexuality and Politics Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 308)

Fri 7:00 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 10:30 am
Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Sat 7:00 am
Sat 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Thu 10:00 am
Fri 7:30 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 7:00 am
Sat 12:00 pm
Fri 6:30 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 213

213

Meetings and Receptions

Panel (PCC, 204-B)


Law and Courts Section Reception (PCC, 201B)
Legislative Studies Quarterly Editorial Board
Breakfast Meeting (Marriott, Room 413)
Legislative Studies Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Franklin 7)
Legislative Studies Section Reception (Marriott,
Room 406)
MENA Workshops Alumni and Friends
Reception (Offsite, Offsite TBD)
MIT Department of Political Science Reception
(PCC, 107-A)
MPSA Executive Council Meeting (Offsite,
MPSA Offsite Location)
Meeting of Comparative Study of Electoral
Systems (CSES) Project (PCC, 204-C)
Migration and Citizenship Section Business
Meeting (Marriott, Franklin 1)
Migration and Citizenship Section Reception
(Offsite, Asian Arts Initiative)
Minority Student Recruitment Program (MSRP)
Best Practices Meeting (Marriott, Room 301)
National Conference of Black Political Scientists
Executive Council Meeting (PCC, 101-A)
New Political Science Business Meeting (PCC,
111-B)
New Political Science Editorial Board Meeting
(Marriott, Room 302)
New Political Science Invited Lecture (Marriott,
Franklin 1)
New Political Science Publications Executive
Committee Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
308)
New Political Science Reception (Marriott,
Franklin 2)
Organized Section Chairs Breakfast (Marriott,
Liberty Ballroom)
PRQ Editorial Board Meeting (Marriott, Room
308)
PRQ Reception (Marriott, Room 414)
PS Editorial Board Meeting (Marriott, Room
301)
Pearson Focus Group (PCC, 303-AB)
Pearson Reception (PCC, 303-AB)
Perspectives on Politics Editorial Board Meeting
(Loews, Washington C)
Pi Sigma Alpha Business Meeting (Marriott,
Franklin 8)
Political Communication Business Meeting
(Marriott, Franklin 5)
Political Economy Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 309)
Political Forecasting Group Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 305)
Political Methodology Section Business Meeting
(PCC, 112-A)
Political Networks Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 305)
Political Networks Section Reception (Offsite,
Vintage Wine Bar & Bistro)

Siting and Engagement Committee Business


Meeting (Offsite, Offsite TBD)
Southeast Asian Politics Open Meeting
(Marriott, Room 301)
Stanford Political Science Department Reception
(PCC, 104-A)
State Politics and Policy Section Business
Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A2)
State Politics and Policy Section Reception
(Loews, Congress A)
Syracuse University Political Science
Department Reception (PCC, 108-A)
Teaching and Learning Committee Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 308)
Texas Reception (PCC, 103-A)
The African Politics Conference Group Business
Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A1)
The Churchill Centre Annual Black Tie
Academic Dinner, Honoring Michael Barone
(Offsite, Union League of Philadelphia)
The International Organization Foundation
Board of Editors Annual Meeting (Marriott,
Salon A)
The Journal of Politics Reception (PCC, 110AB)
The Review of Politics, University of Notre
Dame Reception (Loews, Congress B)
The Wilf Family Department of Politics New
York University Reception (Loews,
Commonwealth D)
UCLA Political Science Department Reception
(PCC, 106-AB)
UW-Madison Political Science Department
Reception (PCC, 104-B)
University of California, Berkeley Reception
(Marriott, Salon I)
University of Chicago Department of Political
Science Reception (Loews, Congress B)
University of Michigan Department of Political
Science Reception (Marriott, Meeting Room
502)
University of Rochester Department of Political
Science Reception (Loews, Congress A)
University of Toronto Department of Political
Science Reception, Hosted by Louis Pauly,
Chair (PCC, 102-A)
Urban & Local Politics Section Business
Meeting (Offsite, Drexel University Stiles Hall
Multipurpose Room (325 N. 15th St.))
Urban & Local Politics Section Reception
(Offsite, Drexel University Stiles Hall
Multipurpose Room (325 N. 15th St.))
W.W. Norton Focus Group (Marriott, Room
301)
Western Political Science Association Executive
Council Meeting (Marriott, Room 308)
Women and Politics Research Section Business
Meeting (Marriott, Franklin 13)
Women's Caucus for Political Science Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 306)
Working Group: Consolidating Databases on
Political Elites in China and Russia (Marriott,
Room 301)

214

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 214

Sat 12:00 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Thu 7:00 am
Fri 7:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm

Sat 6:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm

Sat 6:30 pm
Fri 8:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 12:00 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 10:00 am

Working Group: Election Sciences, Election


Law, and Election Administration: Charting a
Research Agenda (Loews, Tubman)
Working Group: Historical (Marriott, Room
301)
Working Group: Intersectionality and Pedagogy
(Marriott, Room 413)
Working Group: Philanthropy, Policy, and
Power (PCC, 101-A)
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political
Scientists in Government, Policy Centers, and
Other Policy-Related Organizations (Marriott,
Room 301)
Working Group: Social Policy in NonDemocracies (Marriott, Room 301)
Yale University, Political Science Reception
(Marriott, Room 407)

Sat 4:00 pm

Thu 2:00 pm
Sat 4:00 pm
Sat 10:00 am
Thu 4:00 pm

Sat 2:00 pm
Sat 7:30 pm

APSA MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS (BY


TIME)
APSA Meetings and Receptions by Time
Meeting of Comparative Study of Electoral
Systems (CSES) Project (PCC, 204-C)
APSA Awards Ceremony (Marriott, Liberty
Ballroom)
Committee on the Status of Latinos in the
Profession Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
301)
First-Time Attendee Breakfast (Marriott, Liberty
Ballroom)
Teaching and Learning Committee Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 308)
APSA International Committee Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 302)
Minority Student Recruitment Program (MSRP)
Best Practices Meeting (Marriott, Room 301)
APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific
Americans Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
308)
Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI)
Orientation Meeting (Marriott, Room 301)
APSA All-Member Business Meeting (PCC,
114)
Working Group: Historical (Marriott, Room
301)
Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political
Scientists in Government, Policy Centers, and
Other Policy-Related Organizations (Marriott,
Room 301)
APSA Asia Committee Planning Meeting (PCC,
101-A)
APSA Mentoring Networking Reception
(Marriott, Room 410)
Canadian Politics Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 304)
Experimental Research Section Business
Meeting (Marriott, Franklin 7)
Future Directions of the American National
Election Studies (PCC, 106-AB)
Indigenous Studies Network Business Meeting
(PCC, 111-A)
Italian Political Science Review, Editorial Board
Meeting (Marriott, Room 302)

Wed 8:00 am
Wed 6:30 pm
Thu 7:00 am

Thu 7:00 am
Thu 7:00 am
Thu 8:00 am
Thu 8:00 am
Thu 8:30 am

Thu 10:00 am
Thu 12:00 pm
Thu 2:00 pm
Thu 4:00 pm

Thu 5:30 pm
Thu 5:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm

Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm
Thu 6:30 pm

Thu 7:00 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm

Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm

Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 7:30 pm
Thu 8:30 pm
Thu 8:30 pm

Fri 7:00 am

Meeting (Marriott, Room 302)


Legislative Studies Quarterly Editorial Board
Breakfast Meeting (Marriott, Room 413)
New Political Science Publications Executive
Committee Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
308)
Organized Section Chairs Breakfast (Marriott,
Liberty Ballroom)
PS Editorial Board Meeting (Marriott, Room
301)
SWPSA Executive Council Meeting (PCC, 303AB)
National Conference of Black Political Scientists
Executive Council Meeting (PCC, 101-A)
Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI)
Advisory Committee Meeting (Marriott, Room
302)
Association Leaders Meeting (PCC, 101-A)
Politics & Gender Journal Editorial Board
Meeting (Loews, Tubman)
MPSA Executive Council Meeting (Offsite,
MPSA Offsite Location)
APSA Committee on the Status of First
Generation Higher Education Scholars in the
Profession Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
302)
APSR Editorial Board Meeting (Loews,
Washington C)
Department Chairs Luncheon (Loews, Congress
C)
European Politics and Society Section Business
Meeting (Loews, Congress A)
Human Rights Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 407)
Interest Groups & Advocacy Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 406)
Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics Business
Meeting (PCC, 104-A)
LGBT Caucus Business Meeting (Marriott,
Room 413)
Political Methodology Section Business Meeting
(PCC, 112-A)
Public Administration Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Franklin 11)
Public Policy Section Business Meeting and
Award Ceremony (PCC, 202-A)
W.W. Norton Focus Group (Marriott, Room
301)
Foreign Policy Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 408)
Ideas, Knowledge and Politics Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 308)
Journal of Conflict Resolution Editorial Board
Meeting (PCC, 101-A)
APSA Status Committee of Lesbians, Gays,
Bisexuals and Transgenders in the Profession
Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 308)
APSA/ASA Africa Planning Committee Meeting
(PCC, 101-A)
CQ Press Event (Loews, Congress A)
Pi Sigma Alpha Business Meeting (Marriott,
Franklin 8)

Fri 7:00 am
Fri 7:00 am

Fri 7:00 am
Fri 7:00 am
Fri 7:00 am
Fri 8:00 am
Fri 8:00 am

Fri 10:00 am
Fri 10:30 am
Fri 11:45 am
Fri 12:00 pm

Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:00 pm
Fri 12:30 pm
Fri 12:30 pm
Fri 2:00 pm
Fri 5:00 pm

Fri 5:30 pm
Fri 5:30 pm
Fri 6:00 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 215

215

Meetings and Receptions

Labor Project Business Meeting and Keynote


(PCC, 105-AB)
New Political Science Business Meeting (PCC,
111-B)
Political Networks Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 305)
Political Organizations and Parties Section
Executive Council Meeting (PCC, 107-A)
Political Psychology Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 309)
Publius: The Journal of Federalism Editorial
Board Meeting (Marriott, Room 306)
Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Section
Business Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth D)
Religion and Politics Section Business Meeting
(PCC, 104-A)
Southeast Asian Politics Open Meeting
(Marriott, Room 301)
State Politics and Policy Section Business
Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A2)
The African Politics Conference Group Business
Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A1)
Western Political Science Association Executive
Council Meeting (Marriott, Room 308)
Law and Courts Section & Constitutional Law
and Jurisprudence Section Lifetime Achievement
Panel (PCC, 204-B)
Institute for Humane Studies Reception
(Marriott, Room 413)
British Politics Group Reception (Marriott,
Room 307)
BYU Political Affairs Society Reception
(Marriott, Meeting Room 501)
Conference for the Study of Political Thought
(CSPT) Annual Reception (Marriott, Salon J)
International Attendee Reception (Marriott,
Independence Ballroom)
PRQ Reception (Marriott, Room 414)
Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Section
Reception (Marriott, Salon KL)
Religion and Politics Section Reception (PCC,
104-B)
State Politics and Policy Section Reception
(Loews, Congress A)
The Churchill Centre Annual Black Tie
Academic Dinner, Honoring Michael Barone
(Offsite, Union League of Philadelphia)
The Review of Politics, University of Notre
Dame Reception (Loews, Congress B)
University of Michigan Department of Political
Science Reception (Marriott, Meeting Room
502)
112th Annual Meeting Opening Reception
(PCC, Grand Hall)
Political Networks Section Reception (Offsite,
Vintage Wine Bar & Bistro)
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks and
NCOBPS Reception (Marriott, Franklin 9)
APSA Reception Honoring Women in the
Profession: Women & Pol. Section, Womens
Caucus & Comm. (PCC, 201-C)
Asian Pacific American Caucus Business

Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site (ESP)


Reception and Tour (Offsite, 2027 Fairmont
Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19130)
Foundations Plenary Speaker Session (PCC,
204-C)
Class and Inequality Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 407)
Conference Group on Italian Politics and
Society Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 413)
Conflict Processess Business Meeting (Marriott,
Franklin 9)
Drexel Center for Public Policy Business
Meeting (Offsite, Three Parkway Building (1601
Cherry Street, 6th Fl., Ste. 612))
Elections, Public Opinion, & Voting Behavior
Sections Business Meeting (Marriott, Franklin 3)
Federalism and IGR Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 411)
French Politics Group Business Meeting
(Marriott, Meeting Room 502)
Human Rights Section Reception (Offsite,
Caribou Cafe)
International History and Politics Section
Business Meeting (Loews, Tubman)
International Security and Arms Control Section
Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 306)
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 304)
IPSA Research Committee #12 (Biology and
Politics) Business Meeting (PCC, 111-A)
John Gaus Award and Lectureship (Marriott,
Franklin 11)
Journal of Women, Politics & Policy Editorial
Board Meeting (PCC, 303-AB)
Latino Caucus in Political Science Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 414)
Law & Courts Section Business Meeting (PCC,
204-B)
Legislative Studies Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Franklin 7)
Migration and Citizenship Section Business
Meeting (Marriott, Franklin 1)
Political Communication Business Meeting
(Marriott, Franklin 5)
Political Economy Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 309)
Political Forecasting Group Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 305)
Political Science Education Section Business
Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A2)
Politics and History Section Business Meeting
(Loews, Commonwealth A1)
Politics, Literature and Film Section Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 408)
Russian Politics Group Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 412)
Sexuality and Politics Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 308)
Urban & Local Politics Section Business
Meeting (Offsite, Drexel University Stiles Hall
Multipurpose Room (325 N. 15th St.))
Women and Politics Research Section Business

216

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 216

Fri 6:00 pm

Fri 6:00 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm
Fri 6:30 pm

Fri 6:30 pm

Meeting (Marriott, Franklin 13)


Cornell University Department of Government
Reception (Offsite, Pennsylvania 6 (114 S. 12
St. at Sansom St.))
Information Technology and Politics Section
Business Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth C)
Political Organizations and Parties Section
Business Meeting (PCC, 112-A)
2016 GESIS Klingemann Prize for the Best
CSES Scholarship (PCC, 112-B)
APSA Status Committee of Lesbians, Gays,
Bisexuals and Transgenders in the Profession,
Sexuality and Politics Section, and LGBT
Caucus Reception (Marriott, Salon J)
APSA Status of Asian-Pacific Americans in the
Profession Committee and Status of Latinos y
Latinas in the Profession Committee Reception
(Marriott, Room 410)
Claremont Institute Reception (Loews,
Commonwealth B)
Class and Inequality Reception and Outreach
Event (Marriott, Franklin 6)
Columbia University Department of Political
Science Reception (PCC, 105-AB)
Drexel Center for Public Policy Reception
(Offsite, Three Parkway Building (1601 Cherry
Street, 6th Fl., Ste. 612))
Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting
Behavior & Political Communications Sections
Joint Reception (Marriott, Salon C)
Foundations of Political Theory Reception
(Marriott, Liberty Ballroom)
Gaus Reception - Public Administrative Section
Reception (Marriott, Franklin 10)
Ideas, Knowledge and Politics Reception
(Marriott, Room 310)
International Security and Arms Control Section
Reception (Marriott, Franklin 4)
Jack Miller Center Reception (PCC, 103-C)
Law and Courts Section Reception (PCC, 201B)
Legislative Studies Section Reception (Marriott,
Room 406)
Migration and Citizenship Section Reception
(Offsite, Asian Arts Initiative)
MIT Department of Political Science Reception
(PCC, 107-A)
Politics and Art in Philadelphia - A Reception
Sponsored by the Siting and Engagement
Committee and Organized Section on Politics,
Literature, and Film (Loews, Washington C)
Politics and History Section & International
History and Politics Section Joint Reception
(Loews, Washington A)
Reception Honoring Teaching (Loews, Congress
C)
Stanford Political Science Department Reception
(PCC, 104-A)
Syracuse University Political Science
Department Reception (PCC, 108-A)
Texas Reception (PCC, 103-A)
The Journal of Politics Reception (PCC, 110AB)

Fri 7:00 pm

Fri 7:00 pm
Fri 7:00 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm
Fri 8:30 pm

Fri 8:30 pm

Sat 7:00 am
Sat 7:00 am

Sat 7:00 am
Sat 7:00 am
Sat 7:30 am
Sat 10:00 am

Sat 10:00 am
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm

Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 12:00 pm
Sat 2:00 pm
Sat 2:00 pm
Sat 4:00 pm

Working Group: Intersectionality and Pedagogy


(Marriott, Room 413)
APSA Status Committee Chairs Meeting
(Marriott, Room 301)
Pearson Reception (PCC, 303-AB)
MENA Workshops Alumni and Friends
Reception (Offsite, Offsite TBD)
New Political Science Invited Lecture (Marriott,
Franklin 1)
APSA Congressional Fellows, Alumni, and
Friends Happy Hour (Marriott, Circ Bar)
Book Reception for Contested Transformation:
Race, Gender and Political Leadership in 21st
Century America (Marriott, Room 308)
Christians in Political Science Business Meeting
(PCC, 104-B)
Comparative Democratization Section Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 309)
Comparative Politics Section Business Meeting
(Marriott, Meeting Room 501)
EITM Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 408)
Eric Voegelin Society Business Meeting
(Loews, Commonwealth C)
Foundations of Political Theory Section
Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 305)
Health Politics & Policy Section Business
Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A1)
In The Field: Political Science Meeting
(Marriott, Room 409)
Japan Political Studies Group Business Meeting
(Marriott, Room 303)
Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Section Business
Meeting (Loews, Washington C)
Representation and Electoral Systems Section
Business Meeting and Awards Ceremony
(Loews, Commonwealth A2)
Women's Caucus for Political Science Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 306)
APSA Graduate Student Happy Hour (Marriott,
Liberty Ballroom)
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Reception
(Marriott, Room 411)
University of Chicago Department of Political
Science Reception (Loews, Congress B)
University of Rochester Department of Political
Science Reception (Loews, Congress A)
The International Organization Foundation
Board of Editors Annual Meeting (Marriott,
Salon A)
Comparative Democratization Section Reception
(Marriott, Room 310)
Comparative Politics Section Reception
(Marriott, Meeting Room 502)
Eric Voegelin Society Reception (Loews,
Tubman)
Health Politics and Policy Section Reception
(Loews, Congress C)
New Political Science Reception (Marriott,
Franklin 2)
Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) 30th
Anniversary Reception (Marriott, Independence
Ballroom)

Sat 4:00 pm
Sat 5:30 pm
Sat 5:30 pm
Sat 6:00 pm
Sat 6:00 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm

Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm

Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm
Sat 6:30 pm

Sat 7:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm
Sat 7:30 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 217

217

Meetings and Receptions

UCLA Political Science Department Reception


(PCC, 106-AB)
University of California, Berkeley Reception
(Marriott, Salon I)
Urban & Local Politics Section Reception
(Offsite, Drexel University Stiles Hall
Multipurpose Room (325 N. 15th St.))
UW-Madison Political Science Department
Reception (PCC, 104-B)
APSA Reception Honoring Women of Color in
the Profession: Women & Pol. Section,
Womens Caucus & Comm. (Marriott,
Independence Ballroom)
University of Toronto Department of Political
Science Reception, Hosted by Louis Pauly,
Chair (PCC, 102-A)
2017 Division Chairs - Program Committee
Meeting (Marriott, Liberty Ballroom)
APSA Committee on the Status of Women in
the Profession Business Meeting (Marriott,
Room 301)
APSA Journal Editors Meeting (Marriott, Room
302)
Polity Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 413)
Female Working Group on African Politics
(invite only) (PCC, 303-AB)
Working Group: Consolidating Databases on
Political Elites in China and Russia (Marriott,
Room 301)
Working Group: Philanthropy, Policy, and
Power (PCC, 101-A)
Community College Status Committee Business
Meeting (PCC, 101-A)
APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the
Profession Business Meeting (Marriott, Room
301)
Ithiel de Sola Pool Award and Lectureship
(Loews, Commonwealth A2)
Journal of Comparative Politics Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 413)
Journal of Political Science Education Editorial
Board Meeting (Loews, Tubman)
New Political Science Editorial Board Meeting
(Marriott, Room 302)
Pearson Focus Group (PCC, 303-AB)
Perspectives on Politics Editorial Board Meeting
(Loews, Washington C)
Presidency and Executive Politics Business
Meeting (Loews, Commonwealth A1)
PRQ Editorial Board Meeting (Marriott, Room
308)
Related Group Meeting (Loews, Congress C)
Science, Technology and Environmental Politics
Section Business Meeting (Marriott, Room 310)
Siting and Engagement Committee Business
Meeting (Offsite, Offsite TBD)
APSA Technology Task Force Meeting
(Marriott, Room 302)
Working Group: Social Policy in NonDemocracies (Marriott, Room 301)
Working Group: Election Sciences, Election
Law, and Election Administration: Charting a
Research Agenda (Loews, Tubman)

The Wilf Family Department of Politics New


York University Reception (Loews,
Commonwealth D)
Yale University, Political Science Reception
(Marriott, Room 407)
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Business
Meeting (Marriott, Room 410)

Sat 7:30 pm

Sat 7:30 pm
Sat 8:00 pm

APSA SHORT COURSES (ALPHA)


APSA Short Courses by Alpha
A Political Primer on the Periodic State
Constitutional Convention Referendum (PCC,
202-B)
Abolitionist Politics After Ferguson: Race,
Prisons, Police, and Theorizing White
Supremacy (PCC, 104-B)
Assessing Political Science Civic Engagement
and Pedagogy Initiatives: The Consortium for
Inter-Campus SoTL Research, the National
Survey of Student Leaders (PCC, 203-A)
Causal Case Studies: Comparing, Matching, and
Tracing (QMMR2) (PCC, 201-B)
Challenges of Electoral Integrity and the
Construction and Use of Expert Indicators
(Marriott, Franklin 2)
City Politics in an Increasingly Urban World:
Mainstreaming the Local in Scholarship and
Policy Making (Offsite, Drexel University
MacAlister 2019-2020 (3250-60 Chestnut
Street))
Communicating Science in Politicized
Environments (PCC, 108-A)
Database and Website Development for Public
Policy: The Comparative Policy Agendas Project
(Offsite, Temple University Center City
Campus)
Designing Multi-Method Research (QMMR1)
(PCC, 201-A)
Designing and Conducting Field Research
(QMMR5) (PCC, 201-B)
Dissertation Workshop: Advances in Science,
Technology, and Environmental Policy (PCC,
303-AB)
Dissertation Workshop: On the Intersection of
Race, Ethnicity and Gender in American
Political Behavior (PCC, 107-A)
Doing Political Science in the Field: Field
Research, Ethics, Engagement, and
Employability (PCC, 202-A)
EIP Breakout 1 (Marriott, Franklin 3)
EIP Breakout 2 (Marriott, Franklin 4)
Embracing Applied Politics in the Classroom
and Curriculum (PCC, 203-A)
Managing and Sharing Qualitative Data and
Qualitative Research Transparency (QMMR3)
(PCC, 201-C)
Mathematics and Democracy: Designing Better
Voting and Fair-Division Procedures (PCC, 106AB)
Of Cities and Governance: New Theoretical
Approaches to Urban Governance (Offsite,
Drexel University MacAlister 2019-2020 (325060 Chestnut Street))
Process Tracing (QMMR 4) (PCC, 201-A)

218

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 218

Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am

Protean and Control Power in Interaction (PCC,


111-A)
Research Development Group: Emerging
Research from MENA Workshops Alumni
(PCC, 102-A)
Researching the C-SPAN Video Library (PCC,
104-A)
Set-Theoretic Multi-Method Research:
Combining QCA and Process Tracing
(QMMR6) (PCC, 201-C)
Simulations and Games for International
Relations (PCC, 204-B)
The Methods Studio: WorkshopTextual
Analysis and Critical Semioticsand Crit
(PCC, 108-B)
Understanding Complexity: A Simple Guide to
Using & Developing ABM's & Networks for
Research (PCC, 202-B)
Unlocking Success with Failure (PCC, 203-B)
You Have a Job Offer: Get the Most Out of It
(PCC, 204-B)
What? I Have to Lead a Program
Assessment?!? Leading Your Department or
Program Assessment Process for Regional
Accreditation (PCC, 203-B)

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 2:00 pm
Wed 2:00 pm
Wed 9:00 am

Wed 1:00 pm

APSA SHORT COURSES (BY TIME)


APSA Short Courses by Time
Wed 2:00 pm
Wed 1:30 pm

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 2:00 pm
Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 2:00 pm

Causal Case Studies: Comparing, Matching, and


Tracing (QMMR2) (PCC, 201-B)
Designing Multi-Method Research (QMMR1)
(PCC, 201-A)
Doing Political Science in the Field: Field
Research, Ethics, Engagement, and
Employability (PCC, 202-A)
Embracing Applied Politics in the Classroom
and Curriculum (PCC, 203-A)
Managing and Sharing Qualitative Data and
Qualitative Research Transparency (QMMR3)
(PCC, 201-C)
Mathematics and Democracy: Designing Better
Voting and Fair-Division Procedures (PCC, 106AB)
Of Cities and Governance: New Theoretical
Approaches to Urban Governance (Offsite,
Drexel University MacAlister 2019-2020 (325060 Chestnut Street))
Simulations and Games for International
Relations (PCC, 204-B)
Understanding Complexity: A Simple Guide to
Using & Developing ABM's & Networks for
Research (PCC, 202-B)
What? I Have to Lead a Program
Assessment?!? Leading Your Department or
Program Assessment Process for Regional
Accreditation (PCC, 203-B)
Challenges of Electoral Integrity and the
Construction and Use of Expert Indicators
(Marriott, Franklin 2)
Dissertation Workshop: Advances in Science,
Technology, and Environmental Policy (PCC,
303-AB)
Dissertation Workshop: On the Intersection of
Race, Ethnicity and Gender in American

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am
Wed 9:00 am

Wed 9:00 am
Wed 1:00 pm

Wed 1:30 pm

Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 2:00 pm
Wed 2:00 pm
Wed 2:00 pm
Wed 2:00 pm

Meetings and Receptions

Political Behavior (PCC, 107-A)


EIP Breakout 1 (Marriott, Franklin 3)
EIP Breakout 2 (Marriott, Franklin 4)
Protean and Control Power in Interaction (PCC,
111-A)
Research Development Group: Emerging
Research from MENA Workshops Alumni
(PCC, 102-A)
Researching the C-SPAN Video Library (PCC,
104-A)
City Politics in an Increasingly Urban World:
Mainstreaming the Local in Scholarship and
Policy Making (Offsite, Drexel University
MacAlister 2019-2020 (3250-60 Chestnut
Street))
Database and Website Development for Public
Policy: The Comparative Policy Agendas Project
(Offsite, Temple University Center City
Campus)
A Political Primer on the Periodic State
Constitutional Convention Referendum (PCC,
202-B)
Abolitionist Politics After Ferguson: Race,
Prisons, Police, and Theorizing White
Supremacy (PCC, 104-B)
Assessing Political Science Civic Engagement
and Pedagogy Initiatives: The Consortium for
Inter-Campus SoTL Research, the National
Survey of Student Leaders (PCC, 203-A)
Communicating Science in Politicized
Environments (PCC, 108-A)
Designing and Conducting Field Research
(QMMR5) (PCC, 201-B)
Process Tracing (QMMR 4) (PCC, 201-A)
Set-Theoretic Multi-Method Research:
Combining QCA and Process Tracing
(QMMR6) (PCC, 201-C)
The Methods Studio: WorkshopTextual
Analysis and Critical Semioticsand Crit
(PCC, 108-B)
Unlocking Success with Failure (PCC, 203-B)
You Have a Job Offer: Get the Most Out of It
(PCC, 204-B)

Wed 2:00 pm

Wed 2:00 pm
Wed 2:00 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 219

219

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : 2002

Page 220 blank no folio

DAILY SCHEDULE
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Wednesday, 8:00 AM to 6:00 PM
APSA Events
1.1
MEETING OF COMPARATIVE STUDY OF
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS (CSES) PROJECT
Room: PCC, 204-C

Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM


APSA Short Course
2.1
CAUSAL CASE STUDIES: COMPARING,
MATCHING, AND TRACING (QMMR2)
Room: PCC, 201-B
Part:
Derek Beach, University of Aarhus
2.2
DESIGNING MULTI-METHOD RESEARCH
(QMMR1)
Room: PCC, 201-A
Part:
Jason Seawright, Northwestern University
2.3
DOING POLITICAL SCIENCE IN THE FIELD:
FIELD RESEARCH, ETHICS, ENGAGEMENT,
AND EMPLOYABILITY
Room: PCC, 202-A
Part:
Meredith L. Weiss, University at Albany, SUNY
2.4
EMBRACING APPLIED POLITICS IN THE
CLASSROOM AND CURRICULUM
Room: PCC, 203-A
Part:
Justin S. Vaughn, Boise State University
Corey Cook, Boise State University
John Hudak
Caroline Heldman, Occidental College
Candice J. Nelson, American University
Joseph Morris, Mercyhurst College
2.5
MANAGING AND SHARING QUALITATIVE
DATA AND QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
TRANSPARENCY (QMMR3)
Room: PCC, 201-C
Part:
Colin Elman, Syracuse University
Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University
Sebastian Karcher, Syracuse University
2.6
MATHEMATICS AND DEMOCRACY: DESIGNING
BETTER VOTING AND FAIR-DIVISION
PROCEDURES
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Part:
Steven J. Brams, New York University
D. Marc Kilgour, Wilfrid Laurier University
2.7
OF CITIES AND GOVERNANCE: NEW
THEORETICAL APPROACHES TO URBAN
GOVERNANCE
Room: Offsite, Drexel University MacAlister 2019-2020 (325060 Chestnut Street)
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL
POLITICS

2.8
Room:
Part:

Annika M. Hinze
James M. Smith, Indiana University South Bend
SIMULATIONS AND GAMES FOR
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
PCC, 204-B
Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Nina A. Kollars, Franklin & Marshall College
Casey Delehanty, Florida State University

Room:
Part:
2.10

Room:
Part:

UNDERSTANDING COMPLEXITY: A SIMPLE


GUIDE TO USING & DEVELOPING ABM'S &
NETWORKS FOR RESEARCH
PCC, 202-B
Liz Johnson, Complex Systems Institute UNCC
WHAT? I HAVE TO LEAD A PROGRAM
ASSESSMENT?!? LEADING YOUR
DEPARTMENT OR PROGRAM ASSESSMENT
PROCESS FOR REGIONAL ACCREDITATION
PCC, 203-B
Jennifer M. Jensen, Lehigh University
Sean McKitrick, Indiana State University

Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM


APSA Short Course
3.1
CHALLENGES OF ELECTORAL INTEGRITY
AND THE CONSTRUCTION AND USE OF
EXPERT INDICATORS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Part:
Pippa Pippa Norris, Harvard University
Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University
3.2
DISSERTATION WORKSHOP: ADVANCES IN
SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
Room: PCC, 303-AB
Part:
Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa Barbara
Ramiro Berardo, Ohio State University
3.3
DISSERTATION WORKSHOP: ON THE
INTERSECTION OF RACE, ETHNICITY AND
GENDER IN AMERICAN POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Room: PCC, 107-A
Part:
Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University
Sarah Allen Gershon, Georgia State University
3.4
EIP BREAKOUT 1
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Pippa Pippa Norris, Harvard University
3.5
EIP BREAKOUT 2
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Alessandro Nai, University of Sydney
3.6
PROTEAN AND CONTROL POWER IN
INTERACTION
Room: PCC, 111-A
Part:
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
3.7
RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT GROUP:
EMERGING RESEARCH FROM MENA
WORKSHOPS ALUMNI
Room: PCC, 102-A
Part:
Andrew Stinson, American Political Science Association
3.8
RESEARCHING THE C-SPAN VIDEO LIBRARY
Room: PCC, 104-A
Part:
Robert X. Browning, Purdue University
Joshua M. Scacco, Purdue University

Wednesday, 1:00 PM to 6:00 PM


APSA Short Course
4.1
CITY POLITICS IN AN INCREASINGLY URBAN
WORLD: MAINSTREAMING THE LOCAL IN
SCHOLARSHIP AND POLICY MAKING
Room: Offsite, Drexel University MacAlister 2019-2020 (325060 Chestnut Street)

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : 5001

Page 221

221

Daily Schedule

Part:

2.9

Wednesday, 1:00 PM to 6:00 PM

Chair:

Part:

Marion Orr, Brown University


Kristin R. Good, Dalhousie University
Richard Stren, University of Toronto
Clarence N. Stone, George Washington University
Ronald K. Vogel, Ryerson University
Blair A. Ruble, Woodrow Wilson Center
Mara Sidney, Rutgers University, Newark
Martin George Horak, University of Western Ontario
Maureen M. Donaghy, Rutgers University, Camden
David Kaufmann, University of Bern
Theresa Enright, University of Toronto
Veronica Herrera, University of Connecticut
Laura A. Reese, Michigan State University
Elizabeth Ann Strom, University of South Florida

6.5
Room:
Part:
6.6
Room:
Part:

6.7
Room:
Part:

Wednesday, 1:30 PM to 5:30 PM


APSA Short Course
5.1
DATABASE AND WEBSITE DEVELOPMENT FOR
PUBLIC POLICY: THE COMPARATIVE POLICY
AGENDAS PROJECT
Room: Offsite, Temple University Center City Campus
Part:
Bryan D. Jones, University of Texas, Austin
Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Joseph Paul McLaughlin, Temple University

6.8
Room:
Part:
6.9
Room:
Part:

Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 6:00 PM


APSA Short Course
6.1
A POLITICAL PRIMER ON THE PERIODIC
STATE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION
REFERENDUM
Room: PCC, 202-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
AND JURISPRUDENCE

Part:

6.2
Room:
Part:
6.3

Room:
Part:
6.4
Room:
Part:

222

J.H. Snider, iSolon.org


Richard Briffault, Columbia University
John Dinan, Wake Forest University
David M. Farrell, University College Dublin, Belfield
Craig B. Holman, Public Citizen
Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University
William Dawes Blake, University of Maryland,
Baltimore County
Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin
ABOLITIONIST POLITICS AFTER FERGUSON:
RACE, PRISONS, POLICE, AND THEORIZING
WHITE SUPREMACY
PCC, 104-B
Sean Parson, Northern Arizona University
ASSESSING POLITICAL SCIENCE CIVIC
ENGAGEMENT AND PEDAGOGY INITIATIVES:
THE CONSORTIUM FOR INTER-CAMPUS SOTL
RESEARCH, THE NATIONAL SURVEY OF
STUDENT LEADERS
PCC, 203-A
J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University
Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University
COMMUNICATING SCIENCE IN POLITICIZED
ENVIRONMENTS
PCC, 108-A
James N. Druckman, Northwestern University
Samara Klar, University of Arizona
Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 222

6.10
Room:
Part:

DESIGNING AND CONDUCTING FIELD


RESEARCH (QMMR5)
PCC, 201-B
Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa Cruz
PROCESS TRACING (QMMR 4)
PCC, 201-A
Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University
Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University
Tasha A. Fairfield, London School of Economics
SET-THEORETIC MULTI-METHOD RESEARCH:
COMBINING QCA AND PROCESS TRACING
(QMMR6)
PCC, 201-C
Ingo Rohlfing, University of Bremen
Carsten Q. Schneider, Central European University
THE METHODS STUDIO: WORKSHOP
TEXTUAL ANALYSIS AND CRITICAL
SEMIOTICSAND CRIT
PCC, 108-B
Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
UNLOCKING SUCCESS WITH FAILURE
PCC, 203-B
Lee D. Walker, University of North Texas
Jennifer Segal Diascro, University of California,
Washington DC (UCDC)
Susan M. Sterett, Virginia Tech
Erik S. Herron, West Virginia University
Judith Grant, Ohio University
YOU HAVE A JOB OFFER: GET THE MOST OUT
OF IT
PCC, 204-B
Amy L. Atchison, Valparaiso University

Wednesday, 6:30 PM to 9:00 PM


APSA Events
7.1
APSA AWARDS CEREMONY
Room: Marriott, Liberty Ballroom

Thursday, September 1, 2016


Thursday, 7:00 AM to 8:00 AM
APSA Events
8.1
COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF LATINOS IN
THE PROFESSION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 301
8.2
FIRST-TIME ATTENDEE BREAKFAST
Room: Marriott, Liberty Ballroom
8.3
TEACHING AND LEARNING COMMITTEE
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 308

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM


Theme Panels
9.1
20 YEARS AFTER WELFARE REFORM
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Sanford F. Schram, Hunter College, CUNY
Part:
Frances Fox Piven, Graduate Center, CUNY
Kaaryn Gustafson, UCI Law
Ron Haskins, Brookings Institution
Lawrence M. Mead, New York University

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

9.2

DATA ACCESS, TRANSPARENCY, AND


REPLICATION IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University
Part:
Raymond Duch, CESS Nuffield
Nicole Janz
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
Colin Elman, Syracuse University
9.3
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: STAGNATION OR
TRANSFORMATION?
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Miles Kahler, American University
Part:
Martha Finnemore, George Washington University
Daniel W. Drezner, Tufts University
Jessica Green, New York University
Judith Kelley, Duke University
Jon C. W. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin, Madison
APSA Events
10.1
APSA INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 302
10.2
FIRST GENERATION SCHOLARS IN THE
PROFESSION ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
Room: PCC, 202-A
Chair: Lorrie Frasure-Yokley
Part:
Pei-te Lien, University of California Santa Barbara
Els de Graauw, Baruch College
Virginia H. Gray, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, Pace University
Kamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine
Cherry Rain, Redlands Community College
10.3
MINORITY STUDENT RECRUITMENT
PROGRAM (MSRP) BEST PRACTICES MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 301
Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
11.1
MACHIAVELLIS "FLORENTINE HISTORIES"
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Alison McQueen, Stanford University
Disc:
John P. McCormick, University of Chicago
Papers: Machiavelli and Guicciardini on the Medici Regime
Mark Jurdjevic, Glendon College, York University
Corruption and Popular Judgment in Machiavelli's
Florentine Histories
Amanda M. Maher
Machiavellis Istorie Fiorentine as Chronicle of Popular
Revolt
Yves Winter, McGill University
Machiavelli's Commercial Republic
Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


11.3
AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT AT THE
MARGINS
Room: PCC, 108-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY

Chair:
Disc:

Kimberly K. Smith
Justin Rose
Kimberly K. Smith

Papers: "Malignant Prejudice: Easton, Race, and the Ethics of


American Republicanism
Melvin Lee Rogers, University of California, Los
Angeles
Democracy: Doing it Over
Melissa A. Orlie
Unsettling American Political Thought: Wendell Berrys
Vision of Transformation
Michael Lamb, Wake Forest University
Europeans into Americans: Turner, Tocqueville, and
Democracy at the Frontier
Matthew Longo, University of Oxford
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
11.4
FRENCH LIBERALISM AND THE BIG PICTURE
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Greg Conti, Jesus College, Cambridge
Disc:
Samuel Moyn
Papers: Filling the Empty Space: What Is Original about
Leforts Theory of Democracy?
Greg Conti, Jesus College, Cambridge
Is Democratic Constructivism Possible?
Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Pierre Rosanvallon and the Goal of Democratic
Intelligibility
William Selinger
Rethinking the French Liberal Revival
Iain Graham Stewart, University College London
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
11.5
THE LIFE AND WORK OF RICHARD E.
FLATHMAN
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Paige Digeser, University of California, Santa Barbara
Part:
Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania
Sophia Mihic, Northeastern Illinois University
Douglas C. Dow, University of Texas at Dallas

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 223

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:


HISTORICAL APPROACHES
11.2
ROUSSEAU AND HIS PREDECESSORS
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Genevieve Rousseliere, University of WisconsinMadison
Disc:
Genevieve Rousseliere, University of WisconsinMadison
Jason Rosensweig, University of Chicago

Papers: Refined Epicureanism and Rousseau's Political Thought


Jared Holley
Rousseaus Sparta: What Lycurgus Tells Us About the
Lawgiver
Robert Lee McNish
Christopher R. Hallenbrook, Bloomsburg University
of Pennsylvania
The Triumph of Wisdom in Rousseaus Reception of
Cicero
Megan Kathleen Dyer, Texas A&M University
Rousseaus "Emile" as Rejoinder and Reinforcement of
Lockes "Education"
Rita Koganzon, Harvard University
Rousseau's Princely Psychology: Rousseaus "Prince"
and the "Prince" in Rousseau
Alan Joseph Kellner, Northwestern University

223

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Norma Claire Moruzzi, University of Illinois, Chicago


Stephen Engelmann, University of Illinois, Chicago
David P. Weinstein, Wake Forest University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
11.6
RETHINKING HISTORICAL AND STRUCTURAL
INJUSTICE
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Dimitrios E. Efthymiou, Goethe University Frankfurt
Disc:
Jeanne Morefield, Whitman College
Papers: Narrating Historical Injustice: Responsibility and the
Politics of Memory
David Temin, University of Minnesota
Adam J. Dahl, Sewanee: The University of the South
Wisdom Comes Through Suffering: The Political
Wisdom of Mourning Injustice
Heather N. Pool, Denison University
Refusing Empathy
Alexander Keller Hirsch, University of Alaska
Structural Solidarity
Mara Marin, Frankfurt University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
11.7
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
Disc:
Colin Krainin, Princeton University
Papers: Crisis Bargaining Games with Privately Informed Allies
Bradley C Smith, University of Rochester
Dynamic Alliances: Short Run Shifts in Power
Colin Krainin, Princeton University
International Institutions and Rogue States Deterrence
Catherine Hafer, New York University
Umberto Mignozzetti, New York University
Outbidding as Deterrence: Endogenous Demands in the
Shadow of Group Competition
William Spaniel, Stanford University
War as a Stick: Fighting to Keep Adversary's
Unobservable Actions in Check
Bahar Leventoglu, Duke University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
11.8
GENDER AS A CAMPAIGN CUE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Chair:
Disc:

Jessica Robinson Preece, Brigham Young University


Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley

Papers: Girlpower Gone Awry: How Feminine Looks Affect


Candidates Perceived Competence
Rachel Velzquez Bernhard
Implicit Gender Cues in Candidate Communication
Jennifer Jean Jones, University of California, Irvine
Measurement of Multiple Attitudes toward Women and
Men as Political Candidates
John Brehm, University of Chicago
Megan Savel, University of Chicago
The Demobilizing and Mobilizing Effect of Campaign
Rhetoric on Women and Men
Nichole Bauer, University of Alabama
Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
Sara Shahmirzadi Yeganeh, Stony Brook University

224

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 224

Voter Gender Bias and Support for Female Political


Leaders
Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook
Johanna Willmann, SUNY, Stony Brook University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
11.9
ISSUES, PARTIES, AND BELIEF SYSTEMS
Room: Marriott, Room 408
Chair: Nathan P. Kalmoe, Louisiana State University
Disc:
Nathan P. Kalmoe, Louisiana State University
Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: Consequences of Issue-Partisan Conflicts on Vote
Choice and Participation
Katherine McCabe, Princeton University
Do Party Elites drive Mass Polarization over Global
Warming? A Survey Experiment
Matt Luttig, University of Chicago
Dynamic Constraint
Alexander Coppock, Yale University
Donald P. Green, Columbia University
Party versus Policy: How Competing Information
Affects Citizens Opinions
Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis
Scott A. MacKenzie, University of California, Davis
The New Ideological Electorate: Partisan Threat and
Ideological Social Identity
Jarrod Kelly, University of Pittsburgh
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
11.10
AUTHORITARIAN CONTROL AND
AUTOCRATIC SURVIVAL
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Cierra Belin, American Political Science Association
Papers: A Theory of Media Control and Liberalization
Ryan Yuhao Fang, The Pennsylvania State University
A Theory of Propaganda
Carlo Matthias Horz, New York University
Bypass Aid and Autocratic Survival
Matthew DiLorenzo, Vanderbilt University
Revolution and Authoritarian Control
Tusi Wen, Duke University
Trust, Malfeasance and Power
Mahvish Shami, London School of Economics
Amy Nivette, University of Oxford
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
11.11
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF SOVEREIGN RISK
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Andreas Fuchs, University of Heidelberg
Disc:
Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Papers: The Political Economy of Sovereign Debt Issues
Cameron Ballard-Rosa
Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Rachel Wellhausen
Sovereign Loans and Military Corporation with Respect
to Security Risks
Jonas Bunte, University of Texas at Dallas

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Sovereign Debt, Regime Type and the Rise of Chinese


Ratings Agencies
Andreas Fuchs, University of Heidelberg
Kai Gehring, University of Zurich
Daniel McDowell, Syracuse University
The Political Economy of Sanctions and Sovereign Bond
Ratings
Glen Biglaiser, University of North Texas
David J. Lektzian, Texas Tech University
Sovereign Borrowing, Divided Government, and
Government Survival in Democracies
Matthew R. DiGiuseppe, University of Mississippi
Patrick E. Shea, University of Houston
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
11.12
COLONIAL INSTITUTIONS, STATE CAPACITY,
AND CONFLICT
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Andreas Wimmer
Disc:
Didac Queralt, Institute of Political Economy and
Governance
Papers: The Anatomy of Colonial Police Forces in former
German Southwest Africa
Jan Henryk Pierskalla, The Ohio State University
Alexander De Juan, GIGA German Institute of
Global and Area Studies
Historical Legacies and Political Conflict: Evidence from
Peru
Jenny Guardado, Georgetown University
Colonial Origins of Maoist Insurgency in India
Shivaji Mukherjee, University of Toronto
Varieties of Violence: Conflict and Sovereignty in South
Asia
Adnan Naseemullah, King's College London
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
11.13
AGGREGATE DATA IN THE STUDY OF
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
VOTING BEHAVIOR

Chair:
Disc:

Dorothy Kronick, Stanford University


Chamna Yoon, baruch college
Curtis S. Signorino, University of Rochester

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS

Chair:
Disc:

Alison Craig, Ohio State University


Lorien Jasny
Jennifer Nicoll Victor, George Mason University

Papers: Detecting Changes in Network Time Series using


Bayesian Inference
Jong Hee Park, Seoul National University
Yunkyu Sohn, University of California, San Diego
Fuzzy Social Network Analysis of the Role of IOs in
International Conflict
Badredine Arfi, University of Florida
Assessing Military Access in Politics: A Dyadic
Methodology
David Sylvan
Jean-Louis Arcand, Graduate Institute of
International and Development Studies
Public Discourse in Ideological Communication
Networks
Jennifer L. Brookhart, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Alexander M. Tahk, University of
WisconsinMadison
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
11.15
SPATIAL DATA ANALYSIS: METHODS AND
APPLICATIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Jeff Gill, Washington University
Disc:
Melissa Sands, Harvard University
Emily Schilling, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Papers: A Redistricting Method Based on Interregional Mobility
and Social Interaction
William Hobbs, UC San Diego
Connecting Context and Attitudes with Dynamically
Geolocated Survey Data
Ryan T. Moore, American University
Andrew Reeves, Washington University in St. Louis
Combining Design Effects with Neighborhood Effects in
Survey Research
Pierre F. Landry, NYU-Shanghai
Leave The Person Out? Reassessing Personalized
Measures of Interracial Context
Yamil Velez, Wesleyan University
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
11.16
BEST PRACTICES IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
ASSESSMENT
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

Chair:
Disc:

Jeffrey F. Kraus, Wagner College


Fletcher McClellan, Elizabethtown College

Papers: Faculty Perceptions and Internship Outcomes


Bobbi Gentry, Bridgewater College
Renee B. Van Vechten, University of Redlands
Shamira M. Gelbman, Wabash College

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 225

Daily Schedule

Papers: Analyzing Decision Records from Committees


Moritz Marbach
BLP-Lasso for Aggregate Discrete Choice Models
Applied to Elections
Sergio Montero, University of Rochester
Matthew Shum, California Institute of Technology
Hyunsook Moon-Chen, University of California,
Santa Barbara
Improving Ecological Inference by Predicting Race from
Voter Registration
Kabir Khanna, Princeton University
Kosuke Imai, Princeton University
Voter Turnout and Preference Aggregation
Yasutora Watanabe, Hong Kong University of
Science and Technology

DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY


11.14
METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES IN SOCIAL
NETWORK ANALYSIS
Room: Marriott, Room 306

225

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Evaluating the Use of Digital Portfolios in


Undergraduate Courses
Kelly Clancy, Nebraska Wesleyan University
Institutional versus Departmental Assessment: Exercises
in a False Dichotomy
Patrick F. McKinlay, Morningside College
Valerie M. Hennings, Morningside College
The Perfect Storm: Navigating Enrollment Declines in
Political Science
David A. Crockett, Trinity University
John R. Hermann, Trinity University
In Search of Grading Nirvana
Matthew M.C. Roberts, Grand Valley State
University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
11.17
25 YEARS OF CRITICAL JUNCTURES:
COLLIER & COLLIER'S SHAPING THE
POLITICAL ARENA
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Thad Dunning, University of California, Berkeley
Part:
Deborah Yashar, Princeton University
Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University
Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Sebastin Mazzuca, Johns Hopkins University
Gerardo L. Munck, University of Southern California
Steven Levitsky, Harvard University
Christopher H. Achen, Princeton University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
11.18
INEQUALITY, REDISTRIBUTION, AND
DEMOCRACY
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Eunyoung Ha, Claremont Graduate University
Disc:
Christian Houle, Michigan State University
Papers: Inequality, Dualization, and Redistributive Spending in
Developing Countries
Yu-Min Hsu, National Taiwan University
Redistributive Policies and Political Order in Central
Asia and North Africa
Frances Loustau-Williams, University of Pittsburgh
Farhod Yuldashev, University of Pittsburgh
The Inequality Trap: How High Inequality Increases the
Probability of Democracy
Joan Carreras Timoneda, University of Maryland
Sebastian Vallejo, University of Maryland, College
Park
The structure of inequality and middle-income support
for redistribution
Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University
Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva
Transnational Myths and Mobilization: Agrarian Reform
from Brazil to the US
Anthony R. Pahnke, St. Olaf College
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
11.19
CIVIL SOCIETY AND AGENCY OUTSIDE THE
STATE
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Montana
Disc:
Kent E. Freeze, Carleton College

226

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 226

Papers: Brightening the Bright Spots: NGOs and Public Service


Provision in India
Emily R. Clough
Defining the Truth: Peruvian Social Science and
Indigenous Resistance
Cyrus Ernesto Zirakzadeh, University of Connecticut
Perceptions of civil society organizations in rural China:
the skeptical society
Taiyi Sun, Boston University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
11.20
COMPETING AND GOVERNING IN
MULTIETHNIC SOCIETIES
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Robert A. Blair
Papers: Overcoming Coethnic Favoritism: An Experiment in an
African Democracy
Eric J. Kramon, George Washington University
Claire Leslie Adida, UCSD
Jessica Gottlieb, Texas A&M University
Gwyneth McClendon, Harvard University
Political Endorsements and Cross-Ethnic Voting in
Africa
Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California,
Berkeley
Donghyun Danny Choi, University of California,
Berkeley
Matthew Gichohi, University of California, Berkeley
Ethnic Favoritism in Kenyas Bureaucracy after
Independence
Jeremy Horowitz, Dartmouth College
Who Gets on the Ballot: Vote Buying, Ethnicity, and
Candidate Entry in Ghana
Nahomi Ichino, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Noah Nathan, University of Michigan
Dangerous Disconnect: Elite Misperception and Violence
Outbreak in Elections
Steven Rosenzweig, Yale University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
11.21
ETHNIC POLITICS IN PAKISTAN, AFRICA, AND
CHINA
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Clayton J. Cleveland, Ohio University
Disc:
Martin Mendoza-Botelho, Eastern Connecticut State
University
Papers: Ethnic Ties, Political Clout or Efficiency: Who Gets
What Services and Why?
Ghazia Aslam, George Mason University
Persistence Despite Change: Ethnicity and Power in
Africa
Beth Rabinowitz, Rutgers University
Public Goods Spending and Ethnic Identity in Rural
China
Elise Pizzi, University of Iowa
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
11.22
GOVERNANCE AND STATE PERFORMANCE
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Samuel Brazys, University College Dublin

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Disc:

Maiah Jaskoski, Northern Arizona University

Papers: Elections and Goods Provision in Decentralized


Developing Countries
Barry Driscoll, Grinnell College
Making Development Work: The Quality of Government
Approach
Bo Rothstein, University of Oxford
Risks and Rewards: How Political Institutions Shape Oil
Income
Jordan Kyle, International Food Policy Research
Institute
When State Capacity Interferes with Policy Diffusion
Florence Larocque
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
11.23
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND CONTENTIOUS
POLITICS ACROSS REGIONS
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Mneesha Gellman, Emerson College
Disc:
Jessica J. Price, Tulane University
Papers: Donor Funding & Social Movement Demobilization:
The Barabaig Movement, Tanzania
Kristin McKie, Saint Lawrence University
Resistance Movement Participation and Tax Morale in
Timor-Leste
Diana Greenwald, University of Michigan
The Student Movement and Welfare Politics in Third
Wave Asian Democracies
Illan Nam, Colgate University
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
11.24
WELFARE STATE AND INSTITUTIONS
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Christian Rudolf Thauer, The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
Disc:
Erik Jones, Johns Hopkins University

DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY


11.25
CONTENTIOUS POLITICS IN EUROPE
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Katrin Uba, Uppsala University
Disc:
Katrin Uba, Uppsala University

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY


11.26
THE POLITICS OF CENTRAL BANKING IN
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University
Disc:
Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University
Papers: Policy ideas at the BoJ; Why breaking away from
monetary orthodoxy took so long?
Gene Park, Loyola Marymount University
Giacomo Chiozza, Victoria University of Wellington,
Political Science and International Relations
Programme
Saori N. Katada, University of Southern California
The Federal Reserves Support Coalition in Congress
J. Lawrence Broz, University of California, San
Diego
Forward Guidance as a New Idea: Changes in the MPC
Discourse of the MPC under King and Carney
Cheryl M. Schonhardt-Bailey, London School of
Economics
Derek William Valles
Central Bank Independence, Economic Growth, and
Inequality
Raymond Hicks
Cristina Bodea, Michigan State University
The ECB in the Brave New World of Broad Central
Banking
C. Randall Henning, American University-SIS
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
11.27
DETERRENCE AND COERCION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Keir Lieber, Georgetown University
Disc:
Keir Lieber, Georgetown University
Papers: Demonstrating Military Power: The Sources of
Successful Extended Deterrence
Evan B. Montgomery, Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Assessments
Stacie Pettyjohn, RAND Corporation
Deterrence Across Domains: How the Choice of Means
Affects Strategic Ends
Erik Gartzke, UCSD
Jon R. Lindsay, University of Toronto
Nuclear Deterrence Theory in Asia: Ideational Beliefs
and Nuclear Strategy
James Turner Simpson, Boston University
The Logic of Bargaining with Cyber Weapons
Richard Andres

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 227

227

Daily Schedule

Papers: Inward Conquest: Health Care and Policing in the 19th


and Early 20th Centuries
Ben William Ansell, Nuffield College, University of
Oxford
Johannes Lindvall, Lund University
Political Contexts of the Age Orientation of the Welfare
State
Yesola Kweon
Kohei Suzuki, University of Gothenburg
Reforming the Banks: Mobilization and Control in
Europe and the United States
J. Nicholas Ziegler, Brown University
Rethinking the Social Investment State: Investment in
Ethnic Minorities
Amos Zehavi, Tel Aviv University
Dan Breznitz

Papers: Contentious Politics during Economic Crisis: SelfImmolation as a Form of Protest


Ingrid Bego, Western Carolina University
Democracy in Crisis: Mobilizing for Real Democracy
in Iceland and Scotland
Alyssa Maraj Grahame, University of Massachusetts
Amherst
Industrial Conflict in the European Union, 2005-2012
Nicholas Toloudis, The College of New Jersey
Rewarding Contention: Political Capital of Social
Movement Activists
Dominika Roksana Kruszewska

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY


11.28
THE DYNAMICS OF CIVIL CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Michael Weintraub, Binghamton University (SUNY)
Disc:
Michael Weintraub, Binghamton University (SUNY)

From Nonalignment to Strategic Autonomy: the


Evolution of Indias Foreign Policy
Szu-hsien Lee, National Tsing Hua University
Yu-tai Tsai, National Chung Cheng University
(Taiwan)
Monroes Legacy: Regional Exclusion Doctrines in
Comparative Perspective
Steven F. Jackson, Indiana University of
Pennsylvania
The Belt and Road Initiative and the Making of Chinas
Grand Strategy?
Lina Benabdallah, University of Florida

Papers: An Invitation to the Table: Inclusive Peace Agreements


in Civil Conflict
Caroline Brandt, UC Berkeley
Friends or Foes? Rebel to Rebel Relations and Multiparty Civil War Outcomes
Sema Hande Ogutcu-Fu, Binghamton University
(SUNY)
seden akcinaroglu, binghamton university
International Politics by Other Means: External Sources
of Civil War Escalation
Mark Toukan, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Military Intervention and Opposition Group
Fragmentation in Civil Conflict
Daniel Gustafson, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


11.31
DISASTERS AND VIOLENCE
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Elena V. McLean, SUNY, University at Buffalo
Disc:
Resat Bayer, Koc University

DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS


CONTROL
11.29
EXPLAINING THE VIOLENCE IN SYRIA
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Howon Jeong, School of Conflict Analysis and
Resolution, George Mason University
Papers: Lessons from Syria: A Transformation in the Role of
Chemical Weapons?
Hassan Elbahtimy, Centre for Science and Security
Studies
Susan B. Martin, University of London, Kings
College
Geoffrey A. Chapman, King's College London
The International Order and the Arab Spring
Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa
When Civilians are Attacked: State Gender Equality and
Terrorist Targeting
Laura Huber, Emory University
Why Leaders Gas their Own People: Contrasting Causal
Mechanisms in Iraq & Syria
David Palkki, Air War College
Lawrence P. Rubin, Georgia Institute of Technology
Well Whack Them in the Outhouse: Russian
Counterinsurgency History and Syria
Andrea M. Lopez, Susquehanna University

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


11.32
ECONOMICS OF WAR
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Theresa Schroeder, Radford University
Disc:
Rosella Cappella, Boston University

DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY


11.30
GRAND STRATEGIES, GREAT POWERS,
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University
Disc:
Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University
Papers: A Marketing Theory of Chinas Rise and Niche Strategy
in International Relations
Chunman Zhang, Johns Hopkins University
Do Relative Economic and Military Strength Determine
Grand Strategy Choice?
Raymond W. Deppen, University of Missouri, St.
Louis

228

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 228

Papers: Economic Sanctions and Disaster Preparedness


Elena V. McLean, SUNY, University at Buffalo
Taehee Whang, Texas A&M University
Health Rights, Epidemic Disasters and Political Unrest:
The Sickly Trinity
Graig R. Klein, New Jersey City University
Natural Disasters, Aid, and Conflict: The Case of Floods
in Colombia
Jorge Gallego, Universidad del Rosario
The Determinants of Environmental Migrants Conflict
Perception
Vally Koubi, ETH Zurich
Tobias Friedrich Karl Boehmelt, University of Essex
Gabriele S. Spilker, University of Salzburg
Lena M. Schaffer, ETH Zrich

Papers: Industrialization, Trade, and Democracy: Tracing the


Path Towards Zones of Peace
Alex Antony, Indiana University
Inequality, Redistributive Conflict, and the Changing
Pattern of War Finance
Chia-Chien Chang, UC Santa Barbara
Information, Markets, and War Dynamics
Jeffrey B. Arnold, University of Washington
The Business of Peace: New Data on The Role of
Corporations in Peace & Conflict
Molly M. Melin, Loyola University, Chicago
Promises in the Nuclear Age: Why Alliances Are
Violated More Often After 1945
Matthew Fuhrmann, Texas A&M University
Molly Berkemeier
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
11.33
THE STRATEGY OF NONVIOLENCE
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Luke N. Condra, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Ches Thurber, Northern Illinois University

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Papers: A Farewell to Arms? Reassessing the Effectiveness of


Non-Violent Resistance
Costantino Pischedda, University of Miami
Non-Violent Revolutions and Democratic Change
Marianne Dahl, PRIO / NTNU
Violent and Non-violent Electoral Contention in SubSaharan Africa
Manuel Vogt, Princeton University
How the Occupy Wall Street Movement Fails to Change
Privately Owned Public Space
Hao Cao, The University of Texas at Austin
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
11.34
POLARIZATION IN CONGRESS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Mary Layton Atkinson, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
Papers: Modeling Polarization in the Congress and the 50 State
Legislatures
Lynda W. Powell, University of Rochester
An Ideological Measure For All Bills: Congress is Not
as Polarized as its Output
Scott Guenther, University of California--San Diego
Does Intra-District Polarization Cause Party Polarization
in Congress?
Hiroki Kubo, Osaka University
The Causes of Fiscal Dysfunction in Congress
John M. Sides, George Washington University
The Pork Barrel, Polarization, and U.S. Congressional
Elections
Andrew H. Sidman, CUNY-John Jay College
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
11.35
INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN AND RESOURCES
REDISTRIBUTION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Terry M. Moe, Stanford University
Disc:
Terry M. Moe, Stanford University
Bruce E. Cain, Stanford University

Papers: Voters, Activists and Policy Representation


Jan E. Leighley, American University
Jennifer Oser, Ben-Gurion University
Toward a New Theory of Democratic Regulatory
Governance
Jong-sung You, The Australian National University
Seung-Hun Hong, The Australian National University
The Tea Party Movement and Policy Responsiveness at
the State Level
Tony E. Carey, University of North Texas
Christopher S. Parker
What Factors Guide Issue Prioritization among Interest
Groups?
Darren R. Halpin, Australian National University
Anthony J. Nownes, University of Tennessee
Bert Fraussen, Australian National University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
11.37
NEW DATA, NEW METHODS IN THE STUDY OF
LAW AND COURTS
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Raul Alberto Sanchez Urribarri, La Trobe University
Disc:
Matthew C. Ingram, University at Albany, SUNY
Papers: Building a Cross-National Database of Jurisprudence on
Non-Citizens Rights
Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Bridging the Methodological Divide: Predictions and
Legal Scholarship
Christopher Krewson, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Exploring Determinants of Judicial Performance in
Developing Countries
Joseph L. Staats, University of Minnesota, Duluth
The Ideological Content of Reversals v. Affirmances
Revisited
Doug Rice, University of Massachusetts
Gregory A. Caldeira
Charles E. Smith, University of Mississippi
Christopher Zorn, Pennsylvania State University
The Political Geography of European Legal Integration
R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New
Brunswick
Tommaso Pavone, Princeton University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
11.38
WORKING AROUND PUBLIC LAW AND
COURTS
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Michael W. McCann, University of Washington, Seattle
Disc:
Michael W. McCann, University of Washington, Seattle
Papers: Commercial Arbitration as an Instrument of Corporate
Power
Eric Thomas George, York University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 229

229

Daily Schedule

Papers: Choice and Design in the Designation of Metropolitan


Planning Organizations
Susan Marie Miller, University of South Carolina
Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan
Justice For All? Relying on Legal Services Corporations
and Legal Aid Societies
Mathew D. McCubbins, University of Southern
California
Equity and Representation in States Water Grant
Allocation
Iris Hui, Stanford University
Bruce E. Cain, Stanford University
Examining the Impact of Direct Democracy on Finances
of Local Governments
Jason Thomas, Syracuse University
Yilin Hou, Syracuse University
Michelle Lynn Lofton, Syracuse University
PolicyTargeting as a Strategic Public Choice for
Redistributive Spending
Dong-Wook Lee, Claremont Graduate University

DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY


11.36
THE DYNAMICS OF INSTITUTIONAL,
ORGANIZATIONAL, AND POLICY
RESPONSIVENESS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Disc:
Ginger Silvera, Zayed University

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

The Effect of Retrenchment Threat on Lawsuit Claiming


Paul J. Gardner, Syracuse University
Sarah Staszak, Princeton University
The Master's Tools: Tribal Contracting and the Struggle
for Sovereignty
Danielle Delaney, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Framed? Media Construction of Legal Knowledge in an
Age of Litigation
Parker Read Hevron, Texas Woman's University
Jeb Barnes, University of Southern California
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND
JURISPRUDENCE
11.39
CONSTRUCTING RIGHTS, LAW, AND
COMMUNITIES
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: Michelle D. Deardorff, University of Tennessee at
Chattanooga
Papers: Finding Common Ground: Judicial Conceptions of
Political Community
Stuart L Chinn, University of Oregon
Transforming Liberalism Through Corporate and
Community Rights
Elisabeth K. Chaves, Vassar College
The Role of the Courts in Transgender Rights
Susan Mezey, Loyola University, Chicago
Old Rights, New Problems: The Right to Petition in the
21st Century
Kevin J. McGravey, Merrimack College
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
11.40
GREAT TRANSFORMATIONS IN GERMAN
POLITICS: BETWEEN REFORM AND CHANGE
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Dominic Heinz, Leibniz Universitt Hannover
Iris Reus, University of Bamberg
Disc:
Victoria Elizabeth Tait
Iris Reus, University of Bamberg
Tobias Schulze-Cleven, Rutgers University
Papers: Political Monitoring in a Federated System: The Case of
Germany
Thomas D. Lancaster, Emory University
Governing the Big Data Society The Response to New
Regulatory Challenges
Lena Ulbricht, Berlin Social Science Center
Challenges but no Transformation: Religious Instruction
in Public Schools
Julia von Blumenthal, Humboldt Universtt zu Berlin
Steffen Beigang
Transformation of Federalism? Federalism Reform
impact on Lnder Policy-Making
Nicolai Dose, Universitt Duisburg Essen
Iris Reus, University of Bamberg
Public Broadcasting Funding: A Mastered Great
Transformation?
Dominic Heinz, Leibniz Universitt Hannover
Christian Herzog, Leuphana University Lueneburg
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
11.41
FEMINIST INSTITUTIONALISM AT 10 YEARS:
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON TRANSFORMATIVE
CHANGE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS

230

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 230

Co-sponsored by Political Studies Association

Chair:
Disc:

Vivien A. Schmidt, Boston University


S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University

Papers: Formal and Informal Institutions: Key Challenges in


Analysis and Transformation
Georgina Waylen, University of Manchester
Looking Local: Sub-national Institutions and Policies on
Violence Against Women
Vivien Lowndes, University of Birmingham
Francesca Gains, University of Manchester
New Rules for the Worlds Women? Power, Agency and
UN Women
Fiona S. Mackay, University of Edinburgh
Formal Change, Informal Legacies: The Impact of
Gender Quotas in Ireland
Leah Culhane, University of Manchester
Merit in Cabinet Appointment? Informal Rules and
Women's Ministerial Recruitment
Claire Annesley, University of Sussex
Karen Beckwith, Case Western Reserve University
Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
11.42
DESCRIPTIVE REPRESENTATION
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Emily Farris, Texas Christian University
Disc:
Emily Farris, Texas Christian University
Rebecca J. Kreitzer, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Papers: 'Colour Blind' Politics and the Obama Presidency
Richard Johnson, Oxford University
Winners from the Losing Team? Descriptive
Representation and Elections
Christian Dyogi Phillips, University of California Berkeley
Is Barack Obama a Good Descriptive Representative?
Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University
Pavielle Haines, Princeton University
Bennett Butler
Facing Diversity: Categorizing Ambiguous Candidates in
Canada and the US
Benjamin Forest, McGill University
Mike Medeiros, McGill University
Spencer Piston, Boston University
Asian Racial Conservatives in Parliament: A Study in
Race and Governmentality
Laura Jean Kwak, University of Toronto
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
11.43
EVANGELICAL CHRISTIANITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Joanna Tice, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Disc:
Joanna Tice, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Papers: Religious Chickens or Partisan Eggs? Religious
Switching and Political Ideology
Jonathan Parent, Le Moyne College
Religious Dimensions of Symbolic Conservatism:
Pathways to Ideology
Jacob R. Neiheisel, University at Buffalo, SUNY

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Evangelical Political Economy and the Origins of the


Progressive Movement
John W. Compton, Chapman University
At the Crossroads: The New Politics of Latino and
Asian American Evangelicals
Janelle Wong
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
11.44
NEW FRONTIERS IN GROUP-PARTY
INTERACTIONS
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: David Karol, University of Maryland
Disc:
Ruth Bloch Rubin, University of Chicago
Papers: Ahead of the Class: Feminists and Coalition Building in
the Democratic Party
Christopher Baylor, College of the Holy Cross
Institutionalizing Alliances: Parties and Incentives for
Group Recruitment
Katherine Krimmel, Boston University
Friends and Family: What Rewards Await Partisan
Interest Groups
Richard McGrath Skinner, Sunlight Foundation
Casey Byrne Dominguez, University of San Diego
Female Candidate Recruitment as a Function of Policy
Demanders
Rosalyn Cooperman, University of Mary Washington
Working Together in Washington? Partisanship and
Interest Group Cooperation
Jesse M. Crosson, University of Michigan
Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
11.45
HOW DOES ELECTORAL CONTEXT AFFECT
VOTER AND CANDIDATE BEHAVIOR?
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Laurel Harbridge, Northwestern University
Disc:
Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin
Paul S. Herrnson, University of Connecticut

DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION


11.46
GET IT RIGHT THE FIRST TIME:
PREFERENCES FOR LEADER RESPONSIVENESS
AND REFORM
Room: Marriott, Salon I

Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida


Gabriel Lenz

Papers: Citizen Preferences for Legislator Responsiveness to


Different Influences
David L Vannette, Stanford University
Sean Westwood, Dartmouth College
How Do Americans Want Their Elected Representatives
to Make Laws?
Bo MacInnis, Stanford University
Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University
The Language of Leaders and Public Opinion
Michael P. Colaresi, Michigan State University
Corwin D. Smidt, Michigan State University
Alon Peretz Kraitzman, Michigan State University
The Impact of Electoral- & Party-systems on
Congruence from a Micro-perspective
Mirjam Dagefrde, Sciences Po Paris
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
11.47
COVERING CAMPAIGNS
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Stephen J. Farnsworth, University of Mary Washington
Disc:
Michael W. Wagner, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: Agenda Convergence in Congressional Campaigns
Danny Hayes, George Washington University
Jennifer L. Lawless, American University
Media Flows and Effects in the 2015 British General
Election
Susan A. Banducci, University of Exeter
Travis Coan
Gabriel Katz, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies
Lucca
Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter
Primary Influences: Campaign Communications in the
Local Press
Joshua P. Darr, Louisiana State University
Visualizing the 2016 Presidential Election
Tim Groeling, University of California-Los Angeles
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
11.48
DISASTERS, RISK AND GOVERNMENT
DECISIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Chair: Louise K. Comfort
Disc:
Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University
Papers: Administrative Traditions, Risk Aversion, and Adaption
to Climate Change
Adam Wellstead, Michigan Technological University
F.E.M.A. Disaster Recovery Rules and Local Climate
Adaptation Efforts
Bridget K. Fahey, Syracuse University
Operational Contingencies in Degraded Environments
Bob Smith, National Intelligence University
Mitchell Brown, Auburn University
Kathleen Hale, Auburn University

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 231

231

Daily Schedule

Papers: The Effect of Political Trust Under Unified and Divided


Government
David R. Jones, CUNY, Baruch College
The Difficult Kind: Challengers and the Problems Posed
by Electorates
Michael J. Ensley, Kent State University
Preferences and Partisanship: Party Cues, Frames, and
Attitudes on Trade
Christopher P. Donnelly, University of California,
Davis
Timothy W. Taylor, Wheaton College
Electoral Context and Presentation of Self
Taeyong Park, Washington University in St. Louis
Patrick Tucker, Washington University in St Louis
Collective Responsibility in Congressional Elections
Carlos Algara, University of California, Davis

Chair:
Disc:

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Risk Perceptions and Policy Learning in the Aftermath


of Extreme Flooding
Elizabeth Ann Albright, Duke University
Deserai Anderson Crow, University of Colorado
Denver
Lydia A. Lawhon
Policy Learning and Information Processing
Matthew Nowlin, College of Charleston

Short-term Changes in Voter Intention in Myanmar's


Landmark Election
David G. Tully
The Structural Weakness of a Tutelary Regime: A
Common Agency Approach
Yuki Takagi, Department of Political Science,
Stanford University
Hans Hanpu Tung, National Taiwan University
From Resistance Movements to Constitutionalism in
Emerging Democracies in Asia
Michael Curtis Davis, University of Hong Kong
Crisis Not Reequilibration: Post-Coup Instability in
Southeast Asian Democracies
Aries A. Arugay, University of the PhilippinesDiliman

DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND


POLITICS
11.49
THE POLITICAL EFFECTS OF SOCIAL MEDIA
IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: Marc Lynch, George Washington University
Disc:
Amaney Jamal, Princeton University
Papers: Ideological Diversity and Political Tolerance in Egyptian
Twitter Networks
Alexandra Arons Siegel, NYU
The Causes and Consequences of Misperceptions in the
Middle East
Thomas Zeitzoff, American University
Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College
Online Polarization in Egypts Failed Transition
Marc Lynch, George Washington University
Deen G. Freelon, American University
Incumbency Advantage and Online Dialogue in Iran
Navid Hassanpour, Columbia University
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
11.50
PRESENT ENVIRONMENTAL INEQUALITIES
AND TRANSFORMATIVE POTENTIALITIES
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Co-sponsored by Green Politics and Theory

Chair:
Disc:

Sarah Surak, Salisbury University


Sarah Surak, Salisbury University
Chad Lavin, University at Buffalo

Papers: (In)Visible (In)Justice


Jennifer Lawrence
Critical Transformative Politics and the New Green
Consensus
Andy Scerri, Virginia Tech
Ethos, Affirmation, and Transformation in the Work of
Herbert Marcuse
Michael Lipscomb, Winthrop University
Theorizing Deep Capital
Jonathan P. Schwartz, University of WisconsinMadison
Transformative Temporalities
Kellan Anfinson
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
11.51
THE QUESTION OF DEMOCRACY IN ASIA
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Aqil Shah
Disc:
Meredith L. Weiss, University at Albany, SUNY
Aqil Shah
Papers: How Regime Responsiveness in China Facilitates
Protests, but not Revolts
Christian Goebel, University of Vienna

232

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 232

DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS


11.52
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: CELEBRITIES IN US AND
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Carisa R. Showden, University of Auckland
Disc:
Carisa R. Showden, University of Auckland
Papers: Lights! Camera! Misinformation? Celebrities & Human
Trafficking
Samantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay College
Migrant Celebrities in Greece
Sotirios Petropoulos, University of the Peloponnese
Human Rights, Democracy, and Celebrity
Mark Wheeler, London Metropolitan University
Celebritizing the Swedish Model: Celebrities &
Prostitution Decriminalization
Edith Kinney, San Jose State University
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
11.53
HOW TO BUILD A NATIONAL IDENTITY
DATABASE (LIKE A CONSTRUCTIVIST)
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL
HISTORY AND POLITICS

Chair:
Part:

Srdjan Vucetic, University of Ottawa


Ted Hopf, National University of Singapore
Bentley B. Allan, Johns Hopkins University
Bridget Coggins, University of California, Santa Barbara
Marina Duque, Harvard University

DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS


11.54
CONTROLLING THE BODY
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Beth Ginsberg
Disc:
Sarah Elizabeth Spengeman, Catholic University of
America
Papers: Assisted Reproductive Technology in Discourse: What's
Left "Not-said"?
Laci Hubbard-Mattix
Military Wives, State and Federal Insurance Plans, and
Surrogacy Benefits
Melissa Haussman, Carleton University
Amanda Grace Roberts
Sex Wars, SlutWalks, and Carceral Feminism
Lorna Norman Bracewell, University of Nebraska
Kearney
Transforming Gender Dualism Through Intersex
Activism: Two, Three, or No Gender
Angelika von Wahl, Lafayette College

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY


11.55
THE POLITICS OF PUBLIC HEALTH IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Joseph Harris, Boston University
Disc:
Varun Gauri, The World Bank Group
Joseph Harris, Boston University
Papers: Democracy and Health: Insight from Argentina's
Provinces
James W. McGuire, Wesleyan University
State Responses to Public Health Challenges in Maoist
China and Nehruvian India
Prerna Singh, Brown University
Political Context, Organizational Type and the Quality
of Health Care Provision
Melani Cammett, Harvard University
Aytug Sasmaz, Harvard University
The Effect of Mass Bed Net Distribution Campaigns on
Politics in Tanzania
Kevin Croke
Non-Compliance with Polio Vaccination in Northern
Nigeria
Shelby Grossman, Harvard University
Jonathan Phillips
Leah R Rosenzweig
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
11.56
FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON SECURITY AND
VIOLENCE
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Bernd Beber, New York University
Disc:
Bernd Beber, New York University
Konstantin Ash, UC -San Diego
Joan Ricart-Huguet, Princeton University
Papers: A History of Violence: Field Evidence on Trauma,
Discounting and Present Bias
Vera Mironova
A Randomized Evaluation of State-Led Village Policing
in Papua New Guinea
Jasper Jack Cooper
Accountability, Transparency, and Conflict in the
Mining Sector of Peru
Renard J Sexton, New York University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
11.57
MIGRANTS & HOST SOCIETIES
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Sara Angevine, Whittier College
Disc:
Pete Mohanty, Stanford University

Papers: Case Management: Delegation or Abdication


William G. Weissert, Florida State University
Jeffrey Vincent Swanson, Florida State University
Nursing Student Perceptions of Older Adult Substance
Abuse
Sara J. Reed, Lewis University
The Bright Side of Ageing
Kieke G.H Okma
Michael K. Gusmano, The Hastings Center
12.2
CONFERENCE GROUP ON ITALIAN POLITICS
AND SOCIETY: ITALIAN POLITICS UNDER
RENZI AND BEYOND: TRANSFORMATION OR
STAGNATION?
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Martin J Bull, University of Salford
Papers: Renzi's Government and the Primacy of Politics
Maurizio Carbone, University of Glasgow
Simona Piattoni, University of Trento
Although Necessary, is Renzi's Leadership also
Sufficient for Changing Italy?
Sergio Fabbrini, Luiss Guido Carli
Renzi's Jobs Act: A New Era for the Italian Labour
Market Policy?
patrik vesan, University of Aosta Valley
Italian Party Financing in Comparative Perspective
Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna
Political Change and Stability in Russia and Italy
Vincent Della Sala, Universit degli Studi di Trento
12.3
LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDY
GROUP: BUCKLEY V. VALEO AT 40: NEW
THINKING, NEW DIRECTIONS ON CAMPAIGN
FINANCE
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: Guy-Uriel Charles, Duke University School of Law
Part:
Richard L. Hasen, UC Irvine School of Law
Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Lee Drutman, New America
Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico
Joel Mark Gora, Brooklyn Law School

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 233

233

Daily Schedule

Papers: Islamophobia: Xenophobia or Religious Intolerance?


Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center WZB
Richard Traunmuller, Goethe University Frankfurt
Migrant Visibility and Host-Society Attitudes toward
Migration
Jeffrey Daniel Pugh, University of MassachusettsBoston
The Suspicious Consensus: Ideological (Dis)similarities
in Immigration Attitudes
Alexander Kustov, Princeton University
Do Migrant Remittances Inhibit Sanction Success?
Joshua P. Malnight, University of California, Irvine

DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY


11.58
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: HACKER AND
PIERSON ON AMERICAN AMENSIA
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Nicholas Carnes, Duke University
Part:
Steven M. Teles
Henry Farrell, George Washington University
Theda Skocpol
Thomas E. Mann, University of California, Berkeley
Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University
Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley
Related Groups
12.1
AGING POLICY AND POLITICS GROUP:
POPULATION AGING: CHALLENGES TO
SOCIAL POLICY
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Michael K. Gusmano, The Hastings Center
Disc:
Michael K. Gusmano, The Hastings Center

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

12.4
Room:
Chair:
Part:

WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE:


THE TASK FORCE ON POLITICAL SCIENCE IN
THE 21ST C 5 YEARS LATER
Marriott, Room 411
Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame
Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University
Terri E Givens, Menlo College
Denise Marie Walsh, University of Virginia
Sherri L. Wallace, University of Louisville
Valeria Sinclair-Chapman, Purdue University
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley
Luis Ricardo Fraga
Nikol G. Alexander-Floyd, Rutgers University

Thursday, 8:00 AM to 5:30 PM


Division Panels
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
13.1
CHINESE POLITICS: CONTESTATION FROM
WITHIN AND BELOW
Room: Marriott, Room 415
Chair: Bruce J. Dickson, George Washington University
Lily L. Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Pierre F. Landry
Jennifer Pan, Stanford University
Victor C. Shih, UCSD
Disc:
Margaret E Roberts, University of California, San Diego
Yiqing Xu, University of California, San Diego
Rory Truex, Princeton University
Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University
Haifeng Huang, University of California, Merced
Papers: Measuring Ideology Using Social Media Data
Yiqing Xu, University of California, San Diego
Ideology under Autocracy: Explaining Political
Participation in China
Jason Yuyan Wu, University of California, San Diego
Evaluating Labor Markets of Online Crowdsourcing
Platforms in China
Xiaojun Li, University of British Columbia
Weiyi Shi, UCSD
Boliang Zhu, Pennsylvania State University
Pollution and Regime Support: Quasi-Experimental
Evidence from Beijing
Meir Alkon, Princeton University
Erik H Wang, Princeton University
Understanding Red Memory: Maoist Nostalgia in
Contemporary China
Jeffrey Arshad Javed
Iza Ding, University of Pittsburgh
Contentious Politics and Authoritarian Coercive Capacity
Yuhua Wang, Harvard University
Chih-Jou Jay Chen, Academia Sinica
Meritocracy vs. Factionalism: Evidence from Xi
Jinpings Corruption Crackdown
Peter L. Lorentzen, University of California, Berkeley
Xi Lu
The Pitfalls of Information Gathering Through Citizen
Complaints
Jennifer Pan, Stanford University
Authoritarian Rule of Law: Experimental Evidence from
Chinese Courts
Yue Hou
Daniel Mattingly, Stanford University

234

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 234

How does Property Tax Reform Affect CitizenGovernment Relations in China?


Xiaobo Lu, University of Texas at Austin
Lily L. Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Imperial Exams as a Representative Institution
Tianyang Xi, Peking University
We Asked You: Policy Preferences and Consultative
Democracy in China
Dimitar D Gueorguiev, Syracuse University
The Logic of Authoritarian Political Selection: Evidence
from China
Hanzhang Liu, Columbia University
Moving In and Moving Up? Labor Conditions and
China's Changing Development Model
Mary E. Gallagher, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Yujeong Yang
The Precarious Policy of Censorship
Tianguang Meng, Tsinghua University
Jennifer Pan, Stanford University
Margaret E Roberts, University of California, San
Diego
Religious Institutions and the Impact of Inter-Ethnic
Inequality on Conflict
Xun Cao, Penn State University
Chuyu Liu, Pennsylvania State University
Yingjie Wei, Shanghai Jiaotong University
Political and Economic Consequences for Chinese Cities
of Anti-Japanese Protests
Jeremy L. Wallace, Cornell University
Jessica Chen Weiss, Yale University
Kevin Foley, Cornell University
Why Do Autocrats Manipulate Nationalism?: Evidence
from China
Chuyu Liu, Pennsylvania State University
Xiao Ma, University of Washington
The Great Firewall in Comparative Perspective
Rory Truex, Princeton University
Strategic Shuffling of Provincial Leadership Teams in
China
David Janoff Bulman, Ash Center, Harvard Kennedy
School
Kyle Alan Jaros, Harvard Kennedy School
Patronage Networks, Particularistic Accountability, and
Economic Performance
Junyan Jiang, University of Chicago
Intra-factional Competition, Media Coverage and
Political Promotion in China
Ji Yeon (Jean) Hong, Hong Kong University of
Science and Technology
Uncovering Hierarchies Using Career Paths and Network
Measures
Franziska Barbara Keller, Columbia University
Data Manipulation, Collusion, and the Tournament
Model
Steven Matthew Oliver, Yale-NUS College

Thursday, 8:30 AM to 9:30 AM


APSA Events
14.1
APSA COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF ASIAN
PACIFIC AMERICANS BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 308

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Division Panels

Theme Panels
15.1
POLICING IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE:
POLICE VIOLENCE, CORRUPTION AND
DEMOCRACY
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Deborah Yashar, Princeton University
Disc:
Vesla Mae Weaver, Yale University

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:


HISTORICAL APPROACHES
17.1
MACHIAVELLI IN CONTEXT(S)
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Matthias Riedl, Central European University
Disc:
Daniel J. Kapust, University of Wisconsin, Madison
J.S. Maloy, University of Louisiana, Lafayette
Papers: Method and Episteme: Ibn Khaldun and Machiavelli on
Methods
Bettina Koch, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University
Polybius as Monarchist? Receptions of Histories VI
before Machiavelli
Cary J Nederman, Texas A&M University
Machiavelli and the Ciompi
Benedetto Fontana, CUNY-Baruch College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
17.2
BEYOND CRITIQUE: REVITALIZING FEMINIST
POLITICAL THEORY
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Laurie E. Naranch, Siena College
Disc:
Lori Marso, Union College
Papers: Rethinking Feminist Political Universals
Angela Maione, Harvard University
Collective Feminist Visions: Manifestos from Around
the World, 1915-2015
Penny A. Weiss
(Re)Politicizing Rape: A Feminist Politics of
Violence & Freedom
Emily Christensen, University of Washington
Rosa Luxemburgs Standstill of Accumulation in a Time
of Slow Death
Alison K. Staudinger, University of Wisconsin, Green
Bay
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
17.3
CULTURAL FORMATIONS OF NEOLIBERALISM
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: George M. Shulman, New York University
Disc:
Nina Hagel, Bates College
Papers: Humility, Autonomy, and War-Worn Subjects
Sara L. Rushing, Montana State University, Bozeman
The Elevation of the Private in Contemporary
Conservative Formations
Ashleigh Campi, University of Chicago
Feeding on Black Pain: Assuaging White Anxiety in
Neoliberal Times
Ella Myers, University of Utah
The Absent Factory: Towards a New Critical Theory of
Postindustrial Capitalism
Lucas Guimaraes Pinheiro, University of Chicago
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
17.4
THE POLITICS OF PLACE
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Cigdem Cidam, Union College
Disc:
Ali Aslam, Mount Holyoke College
Paulina Ochoa Espejo, Haverford College

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 235

235

Daily Schedule

Papers: Local Lobbying: Diverse Communities and Conflicting


Goals
Laurel Eckhouse
The Informal Regulation of Drug Trafficking in Latin
America
Hernan Flom, University of California-Berkeley
The Social Origins of Institutional Weakness and
Change
Yanilda Maria Gonzalez
The Enduring Effects of State Repression on Trust in
State Security Institutions
Anita Ravishankar
The State as Organized Crime: Industrial Organization
of the Police in the DRC
Raul Sanchez de la Sierra, Harvard University
15.2
THE QUALITATIVE TRANSPARENCY
DELIBERATIONS: AN INTERIM REPORT
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University
Part:
Tim Buthe
Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia
Kimberley S. Johnson, Barnard College
Sarah E. Parkinson, University of Minnesota
Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University
15.3
TRANSFORMATIONS IN HIGHER EDUCATION:
PERSPECTIVES FROM SCHOLARPRACTITIONERS
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Virginia Sapiro, Boston University
Part:
Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley
Peter Lange
Melissa Nobles, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Virginia Sapiro, Boston University
APSA Events
16.1
GOVERNANCE REFORM ROUNDTABLE
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Part:
Jeffrey M. Berry, Tufts University
Terri E Givens, Menlo College
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
Jonathan GS Koppell, Arizona State University
Brett Ashley Leeds, Rice University
Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
Jeffrey A. Segal, SUNY, Stony Brook University
Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton University
Elizabeth Super, American Political Science Association
16.2
RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER INSTITUTE (RBSI)
ORIENTATION MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 301

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: Arendt and Hegel on Place-Making and the Chaos of


Things
Anna Jurkevics
Locality, Identity, and the Politics of Place
Warren Magnusson
Time for Change: Bringing Activist Epistemology to
Comparative Political Theory
Elva Fabiola Orozco Mendoza, Drexel University
Foreign Influence and Democratic Politics
Lucia M. Rafanelli, Princeton University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
17.5
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY IN EVERYDAY
POLITICS
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Michael S. Lewis-Beck, university of iowa


Christopher Manick, University of Florida
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, university of iowa
Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy School

Papers: Deliberative Democracy in Nicaragua


Leslie E. Anderson, University of Florida
Democratic Illusions in Canadian Public Policy
Genevieve Fuji Johnson
Consensus Deliberation in the Greek Political
Assemblies
Mirko Canevaro
Deliberative Democracy in Latin America: A
Comparative Assessment
Thamy Pogrebinschi, WZB Berlin Social Science
Center
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
17.6
MARKETS, JUSTICE AND CITIZENSHIP
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Joseph H. Carens, University of Toronto
Disc:
Brian Berkey, University of Pennsylvania
Chiara Cordelli, The University of Chicago
Papers: The Shared Burdens of Social Cooperation
Lucas Stanczyk, MIT
The Ethics of Economic Growth
Julie L. Rose, Dartmouth College
Social Equality in a Market Society
Jeff Spinner-Halev, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Charity Boxes, Street Begging, and Distributive Justice
Cristian Perez, Pontificia Universidad Catlica de
Chile
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
17.7
EVALUATIONS AND INFERENCES IN
CAMPAIGN ENVIRONMENTS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Samara Klar, University of Arizona
Disc:
Emily Thorson, Boston College
Cengiz Erisen, TOBB University of Economics and
Technology
Papers: How Political Advertising Tone Affects Cognitive
Processing
Keena Lipsitz

236

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 236

Testing the Online Model of Candidate Evaluation in a


More Realistic Environment
Richard R. Lau, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Mona S. Kleinberg, University of Massachusetts,
Lowell
Hector Bahamonde, Rutgers University
Cognitive Styles and Political Learning in Electoral
Campaigns
Gema M. Garcia Albacete, Carlos III-Juan March
Institute of Social Sciences (IC3JM)
Mnica Ferrn, Collegio Carlo Alberto
Marta Fraile, CSIC
Perceptions of competence in candidates faces and
voices influences vote choice
Casey A. Klofstad
Trait Inferences in High-Information Environments
Tessa M. Ditonto
Kyle Mattes, University of Iowa
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
17.8
BUREAUCRACY AND STATE CAPACITY
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Quintin H. Beazer, Florida State University
Disc:
Quintin H. Beazer, Florida State University
Brendan Pablo Montagnes, Emory University
Papers: Bureaucratic Leadership and State Capacity: Evidence
from the Philippines
Nico Ravanilla, Stanford University
Mark Dincecco, University of Michigan
Bureaucrats and Politicians: Electoral Competition and
Dynamic Incentives
Anusha Nath, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
and University of Minnesota
Rational Sclerosis: A Theory of Transactional Rigidity
and Economic Development
Alberto Simpser, ITAM
Cesar Martinelli, Centro de Investigacin Econmica
Corporate Production of State Capacity: Evidence from a
Natural Experiment
Austin Wright, Princeton University
Discrimination in Strategic Settings
Dominik Duell, University of Essex
Dimitri Landa, NYU
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
17.9
MENUS OF (ELECTORAL) MANIPULATION
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Dawn L. Teele, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Lucas Leemann
Joanna Didi Kuo
Papers: Shaping Competition: Allies Party Licensing and the
German Extreme Right
Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford
Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University
The People and the Party: Disfranchisement and Party
Building
David Alexander Bateman, Cornell University
Voting for the Lesser Evil: Corruption, Intimidation, and
Clientelism in Romanian elections
Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Giancarlo Visconti, Columbia University

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Political Cleavages and Opposition to Female Voters in


France, 1918-1944
Dawn L. Teele, University of Pennsylvania
Black Civil War Veterans and the Fight to Redeem the
Promise of Rights
Michael Weaver, Yale University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
17.10
CAUSAL INFERENCE IN RANDOMIZED
EXPERIMENTS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
RESEARCH

Chair:
Disc:

Corrine M. McConnaughy, George Washington


University
Christian Fong, Stanford University
Christopher B Mann, Skidmore College

Papers: Analyzing Rerandomized Experiments with HorvitzThompson Estimation


Joel A. Middleton, UC Berkeley
Chris James Kennedy, University of California,
Berkeley
Messy Data, Robust Inference? Assessing New
Bayesian & Non-Parametric Techniques
Pete Mohanty, Stanford University
Robert Shaffer, University of Texas, Austin
Randomization Inference for Outcomes with Clumping
at Zero
Luke Keele, Georgetown University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
17.11
CODING AND VALIDATING POLITICAL EVENT
DATA
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES

Chair:
Disc:

Brice Acree, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill


Brice Acree, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Emily Hencken Ritter, University of Cailfornia, Merced

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


17.13
ACCOUNTABILITY AND CORRUPTION:
POLITICAL ELITES IN DEVELOPING
DEMOCRACIES
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Daniel S. Treisman, University of California, Los
Angeles
Disc:
Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia
Papers: Bureaucratic Discretion in Clientelistic Contexts:
Evidence from Malawi
Sarah Andrews, University of Virginia
Party-Centered Corruption and the Political Control of
Bureaucrats
Sarah Brierley, UCLA
Can SMS-Mobilization Increase Citizen Reporting of
Public Service Deficiencies?
Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania
Kristin Grace Michelitch, Vanderbilt University
Politicians: Experimental Evidence on Candidacy and
Performance
Saad Ahmad Gulzar, New York University
Yasir Khan, International Growth Center
Bureaucrats vs. Politicians: Evidence from a Field
Experiment on Oversight
Pia Raffler, Yale University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
17.14
DEFINING AND DEPLOYING POLITICAL SPACE
IN ASIA
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Meredith L. Weiss, University at Albany, SUNY
Disc:
Edward Aspinall, Australian National University
Suzaina Kadir, National University of Singapore
Papers: Conceptualizing Political Space and Mobilization in Asia
Eva Louise Hansson, Stockholm University
Meredith L. Weiss, University at Albany, SUNY
Postdemocratic Labour Control in South Korea: The
Erasure of Workers Space
Susan Lee Kang, CUNY- John Jay College
Policing Politics: Myanmars Military Regime and
Protest Spaces in Transition
Marco Bnte, Monash University Malaysia
Exit, Voice, Loyalty, and Shadow Across the
Urban-Rural Divide in China
Johan Lagerkvist, Stockholm University
New Modes of Participation in Singapore, the
Philippines and Malaysia
Garry Rodan, Murdoch University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 237

237

Daily Schedule

Papers: A Machine Learning Approach to the Measurement of


Electoral Violence
Sarah Birch, University of Glasgow
David Alan Muchlinski, University of Glasgow
Xiao Yang
A Methodological Framework for the Validation of
Political Event Data
Benjamin E. Bagozzi, University of Delaware
Patrick T. Brandt, University of Texas at Dallas
John R. Freeman, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
Measuring Consolidation of Power: Extracting Event
Data from Laws and Decrees
Natalie Ahn, University of California-Berkeley
Using Scalable Machine Learning to Understand Violent
Collective Action
Lefteris Jason Anastasopoulos, University of Georgia
Jake Ryland Williams, University of California,
Berkeley
Monitoring Violence: Real-Time Change Detection for
Conflict Event Data
Philipp Hunziker, ETH Zurich

DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL


SCIENCE
17.12
PROMOTION LETTERS: PROBLEMS OF SELFSELECTION & 'DEVALUATION'
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Chair: Bartholomew H. Sparrow, The University of Texas at
Austin
Part:
John J. Coleman, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
Robert C. Lieberman, Johns Hopkins University
Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California
Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


17.15
SURVEY AND LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS IN
THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University
Disc:
Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University
Papers: Passive Support for the Islamic State: Evidence from a
Survey Experiment
Amaney Jamal, Princeton University
Michael Robbins, Princeton University
Mark Tessler, University of Michigan
Qualification or Affiliation? Explaining Candidate
Evaluations among Arab Voters
Bethany Shockley, Qatar University
Justin Gengler, SESRI, Qatar University
Examining the Effects of Gender, Ethnicity, and
Islamism on Voter Preferences
Lindsay J. Benstead, Portland State University
Kristen Kao, University of Gothenburg
Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg
Refugee Responses to Foreign Intervention in the Syrian
Civil War
Daniel Corstange, Columbia University
Drivers of Societal Tolerance: Rational, Elitist,
Emotional or Religious?
Mazen Hassan, Cairo University
Marwa Shalaby, Rice University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
17.16
TRANSITIONS FROM CLIENTELISTIC TO
PROGRAMMATIC PARTY COMPETITION
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
Disc:
Carl Dahlstrom, University of Gothenburg
Papers: The Foundation of Policy-based Politics in Africa
Nic Cheeseman
Ethnic Group Inequality, Clientelism and Programmatic
Linkage
Kiril Kolev
Yi-ting Wang, National Cheng Kung University
Political Economy of Programmatic and Clientelistic
Partisan Politics
Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
The Political Economy of Meritocracy: Elections and
Bureaucracy in Indonesia
Ward Berenschot, Royal Netherlands Institute of
Southeast Asian Studies (KITLV)
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
17.17
LEGACIES OF HISTORICAL AND COLONIAL
PAST IN SOUTH ASIA
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Irfan Nooruddin, Georgetown University
Disc:
Francesca R. Jensenius, Norwegian Institute of
International Affairs
Rajesh Ramachandran, Goethe University
Papers: Land, State Capacity, and Colonialism: Evidence from
India
Alexander Lee, University of Rochester
Land Tenure and Communist Insurgency in India
Anoop K. Sarbahi, University of Minnesota

238

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 238

How Colonial Ideas Shaped Postcolonial Imaginings of


Development in India
Prerna Singh, Brown University
The Colonial Origins of Democratic Dominance: The
INC in Comparative Perspective
Adam W. Ziegfeld, George Washington University
Democratization Through Competition: Historical
Lessons from India
Maya Jessica Tudor
Adam W. Ziegfeld, George Washington University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
17.18
POLITICS OF CHINAS INVESTMENT AND
RESOURCE EXTRACTION IN AFRICA & LATIN
AMERICA
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Carsten Vala, Loyola University Maryland
Disc:
Deborah Brautigam, Johns Hopkins/SAIS
Papers: African Agency and Resource Management: the Case of
China Exim Bank in Angola
Lucy Jane Corkin, RMB Westport
Resource-Based Development and the Politics of
Chinese Investment in Namibia
Meredith J DeBoom, University of Colorado, Boulder
Chinas Global Capital vs Social Forces: Contention
over Chiles Copper Mines
Carsten Vala, Loyola University Maryland
The Mediated Migration of Chinese Small-Scale Gold
Miners in Ghana
Yang Jiao, Miami University
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
17.19
MIGRATION, ETHNICITY AND PROTEST
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia
Disc:
Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia
Papers: Homegrown Terrorism: Why is France Under Attack,
Why Has Germany Been Spared?
Dorle Hellmuth, The Catholic University of America
Purgatory, Protest, or Paralysis? Domestic Politics and
the Refugee Crisis
Sean Christopher Anderson, Wayne State University
Quiet Riot: Estimating a Causal Effect of Protest
Violence
Emiliano Raphael Huet-Vaughn, Middlebury College
Selecting by Ethnicity: Remigration Policies in The
Netherlands and Japan
Michael Orlando Sharpe, CUNY-York College
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
17.20
EUROPE'S INTERSECTING CRISES
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Kim Lane Scheppele, Princeton University
Part:
R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Gary Marks, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam
Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University
Sergio Fabbrini, Luiss Guido Carli
Matthias M. Matthijs, Johns Hopkins University

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY


17.21
DISPUTES IN THE WORLD TRADE
ORGANIZATION
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Richard Nielsen
Disc:
Jennifer L Tobin, Georgetown University
Marc L. Busch, Georgetown University

DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY


17.24
CHINA IN THE WORLD
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Oriana Skylar Mastro, Georgetown University
Disc:
Oriana Skylar Mastro, Georgetown University

Papers: Regime Type and Assertiveness in the WTO


Cristiane Carneiro, University of Sao Paulo
Flvio da Cunha Rezende, Federal University of
Pernambuco
Thiago Rodrigues So Marcos Nogueira, Center for
Global Trade and Investments - CGTI / So Paulo
School of Economics - FGV
Screening for Losers: Institutions and Information
Jason S. Davis
Promoting Cooperation by Bringing More Disputes
Yoo-Sun Jung, Texas A&M University

Papers: Chinas Rise and the Engagement-Containment Debate


Brandon Yoder, National University of Singapore
"On the Verge of Alliance": Defining and Explaining
China-Russia Relations
Alexander Korolev, National University of Singapore
Rhetorical Entrapment toward China: The Present, the
Past, and the Future
Chi-hung Wei, Princeton University
Christina Jun-Yao Lai, China and the World
Program, Princeton University
Unipolarity in Historical China: Moving Beyond
Americentrism
Yuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan University

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY


17.22
ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION AND PUBLIC
OPINION
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Eyal Rubinson, Tel Aviv University
Disc:
Adam Dean

DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY


17.25
PUBLIC OPINION AND INTERNATIONAL
CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Abby Post, University of Virginia
Disc:
Bernd Beber, New York University

Papers: Self-Interest or Worldview: Who Supports International


Redistribution in the US?
Gautam Nair, Yale University
Paternalism, Race, and Foreign Aid: Two Replications
Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder
Voting for Capital Mobility: Self-Interest and Attitudes
about Capital Controls
Stephen Craig Nelson, Northwestern University
David A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins University
Globalization and Welfare State Attitudes in Newly
Industrialized Asia
Sijeong Lim, University of Amsterdam
Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam

Papers: Civilian Casualties and American Public Support for


Military Interventions
Won Steinbach, Duke University
How does Public Opinion affect Foreign Policy?
Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University
Jessica L. P. Weeks, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Keren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton University
Hypocrisy Costs in Crisis Bargaining: An Experimental
Approach
Abby Post, University of Virginia
Pandering to War: Military Escalation in Response to
Public Demand
Brandon Merrell, University of California, San Diego
Strategic Speech and International Politics
Arthur A. Stein

DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION


17.23
BARGAINING AND NEGOTIATION
Room: PCC, 102-A
Disc:
Hartmut Lenz, SOKA, University Tokyo

DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY


17.27
CRITIQUING CORE CONCEPTS IN FOREIGN
POLICY ANALYSIS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Christopher Darnton, Naval Postgraduate School
Disc:
Christopher Darnton, Naval Postgraduate School
Papers: A Seasons Theory of Foreign Policy Change: Hawks,
Doves, and Domestic Politics
Lori Helene Gronich, George Washington University
Anthony M. Bell, Center for Strategic &
International Studies

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 239

239

Daily Schedule

Papers: Bargaining in the UN Security Councils Formal and


Informal Meetings
Richard Loeza, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Bordering on Peace: Border Settlement and International
Economic Cooperation
Gina Marie Riccardella, University of Notre Dame
Gary Goertz
Brokering Security Cooperation: Diplomacy,
Perceptions, and the Origins of NATO
Daisuke Minami, George Washington University
Brian Radzinsky, George Washington University
How Does Trust Among Ambassadors Affect Diplomacy
in International Negotiations?
Shawn L. Ramirez, Emory University
Trade, Conflict, and Compromise: Incentives for
Cooperative Bargaining Outcomes
Ryan Brutger, Princeton University

DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS


CONTROL
17.26
NUCLEAR SECURITY: PAST AND PRESENT
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Sonja M. Amadae, University of Helsinki
Part:
Patrick M. Morgan
Francis J. Gavin, MIT
Michael Desch, University of Notre Dame
Robert Jervis, Columbia University

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Measuring and Reclassifying Soft Power Instruments


Judit Trunkos
Risk Disposition and Deterrence Effectiveness: An
Experimental Examination
Zachary Zwald, University of Houston
Jeffrey D. Berejikian, University of Georgia
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
17.28
DATA, CHALLENGES, & OPPORTUNITIES IN
THE EMPIRICAL STUDY OF SUBNATIONAL
VIOLENCE
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Jonathan D. Caverley, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Papers: The Foundations of Rebel Groups in Latin America
Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of
Maryland, College Park
Jessica Maves Braithwaite, University of Arizona
Honor Among Thieves: Understanding Cooperation
Among Violent Non-State Actors
Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania
Philip B. K. Potter, University of Virginia
Where Women Fight: New Data on Women's
Participation in Rebel Groups
Jakana Thomas, Michigan State University
Days of Contention: Introducing NAVCO 3.0
Erica Chenoweth, University of Denver
Jonathan Pinckney, Sie Cheou-Kang Center,
University of Denver
Civilian-Militant Interactions in Terrorist Territories
Joel K. Day, University of Denver
Evan Perkoski, Harvard Kennedy School
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
17.29
DISAGGREGATING PEACEKEEPING: NEW
DATA ON OPERATION ATTRIBUTES
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Kristin Marie Bakke, University College London
Disc:
Lisa Hultman, Uppsala University
Papers: The Effect of Different Troop Deployments on Conflict
Initiation by Host States
Michael E. Flynn, Kansas State University
Carla Martinez Machain, Kansas State University
Mandating Security: UN Peacekeeping Mandates and
Civilian Protection
Gabriella Elizabeth Lloyd, The Ohio State University
Blue Helmets, Mission Leadership and Mission
Effectiveness
Vincenzo Bove, University of Warwick
Andrea Ruggeri, University of Oxford
Making Electoral Peace: How Peacekeeping Activities
Influence Electoral Violence
Hannah Smidt
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
17.30
LEGISLATIVE ORGANIZATION AND
IMMIGRANT-ORIGIN REPRESENTATIVES IN
EUROPE
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS
AND SOCIETY

Chair:

240

Thomas Saalfeld, University of Bamberg

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 240

Disc:

Kaare Wallace Strom, University of California, San


Diego

Papers: Rules of Procedure and the Floor Activities of


Immigrant-Origin Legislators
Lucas Geese
Jean-Benoit Pilet, Universite Libre de Bruxelles
Thomas Saalfeld, University of Bamberg
The Presence of Citizens of Immigrant Origin in
Regional Legislaures
Rgis Dandoy, University of Louvain
Laura Morales, University of Leicester
Parliamentary Parties as Contexts for Descriptive and
Substantive Representation
Thomas Saalfeld, University of Bamberg
Jorge Miguel Fernandes, University of Bamberg
Committees as Contexts for Descriptive and Substantive
Representation
Jorge Miguel Fernandes, University of Bamberg
Thomas Saalfeld, University of Bamberg
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
17.31
PRIVATE MANAGEMENT | PUBLIC VALUE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Manny P. Teodoro, Texas A&M University
Papers: A Missing Link between Fiscal Shock and Privatization
Gyeo Reh Lee, Indiana University
Political Accountability and Public-Private Infrastructure
Partnerships
Anthony Michael Bertelli, New York University
Valentina Mele, Universit Bocconi
Public Participation, Conservation, & Compliance in
Water Utility Privatization
David Switzer, Texas A&M University
Profit from Administration: Examining Bankruptcys
Street-Level Bureaucrats
Serena Laws
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
17.32
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON PUBLIC
POLICY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY

Chair:
Disc:

Emily D. Bello-Pardo, American University


Phil Nicholas, Independent Scholar
Michael Callaghan Pisapia, Wake Forest University

Papers: A Century of Transformation in Child Policy


Brenda K. Bushouse, University of Massachusetts
Doug Imig, University of Memphis
At the Pleasure of the State: Policy, Politics, and
Government Support for HBCUs
Deondra Rose, Duke University
State and Local Enforcement of Fair Housing Policy
Charles M. Lamb, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Eric M. Wilk
The Creation of a Constituency: The Tennessee Valley
Authority, 1933-1962
Devin Caughey, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Sara N. Chatfield, University of Denver
National ID Card Proposals in the 1970s: Backlash,
Support, and Politics
Magdalena Krajewska, Wingate University

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS


17.33
EXPLAINING JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING
(USCOA AND US STATE COURTS)
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: John P. Kastellec, Princeton University
Disc:
John P. Kastellec, Princeton University
Nicholas Almendares, Tulane University
Papers: Fragmentation and Litigation Outcomes in Contemporary
US Policy Implementation
Miranda Yaver, Washington University in St. Louis
How Equal is Equal? The EEOC and the Federal Court
of Appeals
Scott H. Ainsworth, University of Georgia
The Diffusion of the Law in the American States
Abigail A Rury, University of Iowa
The Players Matter: Attorney Influence on Trial-Level
Outcomes
Todd A. Collins, Western Carolina University
The Sentence of Death: Communication and Retention
Costs on State High Courts
Michael K. Romano, Shenandoah University
Todd A. Curry, University of Texas at El Paso
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND
JURISPRUDENCE
17.34
AMERICAN CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT: ACTORS, ORDERS, AND
CONFLICTS
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: Rebecca McCumbers Flavin
Disc:
John E. Finn, Wesleyan University
Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Papers: Civic Constitutionalism and Civil Rights
Wayne D. Moore, Virginia Tech
Popular Constitutionalism, the States, and the New Deal
Revolution
Sean Beienburg, Lehigh University
The Union Indissoluble: Federalism and Antebellum
Constitutional Instability
Robinson Woodward-Burns, University of
Pennsylvania
Toward an Iconography of Multiple Orders: Visualizing
Constitutional Development
Eric Lomazoff, Villanova University
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
17.35
ISSUES IN FISCAL FEDERALISM
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Srinivas Parinandi, University of Colorado at Boulder
Disc:
Rene J. Johnson, Rhodes College
Daniel Blyth Magleby, Binghamton University

DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH


17.36
GENDER, RACE, AND POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Linda Kay Mancillas


Heather Silber Mohamed, Clark University
Terri L. Towner

Papers: Black Women Mayoral Candidates in the Age of


BlackLivesMatter
Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University
Jamil Shatema Scott
Minority Women Candidates: The Intersection of Race
and Gender Stereotypes
Heather Hicks, University of Maryland, College Park
Money Talks: Gendered Electoral Financing in Malawi
and Zambia
Ragnhild Louise Muriaas, University of Bergen
Vibeke Wang, Chr. Michelsen Institute
Who Wins? Investigating Gender, Race, and Parental
Status on Candidate Viability
Camille Danielle Burge, Villanova University
Melissa Hodges, Villanova University
Substantive&Descriptive Rep:An Experiment on
Electoral Rules & Intersectionality
Kostanca Dhima, Texas A&M
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
17.37
RACE & RELIGION
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: John Francis Burke, Trinity University
Disc:
John Francis Burke, Trinity University
Hans J.G. Hassell, Cornell College
Papers: The Role of Culture, Faith and Conservatism on Public
Opinion about Immigration
Ricardo Ramirez, University of Notre Dame
Juan Valdez, University of Notre Dame
Mark Brockway, University of Notre Dame
God and Gender: Latinx Identity and Public Opinion
Toward Transgender Rights
Brian F. Harrison, Northwestern University
Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College
Race, Religion and Public Policy Preferences
Tony E. Carey, University of North Texas
Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas
Brian R. Calfano, University of Cincinnati
Religion & Social Capital: Latino, African American
and Anglo Civic Engagement
Lakeyta Monique Bonnette, Georgia State University
Sarah Allen Gershon, Georgia State University
Adrian D. Pantoja, Pitzer College
James Benjamin Taylor, University of North Carolina
Wilmington
Muslim American Core American Values
Reem Abou-samra, Wayne State University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 241

241

Daily Schedule

Papers: Federal Transfers, Local Taxation, and Representation:


Evidence from Brazil
Giuliana Pardelli, Princeton University
Fiscal Federalism and Sovereign Risk: Evidence from
Eurozone Bond Spreads
Kyle Hanniman, Queen's University
Metropolitan Institutions in Brazil: Public Goods and
Prospects for Development
David Hughes, Rice University

Strengthening the Regulatory Framework of Subnational


Debt in Mexico
Heidi Jane M. Smith, Instituto Tecnologico
Autonomo de Mexico
Who Gets What, When, and How? The allocation of
federal transfers in Brazil
Mariana Batista, Federal University of Pernambuco

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS


17.38
ISLAM AND POLITICS BEFORE AND AFTER
THE ARAB SPRING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Muqtedar Khan, University of Delaware
Disc:
Muqtedar Khan, University of Delaware
Papers: Birthing the Modern Subject: Subject Transformation in
Contemporary Arab Thought
Yasmeen Daifallah, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
The Missing Structural Perspective of Islam in
Democratization & Secularization
Khaled Helmy, Tulane University
Religion and Politics of Constitution-Making in Tunisia,
Egypt, and Turkey
Etga Ugur, University of Washington Tacoma
Islamist Parties and Institutional Sources of Moderation
A.Kadir Yildirim, Rice University
Public Attitudes towards Islamist Parties in the Post
Arab Spring Era
Alireza Raisi
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
17.39
CONGRUENT REPRESENTATION?
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Chair: Joshua D Potter, Louisiana State University
Disc:
Joshua D Potter, Louisiana State University
Mathias Tromborg, Rice University
Papers: Citizen Perceptions, Manifesto Statements, Failures of
Ideological Congruence
G. Bingham Powell, University of Rochester
Elite-Mass Congruence, Political Disaffection, and
Democracy in Chile
Peter M. Siavelis, Wake Forest University
Do Citizens and Politicians Think Alike? Evidence
from a Survey Experiment
Peter Esaiasson, University of Gothenburg
Patrik Ohberg, The Department of Political Science
at the University of Gothenburg
The Gap between Public and MP Preferences regarding
Democratic Representation
Audrey Andr, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Elites Knowledge of the Publics Issue Priorities in
Three Countries
Stefaan Walgrave
Peter John Loewen, University of Toronto
Jeroen Karl Joly
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
17.40
DYNAMICS OF MULTIPARTY SYSTEMS
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Dalston G Ward, Washington University in St. Louis
Papers: A Marriage of Convenience: Personalism and Populism
in European Democracies
Emilia Zankina, American University in Bulgaria
Getting a Bigger Slice of the Pie: Portfolio Allocation
and the Radical Right
Viktoryia Schnose, Washington University in St.
Louis

242

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 242

How Electoral Systems Affect Political Resources: A


Revision of Duvergers Law
Bernard Tamas, Valdosta State University
Cameron McClure, Columbia University School of
International and Public Affairs
In Opposition to the Opposition
Zsuzsanna Blanka Magyar, UCLA
New Parties and the Transformation of Party Systems
Holger Dring, University of Bremen
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
17.41
CAMPAIGNING, PRIMING AND VOTE CHOICES
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Chair:
Disc:

Rune Slothuus, Aarhus University


Bert Bakker, University of Amsterdam

Papers: Asymmetrical Priming of Issues and Performance


Scott Matthews, Memorial University
Geo-Targeting with Campaign Emails? A Field
Experiment
Taewoo Kang, Washington State University
Samuel Callahan Rhodes, Washington State
University
Orion A Yoesle, Washington State University
Negative Campaigning and Voters Electoral Preferences
in a Multiparty Setting
Annemarie Sophie Walter, University of Nottingham
Cees van der Eijk, University of Nottingham
Negative vs. Positive Campaign Advertisements
Ryan Yuhao Fang, The Pennsylvania State University
Glenda Oskar, Pennsylvania State University
Symphony without an Audience? Voter Reaction to
Issue-Based Campaign Ads
Stephen C. Craig, University of Florida
Paulina S. Rippere, Jacksonville University
Seth C. McKee, Texas Tech University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
17.42
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF TURNOUT
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Peter Charles John, University College London
Disc:
Kasper M. Hansen, University of Copenhagen
Papers: Do Interactions With Candidates Increase Voter Support
and Participation?
Vincent Pons, Harvard Business School
Enrico Cantoni, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Duty for Duties Sake? Descriptive Norms, Subjective
Norms and Civic Duty
Edward A. Fieldhouse, University of Manchester
David John Cutts, University of Bath
Social Class Bias in Low-Turnout Elections: Fads and
Fallacies
Christopher H. Achen, Princeton University
Richard Sinnott, University College Dublin, National
University of Ireland
James McBride
Do Voters Swing in the Rain? The Impact of Bad
Weather on U.S. Election Outcomes
Erik P Duhaime, MIT
Taylor Moulton

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Genes, Educational Attainment, and Political


Participation
Christopher T. Dawes
Sven Oskarsson, Uppsala University
Karl-Oskar Lindgren, Uppsala University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
17.43
HONESTY: EFFECTS OF SCANDALS AND
CORRUPTION ON TRUST, ATTITUDES, AND
BEHAVIOR
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Bradley Thomas Dickerson, Arkansas State University
Disc:
Michael D. Cobb, North Carolina State University
Papers: Scandals, Media, and Public Opinion in China:A
Regression-Discontinuity Approach
Yanjun Liu, University of California, Santa Barbara
The Impact of Scandals on Trust in Government
Scott J Basinger, University of Houston
Jeffrey Milyo, University of Missouri
The Effect of Corruption on Political Trust: Evidence
from a Natural Experiment
Macarena Ares, European University Institute
Enrique Hernndez, European University Institute
Differential Effects of Political Scandals on Political
Preferences
Dominic Nyhuis, Goethe University Frankfurt
Transforming Ties with the State: Distrustful Citizens
and the Reagan Era
Amy Fried, University of Maine
Douglas B. Harris, Loyola University Maryland
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
17.44
THE STRANGER: ASSESSING POLICY
RESPONSIVENESS AND ISSUE OWNERSHIP
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: David A. M. Peterson, Iowa State University,
Chafee2016
Disc:
Jeffrey W. Koch, SUNY, Geneseo

DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION


17.45
A MYRIAD OF MEDIA EFFECTS
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Carl L. Palmer, Illinois State University

Jonathan M. Ladd, Georgetown University

Papers: Candidates' News Coverage and Electoral Success: A


Semantic Networks Perspective
Dror Walter, University of Pennsylvania
Sijia Yang, University of Pennsylvania
Measuring Medias Effect on Public Conversations
Ariel Rebecca White, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Gary King, Harvard University
Benjamin Schneer, Florida State University
Media Effects on Retrospective Economic Perceptions
Diana C. Mutz, University of Pennsylvania
Eunji Kim, University of Pennsylvania
The Electoral Consequences of Elite-Induced Opinion
Change
Erik Peterson, Stanford University
Gabor Simonovits, Rajk Laszlo College for Advanced
Studies
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
17.46
ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEM FRAMES AND
PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Chair: Nora Hanagan, Duke University
Disc:
Deserai Anderson Crow, University of Colorado Denver
Papers: Hot Takes: How (and why) Climate Change Storylines
Change in American Politics
Jack Zhou, Duke University
Public Opinion and Climate Change in Canada
Erick Lachapelle, Universite de Montreal
Public Opinion & Climate Change: An Experiment with
Message Source and Content
Juliet Carlisle, University of Idaho
April K. Clark, Northern Illinois University
Public Perceptions of Hydraulic Fracturing in Four
Marcellus Shale States
Matthew Barnes, West Virginia University
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
17.47
POLITICIZING THE CAMPUS: EDUCATIONAL
SPACES AND NEOLIBERALISM
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: Hannah Walker, University of Washington
Disc:
Laura Katz Olson, Lehigh University
Samantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay College
Papers: John Sexton, Branch Campuses, and the Reproduction of
the Global University
Isaac Kamola, Trinity College
Memorializing Tragedy: Race and Class in American
School Shootings
Jennifer Kelkres Emery, The Washington Center for
Internships & Academic Seminars
Jennifer Augspurger, Hillsborough County
Supervisor of Elections
Sarah Luczyk, University of West Florida
Pedagogy as Politics: Putting the Political Back into
Political Science
William W. Sokoloff, UT Rio Grande Valley
Shaping Safe Spaces: Deliberation and the Painful
Practice of Activism
Rebecca Traber, Yale University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 243

243

Daily Schedule

Papers: Local Policy Responsiveness: A Case Study on


Immigration Policy
Sarah Parrish Bergquist, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Who Listens to Whom? Assessing Inequalities in
Representation
Justin Phillips, Columbia University
Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University
Adam Zelizer
Government Agendas and the Adaptation to Public
Preferences
Daniel Bischof, University of Zurich
Luca Bernardi, University of Leicester
Ruud Wouters, University of Antwerp
Estimating Citizens' Policy Positions Using Roll Call
Votes
Gregory Huber, Yale University
Seth J. Hill, University of California, San Diego
Explaining Issue Ownership Change in America
Jane Green, University of Manchester
Will Jennings, University of Southampton

Disc:

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

The New Campus Anti-Rape Movement: Networked


Activism for Change
Caroline Heldman, Occidental College
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
17.48
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
NATIONALISM, SELF-DETERMINATION AND
SOVEREIGNTY
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Chair: George J. Andreopoulos, CUNY- John Jay College and
the Graduate Center
Disc:
George J. Andreopoulos, CUNY- John Jay College and
the Graduate Center
Papers: The Grand Masquerade: The Global Periphery and the
Myth of Statehood
Valerie Freeland, Simon Fraser University
Semi-Sovereign Actors in International Politics
Dillon Tatum, George Washington University
Theorizing Sovereignty and Self-Determination as
International Rights to Resist
Antonio Franceschet, University of Calgary
The Evolution of Self-Determination: From Statehood to
Minority Rights
Oded Haklai, Queen's University
State Centralization and Nationalism: A Historical
Comparison
Margarita H. Petrova, Institut Barcelona d'Estudis
Internacionals (IBEI)
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
17.49
FORMAL MODELS OF AUTHORITARIAN
POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Chair: Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles
Disc:
Milan Svolik, Yale University
Michael K. Miller, George Washington University
Papers: The Tocqueville Paradox: Why Reform May Provoke
Rebellion
Scott Gehlbach
Evgeny Finkel, George Washington University
Why do Autocrats Disclose?
James R. Hollyer, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
James Raymond Vreeland, Georgetown University
B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University
The Propagandist's Curse
Andrew Little, Cornell University
Information Management in Authoritarian Governance
Arturas Rozenas, New York University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
17.50
HUMAN RIGHTS AS EMANCIPATORY
POLITICS?
Room: PCC, 104-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY

Chair:
Disc:

James D. Ingram, McMaster University


Ayten Gundogdu, Barnard College-Columbia University

Papers: Is it Better to be a Criminal Than a Stateless


Person?Arendts Famous Comparison
Kathleen R. Arnold, DePaul University

244

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 244

The Gender of Dignity: Embodiment and the Fight for


Human Rights
Karen Zivi, Grand Valley State University
Self-Determination as a Human Right: Cassin, Free
France, and Decolonization
Emma Stone Mackinnon, University of Chicago
Human Rights Norms and Their Rivals: A Historical
Analysis of Challenges
Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, University of ConnecticutStorrs
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
17.51
MIXED METHOD RESEARCH DESIGNS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Analyzing Diffusion: Mixed-methods Research Designs
for Spatially Dependent Data
Imke Harbers, University of Amsterdam
Matthew C. Ingram, University at Albany, SUNY
Different Kinds of Qualitative Research: An Idealtypological Approach
Joachim K. Blatter, University of Lucerne
Taking Mixed Methods Forward: A Multilevel
Integration Approach
Yeon Ju Lee, University of Chicago
When Anyone Will Do: Identity, Ideology, and Civilian
Victimization in Civil War
James Hughes, London School of Economics
Anar Ahmadov, Leiden University
From Qualitative to Quantitative Analysis in a LargeScale Migration Project
Maria V. Koinova, University of Warwick
William Margulies, University of Warwick
Philippe Blanchard, University of Warwick
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS
17.52
SEXUALITY AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN
RIGHTS
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Sara Angevine, Whittier College
Disc:
Michael J. Bosia, St. Michael's College
Papers: Norm Contestation at the UN Human Rights Council:
SOGI and Religious Rights
Michael Joel Voss, University of Toledo
Examining the Framing Effects of Transnational LGBTI
Human Rights Advocacy
Erin Aylward, University of Toronto
When Do Voters Support the European Unions
Involvement in Gay Rights?
Douglas Page, University of South Carolina
Protecting or Protesting the Pink?: LGBT Rights in the
European Parliament
Martijn Mos, Cornell University
Human Rights Norm Diffusion: Same-Sex Partnership
and Marriage in Southeast Asia
Ronald L. Holzhacker, University of Groningen
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
17.53
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE: THE ACA,
MEDICAID, AND THE POLITICS OF HEALTH
CARE
Room: PCC, 107-A

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Chair:
Disc:

Colleen M. Grogan, University of Chicago


Colleen M. Grogan, University of Chicago

Chair:
Disc:

Papers: Bargaining and Bipartisanship: Lessons from the


Arkansas Medicaid Waiver
Richard P. Nathan
Explaining Local Variation in the Health Care Safety
Net in the Post-ACA Era
Dana Patton, University of Alabama
Richard C. Fording, University of Alabama
Mike Nicholson, University of Alabama
Extending the Fee Bump: Expanding Medicaid Access
without Expanding Medicaid?
Adam Wilk, Emory University
Leigh Evans, Boston University
David K. Jones, Boston University
Implementing The ACA: Outreach and Navigation
Contracting in State Exchanges
Jocelyn M. Johnston, American University
Anna A. Amirkhanyan, American University
Rebecca Yurman, American University School of
Public Affairs
Michael Hatch, American University
Policy Cascades: Public Enrollment in the Affordable
Care Act
Timothy Herbert Callaghan, University of Minnesota
Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
17.54
INNOVATIONS IN LAB AND SURVEY
EXPERIMENTS
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University
Disc:
Soenke Ehret, New York University

DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP


17.55
CATEGORICAL PRECISION IN THE STUDY OF
IMMIGRANT INTEGRATION
Room: Loews, Commonwealth D

Papers: How Should We Understand Immigrant Integration in


Europe?
Laurence Lessard-Phillips, University of Birmingham
Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Coalitional Variation in Support for Immigration &
Accommodation
Sara Wallace Goodman, University of California,
Irvine
Hannah M. Alarian, University of California, Irvine
Re-Examining the Impact of Prejudice on Policy
Attitudes
Morris E Levy, University of Southern California
Matthew Wright, American University
Jack Citrin, University of California, Berkeley
Maintaining Tolerance and Support for Minority Rights
in the Face of Terrorism
Maria Sobolewska, University of Manchester
Robert Ford, University of Manchester
Paul M. Sniderman, Stanford University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
17.56
SUBNATIONAL IMMIGRATION POLICY
MAKING
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Jacqueline M. Chattopadhyay, University of North
Carolina at Charlotte
Disc:
Anna O. Law, CUNY Brooklyn College
Papers: Immigrant Inclusion and Subfederal Citizenship in the
United States
Allan Colbern
Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California
Riverside
Local Governments and Immigration: Buenos Aires, So
Paulo, and Mexico City
Felipe A Filomeno, University of Maryland,
Baltimore County
Mapping Immigrant Reception
Robin D. Jacobson, University of Puget Sound
T. Elizabeth Durden, Bucknell University
Daniel Tichenor, University of Oregon
The State of Immigrant Health: Undocumented Health
Policy Across State Lines
Jackie Vimo, New School for Social Research
DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY
17.57
CLASS AND INEQUALITY IN THE HISTORY OF
POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Andrew Sabl, Yale University
Disc:
Shawn Fraistat, Brown University
Papers: Class, Property, and the Fruits of Labor: Justice in
Jacksonian Political Thought
Alex Zakaras, University of Vermont
Charity with Class
Emma Saunders-Hastings, University of Chicago
Two Concepts of Aristocracy: Privilege & Fortune in
Founding-era Class Analysis
Luke Gabriel Mayville, Columbia University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 245

Daily Schedule

Papers: Other Peoples' Money: Warm Glow and Risk


Preferences
Jonathan David Rogers, New York University Abu
Dhabi (NYUAD)
Risky Business: Does Corporate Political Giving Affect
Consumer Behavior?
Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University
Donald P. Green, Columbia University
Jonathan S. Krasno, SUNY, Binghamton University
Michael Schwam-Baird, Columbia University
Kyle Endres, The University of Texas at Austin
Eric Moore
Spread the Word: Migration Networks and Spillovers
Miranda Soledad Simon
Cassilde Schwartz, University College London
David Hudson, University College London
Shane Johnson, University College London
Foundations of Social Policy Support
Israel Marques, National Research University Higher School of Economics
Joseph B. Schaffer
Sarah Wilson Sokhey, University of Colorado
Trust, Risk Preferences, and Choice of Land-Taking
Compensation in China
Meina Cai, University of Connecticut

Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina at


Chapel Hill
Peter Thisted Dinesen, University of Copenhagen

245

Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Related
18.1

Room:
Chair:
Part:

18.2
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Inequality and the Social-bases of Self-respect in the


Works of Adam Smith
Glory M. Liu, Stanford University
Managing the Rapacity of the Rich: Adam Smith on
Economic Inequality
David Lay Williams, DePaul University
Groups
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: DO ADMINISTRATIVE
AGENCIES GET TOO MUCH DEFERENCE? 30
YEARS OF CHEVRON
Loews, Commonwealth B
Ronald J. Pestritto, Hillsdale College
Joseph Postell, University of Colorado at Colorado
Springs
John Yoo, University of California at Berkeley
Edith H Jones, United States Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: CONSTITUTIONS
AND FOUNDATIONS
Loews, Commonwealth C
Michael P. Federici, Mercyhurst University
Steven McGuire, Eastern University
Jeffrey Polet, Hope College

Papers: Locke's "A Letter Concerning Toleration" as a


Theological Document
Steven Ealy, Liberty Fund, Inc.
A Confucian Vision of Value Pluralism
Jingcai Ying
Philosophy of Law of Eric Voegelin
Francois Denis Lecoutre, University of Lille 2
Can Constitutions Preserve Engendering Experience?
Michael P. Federici, Mercyhurst University
18.3
INSTITUTE FOR CONSTITUTIONAL STUDIES:
HAMILTON: THE MUSICAL
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Mark A. Graber
Part:
Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin
Lief H. Carter, Colorado College
Susan R. Burgess, Ohio University
Mark A. Graber
18.4
LATINO CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:
LIVING LATINO IMMIGRATION: KNOWLEDGE,
ATTITUDES, AND BELONGING
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Edwina Barvosa, University of California, Santa Barbara
Disc:
David L. Leal, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Broken Mirrors: Identity, Duty, and Belonging in the
New La(tino) Migra
David Cortez, Cornell University (Ph.D. Candidate)
Perceptions of Immigrants Ideology and Immigration
Policy
James C. Garand, Louisiana State University
Betina Cutaia Wilkinson, Wake Forest University
Liz Lebron, Louisiana State University
Thomas M. Holbrook, University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee
The Effect of Co-Ethnic Churches on Latino & Asian
American Political Attitudes
Alvaro Corral, University of Texas, Austin

246

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 246

18.5

Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Political Knowledge of Central American Migrants in


Transnational Spaces
Linda Alvarez, Claremont Graduate University
MCCONNELL CENTER FOR POLITICAL
LEADERSHIP: STATESMANSHIP AND
FRIENDSHIP IN AN AGE OF
TRANSFORMATION
Loews, Commonwealth A2
Lee Trepanier, Saginaw Valley State University
Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Andrew Bibby

Papers: Political Friendship in Churchill's 'Marlborough'


John F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge
Friendship and the Solitude of Greatness: The Case of
Charles de Gaulle
Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College
Homonoia, Friendship, and the Break Between Albert
Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre
Ron Srigley, University of Prince Edward Island
Eisenhower and Nixon: A Friendship of Unequals
John Kitch, LSU
18.6
POLITICAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION OF
IRELAND: IRELAND AND THE 2016 ELECTION
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: Maire Catherine Braniff, Ulster University
Disc:
Daniel M. Smith, Harvard University
Thomas Hennessey, Canterbury Christ Church
University
Papers: Election 2016, Parties, Issues, and the Campaign
David M. Farrell, University College Dublin, Belfield
John Garry, Queen's University of Belfast
Michael Marsh, Trinity College, Dublin
Theresa Reidy, University College Cork
Portfolio Allocation and the Electoral Costs of
Governing in Ireland
Shane Martin, University of Essex
The 2016 Irish General Election: Realignment or
Persistence?
Sean McGraw, University of Notre Dame
The Politics of Leadership: Fianna Fil Ideology, Policy
and Electoral Success
Gary Murphy, Dublin City University
Eoin O'Malley, Dublin City University
Traditional Media and the Irish General Election 2016
Michael Courtney, Dublin City University
Michael Breen, Dublin City University
Iain McMenamin, Dublin City University
Eoin O'Malley, Dublin City University
18.7
SOCIETY OF CATHOLIC SOCIAL SCIENTISTS:
REVOLUTIONARY NATURAL LAW
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Matthew O'Brien, O'Brien Greene & Co.
Disc:
Matthew O'Brien, O'Brien Greene & Co.
Papers: Resistance Theory in Ecclesiastical Context
Gladden J. Pappin, University of Notre Dame
Natural Law in Universities: A Subversive Education
Christopher J. Wolfe
Aquinas on the Limits of Obedience and the Possibility
of Revolution
Michael P Krom, Saint Vincent College

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Natural Law in the Pamphlet Debates


Kody Wayne Cooper, University of Missouri

Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM


APSA Events
19.1
APSA ALL-MEMBER BUSINESS MEETING
Room: PCC, 114

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM


Theme Panels
20.1
30 YEARS AFTER THE IMMIGRATION REFORM
AND CONTROL ACT
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University
Part:
Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California
Riverside
Daniel Tichenor, University of Oregon
Mark Hugo Lopez, Pew Research center
Ricardo Ramirez, University of Notre Dame
Els de Graauw, Baruch College
20.2
BREAKING NEWS PANEL: TAKING STOCK OF
THE BREXIT SHOCK
Room: PCC, 201-C
Co-sponsored by British Politics Group

Chair:
Part:

20.3
Room:
Chair:
Part:

20.4
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Susan Scarrow, University of Houston


Justin T. Fisher, Brunel University
Liesbet Hooghe, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam
R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Gary Marks, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam
Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University
THE BIG NEXT QUESTIONS IN GENDER AND
POLITICS
PCC, 114
Karen Beckwith, Case Western Reserve University
Lisa Baldez, Dartmouth College
Kanisha Bond, University of Maryland, College Park
Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania
Meryl Kenny, University of Edinburgh
Aili Mari Tripp, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame
URBANIZATION IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: A
GREAT TRANSFORMATION IN THE MAKING
PCC, 204-C
Rachel Beatty Riedl, Northwestern University
Tariq Thachil, Vanderbilt University
Alisha Caroline Holland, Princeton University

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:


HISTORICAL APPROACHES
22.1
POLITICAL JUDGMENT: RECOVERING THE
ANCIENTS
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Elizabeth Markovits, Mount Holyoke College
Disc:
Ryan Balot
Jill Frank, Cornell University
Papers: Frustration and Democratic Judgment in Philoctetes
Larissa M. Atkison, University of Chicago
Melancholia and Judgment in Platos Republic
Christina Helen Tarnopolsky, Yale-NUS
Aesthetic Inspiration and Civic Judgment in Plato
Nina Valiquette Moreau, University of Chicago
Plato, Democracy, and Institutionalizing Judgment
Matthew Landauer, University of Chicago
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
22.2
COMPLEXITY, PROCESS AND DISRUPTION:
POLITICAL THEORY UNDER PRESSURE
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Sophia Mihic, Northeastern Illinois University
Disc:
Sophia Mihic, Northeastern Illinois University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 247

Daily Schedule

Papers: City Under Siege


Jeffrey W. Paller, University of San Francisco
Urbanization, Ethnic Identity, and Social Networks in
Lusaka
Rachel Beatty Riedl, Northwestern University
Amanda Lea Robinson, The Ohio State University
Disengaged By Choice? Why Urban Youth Dont
Participate in Formal Politics
Daniel Nicolas Jacques de Kadt
Adam J. Berinsky
Daniel N. Posner, University of California, Los
Angeles
Ethnicity versus Social Position: Political Attitudes in
Urban Nigeria
Adrienne LeBas, American University

Capture and its Consequences: Local Government


Elections in Urban Ghana
Noah Nathan, University of Michigan
APSA Events
21.1
DIVERSITY RECRUITMENT AND RETENTION
ROUNDTABLE: TRANSFORMATIVE CHANGE
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame
Part:
Rosalee A. Clawson, Purdue University
Luis Ricardo Fraga, University of Notre Dame
Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University
Terri E Givens, Menlo College
Tyson D. King-Meadows, University of Maryland,
Baltimore County
21.2
JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
EDUCATION MEET THE EDITORS
ROUNDTABLE
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Part:
Mitchell Brown, Auburn University
Mark L. Johnson, Minnesota State Community and
Technical College
Joseph W. Roberts, Roger Williams University
J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University
21.3
TEACHING CIVIC ENGAGEMENT ACROSS THE
DISCIPLINES IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
Room: Loews, Commonwealth D
Chair: Elizabeth C. Matto, Rutgers University
Part:
Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University
Alison Rios Millett McCartney, Towson University
Caryn McTighe-Musil, Association of American
Colleges and Universities
Michael T. Rogers, Arkansas Tech University
21.4
WORKING GROUP: HISTORICAL POLITICAL
ECONOMY
Room: Marriott, Room 301
Division Panels

247

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: Secularism Beyond Christian Political Theology:


Thinking from Taiwan and China
Leigh K. Jenco, London School of Economics
Tropes of Transit: Muqqadimah, Zhuangzi, and
Discourses on Livy
Dorothy H. B. Kwek, Universitt Konstanz
Political Theory as Process: A Disruptive Interpretation
Matthew J. Moore
Kautilyan Realism: Expansion of a Complex Body
Politic
Stuart Gray, Washington and Lee University
Politics of Indeterminacy: Daoism as a Political Life
Peng Yu, Earlham College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
22.3
POLITICIZING THE ALGORITHM
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Ivan Andre Ascher, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Part:
Martha Poon
Frank Pasquale, University of Maryland
Elizabeth Joh, UC Davis School of Law
Bernard E. Harcourt, Columbia University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
22.4
THE CHALLENGE OF THE OTHER: EUROPEAN
IDENTITY AND THE REFUGEE CRISIS
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Carmen Dege, Yale University
Part:
Seyla Benhabib
Ayten Gundogdu, Barnard College-Columbia University
Joseph H. Carens, University of Toronto
Anna Jurkevics
Peter J. Verovsek, Harvard University
Paul Linden-Retek, Yale University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
22.5
COLLECTIVE ACTION, ENVIRONMENTAL
POLITICS, AND (NONHUMAN) ANIMAL RIGHTS
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Yogi Hale Hendlin, University of California, Los
Angeles
Disc:
Elisabeth H. Ellis, University of Otago
Papers: Climate Change, Collective Action, and Neoliberal
Governance
Matthew D Frierdich, Vanderbilt University Hospital
Existential Recognition and the Politics of Climate
Change Activism
Aspen Elizabeth Brinton, Boston College
Morally Bound by Common Causes: Sharing the
Benefits and Costs of Climate Change
Ana Tanasoca, University of Canberra
The Human-Animal Relationship: Transformations in
Theory and Law
Sarah Elizabeth Spengeman, Catholic University of
America
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
22.6
REPRESENTATION AND POLITICAL
PARTICIPATION
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Jennifer Forestal, Stockton University
Disc:
Prithviraj Datta, Center for Ethics in Society, Stanford
University

248

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 248

Papers: Direct Democracy within Representative Systems:


Complementary or Compatible?
Alice el-Wakil, University of Zurich
The Point of Silence: Abstentions in Early Modern
Constitutional Conventions
Arina Cocoru, New York University
Democratic Representation and Citizenship Beyond the
State
Sean W.D. Gray, Harvard University
Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
22.7
INSTITUTIONS, BARGAINING, AND INFLUENCE
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester
Disc:
Benjamin Ogden, Texas A&M University
Papers: A Structural Model of Bargaining in the European
Union
Tasos Kalandrakis, University of Rochester
Gleason Judd, University of Rochester
Dissolution Power, Confidence Votes, and Parliamentary
Bargaining
Michael Becher, University of Konstanz
Interest Groups and Accountability Traps
Dimitri Landa, NYU
Patrick Le Bihan, Sciences Po
Policy Preferences in Coalition Formation: Minority, and
Surplus Governments
Anna Bassi, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Preventing Compromise: Negotiating Only With
Polarized Parties
Brendan Pablo Montagnes, Emory University
Richard Van Weelden, University of Chicago
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
22.8
PARTISAN WAR AND PEACE IN A POLARIZED
WORLD
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Julie Wronski, University of Mississippi
Disc:
David P. Redlawsk, University of Delaware
Papers: Experiments on Partisan Violence in the United States
Nathan P. Kalmoe, Louisiana State University
Explaining Partisan Bickering: Citizens Attribute Elite
Polarization to Strategy
Douglas Ahler, University of California, Berkeley
What Are They like? Stereotypes of Party Supporters
Ethan C Busby, Northwestern University
Adam Howat, Northwestern University
Jacob Edward Rothschild, Northwestern University
Richard M Shafranek, Northwestern University
Looking for a Fight?: Conflict Avoidance and Responses
to Uncivil Politics
Brandon Marshall, Stony Brook University
Stanley Feldman, Stony Brook University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
22.9
WOMEN AND GENDER IN POLITICAL
ECONOMY
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Julie Elizabeth Dowsett, York University
Disc:
Julie Elizabeth Dowsett, York University

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: A Survey Experiment on Managers, Social Networks,


and the Gender Evaluation Gap
Isabella Alcaniz, GVPT, University of Maryland
Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Maryland
Marcelo Escolar, University of Buenos Aires
Subsistence Entrepreneurs? Market Women as a Tool for
Economic Development
Chika Okoye, Rutgers University, Newark
Age and Gender Perspectives of Gender Equity
Frances L Goldman, SUNY-Binghamton University
Perry Gross, Atkins North America
Regime Stability and Persistence of Traditional Practices
Michael Poyker, UCLA Anderson school of
management
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
22.10
RELIGION AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT IN
THE WEST
Room: PCC, 203-B
Disc:
Matthew Goldman
Papers: Coalition Building between Conservative Catholics and
Protestants, 1977-1979
Chelsea R R Ebin
Cuius Regio, Eius Religio: Political Roots of Religious
Homogeneity in the West
Sener Akturk, Koc University
Hist, Inst. Context & the Pol of US Biling Ed & Islam
Rel. Instr. in Germany
Girma Elyot Alifeyo Parris, Rockefeller College of
Public Affairs & Policy at the University at Albany,
(SUNY)
Imposing Political Parties to Parochialize Power in
Ethnic Enclaves
Mark Edward Denninghoff, Purdue University
Religious Minority Groups and the Clandestine
Collective Action Dilemma.
Robert Braun
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
22.11
MEASURING PROTEST: A COMPARISON OF
SURVEYS AND VARIABLES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES

Part:

Francesca Vassallo, University of Southern Maine


Frederick Solt
Mariano Torcal, Universitat Pompeu Fabra

DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION


22.12
MAINSTREAMING GENDER IN THE TEACHING
AND LEARNING OF POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

Chair:
Disc:

Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University


Liza Mugge, University of Amsterdam

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


22.13
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
REPRESENTATION
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Ben William Ansell, Nuffield College, University of
Oxford
Disc:
Ben William Ansell, Nuffield College, University of
Oxford
Papers: Geography, Elite Competition, and the Origins of Tax
Capacity
Pablo Beramendi, Duke University
Melissa Ziegler Rogers, Claremont Graduate
University
Like Father, Like Son: Continuity of Representational
Style in Dynasties
Amy Louise Catalinac, New York University
Daniel M. Smith, Harvard University
Political Power and Institutional Change during Britains
Revolutionary Period
Adriane Fresh, Stanford University
Strategic Taxation: Taxation and Corruption by Rentseeking Governments
Lucy E. S. Martin, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
The Impact of Partisan Politics on Bureaucratic
Performance: Evidence from India
Carlos Velasco Rivera, Princeton University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
22.14
GANGS, VIGILANTES, AND VIOLENCE
Room: PCC, 202-A
Chair: Omar Garcia Ponce, University of California, Davis
Disc:
Emily D. Bello-Pardo, American University
Papers: Methodological Pitfalls in the Study of Micro-Level
Violence
Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley
Monopolies of Violence: Gang Governance in Rio de
Janeiro
Nicholas Barnes, University of Wisconsin, Madison
The Risks and Rewards of Vigilantism: Emotions, Social
Capital and Violence
Nicholas Rush Smith, CUNY-City College of New
York
Vigilante Neighbors: Trust and Anti-Criminal
Organizations in the Americas
Daniel Zizumbo-Colunga, Centro de Investigacin y
Docencia Econmicas
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
22.15
NON-STATE PROVISION AND CITIZEN CLAIMMAKING IN LOCAL PUBLIC GOODS
Room: PCC, 201-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Chair:
Disc:

Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University


Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 249

249

Daily Schedule

Papers: The Personal is Political Really!


Annick T.R. Wibben, University of San Francisco
Making Gender Count: A Reflection on Gender and
Data
Alexis L. Henshaw, Bucknell University
Gender Mainstreaming in a US Foreign Policy Course
Theresa Schroeder, Radford University

Teaching Gender as a Cross-Cutting Issue in Political


Theory and Practice
Cheryl O'Brien, San Diego State University
Engendering Political Science: Public Law
Susan M. Sterett, Virginia Tech

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: Different Goods, Different Outcomes: Public Goods


Provision in Tanzania
Ruth Carlitz, University of Gothenburg
Political & Welfare Impacts of Service Predictability in
Bangalore
Alison E. Post
Tanu Kumar, University of California, Berkeley
The Distributive Outcomes of Mining Firm Responses to
Risk in Bolivia
Renato Lima De Oliveira, MIT
Matthew Amengual
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
22.16
ARMED AND UNARMED POLITICS IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Paul Staniland, University of Chicago
Disc:
Sana Jaffrey, University of Chicago
Papers: Beyond the State? Institutional Constraints on Rebel
Rule
Rachel Sweet, Northwestern University
To the Victor Go the Spoils? Hierarchy, Group Strength,
and Regime Capture
Peter Krause, Boston College
The Postwar Benefits of Insurgent Cohesion: Evidence
from Aceh
Yuhki Tajima, Georgetown University
Assessing the Efficacy of Nonviolent Direct Action
Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of
Maryland, College Park
Armed Order and State Power in South Asia
Paul Staniland, University of Chicago
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
22.17
PATTERNS AND IMPLICATIONS OF POLITICAL
VIOLENCE
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Halit M Tagma, Ipek University
Disc:
Michael E. Allison, University of Scranton
Papers: Land Security and the Microfoundations of Election
Violence: Evidence from Kenya
Kathleen Klaus, Northwestern University
The Breakdown Game: Election Violence in Burundi
Gabrielle Bardall, Universit de Montreal
Gang Activity in Central American Neighborhoods and
Political Participation
Abby B. Cordova, University of Kentucky
Targeting Journalists: Repression in Veracruz, Mexico
Jos Midas Bartman, University of Amsterdam
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
22.18
RESOURCE ALLOCATION AND DISTRIBUTIVE
POLITICS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Robin Harding
Disc:
Kanchan Chandra, New York University
Kimuli Kasara, Columbia University

250

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 250

Papers: Poll Watchers, Polling Stations, and Electoral


Manipulation
Sergio Jesus Ascencio Bonfil, University of Rochester
Miguel R. Rueda, Emory University
Politician Networks and the Choice of Electoral Strategy
Cesi Cruz, University of British Columbia
Elections and Local Public Goods in Rural Democracies:
Evidence from Botswana
Robin Harding
Social Structure and Electoral Clientelism: Evidence
from Africa
Eric J. Kramon, George Washington University
The Specter of Instability:Fragile Democracy &
Distributive Politics in Pakistan
Rabia Malik, University of Rochester
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
22.19
DYNAMICS OF COALITION GOVERNMENTS
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: G. Bingham Powell, University of Rochester
Disc:
G. Bingham Powell, University of Rochester
David Fortunato, University of California, Merced
Papers: Intra-party Competition and Ministerial Appointments in
Multiparty Cabinets
Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh
Jude C. Hays, University of Pittsburgh
Bargaining Power Concentration & Ministerial Portfolio
Allocation in Coalitions
Maiko Isabelle Heller, University of Michigan
All Cards on the Table: Public Opinion and Partisan
Reshuffles in Coalitions
Lanny W. Martin, Rice University
Mathias Tromborg, Rice University
Presidents, Governments and Election Calling in Europe
Petra Schleiter, University of Oxford
Edward Morgan-Jones, University of Kent
Critical Events and Party Participation in Government
Ioannis Loukas Vassiliadis, University of Rochester
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
22.20
RADICAL RIGHT PARTIES AND EUROPEAN
POLITICS
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Seth Jolly, Syracuse University
Disc:
Seth Jolly, Syracuse University
Papers: Radical Right Saboteurs? Cabinet Duration and the
Radical Right
Viktoryia Schnose, Washington University in St.
Louis
The impact of the far right on European integration
Kimberly Twist, San Diego State University
Enemies of France: Terrorism, Nationalism, and
Migration in the Agenda of the FN
Rachel Hutchins, Universit de Lorraine
Daphne Halikiopoulou, University of Reading
The Blue Awakening? The Rise of the Far Right in
Estonia
Aleksander Lust, Appalachian State University

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY


22.21
CONTEMPORARY POLITICS OF SOVEREIGN
DEBT
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Mark Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Disc:
David Stasavage, New York University
Papers: Debt Induced Migration
William T. Bernhard, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
David Leblang, University of Virginia
Risk and Uncertainty in Emerging Market Debt
Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University
Raphael Cunha, The Ohio State University
Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Politics of Debt Restructuring: Institutions, Preferences,
and Creditor Losses
Matthew R. DiGiuseppe, University of Mississippi
Patrick E. Shea, University of Houston
Patronage by Credit
Eric Braian Arias, New York University
Market Spillovers from Sovereign Litigation
Faisal Z. Ahmed, Princeton University
Laura Alfaro, Harvard University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
22.22
PROTECTING PEOPLE THROUGH
INTERNATIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Deborah Brautigam, Johns Hopkins/SAIS
Disc:
Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of California,
San Diego
Ryan M. Powers
Papers: Do PTAs Including Labor Provisions Reduce Collective
Labor Rights Violations?
Dora Katalin Sari, University of Geneva
Damian Raess, University of Reading
Social Standards in Trade Agreements and the
Embedded Liberalism Compromise
Ida Bastiaens, Fordham University
Evgeny Postnikov, University of Melbourne
Human Rights Clauses in Economic Agreements:
Domestic Politics of Enforcement
Patrick Kearney, University of Wisconsin Madison
Intellectual Property Provisions and Support for US
Trade Agreements
Iain Osgood, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Yilang Feng, University of Michigan

Papers: Concealing Disease: Non-Compliance with WHOs


International Health Regulations
Catherine Z. Worsnop, Brandeis University
Following the Trend(lines): The Increasing Workload of
the UNSC
Susan H. Allen, University of Mississippi
Amy Yuen, Middlebury College

DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY


22.24
CLIMATE, ENERGY, AND SECURITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Emily Meierding, Naval Postgraduate School
Disc:
Emily Meierding, Naval Postgraduate School
Papers: Arctic Shock: Utilizing Climate Change to Test Theories
of Resource Competition
Jonathan Markowitz, University of Southern
California
Assessing Climate Security Vulnerability in Asia
Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin
Todd Graham Smith, University of Nevada, Reno
Nisha Krishnan, LbJ School of Public Affairs
Conflicts of Abundance: Emerging Energy Security
Trends in the US & Saudi Arabia
Jennifer S Hunt, Australian National University
The Oil Logic of Japan's Surrender
Rosemary Kelanic
Organized Conflict, Aerial Visibility, and Strategic
Coordination
Steven Tyler Landis, Arizona State University
SeyedBabak RezaeeDaryakenari, Arizona State
University
Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
22.25
NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION, NONPROLIFERATION, AND THE NUCLEAR
REVOLUTION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Etel L. Solingen, University of California Irvine
Disc:
Etel L. Solingen, University of California Irvine
Charles L. Glaser, George Washington University
Papers: Give Peace a (Second) Chance: A Theory of
Nonproliferation Deals
Muhammet Bas, Harvard University
Andrew J. Coe, University of Southern California
Multiple Threats, Alliances, and Nuclear Proliferation
Alexandre Debs, Yale University
Stephen Herzog, Yale University
Nuno P. Monteiro, Yale University
Two Warheads Passing in the Night: On Modeling
Nuclear Proliferation
Alexander Lanoszka, Dickey Center for International
Understanding
Rex Douglass, University of California San Diego
The End of the Beginning: China and the Consolidation
of the Nuclear Revolution
Avery Goldstein, University of Pennsylvania

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 251

251

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION


22.23
FORMAL INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Erin R. Graham, Drexel University
Disc:
Marina Elisabeth Henke, Northwestern University
Erin R. Graham, Drexel University

The "NIMBY" Effect and Support for International


Legal Institutions
Terrence Chapman, University of Texas, Austin
Stephen Chaudoin, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
The Power of the Weak: How Informal Governance
Shapes the UN Security Council
Christoph Mikulaschek, Princeton University
The Strategic Logic of Security Council Consensus on
Int'l Criminal Courts
Christopher Rudolph, American University-SIS

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Why Israel Never Received Nixons Promised Nuclear


Power Plants
Or Rabinowitz, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
22.26
PUBLIC OPINION AND THE USE OF MILITARY
FORCE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Philip B. K. Potter, University of Virginia
Disc:
Matthew A. Baum, Harvard University
Philip B. K. Potter, University of Virginia
Papers: Democratic Peace and Covert Military Force: An
Experimental Test
Allison Carnegie, Columbia University
Joshua D. Kertzer, Harvard University
Keren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton University
International Organizations and Public Opinion on
Humanitarian Intervention
Jonathan Chu, Stanford University
What Determines Public Support for International Norm
Enforcement?
Melissa M. Lee, Princeton University
Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
The Face of the Enemy: Images of Foreign Leaders and
Popular Support for War
Rachel M. Stein, George Washington University
Which Features of Democracy Contribute to the
Democratic Peace?
Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University
Jessica L. P. Weeks, University of Wisconsin-Madison
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL
22.27
POWER AND PEACE: SYSTEMIC CONSTRAINTS
AND DOMESTIC CONDITIONS
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Jeffrey W. Taliaferro, Tufts University
Part:
Steven E. Lobell, University of Utah
Norrin M. Ripsman, Lehigh University
Timothy Crawford, Boston College
Paul K. MacDonald, Wellesley College
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
22.28
ECONOMIC STATECRAFT: NAVIGATING
REGIONS AND RESOURCES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Tobias Hofmann, National University of Singapore
Disc:
Daniel Bruce Braaten, Texas Lutheran University
Tobias Hofmann, National University of Singapore
Papers: A Stepping Stone: Regional Integration and Domestic
Interests in the WTO
Vinicius G. Rodrigues Vieira, University of Sao Paulo
Defense Budgets and Grand Strategy
Zachary A. Selden, University of Florida
Greater Aid Effectiveness? EU Aid to RTAs Since 1995
Brandy Jolliff Scott, Midwestern State University
Revisiting the Drivers of Chinas Free Trade Agreement
(FTA) Diplomacy
Ka Zeng, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
The Reticence about Human Rights in North Korea
Junhyup Kim, Purdue University

252

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 252

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


22.29
ELECTIONS AND VIOLENCE
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Eric Keels, University of North Texas
Disc:
Miroslav Nincic, University of California, Davis
Papers: Bullets to Ballots: Maoists and the Corruption Complex
in Jharkhand
Rumela Sen, Cornell University
Electoral Violence in Civil Wars: Evidence from
Colombia
Juan Fernando Tellez, Duke University
Land and Politics: the Rural Sources of Electoral
Violence
Camilo Nieto-Matiz, University of Notre Dame
Rebel Victory and Vote Coercion: Sustaining Post-War
Peace
Shelley Xuan Liu
Voting for the Police: Law Enforcement, Politics, and
Urban Violence
Lucas Novaes, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
22.30
GRIEVANCE, OPPORTUNITY, AND
CONTENTIOUS ACTION
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Scott Gates, PRIO
Disc:
Scott Gates, PRIO
Papers: Grievance and Contentious Events
Eric Dunford, University of Maryland
David E. Cunningham, University of Maryland,
College Park
David Backer, University of Maryland, College Park
Erin Colleen McGrath, University of Maryland
Ethnicity and Wartime Patterns of Civilian Abuse
Livia Isabella Schubiger, London School of
Economics
Lisa Hultman, Uppsala University
Lars-Erik Cederman, ETH Zurich
Simon Hug, University of Geneva
To be on the safe side: Government repression in space
and time
Janina Beiser, Universitt Konstanz
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex
Justice During Armed Conflict: Addressing Grievance or
Projecting State Strength
Cyanne E. Loyle, Indiana University
Perceptions of Grievance and Mobilization
Erin Colleen McGrath, University of Maryland
Karsten Donnay, Graduate Institute Geneva
Eric Dunford, University of Maryland
David Backer, University of Maryland, College Park
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
22.31
PARTY AND PROCEDURES IN THE UNITED
STATES CONGRESS: A VIEW IN 2016
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Jacob R. Straus, Congressional Research Service
Part:
Matthew Glassman
Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America
Gregory Koger
Molly Reynolds, Brookings Institution
Colleen J. Shogan, Library of Congress
Michele L. Swers, Georgetown University

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

James Ian Wallner, United States Senate


DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
22.32
THE POLITICS OF AGENCY BUDGETS AND
SPENDING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Miranda Yaver, Washington University in St. Louis
Disc:
John Hudak
Miranda Yaver, Washington University in St. Louis
Papers: Partisan Politics, Agency Budgets and Political
Appointments
Carl Dahlstrom, University of Gothenburg
Mikael Holmgren, Department of Political Science,
University of Gothenburg
Political Control and the Presidential Spending Power
David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt University
Appropriations Power over Bureaucratic Regulations
Before and After Chevron
Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University
Agency Characteristics and Presidential Particularism
Andrew Reeves, Washington University in St. Louis
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
22.33
CRISIS AND DISASTER RESPONSE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Louise K. Comfort
Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University
Louise K. Comfort

Papers: Citizens United Against Hurricanes and Other Natural


Disasters
Catherine Bartch
How Do Extreme Weather Events Influence Climate
Adaptation Policy Windows?
Dana Archer Dolan, George Mason University
Revisiting "After Disaster": New Techniques in the
Narrative Policy Framework
Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University
Clare FitzGerald, North Carolina State University /
SAS Institute
When Crisis Becomes Policy: Credit Card Security and
Public Policy Discourses
Alison N Novak, Rowan University
Marilena Olguta Vilceanu, Rowan University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
22.34
EXPERIMENTS ABOUT POLICY FEEDBACKS
ON MASS POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Saundra K. Schneider, Michigan State University
Disc:
Lefteris Jason Anastasopoulos, University of Georgia
Saundra K. Schneider, Michigan State University

DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS


22.35
LAW AND POLITICS OF THE US COURTS OF
APPEALS
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Scott H. Ainsworth, University of Georgia
Disc:
Scott H. Ainsworth, University of Georgia
Papers: The Effects of Panel Assignment on the US Courts of
Appeals
Deborah Beim, Yale University
Tom Clark, Emory University
Benjamin E Lauderdale, London School of
Economics
Making Precedent for the Circuit
Stephen L. Wasby
Shaping Executive Orders in the U.S. Courts of Appeals
Michael Thunberg
A Strategic Model of Circuit Splits
Joshua A. Strayhorn, University of Colorado,
Boulder
Beliefs and Behaviors of Appellate Court Judges
Douglas M Johnson, University of Rochester
David A. Gelman, University of Rochester
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
22.36
THE DOMESTICATION OF INTERNATIONAL
LAW
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Ezequiel Alejo Gonzalez Ocantos
Disc:
Duncan Snidal, Nuffield College, Oxford
Wayne Sandholtz, University of Southern California
Papers: The Judicial Diffusion of Inter-American Jurisprudence
Ezequiel Alejo Gonzalez Ocantos
Legalized Bureaucratic Politics: The Rise and Demise of
the Bush Torture Program
Arturo Jimenez-Bacardi, University of South Florida
- St Petersburg
Whose Complementarity? Local Agency in the
Implementation of the Rome Statute
Lucrecia Garcia Iommi, Fairfield University
Legal Scholars and the Domestication of Anti-Atrocity
Law in Guatemala
Mark S. Berlin, Marquette University
The Spread of National Human Rights Institutions and
Human Rights Outcomes
Katerina Linos
Thomas Innes Pegram, University College London
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND
JURISPRUDENCE
22.37
IS THE FEDERALIST RELEVANT TO 21ST
CENTURY CONCERNS
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: Mark A. Graber
Part:
Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 253

253

Daily Schedule

Papers: The Evolution of Human Trafficking Messaging


Tabitha Bonilla, University of Southern California
Cecilia Hyunjung Mo
Citizens versus Consumers' Willingness to Co-produce
Public Services
Oliver James, University of Exeter
Sebastian R. Jilke
Partisan Politics and Policy Transparency: Evidence
from a Survey Experiment
Mi Jeong Shin, Washington University in St. Louis

Partisanship and the Submerged State: Experiments in


Social Policy Recognition
Delphia Shanks-Booth, Cornell University
Mallory SoRelle, Cornell University
Public Acceptability and Tax Policy: An Experimental
Approach
Matthew S Lesch, University of Toronto
Peter John Loewen, University of Toronto

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Emily Zackin, Johns Hopkins University


Ran Hirschl, University of Toronto
Kim Lane Scheppele, Princeton University
Scot M. Peterson, Department of Politics and IR,
University of Oxford
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
22.38
FEDERALISM IN GOOD TIMES AND BAD
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Scott L. Greer, University of Michigan
Part:
Kenneth A. Dubin, Anglia Ruskin University
Heather A. Elliott
Janet M. Laible, Lehigh University
Niccole M. Pamphilis, Michigan State University
Alberto Diaz-Cayeros
Rebecca J. Oliver, University of Southern California
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
22.39
GENDERED WAR; GENDERED PEACE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY

Chair:
Disc:

Burcu Pinar Alakoc, Webster University


Laura Roost, The Pennsylvania State University
Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, University of ConnecticutStorrs

Papers: The Girls of War in 1914 and 2014: The Evolution of


the Protection Racket
Laura E Sjoberg
The Discomfort of Safety: Theorizing Gendered Civilian
Anxiety in Wartime
Katharine M Millar
Translating UNSCR 1325: A Case Study on the
Canadian Combat Arms
Victoria Elizabeth Tait
Two Models, One Goal: Competing Paths to
Implementing Gender Security
Carrie Reiling, University of California, Irvine
Structural Violence and Structural Intersectionality in
Women's Peacebuilding
Karie E Cross
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
22.40
DEHUMANIZING POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Tony Affigne, Providence College
Disc:
Tony Affigne, Providence College
Robin D. Jacobson, University of Puget Sound
Papers: Activating Racial Sympathy in American Politics
Jennifer Chudy, University of Michigan
Race, Crime, Police, and Demands from the State
Corrine M. McConnaughy, George Washington
University
Ismail K. White, Ohio State University
Not Quite Human: White Views of Blacks in the 21st
Century
Ashley E. Jardina, Duke University
Spencer Piston, Boston University
It's a 'Racist Plot'? The Effectiveness of Racial Defenses
Nyron N. Crawford, Temple University
Segregation and Partisanship and Media Framing of
Racial Unrest in Baltimore
Andrew Rojecki, University of Illinois, Chicago

254

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 254

DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS


22.41
FRAMING AND TESTING RELIGIOUS BELIEFS
AND RESPONSES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Steven Andrew Snell, Duke University
Disc:
Steven Andrew Snell, Duke University
Papers: Malum Religiosorum Factionum: Beliefs about the
Religious Divide in Politics
Paul A. Djupe, Denison University
Ryan L. Claassen, Kent State University
Andrew R. Lewis, University of Cincinnati
Jacob R. Neiheisel, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Religion, Secularism, and Politics: How do voters
respond?
Michele Margolis, University of Pennsylvania
Politicking Pastors
Dilara Kadriye Uskup
Religion and Its Role in Political Attitudes, Opinions,
and Tolerance
Kellen J. Gracey, University of Iowa
Building a Coalition for Criminal Justice Reform: Issue
Framing and Religion
Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati
Stuart D. Warren, University of Cincinnati
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
22.42
GENDER & REPRESENTATION IN LATIN
AMERICAN LEGISLATURES, PARTIES, AND
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Chair:
Disc:

Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer, Rice University


Miki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State University
Caroline C. Beer, University of Vermont

Papers: Women in Legislatures: Gender, Institutions, and


Democracy
Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer, Rice University
Santiago Alles, Rice University
Womens Representation in Subnational Governments
Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University
Kendall Funk, Texas A&M University
Women in Political Parties: Seen But Not Heard
Jana Morgan, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Magda Hinojosa, Arizona State University
Womens Representation in the Argentine National and
Subnational Governments
Tiffany D. Barnes, University of Kentucky
Mark P. Jones, Rice University
Effect of Institutional Reforms on Women's
Representation in Colombia
Monica Pachon, Universidad del Rosario
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
22.43
ENGINES OF PARTY COALITION CHANGE
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Travis Johnston, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Disc:
Travis Johnston, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Christopher P. Donnelly, University of California, Davis

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: Beyond Service: National Committees and Party Brands


in American Politics
Boris Heersink, University of Virginia
Only Lip Service? The Civil Rights Rhetoric of
Democratic Presidents
Micah Samuel Mintz, University of Massachusetts
Amherst
Party Change in the US: Signaling, Coordination, and
Progressive Ambition
Daniel Lee, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Michael C. Brady, Denison University
Primary Effects: Assessing the impact of candidates on
the parties, 1992-2016
Justine G.M. Ross, University of California, Riverside
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
22.44
CORRUPTION, CLIENTELISM AND VOTE
BUYING
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Simeon C. Nichter, UC San Diego
Disc:
Spyros Kosmidis, University of Oxford
Papers: Accountability and Corruption: Experimental Evidence
from Peru
Sofia B. Vera, University of Pittsburgh
A Tale of Two Villages: Kinship Networks and
Preference Change in Rural India
Neelanjan Sircar, University of Pennsylvania
Buying the Votes of the Poor: How the Electoral System
Matters
Louise Thorn Bttkjr, Copenhagen Business School
Peter Sandholt Jensen, University of Southern
Denmark
Mogens K. Justesen, Copenhagen Business School
Rejuvenation or Renomination? Corruption & Candidate
Turnover in Eastern Europe
Allan Sikk, University College London
Philipp Koeker, University College London
Election Complaints, Election Anomalies, and Election
Frauds
Walter R. Mebane, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Joe Klaver, University of Michigan
Logan Woods, University of Michigan
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
22.45
ELITE POLARIZATION AND THE EFFECTS ON
VOTING BEHAVIOR
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Christian B. Jensen, UNLV
Disc:
Holly Ann Garnett, McGill University

DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION


22.46
I GO TO EXTREMES: SOCIAL AND AFFECTIVE
BASES FOR POLITICAL POLARIZATION
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Matt Luttig, University of Chicago
Disc:
Lilliana Hall Mason, University of Maryland, College
Park
Papers: Social Foundations of Political Polarization: Integrating
Conflicting Research
Christopher P. Muste, University of Montana
Not My Kind of Party? Negational Party Identity and
Political Behavior
Alexander George Theodoridis, University of
California, Merced
Differences in Non-Policy Polarization between Activists
and the General Public.
Jonathan M. Ladd, Georgetown University
Fear and Loathing Outside DC: The Increasing Fear of
Others in the Electorate
Scott Boykin
Are You a Team Player? Elites and Coalitions in a
Politically Polarized Public
John Kane
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
22.47
A POTPOURRI OF FRAMING AND
RHETORICAL EFFECTS
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Kristen Traynor, Kent State University
Disc:
Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
Papers: Internalizing the Central Organizing Idea: The
Psychology of Framing Revisited
Fabian Guy Neuner, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
The Deservingness Heuristic and Outgroup Bias in
Political Communication
Lasse Laustsen, Aarhus University
David J. Hendry, Aarhus Universitet
Lene Aare, Aarhus University
Michael Bang Petersen, University of Aarhus
Understanding the Influence of Moral versus Pragmatic
Framing in Public Opinion
Matthew Wright, American University
Morris E Levy, University of Southern California
Simon Heuberger, American University
When Does Climate Change Rhetoric Foster Political
(In-)action?
Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University
Reuben Kline, SUNY, Stony Brook University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
22.48
COMMUNICATION AND THE DYNAMICS OF
AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES
Room: Marriott, Room 408
Chair: Nils B. Weidmann, University of Konstanz
Disc:
Andrew Little, Cornell University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 255

255

Daily Schedule

Papers: The Bipolar Voter: The Effect of Elite Polarization on


Issue Voting in the US
Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton University
Mert Moral, Binghamton University
Candidate Polarization and Attack Advertising
Kevin K. Banda, University of Nevada, Reno
Jason H. Windett, Saint Louis University
Look Whos Disillusioned Now: Political Disaffection
and Polarization in the US
Christina Farhart, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities

Proximity Voting in the Age of Elite Polarization


Joshua Robison, Aarhus University
Thomas J. Leeper
High Voting Costs Deter Turnout among Moderates and
Encourage Polarized Politics
Victoria Anne Shineman, University of Pittsburgh

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: The Technology of Statecraft in the Age of Social


Media
Camber Warren, Naval Postgraduate School
Breaking News: Censorship, Protest, and Dissent in
Authoritarian Regimes
Eoghan Stafford, UCLA
Diffusion of Protest in Autocracies: The June 1953 East
German Uprising
Charles David Crabtree, Pennsylvania State
University
Holger Lutz Kern, Florida State University
Steven Pfaff, University of Washington
Anti-corruption Campaigns and Popular Support: A
Survey Experiment
Yaoyao Dai, Pennsylvania State University
The Internet, State-controlled Mass Media, and Protest
Diffusion in Autocracies
Espen Geelmuyden Roed, University of Konstanz
Nils B. Weidmann, University of Konstanz
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
22.49
GLOBAL POLITICS AND ENERGY
TRANSITIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Chair: Christopher M. Reenock, Florida State University
Disc:
Joel R. Campbell, Troy University
Papers: A Multi-Method Approach to Assess Institutional Design
in Electricity Systems
Michael R Davidson, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Enabling change: Experimental Insights on Electricity
Policy Acceptance
Clau Dermont, University of Berne
Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen, University of Berne
Reactors and Renewables: Contrasting Energy Politics in
East Asia and Europe
Il Hyun Cho, Lafayette College
Toward Energy Transition: Analysis of Public Energy
R&D in OECD Countries
Inkyoung Sun, Korea Advanced Institute of Science
and Technology (KAIST)
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
POLITICS
22.50
INTERNET [AND] GOVERNANCE
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Disc:
Kenneth S. Rogerson, Duke University
Papers: Election-Monitoring & Social Media: Lessons from
Kenyas 2013 Election for 2017
Ted Perlmutter, Columbia University
Evaluating Multistakeholder Impact on the Internet
Governance IANA Transition
Derrick L. Cogburn, American University
Global Internet Governance & Development:
International Organization Roles
Nanette S. Levinson, American University-SIS
Meryem Marzouki
How do Authoritarian Regimes Repress the Online
Sphere?
Joan Carreras Timoneda, University of Maryland

256

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 256

Power as a Category of Practice: the Case of Internet


Governance
Kavi J. Abraham, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
22.51
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
INCARCERATION IN THE U.S.
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Chair: Lisa L. Miller, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Disc:
Lisa L. Miller, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Papers: Alone in a Cell: The Role of Solitude in Political
Theories of Imprisonment
Sarah X. Pemberton, University of South Florida
The Problem of the Solution: Reformism, Mass
Incarceration, and Ideology
Wendy Wright, Bridgewater State University
Prison yoga and meditation in the U.S. carceral system
Farah Godrej, University of California, Riverside
Punishment, Prisons and Reserve Armies in Canada and
the United States
Paul Kellogg, Athabasca University
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
22.52
WHERE IDEAS MATTER
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: Henry R. Nau, George Washington University
Part:
John M. Owen, University of Virginia
Mark L. Haas, Duquesne University
Charles H. Lipson
Lawrence P. Rubin, Georgia Institute of Technology
Paul O. Carrese, U.S. Air Force Academy
Henry Edmondson, Georgia College & State University
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
22.53
BREAKING THE BOUNDS: CONTENTIOUS
POLITICS AND THE TRANSITION TO
DEMOCRACY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: David Kuehn, Heidelberg University
Disc:
Terence C. Lee, National University of Singapore
Papers: Transitional Democracy, Contentious Politics, and
Human Rights
David L. Cingranelli, Binghamton University, SUNY
Mikhail G. Filippov, SUNY, Binghamton
Censorship of the Arab Spring in MENA Media
Dumitru Ciocan, University of Zrich
Bruno R. Wueest, University of Zurich
Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich
The "Dictators Endgame"
Aurel S. Croissant, University Heidelberg
Tanja Eschenauer
David Kuehn, Heidelberg University
Contentious Politics and Democratization: The Umbrella
Movement in Hong Kong
Stephan Ortmann, City University of Hong Kong
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
22.54
MEDIA, TECHNOLOGY AND HUMAN RIGHT
ADVOCACY
Room: PCC, 104-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Silvio Waisbord
Michael X. Delli Carpini, University of Pennsylvania

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: The Information Paradox


Kathryn Sikkink, Harvard University
Digital Affordances and Human Rights News
Steven L. Livingston, George Washington University
Observational Bias & the Digital Revolution
Matthew Powers, University of Washington - Seattle
Observational Bias in Human Rights
Scott Edwards, Amnesty International
Risk and Digital Human Rights Reporting
Ella McPherson, University of Cambridge
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
22.55
ON THE ETHNOGRAPHIC PROOF
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods

Chair:
Part:

Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University


Martina Avanza, University of Lausanne
Sarah MAZOUZ, Humboldt University
Timothy Pachirat
Romain Pudal, CNRS
Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago

DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS


22.56
LOVE, SEX, AND MARRIAGE
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Susan R. Burgess, Ohio University
Disc:
Julie L. Novkov
Papers: (Re)Imagining Plural Marriage
David Gideon Leitch, California State University,
Northridge
Civil Marriage: Abolish, Extend to All Commitments, or
Neither?
Emily R. Gill, Bradley University
Hearts Be Free Tonight: Imagining Less Regulatory
Logics for Obergefell v Hodges
Paul Martorelli, University of California, Berkeley
Love and Tears - Ideology of Christian Love in Popular
Culture
Helen Lindberg, Linnaeus University
Sodomy's Penumbra
Joseph Fischel, Yale University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
22.57
IMMIGRANT-RELATED POLICIES AND THEIR
EFFECTS
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Heath Brown, City University of New York, Graduate
Center and John Jay College
Disc:
Triadafilos Triadafilopoulos, University of Toronto

DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS


22.58
ETHNICITY, PUBLIC GOODS, AND ELECTORAL
LOGICS IN AFRICA
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Chair: Alice Kang, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Disc:
Brandon Kendhammer, Ohio University
Papers: Ethnic Salience and Local Patronage Priorities in Kenya
Kirk Andrew Harris, Indiana University
Ethnic Parties and Policy Concerns: Agricultural
Interests and Voting in Kenya
Eun Kyung Kim, UCLA
Local Government and the Costs of Voting Opposition
in Tanzania
Rachael McLellan, Princeton University
Power to which people? Electoral politics and
electrification targeting in Ghana
Ryan C. Briggs, Virginia Tech
Ethnic Groupness and Intra-Ethnic Political Competition
in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Matthew Gichohi, University of California, Berkeley
Related Groups
23.1
ASSOCIATION FOR ISRAEL STUDIES:
TRANSFORMATIONS IN THE STATE AND
NATIONAL BOUNDARIES OF ISRAEL
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Oded Haklai, Queen's University
Disc:
Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: Thinking about State Demise: Israel as a Case in Point
Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania
Monopolizing the Nation Evidence from the Israeli
Settlement Issue
Hadas Aron, Columbia University
The Current Levels of Hope for Peace in Israel
Oded Adomi Leshem, George Mason University
The Israeli Elections 2015: The Emergence of Jewish
Skepticism and Arab Faith
Aviad Rubin, University of Haifa
Doron Navot, University of Haifa
As'ad Ghanem, University of Haifa
23.2
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: GUNS ON CAMPUS? THE
PROFESSION AND CAMPUS CARRY
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: David Raney, Hillsdale College
Part:
Anthony Peacock, Utah State Univeristy
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech
Robert J. Cottrol, George Washington University
23.3
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: EDUCATION AND
HUMAN NATURE
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: Thomas W. Heilke, The University of British Columbia,
Okanagan
Disc:
James Greenaway, St. Mary's University
Thomas J. McPartland, Kentucky State University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 257

257

Daily Schedule

Papers: Context Matters: The Development of Multiculturalism


Policies
Daniel Westlake, University of British Columbia
Fighting Over Membership: Party Competition and
Citizenship Policy in Europe
John Graeber, University of Texas at Austin
Is Racial Threat in the Eye of the Researcher?
Alexandra Filindra, University of Illinois at Chicago
Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz, University of Rhode
Island
Amanda Sahar d'Urso-Jadidi, University of Illinois at
Chicago

Why Divergent Migration Policies: A Story of


Citizenship Law
Yu Jin Woo, University of Virginia

Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: The Physics of Order: A Modern Defense of Platos


Musical Education
Jeremy Seth Geddert, Assumption College
An Open Letter to Parents
Ron Srigley, University of Prince Edward Island
Festivity and Freedom in Josef Pieper and Josef
Ratzinger
Amanda Nicole Marilyn Achtman, Catholic
University of Lublin
Lessons From 2015 Nobel Peace Prize: Tunisian
Dialogue
Henrik Syse, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)
23.4
IBERIAN POLITICS: CHANGE AND
CONTINUITY IN IBERIAN POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: Kevin Costa, Radio France Internationale
Disc:
Felix E. Martin, Florida International University
Robert M. Fishman, Carlos III University, Madrid
Papers: Do General Strikes Affect Voting Intentions? The Case
of Spain
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
Bonnie N. Field, Bentley University
Alison L. Johnston, Oregon State University
Fragile By Design: The Political Sources of Banking
Crises in Spain
Sebastian Royo, Suffolk University
Nonpartisanship and Voter Turnout: Evidence from
Local Elections in Portugal
Antonio F. Tavares, University of Minho
Ringa Raudla, Tallinn University of Technology
Parties or Social Movements? Comparing Podemos and
Bloco de Esquerda
Daniela Melo, Connecticut College
23.5
INDIGENOUS STUDIES NETWORK:
INDIGENOUS POLITICS IN NORTH AND SOUTH
AMERICA
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Laura E. Evans, University of Washington
Papers: Indian Images: An Experimental Study of Support for
American Indians
Raymond Orr, University of Melbourne
Indigenous Contribution to Human Rights: The US Case
Kathleen Regina Barrett, University of West Georgia
State Interests and Ethnic Land Rights Enforcement in
Latin America
Giorleny Altamirano Rayo, The University of Texas
at Austin
Contentious Bargaining in Bolivia: Citizenship in an Era
of Institutional Change
Jason Tockman, University of Washington
Indigenous Womens Resistance in a Neo-Extractivist
Era
Andrea Elizabeth Sempertegui, J.W. Goethe
University Frankfurt
23.6
SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS GROUP:
POLITICAL DIVERSITY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Shane J Barter, Soka University of America
Disc:
Mai Nguyen, New York University
Tun Myint, Carleton College

258

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 258

Papers: Accommodating Ethnic Diversity in Southeast Asia


Kai Ostwald, University of British Columbia
Civil Society in Fragmented Societies: Analysis of NonBurman CSOs in Myanmar
Youyi Zhang
Ying Yao
The Politics of Local Taxation in the Philippines: A
Controlled Comparison
Ryan Tans
Volunteer Bureaucrats, Turnout, and Residual Votes in
Indonesian Elections
Seth Nathan Soderborg, Harvard University
Its the economy, mayor? Performance Voting in
Indonesians Municipal Elections
Diego Fossati, ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM


Theme Panels
24.1
BREAKING NEWS: DID THE PARTY DECIDE?
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: John M. Sides, George Washington University
Part:
Marjorie R. Hershey
Martin Cohen, James Madison University
David Karol, University of Maryland
Hans Noel, Georgetown University
Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame
John R. Zaller, University of California, Los Angeles
Jennifer Nicoll Victor, George Mason University
24.2
THE 'ANXIETIES OF DEMOCRACY:'
DIAGNOSES AND PRESCRIPTIONS
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Ira Katznelson, Columbia University
Part:
Deborah Yashar, Princeton University
Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University
Claudine Gay, Harvard University
Nolan McCarty, Princeton University
Nathaniel Persily, Stanford University
24.3
THE SLOW PACE OF BIG TRANSFORMATIONS
IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Room: PCC, 114
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL
HISTORY AND POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Karen J. Alter, Northwestern University


Karen J. Alter, Northwestern University

Papers: Global Historical Institutionalism: A Theoretical Agenda


Abraham Newman, Georgetown University
Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown University
Informal Institutions in the International Liberal
Economic Order
Karl Orfeo Fioretos
Rising States, Power Transitions, and Institutional
Change in Global Governance
Benjamin Faude, WZB -- Social Science Center
Berlin
Matthew D. Stephen, WZB Berlin Social Science
Center
Gradual Transformations in Asian Regionalism
Andrew Yeo, Catholic University of America
Stasis and Change in Global Environmental Politics
Steven F. Bernstein, University of Toronto
Hamish van der Ven, Yale University

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

APSA Events
25.1
APSA TASKFORCE REPORT ON INEQUALITY
AND AMERICAN DEMOCRACY: AFTER A
DECADE
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Christopher G. Faricy
Part:
Theda Skocpol
Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University
Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University
Larry M. Bartels, Vanderbilt University
Kay Lehman Schlozman, Boston College
25.2
GET THE GRANT: FINDING FUNDING,
WRITING PROPOSALS, AND ADVANCING YOUR
RESEARCH AT EVERY CAREER STAGE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Chair: Elizabeth Super, American Political Science Association
Part:
Brian D. Humes, National Science Foundation
Andrew Riess, Council for International Exchange of
Scholars
Jeffrey R. Henig, National Academy of Education/
Spencer Dissertation Fellowship
25.3
MENTORING ROUNDTABLE: MENTORING FOR
SUCCESS AND ADVANCEMENT
Room: Loews, Commonwealth D
Chair: Kimberly A. Mealy, American Political Science
Association
Part:
Heath Fogg Davis, Temple University
Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton University
25.4
WORKING GROUP: PRACTICING POLITICS:
POLITICAL SCIENTISTS IN GOVERNMENT,
POLICY CENTERS, AND OTHER POLICYRELATED ORGANIZATIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 301
Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
26.1
ADAM SMITH
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Michelle A. Schwarze, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Disc:
Michelle A. Schwarze, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Jason Rosensweig, University of Chicago

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:


HISTORICAL APPROACHES
26.2
HOBBES
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Ted H. Miller, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa

Susan P. Liebell, Saint Joseph's University


Ted H. Miller, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa

Papers: Hands on Oneself: Suicidal Subjects


Andrew Poe, Amherst College
Hobbes: Trust/Distrust at the Base of Self-Reflection in
Politics
Gonzalo Bustamante Kuschel
Hobbesian Political Liberalism
David Golemboski, University of Missouri
Hobbess Laws of Nature in the Context of the
Contemporary Culture of Civility
D. Clifton Mark, University of Toronto
Natural Justice and Sovereign Virtuosity in Hobbes's
Leviathan
J. Matthew Hoye
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
26.3
LABOR AND COMMERCE
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Julie L. Rose, Dartmouth College
Disc:
Benjamin McKean, Ohio State University
Michael A. McIntyre, DePaul University
Papers: The Return of the 'Forgotten Man'
Luke Philip Plotica, Virginia Tech
Tocqueville, Pauperism, and the Problem of Political
Membership
Gianna Englert, The Political Theory Project, Brown
University
Citizens, Bakers, and Candlestick Makers: Why
Democracy Needs Artisanal Crafts
Nora Hanagan, Duke University
Feminism, Socialism, and the Labor Movement in
America: A Reexamination
Lisa Pace Vetter, University of Maryland, Baltimore
County
J.S. Mill on Democratic Accountability and the Working
Class
Gordon R. Arlen
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
26.4
BLACK FREEDOM AND BLACK THOUGHT
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Michelle Smith, Barnard College-Columbia University
Disc:
Murad Idris, University of Virginia
Papers: A Splendid Failure?: Tragedy and Agency in "Black
Reconstruction"
Vijay Phulwani, Cornell University
Refuse, Demand, Occupy: Anxiety and strategies of
political transformation
Andreja Zevnik, University of Manchester
James Baldwin and BlackLivesMatter on Violence and
Disavowal
Lisa Beard, University of Oregon
What Can Black Lives Matter Tell Us About Political
Theory?
Charles E. Olney, University of Texas, Rio Grande
Valley

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 259

259

Daily Schedule

Papers: Adam Smith as Political Theorist


Lisa Hill, University of Adelaide
Men within the Breast: The Politics of Theory of Moral
Sentiments
Jason Rosensweig, University of Chicago
The Inequality Conceit: Adam Smith and the
Reformation of Capitalism
Deborah A. Boucoyannis, University of Virginia
The Nature and Causes of Adam Smiths Temporal
Theory of Subjectivity
Jennifer Corby, Kingsborough Community College,
CUNY

Disc:

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


26.5
REIMAGINING DEBT: INDEBTEDNESS,
SABBATH, AND ETERNITY
Room: PCC, 108-A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND
POLITICS

Chair:
Part:

Ian Ward, University of Maryland


Bonnie Honig, Brown University
William E. Connolly, Johns Hopkins University
Cornel West, Princeton University

DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY


26.6
1996: A GOOD YEAR FOR DELIBERATIVE
THEORY, 20 YEARS LATER
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Michael E. Morrell, University of Connecticut
Part:
James Bohman, St. Louis University
Simone Chambers, University of California, Irvine
Amy Gutmann
Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy School
Dennis F. Thompson
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
26.7
CONCENTRATED POWER AND DEMOCRATIC
INSTITUTIONS
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY

Chair:
Disc:

Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College


Melissa A. Schwartzberg, New York University
Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College

Papers: Plebeianism and the Problem of Principled Vulgarity


Jeffrey E. Green, University of Pennsylvania
Democracy-eroding Multilateralism in the EU?
Turkuler Isiksel, Columbia University
Democracy as the Dispersion of Power
Samuel Ely Bagg, Duke University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
26.8
REASON, RHETORIC, AND TRANSLATION
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: John R. Pottenger, University of Alabama in Huntsville
Disc:
Simon A. Stow, College of William & Mary

Papers: Social Context and Political Attitudes: Evidence from


LDS Missions
Adam J. Berinsky
Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University
Jonathan Rodden, Stanford University
Exposure to Inequality Changes Redistributive Behavior:
A Field Experiment
Melissa Sands, Harvard University
The Content and Correlates of Subjective Local Contexts
Frederik Hjorth, University of Copenhagen
Peter Thisted Dinesen, University of Copenhagen
Kim Mannemar Soenderskov, Aarhus University
Network Effects of Felon Disenfranchisement on
Political Participation
Allison Penelope Anoll, Stanford University
Mackenzie Leigh Israel-Trummel, University of
Oklahoma
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
26.10
LAND AND CONFLICT
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Ethan B. Kapstein
Part:
Catherine Boone, London School of Economics and
Political Science (LSE)
Evgeny Finkel, George Washington University
Scott Gehlbach
Michael Albertus, University of Chicago
Paul Frymer, Princeton University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
26.11
THE MAKING OF NATIONS
Room: PCC, 203-B
Disc:
Joan Ricart-Huguet, Princeton University
Papers: Revolution, War, and Legal Secularization since 1850
H. Zeynep Bulutgil, Tufts University
DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE
26.12
TEACHING INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
EDUCATION

Chair:
Disc:

Papers: What's So Great about Public Reasons?


Ian R. MacMullen, Duke University
Recieving Public Reasons
William P. Umphres, University of Cincinnati
Rhetoric and Persuasion in Lincolns Political Thought
Ramon Edgardo Lopez
A Paean of Hopeful Strife: Race and Despair in
American Democratic Imagination
Kirstine S. Taylor, Ohio University
Secularism and the Politics of Translation
andrea cassatella
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
26.9
NEW FRONTIERS IN THE STUDY OF SOCIAL
CONTEXT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Disc:
Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan

260

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 260

Christopher N. Lawrence, Middle Georgia State


University
James Pontuso, Hampden-Sydney College

Papers: An Interactive Theatre Tool for Political Science


Classrooms
Anar Ahmadov, Leiden University
Teaching Cooperation (and Conflict) in the
Undergraduate IR Classroom
Chana M. Solomon-Schwartz, George Washington
University
Visual Framing: Imagery in Political Representation,
Learning, and Research
Guilherme A Silva
Comparing Star Trek and Star Wars as Tools for
Teaching Political Science
Joel R. Campbell, Troy University
Gigi Gokcek, Dominican University of California

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


26.13
DA-RT AND QUALITATIVE METHODS: THE
CASE OF PROCESS TRACING
Room: PCC, 204-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
METHODS

Chair:
Part:

Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University


Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University
James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Tasha A. Fairfield, London School of Economics
Regina A. Bateson, MIT
Peter A. Hall, Harvard University
Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


26.14
POLITICS AND IDENTITY CHANGE IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Amanda Lea Robinson, The Ohio State University
Disc:
Henry E. Hale, George Washington University
Daniel N. Posner, University of California, Los Angeles
Papers: Cultural Revival and Electoral Politics: Ethnic
Mobilization in Malawi
Amanda Lea Robinson, The Ohio State University
Identity in the Making: Some Observations on Ethnic
Adaptation in India
Anoop Sadanandan, Syracuse University
Pivotal Identity: How Competitive Elections Politicize
Latino Ethnicity
Ali A. Valenzuela, Princeton University
Political Context and the Divisiveness of Identities in
Africa
John F. McCauley, University of Maryland, College
Park
Political Protest & Identity: Shaping Young Activists in
Turkeys Gezi Park
Avital Livny, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
26.15
SECESSIONIST VIOLENCE: THE PERSPECTIVE
OF THE STATE AND THE SECESSIONIST
REGION
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Ahsan Ishaq Butt
Disc:
Philip G. Roeder, University of California, San Diego

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING


COUNTRIES
26.17
BEYOND THE NEW NEW INSTITUTIONALISM:
DEBATING THE POLITICS OF DEVELOPMENT
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: David Hulme, Vision Mediaw
Part:
Sam Hickey, University of Manchester
Atul Kohli, Princeton University
Jennifer Widner, Princeton University
Kunal Sen, University of Manchester, UK
Abdul-Gafaru Abdulai, University of Ghana Business
School
Sohela Nazneen, University of Sussex
Nicolas van de Walle
Pablo Yanguas, University of Manchester
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
26.18
THE LOGICS OF CLIENTELISM
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Ryan Steele Jablonski, London School of Economics
and Political Science
Papers: A Tale of Two Constituencies: Clientelism, Rents and
Land Transactions in China
Xin Sun, University of Oxford
Bureaucrats as Patrons: Administrative Chiefs and
Clanism in Northern Kenya
Brenton Peterson, University of Virginia
Competitive Elections and Public Goods Distribution in
Africa
Donghyun Danny Choi, University of California,
Berkeley
David Dow, University of California-Berkeley
Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California,
Berkeley
Matthew Gichohi, University of California, Berkeley
Does Democracy Dampen Clientelism? Evidence from
Mexico
Yuriko Takahashi, Waseda University
Philippine Political Dynasties and Targeted Spending
Laurie Tumaneng, Pennsylvania State University
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
26.19
DEMOCRACY, REDISTRIBUTION, AND
INEQUALITY
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Aleksander Lust, Appalachian State University
Disc:
Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 261

Daily Schedule

Papers: Separatist Leaders and Violent Secession: The Case of


East Ukraine
Elise Giuliano, Columbia University
States, Separatist Movements and Organized Crime in
the Balkans and Caucasus
Danilo Mandic, Harvard University
The Impact of Democracy and Income Redistribution on
Secessionist Violence
Valery Dzutsati, Arizona State University
Winning the Contest by Not Playing: Hybrid Warfare
and Market Penetration
Leo J. Blanken, Naval Postgraduate School
Jason J. Lepore, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING


COUNTRIES
26.16
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: A PANEL ON
GLOBALIZING INDIA
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Part:
Aseema Sinha, Claremont Mckenna College
Kellee S. Tsai, Hong Kong University of Science and
Technology
Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
Carol Wise, University of Southern California
Devesh Kapur

261

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Papers: Politics, Markets, and Top Income Shares


Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
John D. Stephens, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Jingjing Huo, University of Waterloo
Representation versus Redistribution
Carsten Jensen, Aarhus University
Sigrun Kahl, Yale University
Magnus Bergli Rasmussen, Institute of Social
Research (ISF) Norway
Testing the Opinion-policy Link in Sweden
Mikael Persson, University of Gothenburg
Mikael Gilljam, University of Gothenburg
Use with Caution: Democracy without Solidarity
Erik Jones, Johns Hopkins University
Work Time Regimes: Implications for Income and
Gender Inequality
James Conran
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
26.20
ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL INTEGRATION OF
IMMIGRANTS IN EUROPE
Room: PCC, 202-A
Chair: Francesca Vassallo, University of Southern Maine
Disc:
Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Papers: An Evaluation of Immigrant Integration Policies in
Western Europe
Michael Neureiter, University of Pittsburgh
Navigating Economic Integration: The Role of Sending
and Receiving State Diversity
Hannah Marie Alarian, University of California,
Irvine
Rejectionism and Engagement: How Xenophobia Affects
Immigrant Political Behavior
Carolyn Morgan, Ohio State University
EU Anti-Immigration Attitudes in the Post-Economic
Recession Era
Francesca Vassallo, University of Southern Maine
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
26.21
NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN MONETARY AND
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Meredith Wilf, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Lucy M. Goodhart, Brandeis University
Papers: Democracy and Foreign Exchange Reserves
Byunghwan Son, George Mason University
The Politics of Trust in Derivatives Markets: The Case
of Central Clearing
Erin Lockwood, Northwestern University
Remittances and Central Bank Independence
Ana Carolina Garriga, CIDE
Covadonga Meseguer, London School of Economics
The Political Sources of Widening Central Bank
Mandates in Developing Countries
Florence Dafe, German Development
Is Central Bank Independence Always a Good Thing?
Andreas Kern, Georgetown University
Michael Aklin, University of Pittsburgh

262

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 262

DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION


26.22
LOBBYING INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Randall W. Stone, University of Rochester
Disc:
Duncan Snidal, Nuffield College, Oxford
Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University
Papers: Aid on Demand: African Leaders and the Geography of
Chinas Foreign Assistance
Andreas Fuchs, University of Heidelberg
Axel Dreher, ETH Zurich
Bradley C. Parks, College of William and Mary
Michael J. Tierney, College of William & Mary
How to Win Friends and Influence the UN: Donor
Influence on the UN Bureaucracy
Svanhildur Thorvaldsdottir, University of Rochester
Advocacy Strategies in Global Governance: Inside vs.
Outside Lobbying
Lisa Maria Dellmuth, Stockholm University
Jonas Tallberg
The Politics of Contract Allocation in Multilateral Aid
Organizations
Elena V. McLean, SUNY, University at Buffalo
U.S. Banks and IMF Conditionality
Randall W. Stone, University of Rochester
Trung Dang
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
26.23
GREAT POWER POLITICS AND GRAND
STRATEGY: BRIDGING THEORY, HISTORY,
AND PRACTICE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Joshua Itzkowitz Shifrinson, Texas A&M University
Disc:
Robert Reardon, North Carolina State University
John Schuessler, Bush School of Government and Public
Service
Papers: Economic Interdependence, Grand Strategy, and the
Great War
Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University
The Influence of the International System on U.S. Cold
War Strategy
Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa
Grand Strategy and Uncertainty
David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University
The Stopping Power of Water and American Grand
Strategy
Joshua Itzkowitz Shifrinson, Texas A&M University
John Schuessler, Bush School of Government and
Public Service
Disentangling Grand Strategy
Paul C. Avey, Virginia Tech
Robert J. Reardon, North Carolina State University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
26.24
NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Joshua Rovner, Southern Methodist University
Disc:
Joshua Rovner, Southern Methodist University
Papers: The New Era of Counterforce
Keir Lieber, Georgetown University
Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Clandestine Capabilities in World Politics


Brendan R. Green, University of Cincinnati
Austin Long, Columbia University
Looking for Off-ramps: Limited Nuclear War & the
Challenge of Escalation Control
Jasen J. Castillo, Texas A&M University
The Origins of Grand Strategy and the Implications for
Proliferation
Thomas Patrick Cavanna, Southern Methodist
University
Nuclear Pragmatism: How Nuclear Acquisition Changes
Foreign Policy
Mark S. Bell
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
26.25
ECONOMIC SANCTIONS: OBJECTIVES,
INFLUENCE, AND UNINTENDED
CONSEQUENCES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Amanda A. Licht, Binghamton University
Disc:
Amanda A. Licht, Binghamton University
Benjamin Tkach, Center on Conflict and Development
Papers: Acting One Way and Talking Another: Chinas
Economic Statecraft in East Asia
Christina Jun-Yao Lai, China and the World
Program, Princeton University
Birds of a Feather, Sanctioned States Flock Together
Bryan Robert Early, SUNY, University at Albany
Old Flaws in New Sanctions: Evidence from Russia and
Iran
Emma Ashford, Cato Institute
The Target Strikes Back: Explaining Russias Strategy
of Countersanctions
Masha Hedberg, Johns Hopkins University School of
Advanced International Studies
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
26.26
LEADERS AND EXECUTIVE INSTITUTIONS IN
FOREIGN POLICY MAKING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
EXECUTIVE POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Meena Bose, Hofstra University


David Palkki, Air War College
Meena Bose, Hofstra University

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


26.27
MANAGEMENT OF TERRITORIAL DISPUTES
Room: Marriott, Salon B

Krista E. Wiegand, University of Tennessee


Paul K. Huth, University of Maryland, College Park

Papers: Examining Faits Accomplis in Territorial Disputes


Bella Wang, Princeton University
How Many and When?: Investigating Stages Within
Territorial Disputes
Shawna K. Metzger, National University of Singapore
Microfoundations for Individual Level Attitudes towards
Border Disputes in India
Sarah Fisher, Emory & Henry College
Florian Justwan, University of Idaho
Settling Territorial Disputes: The Strategies of the Weak
and the Strong
Erik Charles Beuck, University of Tennessee
Krista E. Wiegand, University of Tennessee
Systemic Uncertainty and the Emergence of Border
Disputes
Scott Abramson, University of Rochester
David B. Carter, Princeton University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
26.28
NEGOTIATING CIVIL WAR PEACE
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Jeffrey B. Arnold, University of Washington
Disc:
Nils B. Weidmann, University of Konstanz
Papers: Bargaining, Enforcement, and Civil War Resolution
Vibeke Wien Hansen, University of Oslo
Helge Holtermann, University of Oslo
Jon Hovi, University of Oslo
Tatjana Stankovic, University of Oslo
Civil Wars of Attrition: Bargaining, Reputation, and
Civil War Duration
Casey Crisman-Cox, University of Rochester
Competing Risks Analysis of Peace Negotiations in
Internal Armed Conflicts
Baris Ari, University of Essex
Double Trouble: Government and Rebel Fragmentation
and Conflict Duration
Nils W. Metternich, University College London
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
26.29
CONGRESS AND THE BUREAUCRACY
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Kathryn Pearson, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Disc:
Theodore J. Masthay, University of Missouri
Papers: Bureaucrats and Their Constituents: Congress, the GAO,
and Representation
John Logan Ray, University of California-Los
Angeles
Discretion and Non-compliance in the Unilateral
Presidency
Kenneth Lowande, University of Virginia
Legislators as Lobbyists
Melinda Ritchie, Vanderbilt University
Hye Young You, Vanderbilt University
Allocation and Usage of Presidential Resources in
Interbranch Bargaining
Philip Waggoner, University of Houston
Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 263

263

Daily Schedule

Papers: Foreign Policy and Regime Survival in Mubaraks Egypt


during the Gulf Wars
Debra Shushan, College of William & Mary
Powers at War: Presidential Prerogative in Peacetime
Hilde Eliassen Restad, Bjorknes University College
Presidents and Proliferation: Nuclear foreign policy and
Executive control
Sarat Krishnan, The University of Texas, Austin
Leaders Motivations Behind the Intervention in Syrian
Civil War
Adriana Boersner, University of Missouri
The Credibility Cartel: Extra-Governmental US National
Security Organizations
Chad Levinson, University of Chicago

Chair:
Disc:

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Publicizing Unilateral Executive Action


Ashley Moraguez, University of North Carolina,
Asheville
Leeann Bass
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
26.30
MULTILATERAL AND UNILATERAL
PRESIDENTIAL DIPLOMACY AND FOREIGN
POLICY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY

Chair:
Disc:

Bruce Miroff, SUNY Albany


Jordan Tama, American University-SIS

Papers: Breaking the Cycle of Unrestrained Presidential National


Security Power
Chris Edelson, American University
Presidential Diplomacy in an Era of Unilateralism: The
End of the Treaty Power?
Jeffrey S. Peake, Clemson University
The National Security State at Dtentes End: Lessons
from the Vietnam War
Adam M. McMahon, The Graduate Center, CUNY
The Obama Administration and Authorizations for the
Use of Military Force
Melanie M. Marlowe, Georgetown University Law
Center
Unilateral Diplomacy by the Executive Branch:
International Environmental Policy
Kiki Caruson, University of South Florida
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
26.31
DYNAMICS OF COALITIONS AND
COLLABORATION IN MULTIPLE POLICY
AREAS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Chair: Wendy Whitman-Cobb, Cameron University
Disc:
Vivien Lowndes, University of Birmingham
Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of
Pennsylvania
Papers: Organizing Across Boundaries: The Politics of
Transportation Reform
Margaret Weir, Brown University
Comparing Collaboration: Energy Efficiency Action
Across Local Governments
Jisun Youm, University of Wyomoing
Jessica Terman, George Mason University
Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University
Core Beliefs, Trust, and Collaboration in Local Autism
Policy Networks
Bryan M. Parsons, Roanoke College
Representation in Collaborative Governance: The Case
of Food Policy Councils
Chris Koski, Reed College
Saba Siddiki
Taking a Closer Look at Local Government Service
Provision
Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma
Meeyoung Lamothe, University of Oklahoma
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
26.32
THE EFFECTS OF POLICY DESIGN ON TAKEUP AND MASS POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Laura Katz Olson, Lehigh University

264

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 264

Disc:

Iliyan Iliev, University of Southern Mississippi


Laura Katz Olson, Lehigh University

Papers: Experiments on Social Safety Nets for Unemployment


Scott Bokemper, Stony Brook University
Peter DeScioli, Stony Brook University
Anti-Discrimination Laws, Policy Knowledge, and
Political Engagement
Conrad Ziller, University of Cologne
Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center WZB
Effects of Medicare Eligibility on Political Attitudes and
Participation
Baobao Zhang, Yale University
How does Regulation affect Beliefs? The Stock Market
Valuation of OD approvals
Cyril Benoit, Sciences Po Bordeaux - The University
of Sheffield
Letting the Gini Out of the Bottle: Careful What You
Wish about Death and Taxes!
Robert D. Duval, West Virginia University
Thomas K. Bias, West Virginia University
Raquel Echeverria
Matthew G. Matyasovsky, West Virginia University
David King
Aaron Tyler Mentzer, West Virginia University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
26.33
THE EXPANSION AND CONTRACTION OF
AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP RIGHTS
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Robert C. Lieberman, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
Robert C. Lieberman, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: When the State Fails: The death of federal civil rights
activism after 1975
Desmond King
Building a National Security State: Securing the State
and Terrorizing Citizens
Megan Ming Francis, University of Washington
Minority Rights Movements and the Public-Private
Welfare State
Chloe Thurston, Northwestern University
Debtors Rights and American Social Citizenship
Emily Zackin, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
26.34
DEVOLUTION, FRAGMENTED POWER, AND
ELECTORAL ACCOUNTABILITY
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin
Disc:
Alan Fenna, Curtin University
Anthony Michael Bertelli, New York University
Papers: Convergent Election Administration Across the States
Mitchell Brown, Auburn University
Kathleen Hale, Auburn University
Making Accountability Work Under Asymmetric
Devolution. the British Case
Sandra Leon, UNIVERSITY OF YORK
Lluis Orriols, University Carlos III of Madrid

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Resource Transfers to Local Govts: Political


Manipulation and Voting Patterns
Anusha Nath, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
and University of Minnesota
Dilip Mookherjee
The Indirect Effect of Income on Preferences for
Centralization of Authority
Diogo Ferrari, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Marta Arretche
The Consequences of Maintaining Communities of
Interest
Daniel Blyth Magleby, Binghamton University
DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
26.35
SCHOOL POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Alison N Novak, Rowan University


Michael Hankinson, Harvard University

Papers: Charter School Boards and Democratic Principles


J. Celeste Lay, Tulane University
Higher-Poverty Schools and Public Policy: The Case of
Promise Neighborhoods
Neil Kraus, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
Talking in the Halls: How Deliberative Democracy
Influences Urban Governance
Jonathan Collins, University of California - Los
Angeles
Teachers Unions and Selective Engagement in New
York and Philadelphia, 1935-1965
Nicholas Toloudis, The College of New Jersey
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
26.36
GENDERED LEADERSHIP IN CONGRESS AND
ON COURTS
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

Chair:
Disc:

Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College


Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College
Lisa M. Holmes, University of Vermont

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

Chair:
Disc:

Lisa Hager, South Dakota State University


Sara Angevine, Whittier College
Lisa Hager, South Dakota State University

Papers: Are the Women of Congress Affected by the Women of


their Districts?
Lauren Marie Santoro, West Virginia University
Does Descriptive Representation of Women Enhance
Legislative Communication?
Mia Costa, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Does Legislator Ideology Affect Women's
Representation? An Experimental Analysis
Danielle Thomsen, Syracuse University
Bailey Sanders
Woman-Invoked Rhetoric and the Impact of Republican
Women in Congress
Catherine N. Wineinger, Rutgers University
The Impact of Womens Legislative Caucus Variation
on Womens Representation
Anna M. Mahoney, Tulane University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
26.38
CONSTRUCTING THE IMMIGRANT "OTHER"
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Angel Saavedra Cisneros, The University of Texas-Pan
American
Disc:
Angel Saavedra Cisneros, The University of Texas-Pan
American
David L. Leal, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Black Views towards Undocumented Immigrants in the
United States
Lorrie Frasure-Yokley
Experimentally Testing the Effect of Economic Threat
on Anti-Immigrant Sentiment
Jonathan Mellon, University of Oxford
Immigration Enforcement and Public Perceptions of
Immigrants and Latinos
Elizabeth A Maltby, University of Iowa
Perceptions About Latinos and Immigration Attitudes
Lucila Figueroa, University of Virginia
Republican Campaign Appeals and Black Opinion on
Immigration Reform
Tatishe Mavovosi Nteta, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
26.39
NATIONALISM, INTOLERANCE, AND ANTIMINORITY MOBILIZATION IN ASIA
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Yuhki Tajima, Georgetown University
Disc:
Donald L. Horowitz, Duke University
Papers: Emerging Democracy and Religious Intolerance:
Indonesia and Malaysia Compared
Kikue Hamayotsu, Northern Illinois University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 265

Daily Schedule

Papers: Gendered Leadership and State Supreme Court Chief


Justices: A Survey Analysis
Mikel Norris, Coastal Carolina University
Women and Consensus on State Supreme Courts
Meghan E. Leonard, Illinois State University
Joseph V. Ross, Florida Gulf Coast University
Gender and Policy Responsiveness in the United States
Congress
Jeffrey Lazarus, Georgia State University
Amy L. Steigerwalt, Georgia State University
Sex, Bipartisanship, and Collaboration in the U.S.
Congress
Jennifer L. Lawless, American University
Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin
Womens Representation in the 114th Congress:
Priorities, Impact, & Polarization
Kelly Dittmar, Rutgers University-Camden
Kira Sanbonmatsu, Rutgers University, New
Brunswick
Susan J. Carroll, Rutgers University, New Brunswick

DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH


26.37
REPRESENTING WOMEN, REPRESENTING
WOMEN'S INTERESTS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7

265

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Competition, Coordination, and the Colonial Origins of


Intolerance in Indonesia
Alexandre Pelletier, University of Toronto
Religious Freedom and Public Order: Constitutional
Tensions in Two Muslim States
Matthew J. Nelson, University of London, SOAS
Religious Nationalism Discourse and Prejudice in
Thailand
Joel Sawat Selway, Brigham Young University
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
26.40
GENDER AND EXECUTIVE REPRESENTATION
IN LATIN AMERICA
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Chair:
Disc:

Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University


Veronica Montecinos, Penn Sate University
Diana Z. O' Brien, Indiana University

Papers: Latin Americas Presidentas: Challenging Old Patterns,


Forging New Pathways
Gwynn Thomas, SUNY, University at Buffalo
Catherine Reyes-Housholder
Getting into the Elite Club? Women in Presidential
Cabinets
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University
Representation without Equality: Women in the Costa
Rican Executive Branch
Jennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental College
Informal Rules and Womens Representation in Chiles
Executive Branch
Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary
Women, Power, and Policy in Brazil
Anna Calasanti, University of New Mexico
Mala Htun, University of New Mexico
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
26.41
COALITION IMPLICATIONS OF RANKED
CHOICE VOTING ELECTIONS
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Todd Donovan, Western Washington University
Disc:
Todd Donovan, Western Washington University
Papers: Voter Mobilization under Preferential and Plurality
Elections
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
Kellen J. Gracey, University of Iowa
Courtney Juelich, University of Iowa
The Other Side of Urban Reform: Insurgents and Issues
Under City STV, 1930-61
Jack Santucci, Georgetown University
Debates Over the Future of Irelands Single Transferable
Vote
David M. Farrell, University College Dublin, Belfield
Jane Suiter, Dublin City University
Clodagh Harris, University College Cork
Voter Turnout under RCV in Local Elections: A QuasiExperimental Design
Jason A. McDaniel

266

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 266

Voter Participation with Ranked Choice Voting in the


United States
David C. Kimball, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Joseph Anthony, University of Missouri at St. Louis
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
26.42
CAMPAIGN DYNAMICS, SOCIAL MEDIA AND
VOTER PREFERENCES
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Chair:
Disc:

Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern Denmark


Kenneth R. Benoit

Papers: UK 2015 - The Impact of Social Media on Voters'


Knowledge and Preferences
Jonathan Nagler, New York University
Kevin Munger, NYU
Patrick J. Egan, New York University
Joshua A. Tucker, New York University
Campaign Dynamics of Leader Popularity: Causes and
Effects
Mona Krewel, Cornell University
Julia Partheymller, University of Mannheim
Campaigning through Multiple Communication Channels
Taewoo Kang, Washington State University
Diffusion of Elite Campaign Rhetoric to the Mass Public
Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern
Denmark
David Dreyer Lassen, University of Copenhagen
The Dynamics of Accuracy in Campaign Advertising
and its Effects
Barbara Allen, Carleton College
Gabriel Katz, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies
Lucca
Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
26.43
ORDERS OF MAGNITUDE: BIG DATA
APPLICATIONS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

Chair:
Disc:

Clifton van der Linden, University of Toronto


Peter John Loewen, University of Toronto

Papers: Examining the 2015 Canadian Federal Election


Campaign through a Big Data Lens
Francois Gelineau
Elisabeth L. Gidengil
Richard Johnston, University of British Columbia
Clifton van der Linden, University of Toronto
You're Hot then You're Cold: Feeling Thermometer
Framing Effects
Yannick Dufresne
Anja Kilibarda, Columbia University
Breaking the Chemical Weapons Taboo: Rethinking
Norms on Intervention
Gregory Eady
Clifton van der Linden, University of Toronto
Same-sex Marriage Debate in Australia: Public Opinion
and Policy Responsiveness
Andrea Carson, University of Melbourne
Shaun Ratcliff, Monash University

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION


26.44
SOMETIMES A FANTASY: CAUSES AND
CONSEQUENCES OF CONSPIRACY
ENDORSEMENT
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Joseph E. Uscinski, University of Miami
Disc:
Joseph E. Uscinski, University of Miami
Papers: Conspiratorial Beliefs, Partisanship, and Polarization
Adam M. Enders
Steven Michael Smallpage, Michigan State University
An Experimental Test of the Conspiracy Theories are
for Losers Hypothesis
Kyle L. Saunders, Colorado State University
Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
Christina Farhart, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
The Mediating Impact of Conspiracy Thinking on
Climate Change Attitudes
Joseph E. Uscinski, University of Miami
Santiago Olivella, Princeton University
The Influence of the Authoritarian Personality on
Conspiracy Beliefs
Sean Richey, Georgia State University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
26.45
INNOVATIONS IN MEASURING POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Lindsey Cormack, Stevens Institute of Technology
Disc:
Josh Pasek, University of Michigan
Lefteris Jason Anastasopoulos, University of Georgia
Papers: Estimating Multiple Measures of Media Ideology in the
United Kindgom
Gaurav Sood, Independent
Philip Habel, University of Glasgow
Evaluating Online Labor Markets for Content Analysis
of Political Communication
Nicholas Winter, University of Virginia
Adam Gregory Hughes, University of Virginia
Issue Agendas in Television Media
Kelsey Shoub, UNC-Chapel Hill
Andrew Tyner, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Brice Acree, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Using Structural Topic Models to Assess Television
News Content
Robert Bond, The Ohio State University
Matthew Sweitzer, The Ohio State University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
26.46
POLITICAL ELITES AND SOCIAL MEDIA
Room: PCC, 112-A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Eric A. Baldwin, University of California, Los Angeles


Leticia Bode
Jie Lu, American University

DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND


ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
26.47
STATE AND LOCAL ENVIRONMENTAL
POLITICS AND POLICY
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

Chair:
Disc:

Leigh S. Raymond, Purdue University


Matthew Nowlin, College of Charleston

Papers: Environmental Marble Cake: Three Level Federalism in


Environmental Compliance
David Switzer, Texas A&M University
Mellie Haider
Manny P. Teodoro, Texas A&M University
Youlang Zhang
The Grass is Always Greener: U.S. State Environmental
Politics and Well-Being
Andre Pierre Audette, University of Notre Dame
Benjamin Radcliff, University of Notre Dame
Christopher L. Weaver, University of Notre Dame
The RFS mandate in Corn Country; Exploring the
economic impacts.
Ryan M. Yonk, Utah State University
Randy T. Simmons, Utah State University
The Green Publicity State: 'Green Economy'in Michigan
and Ontario, 2007-2012
Stephanie Tombari, University of Guelph
Impact of Political Culture on City Sustainable Built
Environment Commitments
Megan Topham, The University of Texas at Arlington
Colleen Casey, University of Texas at Arlington
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
POLITICS
26.48
DIGITAL PROTEST AND POLITICAL
PARTICIPATION
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: David A. Karpf, George Washington University
Disc:
Nick Anstead, London School of Economics
Papers: Bridging the Gap Between the State and Contemporary
Forms of Civic Engagement
Max Halupka, Institute for Governance and Policy
Analysis
Emma Vines, University of Canberra

Papers: How Public Opinion Shapes Policy Outcomes in China:


the Policy Feeler Mechanism
Tongtong Zhang, Stanford University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 267

267

Daily Schedule

Chair:
Disc:

The Dynamics of Social Media Censorship in


Transitioning Democracies
Abdullah Aydogan
Rima Tanash, Rice University
Zhouhan Chen, Rice University
Melissa J. Marschall, Rice University
Devika Subramanian, Rice University
Dan Wallach, Rice University
The Impact of Ideology on Congressional Members'
Social Media Messages
C. Danielle Vinson, Furman University
Patrick Ramjug
Tweet Style: How Governing and Elections Shape
Political Communication
Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Expressive v. Strategic Forms of Environmental


Activism in the 21st Century
Hahrie C. Han, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Aaron C Sparks, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Images that Matter: Online Protests and the Mobilizing
Role of Pictures
Andreu Casas, University of Washington
Nora Webb Williams, University of Washington
The Personal is Political: Promoting Disability Rights
Online
Filippo Trevisan, American University
The Role of Social Media in Framing Australias Coal
Seam Gas Debate
Michael J. Jensen, University of Canberra
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
26.49
POPULISM AND BIGOTRY IN A TIME OF
INEQUALITY
Room: Marriott, Room 408
Chair: Nancy Sue Love, Appalachian State University
Disc:
Nancy Sue Love, Appalachian State University
Papers: The Bigot Today
Stephen Eric Bronner
Politics and Identity in an Era of Growing Islamophobia
Dalia Fikry Fahmy, Long Island University, Brooklyn
Toward an Antiracist Populism
Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon
Occupy's Failure
John Ehrenberg, Long Island University, Brooklyn
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
26.50
THE STORIES WE TELL: HISTORY, IDENTITY,
IMAGE AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: John M. Owen, University of Virginia
Disc:
Jennifer M. Dixon, Villanova University
Papers: Foreign Policy Making and Memory of Limited
Sovereignty
Jaeyeon Yim
From Foe to Friend: Changes in State Reputation
Emily Holland
Hadas Aron, Columbia University
Imprinting the National Story: Gandhi, Chiang Kai-shek,
and the Imperial Powers
Grace Huang, St. Lawrence University
Transformation of Identity: Patriotic Education
Campaign in Japan and China
Florence Yang
Why History Matters: Explaining the U.S. Intelligence
Failure in Iraq, 1958
Jeffrey G. Karam, Brandeis University
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
26.51
CONTENTION, INEQUALITY AND
DEMOCRATIZATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Sean Burns, None
Disc:
David L. Cingranelli, Binghamton University, SUNY

268

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 268

Papers: Who Revolts? Revisiting the Social Origins of


Democratic Revolutions
Tore Wig, University of Oslo
Sirianne Dahlum
Decomposing the "Revolutionary Threat" Thesis of
Democratization
Jared Abbott, Harvard University
Matthew J Reichert, Harvard University
Aytug Sasmaz, Harvard University
Rousing the Rabble: Inequality, Institutions, and Regime
Change
Terence Teo, Seton Hall University
Uprising: A Unified Theory of Democratization and
Revolution
Sean Burns, None
From Belgrade to Maidan to Tahrir: Comparative
Democratizing Mass Mobilizations
Spyridon Kotsovilis
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
26.52
MONITORING AND ENFORCING HUMAN
RIGHTS
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Emily Hencken Ritter, University of Cailfornia, Merced
Disc:
Yonatan Lupu, George Washington University
Papers: Sanctioning Abuse? Economic Sanctions and Respect for
Physical Integrity
K. Chad Clay, University of Georgia
Daniel Hill
The Good, the Bad, and the Data: Human Rights Law
and Cross-National Indicators
Geoff Dancy, Tulane University
Christopher J. Fariss, Penn State University
Heretics and Infidels: Treaty Membership and the
Enforcement of Human Rights
Daniela Donno, University of Pittsburgh
Nikolay V. Marinov, University of Mannheim
Creating and Coopting National Human Rights
Institutions
Thania Sanchez, Yale University
Assessing the Effects of Human Rights Treaties When
Times Change
Jana von Stein, Victoria University of Wellington
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
26.53
APPROACHES TO ETHNOGRAPHY AND
INTERVIEWING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Eric Radezky
Disc:
Joseph E. Campbell, Rose State College
Papers: Partisan Personas of the Modern US Representative
Eric Radezky
Studying Urban StateSociety Intermediaries Through
Serial Interviews
Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa
Cruz
Surveying Caribbean Elites: The Effects of Mode Choice
on Response Quality
Jennifer Gauck, Social Solutions International, Inc.
Understanding Party Mobilization through Life History
Interviews
Johanna Sderstrm, Uppsala University

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY


26.54
OBAMACARE WARS: FEDERALISM, STATE
POLITICS, AND THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark
Part:
Shanna Rose, Claremont McKenna College
Robert B. Hackey
Julia Lynch, University of Pennsylvania
Donald F. Kettl, University of Maryland
Paul L. Posner, George Mason University
Philip B. Rocco, Marquette University
Daniel Beland
Alex Waddan, University of Leicester
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
26.55
METHODOLOGICAL AND EMPIRICAL
APPLICATIONS OF POLITICAL NETWORKS
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Curtis S. Signorino, University of Rochester
Disc:
Eric Hundman, University of Chicago
Papers: The Market for Small Arms, Global Networks, and
Influential Global Arms Traders
Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
Brett Benson, Vanderbilt University
Using Global Event Data to Diagnose Network Shocks
Jesse Hammond, University of California, Davis
Brandon J. Kinne, University of California, Davis
Why Who You Know Matters: Influence and Social
Networks
Karen Albert, University of Rochester
Analyzing Roles and Positions in Political Networks
Elizabeth Maggie Penn, Washington University in St.
Louis
John W. Patty, University of Chicago
Modeling the Co-Evolution of Security and Economic
Cooperation
Oliver Westerwinter, University of St. Gallen
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
26.56
METHODOLOGICAL INNOVATIONS IN
EXPERIMENTS
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Victoria Anne Shineman, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
David W. Nickerson, Temple University

DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP


26.57
THE FUTURE OF IDENTITY POLITICS IN THE
UNITED STATES
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Danielle Lemi, University of California, Riverside
Disc:
Beth Ginsberg
Papers: Destructive Nostalgia: What Explains White Working
Class Radicalism?
Justin Gest, George Mason University
Tyler Thomas Reny, University of California Los
Angeles
Jeremy Mayer, George Mason University
Race and Descriptive Representation: Re-examining the
Importance of Race
Danielle Lemi, University of California, Riverside
Multiracial Coalitions and The Rise of Solidarity
Amongst Minority Communities
Vanessa C. Tyson, Scripps College
Kiku Huckle, Pace University
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS
26.58
POLITICS IN AUTHORITARIAN STATES IN
AFRICA
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Chair: Malte Lierl, Yale University
Disc:
Carl LeVan, American University
Papers: A Tradition Coopted: Participatory Development and
Authoritarian Rule in Sudan
Anne-Laure Mah, Universit de Montral
Punishment, Patronage and Political Order in
Authoritarian Rwanda
Anu Chakravarty
The Political Survival of Cabinet Ministers in Africas
Authoritarian Regimes
Alex Kroeger, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Voting for the Devil You Know: Popular (Il)Legitimacy
in Autocratic Cameroon
Natalie Wenzell Letsa, Cornell University
Related Groups
27.1
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: STRAUSS ON PHILOSOPHY,
RELIGION, AND MORALITY
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: David Oliver Davies, University of Dallas
Part:
John W. Grant, Hillsdale College
Timothy W. Burns, Baylor University
Mark J. Lutz, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Eric Buzzetti, Concordia University
27.2
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: ROUNDTABLE:
VACLAV HAVEL'S LEGACY TODAY.
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: Martin Palous, Florida International University
Part:
Henrik Syse, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)
Glenn Hughes, St. Mary's University
Zdravko Planinc, McMaster University
Jeffrey C. Isaac, Indiana University, Bloomington

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 269

269

Daily Schedule

Papers: "Don't Know" Responses and Cultural Differences


Yoshikuni Ono, Tohoku University
Masahiro Yamada, Kwansei Gakuin University
How Post-Treatment Bias Can Ruin Your Experiment
and What to Do About It
Jacob M. Montgomery, Washington University in St.
Louis
Michelle Torres, Washington University in St. Louis
Just Checking? Manipulation Checks in Experimental
Research Designs
John Kane
Jason Barabas, Stony Brook University
Using Online Panels to Improve Persuasion Field
Experiments
Joshua L Kalla, University of California, Berkeley
David Broockman, Stanford GSB
Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California,
Berkeley

Testing Mechanisms: A Principal Stratification Approach


Albert Fang, Yale University

Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

27.3
Room:
Chair:
Part:

27.4
Room:

LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, AND TRANSGENDER


CAUCUS: AFTER MARRIAGE EQUALITY:
WHAT IS NEXT FOR THE LGBT MOVEMENT?
PCC, 203-A
Carlos Ball, Rutgers University School of Law
Joseph Fischel, Yale University
Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas
Nancy J. Knauer, Temple University
Gary Mucciaroni, Temple University
Bruno Perreau
David Rayside
PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL OF FEDERALISM:
MARTHA DERTHICK'S FEDERALISM
SCHOLARSHIP
Marriott, Room 411
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS

Chair:
Part:

27.5

Room:
Chair:
Part:

John Dinan, Wake Forest University


Tim Conlan, George Mason University
R. Kent Weaver, Georgetown University
Troy E. Smith, Brigham Young University at Hawaii
Joshua M. Dunn, University of Colorado, Colorado
Springs
WALTER BAGEHOT RESEARCH COUNCIL ON
NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY: AMERICAN
SECURITY CHALLENGES IN AN AGE OF
POLARIZATION AND POLITICAL DISTRUST
Marriott, Room 414
Joseph Prud'homme
Joseph DiSarro, Washington & Jefferson College
Frank P. Le Veness, Saint John's University
Alan G. Stolberg, U.S. Army War College
Lucy Margarita Arraya
Kevin Costa, Radio France Internationale
Matthew A. Pauley, Manhattanville College
Robert F. Pecorella, St. John's University

Thursday, 5:30 PM to 6:30 PM


APSA Events
28.1
APSA ASIA COMMITTEE PLANNING MEETING
Room: PCC, 101-A
28.2
APSA MENTORING NETWORKING RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Room 410

Thursday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM


APSA Events
29.1
112TH APSA PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: LEFT
PESSIMISM AND POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Part:
Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University

Thursday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM


APSA Events
30.1
CANADIAN POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 304
30.2
EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
30.3
FUTURE DIRECTIONS OF THE AMERICAN
NATIONAL ELECTION STUDIES
Room: PCC, 106-AB

270

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 270

30.4
Room:
30.5
Room:
30.6
Room:
30.7
Room:
30.8
Room:
30.9
Room:
30.10
Room:
30.11
Room:
30.12
Room:
30.13
Room:
30.14
Room:
30.15
Room:
30.16
Room:
30.17
Room:

INDIGENOUS STUDIES NETWORK BUSINESS


MEETING
PCC, 111-A
ITALIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW,
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Marriott, Room 302
LABOR PROJECT BUSINESS MEETING AND
KEYNOTE
PCC, 105-AB
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 111-B
POLITICAL NETWORKS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 305
POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
SECTION EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
PCC, 107-A
POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 309
PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL OF FEDERALISM
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Marriott, Room 306
QUALITATIVE AND MULTI-METHOD
RESEARCH SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth D
RELIGION AND POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
PCC, 104-A
SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS OPEN MEETING
Marriott, Room 301
STATE POLITICS AND POLICY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A2
THE AFRICAN POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A1
WESTERN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
Marriott, Room 308

Thursday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM


APSA Events
31.1
LAW AND COURTS SECTION &
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE
SECTION LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT PANEL
Room: PCC, 204-B

Thursday, 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM


APSA Events
32.1
INSTITUTE FOR HUMANE STUDIES
RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Room 413

Thursday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM


APSA Events
33.1
BRITISH POLITICS GROUP RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Room 307
33.2
BYU POLITICAL AFFAIRS SOCIETY
RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
33.3
CONFERENCE FOR THE STUDY OF POLITICAL
THOUGHT (CSPT) ANNUAL RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Salon J

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

33.4
Room:
33.5
Room:
33.6
Room:
33.7
Room:
33.8
Room:
33.9
Room:
33.10
Room:
33.11
Room:

INTERNATIONAL ATTENDEE RECEPTION


Marriott, Independence Ballroom
PRQ RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 414
QUALITATIVE AND MULTI-METHOD
RESEARCH SECTION RECEPTION
Marriott, Salon KL
RELIGION AND POLITICS SECTION
RECEPTION
PCC, 104-B
STATE POLITICS AND POLICY SECTION
RECEPTION
Loews, Congress A
THE CHURCHILL CENTRE ANNUAL BLACK
TIE ACADEMIC DINNER, HONORING MICHAEL
BARONE
Offsite, Union League of Philadelphia
THE REVIEW OF POLITICS, UNIVERSITY OF
NOTRE DAME RECEPTION
Loews, Congress B
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF
POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Thursday, 7:30 PM to 9:30 PM


APSA Events
34.1
112TH ANNUAL MEETING OPENING
RECEPTION
Room: PCC, Grand Hall
34.2
POLITICAL NETWORKS SECTION RECEPTION
Room: Offsite, Vintage Wine Bar & Bistro

Thursday, 8:30 PM to 10:00 PM


APSA Events
35.1
APSA COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF
BLACKS AND NCOBPS RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
35.2
APSA RECEPTION HONORING WOMEN IN THE
PROFESSION: WOMEN & POL. SECTION,
WOMENS CAUCUS & COMM.
Room: PCC, 201-C
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science

Friday, September 2, 2016


Friday, 7:00 AM to 8:00 AM

APSA Events
37.1
SWPSA EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
Room: PCC, 303-AB

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM


Theme Panels
38.1
CYBER AND CONFLICT: TRANSFORMATIVE
CHANGE OR STATUS QUO DYNAMICS?
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Emily O. Goldman
Part:
Robert Jervis, Columbia University
Jacquelyn Schneider, Naval War College
Erik Gartzke, UCSD
Jon R. Lindsay, University of Toronto
Austin Carson, University of Chicago
Fiona Stephanie Cunningham, Political Science
Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Joshua Rovner, Southern Methodist University
38.2
GENDER TRANSFORMATIONS
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Mala Htun, University of New Mexico
Part:
S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University
Valentine M. Moghadam, Northeastern University
Peace A. Medie
Nikol G. Alexander-Floyd, Rutgers University
Javier Corrales
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley
Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, University of ConnecticutStorrs
38.3
POLITICAL THEORY AND POLITICAL
TRANSFORMATION
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Ira Katznelson, Columbia University
Part:
Ingrid Creppell, George Washington University
Roxanne L. Euben, Wellesley College
Jeffrey C. Isaac, Indiana University, Bloomington
Leigh K. Jenco, London School of Economics
Stephen Taylor Holmes, New York University
APSA Events
39.1
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF BLACK
POLITICAL SCIENTISTS EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
MEETING
Room: PCC, 101-A
39.2
RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER INSTITUTE (RBSI)
ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 302
Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
40.1
INSINCERITY AND AUTHENTICITY IN
AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Cristina Beltran, New York University
Disc:
Corey Robin
Papers: Confessions of an Ex-Communist
Nolan Bennett, Georgetown University
Telling it Like it Is: Authenticity in Civil-Rights Era
Black Freedom Struggles
Nina Hagel, Bates College
Booker T. Washington and the Politics of Deception
Desmond Jagmohan, Princeton University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 271

Daily Schedule

APSA Events
36.1
ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 302
36.2
LEGISLATIVE STUDIES QUARTERLY
EDITORIAL BOARD BREAKFAST MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 413
36.3
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE PUBLICATIONS
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 308
36.4
ORGANIZED SECTION CHAIRS BREAKFAST
Room: Marriott, Liberty Ballroom
36.5
PS EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 301

Friday, 7:00 AM to 8:30 AM

271

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Stephen Douglass Self-Deception: Popular Sovereignty


in the Territories
Trevor Latimer, University of Georgia
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
40.2
DEMOCRACY NOW
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Rosanne T. Kennedy, New York University
Disc:
David W. McIvor, Colorado State University
Papers: Democracy, Impatience, and Failure
Mario Feit, Georgia State University
On Dromophilia: Speed, Democracy and the Desire for a
"Quick Fix"
Simon Glezos, University of Victoria
The New Crowd: Masses, Mobs, and Movements Online
Nancy Sue Love, Appalachian State University
The museum as a site of democracy: affect, sensory
reasonings and history.
Elaine Stavro, Trent University
Toward a Counter-History of Democracy
Gabriel Rockhill, Villanova University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
40.3
DEMOCRATIC ENGAGEMENT AND
DISENGAGEMENT
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: John T. Lombardini, College of William & Mary
Disc:
John T. Lombardini, College of William & Mary
Papers: Democratic Public Opinion and Freedom: A
Tocquevillian Problem and Solution
Jennie Choi Ikuta, University of Tulsa
Intergenerational Justice and Democratic Political
Engagement
Elizabeth Markovits, Mount Holyoke College
Modern Mindfulness: The Buddhist Retreat Toward
Democracy in the U.S.
Shannon Mariotti, Southwestern University
Stirring Emotion: The Place of Enthusiasm in Hatred for
Democracy
Andrew Poe, Amherst College
Tropes of Transit: The Muqqadimah, Zhuangzi, and
Discourses on Livy
Dorothy H. B. Kwek, Universitt Konstanz
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
40.4
PROTESTS AND PUBLICS: REVISITING
MARGINALIZED GROUPS STANDING AND
UPTAKE
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Karen Zivi, Grand Valley State University
Disc:
Andrew Schaap, University of Exeter
Papers: Between the Human and the Person: A Critical Inquiry
into the Subject of Rights
Ayten Gundogdu, Barnard College-Columbia
University
Respect for non-persons: Despotism, Domination, and
the Politics of Ecological Emancipation
Sharon R. Krause, Brown University
Seizing Standing: On the Politics of Claiming Oneself
Already Authorized
Daniel Nichanian

272

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 272

Resonant Insurgency: The Function of Social


Movements as Democratic Claim-Makers
Deva Woodly, New School for Social Research
Moralizing Sensibilities and a Moral Economy of Protest
Ana Maria Ospina Pedraza
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
40.5
ASSESSING DELIBERATION
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia
Disc:
Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia
Papers: An Epistemic Approach to Religion in the Public Sphere
Benjamin R. Hertzberg, Emory University
Inclusion and the Operationalization of Democratic
Listening
Molly Scudder, Purdue University
Trust and Deliberation: Consensuality and Agonism in
Police-Community Forums
Stephen K. White, University of Virginia
Rachel Lee Wahl, University of Virginia
Talking across Diversity: Deliberative Capital &
Facilitating Discourse Quality
Afsoun Afsahi, University of British Columbia
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
40.6
NORMATIVE THEORIZING WITH THOSE WHO
STRUGGLE
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Chris Tenove, University of Toronto
Part:
Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University
Linda Bosniak, Rutgers University
Genevieve Fuji Johnson
Fonna Forman, University of California, San Diego
Antje Wiener, University of Hamburg
Luis Cabrera, Griffith University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
40.7
DELEGATION AND THE MANAGEMENT OF
EVIDENCE AND INFORMATION
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
Papers: An Informational Argument for Judicial Deference
Ian R. Turner, Texas A&M University
John W. Patty, University of Chicago
Decision Rules, Evidence Disclosure and Conflict of
Interest
Marlene Guraieb, New York University
Effort Allocation in a Resource Constrained Court: A
Theory of Case Management
Ryan Hubert, University of California, Davis
The Role of Courts in Technology Policy
Sepehr Shahshahani, Princeton University
Strategic Analysis of a "King-Maker"
Suhjin Lee, London School of Economics and
Political Science
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
40.8
THE POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY OF
DELIBERATING GROUPS
Room: Marriott, Room 408
Chair: Lilach Nir, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Disc:
Jason Barabas, Stony Brook University

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Papers: How Deliberation Changes Policy Attitudes: Learning


versus Diversity
Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin
Pete Mohanty, Stanford University
Opting Out of Political Discussions: Evidence of MicroProcesses of Polarization
Jaime E. Settle, College of William & Mary
Taylor Nicole Feenstra, University of California, San
Diego
Social Identity, Partisanship, and Political Deliberation
C. Daniel Myers, University of Minnesota
Social Stereotypes and the Flow of Ideas in Political
Deliberation
Edana Beauvais
Diversity, Deliberation, and the Creation of Bonding and
Bridging Capital
Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
Kevin M. Esterling, University of California,
Riverside
Archon Fung, Harvard University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
40.9
NEW THEORIES AND EVIDENCE ON
PROPERTY RIGHTS
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Timothy Frye
Disc:
Timothy Frye
Papers: The Politics of Order in Informal Markets: Evidence
from Lagos
Shelby Grossman, Harvard University
The Cost of Government in Privatizing the Commons:
Kajiado District, Kenya
Colin Harris, George Mason University
Private Entrepreneurs, Legislatures, and Property
Protection in China
Yue Hou
Elite Capture: How Decentralization and Informal
Institutions Weaken Property Rights in China
Daniel Mattingly, Stanford University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
40.10
SOCIAL POLICY IN NON-DEMOCRACIES:
RUSSIA & CHINA
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Sarah Wilson Sokhey, University of Colorado
Disc:
Israel Marques, National Research University - Higher
School of Economics
Mary E. Gallagher, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Papers: Conditions for Conditionality: Testing the Validity of


Linear Interaction Models
Jens Hainmueller, Stanford University
Jonathan Mummolo, Stanford University
Yiqing Xu, University of California, San Diego
Interdependent Outcomes in Political Science: Modeling
Dependence Across Choices
Scott Cook, Texas A&M University
Jude C. Hays, University of Pittsburgh
Robert J. Franzese, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Two Wrongs Make a Right: Misclassification in Binary
Data from Multiple Sourcess
Scott Cook, Texas A&M University
Modeling Unbalanced Multi-Level Data: Case of
Russian Fiscal Federalism.
Anna Pechenina
Richard Herrington, University Of North Texas
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
40.12
TEXT ANALYSIS: METHODS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Will Lowe, Princeton University
Disc:
Eugenia Giraudy, University of California, Berkeley
Anton Strezhnev, Harvard University
Papers: Active Learning for Automatic Content Analysis: Trend
Prediction in Big Data
Gregor Wiedemann, Leipzig University
Building Grammatical Models of Complex
Organizational Processes
Jon Strandquist, Graduate Institute of International
and Development Studies
Deep-Learning Methods for Analyzing Political
Language
Brice Acree, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
The Unreliability of Measures of Intercoder Reliability,
and What to do About it
Justin Grimmer, Stanford University
Gary King, Harvard University
Chiara Superti, Columbia University
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
40.13
TRANSFORMATIONAL LEARNING IN DIVERSE
CONTEXTS
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

Chair:
Disc:

DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY


40.11
MODEL SPECIFICATION: METHODS AND
APPLICATIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Suzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State University
Disc:
Adeline Lo
Graeme Blair, UCLA

Papers: Reaching beyond the Waters Edge: Teaching Global


Engagement
Adam Lusk, Rosemont College
Teaching Students to Engage With Evidence: Evaluating
Active Learning Strategies
Steffen Blings, Cornell University
Sarah Maxey, Cornell University
Understanding Civic Engagement: now that I see it I
understand
Sharon Mary Feeney, Dublin Institute of Technology
John W. Hogan, Dublin Institute of Technology

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 273

273

Daily Schedule

Papers: Social Cleavages and Preferences for Redistribution in


China
Xian Huang, Rutgers University
Explaining Villagers Trust in Healthcare Workers in
Rural China
Kerry Ratigan, Amherst College
The State that Betrays the Trust
Natalia Forrat, Stanford University

William E. Hudson, Providence College


Sarah Elizabeth Spengeman, Catholic University of
America
Michael L. Coulter, Grove City College

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Transforming Learning: Teaching Non-traditional


Students
Carolyn Geiser, Colorado Technical University
Normative Power Europe and Perceptions as Cultural
Filters in Civic Studies
Sharon Pardo, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
40.14
EXTRACTIVES IN CONTEXT: COMMUNITIES
AND THE LOCAL POLITICS OF DISTRIBUTION
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Erika S. Weinthal, Duke University
Disc:
Erika S. Weinthal, Duke University
Papers: Subnational Bargaining over Mining Rents: Evidence
from the Argentine Provinces
Paul Alexander Haslam, University of Ottawa
Firm as Governor? Effects of Firms on Governance in
Mozambique, Zambia, and DRC
Jessica Steinberg, Indiana University
Community Organization and Private Distributive
Politics in Peru
Matthew Amengual
Property Rights, Self-Governance, and the Economic
Value of Community Consent
Sinziana Dorobantu, New York University
Kate Odziemkowska, Wharton, Univ. of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
40.15
INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE UNDER
AUTHORITARIAN RULE
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Peter L. Lorentzen, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Joseph Wright, Pennsylvania State University
Papers: Policy Experimentation as a Source of Institutional
Change in China
Jessica C. Teets, Middlebury College
Orion A. Lewis
Elections as Subversive Institutions in Competitive
Authoritarian Regimes
Valerie Bunce
Legitimizing Electoral Autocracies
Aleksandar Matovski, Stanford University
The Origins of Ethnic Orders: Institutional Emergence in
Authoritarian Malaysia
Thomas Pepinsky
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
40.16
MILITARY COUPS, DEMOCRATIC EROSION,
AND POLITICAL INSTABILITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Cynthia McClintock
Disc:
Juan Pablo Luna, Instituto de Ciencia Poltica, PUCChile
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University
Papers: Coups, Attempts, and Rebellions: Instability in Latin
American Politics
Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina,
Greensboro
Populism and Party System Instability: Which Way Do
the Arrows Run?
Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Darin Self, Cornell University

274

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 274

Radicalism and Democratic Backsliding in Latin


America
Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh
Presidential-Election Rules and Democratic Erosion in
Latin America
Cynthia McClintock
Mass Support for Coups d'etats in Latin America and
the Caribbean: 2004-2014
Mitchell A. Seligson, Vanderbilt University
John A. Booth, University of North Texas
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
40.17
THE PERSISTENCE OF CLIENTELISM
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Susan C. Stokes, Yale University
Disc:
Miguel R. Rueda, Emory University
Susan C. Stokes, Yale University
Papers: Transitional Justice and Clientelism
Monika Nalepa, University of Chicago
Milena Ang Collan Granillo, University of Chicago
Party Organization and Linkage Strategies
Daniel Max Kselman, IE Business School; School of
IR
Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
Why Citizens Sustain Clientelism
Simeon C. Nichter, UC San Diego
The Gender Gap in Clientelism: Evidence from
Argentina
Mariela Szwarcberg Daby, Reed College
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
40.18
THE ROLE OF ELECTIONS IN REGIME
TRANSFORMATIONS
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg
Disc:
Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg
Arturas Rozenas, New York University
Papers: Opposition Unity and Cooptation in Presidential
Elections in Sub-Saharan Africa
Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University
Grant T. Buckles, Emory University
Don't Call It a Comeback: Autocratic Successor Parties
and Democratization
Michael K. Miller, George Washington University
Getting Elections Right? Electoral Reform in
Democracies and Autocracies
Carolien Van Ham, University of New South Wales
When Polarization Trumps Virtue: Captured Voters and
Subversion of Democracy
Milan Svolik, Yale University
Freeness and Fairness: Connections between Subnational
and National Elections
Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University
Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Gothenburg
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
40.19
CONTENTION AND REPRESSION IN AFRICA
AND SOUTH AMERICA
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Yu Tao, University of Central Lancashire
Disc:
Chunman Zhang, Johns Hopkins University

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Papers: Anti-Slavery Activism in Mauritania and Social


Movement Theory
Claire Seulgie Lim, Boston University
Avenue of Transgression: Mass Movement & Resource
Subsidies in Egypt and Nigeria
Marcus Walton, Brown University
Police, Politics and Public Security in Brazil
Douglas Block, University of Pittsburgh
Political Violence and Parliament in Nigeria
Kazuhiro Obayashi, Hitotsubashi University
Rentaro Iida
Jonathan Robert Lewis, Graduate School of Social
Sciences, Hitotsubashi University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
40.20
DYNAMICS OF PARTICIPATION AND
ENGAGEMENT
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Jing Vivian Zhan, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Disc:
Veronica Herrera, University of Connecticut
Papers: How Democracy Works: Participatory Institutions and
Well-being in Brazil
Michael Touchton, University of Miami
Brian Wampler, Boise State University
Natasha Borges Sugiyama, University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee
Participatory Budgeting in El Salvador Ten Years Later
Gary Bland
Strategic Ambivalence: Migrant and Refugee
Engagement in Egypt, Morocco & Turkey
Kelsey P. Norman, University of California, Irvine
The Origin of Social Capital: Great Transformation in
Quake-stricken China
Taiyi Sun, Boston University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
40.21
THE NATURE OF INDIAN DEMOCRACY
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Rani D. Mullen, College of William & Mary
Part:
Anirudh Krishna, Duke University
Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
Atul Kohli, Princeton University
Maya Jessica Tudor
Paul Staniland, University of Chicago
Sanjay Ruparelia, New School for Social Research
Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University, Bloomington
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
40.22
CHALLENGES OF POSTCOMMUNIST
GOVERNANCE
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Danielle Nicole Lussier, Grinnell College
Disc:
Besnik Pula, Virginia Tech

DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED


INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
40.23
GREAT TRANSFORMATIONS IN WORLD POL. 1:
PROTEAN AND CONTROL POWER IN
INTERACTION
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: Lucia A. Seybert, American University
Disc:
Jacqueline Best, University of Ottawa
Miles Kahler, American University
Papers: Firms in Firmament: Protean Power and Hydrocarbons
Rawi Abdelal, Harvard University
Protean Power and Financial Markets
Erin Lockwood, Northwestern University
Stephen Craig Nelson, Northwestern University
Terrorism and Protean Power
Barak Mendelsohn, Haverford College
Control and Protean Power in Contemporary Arms
Control
Jennifer L. Erickson, Boston College
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
40.24
ECONOMIC PREFERENCES AND ECONOMIC
VOTING IN EUROPE
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Michael S. Lewis-Beck, university of iowa
Disc:
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, university of iowa
Papers: External Endorsements and Economic Policy Preferences
in the Crisis
Alexander Kuo, Cornell University
Jose Fernandez-Albertos, CSIC
Left-Leaning and Unwilling to Support Redistribution
Florian Stoeckel, European University Institute
Hanna Kleider, University of Georgia, UGA
Pocketbook in Private? Social Pressure and Economic
Policy Evaluations in the EU
Jim M Pripusich, University of Colorado Boulder
The Emergence of Economic Voting in European
Parliamentary Elections
Nathan Henceroth, University of Nevada-Las Vegas
Rafael Oganesyan, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
40.25
THE EVOLUTION OF FINANCIAL
REGULATIONS: INTERNATIONAL AND
COMPARATIVE CONTEXTS
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Christopher Gandrud, City University London
Disc:
Kathryn C. Lavelle, Case Western Reserve University
Abraham Newman, Georgetown University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 275

Daily Schedule

Papers: Public Support for Anti-Corruption Policies: Is More


Spending Acceptable?
Tatiana Kostadinova, Florida International University
Ukraine in Transformation: Trust, Taxes & Governance
Compared to Poland & Russia
Marc P. Berenson, King's College London

The Influence of Party Strategies on Voters Attitudes


Towards Corruption
Albana Shehaj, University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Whos to Blame: Economic Performance & Blame in a
Centralized Political System
Quintin H. Beazer, Florida State University
Ora John Reuter, University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee
The Politics of Corporate Tax Competition in Eastern
Europe
Carissa Tudor Block

275

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Papers: The Political Economy of Implementing Macroprudential


Regulatory Tools
Jeffrey M. Chwieroth, London School of Economics
Christopher Gandrud, City University London
Financial Globalization Policy Diffusion: Adoption of
Basel I
Meredith Wilf, University of Pittsburgh
Making Banks Pay--Extensions of Deposit Insurance
Schemes
Raphael Reinke
The Changing Politics of Regulating Systemically
Important Banks
Andrew Walter, Melbourne School of Government,
University of Melbourne
Do Financial Crises Discipline Future Credit Growth?
Puspa D Amri, Ithaca College
Ming-Ping (Eric) Chiu, Claremont Graduate
University
Greg Richey, California State University San
Bernardio
Thomas D. Willett, Claremont Graduate University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
40.26
THE IMPACT OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC
INSTITUTIONS AND EVENTS
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Joanne Gowa, Princeton University
Disc:
Allison Carnegie, Columbia University
Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University
Papers: Political Economy of Financial Reform
Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania
Witold J. Henisz, University of Pennsylvania
Big Treaties, Small Effects
Joanne Gowa, Princeton University
Raymond Hicks
The Global Consequences of Domestic Regulation
Rebecca Perlman
Partisan Politics in International Financial Rescues
Stephanie J. Rickard, London School of Economics
Mark Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Keeping the Euro at any Cost? Explaining Greek
Preferences for Euro Membership
Elias Dinas, University of Oxford
Ignacio Jurado, University of York
Nikitas Konstantinidis, University of Cambridge
Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
40.27
COMPLIANCE AND ENFORCEMENT
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Jana von Stein, Victoria University of Wellington
Disc:
Jana von Stein, Victoria University of Wellington
Papers: Bargaining over Compliance: Strategic Escalations of
EU Infringement Proceedings
Tobias Hofmann, National University of Singapore
Compliance with Multilateral Treaties: Evidence from
Self-Reporting
Karolina M. Milewicz, University of Oxford
Design of Enforcement: Collective Action & the
Enforcement of International Law
Leslie Johns, University of California, Los Angeles

276

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 276

The Consequences of Membership Suspension from


International Organizations
Inken von Borzyskowski, Florida State University
Felicity Vabulas, University of Chicago, Harris
School of Public Policy Studies
The International Law and Politics of Treaty Drift
Tonya L. Putnam, Columbia University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
40.28
BLURRED LINES IN REPERTOIRES OF
POLITICAL VIOLENCE AND REPRESSION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Anoop K. Sarbahi, University of Minnesota
Disc:
Ore Koren, University of Minnesota
Papers: Food Insecurity and Violence
Ore Koren, University of Minnesota
Alliances and Repression
Alexander Von Hagen-Jamar, Lund University
International Negotiations and the Repression-Dissent
Nexus
Yonatan Lupu, George Washington University
Scott Wolford, University of Texas
Protectors or Predators: Gendarmeries in State
Repression
Meredith Blank, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Organization-Building and Insurgent Military
Effectiveness During Iraq
Alec Worsnop, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
40.29
LEADERS IN THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Henk Erich Goemans, University of Rochester
Disc:
Henk Erich Goemans, University of Rochester
Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: Agency Versus Structure in International Affairs: A New
Empirical Approach
Allan Dafoe, Yale University
Robert F. Trager, UCLA
Andrew Bertoli, University of California, Berkeley
Career Socialization and Leader Violations of Treaty
Commitments
Matthew Fuhrmann, Texas A&M University
Sizing up the Adversary: Leader Attributes and
Reciprocation
Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania
Interests, Institutions, and Foreign Policy Change
Brett Ashley Leeds, Rice University
Michaela Mattes, UC-Berkeley
Leaders, Advisers, and the Political Origins of Elite
Support for War
Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, George Washington
University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
40.30
BEIJING, TAIPEI, TOKYO: EAST ASIAN
SECURITY RELATIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Sheng Ding, Bloomsburg University
Disc:
Christopher P. Twomey, Naval Postgraduate School

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Papers: Back to the Future: Instability of Sino-Japan


Relationship in the 21st Century
Hsiao-chuan Liao, Tamkang University
Struggle for Recognition in the Sino-Japanese Relations
Seunghee OH, Ewha Womans University
Eunbong Choi, Ewha Womans University
Why Underbalancing? Nation Building and Taiwans
Rapprochement toward China
Dean Chen, Ramapo College of New Jersey
Difficult but Necessary: Changing the U.S.-Taiwan
Defense Relationship
Eric Gomez
Prospect Theory and Sino-Japanese Maritime Disputes
Dalei Jie, Peking University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
40.31
DOMESTIC AUDIENCE COSTS
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Alexander Siedschlag, Penn State Harrisburg
Disc:
Kerim Can Kavakli, Sabanci University
Papers: Audience Costs: Why Regime Type Does Not Matter
Olivier Henripin, Loyola University, Chicago
Engaging the Chinese Domestic Audience During
Foreign Policy Crises
Yue Zou
Going Public under Media Pressure
Azusa Katagiri, Stanford University
Learning Audience's Resolve: Endogenous Publicity and
Crisis Bargaining
Cathy Xuanxuan Wu, University of Texas, Austin
Taking Voters Seriously: Electoral Cycles of Audience
Costs
Kiyotaka Yasui, Waseda University
Masaaki Higashijima, Tohoku University
Shin Toyoda, Waseda University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
40.32
THE CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF GOVERNMENTSPONSORED MASS KILLING
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Gary Uzonyi, Duke University
Disc:
Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison

DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES


40.33
PRIMARIES, CANDIDATES, AND BALLOTS:
ELECTORAL COMPETITION IN THE UNITED
STATES
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Lynda W. Powell, University of Rochester

Lynda W. Powell, University of Rochester


Laurel Harbridge, Northwestern University

Papers: Do Congressional Incumbents Benefit From Divisive


Out-Party Primary Elections?
Christopher P. Donnelly, University of California,
Davis
Jordan Kujala
Choice and Competition in Primary Elections
Aaron Scott King, University of North Carolina,
Wilmington
The Concept of a Candidacy
Danielle Thomsen, Syracuse University
Electoral Accountability in 19th Century U.S. House
Elections
Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia
Joel Sievert
How Parties Construct Democracy: Ballot Law Changes
in the US
Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis
Jason M. Roberts, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
40.34
OF AGENTS AND PRINCIPALS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Justin S. Vaughn, Boise State University
Disc:
Justin S. Vaughn, Boise State University
Papers: Structural Reorganization as Personnel Management
Mikael Holmgren, Department of Political Science,
University of Gothenburg
Unwanted Bureaucracy: Congressional Testimony by
Unsympathetic Agency Leadership
Joshua Semat, Pennsylvania State University
Intergovernmental Collaborative Management as a
Congressional Choice
Anthony Michael Bertelli, New York University
Pamela Clouser McCann, University of Southern
California
Political Determinants of Bureaucratic Autonomy: Social
Policymaking in Turkey
Ozsel Beleli, University of Oxford
Principals Tension: Institutions,the Public&the Endless
Education Reform Cycle
Eleanor Schiff, Pennsylvania State University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
40.35
NEW RESEARCH ON THE POLITICS OF
POLICYMAKING PROCESSES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Patricia Strach, University at Albany, SUNY
Disc:
James C. Clinger, Murray State University
Papers: Corporate Political Activity as a Bundle of Goods
Maxwell B. Palmer, Boston University
Benjamin Schneer, Florida State University
Disclosure, Transparency, and Stakeholders in Public
Pension Financial Reporting
Carolyn Abott, Princeton University
Off to the Courts? Or the Agency?: Public Attitudes on
Policy Enforcement
Shana Kushner Gadarian, Syracuse University
Quinn W. Mulroy, Northwestern University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 277

277

Daily Schedule

Papers: Government Mass Killing and Post-Conflict Terrorism


Nazli Avdan, Kansas University
The International Control of Government Mass Violence
Kristin Marie Bakke, University College London
Neil J. Mitchell, University College London
Hannah Smidt
Ethnic Exclusion and Collective Targeting in Civil War
Hanne Fjelde, Uppsala University
Lisa Hultman, Uppsala University
Government-Sponsored Mass Killing as a Commitment
Problem
Gary Uzonyi, Duke University
Military Ethnic Composition and Genocide
Paul Lorenzo Johnson, UC Davis

Disc:

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Which Immigration Policies Advance in Congress?


Jennifer Hayes Clark, University of Houston
Michelle Helene Belco, University of Houston
Savannah Sipole, University of Houston
Beyond Policy Adoption: How Implementation Expands
the Scope of Diffusion
Kelly Branham Smith, Brown University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
40.36
COURTING THE PUBLIC: JUDICIAL REVIEW
AND INDEPENDENCE IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Susanne Schorpp
Disc:
Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
Lee D. Walker, University of North Texas
Papers: The General Will? The Public, Legislative
Oppositions & Judicial Decision-Making
Benjamin Bricker, Southern Illinois University,
Carbondale
Inter-branch Crisis Bargaining in Separation of Powers
Systems
Amanda Driscoll
Political Competition, Regime Type and Judicial
Independence
Brad Epperly, University of South Carolina
Looks Can be Deceiving: Judicial Councils and
Judicial Independence
Karen Bodnaruk Jazayeri
Public Awareness and the Behavior of "Unpopular"
Courts
Jay Krehbiel, Washington University in St. Louis
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND
JURISPRUDENCE
40.37
THE FIRST AMENDMENT IN A DIVERSE AGE
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: H. N. Hirsch, Oberlin College
Part:
Donald A. Downs, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Rogers M. Smith
Wayne Batchis, University of Delaware
Timothy Kuhner, Georgia State University
Samantha Harris, Foundation for Individual Rights in
Education
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
40.38
POLARIZATION AND (DE)CENTRALIZATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism

Chair:
Disc:

Saundra K. Schneider, Michigan State University


John Barry Ryan, Stony Brook University
Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University

Papers: Governors, Hyper-Partisanship, and Shifting Alignments


in the Federal System
Jennifer M. Jensen, Lehigh University
Offers and Throffers: The New Politics of Education
Policy
Ursula Hackett, University of Oxford
Polarization and Intergovernmental Health Policy in the
U.S. and Australia
Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University

278

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 278

Unpopular Policy, Devolution and American Federalism


in an Age of Polarization
Joshua Meyer-Gutbrod
A Paradox of Externalities in Federal Systems
Sanford C. Gordon, New York University
Dimitri Landa, NYU
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
40.39
GOVERNORS IN THE AMERICAN STATES
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Chair: Richard F. Winters, Dartmouth College
Disc:
Rene J. Johnson, Rhodes College
Nelson C. Dometrius, Texas Tech University
Papers: Bring on the Sunshine: The Effect of Legislative Term
Limits on Executive Success
Samantha Guthrie, American University
Giving to Governors: How Region and Competition
Impact Contributions
Brent D. Boyea, University of Texas at Arlington
Gubernatorial Executive Orders: A Focus on Function
Over Form
William Harder, American University
Polarization and Executive Policymaking: Evidence from
the American States
Michael Barber, Brigham Young University
Alexander Bolton, Duke University
Sharece Thrower, Vanderbilt University
News Coverage of the 2013 Virginia Governors Race
vs Presidential Election News
S. Robert Lichter, George Mason University
Stephen J. Farnsworth, University of Mary
Washington
DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
40.40
NEIGHBORHOOD-LEVEL POLITICAL
DYNAMICS
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS

Chair:
Disc:

Melanie Marie Bowers, Rutgers University, Camden


Callum Ingram, DePauw University

Papers: Amplifying Collaboration: Participatory Budgeting and


Community Organizations
Carolina Johnson, University of Washington
Neighborhood Effects on Electoral Behavior in a Large
City: Toronto, 1997-2014
Zack Taylor, Western University
Daniel Silver
Jan Doering, University of Toronto
Promise or Peril? Neighborhood Capacities for Urban
Regeneration
Ellen Shiau, California State University, Los Angeles
Juliet Ann Musso, University of Southern California
Jefferey M. Sellers
The Defended Neighborhood: How Attitudes towards
Immigrants Change over Time
Sjoerdje Charlotte van Heerden, University of
Amsterdam
There Goes the Neighborhood? Neighborhood
Institutions and Parolee Integration
Michael C. Craw, University of Arkansas at Little
Rock

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH


40.41
INNOVATIONS IN ASSESSING GENDER GAPS
AND ATTITUDES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Chair:
Disc:

Nicholas Winter, University of Virginia


Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Lindsey Cormack, Stevens Institute of Technology

Papers: Evaluating the Impact of Gender Quotas on Attitudes


Towards Female Politicians
Danielle M. Higgins, American University
Gendered Media Leads to Gendered Attitudes: Evidence
from the UK and the US
Shan-Jan Sarah Liu, Pennsylvania State University
Corruption and Gendered Perceptions of Elites in Spain
and Portugal
Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer, Rice University
Tnia Verge, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Nina Wiesehomeier, IE University
Using Non-binary Measures of Gender to Study Sex
Gaps in Party Choice
Kristi Winters, GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the
Social Sciences
Peter Allen, Queen Mary University of London
David John Cutts, University of Bath
Can Gender Identity Explain Gaps Between Women and
Men in Socio-tropic Anxiety?
Lena Wangnerud, University of Gothenburg
Maria Solevid, University of Gothenburg
Monika Djerf-Pierre, University of Gothenburg
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
40.42
WOMENS PARTIES AROUND THE WORLD:
ORIGINS, SUBSTANCE AND IMPACT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 35: POLITICAL
ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES

Chair:
Disc:

Ana Catalano Weeks, Harvard University


Karen Beckwith, Case Western Reserve University

Papers: Do Womens Parties Improve the Lot of Women?


Impact, Strategy and System
Kimberly B. Cowell-Meyers, American University
Working for Women? The Emergence and Impact of the
Womens Equality Party
Elizabeth J. Evans, University of Bristol
Meryl Kenny, University of Edinburgh
How Inclusive is the Feminist Initiative?
Elin Bjarnegard, Uppsala University
Lenita Freidenvall, Stockholm University
Challenges and New Strategies of the Womens Local
Party in Japan
Ki-Young Shin, Ochanomizu University

DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS


40.44
MEDIA PRIMING OF RACIST SENTIMENTS
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Stephen Maynard Caliendo, North Central College
Disc:
Carolina Ferrerosa-Young, Columbia University
Stephen Maynard Caliendo, North Central College
Papers: Priming Anti-Latino Prejudice in Contemporary Political
Campaigns
Tyler Thomas Reny, University of California Los
Angeles
Ali A. Valenzuela, Princeton University
Loren Collingwood, UC Riverside
Media Coverage, Media Source, and Blacks Stereotypes
of Latinos
D. Xavier Medina Vidal, Virginia Tech
Betina Cutaia Wilkinson, Wake Forest University
The Changing Norms of Racial Political Rhetoric and
the End of Racial Priming
Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Fabian Guy Neuner, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
L. Matthew Vandenbroek, University of Texas, Austin
Who are They? An Examination of Identities in Media
Coverage of Immigration
Emily Farris, Texas Christian University
Heather Silber Mohamed, Clark University
What Candidates Say & What is Reported: Bias in
Coverage of Minority Candidates
Hans J.G. Hassell, Cornell College
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
40.45
RACIAL, ETHNIC, AND RELIGIOUS DIVISIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 415
Chair: Dilara Kadriye Uskup
Disc:
Dilara Kadriye Uskup
Kellen J. Gracey, University of Iowa
Papers: Measuring American Religious Diversity and Its
Association with Out-group Threat
Betsy L. Cooper, Public Religion Research Institute
Daniel A. Cox, Public Religion Research Institute
Robert P Jones, Public Religion Research Institute
Rachel Lienesch, Public Religion Research Institute
Racialized Churches: How Race Changes the Impact of
Church Congregations
Meyer Levy, University of Notre Dame
The Effect of Co-Ethnic Churches on Latino & Asian
American Political Attitudes
Alvaro Jose Corral, University of Texas at Austin
Muslim-American Portrayals in the Media and Effects
on Mass Attitudes
Nazita Lajevardi, UCSD
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
40.46
THE GEOGRAPHY OF PARTY POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Antoine Yoshinaka, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Disc:
David A. Hopkins, Boston College
Antoine Yoshinaka, University at Buffalo, SUNY

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 279

279

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS


40.43
CONTESTED TRANSFORMATION: RACE
GENDER & POLITICAL LEADERSHIP IN 21ST
CENTURY USA
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Wendy G. Smooth, The Ohio State University
Part:
Susan J. Carroll, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
John Armando Garcia, University of Michigan
Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California
Carol Hardy-Fanta, University of Massachusetts Boston

Christine Marie Sierra, University of New Mexico


Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame
Pei-te Lien, University of California Santa Barbara

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Papers: Decentralization as Party Electoral Strategy


Kathryn Wainfan, UCLA
The Nationalization of State Politics: Polarization and
Electoral Bias
Jesse T. Richman, Old Dominion University
Joshua N. Zingher, Old Dominion University
The Nationalization of U.S. Political Parties, 1932-2014
Daniel J. Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania
Eric Schickler, University of California, Berkeley
The Political Geography of Independent Expenditures in
Presidential Nominations
Andrew J. Dowdle, University of Arkansas,
Fayetteville
Joshua L. Mitchell, University of Arkansas,
Fayetteville
Karen Denice Sebold, University of Arkansas,
Fayetteville
Nationalization, Sectional Insurgency, and Volatility:
Canada as a Critical Case
Richard Johnston, University of British Columbia
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
40.47
THE CAUSES AND POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES
OF PARTIES' POLICY IMAGES
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Randolph T. Stevenson, Rice University
Disc:
Randolph T. Stevenson, Rice University
Papers: Beyond Manifestos: How Voters infer Policy Positions
based on Party Interactions
James Adams, University of California, Davis
Simon Weschle, Carlos III-Juan March Institute of
Social Sciences (IC3JM)
Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin
Follow the (Foreign) Leader
Tobias Friedrich Karl Boehmelt, University of Essex
Lawrence Ezrow, University of Essex
Roni Lehrer
Hugh Ward, University of Essex
How Election Campaigns affect Voter Perceptions of
Party Positions
Zeynep Somer-Topcu, University of Texas at Austin
Margit Tavits, Washington University in St. Louis
Pathologies of the Politically Engaged Citizen
David Fortunato, University of California, Merced
Matthew V. Hibbing, University of California,
Merced
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
40.48
TURNOUT, POLITICAL PARTICIPATION, AND
ENGAGEMENT
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Logan Dancey, Wesleyan University
Disc:
Josh Carpenter, Oriel College, Oxford University
Logan Dancey, Wesleyan University
Papers: Timing the Habit: Voter Registration and Turnout in the
American States
Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida
Enrijeta Shino, University of Florida
How Young is too Young? Voting at 16 and Political
Participation
Laura Bronner, Department of Government, LSE
David Ifkovits, Harvard University, Department of
Government

280

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 280

Immigrant Turnout and the Political Context of Origin


and Destination
Eline A. de Rooij, Simon Fraser University
Network Discord and Political Engagement: Dynamic
Patterns among Teens
Jennifer Fitzgerald
Erik Amn, rebro University
Ali Abdelzadeh
Altruistic Motivation for Election Participation: A
Synchronic Online Experiment
Akitaka Matsuo, Nuffield Centre for Experimental
Social Sciences
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
40.49
IT'S A MATTER OF TRUST: INSTITUTIONAL
AND ATTITUDINAL EFFECTS ON TRUST
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Joseph E. Uscinski, University of Miami
Disc:
Cherie Maestas, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Papers: Can Involvement in Decision-Making Procedures Foster
Political Trust?
Hannah Werner, University of Leuven
Did Rapid Modernization Destroy Social Trust in China?
H. Christoph Steinhardt, The Chinese University of
Hong Kong
Jan Delhey, University of Magdeburg
Intrastate Violence, Trust, and Tolerance: Cross-national
Evidence
Sule Yaylaci, University of British Columbia
The Effect of Direct Democracy on Political Trust. A
Belgian Panel Study
Sofie Marien, University of Leuven
Political Lie Detection
Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
40.50
GENDER AND POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Room: PCC, 112-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Chair:
Disc:

Kelly Dittmar, Rutgers University-Camden


Heather L. Ondercin, University of Mississippi

Papers: Candidate Rhetoric and The Gender Gap in American


Presidential Campaigns
Marcia Neille Beyer, The University of Houston
Gender Stereotyping in New Politics: Old Traits for
New Parties?
Monica Ferrin
Marta Fraile, CSIC
Gema M. Garcia Albacete, Carlos III-Juan March
Institute of Social Sciences (IC3JM)
How Powerful a Presence? Women as Sources in
Television News
Pamela Johnston Conover, University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill
Kelsey Shoub, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Amy Sentementes, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Leah Christiani, University of North Carolina Chapel
Hill

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

The Twitter Revolution: Will Girls Be Allowed?


Phillip J. Ardoin, Appalachian State University
Renee Gannon Scherlen, Appalachian State
University
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
40.51
CLIMATE ACTION AT STATE AND LOCAL
LEVELS
Room: Marriott, Room 407
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

Chair:
Disc:

Sara Hughes, University of Toronto


Elizabeth Ann Albright, Duke University

Papers: Climate Policy Resilience in the Canadian Provinces:


The Case of Carbon Pricing
David Hubert Houle, University of Michigan
Explaining Patterns of Local Government Climate
Adaptation
Derek Kauneckis, Voinovich School of Leadership
and Public Affairs
Sustainable Transformations: Using Density Bonusing to
Meet Local Climate Goals
Elizabeth Schwartz, University of British Columbia
The Effects of Local Pollution Regulation on
Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Claire Brunel, American University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
POLITICS
40.52
AUTHORS/CRITICS ROUNDTABLE: INTERNET
GOVERNANCE RESEARCH METHODS
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Part:
Nanette S. Levinson, American University-SIS
Derrick L. Cogburn, American University
Irene S. Wu
Kenneth S. Rogerson, Duke University
Elizabeth (Betty) C. Hanson, University of Connecticut
J.P. Singh, George Mason University
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
40.53
HONOR, EXCELLENCE, AND THE RELATIVITY
OF VALUES
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Cyrus Ernesto Zirakzadeh, University of Connecticut
Disc:
Donald D.A. Schaefer, Georgia State University
Varad Mehta

DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE


40.54
NEW GLOBAL POLITICS?:
INTERNATIONALIZING THE CAUCUS FOR A
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Chair: Susan Lee Kang, CUNY- John Jay College
Disc:
Isaac Kamola, Trinity College
Laura E Sjoberg

DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS


40.55
MODERNIST INTERNATIONALISMS AND NEW
WORLD ORDERS
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Chair: Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
Jeffrey W. Legro
Papers: Toward a Typology of Modernist Internationalisms
Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University
G. John Ikenberry, Princeton University
Internationalist Engineers: Industrial Standard-Setting,
1895-2015
Craig N. Murphy, Wellesley College
Internationalism in the Global Commons
Elizabeth Ann Mendenhall
Power and Partnership: The Shifting Foundations of the
Western Liberal Order
Peter Trubowitz, London School of Economics
Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam
The State Strikes Back: IOs as Impediments to Global
Governance
Dane K. Imerman, Denison University
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
40.56
CONSTITUTION MAKING AND TRANSITIONAL
JUSTICE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Geoff Dancy, Tulane University
Disc:
Geoff Dancy, Tulane University
Papers: Setting Rules of how to Make the Rules: A Crucial
Phase in Constitution-Making
Tereza Jermanova, University of Warwick
Do Truth Commissions Contribute to Democratic
Governance?
Oskar N.T. Thoms, Princeton University
Mass Justice: Why It Consolidates Both Democratic and
Authoritarian Transitions
Anu Chakravarty
Historical Memory of State Repression and the Tunisian
Democratic Transition
Sarah Weirich, Rutgers University
How Do Human Rights Trials Deter Future Violence? the South Korean Experience
Hae Won Lee, Boston University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
40.57
HUMAN RIGHTS AND FOREIGN POLICY
Room: PCC, 104-B

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 281

281

Daily Schedule

Papers: "Arrange your Face": Honor and Affect in 'Wolf Hall'


Smita A. Rahman, DePauw University
Achebes Heroditean Inquiry or His Non-relative
Defense of Relativism
Kenneth DeLuca, Hampden-Sydney College
Narrative and Social Class under Italian Fascism
Chiara Ferrari, City University of New York
One Hesitates to Call Them Living: What Remains of
the Human in Giorgio Agamben
William Stahl

Papers: Changing the Discipline and the World: Reflections on


Cross-Field Collaboration
Kevin Funk, University of Florida
To Struggle for a Better World: Radical Scholarship in
the Anthropocene
Mauro J. Caraccioli, Virginia Tech
State as Exception: An Alternative LGBTI Politics and
Alternatives to the State
Michael J. Bosia, St. Michael's College
Activist Scholarship, Out of Place?
Meredith L. Weiss, University at Albany, SUNY
APSA and Justice in Palestine: Building a Discipline,
Expanding a Struggle
C. Heike Schotten, University of Massachusetts
Boston

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Chair: Benjamin McKean, Ohio State University


Papers: Doubling Down on Human Rights or Witnessing the
Return to Security Politics
Rhonda L. Callaway, Sam Houston State University
Julie Harrelson-Stephens, Stephen F. Austin State
University
Highlighting Human Rights: Human Rights Frames And
Support for Foreign Policy
Michelle Giacobbe Allendoerfer, George Washington
University
Naming and Shaming and the Presence of Non-State
Perpetrators
Melissa Martinez, University of North Texas
Naming and Sometimes Shaming: US Presidential
Attention to Human Rights Problems
Roger P. Rose, University of Minnesota, Morris
Nathan Andrew Bean, University of Minnesota
Morris
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
40.58
ETHNIC IDENTIFICATION IN SOCIAL
CONTEXT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Chair: Matthew Cebul, Yale University
Disc:
Deborah Yashar, Princeton University
Papers: The Undoing of Multsectarian Accommodation in Syria
Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago
An Interactional Approach to Ethnic Civil Wars
Kanchan Chandra, New York University
Provincializing ethnicity: networks and ascriptive
identity in violent conflict
Kevin Mazur, Princeton University
Post-Ottoman Nation-Building Policies: Legacy or
Geostrategic Choice?
Harris Mylonas, George Washington University
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
40.59
POLITICAL NETWORKS: ESTIMATION,
MEASUREMENT AND INFERENCE
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Jacob M. Montgomery, Washington University in St.
Louis
Disc:
Lauren Ratliff
Michelle Torres, Washington University in St. Louis
Papers: Ethnic Networks
Jennifer M. Larson
Janet I. Lewis, U.S. Naval Academy
Partner Switching in Coevolving Networks: Evidences
from Trade Negotiations.
Huan-Kai Tseng, George Washington University
Hsuan-Wei Lee, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Social Networks and the Political Salience of Ethnicity
Nick Eubank, Stanford GSB
The Political Significance of Social Penumbra
Andrew Gelman, Columbia University
Yotam Margalit, Tel Aviv University
U.S. Defense Spending and the Weapons Caucus
Austin Knuppe, Ohio State University
Andrew S Rosenberg, Ohio State University
William Minozzi, Ohio State University

282

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 282

DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH


40.60
EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS IN VOTER
BEHAVIOR IN AFRICA
Room: Marriott, Room 406
Chair: Melina Raquel Platas Izama, NYU Abu Dhabi
Disc:
Gwyneth McClendon, Harvard University
Papers: A Market Equilibrium Approach to Reduce the
Incidence of Vote-Buying
Horacio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard University
Benjamin Marx, MIT Economics
Christopher Blattman, Harris School of Public Policy
Meet the Candidates: Information and Accountability in
Ugandan Elections
Pia Raffler, Yale University
Melina Raquel Platas Izama, NYU Abu Dhabi
Domestic Election Observers and Electoral Fraud in
Malawis 2014 Elections
Daniel N. Posner, University of California, Los
Angeles
George Ofosu
Voting for Status: Evidence from Tanzania
Lily L. Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Election Integrity and the Responsiveness of Legislators
in Sub-Saharan Africa
George Ofosu
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
40.61
VARIETIES OF CITIZENSHIP: INTERNATIONAL
MIGRATION AND POLITICAL OUTCOMES
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Gallya Lahav, Stony Brook University
Disc:
Gerasimos Tsourapas, University of Birmingham
Papers: The Casualization of Citizenship
Elizabeth F. Cohen, Syracuse University
Citizens of the Market: The Political Effects of HighMobility Migration
Ruxandra Paul, Amherst College
Transnational Candidate Selection among Emigrants for
Homeland Elections
Eva Ostergaard-Nielsen
Succesful Integration? Labor Market Integration
Programs and Job Quality
Romana Careja, University of Southern Denmark
DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND POLITICS
40.62
IDEATIONAL POLITICS: NEW DIRECTIONS IN
POLITICS AND EPISTEMOLOGY
Room: Marriott, Room 310
Chair: Helene E. Landemore
Disc:
William J Berger, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Papers: Knowledge Brokerage in Theory & Practice: A Case
Study
Ashley Lenihan, London School of Economics
Premises in Political Belief Systems
Morgan Marietta, University of Massachusetts Lowell
David C. Barker, California State University,
Sacramento
Studying Politicians' Theories of Democracy: Towards
Historical Comparison
Jens Borchert, University of Frankfurt

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Why We Fight? The Wests Quest for Legitimacy


Uriel Abulof, Princeton University, Tel-Aviv
University
DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY
40.63
WEALTHY DONORS, ORGANIZED INTERESTS,
AND AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Kay Lehman Schlozman, Boston College
Disc:
Pepper D. Culpepper, University of Oxford
Papers: The Wealth Elasticity of Political Contributions by the
Forbes 400
Adam Bonica
Howard Rosenthal, New York University
Donor Consortia on the Left and Right
Alexander Warren Hertel-Fernandez, Harvard
University
Theda Skocpol
Jason Aries Sclar
Interest Groups on the Inside: Unions and the Funding
of Public Pensions
Sarah F. Anzia, University of California, Berkeley
Terry M. Moe, Stanford University
Are Large American Corporations Politically Moderate?
Jake M Grumbach, UC Berkeley
Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley
Unequal Incomes, Ideology and Gridlock
John Voorheis, University of Oregon
Nolan McCarty, Princeton University
Boris Shor, Georgetown University
Related Groups
41.1
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: FREEDOM OF RELIGION AND
SPEECH IN THE AMERICAN SOCIAL COMPACT
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: Jason R. Jividen, Saint Vincent College
Disc:
Phillip Munoz, University of Notre Dame
Ralph C. Hancock, Brigham Young University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 283

283

Daily Schedule

Papers: Social Compact, Religious Toleration, and the American


Founding
Thomas Tacoma, Hillsdale College
The Golden Thread of Religious Liberty in the Thought
of Locke
Kevin Vance, University of Notre Dame
Holmes and the Abrams Dissent: The Modernization of
Free Speech Jurisdiction
Kevin J. Burns, Baylor University
Constructing the First Amendment: Freedom of Speech,
the Alien and Sedition Acts, and the Partisan Press
Robert E Ross, Utah State University
41.2
COMMITTEE FOR POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY:
MIGRANTS REPRESENTATION: PARTIES,
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS AND MOBILIZATION
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Luis Ramiro, University of Leicester
Disc:
Laura Morales, University of Leicester

Papers: Mobilization, Counter-Mobilization, and Access to


Power
Maria Sobolewska, University of Manchester
Laura Morales, University of Leicester
Marc van de Wardt, University of Amsterdam
Steven Van Hauwaert, Sciences-Po Paris
Patrick English, University of Manchester
Descriptive Representation of Constituency Interests
Lucas Geese
Constanza Sanhueza Petrarca, Goteborg University
Matching Candidate Nomination, Ethnic Voting, and
Ethnic Representation
Constanza Sanhueza Petrarca, Goteborg University
Lucas Geese
Party Procedures and the Representation of Immigrant
Origin Citizens
Luis Ramiro, University of Leicester
Angeliki Konstantinidou, University of Leicester
Daniela Vintila, University of Leicester
41.3
CRITICAL POLICY STUDIES: EMOTIONS AND
DISCOURSE IN PUBLIC POLICY
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Jennifer Dodge, SUNY, University at Albany
Papers: Identity and Affect in Public Policy Discourse
Hugh T. Miller, Florida Atlantic University
The Cultural Underpinnings of Nuclear Waste
Management Discourses
Suzanne Waldman, Carleton University
Food Fight: Competing Constructions of Problems and
Populations
William Sisk, SUNY Albany
Jennifer Dodge, SUNY, University at Albany
Social Entrepreneurship v. Social Policymaking:
Capacity, Efficiency, Empathy
Gordon E. Shockley, Arizona State University
Peter M. Frank, Wingate University
41.4
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: ELECTION 2016:
ANALYSIS AND PREDICTIONS
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: Olivia O'Donnell, Plattsburgh State University
Part:
Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America
Richard McGrath Skinner, Sunlight Foundation
Geoffrey Vaden Skelley, University of Virginia
Mark J. Rozell, George Mason University
41.5
FEDERALIST SOCIETY FOR LAW AND
POLITICS: ROUNDTABLE: CONGRESS,
DELEGATION, AND THE ADMINISTRATIVE
STATE
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Michael M. Uhlmann, Claremont Graduate University
Part:
Lee Drutman, New America
Gordon Lloyd, Pepperdine University
Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los
Angeles
Neomi Rao, George Mason University
41.6
SLOVENIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE
ASSOCIATION: CHALLENGES FOR POLITICAL
LEADERS IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: Miro Hacek, University of Ljubljana
Papers: Understanding Local Political Leadership in PostCommunist Countries
Simona Kukovic, Faculty of Social Sciences

Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Political Leadership Imagined? Explaining Decision


Making through Spirituality
Peter Rozic, Currently none
Damjan Ristic, University of Ljubljana
Political Leadership in Slovenia after the EU Accession
Miro Hacek, University of Ljubljana

Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:30 PM


Division Panels
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
42.1
GLOBAL ASSESSMENT POWER MINICONFERENCE
Room: Loews, Commonwealth D
Disc:
Judith Kelley, Duke University
Part:
Papers: From Blacklists to Bonds Yields
Julia C. Morse, Princeton University
Top Ten: Do State Failure and Fragility Indicators
Affect Aid?
Melissa M. Lee, Princeton University
Aila M. Matanock, University of California-Berkeley
The Donor Scramble: Aid Transparency and the Power
of Global Rankings
Catherine Weaver, University of Texas, Austin
The Politics of International Testing
Phillip Y. Lipscy, Stanford University
Rie Kijima
Freedom Houses Scarlet Letter
Jordan Roberts, Duke University
Juan Fernando Tellez, Duke University
(Ac)Counting the Steps from Local Experiments to
Global Climate Governance
David Jeremy Gordon, University of Ottawa
Steven F. Bernstein, University of Toronto
Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto
Transparency, Accountability and Assessment
James R. Hollyer, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University
James Raymond Vreeland, Georgetown University
James Hodgdon Bisbee, NYU
Seeing the Change: Organizational Responses to Aid
Flow Transparency Assessment
Dan Honig, Johns Hopkins University
Keeping up with Georgians: Manipulation of Investment
Competitiveness Indexes
Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University
Nathan M. Jensen, University of Texas at Austin
The Assessment Power of the Ease of Doing Business
index
Rushabh doshi
Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University
Judith Kelley, Duke University
Do Subnational Indices Improve Governance? Evidence
from a Vietnamese Experiment
Anh Le, Duke University
Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University
Public Scrutiny and Shaming in the ILO: Effectiveness
without Exposure
Faradj Koliev
Jonas Tallberg
Thomas Sommerer, Stockholm University

284

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 284

The Financial Consequences of Evaluating International


Organizations
Ranjit Lall
When Do Performance Assessments Influence Policy
Behavior?
Takaaki Masaki, The College of William and Mary
Bradley C. Parks, College of William and Mary
The Power of Rank: PISA, Civil Society and
Governance of Education
Nancy Green Saraisky
Angelina Fisher
The Concept of Global Assessment Power
Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University
Judith Kelley, Duke University
Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University
Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM


Theme Panels
43.1
BREAKING NEWS: RAGE AGAINST THE
MACHINE: POPULIST POLITICS IN THE U.S.,
EUROPE, AND LATIN AMERICA
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University
Part:
Justin Gest, George Mason University
David Art, Tufts University
Wendy M. Rahn, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Cynthia McClintock
Pippa Pippa Norris, Harvard University
Ronald Franklin Inglehart, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
43.2
JUDICIAL NETWORKS
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Matthew C. Ingram, University at Albany, SUNY
Disc:
Ezequiel Alejo Gonzalez Ocantos
Papers: Judicial Networks and the Informal Dimension of
Judicial Politics
Bjoern Dressel
Raul Alberto Sanchez Urribarri, La Trobe University
Alexander Stroh, University of Bayreuth
Judicial Networks as Influence Mechanisms in the
European Rule of Law Promotion
Daniela Piana
Collaborators Come and Go: A Dynamic Model of
Interest Group Networks
Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University
Dino P. Christenson, Boston University
Informal Judicial Politics in Asia: Insights from the
Philippines
Bjoern Dressel
Meritocracy or Connections? Clientele Networks in the
Mexican Federal Judiciary
Andrea Pozas-Loyo, UNAM-IIJ
Julio Rios-Figueroa, CIDE
43.3
TRANSFORMING MARRIAGE AND RELIGION
IN AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: PCC, 114
Co-sponsored by American Political Thought

Chair:
Disc:

Paul O. Carrese, U.S. Air Force Academy


Lauren K. Hall, Rochester Institute of Technology
James R. Stoner, Louisiana State University

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: The Future of Marriage and Religious Freedom after


Obergefell
Ryan T Anderson
Obergefell, Public Reason, & Anti-Gay Pride
Sotirios A. Barber, University of Notre Dame
Just Married: Same-Sex Couples, Monogamy, and the
Future of Marriage
Stephen Macedo, Princeton University
APSA Events
44.1
APSR MEET THE EDITORS
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Barbara Walthall, APSA
Part:
Thomas Knig, University of Mannheim
Kenneth R. Benoit
Ingo Rohlfing, University of Bremen
Leigh K. Jenco, London School of Economics
Sabine C. Carey, University of Mannheim
Benjamin E Lauderdale, London School of Economics
44.2
ASSOCIATION LEADERS MEETING
Room: PCC, 101-A
44.3
HOW TO WRITE ABOUT YOUR RESEARCH
FOR THE MONKEY CAGE
Room: PCC, 202-A
Chair: John M. Sides, George Washington University
Part:
Henry Farrell, George Washington University
Laura Seay, Colby College
Marc Lynch, George Washington University
Kim Yi Dionne, Smith College
44.4
MOVING FORWARD ON IMPROVING THE
STATUS OF COMMUNITY COLLEGES IN THE
PROFESSION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Sara Parker, Chabot College
Part:
Elsa Dias, Pikes Peak Community College
Erin E. Richards, Cascadia College
Cammy Shay, Houston Community College-Southeast
Tressa E. Tabares, American River College
Andrea Y. Simpson, University of Richmond
44.5
TO HELL AND BACK: BLACK POLITICAL
SCIENTISTS, DISPOSSESSION, DISABILITY, AND
THE QUOTIDIAN VIOLENCE OF ACADEMIC
LIFE
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Christina M. Greer, Fordham University
Melanye Tarea Price, Rutgers University
Part:
Nikol G. Alexander-Floyd, Rutgers University
Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University
Alexandra Moffett-Bateau, CUNY-John Jay College
Valeria Sinclair-Chapman, Purdue University
Tiffany J. Willoughby-Herard, University of California,
Irvine
Division Panels

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


45.2
GUNS AND DEMOCRATIC CITIZENSHIP
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Jack Knight, Duke University
Disc:
Jack Knight, Duke University
Papers: Gun Rights and the Rule of Law
Firmin DeBrabander, Maryland Institute College of
Art
Stand Your Ground? Guns, Gender, and Democratic
Citizenship
Susan P. Liebell, Saint Joseph's University
Gun Rights and Mental Illness: a Capacity Based
Approach
Heather Pincock, Kennesaw State University
Gender and Public Anger in the US Gun Control Debate
Holloway Sparks, Emory University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
45.3
MARKETS AND ECONOMIES
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Char Roone Miller, George Mason University
Disc:
Char Roone Miller, George Mason University
Papers: A Turn to Risk? On the Coupling of Risk and Profit
from Smith to Knight
Roni Hirsch, University of California, Los Angeles
Liberal Economics and the Value of Debt
Chad Lavin, University at Buffalo
Markets and Sacrifice: Hegelian Rejoinders
Michael Feola, Lafayette College
Protecting Lockean Freedom From Market Excess
Steven Kelts, Princeton University
Montesquieu and Rousseau on the Possibility of a Large
and Commercial Republic
Genevieve Rousseliere, University of WisconsinMadison
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
45.4
GENDER, THE FAMILY, AND FEMINIST
POLITICAL THEORY
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Megan Gallagher, Brown University
Disc:
Lena K. Zuckerwise, Simmons College
Papers: Where Should Feminist Theory Be Going?
Kathy E. Ferguson, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Substantive Relational Autonomy as Liberal Political
Autonomy
Aberdeen Berry
Commodification of Reproduction: The Case for
Surrogate Motherhood
Naomi Scheinerman

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:


HISTORICAL APPROACHES
45.1
RE-IMAGINING THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL IN
2016
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: David Johnston, Columbia University
Disc:
Jacob T. Levy, McGill University

Machiavellis Virtuous Princes


Michelle Tolman Clarke
Insurance and the Language of Risk of Early Modern
Political Thought
Emily Nacol, Vanderbilt University
Persuasion at any Price? Strategies of Scriptural
Argument in Hobbes Leviathan
Alison McQueen, Stanford University

Papers: Ibn al-Muqaffas Prayer for Caliphal Absolutism.


Jennifer Anne London, Association for Analytic
Learning About Islam and Muslim Societies

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 285

285

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Religious Right v. Secular Transformations: The Haredi


War on Women in Israel
Judith Lynn Failer, Indiana University, Bloomington
Religion, Culture, and Childrens Rights
Samantha Godwin
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
45.5
PUTTING THE POLITICAL BACK INTO
POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY: FIVE NEW WORKS
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Melissa A. Schwartzberg, New York University
Part:
Elisabeth H. Ellis, University of Otago
John N. Medearis, University of California, Riverside
Ian Shapiro, Yale University
Marc Stears, University of Oxford
Jeremy Waldron, New York University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
45.6
WHAT CAN POLITICAL THEORY TELL US
ABOUT ELECTIONS?
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Ryan Phillips, Connecticut College
Disc:
Sean W.D. Gray, Harvard University
Papers: The Ethics of Rational Choice and the Benefits of
Voting
Eliezer S. Poupko, University of Texas at Austin
A Life Plan-based Theory of Voting Rights
Kim Angell, University of Oslo
Competition and Excellence in Representative
Democracy
Syed Shimail Reza, Harvard University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
45.7
THE POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY OF POVERTY
AND INEQUALITY
Room: Marriott, Room 408
Chair: Hakeem Jerome Jefferson, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Disc:
Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University

Thad Dunning, University of California, Berkeley


Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg
Daniel N. Posner, University of California, Los Angeles
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
45.9
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Amy Semet, Princeton University
Disc:
Amy Semet, Princeton University
Papers: All Sins are Not Created Equal: Citizens Preferences
over Corruption Modalities
Lucy E. S. Martin, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Corruption and Career Advancement: Do Promotions
Reduce Corruption in China?
Xu Xu, Penn State University
Political Connections and Distributive Politics: Evidence
from Farm Subsidies
Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
Andrew Healy
Gabor Simonovits, Rajk Laszlo College for Advanced
Studies
The Impact of Social Accountability on Corruption and
Service Delivery
Nathan Fiala
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
45.10
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: FED POWER BY
LAWRENCE JACOBS AND DESMOND KING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Adam Sheingate, Johns Hopkins University
Part:
Sarah Binder, GWU / Brookings Institution
J. Lawrence Broz, University of California, San Diego
Pepper D. Culpepper, University of Oxford
Robert C. Lieberman, Johns Hopkins University
Margaret Weir, Brown University
Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
Desmond King
James A. Morone, Brown University

Papers: Economic Inequality, Racialized Deservingness, and


Selective Solidarity
Gabriele Magni, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Employment Status and Support for Wartime Violence:
Evidence from the Iraq War
Andrew C Shaver, Princeton University
Household Debt and the Politics of Personal
Responsibility
Tess Wise, Harvard University
Poor students in rich schools: affluent environments and
political participation
Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University
Adam Thal, Princeton University
Tanika Raychaudhuri, Princeton University
Poverty, Anxiety, and the Gap between Good Intentions
and Political Action
Elaine Denny, UCSD

DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY


45.11
RACE, CITIZENSHIP, AND AMERICAN
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Benjamin Marquez, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Disc:
Quinn W. Mulroy, Northwestern University

DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY


45.8
MAKING POLITICS WORK FOR ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT, NOT AGAINST IT
Room: PCC, 103-C
Part:
Stuti Khemani, The World Bank
Frederico Finan, University of California, Berkeley
Melani Cammett, Harvard University

DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY


45.12
ADVANCES IN TIME SERIES AND DYNAMIC
MODELING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Jonathan N. Katz, California Institute of Technology
Disc:
Matthew Lebo, Stony Brook University
Jong Hee Park, Seoul National University

286

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 286

Papers: Creating Black Democrats: The Role of the Great


Migration in Black Partisanship
Keneshia N. Grant, Howard University
Racial Orders and Interactive Political Development
Debra Thompson, Northwestern University
Re-imagining the arechetypical U.S. immigrant
Anna O. Law, CUNY Brooklyn College
Endowed with the Same Right and Claim: American
Indian Political Activism
Laura E. Evans, University of Washington

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: Exploring the Dynamics of Latent Variable Models


Kevin Reuning, Pennsylvania State University
Michael Kenwick, Pennsylvania State University
Christopher J. Fariss, Penn State University
It is About Time: Cross Sectional Dynamic
Heterogeneity in TSCS Data
Clayton McLaughlin Webb, University of Kansas
Joe Weinberg, University of Southern Mississippi
On the Simultaneous Use of Fixed Effects on Cases and
Time Points
Jonathan Kropko
Robert Kubinec, University of Virginia
Using Flexible Distributed Lag Models to Study
Political Dynamics
Julia Partheymller, University of Mannheim
What About the Rest of the Pie? A Compositional
Approach to Modeling Inequality
Andrew Q Philips, Texas A&M University
Guy D. Whitten, Texas A&M University
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
45.13
EMBRACING TECHNOLOGY TO ENHANCE
STUDENT LEARNING
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Chair: Jilda M. Aliotta
Disc:
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
Justin E. Esarey, Rice University
Papers: Data on a Dime: Teaching Undergraduates to Collect
Data
Neil A. Englehart, Bowling Green State University
Melissa K. Miller, Bowling Green State University
The Omnipresent Android Device and Political Science
Teaching Methods
Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Technologys Impact on Current Political Events
Knowledge
Linda Kay Mancillas
Peter W. Brusoe, Bloomberg Government
Curiosity in Class: Student Videos, Assessment,
Learning/Teaching Experience
Andreja Zevnik, University of Manchester
Using Social Media to Transform University
Communications with Students
Darren A. Wheeler, Ball State University
Brandon Waite, Ball State University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
45.14
TAXATION
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Montana
Disc:
Marc P. Berenson, King's College London

Papers: 538 for the World? Forecasting Global Presidential


Elections
Ryan P. Kennedy
David Lazer
Stefan J. Wojcik, Northeastern University and
Harvard IQSS
Do Programmatic Policies Cause Electoral Effects?
Evidence from Two Experiments
Kosuke Imai, Princeton University
Gary King, Harvard University
Carlos Velasco Rivera, Princeton University
Suspicious Numbers: Examining Fraud in Indonesias
2014 Presidential Election
Kai Ostwald, University of British Columbia
Dimitar D Gueorguiev, Syracuse University
Paul J. Schuler, University of Arizona
Oppositions and Protests on Cubas Election Day Ballots
Jorge I. Dominguez, Harvard University
Angela Maria Fonseca Galvis, Pontificia Universidad
Javeriana
Chiara Superti, Columbia University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
45.16
UNIONS AND POLITICS IN ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Anke Hassel, Hertie School of Governance
Disc:
Anke Hassel, Hertie School of Governance
Jake Rosenfeld, University of Washington
Papers: Origins and Consequences of Union-Administered
Unemployment Schemes
Magnus Bergli Rasmussen, Institute of Social
Research (ISF) Norway
Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva
Unions and the Capacity of Left Parties to Build New
Voters Coalitions
Line Rennwald, University of Lausanne
Local Union Power and Democratic Representation
Michael Becher, University of Konstanz
Daniel Stegmueller, Duke University
Konstantin Kppner, University of Konstanz
What makes Trade Unions support Labor Market
Outsiders?
Nadja Mosimann, University of Geneva
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
45.17
FILLING EMPTY GLASSES: INSTITUTIONAL
PERFORMANCE IN INDIA
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Devesh Kapur
Disc:
Devesh Kapur
Papers: Keeping Women Out: Incumbency and Renomination
Patterns for Female Politicians
Francesca R. Jensenius, Norwegian Institute of
International Affairs

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 287

287

Daily Schedule

Papers: Development and Welfare by Other Means: Taxation


and Savings in South Korea
Ungki Jung, Johns Hopkins University
Does Taxation Improve Government Quality?
Rasmus Broms, Quality of Government Institute,
University of Gothenburg
Understanding Fiscal Capacity: Income Tax Laws and
their Administration
Thomas Brambor, Lund University
War Mobilization or War Destruction? The Unequal
Rise of Wealth Taxes Revisited
Lukas Haffert, Department of Political Science

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


45.15
UNDERSTANDING ELECTIONS
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Karen L. Remmer, Duke University
Disc:
David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Womens Inheritance Rights Reform and the Preference


for Sons in India
Rachel E. Brule, New York University Abu Dhabi
Sonia Bhalotra, University of Bristol
State, Elites, and Democracy in Rural India
Rahul Verma, University of California, Berkeley
Contingent Power and Autonomy: The Case of the
Indian Election Commission
Amit Ahuja, University of California, Santa Barbara
Susan L Ostermann, University of California,
Berkeley
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
45.18
ORIGINS AND TRANSFORMATIONS OF
GENDER GAPS
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Cristina Corduneanu-Huci, Central European University
Disc:
Summer E. Lindsey, Columbia University
Papers: Colonialism and Gender Inequality: The Impact of
Christian Missionaries
Max Montgomery, German Institute of Global and
Area Studies
Disconnected and Uninformed: Dissecting Indias
Political Gender Gap
Soledad Artiz Prillaman, Harvard University
Informing Women and Improving Sanitation: Evidence
from Panel Data
YuJung Julia Lee, Texas A&M University
Media Openings In Political Transitions and Women's
Rights: The Case of Egypt
Vickie Langohr
Historicizing Womens Participation in Religious
Nationalist Politics in India
Rina Verma Williams, University of Cincinnati
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
45.19
URBANIZATION, DEVELOPMENT, AND SOCIAL
DISLOCATION
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Ignacio Arana Araya, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Hans Hanpu Tung, National Taiwan University
Papers: Industrial Ownership and Fiscal Decentralization in
Chinese Cities
SHIMING YANG, University of Southern California
The Role of Urban Planning and Spatial Policies in
Violence in Latin America
Lirio del Carmen Gutierrez Rivera, National
University of Colombia
Urbanization and the Changing Role of the Local State
in China
Wu Zhang
The Politics of Metropolitan-Oriented Development in
China and India
Kyle Alan Jaros, Harvard Kennedy School
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
45.20
AUTOCRACIES ON SOCIAL MEDIA: GOALS,
TOOLS, LESSONS OF KREMLINS ONLINE
OFFENSIVE
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Seva Gunitsky, University of Toronto

288

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 288

Disc:

Jaclyn Kerr

Papers: Turning the Virtual Table: Government Strategies for


Addressing Online Opposition
Sergey Sanovich, New York University
Denis Stukal, New York University
Duncan Penfold-Brown, NYU Social Media and
Political Participation Lab
Joshua A. Tucker, New York University
How Pro-Government Trolls Change Political Discussion
in Autocracies
Anton Sobolev, University of California, Los Angeles
Maxim Ananyev, UCLA
Measuring RTs Impact on YouTube
Elizabeth Nelson, George Washington University
Robert W. Orttung
Communication Power Struggle on Social Media: A
Study of the Russian Protests
Viktoria Spaiser, University of Leeds
Thomas Chadefaux, ETHZ
Karsten Donnay, Graduate Institute Geneva
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
45.21
GREAT TRANSFORMATIONS IN WORLD POL. 2:
PROTEAN AND CONTROL POWER IN
INTERACTION
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
Disc:
Jeffrey C. Isaac, Indiana University, Bloomington
Stephen D. Krasner
Papers: Subordination and Moral Fragmentation: Uncertainty,
Protean Power, and Revolutions in Rights
Christian Reus-Smit, University of Queensland
Border Collision: Control and Protean Power Across the
U.S.-Mexico Line
Noelle K. Brigden, Marquette University
Peter Andreas
Slumdog versus Superman: Uncertainty, Innovation, and
Protean Power in the Global Film Industry
Lucia A. Seybert, American University
Stephen Craig Nelson, Northwestern University
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
Of Power and Rights: Navigating Uncertainty in the
LGBT
Phillip M Ayoub
Jessica Green, New York University
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
Incomplete Disruptions: Power Dynamics in High Tech
Lucia A. Seybert, American University
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
45.22
MIGRATION AND ITS EFFECTS ON EUROPEAN
POLITICS AND SOCIETY
Room: PCC, 112-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP

Chair:
Disc:

Willem Maas, York University & European University


Institute
Willem Maas, York University & European University
Institute

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: Challenges of Migration in Western Europe: Indirect


Radical Right Party Impacts
Michelle Hale Williams, University of West Florida
Outsourcing EU's Immigration Challenges: Agenda
Setting & Norm Entrepreneurship
Halit M Tagma, Ipek University
The Growth of European Civil Society and Unity
Meaghan Charlton, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
45.23
EXCHANGE RATE POLITICS
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: David A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
David A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: Capital Flows, Exchanges Rates, and the Political
Economy of High Beta Economies
Michael Gavin, The University of Toronto
Mark S. Manger, University of Toronto
Global Value Chains and Monetary Convergence
Ryan Weldzius | UCLA Dept. of Polit Weldzius
Revisiting the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval
Hypothesis
Jana Grittersova, University of California, Riverside
The Political Origins of Exchange Rate Valuations
Dennis P. Quinn, Georgetown University
Maria Toyoda, Suffolk University
Stephen Weymouth, Georgetown University
Exchange Rate Policy and Policy Diffusion: The Case of
South Korea and Taiwan
Hyunsook Moon-Chen, University of California,
Santa Barbara
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
45.24
OUTWARD AID, FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
FLOWS FROM RISING ECONOMIC POWERS
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Christina Davis, Princeton University
Disc:
Deborah Brautigam, Johns Hopkins/SAIS

DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION


45.25
HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES
Room: PCC, 104-A

Papers: Interstitial Rules and Contestation of IHRL and IHL in


Counterterrorism
Michael Newell
Modeling Human Rights Treaty Travaux
Kevin Cope, University of Michigan
Old Laws, New States: International Treaty Law and
Post-Soviet States
Audrey Lynn Comstock, Cornell University
Rights Practice, Political Institutions, and Commitment
to Human Rights Treaties
Xinyuan Dai, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Duu Renn, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
The Incentives for Autocrats to Ratify Multiple Human
Rights Treaties
Mi Hwa Hong, University of Michigan
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
45.26
BRIDGING LEVELS OF ANALYSIS:
THEORETICAL APPROACHES TO
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Karen Ruth Adams, University of Montana
Disc:
Karen Ruth Adams, University of Montana
Papers: A Question of Costliness: Time Horizons and Interstate
Signaling
Kyle Haynes, Purdue University
Regime Type, Audience Costs, and Democratic Peace
Christopher Liu, University of Pennsylvania
Unipolarity, Hegemony and the New Peace
Christopher J. Fettweis, Tulane University
A Leap in the Dark: Uncertainty and Trust in
International Relations
Michelle Murray, Bard College
Changing Patterns of War and Peace in the 21st Century
Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
45.27
SOUTH CHINA SEA FLASHPOINT: TINDERBOX
OR TEMPEST IN A TEA CUP?
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Andrew Charles Scobell, RAND Corporation
Part:
Lyle Johann Morris, RAND Corp
Alice D. Ba, University of Delaware
Feng Zhu, China Center for Collaborative Studies of the
South China Sea, Nanjing University
John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago
Muthiah Alagappa, East West Center
John F Garofano, U.S. Naval War College/ Brown
University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL
45.28
SOURCES OF EXTREMISM AND VIOLENCE
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Marina Elisabeth Henke, Northwestern University
Disc:
Stefanie Ines Kasparek, Temple University

Daily Schedule

Papers: Banking Unconditionally: Political Economy of Chinese


Finance in Latin America
Stephen B. Kaplan, George Washington University
The Visible Hand: State Preferences and Chinas
Outbound FDI
Weiyi Shi, UCSD
Global Champions Are Made At Home: State Support
for Domestic MNCs in Brazil
Jazmin Sierra, University of Oxford
Competing for Recipients: Responses to Chinas
Development Cooperation with Asia
Austin Michael Strange
Andreas Fuchs, University of Heidelberg
Soo Yeon Kim, National University of Singapore
Michael J. Tierney, College of William & Mary
Financial Globalization and the Rise of State-Owned
Enterprises
Richard Carney, Australian National University

Joel E. Oestreich, Drexel University

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS

Chair:
Disc:

Joel E. Oestreich, Drexel University


Jonathan Chu, Stanford University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 289

289

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: Rebel Funding and Conflict Duration


Justin Conrad, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
Kevin T Greene, Michigan State University
Beth Elise Whitaker, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
James Igoe Walsh, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
Plugging the Pipelines: Challenges of Terminating State
Support for Rebel Groups
Andrea M. Lopez, Susquehanna University
Rule without States? Exploring the Implications of NonState Actor Governance
Liana Eustacia Reyes-Reardon, Rice University
Approving of But Not Choosing Violence: Paths of
Nonviolent Radicals
Maiah Jaskoski, Northern Arizona University
Berny Lazareno, University of California, Santa Cruz
Michael Wilson, University of California, Santa Cruz
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
45.29
IMAGE AND IDENTITY IN INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Belgin San-Akca, Koc University
Disc:
Galia Press-Barnathan, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Belgin San-Akca, Koc University
Papers: Debating Indias Security Identity as a "Rising"
Maritime Power(1998-2015)
Pounami Basu, University of Reading
State Identity Discourses and Continuity and Change in
Irans Nuclear Policy
Abolghasem Bayyenat, Syracuse University
The Origin of US Racial Imperialism
Taesuh Cha, Johns Hopkins University
Race and War: The Enemy Image and Disastrous
Outcomes of the Second World War
Shino Yokotsuka, University of Delaware
The Anachronism of A China Socialized: Why Has
Engagement Failed?
Xiangfeng Yang, Yonsei University Wonju Campus
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
45.30
PEACEKEEPING
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Amy Yuen, Middlebury College
Disc:
Susan H. Allen, University of Mississippi
Papers: Collaborating for Peace: Inter-Organizational Networks
in Peace Operations
Isil Akbulut, Sacred Heart University
ICTs and Peacekeeping: ICT Investment and Postconflict Stability
Charles Patrick Martin-Shields, George Mason
University
Quality of Peace and Long Peace
Resat Bayer, Koc University
Targeting Peace: United Nations Peacekeeping
Operations and Terrorist Activity
Jacob A. Mauslein, Oklahoma State University
UN Peacekeeping and Selectivity
Miku Matsunaga

290

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 290

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


45.31
QUASI-EXPERIMENTS OF CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Robert Blair, Yale University
Disc:
Michael James Gilligan, New York University
Papers: Climate Change, Snow Cover, and the Fighting Season
in Afghanistan, 2001-2013
Timothy A. Carter, Drew University
Daniel J. Veale, Wayne State University
Drone Strikes and Hearts and Minds: A QuasiExperimental Analysis in Pakistan
Daniel Silverman, Ohio State University
Economic Shocks and Rebel Tactics: Evidence from
Colombia
Austin Wright, Princeton University
How War Changes Land: The Long-term Economic
Impact of US Bombing in Cambodia
Erin Lin, Princeton University
Expecting the Unexpected: Disaster Risks and Conflict
Muhammet Bas, Harvard University
Elena V. McLean, SUNY, University at Buffalo
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
45.32
LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR IN EUROPE
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Martin Ejnar Hansen, Brunel University London
Disc:
Raphael Heuwieser, University of Oxford
Papers: Private Members Bills: experimental evidence from the
UK
Peter Charles John, University College London
Yusaku Horiuchi, Dartmouth College
Regulating Legislative Debate in the UK House of
Commons, 1811-1945
Niels Goet, University of Oxford
Signals of Ambition: Speech and Career Progression in
the House of Commons
Patrick Leslie, University of Essex
Gender Sensitive Parliaments: the Case of the UK
Parliament at Westminster
Chloe Challender, House of Commons
Sarah Childs, University of Bristol
Who Represents the Poor? German Legislators and
Welfare State Policies
Thomas Zittel, Goethe-University Frankfurt
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
45.33
PERSPECTIVES ON EXECUTIVE POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Samuel B. Hoff, Delaware State University
Disc:
Jeremy D. Bailey, University of Houston
Papers: An Endogenous Account of the Crisis of Governing
Legitimacy
Curt Nichols, Baylor University
Jill Nichols, Baylor University
Martin Van Buren and the Jacksonian Reinvention of the
Constitution
Elvin T. Lim, National University of Singapore
The Road Not Taken: William Howard Taft and the
Dilemmas of Regime Restoration
David A. Crockett, Trinity University

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

The Unitary Executive in Congress


Justin Peck, San Francisco State University
An Empirical Test of the Unitary Executive Framework
Patrick R. O'Brien, Yale University
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
45.34
THE POLITICS OF RULEMAKING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Karen M. Hult, Virginia Tech
Disc:
Karen M. Hult, Virginia Tech
Papers: Assessing the Effect of Technical and Political
Complexity on Rulemaking Delay
Nicole Kalaf-Hughes, Bowling Green State University
Russell W. Mills
Dropping the Final Rule Bomb: Political Oversight &
Timing of Agency Rulemaking
Rachel Augustine Potter
Making Lemonade from Lemons: Accounting for
Agency Capacity in Rulemaking
Christopher Michael Carrigan, George Washington
University
Russell W. Mills
Strategic Rulemaking: Agency Proposal of Significant
Rules
Gbemende Johnson
Susan Marie Miller, University of South Carolina
Technocracy, Democracy, and Public Policy:
Participation in Regulatory Review
Mercy DeMenno, Duke University - Sanford School
of Public Policy
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
45.35
NEW DIRECTIONS IN EDUCATION POLICY
RESEARCH
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Chair: John Portz, Northeastern University
Disc:
Marissa Martino Golden, Bryn Mawr College
John Portz, Northeastern University
Papers: Comparing Growth and Proficiency Scores for School
Accountability
Jason Giersch, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
Measuring Higher Education Governance: A MetaRegression Analysis
Eric William Shannon, University of Kansas
The Charter School Explosion: Why Charter Schools
Proliferated in Albany, NY
Ryane McAuliffe Straus, College of Saint Rose
The Political Economy of State-Owned Enterprises and
Public Higher Education
Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas at Dallas
Whose Money Matters and How in Public Schools:
Variations across States
Eunju Kang, SUNY Geneseo

DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND


JURISPRUDENCE
45.37
JUDICIAL DECISION-MAKING: ASSESSING
INFLUENCES AND CONSTITUTIONAL
IMPLICATIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: Michael Zilis
Disc:
Mark E. Rush, Washington and Lee
Papers: Influence of International and Foreign Law in U.S.
Supreme Court Opinions
James R Keller
Todd A. Curry, University of Texas at El Paso
Rebecca Ann Reid
Shelby County, the Supreme Court, and the Problem of
Partisan Capture
Terri Peretti, Santa Clara University
The Crocodile in the Bathtub: The Solicitor General and
the Supreme Court
Alan Kluegel
The Judicial Protection of Anti-Judicial Speech
Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University
Richard S. Price, Weber State University
Brandon Thomas Metroka, Syracuse University
Reliance on Amicus Curiae in United States Supreme
Court Concurring Opinions
Jeremy Buchman, Long Island University
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
45.38
UNDERSTANDING THE POSTDECENTRALIZATION SCENARIO IN LATIN
AMERICA
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Jean-Paul Faguet, London School of Economics
Disc:
Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University
Monica Pachon, Universidad del Rosario
Papers: The Municipal Fiscal Sustainability after
Decentralization
Claudia N. Avellaneda, Indiana University
Recentralisation and its Causes: Colombia 1994 - 2014
Julian Daniel Lopez-Murcia, University of Oxford
Resisting the Center? Governors and Recentralization
Policies in Mexico
Juan Cruz Olmeda, El Colegio de Mxico
Alejandra Armesto
The Decentralization of Policy-Making: Policies for
Women in Brazil
Malu A. C. Gatto, University of Oxford

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 291

291

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS


45.36
COURTS AS CATALYSTS OF POLICY CHANGE:
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Eric A. Feldman, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Eric A. Feldman, University of Pennsylvania

Papers: Free and/or Fair? How Courts Rule on Election


Campaign Regulations
Kenneth Mori McElwain, University of Tokyo
Rights Activism and Legislation for Persons with
Disabilities in Japan and Korea
Celeste Arrington, George Washington University
Increasing Welfare at the Cost of (Re-)Centralization?
Christian Winkler, Hokkaido University
Who Judges? Introducing Jury Systems in Industrialized
Democracies
Rieko Kage, University of Tokyo

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

The Political Scandal in Mexico: A TheoreticalEmpirical Approach


Ernesto Hernndez Norzagaray, Asociacin Mexicana
de Ciencias Polticas/Universidad Autnoma de
Sinaloa
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
45.39
VARIATIONS IN STATE-LEVEL INEQUALITY
POLICY AND POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Chair: Becki Scola, Saint Joseph's University
Disc:
Sanford F. Schram, Hunter College, CUNY
David B. Robertson, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Papers: Does Austerity Pay? State Decisions Regarding
Medicaid Expansion Under the ACA
Charles J. Barrilleaux, Florida State University
Jeffrey Vincent Swanson, Florida State University
State Medicaid Expansion and Citizens Quality of Life
Patrick Flavin, Baylor University
Its Not an Accident: State Policy and Fatalities on
Dairy Farms
Maggie Gray, Adelphi University
Felons and Food: State Policy Variations in Ex-Drug
Felons Eligibility for SNAP
Becki Scola, Saint Joseph's University
Mary Summers, University of Pennsylvania
Kalie Wertz
State Party Position Taking: Elites Listening to Elites
Gerald C. Wright, Indiana University
DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
45.40
CITIES, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND
SUSTAINABILITY POLICY
Room: Marriott, Room 310
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Veronica Herrera, University of Connecticut


Yogi Hale Hendlin, University of California, Los
Angeles

Papers: A Creative Class Theory of City Sustainability Policies


Kent E. Portney, Texas A&M University
Jeffrey M. Berry, Tufts University
Climate Change A Global Problem yet Utterly Local
Kristin Ljungkvist, Uppsala University
How do City Governments Steer? Evidence from
Climate Change Policies
Sara Hughes, University of Toronto
Local Sustainability Policy: Measuring the Performance
of the Three E's
Susan Opp, Colorado State University
Samantha Mosier, Missouri State University
Political Orientations of Local Lawmakers About Rising
Seas
Glen Sussman, Old Dominion University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
45.41
FEMALE CANDIDATES: VOTER ATTITUDES
AND ELECTORAL SUCCESS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7

Papers: Fear of Gender Favoritism and Vote Choice during the


2008 Presidential Primaries
Seth K. Goldman
Gender Differences in Perceptions of Candidate
Qualifications
Nichole Bauer, University of Alabama
The Effect of Campaigning on Social Issues on the
Success of Female Candidates
Joy Wilke, University of California, Los Angeles
Women in Congressional Primaries: An Exploration
Jack D. Collens, Siena College
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
45.42
"UN-SETTLING" CHALLENGES BY TRIBAL
GOVERNMENTS TO THE FEDERALISM
DYNAMIC
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Paula Mohan, UW-Madison
Papers: Tri-Federalism? Tribal-State-Feds: the Cooperative
Sovereignty Challenge
Kouslaa Kessler-Mata, University of San Francisco
Disrupting Federalism: Tribal Legalization of Marijuana
and Hemp
Paula Mohan, UW-Madison
Tribal-State Relations and American Indian Gaming
Compacts
Richard C. Witmer, Creighton University
Joshua Johnson, Kennesaw State University
The Impact of Spatial Context on Support for Indian
Gaming
Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa
Regina Branton
Richard C. Witmer, Creighton University
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
45.43
BEYOND SECULAR DEMOCRACY: POLITICAL
INSTITUTIONS AND THE REGULATION OF
RELIGION
Room: Marriott, Room 415
Chair: Jeremy Menchik, Boston University
Disc:
Tamir Moustafa, Simon Fraser University
Michael Driessen, John Cabot University
Papers: Secularism, Reproductive Health & Religious
Exemptions in the Philippines & U.S.
David T. Buckley, University of Louisville
State Control and Selective Secularism(s) in Turkey and
Tunisia
Monica Marks, Oxford University
Beyond Secular Democracy: Regulating Religion
Democratically
Jeremy Menchik, Boston University
Religion and the Subversion of National Boundaries in
Israel and Pakistan
Atalia Omer, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
45.44
POLICY PREFERENCES AND POLICY
OUTCOMES
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND


VOTING BEHAVIOR

Chair:
Disc:

292

Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University


Sarah Oliver, St. Lawrence University
Kristin Kanthak, University of Pittsburgh

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 292

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

Chair:
Disc:

Francisco Cantu, University of Houston


Francisco Cantu, University of Houston

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: Pivotal Policy Makers and Policy Outcomes in


Presidential Systems
Brian F. Crisp, Washington University in St. Louis
Santiago Olivella, Princeton University
Guillermo Rosas, Washington University in St. Louis
Communicating Party Brand in Bolivian Multiparty
Governments
Jason Alan Eichorst, University of Mannheim
The Effect of Internet Technologies on Voters' LeftRight Assessments of Parties
Joshua D Potter, Louisiana State University
Johanna Dunaway, Texas A&M University
Personal Vote and Proportional Representation in
Unequal Societies.
Natalia Regina Avila Maciel
Electoral Proportionality and Issue Salience in European
Elections
Nathan Rexford, University of California, Davis
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
45.45
THE POLITICS OF AMERICAN PARTY
IDEOLOGIES
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Richard F. Bensel
Disc:
Samuel DeCanio, Yale University
Papers: Separating Ideology from Party in Roll Call Data
Hans Noel, Georgetown University
Partisan vs. Institutional Policy Conflict in American
Political Development
David Karol, University of Maryland
Ideology as a Product of Coalition Building
Christopher Baylor, College of the Holy Cross
Party Control of Government and American Party
Ideology Development
Verlan Lewis, Stanford University
The Social Construction of Ideology
Marcos Menchaca, University of California, Los
Angeles
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
45.46
SOCIAL IDENTITY AND POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Chair:
Disc:

Elias Dinas, University of Oxford


Thomas J. Leeper

DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR


45.47
THE POLITICAL BEHAVIOR AND
REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Chair:
Disc:

Mona Morgan-Collins, London School of Economics


and Political Science
Dawn L. Teele, University of Pennsylvania

Papers: The Effect of Employment on Female Vote Choice


Chitralekha Basu, University of Rochester
Christopher P. Donnelly, University of California,
Davis
Candidate Effects and the Gender Gap
Rosie Campbell, University of London, Birkbeck
College
Oliver Heath, Royal Holloway
Electoral Institutions and the Gender Gap in Political
Participation
Oyvind Skorge, London School of Economics
Voting Procedures and Womens Access to Power
Tiffany D. Barnes, University of Kentucky
Carolina Tchintian, Rice University
Parties, Gender, and the Representation of Citizens
Priorities
Anthony Michael Bertelli, New York University
Diana Z. O' Brien, Indiana University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
45.48
TOMORROW IS TODAY: CAUSES AND
CONSEQUENCES OF POLITICAL
SOCIALIZATION
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Darrell Lovell, Lone Star College University Park
Disc:
J. Celeste Lay, Tulane University
Papers: Family Structure and Politics
Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University
Jeremy Clayne Pope, Brigham Young University
Pre-adult Family Structure and Young Adult Political
Participation
Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida
The Home as a Fortress: Family Socialization in the Era
of Polarized Politics
Tobias Benjamin Konitzer
Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
Kent L. Tedin, University of Houston
More Polarized, Better Socialized? Political Socialization
in a Polarized Era
Clinton Maddox Jenkins, George Washington
University
Socialization or Experience? Political Support among
Expatriated Swedes
Stefan Dahlberg, Goteborg University
Jonas Linde, Department of Comparative Politics,
University of Bergen

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 293

293

Daily Schedule

Papers: Outgroup Attitudes and Resource Allocation After the


Los Angeles Riots
Aaron Russell Kaufman
Melissa Sands, Harvard University
Ryan D. Enos, Harvard University
Social Identity and Attribution of Political Responsibility
Dominik Duell, University of Essex
When Your Group Fails: Group Identity, Context, and
Information Responsiveness
John Holbein
Hans J.G. Hassell, Cornell College
Contextual Priming: Race, Church Polling Places and
Same Sex Marriage
Steven Moore, University of Michigan
Todd C. Shaw, University of South Carolina

Voting Together: Evidence from Time Stamped Voter


List
Yosef Bhatti, KORA - Danish Institute for Local and
Regional Government Research
Edward A. Fieldhouse, University of Manchester
Kasper M. Hansen, University of Copenhagen

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND


ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
45.49
INSTITUTIONS AND COOPERATION IN WATER
GOVERNANCE
Room: Marriott, Room 407
Chair: Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis
Disc:
Ramiro Berardo, Ohio State University
Papers: Institutions for Watershed Management in
Heterogeneous Communities
Pranietha Mudliar, Ohio State University
Tomas Koontz, University of Washington Tacoma
Policy Devolution and Cooperation Dilemmas
David Konisky, Indiana University, Bloomington
Christopher M. Reenock, Florida State University
Coalition Dynamics in Collaborative Environmental
Governance Processes
Elizabeth Koebele
Borders, Federalism, and Local Networks for Great
Lakes Water Protection
Eric Zeemering, Northern Illinois University
Hydraulic Fracturing, Access to Water, and Israels
National Security
Donald D.A. Schaefer, Georgia State University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
POLITICS
45.50
POLICY RESPONSES TO THE INTERNET
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: Ben Epstein, DePaul University
Disc:
Leticia Bode
Papers: Bitcoin Begets BitLicense: The New Challenges of
Regulatory Policymaking
Robert J. Domanski, CUNY-College of Staten Island
E.U. - the Right to Be Forgotten - Impermissible ExtraTerritorial Legislation?
Alexander Wathen, University of Houston Downtown
From Moments of Madness to the Politics of
Mundanity
Jun Liu, University of Copenhagen
Governing Robots: Institutional Requirements for a New
Technology
Aaron Mannes, HSARPA
How ICT is Changing Authoritarian Use of Information
David C. Benson, School of Advanced Air and Space
Studies
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
45.51
POLITICAL LITERATURE IN THE
TRANSFORMATION TO THE DEMOCRATIC
AGE
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Natalie Taylor, Skidmore College
Papers: Possessiveness, Possessions, and Human Nature in
Tolkiens The Lord of the Rings
Nivedita Bagchi, Millersville University of
Pennsylvania
Anthony Trollope: Novelist of the Democratic
Revolution
Sara Henary, Missouri State University

294

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 294

Womens War: Family and Politics in Charlotte Perkins


Gilman and Jane Addams
Lorraine Krall McCrary, Wabash College
Never Let Them Go: Education, Love, and Rage in
Kazuo Ishiguros Never Let Me Go
Jeremy J. Mhire, Louisiana Tech University
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
45.52
UNDERSTANDING US FOREIGN POLICY: NEW
RESEARCH WITH HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Chair: Paul Musgrave, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Disc:
Paul Musgrave, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Papers: The Evolution of Realist Justifications for U.S. Foreign
Policy, 1861-1960
Timothy J. McKeown, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Dissent in the Ranks: Humanitarianism and US Foreign
Policy
Amanda Joan Rothschild, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Envoys and Missed Opportunities in Enduring Rivalries:
USA-Cuba, 1961
Christopher Darnton, Naval Postgraduate School
Middle-Power Agency and US Foreign Policy: Latin
America's Alliance for Progress
Christopher Darnton, Naval Postgraduate School
Intelligence Cooperation: Past and Present
Siobhan Martin, Geneva Centre for Security Policy
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
45.53
ELITES, MASSES, AND CULTURE: THE ARAB
SPRING IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Matthew Goldman
Disc:
Steven Brooke, University of Louisville
Papers: Military Responses to Popular Uprisings: Tunisia in
Comparative Perspective
Nicholas John Lotito
Between Scylla and Charybdis: Religion, Military, and
Support for Democracy in Egypt
Mazen Hassan, Cairo University
Stephen Whitefield, University of Oxford
When Tolerance Matters Most: Transforming Political
Culture during Transitions
Youssef Chouhoud, University of Southern California
The Internet & Democratization: Comparing the Arab
Spring & Post-Soviet States
Rachel Vanderhill, Wofford College
Protestant and Muslim Regions Are Similar: Religion
and Subnational Democracy
Rasmus Fonnesbaek Andersen, University of
Copenhagen
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
45.54
HOW SUCCESSFUL TRANSFORMATIONS
OVERCOME SOCIAL DILEMMAS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Marc F. Plattner, National Endowment for Democracy
Part:
Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
Edward Aspinall, Australian National University
Sheri Berman
Eric M. Uslaner, University of Maryland
Alina Mungiu-Pippidi

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Jong-sung You, The Australian National University


Paul M. Heywood, University of Nottingham
Ryan Saylor, University of Tulsa
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
45.55
VIOLENCE, HUMANITARIANISM, AND HUMAN
RIGHTS
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Jessica J. Price, Tulane University
Disc:
Neil Narang, University of California, Santa Barbara
Papers: Actors, Intentions, and War-Time Atrocities
Stephen Roblin, Cornell University
Sarah E. Kreps
Human Rights, Humanitarian Law... and Convergence?
Evidence from Colombia
Pablo Kalmanovitz, Universidad de los Andes
Restorative Justice: Evaluating Impacts and Explaining
Diffusion
Bridget E Marchesi, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
Mexico under Siege: Violence, Perceptions of
Democracy and Human Rights
Dona-Gene Barton, University of Nebraska
Courtney Hillebrecht, University of Nebraska,
Lincoln
Sergio C. Wals, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
45.56
PROMISES AND PITFALLS OF ECLECTICISM IN
IR
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Chair: Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: Pluralism--IR's Fourth Debate?
Audie Klotz, Syracuse University
Pragmatism, Pluralism and Eclecticism
Fred Chernoff, Colgate University
Pragmatism, Eclecticism and the Logic of Questions
Jeremie Cornut, Simon Fraser University
Analytic Eclecticism and the Challenge of Theoretical
Multilingualism
Eric M. Blanchard
Realism, Analytic Eclecticism and Systemism
Patrick James, University of Southern California
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
45.57
ELITE NETWORKS AND AUTHORITARIAN
STABILITY
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Disc:
Armando Razo, Indiana University
Jonathan Homola, Washington University in St. Louis

DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH


45.58
EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS OF HUMAN
RIGHTS
Room: Marriott, Room 406
Chair: Michelle Giacobbe Allendoerfer, George Washington
University
Disc:
Joshua D. Kertzer, Harvard University
Papers: The Microfoundations of Commitment to Human Rights
Treaties
Courtenay R. Conrad, University of California,
Merced
Emily Hencken Ritter, University of Cailfornia,
Merced
Terrorist Labeling and Individual Reactions to Call to
Action
Ana Bracic, University of Oklahoma
Amanda Marie Murdie, University of Georgia
The Power and Pathologies of Language: Messaging
Effects on Support for Violence
Michele Leiby, College of Wooster
Matthew Krain, College of Wooster
Framing US Healthcare: Health Care for the Left, Health
Purity for the Right
Joseph Braun, University of Maryland
Stephen Arves
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
45.59
CONSTITUTING THE GLOBAL: MIGRATION AS
CRITICAL GEOPOLITICS
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Kamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine
Papers: Rethinking Migration as a Spectrum: Reflections from
the Indonesian Context
Anne McNevin, The New School
Migration to MENA Host States: Divergent Outcomes
by Nationality
Kelsey P. Norman, University of California, Irvine
Burden-Sharing in a Zero-Sum World: Asylum and the
Western Balkan Migration Crisis
Craig Damian Smith, University of Toronto
Calling Europe: Sonic Infrastructures and North African
Migration
Michelle Day Weitzel, The New School for Social
Research
Whither the Rabat Process?: Euro-African Cooperation
on Migration Management
Gregory W. White, Smith College
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS
45.60
DEVELOPMENT DISCOURSES: GLOBAL,
REGIONAL, AND LOCAL ACTORS
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Bruce A. Magnusson, Whitman College
Disc:
Ryan Steele Jablonski, London School of Economics
and Political Science
Papers: La Sant Avant Tout: Ownership of Development in
Burkina Faso's Health Sector
Takiyah Harper, University of Connecticut
The Development Dance: Bargaining and Institutional
Innovation in Foreign Aid
Haley J. Swedlund, Radboud University Nijmegen

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 295

Daily Schedule

Papers: Ends or Means? Ideologies, Strategies, and


Commitments in Regime Change
Basak Taraktas, University of Pennsylvania
Creating Stability Amid Change: Cabinet Appointments
and Dictator Survival
Josef Woldense, Indiana University, Bloomington
Dynamics of the Inner Elite in Dictatorships: Evidence
from North Korea
Paasha Mahdavi, Georgetown University
John Ishiyama, University of North Texas

The Ties that Kill: Informal Networks and Purges


Franziska Barbara Keller, Columbia University

295

Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

ECOWAS and the Emergence of Financialization in


West Africa
Emmanuel Balogun, University of Delaware
DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY
45.61
UNEQUAL RESPONSIVENESS: NEW EVIDENCE
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Martin Gilens, Princeton University
Disc:
Martin Gilens, Princeton University
Peter Enns, Cornell University
Papers: Economic Inequality and Representation in Local
Government
Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Jesse H. Rhodes, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Organizational Affiliation and Legislators
Responsiveness to the Poor
Anouk Lloren, Washington University in St. Louis
Joscha Legewie, New York University
Class and Congruence in Latin America
Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University
Zach Warner, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Social Inequality and Political Representation in Latin
America
Jana Morgan, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Nathan J. Kelly, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Political Inequality in Affluent Democracies
Larry M. Bartels, Vanderbilt University
Related Groups
46.1
CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:
CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
RESEARCH ROUNDTABLE
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Part:
Scott L. Althaus, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Virginia Parish Beard, Hope College
Kimberly H. Conger, University of Cincinnati
Paul A. Brink, Gordon College
46.2
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: THOMAS WEST ON MORALITY
AND THE FAMILY IN LOCKE AND THE
FOUNDERS
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: Ryan P. Williams
Part:
Thomas G. West
Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame
James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia
Patrick J. Deneen, University of Notre Dame
46.3
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: UNIVERSAL
HUMANITY AND HISTORY
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: Dennis J. Coyle, Catholic University of America
Disc:
Wolfgang Leidhold, University of Cologne
Michael D. Henry, St. John's University
Papers: Eric Voegelin's Concept of Universal Humanity
Harald Bergbauer, Bavarian School of Public Policy

46.4
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Tan Duns The First Emperor: Empire and Ecumene in


Politics, Art, Consciousness
Eugen L. Nagy, Central Washington University
Thomas After Conceptualism
R.J. Snell, Eastern University
Politics and the Tragic Sense of History
Stan Molchanov, Catholic University of America
INTELLIGENCE STUDIES GROUP:
INTELLIGENCE ACCOUNTABILITY AT A
CROSSROADS
Marriott, Room 411
Jennifer Kibbe, Franklin & Marshall College
David M. Barrett, Villanova University

Papers: Judicial Oversight: Failures through the States Secret


Privilege
Louis Fisher
Exploring New Perspectives on Congressional Oversight
of Intelligence
Glenn P. Hastedt, James Madison University
Intelligence Accountability: Perspectives from the
Nation's Spymasters
Loch K. Johnson, University of Georgia
46.5
JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP: JAPANS
SECURITY CHALLENGES IN A CHANGING
WORLD
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Amy Louise Catalinac, New York University
Disc:
Michael Strausz, Texas Christian University
Papers: Explaining Intelligence Trajectories: The Japanese Case
Deirdre Quinn Martin, UC Berkeley
Normalizing Japan? Foreign Threats and the Operation
of the Diet
Koji Kagotani, Osaka University of Economics
Yoshikuni Ono, Tohoku University
The Trajectory of Weapons Procurement in a Normal
Japan
Bryan Matthew Walker, Griffith University
Japans Changing Defense Posture and the Security
Dilemma in East Asia
Shuhei Kurizaki, Waseda University
Andrew Robert Capistrano, Rebuild Japan Initiative
Foundation

Friday, 10:30 AM to 12:30 PM


APSA Events
47.1
POLITICS & GENDER JOURNAL EDITORIAL
BOARD MEETING
Room: Loews, Tubman

Friday, 11:45 AM to 3:30 PM


APSA Events
48.1
MPSA EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
Room: Offsite, MPSA Offsite Location

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM


Theme Panels
49.1
FORECASTING THE U.S. PRESIDENTIAL AND
CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS
Room: PCC, 204-C
Co-sponsored by Political Forecasting Group

Chair:

296

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39

Page 296

Mary Stegmaier, University of Missouri

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Part:

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND


POLITICS

50.9
Room:
50.10
Room:
50.11
Room:
50.12
Room:
50.13
Room:
Chair:
Part:

50.14
Room:
Part:

50.15
Room:
Chair:
50.16
Room:
50.17
Room:
Chair:
Part:

LGBT CAUCUS BUSINESS MEETING


Marriott, Room 413
POLITICAL METHODOLOGY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 112-A
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 11
PUBLIC POLICY SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
AND AWARD CEREMONY
PCC, 202-A
THE FUTURE OF TRANSGENDER RIGHTS
Marriott, Franklin 13
Patrick J. Egan, New York University
Shannon Price Minter, National Center for Lesbian
Rights
Daniel C. Lewis, Siena College
Patrick R. Miller, University of Kansas
Heath Fogg Davis
Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Zein Murib, Fordham University-Lincoln Center
THE METHODS CAFE
Marriott, Liberty Ballroom
Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Mary L. Bellhouse, Providence College
Victoria Hattam
Kenneth Kato, Office of the House Historian
Anna Sampaio, Santa Clara University
Ronald J Schmidt, California State University, Long
Beach
Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania
Robert Vitalis, University of Pennsylvania
Mark B. Salter, University of Ottawa
Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon
Frederic C. Schaffer, University of Massachusetts
Amherst
Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University
Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Timothy Pachirat
Robin L. Turner, Butler University
Samantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay College
Joseph Fischel, Yale University
Laura J. Hatcher, Southeast Missouri State University
Ido Oren, University of Florida
Danielle N. Pritchett, Rutgers University
THE PARTISAN DIVIDE AND THE 2016
ELECTION
Loews, Commonwealth A2
Thomas M Davis, Deloitte
Jonas Martin Frost, Polsinelli PC
W.W. NORTON FOCUS GROUP
Marriott, Room 301
WHY RECONSTRUCTION MATTERS TO
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PCC, 103-B
Rick Valelly, Swarthmore College
Paul E. Herron, Providence College
Mark A. Graber
Desmond King
Megan Ming Francis, University of Washington
Amy B. Bridges, University of California SanDiego
Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Virginia

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 297

297

Daily Schedule

Alan I. Abramowitz, Emory University


James E. Campbell, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, university of iowa
Helmut Norpoth, Stony Brook University
Andreas Graefe, LMU Munich
Alfred G. Cuzan, The University of West Florida
49.2
HIGHER EDUCATION DISRUPTED: THE
POLITICS AND POLICIES OF
TRANSFORMATION
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Julia Lynch, University of Pennsylvania
Part:
Ben Wildavsky, State University of New York
Benjamin Ginsberg, Johns Hopkins University
Rogers M. Smith
Tobias Schulze-Cleven, Rutgers University
Julian Leonce Garritzmann, University of Konstanz
Charles Eaton, University of California, Berkeley
Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University
49.3
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE STUDY OF
CLIMATE CHANGE
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Debra Javeline, University of Notre Dame
Part:
Jessica Green, New York University
Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland, College Park
David Konisky, Indiana University, Bloomington
Johannes Urpelainen, Columbia University
Steven J. Vanderheiden, University of Colorado, Boulder
APSA Events
50.1
APSA COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF FIRST
GENERATION HIGHER EDUCATION SCHOLARS
IN THE PROFESSION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 302
50.2
APSR EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Room: Loews, Washington C
50.3
DEPARTMENT CHAIRS LUNCHEON
Room: Loews, Congress C
50.4
EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Loews, Congress A
50.5
FEDERAL BUDGET PROCESS REFORM: THE
SOLUTION STREAM MEETS THE POLITICAL
STREAM
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Paul L. Posner, George Mason University
Papers: Budgeting for Short, Medium and Long Term
Joseph White, Case Western Reserve University
Strengthening the Roles of Budget Committees to
Address Fiscal Gaps
Philip G. Joyce, University of Maryland
Congressional Voting on Budget Resolutions
Molly Reynolds, Brookings Institution
50.6
HUMAN RIGHTS SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 407
50.7
INTEREST GROUPS & ADVOCACY BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 406
50.8
JOURNAL OF RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS BUSINESS MEETING
Room: PCC, 104-A

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
51.1
AGENCY AND DECISION-MAKING IN
ROUSSEAU
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Lee MacLean
Disc:
Rebecca Aili Ploof, Harvard University
Bjorn Wee Gomes
Papers: Freedom, Agency, and Structure in Rousseaus 2nd
Discourse and Social Contract
Peter J Newman
Rethinking the General Will: Rousseaus Political
Theology
Charles H. T. Lesch, Harvard University
Rousseau and Gender: A Feminist Materialist
Interpretation
Whitney Mannies
To Keep Persuading without Convincing: Rousseaus
Lawgiver and Democratic Theory
Boris Litvin, Northwestern University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
51.2
GLOBAL NATIONALISMS AND ANTAGONISMS
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Anand Bertrand Commissiong, West Texas A&M
University
Disc:
Lars Peter Rensmann, John Cabot University
Papers: Nationalism, Abolition Democracy, and W.E.B. Du Bois
as Glocal Thinker
Jasmine Noelle Yarish
Remaking Civil Religion
Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
The Politics of Rabindranath Tagore and WEB Du Bois
and the "National Gift"
Hari Ramesh, Yale University
American Independence as Vattelian Sovereignty
Theodore Christov, George Washington University
Love, Piety, and Community: Political Belonging in Late
Ottoman Political Thought
Neveser Koker
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
51.3
PUBLIC POSTHUMANISM: STRATEGIES
TOWARD THE NEXT GREAT
TRANSFORMATION
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Davide Panagia, UCLA
Disc:
Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Papers: Toward a Revolutionary Ecology of Interspecies Affect
Romand Coles, Australian Catholic University
Practical Posthumanism: Convening Bruno Latours
Parliament of Things"
Stefan P. Dolgert, Brock University
Exiting the Anthropocene: Global Environmental
Governance as Posthumanism
Jairus V. Grove, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Democratic Theory and the Politics of Endings
Lida E. Maxwell, Trinity College

298

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 298

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


51.4
YOU CANT BE SERIOUS: UNDERSTANDING
POLITICS THROUGH COMEDY AND
LAUGHTER
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: John E. Seery, Pomona College
Disc:
Lars Toender, University of Copenhagen
John Protevi, Louisiana State University
Papers: Whos Laughing Now? Doing Critical Theory with
Tourettes Syndrome and Biscuits
Rex Lansing Troumbley, Rice University
Ai Weiwei as a Court Jester: Laughter as a Mode of
Resistance
William A. Callahan, London School of Economics
The Medium of Televisual Political Satire as Ludic
Surveillance
Marc-Olivier Castagner, University of Ottawa
David Grondin, University of Ottawa
The Political Life of Twitter-Bots: Campaigns,
Conversations, and Comedy
Kathleen P. J. Brennan, University of Hawaii, Manoa
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
51.5
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: STEPHEN
MACEDO'S "JUST MARRIED"
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth College
Part:
Andrew F. March, Yale University
Tamara Metz, Reed College
Carlos Ball, Rutgers University School of Law
Stephen Macedo, Princeton University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
51.6
NATIONALISM, IDENTITY, AND GROUP SELFDETERMINATION
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Stephen Siu Kay On, National Sun Yat-Sen University
Disc:
Michael R. James, Bucknell University
Papers: Alternative Models of Indigenous Self-Organization
Burke Hendrix, University of Oregon
Exhibiting Recognition: Self-Definition at the Canadian
Museum of Civilization
Caitlin Tom, University of California, Berkeley
Multiculturalism, Dynamics of Minoritization, and
Vulnerability
Frdrick Armstrong, University McGill
The Negotiation of Identity as a Negotiation of Plot
Structures
Nadim Khoury, University of Tromso-The Arctic
University of Norway
The Three Rs: Respectability, Recognition, and Racism
Tamar Malloy, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
51.7
FIRMS AS POLITICAL ACTORS
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Tyson Roberts, University of California, Irvine
Disc:
Tyson Roberts, University of California, Irvine
Nestor Castaneda, University College London
Papers: Political Geography of Lobbying
Benjamin Barber, IE Business School

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Covert Corporate Political Activity and Shareholder


Value
Timothy Werner, University of Texas at Austin
Explaining PTA Bargaining Delay
Kim-Lee Tuxhorn, University of Colorado, Boulder
Firm Preferences and the Globalization of Finance
Bora Clara Park, UC Berkeley
Owning that Party: Extreme Wealth and Political Parties
in Nascent Democracies
Stanislav Markus, Darla Moore School of Business
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
51.8
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INEQUALITY
Room: PCC, 102-A
Disc:
Vittorio Merola, The Ohio State University
Papers: Capital and the Political Origins of Wealth Inequality
Kenneth F. Scheve, Stanford University
David Stasavage, New York University
Divided They Fall: Is Rising Inequality Weakening the
Incumbency Advantage?
Lloyd Gruber, London School of Economics
Do Economic Crises Fuel Income Inequality?
Cristina Bodea, Michigan State University
Christian Houle, Michigan State University
Hyunwoo Kim, Michigan State University
Explaining the Response to Inequality in the US
Lucy M. Goodhart, Brandeis University
How Economic Dis/Advantage Sustains Inequality in
Democracies
Bastian Becker, Central European University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
51.9
STUDYING AND MEASURING ELECTORAL
INTEGRITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
VOTING BEHAVIOR

Chair:
Disc:

Susan D. Hyde, University of California, Berkeley


Casey Crisman-Cox, University of Rochester
Dorothy Kronick, Stanford University
Emily Beaulieu, University of Kentucky

Papers: Developments in Positive Empirical Models of Election


Frauds
Walter R. Mebane, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Diogo Ferrari, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Spatial Election Audits
Francisco Cantu, University of Houston
Leonardo Antenangeli, The University of Houston
Who are the Experts? Comparing Perceptions of
Electoral Integrity
Max Grmping, The University of Sydney

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE


EDUCATION

Chair:
Disc:

Elizabeth C. Matto, Rutgers University


J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


51.11
BARRIERS TO INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Kristin McKie, Saint Lawrence University
Disc:
Kristin McKie, Saint Lawrence University
Papers: Constitutional Rigidity: A Veto Players Approach
George Tsebelis, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Explaining Authoritarian Institutional Change: Sources
and Trajectories
Hans Hanpu Tung, National Taiwan University
Institutional Change and Veto Players: Displacement of
Militaries
Dina I. Rashed
Instrumental Incoherence in Institutional Reform:
Politics & Structural Change
Jean-Paul Faguet, London School of Economics
Mahvish Shami, London School of Economics
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
51.12
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON PARTY
INSTITUTIONALIZATION
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Georgia Kernell, UCLA
Disc:
Jennifer C. Boylan
Papers: Democratization through Elections: the Role of Ruling
Party Institutionalization
Qingjie (Eddie) Zeng, Fudan University
Incentives Are Not Enough: Party Capacity and
Affiliation to Seguro Popular
Jose Antonio Hernandez Company, Instituto
Tecnolgico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey
David Argente
Party-Building from Personalism: Coalitions,
Constraints, and Outsider Politics
Samuel Handlin, University of Utah
Varieties of Populism: A New Type Based on Turkey,
Thailand and India
Yaprak Gursoy, Istanbul Bilgi University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 299

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL


SCIENCE
51.10
ENHANCING TEACHING AND LEARNING
Room: Marriott, Room 305

Papers: Teaching University Teachers to Become Better


Teachers - Is It Effective?
Gissur Erlingsson, Lund University
Jorgen Odalen, Linkoping University
Enhancing Student Writing in Online Classes through
Instructor Feedback
Bruce M. Wilson, University of Central Florida
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
Alisha Janowsky, University of Central Florida
Patsy Moskal, University of Central Florida
Role Playing in the Classroom
Laura D Young, Georgia Gwinnett College
Michael Perrin, Purdue University
Nusta Pitushca Carranza Ko, Purdue University
How do Political Scientists use Online Resources?
Justin E. Esarey, Rice University
Andrew R. Wood, Rice University
Mistaken About Our Students Critical Thinking and
Writing Skills: A Proposal for a Keystone Writing in
Political Science Course
Lev Szentkirlyi, University of Colorado

299

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


51.13
SUBNATIONAL POLITICS IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES: POLICY, INSTITUTIONS AND
CONFLICT
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Candelaria Garay, Harvard University
Disc:
Tariq Thachil, Vanderbilt University
Papers: Comparing the Introduction of Smallpox Vaccination in
Canton and Madras
Prerna Singh, Brown University
Poor People's Participation: Local Civic Engagement in
Bolivia
Tulia G. Falleti, University of Pennsylvania
Emmerich Davies
Imperfect Recall: Subnational Office Removals in Peru
and Colombia
Alisha Caroline Holland, Princeton University
Jose Incio, University of Pittsburgh
Soybean Expansion and Popular Resistance in the
Argentinean Chaco Region
Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University
Jorge G Mangonnet, Columbia University
Commodities vs Forests? Variation in Forest Protection
in the American Chaco
Mara Beln Fernndez Milmanda, Harvard
University
Candelaria Garay, Harvard University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
51.14
COLONIALISM AND HISTORICAL LEGACIES
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Sherrill Stroschein, University College London
Disc:
Shane J Barter, Soka University of America
Papers: Colonial Origins of Postcolonial Inter-communal
Violence in Ex-British Colonies
Subhasish Ray, National University of Singapore
Colonialism, Elite Networks, and Ethnic Power Sharing
in Multiethnic States
Manuel Vogt, Princeton University
Varieties of Economic Nationalisms in Post-War Brazil
and India
Jason Jackson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Warfare, Bossism, and State Capacity: Evidence from
post-Revolutionary Mexico
Mariano Sanchez-Talanquer, Cornell University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
51.15
POLITICAL PARTIES IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES: ALIGNMENTS AND LEADERSHIP
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Navid Hassanpour, Columbia University
Disc:
Yann Kerevel, Louisiana State University
Papers: Chief Strength and Opposition Party Fragmentation in
Africa
Timothy Peterka, University of California, Davis
Factionalism of Dominant Parties in Sub-Saharan Africa:
The Case of Tanzania
Machiko Tsubura, Institute of Developing Economies

300

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 300

Fake It Until You Make It: Elections and Parties in


Hybrid Regimes
Jeremy Martin Ladd, Queen's University
Partisanship and Representation in a Semi-Authoritarian
Chamber
Amanda Clayton, Vanderbilt University
Daniel Berliner, Arizona State University
The Political Economy of Institutional Change in
African Legislatures
Michaela Collord, University of Oxford
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
51.16
RESURGENCE OF INDUSTRIAL POLICY:
NETWORKS, CLUSTERS, AND PRODUCTION
FRAGMENTATION
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Mark Peter Dallas, Union College
Disc:
Gary Herrigel, University of Chicago
Richard F. Doner, Emory University
Papers: Old Dogs, New Tricks: Industrial Policy & Firms in
German Wind & Solar Sectors
Jonas M. Nahm
Clustering in Captivity: Industrial Policy and TNCs in
Malaysian Semiconductors
Greg B. Felker, Willamette University
Failing to Connect: Networks and EPZs in Latin
American Industrial Policy
Dan Breznitz
Janus-face of Chinese Industrial Policy: Natl
Champions & Fragmented Production
Mark Peter Dallas, Union College
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
51.17
POST-COMMUNIST SOCIAL POLICY
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Linda J. Cook, Brown University
Disc:
Erica J. Johnson, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Quintin H. Beazer, Florida State University
Papers: Public Services Delivery and the Fate of Social Sector
Reforms in Russia
Mikhail Zherebtsov, Carleton University
Protecting workers or creating an international labor
market?
Caress Rene Schenk, Nazarbaev University
Post-Soviet Labor Reform: Between Economic
Liberalization and Workers Rights
Elena Maltseva, University of Windsor
Shock-Resistant Authoritarianism:Infrastructural
Capacity in Putins Russia
Natalia Forrat, Stanford University
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
51.18
THE MISSING LEFT? THE RESPONSE OF LEFTWING PARTIES TO THE GREAT RECESSION
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Roy Gava, University of Geneva
Disc:
Matthias M. Matthijs, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: The Great Recession, Corruption and Trust in Europe
Anastassia V. Obydenkova, Harvard University

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Whats Left of the Left? The Great Recession and the


Response Left-Wing Parties
Bjoern Kristen Bremer, European University Institute
Assessing Party System Change in Times of Crisis
Fernando Casal Bertoa, University of Nottingham
Till Weber, Baruch College, CUNY
Responsiveness during Hard Times: The Global
Financial Crisis and Banking Reform
Roy Gava, University of Geneva
Oriol Sabate, University of Leicester
Laura Morales, University of Leicester
Varieties of Crisis Capitalism? Saving the auto industry
Mark Nance, North Carolina State University
Jack Daly, Duke University Center on Globalization,
Governance & Competitiveness
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
51.19
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON FOREIGN AID
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Saori N. Katada, University of Southern California
Disc:
Irfan Nooruddin, Georgetown University
Papers: Is Foreign Aid an Effective Immigration Policy?
Jonas Gamso, Arizona State University
Farhod Yuldashev, University of Pittsburgh
Providing the Underprovided? The Public and Private
Nature of Development Aid
Anna Walsdorff
Fragmentation of Sectoral Development Aid: The Role
of Multilateral Institutions
Martin C. Steinwand, Stony Brook University
Refugee Inflows and Refugee Aid: Symbiosis or
Competition?
A. Maurits van der Veen, College of William & Mary
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
51.20
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: "WAR AND
DEMOCRATIC CONSTRAINT" BY BAUM AND
POTTER
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Sarah E. Croco, University of Maryland, College Park
Part:
Sarah E. Croco, University of Maryland, College Park
James N. Druckman, Northwestern University
Christopher F. Gelpi, Ohio State University
Tim Groeling, University of California-Los Angeles
Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, George Washington
University
Matthew A. Baum, Harvard University
Philip B. K. Potter, University of Virginia
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
51.21
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Kevin Narizny, Lehigh University
Disc:
Jennifer L. Erickson, Boston College
Kevin Narizny, Lehigh University

DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS


CONTROL
51.22
THE POWER OF GREAT POWERS?
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Catherine Sanger, Yale-NUS College
Disc:
Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University
Papers: Losing and Resentment: Russia as a Normal Defeated
Great Power
Paul Fritz, Hofstra University
Strategies of Domination: The Politics of Foreign Rule
1900-2015
Benjamin Denison, University of Notre Dame
The Power of Transformative Positive Shocks and the
Marketplace of Ideas
Michael J. Reese, University of Chicago
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
51.23
CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES FOR U.S.
FOREIGN POLICY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Dorle Hellmuth, The Catholic University of America
Disc:
Dorle Hellmuth, The Catholic University of America
Papers: Concordance in Digital Affairs: Domestic Politics and
Cyber Threat Inflation
Christopher Whyte, George Mason University
Foreign Policy Objectives and US Migration Policy
Robbie J. Totten, American Jewish University
The Strange Disappearance of US Policy Direction and
Influence in Latin America
Emily Acevedo, California State University, Los
Angeles
Jeremy David Busacca, University of California
Riverside
Walking the Talk: Prospects for Negotiation with al
Qaeda and the Islamic State
Seth Cantey, Washington and Lee University
American Retrenchment and the Future of World Order
Robert J. Lieber, Georgetown University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
51.24
MOBILIZING AGAINST THE ''STATE''
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Michael E. Allison, University of Scranton
Disc:
J. Michael Greig, University of North Texas

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 301

Daily Schedule

Papers: Privileging Procurement?: Understanding Procurement in


US Military Spending
Rosella Cappella, Boston University
Benjamin O. Fordham, SUNY, Binghamton
Kaija E. Schilde, Boston University

Producing Goods and Projecting Power: What You


Make Influences What You Take
Jonathan Markowitz, University of Southern
California
Blake McMahon, US Air Force
Christopher J. Fariss, Penn State University
The Political Economy of Territorial Preferences
Jeff Colgan, Brown University
The Political Economy of Arms Sales and International
Influence
Jonathan D. Caverley, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Fiscal Constraints and Interstate Crises
Patrick E. Shea, University of Houston

301

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Papers: Militant Group Mobilization and Selection into Civil


War
Christopher Linebarger, University of Texas at El
Paso
Mobilized Dissent and Repression as a Dual
Coordination Problem
Tiberiu C. Dragu, New York University
Yonatan Lupu, George Washington University
Mobilizing Civilians for Combat: Evidence from Eastern
Ukraine
Vera Mironova
Sam Whitt, High Point University
Overcoming the Rebel's Dilemma: Capacity Mobilization
and Military Capabilities
Jacob Aronson, University of Maryland, College Park
Paul K. Huth, University of Maryland, College Park
Mark I. Lichbach, University of Maryland, College
Park
Transnational Dynamics of Armed Mobilization: Foreign
Fighters in Civil War
Anastasia Shesterinina, Yale University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
51.25
NEW RESEARCH IN QUANTITATIVE
TERRORISM STUDIES
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: James A. Piazza, Pennsylvania State University
Disc:
Stephen C. Nemeth, Oklahoma State University
Papers: When Do Terrorist Groups Claim Credit?
Max Abrahms
Justin Conrad, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
The Effect of New Information and Communications
Technologies on Terrorism
Bryan Joseph Arva, Pennsylvania State University
Rebels Go Abroad: Offsetting Weakness or Signaling
Strength?
Luis De la Calle, Centro de Investigacin y Docencia
Econmicas (CIDE)
Will Promoting Development and Democracy Reduce
Support for Political Violence?
James A. Piazza, Pennsylvania State University
An Alternative Method to Studying Terrorism
Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
51.26
SURVEYS IN CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Benjamin Morse, MIT
Disc:
Kyle Beardsley, Duke University
Papers: How Do Rebel Groups Gain Support? Evidence from
Survey Experiments
Megan A. Stewart, University of Virginia
D.J. Flynn, Dartmouth College
Local Public Opinion and Local Political Violence
David J. Hendry, Aarhus Universitet
Sunhee Park, Aarhus University
The Relics of the Dayton Peace Agreement
Vanja Petricevic, Florida Gulf Coast University

Refugees and Foreign Policy Preferences: A Survey


Experiment in Turkey
Anna Getmansky, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)
Herzliya
Tolga Sinmazdemir, Bogazici University
Thomas Zeitzoff, American University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
51.27
LEGISLATIVE CAREERS
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Audrey Andr, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Disc:
Emanuel Coman, Corpus Christi College, University of
Oxford
Papers: Signaling Influence and Leadership Selection in the
European Parliament
Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Steven Wilson
Determinants of Membership Volatility in the European
Parliament, 1979-2014
William Thomas Daniel, Francis Marion University
Shawna K. Metzger, National University of Singapore
Exiting the Continent: Retirements from the European
Parliament
Theodore J. Masthay, University of Missouri
Legislative Exposure Scores: Proposing a Measurement
of MEP Legislative Behavior
Nathan Henceroth, University of Nevada-Las Vegas
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
51.28
AGENCIES AND APPOINTEES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University
Disc:
Karen M. Hult, Virginia Tech
Papers: Analyzing Agency History and Hierarchy with Text
Analysis
Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester
Matthew James Sweeten, University of Rochester
Assessing Unilateral Presidential Action with Recess
Appointments
Anne Cizmar, Eastern Kentucky University
Bureaucratic Leadership and Structural Change in US
Federal Agencies
George A. Krause, University of Pittsburgh
Congressional Accountability and Government
Regulation, 1950-1987
Simon F. Haeder, West Virginia University
Jason D. Yackee, University of Wisconsin
Susan Webb Yackee, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Ideological Representation of Geographic Constituencies
in the U.S. Bureaucracy
Jowei Chen, University of Michigan
Tim Johnson, Willamette University
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
51.29
REPRESENTATIVE BUREAUCRACY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Lael R. Keiser, University of Missouri, Columbia
Disc:
Francesca Gains, University of Manchester
Papers: Racial Representation, Diversity and Public Sector
Performance in South Africa
Hongseok Lee, Indiana University at Bloomington
Sergio Fernandez, Indiana University

302

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 302

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Examining Representation in Public and Private


Corrections Facilities
Jocelyn M. Johnston, American University
Stephen Holt, American University
Gender, Representation, and Whistle-Blowing: The Case
of Sexual Harassment
Sun Young Kim, Indiana University
Bureaucratic Representation and Agency Capacity
Lorena Moscovich, Universidad de San Andrs
John Polga-Hecimovich, U.S. Naval Academy
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
51.30
NEW DIRECTIONS IN POLICY FEEDBACK
RESEARCH
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Disc:
Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Policy Feedback, Social and Economic Stratification,
and the Affordable Care Act
Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University
Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
Political Partisanship and Policy Uptake: Experimental
Evidence from Obamacare
Amy E. Lerman, UC Berkeley
Meredith L. Sadin, UC-Berkeley
Housing Bubbles and Support for Incumbents
Martin Vins Larsen, University of Copenhagen
Frederik Hjorth, University of Copenhagen
Peter Thisted Dinesen, University of Copenhagen
Kim Mannemar Soenderskov, Aarhus University
Do Cutbacks in the Welfare State Make People More
Conservative?
Jane R. Gingrich, University of Oxford
Transformative Policy Experience: Theory and
Measurement
Audrey Latura, Harvard University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
51.31
THE COMPLEX INFLUENCES OF LEGISLATOR
AND BUREAUCRAT CHARACTERISTICS ON
POLICY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION

Chair:
Disc:

Amy Semet, Princeton University


Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas at Dallas
David W. Brady, Stanford University

Papers: Are We Appointing a Diverse Judiciary of the Nations


Very Best Lawyers?
Lisa M. Holmes, University of Vermont
Litigation: The Next Partisan Arena
James Sasso, Princeton University/Harvard Law
The Supreme Court and Religion in a Polarized Political
Regime
Mitch Pickerill
Cornell W. Clayton, Washington State University
Polarized Justice? State Court Decision Making in a
Hyperpartisan Environment
Kyla Stepp, Wayne State University
Kevin Gerald Lorentz, Wayne State University
Polarizing the Bench? Considering the Influence of Party
on State High Courts
Morgan L. W. Hazelton, Saint Louis University
Matthew E.K. Hall, University of Notre Dame
Jason H. Windett, Saint Louis University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
51.33
LAW, COURTS, AND POLICY
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Jodi S. Finkel, Loyola Marymount University
Disc:
Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University
Papers: Constitutions, Rights, and Political Economy of Health:
S.Africa, India, and the World
Matthew Kavanagh, University of Pennsylvania
Overcoming Constraints? Courts and Social Change in
Canada and Germany
Elizabeth Acorn
Whitney Taylor
The Supreme Court and the "Policymaking Agenda"
Logan Strother, Syracuse University
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND
JURISPRUDENCE
51.34
COMPARATIVE CONSTITUTIONALISM
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: Paul Brian Nolette, Marquette University
Disc:
Alison Dundes Renteln, University of Southern
California
Jeffrey A. Lenowitz, Brandeis University
Papers: Beyond Justification & Legitimacy:The Ideational
Origins of Juristocracy
Sung Wook Paik, York College of Pennsylvania
Citation Practices: An Empirical Analysis of the Belgian
Constitutional Court
Josephine De Jaegere, University of Antwerp
The Elite Intellectual Origins of Judicial Empowerment
in India
Manoj Mate, Whittier College School of Law
(Whittier Law School)
Hate, Virtual Violence, and Human Dignity: US,
Canadian, and German Jurisprudence
Jameson W. Doig, Dartmouth College

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 303

303

Daily Schedule

Papers: Elite Education, Liberalism, and Effective Lawmaking in


the U.S. Congress
Craig Volden, University of Virginia
Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University
Estimating Bureaucratic Legitimacy
Matthew Zarit
Inertia and Public Bureaucracy: The Imprint of the
Bureaucrat
Shaheen Naseer
Klaus Heine
Who Governs the Federal Reserve Banks?
Gabrielle Elul, UC Berkeley

DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS


51.32
COURTS IN A POLARIZED ERA
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Eileen Braman
Disc:
Eileen Braman

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL


RELATIONS
51.35
INTERGOVERNMENTAL POLITICS AND
PERCEPTIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism
Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism

Chair:
Disc:

Derek Kauneckis, Voinovich School of Leadership and


Public Affairs
Daniel J Mallinson, Stockton University
Mona Vakilifathi, University of California, San Diego

Papers: City, State, National: Cooperative Federalism From the


Perspective of Mayors
Katherine Levine Einstein, Boston University
David Glick, Boston University
Federalism and Congressional Delegation, 1933-2014
Miranda Yaver, Washington University in St. Louis
Susan Marie Miller, University of South Carolina
The Diffusion of Policy Perceptions: Evidence from a
Structural Topic Model
Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich
Charles R. Shipan, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Bruno R. Wueest, University of Zurich
The Rhetoric of Localism in Policy Protest: An
Ideological Appraisal
Celia Carroll Jones, Hampden Sydney College
Resource Limitations and the Employment Private
Attorneys General
Bethany Nanamaker, Emory University
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
51.36
LEGISLATORS AND LEGISLATURES IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Chair: Gary F. Moncrief
Disc:
Gary F. Moncrief
Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester
Douglas M Johnson, University of Rochester
Papers: Accountability in State Legislative Primary Elections
Steven Rogers, Saint Louis University
Legislative Productivity in the States
Nathaniel A Birkhead, Kansas State University
Strategic Abstention, Missing Data, and Ideal Point
Estimation
Asya Magazinnik, Princeton University
Sepehr Shahshahani, Princeton University
The Myth of the Citizen-Legislator: How Reforms
Increased The Incumbency Effect
Kevin Fahey, Florida State University Political
Science Department
What Makes a Decision Difficult for State Legislators?
Kristin O'Donovan, Wayne State University
Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State
University
Steven Betz
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
51.37
GENDER AND POLITICAL ATTITUDES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Chair:

304

Jennifer Kelkres Emery, The Washington Center for


Internships & Academic Seminars

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 304

Disc:

Zoe M. Oxley, Union College


Meghan Condon, DePaul University

Papers: A Comprehensive Analysis of Gender Gaps in Modern


American Public Opinion
Nicholas Winter, University of Virginia
Chelsea A. Goforth, University of Virginia
Similarities and Differences Across Generations in the
Partisan Gender Gap
Heather L. Ondercin, University of Mississippi
Gender Differences in Support for Gun Control
Mary Kate Lizotte, Augusta University
Gender, Parenthood, and the Politics of Marijuana
Laurel Elder
Steven Greene, North Carolina State University
The Feminist Gap: Feminism, Not Gender, as a
Predictor of Vote Choice
Amanda Wintersieck, University of Tennessee,
Chattanooga
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
51.38
THE POLITICS OF WOMEN'S HEALTH POLICY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND
HEALTH POLICY

Chair:
Disc:

Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina


Elspeth Wilson, Franklin & Marshall College
Melissa Haussman, Carleton University

Papers: Access, Inequality, and State Infertility Policy


Erin Heidt-Forsythe, Pennsylvania State University
Embryonic Politics & Moral Values: IVF, Abortion, &
Stem Cell Research
Heather Silber Mohamed, Clark University
Reproductive Crimes and the Relevance of Law
Grace Elizabeth Howard, Rutgers University
When Sex Becomes Dangerous: HIV Prevention Policies
for Women in the U.S.
Karen L. Baird, Purchase College, SUNY
Inward or Outward: How Pregnancy Shapes Political
Orientations
Elin Naurin, University of Gothenburg
Dietlind Stolle, McGill
Elias Markstedt, Department of Journalism, Media
and Communications
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
51.39
EMOTIONAL POLITICS: MOBILIZING RACIAL
RESENTMENT
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Efren Osvaldo Perez
Disc:
Efren Osvaldo Perez
Joel A. Lieske, Cleveland State University
Papers: Electoral Implications of Racial Resentment in the
South: The Influence of Party
M. V. Hood, University of Georgia
Quentin Kidd, Christopher Newport University
Irwin L. Morris, University of Maryland, College
Park
50 Years After Watts: Superordinate Identity and
Intergroup Relations
Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas
Brian R. Calfano, University of Cincinnati

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Emotions Condition the Influence of Racial Resentment


on Policy Positions
David P. Redlawsk, University of Delaware
Natasha Altema McNeely, University of Texas, Rio
Grande Valley
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
The Donald and The Sleeping Giant
Angel Saavedra Cisneros, The University of Texas
Rio Grande Valley
Does it Pay for Minority Candidates to Derogate
Minorities?
Alexandra Filindra, University of Illinois at Chicago
Matt Motyl, University of Illinois at Chicago
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
51.40
RELIGIOUS/SECULAR POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
Room: Marriott, Room 415
Chair: Christina Gregory, University of California, Riverside
Disc:
Brendan Joseph Wright, Princeton University
Papers: Negotiated Space: Secular vs. Religion In America and
France Today
Christina Gregory, University of California, Riverside
Religious Participation, Trust, and Civic Engagement in
a Secular Context
Susanne Wallman Lundasen, Mid Sweden University
Explaining Why Belgium Publicly Funds Religious
Schooling While America Does Not
Robert Maranto, University of Arkansas
Dirk C van Raemdonck, University of Arkansas
Teacher Attitudes about the Limits of Religious Free
Exercise in the Classroom
Laura R. Olson, Clemson University
Daniel Frost, Clemson University
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
51.41
THE IMPACT OF DELIBERATIVE MINIPUBLICS
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Chair: Graham Smith, University of Southampton
Disc:
Edana Beauvais

DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND


PARTIES
51.42
SETH MASKET'S "THE INEVITABLE PARTY"
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Hans Noel, Georgetown University
Part:
Gerald C. Wright, Indiana University
Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame
Justin Kirkland, University of Houston
Jennifer Hayes Clark, University of Houston
Seth E. Masket, University of Denver
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
51.43
METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES AND
ADVANCES USING THE CSES
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

Chair:
Disc:

Stephen Patrick Quinlan, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the


Social Sciences
Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University

Papers: Gender or Measurement? A Comparative Analysis of the


Gender Gap in Knowledge
Marta Fraile, CSIC
Jessica Fortin-Rittberger, University of Salzburg
Institutional Influences on Behavior and Selection
Effects
John H. Aldrich, Duke University
Joshua Yoshio Lerner, Duke University
Dimensionality, Contexts, and Ideological Congruence
between Parties and Voters
Royce A. Carroll, Rice University
Hiroki Kubo, Osaka University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
51.44
TARGETED SURVEYS: HOW TO STUDY THE
UNDERSTUDIED
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Elizabeth R. Nugent, Princeton University
Disc:
Christopher H. Achen, Princeton University
Papers: Regionalism in New Democracies: Evidence from a
Voter Exit Survey in Tunisia
Chantal Berman, Princeton University
Elizabeth R. Nugent, Princeton University
Gauging Shia Public Opinion: A Survey of Iranian and
Iraqi Religious Pilgrims
Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Dean Knox, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Elizabeth Dekeyser, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Facebook Subject Recruitment: Experimental Evidence
from Turkey
Kimberly Guiler, University of Texas, Austin
Surveying Political Elites: Lessons from a Comparative
Study in Three Countries
Jeroen Karl Joly
Stefaan Walgrave

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 305

305

Daily Schedule

Papers: Systemic Assessment of Deliberative Assemblies: A


Comparative Approach
Simon J. Niemeyer, Australian National University
Andrea Felicetti, Scuola Normale Superiore
Nicole Curato, University of Canberra
Deliberative Democracy and the So What Question: The
Effects of Belgiums G1000
Didier Caluwaerts, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Vincent Jacquet, Universit catholique de Louvain
Min Reuchamps, Universit catholique de Louvain
Pilot Citizens Assemblies in the UK: Linking Political
Science and Politics
Matthew Flinders, University of Sheffield
Will Jennings, University of Southampton
Alan Renwick
Graham Smith, University of Southampton
Paolo Spada, University of Southampton
Gerry Stoker, University of Southampton

Bringing Deliberation into the Mainstream: The Irish


Constitutional Convention
David M. Farrell, University College Dublin, Belfield
Clodagh Harris, University College Cork
Jane Suiter, Dublin City University

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION


51.45
WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT WHAT THEY KNOW:
INFLUENCES ON POLITICAL KNOWLEDGE
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington University
Disc:
Johanna Dunaway, Texas A&M University
Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington University
Emily Thorson, Boston College
Papers: Do People Learn From Fact-checking? Evidence from a
Longitudinal Campaign Study
Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College
Jason A. Reifler, University of Exeter
Measuring the Effects of Issue Television Advertising
Christopher B Mann, Skidmore College
Robyn Stiles, Louisiana State University
What You Know Depends on How Fast You Go:
Internet Speed and Political Knowledge
Yphtach Lelkes, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
51.46
KNOWLEDGE AND IDEOLOGY IN
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 310
Chair: Erick Lachapelle, Universite de Montreal
Disc:
Ann O'M. Bowman, Texas A&M University
Papers: Cognitive Awareness of the Water-Energy-Food Nexus
Kent E. Portney, Texas A&M University
Measuring Knowledge of Environmental Sustainability
Colin Kuehl, University of California - Santa
Barbara
Aaron C Sparks, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Heather Elina Hodges, Reed College
Eric R. A. N. Smith, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Katie C Maynard, UCSB Department of Geography
Pushing a Green Agenda: Cohort and Period Effects on
Environmental Funding
April K. Clark, Northern Illinois University
Juliet Carlisle, University of Idaho
Motivated Reasoning and the Sources of Scientific
Illiteracy
Josh Pasek, University of Michigan
What Americans Think about Human Origins, Science,
Religion, and the Environment
Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
POLITICS
51.47
INTERNET POLITICS BEYOND WESTERN
DEMOCRACIES
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: Terri L. Towner
Disc:
Michael J. Jensen, University of Canberra
Papers: Government Control of Information Flows: Social Media
and Participation
Jason Gainous, University of Louisville
Jason P Abbott, University of Louisville
Kevin Wagner, Florida Atlantic University

306

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 306

Netizens, Nationalism, and New Media: Online Foreign


Policy Discourse in China
Jackson Woods, George Washington University
Social Media from Revolution to Democratic
Consolidation
Magdalena Karolak, Zayed University
Technological Strategies of Mobilization: Language and
Strategy in Ukraine
Megan MacDuffee Metzger, New York University
Technologies of Participatory Governance in Putin's
Russia
Hannah Chapman, University of Wisconsin-Madison
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
51.48
NEW RESEARCH IN GENOCIDE AND MASS
KILLING
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
METHODS

Chair:
Disc:

Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison


Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Papers: Information and Intervention to Stop Mass Killing


Taylor B. Seybolt, University of Pittsburgh
How Atrocities End: A New Dataset and Typology of
Mass Atrocity Terminations
Chad Hazlett
Bridget K Conley-Zilkic, Tufts University
Dissent, Debate, and the Origins of Responsiveness to
Mass Killing
Amanda Joan Rothschild, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Coming to Terms with Dark Pasts?
Jennifer M. Dixon, Villanova University
The Role of Law: Punishing Perpetrators of Genocide
and Other Mass Atrocities
Zachary Daniel Kaufman, Harvard University John
F. Kennedy School of Government
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
51.49
SOURCES OF REGIME DURABILITY AND
TRANSFORMATION IN CHINA
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Elizabeth J. Perry, Harvard University
Disc:
William Hurst
Papers: Regime Support in Urban China
Bruce J. Dickson, George Washington University
Strength without Confidence in Authoritarian China
Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Joseph Wong, University of Toronto
The Future of Chinas Authoritarianism: Learning from
Inductive Research
Marie-Eve Reny, Universit de Montral
The Revolutionary Origins of Authoritarian Durability in
China
Steven Levitsky, Harvard University
Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto
Fearing the Sword: Bias Against Cadres with Military
Background in the CCP
Victor C. Shih, UCSD

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS


51.50
SEXUALITY AND POLITICS: VARIOUS
METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Kenneth Sherrill
Papers: Ethos and the Carceral Terrain
Ray Noll, University of Chicago
Generalizing Rights Construction and Deployment
Scott Barclay, Drexel University
Andrew R. Flores, UCLA School of Law
Tracing Mechanisms of Discursive Change in Marriage
Equality Debates
Julie Hollar, City University of New York Graduate
Center
Understanding Bias against LGBT Candidates: A
Conjoint Experiment
Andrew Thomas Proctor, Princeton University
Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton University
Viral Memories: The Politics of Memory in the HIV/
AIDS Epidemic
J. Ricky Price, The New School
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
51.51
THE POLITICS OF PUBLIC HEALTH:
TRANSFORMATION OR STATUS QUO?
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Miriam J. Laugesen, Columbia University Mailman
School of Public Health
Disc:
Miriam J. Laugesen, Columbia University Mailman
School of Public Health
Papers: Barriers to High Quality Maternity Care in the US
Lauren K. Hall, Rochester Institute of Technology
Normalizing Tobacco? The Politics of Trade and
Tobacco Control
Holly Jarman, University of Michigan
Policy Change in Noncommunicable Diseases: Tobacco
and Obesity
Donley T. Studlar, University of Strathclyde
Hadii M. Mamudu, East Tennessee State University
The Role of Untreated Mental Illness in Deadly
Encounters with the Police
Holona LeAnne Ochs, Lehigh University
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
51.52
NATURAL AND QUASI EXPERIMENTS
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Joan Ricart-Huguet, Princeton University
Disc:
Albert Fang, Yale University

DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP


51.53
EMPLOYING MIGRANTS: MULTIPLE
PERSPECTIVES
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University
Disc:
Jeannette Money
Papers: Comparing Migrant Care Worker Policies in Taiwan and
South Korea
Yi-Chun Chien, University of Toronto
Non-Quota Barriers to Immigration
Vivienne Born, University of Pennsylvania
The Effect of Welfare States on Skill-Selective
Immigration Policies
Melanie Kolbe, The Graduate School of International
and Development Studies
With or Without the Veil Muslim Women in the
German Employment Sector
Lara-Zuzan Golesorkhi, The New School for Social
Research
Related Groups
52.1
ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF
NATIONALITIES: CONFLICT AND IDENTITY IN
POSTCOMMUNIST STATES: NEW RESEARCH
ON POLITICS, NATIONALISM, AND VIOLENCE
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University
Disc:
Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University
Papers: Unintended Consequences: State Governance,
Secessionist Movements, and Instability in Georgia and
Moldova
Julie George, CUNY, Queens College
When do National-secession Campaigns Use Violence?"
Philip G. Roeder, University of California, San Diego
Rallying Behavior and Identity in Times of Conflict:
Evidence from a Panel Survey in Russia 2012-15
Henry E. Hale, George Washington University
Olga Onuch, University of Manchester
Nadiya Kravets, Harvard University
Timothy J. Colton, Harvard University
52.2
CATO INSTITUTE: COLLABORATION
BETWEEN ACADEMIA AND POLITICAL
PRACTITIONERS
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: Emily McClintock Ekins, Cato Institute
Disc:
David Richard Kirby, Cato Institute
Donald P. Green, Columbia University
Kevin Collins, Analyst Institute
52.3

Room:
Chair:

CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF


STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: MACHIAVELLI ON WAR, PEACE,
AND REPUBLICANISM
Loews, Commonwealth B
Lindsay Eberhardt, The Claremont Institute

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 307

307

Daily Schedule

Papers: Paris Changes Everything? A Large-scale Natural


Experiment
Charles Breton, UBC
Gregory Eady
Clifton van der Linden, University of Toronto
When the Sorting Hat Does Not Sort: A Natural
Experiment on Culture
Joan Ricart-Huguet, Princeton University
Betsy Levy Paluck, Princeton University
Anti-Corruption and Economic Performance: Evidence
from a Natural Experiment
Kendall Funk, Texas A&M University
Erica Owen, Texas A&M University

Running to the Voting Booth: The Effect of Marathon


Target Times on Turnout
Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University
Christopher T. Dawes
Party Performance: Does the Political Party in Power
Affect Policy Outcomes?
John Holbein

Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Disc:

Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College


Khalil Habib, Salve Regina University

Papers: Note on the Plans of the Prince


Michael Anton, Citigroup
Reviving Ancient Modes and Orders: Swiss
Republicanism According to Machiavelli
Nathan Gill
The Real Possibility of Peace Within Machiavellis
Thoughts on War
Christopher Lynch, Carthage College
52.4
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY:
DEMOCRATIZATION AND THE EXPERIENCE
OF FREEDOM IN CENTRAL EASTERN EUROPE
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: James R. Stoner, Louisiana State University
Disc:
Martin Palous, Florida International University
Papers: Between Latin America and Western Democracy Transformation in the Balkans
Spasimir Domaradzki, Lazarski University
War and Its Impact on Russian Politics and Foreign
Policy
Mark Kramer
Democratisation of Ukraine as a Way to Anchor Russian
Neo-Imperialism
Ostap Kushnir, Lazarski University
Collective Memory, Symbols and Regimes in Central
Eastern Europe
Michal Maciej Kuz, Lazarski University
52.5
NATIONAL HUMANITIES INSTITUTE: THE
HISTORICAL MIND: REFLECTIONS ON THE
THINKING OF CLAES G. RYN
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Ryan Robert Holston, Virginia Military Institute
Disc:
Justin D Garrison, Roanoke College
Ryan Robert Holston, Virginia Military Institute
Papers: An American Foreign Policy towards a Common Human
Ground
Lowell Gustafson, Villanova University
Machiavellian Realism and Burke's Vindication of
Natural Society
Daniel McCarthy, The American Conservative
Ryn and Voegelin on Imagination, Truth, and History
Steven McGuire, Eastern University
52.6
POLITICA: STUDY OF MEDIEVAL POLITICAL
THOUGHT: WHITHER ARISTOTLE? MEDIEVAL
ARISTOTELIANISMS
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Cary J Nederman, Texas A&M University
Disc:
Bettina Koch, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
Papers: Dante and Global Encounters
Mary Elizabeth Sullivan, University of Central
Arkansas
A Society of Orders? The Language of Social
Stratification and Citizenship in the Medieval
Commentaries on Aristotle's Ethics and Politics
Noah Dauber, Colgate University
The Lost Soul of the Body Politic
Jesse Allen Chupp

308

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 308

Plurality of Principates: Aristotle and Dominican


Papalism
Thomas M Izbicki, Rutgers University

Friday, 12:30 PM to 1:30 PM


APSA Events
53.1
FOREIGN POLICY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 408
53.2
IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND POLITICS BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 308

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM


Theme Panels
54.1
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON 'SONS OF THE SOIL'
CONFLICT
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Isabelle Cote, Memorial University of Newfoundland
Part:
David D. Laitin, Stanford University
Eric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University of
London
Matthew I. Mitchell, University of Saskatchewan
Monica Duffy Toft, University of Oxford
Kathleen Klaus, Northwestern University
54.2
PLENARY SESSION: THE STATE OF RACE
RELATIONS IN THE U.S.
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Part:
Paul Frymer, Princeton University
Melissa Harris-Perry, Wake Forest University
Janelle Wong
Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley
54.3
TRANSFORMATIONS DURING PRESIDENTIAL
TRANSITIONS: HOW SCHOLARS CAN HELP
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Heath Brown, City University of New York, Graduate
Center and John Jay College
Part:
Martha Joynt Kumar, White House Transition Project
Nancy Kassop, SUNY New Paltz
David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt University
Charles E. Walcott, Virginia Tech
Terry Sullivan, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
APSA Events
55.1
GENDER, PARENTHOOD, AND SUCCESS IN THE
ACADEMY
Room: PCC, 202-A
Chair: Jill S. Greenlee, Brandeis University
Part:
Sarah Allen Gershon, Georgia State University
Elisabeth Robin Anker, George Washington University
Amber Knight, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Naomi Levy, Santa Clara University
Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University
Marissa Martino Golden, Bryn Mawr College
Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, Pace University
55.2
GET THE JOB: TIPS FOR THE ACADEMIC JOB
MARKET
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Ethan J. Hollander, Wabash College

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Part:

Amanda Marie Murdie, University of Georgia


Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Ron E. Hassner, University of California, Berkeley
Michelle M. Kundmueller, Christopher Newport
University
Nyron N. Crawford, Temple University
55.3
JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Room: PCC, 101-A
Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
56.1
INEQUALITY, PATRIOTISM, AND PROGRESS:
ADAM SMITH'S MORAL ECONOMY
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Ryan Patrick Hanley, Marquette University
Disc:
Brandon Turner, Clemson University
Genevieve Rousseliere, University of WisconsinMadison
Papers: The Possibility of Progress: Smith on Sympathy and the
Moral Economy
Michelle A. Schwarze, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
John T. Scott, University of California, Davis
Managing the 'Natural Rapacity' of the Rich: Adam
Smith on Economic Inequality
David Lay Williams, DePaul University
The Impartial Patriot: Adam Smith's Theory of
Enlightened Patriotism
Yiftah Elazar, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Pursuing Sympathy without Vanity: Smith's Attack on
Rousseau and Mandeville
John William McHugh, Denison University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
56.2
INVISIBLE SUBJECTS: PERSONS HAUNTING
THE MARGINS OF MODERN POLITICAL
THEORY
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Barbara Arneil, University of British Columbia
Disc:
Michaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado, Boulder

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


56.3
KATEB ON LINCOLN
Room: PCC, 108-B
Part:
Steven Johnston, University of Utah
Morton Schoolman, SUNY, University at Albany
Jack Turner, University of Washington
Sharon R. Krause, Brown University

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


56.4
TRANSFORMING VIOLENCE: "DIVINE"
VIOLENCE, PEACE, AND DIPLOMACY.
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Kam Shapiro, Illinois State University
Disc:
Yannik Thiem, Villanova University
Papers: Divine Violence, Divine Peace: Benjamin and Israeli/
Palestinian Peace Activism
Jon Simons, Indiana University
Divine Violence, The Egyptian Revolution and the
Muslim Brotherhood
Matthew Scherer, George Mason University
The Impoliteness of Smart Power
Kam Shapiro, Illinois State University
Death as Witness: Self-sacrifice and Political Founding
Catherine Frost, McMaster University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
56.5
CARE ETHICS, PUBLIC POLICY, AND HUMAN
DIGNITY
Room: PCC, 107-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Chair:
Disc:

Claire C. McKinney, College of William & Mary


Claire C. McKinney, College of William & Mary

Papers: Restructuring Work for Care and Care at Work


Jennifer Nedelsky, University of Toronto
Prioritizing family-friendly workplace policies: day care
or parental leave?
Ruth E. Groenhout, Calvin College
The State of Friendship: Care beyond Family and Free
Market
Julie A. White
Dignity Redefined
Sarah Clark Miller, Penn State University
A Fourth Concept of Liberty? Care Ethics and Concepts
of Liberty
Dan Engster, University of Texas, San Antonio
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
56.6
NEW DIRECTIONS IN DELIBERATIVE
DEMOCRATIC THEORY
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Peter D. Breiner, SUNY, University at Albany
Disc:
Nora Hanagan, Duke University
Papers: Anonymity, Pseudonymity and Deliberation: Why
Everything Should Not Be Connected
Alfred Moore, University of Cambridge
Democratic Deliberation is Always Distributed: A
Response to Owen and Smith
Daniel Hutton Ferris, University of Toronto
Deliberation in Coal Country: Power and Movements in
a Deliberative System
Charlee Tidrick, University of Virginia
Freedom of Thought as a Check on Deliberative
Demands
Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 309

309

Daily Schedule

Papers: Diderots Essay on the Blind as a Political Theory of


Disability
Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania
Frankenstein, Human Rights, and the Spectre of the
Stateless Orphan
Eileen Hunt Botting, University of Notre Dame
Centers and Peripheries of Citizenship: The Case of
Asylum Seekers
Marina Calloni, Universita Degli Studi di MilanoBicocca
The Laughter of the Unreconciled
Bronwyn Anne Leebaw, University of California,
Riverside

Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia


George Kateb

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY


56.7
EXPLAINING LEADERS' INFLUENCE IN
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 408
Chair: Margaret G. Hermann
Disc:
Stephen G. Walker, Arizona State University
Papers: Who Made Decisions And How In The July 1914
Crisis?: A Decision Units Analysis
Joe Dickerson Hagan, West Virginia University
Margaret G. Hermann
Assessing Kim Jung Un at a Distance: The Contours of
his Subjective Rationality
Stephen B. Dyson, University of Connecticut
Sercan Canbolat
Constrained Leadership? The Role of Prime Ministers in
Coalition Foreign Policy
Sibel Oktay, University of Illinois, Springfield
What Drives Terrorist Leaders and How Different Are
They from State Leaders?
Ronit Berger, Syracuse University
Contesting Austerity: Leadership and Social Movements
in Post-crisis Europe
Michael Dedmon, Syracuse University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
56.8
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF SOCIAL POLICY IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Cierra Belin, American Political Science Association
Papers: Economic Vulnerability and Social Policy Demand in
Developing Countries
Wei-Ting Yen, Ohio State University
Is Job Security an Insider Privilege in Latin America?
Sarah Andrea Berens
Achim Kemmerling, CEU Budapest
Left Behind: Why Governments of the Left Relax Labor
Law Enforcement
German Feierherd, Yale University
Electoral Systems, Social Cleavages, and Social Policy
Priorities
Yesola Kweon
Marginalized Groups and Civic Action: Evidence from a
Field Experiment in India
Divya Guru Rajan
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
56.9
POLITICAL FOUNDATIONS OF ECONOMIC
POLICY
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Raphael Cunha, The Ohio State University
Disc:
Raphael Cunha, The Ohio State University
Vittorio Merola, The Ohio State University
Papers: Electoral Competitiveness, Geography, and Economic
Policy
Stephanie J. Rickard, London School of Economics
Fiscal Capacity & Policy Bargains: How Failure to Tax
the Poor Can Hurt the Poor
Jason S. Davis
Government of the People?: Right-wing Populism and
Immigration Policy
Adrian J. Shin, University of Colorado, Boulder

310

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 310

Immigration Policy Preferences and Varieties of


Immigration Policies
Sarah J. Cormack-Patton, Stanford University
Regime Type, Coalition Size, and Consumer Subsidies
as a Form of Goods Delivery
Jonathan Hanson, University of Michigan
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
56.10
IMPOSED REGIMES AND ENDURING
PATTERNS OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: Matthew Goldman
Disc:
Joan Ricart-Huguet, Princeton University
Papers: Colonial Rule, Local Governance and Development:
Evidence from Tlaxcala, Mexico
Edgar Franco Vivanco, Stanford University
Enduring Effects of Property Transfer: Nazi Death
Camps in Poland
Volha Charnysh, Harvard University
Evgeny Finkel, George Washington University
Long-Run Impacts of State Integration Policies
Mai Nguyen, New York University
Politics of Ethnic Inequality: Effects of Artificial
Borders & Soil Inequality
Rachael McLellan, Princeton University
Sondre Solstad, Princeton University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
56.11
METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES IN CAUSAL
MEDIATION ANALYSIS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Kosuke Imai, Princeton University
Disc:
Tess Wise, Harvard University
Hye Sung Kim, Strathmore University
Papers: A Causal Mediation Analysis of Human Rights Treaty
Mechanisms of Influence
Sinh Nguyen, Purdue University
Estimating Controlled Direct Effects through Marginal
Structural Models
Michelle Torres, Washington University in St. Louis
Comparative Causal Mediation: Relaxing the
Assumption of Sequential Ignorability
Kirk Bansak, Stanford University
DPM-SEM: A Nonparametric Bayesian Method for
Estimating Causal Heterogeneity
Yuki Shiraito, Princeton University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
56.12
EMPIRICAL & NORMATIVE IMPLICATIONS OF
DELIBERATIVE CONSTITUTIONS IN
DEMOCRACIES
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Gabriel L. Negretto, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia
Economicas
Disc:
Archon Fung, Harvard University
Papers: Deliberative Constitution-Writing: Empirical Evidence
and Normative Arguments
Todd A. Eisenstadt, American University
Carl LeVan, American University
Participatory Constitution-Making and the Endurance of
National Constitutions
Tofigh Maboudi, Loyola University Chicago

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Inclusive Constitution-Making and Religious Rights:


Lessons from the Iceland
Helene E. Landemore
Mass or Multitude in the Making of the 2009 Bolivian
Constitution?
Joshua Braver, Yale University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
56.13
NON-STATE ACTORS AND POLICYMAKING IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University
Disc:
Candelaria Garay, Harvard University
Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University
Papers: Co-Ethnicity, Capacity, and Connectivity: Who Becomes
a Slum Leader in India?
Adam Michael Auerbach, American University-SIS
Tariq Thachil, Vanderbilt University
Bypass Aid and Local Accountability
Katharine A. Baldwin, Yale University
Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Partisan Charity: The Distributive Politics of Non-State
Welfare Provision
Natalia Salgado Bueno, Yale University
Government and NGO Collaboration in Public Service
Delivery
Jami Nelson-Nunez, The University of New Mexico
The New Kid in Town: Building Parties through
Organizational Linkages in Mexico
Brian Palmer-Rubin, Harvard University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
56.14
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVE
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Carles Boix, Princeton University
Disc:
Lucas Leemann
Daniel M. Smith, Harvard University
Papers: Industrialization, Urban Form, and Voting Behavior
Jonathan Rodden, Stanford University
Who Speaks for the Poor? Suffrage Expansion and the
Swedish Social Democrats
Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University
Partisan Performance After Womens Enfranchisement
Mona Morgan-Collins, London School of Economics
and Political Science
Dawn L. Teele, University of Pennsylvania
From Political Mobilization to Electoral Participation:
Turnout in the 1930s.
Francesc Amat, Institute for Political Economy and
Governance
Carles Boix, Princeton University
Jordi Munoz, Universitat Autnoma de Barcelona
Toni Rodon, Stanford University

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING


COUNTRIES
56.16
DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION, GENDER, AND
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN LATIN
AMERICA
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Disc:
Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Joseph Wong, University of Toronto
Papers: Subnational Poverty and Social Development in Brazil
in Mexico
Jennifer Pribble, University of Richmond
Work and Family Politics in Brazil and Argentina under
Leftwing Governments
Merike Blofield, University of Miami
Participatory Democracy in Latin America: Institutions
and Democratic Quality
Stephanie McNulty
Gendered Dimensions of Human Development: Local
Democratic Outcomes in Brazil
Natasha Borges Sugiyama, University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee
Michael Touchton, University of Miami
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
56.17
INEQUALITY & DISTRIBUTION
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Patrick Egan, Tulane University
Disc:
Eunyoung Ha, Claremont Graduate University
Papers: Decentralized Destitution - The Politics of Poverty in
China
Dario Sidhu
Fiscal Capacity, Income Distribution, and Taxation in
Brazilian Municipalities
Florian Max Benjamin Hollenbach, Texas A&M
University
Thiago Nascimento da Silva, Texas A&M University
How Social Bases of Power influence State Policy:
Evidence from Indian States
Poulomi Chakrabarti, Brown University
The Politics of Dignity vs. Development: Evidence from
Caste Movements in India
Poulomi Chakrabarti, Brown University
Transforming Inequalities: Land Redistribution and
Autocratic Durability in MENA
Allison Spencer Hartnett, University of Oxford

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 311

311

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING


COUNTRIES
56.15
CYCLES OF CONTENTION: THE GROWTH AND
REGROWTH OF ISLAMISM IN THE MIDDLE
EAST
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University
Disc:
Quinn Mecham, Brigham Young University

Papers: Testing Islamism's Structural Advantage: Spatial


Evidence from Interwar Egypt
Steven Brooke, University of Louisville
Neil Ketchley, University of Oxford
Independent Egyptian Salafi Shaykhs Before and During
the Egyptian Revolution
Laurence Deschamps-Laporte
Remaking Brothers: The Muslim Brotherhood's
Changing Curricula 2000-2011.
Sumita Pahwa, Scripps College
Pathways of Moderation in Tunisia's Ennahda
Sharan Grewal, Princeton University

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING


COUNTRIES
56.18
SUBNATIONAL POLITICS: LOCAL PATTERNS
AND PUZZLES
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Ling Chen, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
Thomas Brambor, Lund University
Papers: Dirty Laundry is Washed at Home: Money Laundering
and Local Governments
Vidal Romero, ITAM
Fiscal Capacity and Economic Development in Local
China
Kevin Wei Luo, University of Toronto
The Politics of Local Industrial Policy in Mexico
Steven Samford, University of Toronto
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
56.19
SECURITY IN UKRAINE AND BEYOND
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Sabina Gueorguieva Pavlovska-Hilaiel, University of
Denver, Josef Korbel School of International Studies
Disc:
George Soroka, Harvard University
Papers: Effects of Frozen Conflict on Democratization Processes
in Transitioning Regimes
Evgenia Jane Kitaevich, University of Michigan
Albana Shehaj, University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Voices from the "Maidan": Investigating Action
Networks in Ukraine
Patrick M. Bell, Florida International University
Regime Collapse and Ukraines Civil War
Jesse Driscoll, University of California, San Diego
Dominique Arel, University of Ottawa
Russias Ambiguous War in Ukraine: Its Components
and Implications
Emmanuel Karagiannis, King's College London at
the Joint Services Command and Staff College
The Far Right in Ukraine During the Euromaidan and
the War in Donbas
Ivan Katchanovski, University of Ottawa
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
56.20
POLITICAL PARTIES, POLICIES, AND
POLITICIANS IN JAPAN
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: Kuniaki Nemoto, Musashi University
Disc:
Yoshikuni Ono, Tohoku University
Papers: Do Disasters Cause Civil Society Transformation?: From
Japans Experience
Hiromi Akiyama, School of Policy, Government and
International Affairs, George Mason University
Electoral Competition and the Politics of International
Recession Response
Nobuhiro Hiwatari, University of Tokyo
Female National Politicians as Role Models for Local
Women in Japan and Korea
Kuniaki Nemoto, Musashi University
Intra-Party Dynamics and Preferences for Electoral
System Change in Japan
Hiroki Kubo, Osaka University

312

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 312

Support for a Fringe Party: Explaining the Japanese


Communist Party's Resurgence
Ko Maeda, University of North Texas
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
56.21
DEMOCRATIC POLITICS IN THE AGE OF
AUSTERITY
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Harris Mylonas, George Washington University
Disc:
Erik Jones, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: The Impact of Technocracy on Support for Democracy:
Evidence from Europe
Eri E Bertsou, University of Zurich
Giulia Pastorella
Italian Politics after 2014 and the Anti-EU Turn
Laura Polverari, University of Strathclyde
Arianna Giovannini, SPERI (Sheffield Political
Economy Research Institute)
Antonella Seddone, University of Turin
Strategic Austerity: The Politics of Crisis Response in
Hungary and Spain
Kristin Makszin, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
The Political Dimension of Banking: When Banks Do
What Governments Tell Them To
Elsa C Massoc, UC Berkeley
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
56.22
GREY TRANSFORMATIONS: COMMERCIAL
SMUGGLING AND SECURITY
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Peter Andreas
Disc:
Mark Nance, North Carolina State University
Papers: Migration Brokerage and Clandestine Routes: Central
America through Mexico
Noelle K. Brigden, Marquette University
The Other 50 Shades: Regulating Transnational Grey
Markets
H. Richard Friman, Marquette University
Phantom Commerce: Smuggling economies,
development, and (in)security
Rebecca Galemba, Josef Korbel School of
International Studies at University of Denver
Globalization in the Shadows: How Smugglers Force
Hostile Countries to Cooperate
Rahul Shah Mediratta, Northwestern University
Building Borders: Armed Groups and Transnational
Exchange in Economies of War
Rachel Sweet, Northwestern University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
56.23
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON THE POLITICS OF
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: In Song Kim, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Disc:
Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Papers: Electoral Rules and the Politicization of Trade Policy in
Election Manifestos
Timothy W. Taylor, Wheaton College
Ethnic Politics and Economic Policy: Theory and
Evidence from India
Nikhar Gaikwad, Yale University

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Free Elections, Free Trade, and Free Labor?


Adam Dean
Trade Policy and the Political Geography of Global City
Regions
Aditya Ranganath
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
56.24
THE JUDICIALIZATION OF INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Karen J. Alter, Northwestern University
Disc:
Erik Voeten, Georgetown University
Papers: The Judicialization of International Relations
Karen J. Alter, Northwestern University
Laurence R. Helfer, Duke University
Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of
California, San Diego
Regime Complexes in Investment Arbitration
Todd Tucker
Split Vision. Multi-Dimensionality in the International
Legal Policy Space
Daniel Naurin, University of Oslo and University of
Gothenburg
Olof Larsson, University of Gothenburg
Judicialization of the Sea: Bargaining under the
UNCLOS Regime
Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa
Andrew Owsiak, University of Georgia
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
56.25
DRONES AND THE NATURE OF WARFARE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Michael J. Boyle, La Salle University
Papers: Terrorist Drones
Michael J. Boyle, La Salle University
Normal Autonomous Accidents
Stephanie Carvin, Carleton University
Concepts and Models for Mapping Debates Over The
Nature of War and UAVs
Adam Elkus, George Mason University
Who's Afraid of Killer Robots: The Tradeoff Between
Capital and Labor
Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania
Territory and the IT Revolution: Drones, Cyberspace,
and Territorial Governance
Jordan Branch
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
56.26
TRANSFORMATIONS IN MILITARY
TECHNOLOGY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Neil Narang, University of California, Santa Barbara
Disc:
Neil Narang, University of California, Santa Barbara

DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS


CONTROL
56.27
NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION CHALLENGES:
PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Robert Jervis, Columbia University
Disc:
Matthew Fuhrmann, Texas A&M University
William Tobey, Harvard University
Papers: Twenty Years to Midnight: U.S Intelligence and the
Israeli Bomb 1959-1979
Austin Long, Columbia University
Joshua Itzkowitz Shifrinson, Texas A&M University
U.S. Intelligence and Indias Nuclear Program, 19541974
Joshua Rovner, Southern Methodist University
U.S. Intelligence, Nuclear Nonproliferation, and South
Korea, 1969-1980
Alexander Lanoszka, Dickey Center for International
Understanding
The Nuclear Weapons Proliferation Implications of 3-D
Printing
Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University
Where We Are Headed
Henry Sokolski, Nonproliferation Policy Education
Center
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
56.28
RISING INDIA AND THE CHANGING
CHARACTER OF INDIAN FOREIGN POLICY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Surupa Gupta, University of Mary Washington
Disc:
Nicolas Blarel, Indiana University, Bloomington
Papers: Development Assistance as Indian Foreign Policy
Rani D. Mullen, College of William & Mary
Indian Foreign Policy: Reinvigorated under Modi?
Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University, Bloomington
India's Trade Engagement: The More Things Change,
the More They Remain the Same
Surupa Gupta, University of Mary Washington
Democracy and Foreign Policy: Evidence from India
Paul Staniland, University of Chicago
Vipin Narang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
56.29
STATE FORMATION, SOVEREIGNTY, AND
THEIR OBSTACLES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University
Disc:
Paul Musgrave, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Catherine Sanger, Yale-NUS College

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 313

Daily Schedule

Papers: Asset Fungibility and Organizational Adaptability in


Dealing with Cyber Threats
Ivan Dinev Ivanov, University of Cincinnati
Igor Kovac
Cyber Victory and Failure: State Utilization of Cyber
Coercive Actions
Ryan C. Maness, Northeastern University
Brandon Valeriano, University of Glasgow
Benjamin M. Jensen

From Worms to Wars: Transatlantic Cooperation on


Cybersecurity
Eva-Maria Maggi, University of Arizona
Introducing the CBW Dataset: Chemical and Biological
Weapons Proliferation
Neil Narang, University of California, Santa Barbara
Shifting the Fog of War: Information Technology and
the Politics of Control
Jon R. Lindsay, University of Toronto

313

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: Anarchy Emergent?: Political Collapse & Threat in the


Shadow of Hierarchy
Bridget Coggins, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Changing Kurdish Geopolitics After Syria
Akin Unver, Kadir Has University
Explaining Varieties of State Building in East Asia
Enze Han, SOAS, University of London
Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University
Sovereignty, Self-Determination, and the Shadow of
Violence
R. Joseph Huddleston, University of Southern
California
International Recognition, Religion and The Status of
Western Sahara
Nikola Mirilovic, University of Central Florida
David S. Siroky, Arizona State University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
56.30
DATA AND METHODOLOGY OF CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Michael P. Colaresi, Michigan State University
Disc:
Julian Wucherpfennig, University College London
Papers: Data Problems and Solutions in the Empirical Study of
Political Violence
Jule Krueger, University of Michigan/HRDAG
Adeline Lo
Early ViEWS: A Disaggregated, Open-Source Violence
Early Warning System
Michael P. Colaresi, Michigan State University
Hvard Hegre, Uppsala University
Jonas Nordkvelle, Peace Research Institute Oslo
Multi-language Automated Coding of Event Data for
Conflict Research
Javier Osorio, John Jay College, CUNY
Internal Colonialism, State Weakness and Civil War
Philipp Hunziker, ETH Zurich
Lars-Erik Cederman, ETH Zurich
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
56.31
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES AND CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Ruoxi Du, University of Iowa
Disc:
Steven Tyler Landis, Arizona State University
Papers: Burning it Down: The Use of Scorched Earth Tactics in
Civil Conflict
Thomas O'Mealia, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Jessica Sun, University of Michigan
Domestic Institutions and International CAP:
International Water Conflicts
Muserref Yetim, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
Resource Dependence and Conflict
Sojeong Lee, University of Iowa
Sleep, Bark, or Bite: Do Natural Resources Shape the
Form of Conflict?
Vita Thormann, GIGA German Institute of Global
and Area Studies
Matthias Basedau, GIGA German Institute of Global
and Area Studies
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
56.32
THE EVOLUTION OF PARLIAMENTARISM
Room: Marriott, Room 304

314

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 314

Chair:
Disc:

Cristina Bucur, University of Oslo


Jonathan B. Slapin, University of Essex

Papers: Origins and Evolution of the Institutions of


Parliamentarism
Jose Antonio Cheibub, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Shane Martin, University of Essex
Bjorn Erik Rasch, University of Oslo
Varieties of Parliamentarism
Michael Ko, LMU Munich
Stronger Legislatures, Stronger Democracies Revisited:
Multidimensional Analysis
Yi-ting Wang, National Cheng Kung University
Steve Fish, University of California, Berkeley
Katherine E Michel, UC Berkeley
Parliamentary Agenda Priorities and Representation in
Authoritarian Regimes
Marwa Shalaby, Rice University
Abdullah Aydogan
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
56.33
TRUST IN PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AROUND
THE WORLD
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Claudia N. Avellaneda, Indiana University
Disc:
Vivien Lowndes, University of Birmingham
Papers: Social Capital and the State: A Test of the Better
Bureaucracy Hypothesis
Mallory E. Compton, Texas A&M University
Vivid Negative Experiences with Public Services
Asmus Leth Olsen, University of Copenhagen
Legal Cynicism Beyond Law Enforcement
Shelley Xuan Liu
Tony Cheng
Resolving the Conflicting Effects of Transparency on
Trust in Government
Yunsoo Lee
Antecedents of Trust in Government in Asia: Does the
Civil Service Matter?
Louis Fucilla, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater
Hyunkang Hur, Indiana University, Kokomo
Daewoo Lee, SPEA, Indiana University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
56.34
THE POLITICS OF ENVIRONMENTAL, ENERGY,
AND FOOD POLICY ISSUES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Derek Kauneckis, Voinovich School of Leadership and


Public Affairs
Iris Hui, Stanford University
Tyler Hughes, California State University, Northridge

Papers: Executive Power in Unlikely Places: The Presidency &


Americas National Forests
Maria McCollester, Boston College
Policy Entrepreneur Emergence in Local Fracking
Debates
Gwen Arnold, University of California, Davis

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Policy Preferences at the Nexus of Water, Energy, and


Food
Ann O'M. Bowman, Texas A&M University
Justin B Bullock, Texas A&M
The Promotion of Alternative Energy Going Beyond a
Multiple Streams Approach
Lorenz Kammermann, University of Bern
Karin Ingold, University of Bern
What's Cooking in Washington: Interest Group
Lobbying Strategy and Food policy
Clare Brock, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
56.35
EXPLAINING JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING
(SCOTUS)
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Timothy R. Johnson, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
Disc:
Timothy R. Johnson, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
Alyx Mark, North Central College
Papers: Allegations of Activism: Disregard of Intent &
Separation of Powers
Kathleen Winters, University of St Thomas
Matthew Woessner, Pennsylvania State University,
Harrisburg
Jessica Lyne Kehler, Temple University
Assessing the Influence of the NRA on Supreme Court
Decision Making
Frauke Schnell, West Chester University
Karen J. Callaghan, Texas Southern University
Codependence in a Separated System: SCOTUS, Regime
Politics, and INS v Chadha
Christopher B. Brough, Northern Illinois University
Mitch Pickerill
Selecting on the Economy? Economic Issues, Public
Opinion and the Supreme Court
Alison Higgins, Texas A&M University
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
56.36
DECENTRALIZATION AND POWER SHARING
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Kathleen Hale, Auburn University
Disc:
Gemma Sala, Grinnell College

DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY


56.37
POLITICAL PARTIES IN THE AMERICAN
STATES
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Chair: Jeffrey F. Kraus, Wagner College

Michael Rivera
Jeffrey F. Kraus, Wagner College

Papers: Majority of the Majority: Integrating Critical Mass and


Party Control
Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa
Emily Schilling, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
The Consequences of Committee Jurisdiction
Reorganization in State Legislatures
Todd Makse, Florida International University
The Impact of Political Parties on State Governments
Performance in New Economy
Geiguen Shin, University of Missouri
Tied Chambers and Party Effects on State Legislative
Committees
Robert J. McGrath, George Mason University
Josh Ryan, Utah State University
Legislators, Commissioners, and Traditional
Redistricting Principles
Barry Clayton Edwards, University of Central
Florida
Michael Crespin, University of Oklahoma
Ryan Dane Williamson, University of Georgia
Maxwell B. Palmer, Boston University
DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
56.38
DEVELOPMENTAL AND HISTORICAL
INSTITUTIONALIST PERSPECTIVES ON URBAN
POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY

Chair:
Disc:

Amy B. Bridges, University of California SanDiego


Richardson Dilworth, Drexel University

Papers: Institutional Dynamics and Structural Evolution in


American City Government
Meng Yuan, Northern Illinois University
Making the City Live: The Political History of Blight
Sally F Lawton, Johns Hopkins University
The New Era of Urban Redevelopment in the United
States
Alexander von Hoffman
Urban Politics and American Political Development:
Theories and Evidence
Heywood Sanders, University of Texas at San
Antonio
Coordination in Secondary Capital City Regions: An
Institutionalist Approach
David Kaufmann, University of Bern
Fritz Sager, University of Bern
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
56.39
GENDER AND THE GREAT MAN I:
RECOVERING THE WIVES OF THE CANON
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY

Chair:
Disc:

Mary Andrea Caputi, California State University, Long


Beach
Jennifer Forestal, Stockton University

Papers: Xanthippe: Shrew or Muse


Arlene W. Saxonhouse, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 315

315

Daily Schedule

Papers: Decentralizing Autonomy: Power Sharing among Ethnic


Minorities
Shane J Barter, Soka University of America
Determinants of Capital Spending in Brazil: PT's
Changing Support Base
Lorena Vinuela, Syracuse University
Redistribution and Regionalism
Zain Asaf, University of Toronto
Territorial Federation and the Resolution of Ethnic
Conflict: A Risky Strategy?
John Coakley, Queen's University, Belfast
The Failure of Power-Sharing in the Kurdistan Region
Megan Connelly, SUNY Buffalo State

Disc:

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Therese Levasseurs Improvised life with Rousseau:


Freedom without Equality
Jennifer Jones, Rutgers University
An Aristocratic Wife?: Mary Mottley and the Institution
of Marriage
Ross Carroll, University of Exeter
Mere Auxiliaries to the Movement: Marxs and
Engelss Love Interests
Terrell Carver
"The Beloved and Deplored Memory of Her":
Rethinking Harriet Taylor-Mill
Menaka Philips, Tulane University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
56.40
WOMEN'S SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION
AND POLICY SUCCESS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Chair: Miki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State University
Disc:
Georgina Waylen, University of Manchester
Sarah Khan, Columbia University
Papers: Populist Radical Right & the Substantive Representation
of Women
Karen I.L. Celis, Free University of Brussels
Sarah Childs, University of Bristol
Quotas Matter: The Impact of Gender Quota Laws on
Work-Family Policies
Ana Catalano Weeks, Harvard University
Transformation in Europe and the Americas: Evaluating
Feminist Policy Success
Richard Elgar, Washington State University
Season Hoard, Washington State University
Gender Equality for Whom? Anti-discrimination Laws
versus Social Norms in Mexico
Mala Htun, University of New Mexico
Francesca R. Jensenius, Norwegian Institute of
International Affairs
Female Representation and Womens Security: A
Comparative Study
Celeste Beesley, Brigham Young University
Natalie Wright Romeri-Lewis, Brigham Young
University & The WomanStats Project
Benjamin White, Brigham Young University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
56.41
VOTER ACESS: PERSISTANCE OF RACE AND
VOTER RESTRICTIONS
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Thad E. Hall, Fors Marsh Group
Disc:
Thad E. Hall, Fors Marsh Group
M. V. Hood, University of Georgia
Papers: Latino Voting in the 21st Century
Beth Ginsberg
The Voting Rights Act and Latino Participation and
Turnout
Melissa J. Marschall, Rice University
Amanda N. Rutherford, Indiana University,
Bloomington
John Lappie, Rice University
Voice Lessons: Nonprofits, Civic Voluntarism, and the
Political Behavior of the Formerly Imprisoned
Michael Leo Owens, Emory University
Hannah Walker, University of Washington

316

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 316

Race, Deliberation, and Voter ID Laws in State


Legislatures
Matthew J. Hayes, Indiana University, Bloomington
Bryce Dietrich, University of Missouri, Columbia
Rational Choice and Black Turnout
Brandon Rudolph Davis
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
56.42
RELIGIOUS POLITICAL PARTIES: NORMATIVE
AND EMPIRICAL PERSPECTIVES
Room: Marriott, Room 415
Chair: Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University
Disc:
Russell Muirhead, Dartmouth College
Papers: Political Parties, Religion, and the Idea of an
Overlapping Consensus
Matteo Bonotti, Cardiff University
The Concept of Religious Political Party in the Christian
Democratic Tradition
Carlo Invernizzi Accetti, City University of New York
Religious Parties in India and Turkey: Promise or Peril?
Bryan T. McGraw, Wheaton College
Comparing Post-Secularism and Post-Islamism in
Catholic and Muslim Contexts
Michael Driessen, John Cabot University
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
56.43
REDISTRICTING IN THE US AND ABROAD
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
VOTING BEHAVIOR

Chair:
Disc:

Christopher D. Raymond, Queen's University Belfast


Christopher D. Raymond, Queen's University Belfast

Papers: Beyond the Party Binary: Ideology and Polarization in


Electoral Redistricting
Stephanie Chan, University of Massachusetts
Amherst
Comparing the Partisan Bias of Districting Plans across
Party Systems
Gabor A. Toka, Central European University
Democratization?: Electoral Rules and Strategic Voting
in Turkey
Fatih Serkant Adiguzel, Bogazici University
Deniz Selman, Bogazici University
Mexican Salamanders: Governors and the Design of
Districts in the Mexican States
Santiago Alles, Rice University
Do Commissions Draw Better Maps? Redistricting
Institutions & Outcomes
Peter Miller, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
56.44
THE DYNAMICS AND CONSEQUENCES OF
INTERNAL PARTY POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia
Disc:
Chitralekha Basu, University of Rochester
Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia
Papers: Un-competitive Democracy
Olga V. Shvetsova, SUNY, Binghamton University
Andrei Zhirnov

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Intraparty Politics and Candidate Selection in Mexico


Sergio Jesus Ascencio Bonfil, University of Rochester
Regulating Intra-Party Democracy: Patterns and
Consequences
Susan Scarrow, University of Houston
How Intra-party Disagreement Determines Issue
Diversity in Election Manifestos
Zachary David Greene, University of Strathclyde
Coalition Politics and Individual Preferences in
Institutional Context
William B. Heller, SUNY, Binghamton
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
56.45
STRATEGIC VOTING
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Michael F. Meffert, Leiden University
Disc:
Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University
Papers: Strategic Voting in Comparative Perspective: Theory and
Evidence
Andrew C. Eggers, Nuffield College, Oxford
Nick Vivyan, Durham University
Markus Wagner
The Impact of Party Supply and Variations in Electoral
Rules on Strategic Voting
Philipp Harfst, University of Greifswald
Expressive or Strategic Voters? Evidence from a
Regression Discontinuity Design
Vincent Pons, Harvard Business School
Clmence Tricaud
Election Cycles and Redistribution with Myopic Voters
Massimo Mannino, University of St.Gallen
Michael M. Bechtel, Washington University in St.
Louis
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
56.46
VOTE CHOICES, IDEOLOGY AND POLITICAL
PARTIES
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University
Disc:
Erik R. Tillman, DePaul University

DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION


56.47
WE DIDN'T START THE FIRE: EMOTIONAL
AND ATTITUDINAL EFFECTS OF TERRORISM
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook
Disc:
Jennifer L. Merolla, University of California, Riverside

DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION


56.48
HOW WE USE THE NEWS NOW: MEDIA
CONSUMPTION AND ATTENTION IN THE 21ST
CENTURY
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Alison N Novak, Rowan University
Disc:
Joshua P. Darr, Louisiana State University
Papers: Does Internet Use Invigorate Democracy? An Analysis
of Online Political Efficacy
Fumiko Sasaki
Engaging to Influence: How Dual Screening is
Reshaping Political Media Events
Andrew Chadwick
Ben O'Loughlin, University of London, Royal
Holloway
Cristian Vaccari, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Personality and news consumption
Bert Bakker, University of Amsterdam
Claes H. de Vreese, University of Amsterdam
Media Attention and Voting for New vs. Established
Political Parties
Holli A. Semetko, Emory University
Anup Kumar, Cleveland State University
Taberez A. Neyazi, Jamia Millia Islamia
Jonathan Mellon, University of Oxford
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
56.49
WHAT DRIVES ECONOMIC NEWS?
DISTRIBUTIVE, COMPARATIVE, AND NEWMEDIA PERSPECTIVES
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Paul M. Kellstedt, Texas A&M University
Disc:
Paul M. Kellstedt, Texas A&M University
Papers: Biases in Economic News Coverage: Traditional vs.
Social Media
Stuart N. Soroka, University of Michigan
Mark Daku, Institute for Health & Social Policy
Daniel Hiaeshutter-Rice, University of Michigan
Josh Pasek, University of Michigan

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 317

Daily Schedule

Papers: Ideological Defection: Why Citizens Don't Vote for the


Closest Party
G. Bingham Powell, University of Rochester
Barbara Maria Piotrowska, University of Rochester
The Making of "The American Voter"
Herbert F. Weisberg
Heterogeneous Anchoring of Extreme Candidate on
Voters Perception of Mainstream
Austin Horng-En Wang, Duke University
Ideological Interiors and Punishment of Coalition
Participation
Nick Lin, Mannheim University
Region of Acceptability. Do Voters Deviate from
Directional Voting Predictions?
Peter Grand, Institute for Advanced Studies

Papers: Civilians Distinct Emotional & Political Responses to


Varied Terrorist Threats
Carly Nicole Wayne
Kristyn L. Karl, Stevens Institute of Technology
Ted Brader, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Do Terrorist Attacks Produce a Rightward Shift in
Stable Political Identities?
Mark Peffley, University of Kentucky
Marc L. Hutchison, University of Rhode Island
Michal Shamir, Tel Aviv University
Did the Paris Attacks Influence American Public
Opinion?
David C. Kimball, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Adriano Udani, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Did American Authoritarians Rise to Donald Trumps
Authoritarian Siren Call?
Matthew C. MacWilliams, University of
Massachusetts-Amherst
Fear of Immigrants in Europe: The Role of Security,
Labor, Culture, and Religion
Marc Hooghe, University Leuven

317

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Whose News? The Media and the Distribution of


Economic Gains and Losses
Timothy Hicks, University College London
Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia
Scott Matthews, Memorial University
Eric Merkley, University of British Columbia
Partisan Reporting and the Economic Vote: A CrossNational Text Analysis
Mark Andreas Kayser, Hertie School of Governance
Michael Peress, SUNY - Stony Brook
Economic Conditions, Economic Perceptions and Media
Coverage of the U.S. Economy
Pablo Barbera, University of Southern California
Amber Ellen Boydstun, University of California,
Davis
Suzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State University
Jonathan Nagler, New York University
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
56.50
ACTOR INTERESTS IN INTERNATIONAL
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 407
Chair: Donald D.A. Schaefer, Georgia State University
Disc:
Aseem Prakash, University of Washington
Papers: Allies or Adversaries? The Authoritarian State, Civil
Society & the Environment
Jennifer Wallace
How Indigenous Groups Participate in International
Environmental Governance
Shane D. Day, University of New Mexico
NGOs and Regional Environmental Governance in
Peninsular Southeast Asia
Kim D. Reimann, Georgia State University
Environmental Governance Transition in China: the Case
of Climate Policy
Meian Chen, University of Oregon
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
56.51
AMERICA IN LITERATURE'S HALL OF
MIRRORS
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Joshua M. Bandoch, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Disc:
Joel R. Campbell, Troy University
Rebecca McCumbers Flavin
Papers: The Spirit of Democracy: American Movies and the
Trial on Propaganda, 1915-1920
John Steinmetz, University of Oregon
Voltaire's Surprising Influence on Perceptions of the
United States
Alan Levine
Wharton, Tocqueville, and American Restlessness
Lauren K. Hall, Rochester Institute of Technology
Robert Coover and the Transformative Power of
Spectacle
David Haven Blake, The College of New Jersey
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
56.52
CRITICAL EXPLORATIONS OF CULTURE AND
MEDIA
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 41: POLITICS,
LITERATURE, AND FILM

Chair:

318

Sean Parson, Northern Arizona University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 318

Disc:

Robert E. Kirsch, Arizona State University


Sean Parson, Northern Arizona University

Papers: Bernays, Fleischman, and the Historical Origins of


Commodity Feminism
Julie Elizabeth Dowsett, York University
Love and Capitalism: Agape, Pope Francis and The
Prosperity Gospel
Michael K. Stein, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Spectacular Savagery: The Nexus of Capitalism and
Terrorism in the 21st Century
Eric Michael Fattor, Hendrix College
Supergirl and the Corporate Articulation of Neoliberal
Feminism
Kathryn Miller, Oberlin College
Joshua Plencner, Drexel University
The Information Revolution and the Pacification of the
World
Justin Murphy, University of Southampton
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
56.53
CONFLICT AND COOPERATION: POWER
TRANSITIONS AND THE INTERNATIONAL
ORDER
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Chair: Michael J. Reese, University of Chicago
Disc:
Michael J. Reese, University of Chicago
Papers: A Prologue to Manifest Destiny: Britain and the US'
Unchallenged Rise, 1836-1847
DJ Kim, Yale-NUS College
Gradual Formation and Sudden Demise of Dynastic
Succession in China and Europe
Hilton L. Root, George Mason University
Great Power War, Critical Junctures, and International
Political Structure
Patrick J. McDonald, University of Texas, Austin
War, Revolution, and the Transformation of European
Politics
Chad Nelson, Brigham Young University
The International System as the Broker of Competing
Ideas on National Security
Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
56.54
ANALYZING THE INTERNATIONAL DIMENSION
OF AUTHORITARIAN RULE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Jillian M. Schwedler, Hunter College
Disc:
Karrie J. Koesel, University of Notre Dame
Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin
Papers: The Durability of Client Regimes
Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto
Adam Casey, University of Toronto
Explaining Authoritarian Collaboration in Different Issue
Areas
Christian von Soest
Georg Struever, GIGA German Institute of Global
and Area Studies
Labor Migrants as Political Leverage? Population
Mobility and Coercion in the Arab World
Gerasimos Tsourapas, University of Birmingham

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Autocratic Linkage, The Duration of Sanctions, and the


Survival of Dictators
Alexander Schmotz, King's College London
Oisin Tansey, King's College London
Jonathan Golub, University of Reading
Curtailing Civil Society: Convergence and Learning in
Russia and Egypt
Edward Stoddard, University of Portsmouth
Ilyas Saliba, WZB Social Science Center Berlin
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
56.55
POLITICAL TRUST ACROSS DEMOCRACIES
OLD & NEW: CAUSES, CONSEQUENCES,
COMPARISONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University
Disc:
Suzanne L. Parker
Papers: Political Trust and Political and Social Performance in
Contemporary Democracies
Mariano Torcal, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Matias Bargsted, Pontificia Universidad Catlica de
Chile
Media Ownership, Institutional Trust & Satisfaction with
Democracy in E. Europe
Besir Ceka, Davidson College
Political Trust & Protest: Protest Activities & Trust in
Different Institutions
Christina Eder, Leibniz Institute for the Social
Sciences
Alexia Katsanidou, GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the
Social Sciences
Desconfianza: The Consequences of Political
(Dis)Trust in Latin America
Barry S. Levitt, Florida International University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
56.56
THE POLITICAL THEORY OF HUMAN RIGHTS
Room: Marriott, Room 310
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY

Chair: Carol C. Gould, City University of New York


Papers: The Universality of Human Rights
Adam Etinson, University of St Andrews
Different Steps Toward a Theory of Human Rights
Joshua Frank Keton
The Principle of Permanent Sovereignty over Natural
Resources Revisited
John L. Phillips, Austin Peay State University
Transformative Democracy: The Right to Direct
Democracy in International Law
Jonathan Crock, Leiden University
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
56.57
INTERPRETING POLITICAL IDEAS, BELIEFS,
AND DISCOURSES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods

John Girdwood
Ingo Rohlfing, University of Bremen

Papers: A Schmittian-Latourian Lens in Discourse Analysis:


Toward Radical Empiricism
Pepijn van Eeden, Centre d'tude de la vie politique

DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS


56.58
IDENTITY AND SEXUALITY
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University
Disc:
Jameson W. Doig, Dartmouth College
Papers: How LGB Republicans Negotiate their Social Identity
and Partisan Loyalties
Katherine McCabe, Princeton University
LGBT Politics in the Age of Conservative Ascendancy
in the U.S., 1988 1990
Zein Murib, Fordham University-Lincoln Center
Lions and Tigers and Bears! Oh My! The Political
Attitudes of Furries
Charles Smith, University of California, Irvine
Shawn Richard Schulenberg, Marshall University
Eric A. Baldwin, University of California, Los
Angeles
Queering Rights? Law and Identity in Grassroots
LGBTQ and Immigrant Coalitions
Erin Adam, University of Washington
Towards Epistemic Justice: Transgender Identities and
Argentine Law
B Lee Aultman, Purchase College, SUNY
Julie Hollar, City University of New York Graduate
Center
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
56.59
THE TRANSFORMING HEALTH SYSTEM: NEW
ROLES FOR OLD PLAYERS?
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Michael K. Gusmano, The Hastings Center
Disc:
Michael K. Gusmano, The Hastings Center
Papers: Health Transformed: Political Evolution Across the
National Institutes of Health
Herschel Nachlis, Dartmouth College
The Cadillac Tax: The Affordable Care Acts Significant
Brawl Among Friends
James M. Brasfield, Webster University
The Prescription Drug Paradox: Pharmaceutical Prices
and the Affordable Care Act
Anthony D. Dell'Aera, Worcester State University
Political Spillover into Physician Clinical Practice
Eitan D. Hersh, Yale
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
56.60
ROUNDTABLE ON THE CPS SPECIAL ISSUE ON
TRANSPARENCY IN THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
Room: Marriott, Room 406
Chair: Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
Part:
Aaron S. Erlich, McGill University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 319

319

Daily Schedule

Chair:
Disc:

Reading Thucydides: Approaches, Methods and


Ontologies
Christian Rudolf Thauer, The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
Three Independent Elements of the American Political
Culture
John Girdwood
Reconsidering tolerance: Theory and Practice for the
21st Century
Teresa M. Bejan, University of Oxford
Calvert W. Jones, University of Maryland, College
Park

Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

F. Daniel Hidalgo, Massachusetts Institute of


Technology
Dominika Roksana Kruszewska
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Thomas Pepinsky
David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Yael Zeira, University of Mississippi
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
56.61
IMMIGRANT POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Moritz Marbach
Disc:
James A. McCann, Purdue University
Papers: A Network Approach to Studying Immigrants' Political
Participation
Sara Pavan, Queen's University
Explaining Immigrants' Political Participation: An
Identity Politics Approach
Michael D. Nicholson
Explaining Anomalous Political Assimilation among
Immigrants to Australia
Jill Sheppard, The Australian National University
The Civic Identities of the Undocumented in the United
States
Vesla Mae Weaver, Yale University
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS
56.62
YOUTH POLITICS AND ACTIVISM IN AFRICA
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Aili Mari Tripp, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Disc:
Isaac Kamola, Trinity College
Papers: Beyond the Time Bomb: Youth and Unemployment in
Developing Democracies
Itumeleng Makgetla, Yale University
Emigration and Transnational Involvement in the Horn
of Africa
Solomon Mebrie Gofie, Addis Ababa University
Student Activism and the State in Kenya and Tanzania,
1970-1987
Luke Melchiorre, University of Toronto
The Politics of Being Non-Political in Democratic South
Africa
Carolyn Ethel Holmes, Mississippi State University
DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND POLITICS
56.63
DISCOURSE, CONFLICT, AND INSTITUTIONS IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Kathryn Sikkink, Harvard University
Disc:
Kathryn Sikkink, Harvard University
Papers: Comparative National Urban Policy: A Discursive
Institutionalist Approach
Neil Bradford, Western University
Ideational Power in the Euro Crisis: A Discursive
Institutionalist Approach
Vivien A. Schmidt, Boston University
Martin B. Carstensen, Copenhagen Business School
Why Govern Gold? A Discursive Institutional Approach
to the Certification Sector
Kristin Sippl, Harvard University

Of Paradigms and Power: British Economic Policy


Making after Thatcher
Matthias M. Matthijs, Johns Hopkins University
Martin B. Carstensen, Copenhagen Business School
Discursive Institutionalization: Theory & Method
Thea Nadja Riofrancos, Providence College
Related Groups
57.1
ASSOCIATION FRANAISE DE SCIENCE
POLITIQUE: COMPARING AMERICAN AND
FRENCH PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGNS
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION

Chair:
Disc:

Christina Holtz-Bacha, University of ErlangenNuremberg


Ann N. Crigler, University of Southern California
Dannagal G. Young, University of Delaware

Papers: The 2012 American and French Presidential Debates


Parallel Lessons
Philippe J. Maarek, University Paris East
Real Time Spin and Social Media Response during the
2012 French and US Debates
Chris Wells, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Jack van Thomme, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Alex Hanna, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Jon C. W. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Dhavan Vinod Shah, University of Wisconsin
Erik P. Bucy, Texas Tech University
Peter Maurer, University of Vienna
The evolution of interactive campaigning from Royal to
Obama to Hollande
Darren Lilleker, Bournemouth University
Karolina Koc Michalska
Towards a Standardization of Campaign Strategies based
on the Obama Model"
Anas THEVIOT, Sciences po Bordeaux,
Interpreting the Front National Vote in the 2015
Regional Elections in France
Gabriel Goodliffe, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de
Mexico
57.2
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: CONGRESS AS ENABLER OF
THE ADMINISTRATIVE STATE: CAN IT BE
REFORMED?
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: Matthew Spalding, Hillsdale College
Part:
Christopher DeMuth, Hudson Institute
John Marini, University of Nevada, Reno
Michael M. Uhlmann, Claremont Graduate University
Kevin Portteus, Hillsdale College
57.3
GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICAL
SCIENTISTS: LOCAL GOVERNANCE IN A
GLOBALIZED WORLD
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Zhiqun Zhu, Bucknell University
Disc:
Yang Zhong, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Roselyn Hsueh, Temple University
Papers: Local Government Entrepreneurship: Public Goods and
Risks in China
Xiaobo Hu, Clemson University

320

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 320

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

57.4
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Accountability of Local Governments in the Era of


Globalization
Guoli Liu, College of Charleston
From Yangjiao to Zongjiao: Adapting religion to
Chinas needs
Lawrence C. Reardon, University of New Hampshire
How Have Chinese Internal Politics Shaped Trade
Policy toward the US?
William Hurst
IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #12 (BIOLOGY
AND POLITICS): NEW DIRECTIONS IN
BIOLOGY AND POLITICS
Marriott, Room 411
Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University,
Harrisburg
Kevin Costa, Radio France Internationale

Papers: Gene-Culture Model of Hypernationalism: A CrossCultural Case Study Approach


John M. Friend, College of St. Benedict and St.
John's University
Bradley A. Thayer, University of Iceland
New Perspectives on Evolutionary Institutionalism
Kai Furstenberg, Heidelberg University
The Wages of Cynicism: Statecraft from an Outcomes
Perspective
Robert Hunt Sprinkle, University of Maryland
We Should Abolish the Death Penalty as a Matter of
Foreign Policy
James H. Rutherford
57.5
INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES AND
METHODS: COLORING THE FIELD:
EXAMINING POSITIONALITY IN FIELD
RESEARCH
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
METHODS

Chair:
Disc:

Lee Ann Fujii, University of Toronto


Robin L. Turner, Butler University
Deborah Ann Thomas, University of Pennsylvania

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM


Theme Panels
58.1
ELECTIONS, PARTIES, AND INSTITUTIONS IN
AFRICA
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Lise Rakner, University of Bergen

Rachel Beatty Riedl, Northwestern University

Papers: Party Building and Politician Defection in Zambia


Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California,
Berkeley
Lise Rakner, University of Bergen
Donghyun Danny Choi, University of California,
Berkeley
Justine Davis, University of California, Berkeley
Ingvild Aagedal Skage, University of Bergen
Melanie Lauren Thompson, University of California,
Berkeley
Who Plays the Ethnic Card? Presidential Campaigns in
Africas Multiethnic States
Elena Gadjanova, Max Planck Institute
Politicizing the Local: Chief Recruitment and
Advancement in Kenya
Mai Omer Hassan, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Party States vs State Parties: Cameroon and Tanzania in
Comparative Perspective
Yonatan L. Morse, Georgetown University
Patronage and Productivity: Party Systems and State
Capacity in Africa
Rachel Sigman, University of Gothenburg
58.2
TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION IN RESEARCH
AND TEACHING
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Antoinette Pole
Part:
Omar Wasow, Princeton University
Justin Grimmer, Stanford University
Renee B. Van Vechten, University of Redlands
Molly Jackman, Brookings Institution
David Mainwaring, Cambridge University Press
58.3
UNIPOLARITY AND THE NEW WORLD ORDER
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Michael Beckley, Tufts University
Part:
G. John Ikenberry, Princeton University
David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Jennifer M. Lind, Dartmouth College
Nuno P. Monteiro, Yale University
Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University
APSA Events
59.1
DEFENDING DEMOCRACY: HOW POLITICAL
SCIENTISTS ARE ENGAGING IN THE FIGHT
OVER VOTING RIGHTS (AND WHY YOU AND
YOUR DEPT. SHOULD TOO), PRESENTED BY
THE SCHOLARS STRATEGY NETWORK
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Theda Skocpol
Part:
Zoltan L. Hajnal, University of California, San Diego
Lorraine C. Minnite, Rutgers University-Camden
Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida
Carrie Davis, League of Women Voters of Ohio
Erin E. O'Brien, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Michael Leo Owens, Emory University
59.2
DONORS ANSWER CRITICS PHILANTHROPIC
INVESTMENT AND POLITICAL CHANGE
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Steven Rathgeb Smith, American Political Science
Association
Part:
Daniel D. Stid, Hewlett Foundation
Elizabeth T Boris, Urban Institute
Keesha Gaskins, Purchase College

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 321

321

Daily Schedule

Papers: What Does Race Have to Do With It?: Discussion on


How Race Frames Field Research
Lahoma Thomas, University of Toronto
Navigating the In-Between: Field Research as a 'Reverse
Immigrant'
Jessica Soedirgo, University of Toronto
Location, Duration, & Interpretation: Positionality in
Elite Interviewing
Aarie Glas, University of Toronto
Creole Like You and Me: Reflections on Race &
Transnationality in Field Research
Eleanor Nicole Thornton
Negotiating the Haze: Identity and Fieldwork on the
Drug Trade
Kevin Edmonds, University of Toronto

Disc:

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

59.3
Room:
Chair:
Part:

59.4
Room:
Chair:
Part:

59.5
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Paul Gronke, Reed College


FIRST YEAR(S) ON THE FACULTY: ADVICE
FOR EARLY CAREER SUCCESS
PCC, 202-A
Adryan Wallace, University of Hartford
Emily Nacol, Vanderbilt University
Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University
Paulina S. Rippere, Jacksonville University
Jonathan R. Strand, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Linda Choi Hasunuma, Franklin and Marshall College
IN MEMORY OF DON NAKANISHI: ASIAN
AMERICAN VOTING AND EMPOWERMENT
Marriott, Room 410
Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California
Riverside
Julie Lee Merseth, Northwestern University
James S. Lai, Santa Clara University
Pei-te Lien, University of California Santa Barbara
Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
Janelle Wong
Paul Y. Watanabe, University of Massachusetts, Boston
LATINO/A SCHOLARS TRANSFORMING
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Marriott, Franklin 13
John Armando Garcia, University of Michigan
Gisela Sin, University of Illinois at U-C
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley

Papers: Liar Liar: Responses Latencies and Turnout Overreports


Ivelisse Cuevas-Molina, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Rolling Off the Tongue Into the Top-of-the-Head:
Explaining Language Effects on Public Opinion
Efren Osvaldo Perez
Belonging and the Politics of Inclusion: Rethinking
Latino Political Engagement
Angela Ximena Ocampo, University of California,
Los Angeles
Who Gets What? Formateur Advantage and Salience in
Portfolio Allocation in Presidential Multiparty Systems
Thiago Nascimento da Silva, Texas A&M University
Mechanisms of Politicized Latino Identity
Ali A. Valenzuela, Princeton University
59.6
POLITICS, ART, AND COMMUNITY
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College
Part:
Jane Golden, City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program
Vincent Feldman, University of the Arts
Laurel Raczka, Painted Bride Art Center
Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College
59.7
THINKING OUTSIDE THE BOX: NONACADEMIC JOBS ROUNDTABLE
Room: Marriott, Room 302
Chair: Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
Part:
Kara Miriam Abramson, American Political Science
Association
Deborah Diamond, Campus Philly
Julie L. Sulc, The Pew Charitable Trusts
Kimberly Fitch, Gallup
Michael P. Noonan, Foreign Policy Research Institute
Jacob R. Straus, Congressional Research Service

322

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 322

Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
60.1
NIETZSCHE RECONSIDERED
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Alexander Duff, College of the Holy Cross
Disc:
James M. Glass, University of Maryland, College Park
Alexander Duff, College of the Holy Cross
Papers: Nietzsche, Liberalism, and Democracy
William Winstead
Nietzsche, Nihilism, and Golden Laughter
Colleen Mitchell
On Zarathustras Statesmanship
Jason Caro, University of Houston, Downtown
The Gaya Scienza: Marcuse & Nietzsche in An Essay
on Liberation
Sidney Simpson, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
60.2
PLATO
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Paul W. Ludwig, St. John's College, Annapolis
Disc:
Xavier Marquez, Victoria University of Wellington
Andreas Avgousti, Columbia University
Papers: On Law in Plato's Republic
Nina Valiquette Moreau, University of Chicago
Plato's International Thought: justice within and without
polis
Sungwoo Park, Seoul National University
The Political Psychology of Reverence in Platos
Laws
Robert A Ballingall, University of Toronto
The Political Taming of Eros: Women, Homosexuality,
and War in Platos Laws
Ramon Edgardo Lopez
Theology in the Republic
Mark J. Lutz, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
60.3
DEMOCRATIC THEORY REINVIGORATED
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Disc:
Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Papers: How Can the State Support, but Not Tyrannize, the
Educational System?
Nicholas Tampio, Fordham University
Sheldon Wolin on Radical Democracy and the Archaic
Lucy Cane
The Legitimating Role of Constitution-making
Procedures
Jeffrey A. Lenowitz, Brandeis University
What is the Maturity of Democracy?: Temporalities of
Democracy in Modern Japan
Nobutaka Otobe, Ibaraki University
The Athenian Practice of Ostracism and the Rule of Law
John T. Lombardini, College of William & Mary

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


60.4
FEMINIST TRANSFORMATIONS OF POLITICAL
THEORY: THE OXFORD HANDBOOK
Room: PCC, 108-A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Chair:
Part:

Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University


Sharain Sasheir Naylor, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Kathy E. Ferguson, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Shatema Threadcraft, Rutgers University
Juliet A. Williams, University of California, Los
Angeles
Elizabeth R. Wingrove, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Renee Heberle, University of Toledo
Moya Lloyd, Loughborough University

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


60.5
REVOLUTIONS AND COUNTERREVOLUTIONS
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Julie Elizabeth Dowsett, York University
Disc:
Isaac Kamola, Trinity College
Papers: "War is Politics with Bloodshed": Mao, Black Panthers,
and Protracted Politics
Quinn Lester, Johns Hopkins University
Counter-Revolutions: Reactive Politics in Theory and
Practice
Jeffrey A. Becker, University of the Pacific
Foundations of the Modern State: Patriarchy and its
Subversion at Gezi Protests
Meral Ugur Cinar, Bilkent University
Alev Cinar, Bilkent University
Acting as a Body or Acting in Concert?: Hannah Arendt
and Michel Henry
Althea Rani Sircar, UCLA
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
60.6
FUNDING NGO ADVOCACY: ETHICAL AND
POLITICAL DIMENSIONS
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Rob Reich, Stanford University
Disc:
Rob Reich, Stanford University
Emma Saunders-Hastings, University of Chicago
Papers: Understanding the Politics of Philanthropists
Preferences for Funding Advocacy
Emily R. Clough
Funding Feminist Advocacy in India and Afghanistan
Nandini Deo, Lehigh University
The Altruist's Dilemma
Theodore M. Lechterman, Princeton University
Advocacy, Donating, and the Politics of Searchable
Databases
Jennifer C. Rubenstein, University of Virginia

Papers: An Autonomy-Based Argument for Democracy


James L. Wilson, University of Chicago

DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY


60.8
THEORIES OF AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago
Disc:
Tiberiu C. Dragu, New York University
Papers: Attention and Persuasion in Authoritarian Regimes
Tinghua Yu, Columbia University
Authoritarian Elections, Legitimacy and Regime
Stability Revisited
Gail Buttorff, University of Kansas
Douglas Dion, University of Iowa
Institutions, Repression and the Spread of Protest
Mehdi Shadmehr, University of Miami School of
Business
Raphael Boleslavsky, University of Miami
Mass Killing As A Commitment Problem
Ore Koren, University of Minnesota
Bumba Mukherjee, Pennsylvania State University
On the Political Use of Atrocities
Scott Tyson, University of Chicago
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
60.9
PERSUASION: WHAT AND WHO MOVES
OPINIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 408
Chair: Keena Lipsitz
Papers: Argument Strength and Psychological Resonance
Michael Bang Petersen, University of Aarhus
Lene Aare, Aarhus University
Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University
Back to Bayes: Confronting the Evidence on Attitude
Polarization
Andrew Guess, New York University
Alexander Coppock, Yale University
Existential Security, Persuasion, and Value Change
Ronald Charles Inglehart, The Ohio State University
The Humanitarian Sensitivity to Deservingness Cues in
Public Opinion Formation
Kristina Jessen Hansen, University of Aarhus
The Who, What, When, and Why of Interpersonal
Persuasion
Lisa Argyle, University of California, Santa Barbara
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
60.10
HOLDING GOVERNMENTS TO ACCOUNT:
VARIATION IN INSTITUTIONAL AND CITIZEN
OVERSIGHT
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University
Disc:
F. Daniel Hidalgo, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Luis Schiumerini, University of Oxford

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 323

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY


60.7
WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE FREE? AGENCY,
AUTONOMY, ANTIPOWER
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: David Owen, University of Southampton
Disc:
Julie L. Rose, Dartmouth College

Access, Control and Proximity: Anitpower, Freedom and


Well-Being
John W. Maynor, Middle Tennessee State University
Freedom, Liberty, and Autonomy in Agonistic Political
Theory
David Owen, University of Southampton
Hate Speech and Blasphemy
Jamie Mayerfeld, University of Washington
Agency of the Gendered Subject: A Feminist
Theorization
Vertika Vertika, McGill University

323

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Papers: Repairing Information Underload: How News on


Services Affects Votes in Uganda
Mark Buntaine, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Sarah S. Bush, Temple University
Ryan Steele Jablonski, London School of Economics
and Political Science
Daniel L. Nielson
Paula M. Pickering, College of William & Mary
How the Political Natural Resource Curse Works:
Evidence from India
Rikhil R Bhavnani, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Desiree Desierto, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Overseeing Oversight: The Logic of Appointments to
Subnational Audit Courts
Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University
Camila Lima de Moraes
Throwing the Rascals In: Prosecuting Latin American
Leaders
Gretchen Helmke, University of Rochester
Signaling Sophistication: How Social Expectations
Induce Information Acquisition
John Marshall, Columbia University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
60.11
INEQUALITY: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Room: PCC, 203-A
Disc:
Tommaso Pavone, Princeton University
Papers: Convict Leasing by Another Name: Longterm
Determinants of Incarceration in the US
Michael Poyker, UCLA Anderson school of
management
Positive Externalities of Land Inequality on Political
Institutions
Deborah A. Boucoyannis, University of Virginia
The Historical Roots of Corruption: The United States
Eric M. Uslaner, University of Maryland
The Sky is the Limit: The Growth Executive Pay in the
U.S.
Sandra L. Suarez
Violence against Women, Reformist Hinduism and
Gender Outcomes in Colonial India
Parashar Kulkarni, YaleNUS College
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
60.12
CONVENIENCE SAMPLING AND
REPRESENTATIVENESS OF PUBLIC OPINION
SURVEYS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Chair:
Disc:

Michael Tesler, UC Irvine


Adrienne Hosek, University of California, Davis
Michele Margolis, University of Pennsylvania

Papers: Comparing Representativeness in Online Surveys and


Live Interview Phone Surveys
Kevin Collins, Analyst Institute
Joshua Rosmarin, Analyst Institute
Online Convenience Sampling: Facebook, MTurk, and
Qualtrics in the US and India
Taylor C. Boas, Boston University
Dino P. Christenson, Boston University
David Glick, Boston University

324

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39

Page 324

Selection Sensitive Design


Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown University
Effects of Amazon Mechanical Turk Policy Changes on
Demographics and Validity
Alexander Lovell, University of Utah
Understanding the Social Media Electorate
Rachel K. Gibson, University of Manchester
Jane Green, University of Manchester
Edward A. Fieldhouse, University of Manchester
Rosalynd Victoria Southern, Manchester
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
60.13
WHOS CHARLIE? TEACHING THE 2015 PARIS
ATTACKS & OTHER DRAMATIC CURRENT
EVENTS
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group

Chair:
Part:

Jennifer Fredette, Ohio University


William J. Muck, North Central College
Heather N. Pool, Denison University
Jennifer Woodward, Middle Tennessee State University
Patrick F. McKinlay, Morningside College

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


60.14
GLOBAL EXPERIMENTS EXPLAINING
HETEROGENEITY IN CITIZEN RESPONSES TO
CORRUPTION
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia
Disc:
Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia
Papers: Citizen Mobilization in Anti-Corruption: Evidence from
Malawi
Brigitte Seim, University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill
Understanding Tolerance toward Corruption:
Experimental Evidence from Brazil
Nara Pavao, Vanderbilt University
When Do Voters Sanction Corrupt Politicians?
Marko Klasnja, Georgetown University
Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University
Joshua A. Tucker, New York University
Corruption, Red Tape, and Accountability: Survey
Experimental Evidence
Pablo Fernandez-Vazquez, Carlos III - Juan March
Institute
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
60.15
THE POLITICS OF RESOURCES
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Marcus J. Kurtz, Ohio State University
Disc:
Marcus J. Kurtz, Ohio State University
Papers: Development, Democracy and the Extraction of
Commodities
Thomas Albert Koelble, University of Cape Town
Oil Windfalls, Elections, and Fiscal Transparency
Lasse Aaskoven, University of Copenhagen
Oil, Authoritarian Reversals, and Democratization
Christian Houle, Michigan State University
Spending to Survive: Politics of Economic
Diversification in Rentier Autocracies
Marie Alienor N. van den Bosch, Princeton
University

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING


COUNTRIES
60.16
REVISITING DEPENDENCY AND THE
INTERNATIONAL CONSTRAINTS ON
NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: James R. Kurth, Swarthmore College
Disc:
Douglas B. Fuller, Zhejiang University
James R. Kurth, Swarthmore College
Papers: The Meaning and Relevance of Dependency in the 21st
Century
Adnan Naseemullah, King's College London
Darius Ornston, University of Toronto
Has Latin America Become More Inclusive? Progressive
Politics and their Limits
Peter R. Kingstone, King's College London
Global Value Chains and Dependency: A Reassessment
Caroline E. Arnold, CUNY-Brooklyn College
The Politics of Productivity: Quality Infrastructure and
the Middle-Income Trap
Richard F. Doner, Emory University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
60.17
WELFARE POLITICS IN INDIA, CHINA, AND
BEYOND
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University
Disc:
Yuen Yuen Ang, University of Michigan
Papers: Do Welfare Benefits Affect Public Support of
Government? Evidence from China
Xian Huang, Rutgers University
Qin Gao, Fordham University
From Means to Ends: The Outcomes of Social Security
in Developing Countries
Carina Schmitt
Generational Transformation in Post-Revolutionary
States: Iran and Cuba
Vahid Abedini, Florida International University
The State and its Practice, between Center and
Periphery: Evidence from India
Thibaud Marcesse, Cornell University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
60.18
WHITHER AUTHORITARIAN RESILIENCE:
CHALLENGES FACING THE CHINESE PARTYSTATE
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Maria Repnikova, Georgia State University
Disc:
John Yasuda, Indiana University - Bloomington

DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND


FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
60.19
THE CHANGING POLITICAL ECONOMIES OF
AUTHORITARIANISM IN CENTRAL ASIA
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Jody Marie LaPorte, University of Oxford
Disc:
Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili, University of Pittsburgh
Papers: Criminalization of Anti-Mining Protests in Kyrgyzstan
Amanda Wooden
Moscow Calling: The Mixed Fortunes of Russian
Telecoms in Eurasia
Eric McGlinchey, George Mason University
Democracy, Anyone? Support for Democracy in PostSoviet Market Economies
Barbara J. Junisbai, Nazarbayev University
The Urban Geography of Industrial Recomposition in
Central Asia
Regine A. Spector, University of Massachusetts
Beyond Kompromat: Coercion, Corruption, and Deterred
Defection in Central Asia
Lawrence P. Markowitz, Rowan University
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
60.20
THE LIMITS OF LIBERALISM IN EASTERN
EUROPE
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Hilary Appel, Claremont McKenna College
Disc:
Andrew S. Barnes, Kent State University
Papers: Renegade Cities: How Hungarian Subnational Politics
Propel Illiberalism
Matthew Stenberg, University of California, Berkeley
Laura Jakli, UC Berkeley
The Crisis of Neoliberalism in Eastern Europe
Mitchell A Orenstein, University of Pennsylvania
The Spread of Economic Ideas and the Great
Transformation in Eastern Europe
Paul Dragos Aligica, George Mason University
Mainstream Parties Convergence and Support for
Radical Parties in Hungary
Maria Snegovaya
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
60.21
PARTY POLITICS, ELECTORAL SYSTEMS, AND
POLICY
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Jeannette Money
Papers: Effects of Decentralization on Party Selective Entry in
Parliamentary Elections
Bonnie M. Meguid, University of Rochester
Issue Ownership and Voting as a Strategic Party Choice
Kyung Joon Han, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Understanding Effects of Political Institutions on Policy
Response to Drought
Cory Belden, UC Davis
Matthew S. Shugart, University of California, Davis

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 325

325

Daily Schedule

Papers: Censorship Comes, Censorship Goes: State Control and


Online Complaints in China
Rongbin Han, University of Georgia
Rethinking Authoritarian Resilience and the Coercive
Apparatus
Suzanne E. Scoggins
Exploiting the Implementation Gap: Industrial Upgrading
and Renewable Energy
Jonas M. Nahm

A Xi Change? Using Big Data to Identify Trends in


Chinese Legal Reform
John Wagner Givens, University of Pittsburgh
Andrew MacDonald, University of Louisville

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Taxing the Tails: How Electoral Systems Affect Taxes


Paid by the Poor and Rich
Jude C. Hays, University of Pittsburgh
The Evolution of Party Positions on European
Integration
Oakley Benedict Gordon, University of California,
Davis
Michelle Christine Phillips, University of California,
Davis
James Adams, University of California, Davis
Lawrence Ezrow, University of Essex
Tzu-Ping Liu
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
60.22
INSTITUTIONS AND INSTITUTIONAL
EVOLUTION IN THE EU
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Amie Kreppel, University of Florida
Disc:
Sergio Fabbrini, Luiss Guido Carli

Macroprotectionism: Economic Shocks and Public


Opinion Dynamics of Trade Policy
Ryan M. Powers
Who Speaks for Free Trade in the US Congress and
How It Matters
Sung Eun Kim, Columbia University
What Do Voters Learn from Foreign News?
Experimental Evidence on PTA Diffusion
Megumi Naoi, University of California, San Diego
Jason Kuo, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
60.25
CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS AND DOMESTIC
STABILITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Risa A. Brooks, Marquette University
Disc:
Nina A. Kollars, Franklin & Marshall College

Papers: From Conductor to Orchestra Member: the Evolution of


the Council of the EU
Amie Kreppel, University of Florida
Sceptic or opponents? Patterns of Conflict in the EP
during two Crises
Benedetta Carlotti, Scuola Normale Superiore
The Determinants of Delegation to Informal Decision
Making in the EU
Philipp Christian Broniecki, University College
London
The Migration Crisis Response: Delegitimizing the
European Union in Real Time?
Vihar Georgiev, Sofia University

Papers: Anti-regime Rebellions and Military Defections: Dawn


Brancati
Dawn Brancati, Columbia University
Hazards of Victory: Conflict Outcome and Military
Participation in Government
Peter White, University of Maryland-College Park
Is Civilian Control Self-Reinforcing? A MeasurementBased Analysis
Michael Kenwick, Pennsylvania State University
Rethinking Civil-Military Relations in Arab Autocracies
Risa A. Brooks, Marquette University
The Enemy Within (or Without): The Organization of
the State Security Apparatus
Meredith Blank, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY


60.23
PROPERTY RIGHTS, RISK, AND THE POLITICS
OF A NETWORKED GLOBAL FINANCIAL
SYSTEM
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: William Kindred Winecoff, Indiana University
Disc:
Daniel W. Drezner, Tufts University

DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY


60.26
WHY SO MUCH TALK? DIPLOMACY,
RHETORIC AND CREDIBLE COMMUNICATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: James D. Morrow, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Disc:
James D. Morrow, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Anne E. Sartori, MIT

Papers: The Dual Faces of Hegemony: Revisiting Hegemony


Stability in a Complex Network
Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Income Inequality from Industrial Organization and
Intellectual Property Rights
Herman Mark Schwartz, University of Virginia
Global Finance as a Political Economy Habitat
William Kindred Winecoff, Indiana University
Between Jobs: Advocacy Behavior and Social Distance
to Financial Regulators
Kevin Young, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Timothy E. Marple, UMass Amherst

Papers: The Incentive to Represent: When Can Leaders Expose


Their Motives?
Michael Frederick Joseph, George Washington
University
Fragile Diplomacy: Explaining Alliance Negotiations
Paul Poast, University of Chicago
Provocations, Threats, and Framing in International
Disputes
Allan Dafoe, Yale University
Jessica Chen Weiss, Yale University
Democracy, Information,and Audience Costs
Shuhei Kurizaki, Waseda University
Taehee Whang, Texas A&M University
Is Violence Virtuous? The Pull of the Status Quo and
the Push of Power
Robert F. Trager, UCLA

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY


60.24
PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR TRADE POLICY
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Alexandra Guisinger, Temple University
Disc:
Alexandra Guisinger, Temple University
Papers: Not All Tariffs Are Created Equal: Consumer Interests
and Trade Policies
Timm Betz, Texas A&M University
Amy Pond, Texas A&M University

326

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 326

DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS


CONTROL
60.27
NEW RESEARCH ON CHINA AND NUCLEAR
NONPROLIFERATION
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Jane Vaynman, George Washington University
Disc:
Martin Malin, American Academy of Arts & Sci

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Nicholas Miller, Brown University


Papers: Sino-India Border Crises and Chinas Nuclear Program
Jooeun Kim, Georgetown University
Theorizing Asias Multipolar Nuclear Future
Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University
China's Rise and the Future of the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Regime
Rebecca Davis Gibbons, Georgetown University
The Sino-Soviet Treaty and Chinas Nuclear Weapons
Program
Fiona Stephanie Cunningham, Political Science
Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
The Determinants of Nuclear Latency
Gene Gerzhoy, Harvard University
Rupal Mehta, Harvard Kennedy School
Rachel Elizabeth Whitlark, Harvard University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
60.28
KIN AND COUNTRIES: ETHNICITY AND
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Stephen M. Saideman
Disc:
Florian Justwan, University of Idaho
Papers: Assessing Chinas Diaspora Engagement Policies
Sheng Ding, Bloomsburg University
Foreign Policy Transformation and Diasporas: The Rise
of Civilizational Nations
Yehonatan Abramson
Micro-Foundational Roots of Transnational Ethnic Ties
Belgin San-Akca, Koc University
Ali Carkoglu
Selective Humanity
Gulcan Saglam, Georgia State University
Two Poles of Securitization of Migration in the EU:
Germany and Hungary Cases
Nurullah Ayyilmaz, Old Dominion University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
60.29
CIVILIAN TARGETING AND VICTIMIZATION
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Aysegul Aydin, University of Colorado, Boulder
Disc:
Manus I. Midlarsky

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


60.30
COALITIONS AND ALLIANCES
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Erik Gartzke, UCSD
Disc:
Brett Ashley Leeds, Rice University

DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES


60.31
COOPERATION AND CONFLICT WITHIN
LEGISLATURES
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Michael Ko, LMU Munich
Disc:
Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Papers: When Does Opposition Oppose?
Betul Demirkaya, Washington University in St. Louis
Parliamentary Brawls and Re-election in Taiwan
Nathan F. Batto, Academia Sinica
Testing the Effects of Two-Dimensional Conflict on
Legislative Productivity
Scot Schraufnagel, Northern Illinois University
Lawrence C. Dodd, University of Florida
The Functions of Interpellations in Hungary (1990-2014)
Mikls Sebk, Centre for Social Sciences, Hungarian
Academy of Sciences
Blint Gyrgy Kubik, Hungarian Academy of
Sciences
Csaba Molnr, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
60.32
PRESIDENTIAL RHETORIC
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Roderick P. Hart, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College
Papers: Barack Obama and the Post-Rhetorical Politics of Gun
Control
Justin S. Vaughn, Boise State University
Changing the Debate: Republican Presidents Talking
Health Care Expansion
Diane J. Heith, St. John's University
Jennifer Hopper, Southern Connecticut State
University
Employing the American Dream: Partisan Variation in
Presidential Rhetoric
Donna R. Hoffman, University of Northern Iowa
Alison Howard, Dominican University of California
Partisan Rhetoric and Presidential Leadership:The New
Deal and Reagan Revolution
Mark A Scully, University of the Ozarks
The Political Geography of Presidential Rhetoric
Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 327

327

Daily Schedule

Papers: Civilian Victimization and Forced Recruitment


Simon Hug, University of Geneva
How Do Civilians Attribute Blame for Indiscriminate
Violence?
Andrew W. Bausch, Carnegie Mellon University
Anna O. Pechenkina, Utah State University
Kiron Kanina Skinner, Carnegie Mellon University
Territorial Changes and Civilian Victimization: Evidence
from the Korean War
Seung Joon Paik, George Washington University
"Cleaning Up Dirty Bargaining" Effects Of US Military
Aid On Civilian Killings
Amira Jadoon, State University of New York, Albany

Papers: Coalitions, Dyads, and the Estimation of Interstate


Conflict
Max Blau Gallop, University of Strathclyde
Comparing the Effects of Consultation Pacts and
Defense Pacts
Ahra Wu, Rice University
Great Power Involvement and Regional Conflict
Kentaro Sakuwa, Valparaiso University
Divergent Levels of Security Dependence on the US and
Conflict Joining Behavior
Yoon Jin Lee, Harvard University Government
Department
Allied in Combat: Alliance Organization and Battlefield
Performance
Rosella Cappella, Boston University
Ryan D. Grauer, University of Pittsburgh

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION


60.33
PUBLIC MANAGEMENT STRATEGY &
PERFORMANCE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: James C. Clinger, Murray State University
Disc:
Marissa Martino Golden, Bryn Mawr College
Papers: Mission-extrinsic Public Values in Results-oriented
Public Management
Suzanne Piotrowski, Rutgers University-Newark
David H. Rosenbloom
Using Naming & Shaming of Bureaucrats to Increase
Responsiveness & Effectiveness
Lael R. Keiser, University of Missouri, Columbia
Susan Marie Miller, University of South Carolina
Leadership in Local Government Performance
Juliet Ann Musso, University of Southern California
Christopher Weare, University of Southern California
Centralization and Performance: A Case of State Central
Budget Offices
Shinwoo Lee, Indiana University
Exit or Loyalty: Tiebout Dynamics in Local Government
Inspections
Martin Lodge, London School of Economics
Chris van Stolk, RAND Europe
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
60.34
DYNAMICS BETWEEN LABOR AND PUBLIC
POLICY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Chair: Jacqueline M. Chattopadhyay, University of North
Carolina at Charlotte
Disc:
Jacqueline M. Chattopadhyay, University of North
Carolina at Charlotte
Daniel J Mallinson, Stockton University
Papers: Democratic Theory and Occupational Safety and Health
Clayton Sinyai, CPWR -- The Center for
Construction Research and Training
Opportunities and Limits for Mayoral-Public Employee
Union Collaborations
Elizabeth C Eisenberg, CUNY-Graduate Center
Public Versus Private Sector Investment in Advocacy
Thomas Kelly, UC Berkeley Department of Political
Science
Unskilled-Labor Demand as a Mechanism for
Expansionist Immigration Reform
Lauren Marie Rowlands, Temple University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
60.35
POLITICS OF LAW, COURTS, AND ISLAM
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Mirjam Kuenkler, University of Gttingen
Disc:
Mirjam Kuenkler, University of Gttingen
Papers: Constitutionalism under Theocracy? A Case Study of
Iran
Farshad Ghodoosi, Yale University
Incorporation of the Shariah and Judicial Politics in
Tunisia and Egypt
Frederick Harris Setzer, Cornell University
Shari'a Review: Law, Politics and Finance between
Pragmatism and Idealism
Shoaib Ghias

328

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 328

What Do We Learn from Sharia-applying Democracies


about Sharia & Democracy?
Yuksel Sezgin, Maxwell School, Syracuse University
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
60.36
THE FEDERAL DESIGN DILEMMA: CONGRESS
AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL DELEGATION
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: Charles R. Shipan, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Part:
Pamela Clouser McCann, University of Southern
California
George A. Krause, University of Pittsburgh
Paul L. Posner, George Mason University
Craig Volden, University of Virginia
Barry R. Weingast, Stanford University
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
60.37
DIFFUSION AND POLICY VARIATION IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Craig M. Burnett, Hofstra University
Disc:
Craig M. Burnett, Hofstra University
David A. Hughes, University of Georgia
Papers: Reformers versus Parties? Explaining the Adoption of
the Direct Primary
Jillian Evans, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Safety in States: How (Some) Gun Reforms are Silently
Diffusing Across America
Sierra Smucker, Duke University
The Diffusion of Model Legislation
Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa
The Political and Economic Determinants of State
Reliance on Private Prisons
Anna M Gunderson, Emory University
Assessing the Drivers of Policy Diffusion Among
Individual State Legislators
Srinivas Parinandi, University of Colorado at
Boulder
DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
60.38
ALTERNATIVES TO THE NEOLIBERAL CITY
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE

Chair:
Disc:

Timothy Weaver, University at Albany, SUNY


Lester Kenyatta Spence, Johns Hopkins University

Papers: The Perils of Rationalism and a New Paradigm for


Urban Policy
David Imbroscio, University of Louisville
Unjust Cities and the Essential Strangeness of Urban
Land
Loren King, Wilfrid Laurier University
The Solidarist City
Margaret Kohn, University of Toronto
The Need for a New Urban Left
Adolph L. Reed
A City of Citizens: Social Justice and Urban Social
Citizenship
Timothy Weaver, University at Albany, SUNY

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH


60.39
JIHADI BRIDES: SOURCES AND OUTCOMES OF
FEMALE RADICALIZATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION

Chair:
Part:

Leah Cathryn Windsor, The University of Memphis


V.G. Julie Rajan, Rutgers University
Mia M. Bloom, Georgia State University
Marijke Breuning
Anthony Lemieux, Georgia State University

DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS


60.40
RACE AND POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY IN THE
AMERICAN POLITICAL IMAGINARY
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Melvin Lee Rogers, University of California, Los
Angeles
Part:
Adom Getachew, University of Chicago
Melvin Lee Rogers, University of California, Los
Angeles
Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon
Juliet Hooker, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
60.41
RELIGION AND PUBLIC AUTHORITY
Room: Marriott, Room 415
Chair: Andrea Cassatella
Disc:
Andrea Cassatella
Papers: Reason, the Law, and the Affective Politics of Religious
Accommodation
Kathryn A. Heard, University of California, Berkeley
Religion, Public Justification, and the Production of
Space
Alicia Steinmetz, Yale University
The Role of Religious Authority in Democracy
Karen Taliaferro, Princeton University
How Not to be Secular: The Complex Entanglements of
Secular Sociability
Brendan Joseph Wright, Princeton University
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
60.42
THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF
RELIGION DURING CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Carolyn M. Warner, Arizona State University
Disc:
Ron E. Hassner, University of California, Berkeley

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS


RESEARCH

Chair:
Disc:

Christina Xydias
Christina Xydias

Papers: Proportional Representation and the Election of Women


and Ethnic Minorities
Stephanie S. Holmsten, University of Texas, Austin
Melanie M. Hughes, University of Pittsburgh
Robert G. Moser
How do Electoral Quotas Influence Political
Competition? Evidence from India
Adam Michael Auerbach, American University-SIS
Adam W. Ziegfeld, George Washington University
Candidates' Attitudes Towards Descriptive and
Substantive Representation
Marion Reiser, Leuphana University Lueneburg
Hilde Roza Coffe, Victoria University of Wellington
Reconciling Two Wisdoms on Multi-member Districts
Sarah John, FairVote
Strategic Party Choices and Electoral List Diversity
Andrea Stephanie Aldrich, Texas A&M University
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
60.44
LOBBYING
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Iliyan Iliev, University of Southern Mississippi
Disc:
Iliyan Iliev, University of Southern Mississippi
Timothy Werner, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Its More Than Who You Know: Knowledge Types in
Revolving Door Lobbying
Lara Chausow, Congressional Research Service
K Street on Main? How Advocacy Cost and
Competition Cultivate a Lobbying Elite
James Manning Strickland, University of Michigan
Jesse M. Crosson, University of Michigan
Lobbying, Legislator Priorities and Congressional
Committee Agenda-Setting
Geoffrey M. Lorenz, University of Michigan
Placing Lobbyists and Legislators in a Common
Ideological Space
Kevin M. Esterling, University of California,
Riverside
The Rise and Fall of Lobbying: Investigating Interest
Group Strategies
Andrew Peterson, New York University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
60.45
POPULISM AND VOTING FOR THE EXTREMES
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Heike Klver, University of Hamburg
Disc:
Eri E Bertsou, University of Zurich
Papers: Extreme Right-wing Parties and Moderate Economic
Policies in Europe
Robert Rohrschneider, University of Kansas
Stephen Whitefield, University of Oxford

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 329

329

Daily Schedule

Papers: Women for the Temple and the (In)Divisibility of


Contested Sacred Places
Lihi Ben Shitrit
The Strategic Logic of Religious Violence
Matthew Isaacs, Brandeis University
Why Some Religious Actors Protest Peacefully While
Others Resort to Violence
Christopher Meserole, University of Maryland
Never Waste a Religious Crisis
Peter Shane Henne, University of Vermont

DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL


SYSTEMS
60.43
ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS AND
REPRESENTATION OF MINORITIES AND
WOMEN
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

The Dispositional Sources of Populist Radical Right


Party Support
Erik R. Tillman, DePaul University
The populism of Donald Trump in comparative
perspective
Todd Donovan, Western Washington University
David P. Redlawsk, University of Delaware
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
How do Policy-seeking Parties Adapt to Entry of New
Parties on their Extremes?
Samuel Merrill, Wilkes University
Bernard N. Grofman, University of California, Irvine
I'm (Not) With Stupid: Do Extreme Candidates Help or
Hurt Their Parties?
Jack Edelson, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Frank John Gonzalez, University of Nebraska Lincoln
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
60.46
AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: "WHO GOVERNS?"
BY JACOBS AND DRUCKMAN
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Part:
Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston
Benjamin I. Page, Northwestern University
Martin Gilens, Princeton University
John H. Aldrich, Duke University
Kay Lehman Schlozman, Boston College
Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University
Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
James N. Druckman, Northwestern University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
60.47
DOES THE INFORMATION ENVIRONMENT
POLARIZE?
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Robert Bond, The Ohio State University
Disc:
Yphtach Lelkes, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: Cracks in the Echo Chamber? Network Effects & the
Diffusion of Political News
Julia Kamin
Dynamics of Polarization: Media, Elites, and the Growth
of Climate Skepticism
Dominik Andrzej Stecula, University of British
Columbia
Eric Merkley, University of British Columbia
Party Identity, Threat, and Emotions
Melanie S. Freeze, Carleton College
The Polarizing Effects of Exposure to Political Content
on the Facebook NewsFeed
Jaime E. Settle, College of William & Mary
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
60.48
CONSTITUENCIES IN ENVIRONMENTAL
MANAGEMENT
Room: Marriott, Room 407
Chair: Dorothy Daley, University of Kansas
Disc:
David Konisky, Indiana University, Bloomington
Papers: Administrative Control through Citizen Participation
under NEPA
Adam Eckerd, Virginia Tech
Roy L. Heidelberg, Louisiana State University

330

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 330

CNN Drops: Inequality in Agency Management


Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Heather Elina Hodges, Reed College
Thomas Stratmann, George Mason University
Federal Rules and Municipal Actions: The Challenge of
Stormwater Management
Robert A. Holahan, Binghamton University
Stakeholder Participation and Strategy in Rulemaking: A
Comparative Analysis
Deserai Anderson Crow, University of Colorado
Denver
Elizabeth Ann Albright, Duke University
Elizabeth Koebele, University of Colorado Boulder
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
60.49
WILLINGLY SUSPENDING OUR DISBELIEF:
THE POWER OF ART AND FICTION
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Claudia Franziska Bruehwiler Haeusermann, University
of St. Gallen
Disc:
Richard A. Barrett, Mount Mercy University
Robert M. Schaefer, University of West Georgia
Papers: Popular Culture in Conflict Management and Resolution
Galia Press-Barnathan, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
The Art of Representation: Reflections from Mexico
Tania Islas
The Future of Human Nature: Rethinking Identity in the
21st Century
Jamie Aroosi, Yeshiva University
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
60.50
TRANSFORMING TEACHING, TRANSFORMING
SOCIETY
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Part:
Wendy Wright, Bridgewater State University
Christine A. Kelly, William Paterson University
Mary L. (Molly) Shanley, Vassar College
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
60.51
INNOVATION AND EVOLUTION IN
INTERNATIONAL LAW, NORMS AND THE LAWS
OF WAR
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: Zachary Daniel Kaufman, Harvard University John F.
Kennedy School of Government
Disc:
Zachary Daniel Kaufman, Harvard University John F.
Kennedy School of Government
Papers: At the Crossroads of Law and License: Retracing the
Evolution of Jus ad bellum
Anatoly Levshin, Princeton University
Norms & Networks: How States Deny and Disrupt
Global National Security Norms
Drew Herrick, George Washington University
The Responsibility to Protect in Historical Perspective
Joseph Kochanek, George Mason University
New Technologies and Norms of War: Submarine
Warfare in World War I
Jennifer L. Erickson, Boston College
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
60.52
THE QUALITY OF ELECTIONS:
MANIPULATION AND MONITORING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Chair:
Disc:

Francisco Cantu, University of Houston


Pippa Pippa Norris, Harvard University
Merete Bech Seeberg, Department of Political Science,
Aarhus University

Papers: The Politics of Electoral Manipulation in Autocracies


Yuree Noh
The Fingerprints of Mexico's 1988 Presidential Election
Francisco Cantu, University of Houston
How Vote Buying Affects Vote Choices
Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin
Election Monitoring and Government Performance:
Theory and Experiment
Kazuto Ohtsuki, Waseda University
UN Electoral Assistance in Autocracies: More than a Fig
Leaf?
Anna Luehrmann
Nicholas Kerr, University of Alabama
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
60.53
THE STATE AND PARTICIPATION IN NEW
DEMOCRACIES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Marcia Grimes, Dept of Political Science
Disc:
Marc P. Berenson, King's College London
Agustina Giraudy, American University
Papers: Bureaucratic Politicization, Democratization, and Civic
Engagement in Peru
Marcia Grimes, Dept of Political Science
Agnes Cornell, Aarhus University
Victor Lapuente, Goteburg University
Parties and Democratic Innovations in Mexico:
Authoritarian and/or Democratic?
Gisela Calderon-Gongora, London School of
Economics and Political Science
How Participatory Governance Facilitates Subnational
Authoritarian Enclaves
Allyson L. Benton, CIDE
Participation without Democracy? Governance in
Rwanda
Jessica Piombo, Naval Postgraduate School
Authoritarian Origins of Quotidian Order: Vigilantism in
Democratic Indonesia
Sana Jaffrey, University of Chicago
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
60.54
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND HUMAN
RIGHTS COMPLIANCE
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Alyssa Prorok
Disc:
Daniel Bruce Braaten, Texas Lutheran University

DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS


60.56
TRANSGENDER POLITICS
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Melissa Haussman, Carleton University
Disc:
Caroline Tynan, Temple University
Papers: Constructing Transgender Identity in Restroom-Related
Policy Debates
Thomas J Billard, University of Southern California
Explaining Public Opinion toward Transgender People,
Rights, and Candidates
Phil Jones, University of Delaware
Paul R. Brewer, University of Delaware
Lindsay Hoffman, University of Delaware
Jennifer L. Lambe, University of Delaware
Dannagal G. Young, University of Delaware
The Bathroom Issue: Transgender Rights and Public
Opinion
Patrick R. Miller, University of Kansas
Andrew R. Flores, UCLA School of Law
Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas
Daniel C. Lewis, Siena College
Barry L. Tadlock, Ohio University
Jami K. Taylor, University of Toledo
The Next Frontier: The Impact of Language on Support
for Trans Policies
Leticia Bode
Timothy Hildebrandt, King's College London
The Battle over Gender Identity in Schools
Susan Mezey, Loyola University, Chicago
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
60.57
EXPERIMENTS ON GENDER AND SEXUALITY
Room: Marriott, Room 406
Chair: Christopher P. Donnelly, University of California, Davis
Disc:
Sarah Oliver, St. Lawrence University
Papers: Addressing Social Norms and Violence Against Women
in Madyha Pradesh India
Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University
Sarah Khan, Columbia University
Summer E. Lindsey, Columbia University
Adjudication and Punishment in US Rape Culture: A
Conjoint Experiment
Susanne Schwarz, Harvard University
Can the Gender Gap in Political Ambition be Mitigated?
Experimental Evidence
Florian Foos, University of Zurich
Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 331

331

Daily Schedule

Papers: Explaining Variation in Cooperation with the ICC by


African States
Michael Patrick Broache, University of Tampa
The End of Head of State Immunity?
Dave O. Benjamin
The United Nations and Third Gender Rights in Nepal
Joel E. Oestreich, Drexel University
Humanizing the Counter-terrorist Discourse at the UNSC
George J. Andreopoulos, CUNY- John Jay College
and the Graduate Center

DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS


60.55
NON-TRANSPARENCY AND THEORY
GENERATION IN THE STUDY OF
AUTHORITARIANISM
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Chair: Martin Dimitrov, Tulane University
Part:
Milan Svolik, Yale University
Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles
Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago
David Art, Tufts University
Sheena Chestnut Greitens
Martin Dimitrov, Tulane University

Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Does Candidate Sexual Orientation Matter at the Ballot


Box? A Field Experiment
David Niven, University of Cincinnati
Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University
Gendered Negotiations. A Survey Experiment in the EU
Council of Ministers
Daniel Naurin, University of Oslo and University of
Gothenburg
Elin Naurin, University of Gothenburg
Amy C. Alexander, Quality of Government Institute,
University of Gothenburg, Sweden
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS
60.58
AFROBAROMETER AND CONTEMPORARY
AFRICAN ISSUES
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Gothenburg
Disc:
Kevin S. Fridy, University of Tampa
Papers: Citizen Opposition to Local Taxation in Africa
Sanata Sy-Sahande
Citizenship Security and Patterns of Violence in Africa
Anne Christine Fruge', University of Maryland,
College Park
Conditional National Attachment in Africa
Dominika Koter, Colgate University
Explaining the Variation of African Citizens
Perceptions towards Homosexuality
Stephen Winkler, University of Washington
Gender or Religion? The Effect of Presidential Priming
on Political Preferences
Marlette Jackson, Stanford University
Related Groups
61.1
CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM:
DYNAMIC DE/CENTRALIZATION IN
FEDERATIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS

Part:

61.2

Room:
Chair:
Part:

61.3
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

332

Paolo Dardanelli, University of Kent


John Kincaid, Lafayette College
Jenna Bednar, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Alan Fenna, Curtin University
Nathalie Behnke, Konstanz University
Andr Kaiser, University of Cologne
Richard George Eccleston, University of Tasmania
Andr Lecours, University of Ottawa
Sonja Walti, American University
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
ROUNDTABLE
Loews, Commonwealth B
William Voegeli, The Claremont Institute
William Voegeli, The Claremont Institute
William Kristol, The Weekly Standard
Michael Barone, American Enterprise Institute
James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: POLITICAL
SCIENCE AND METHODOLOGICAL LIMITS
Loews, Commonwealth C
James R. Stoner, Louisiana State University
Michael G. Franz

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 332

Leon Harold Craig


Papers: Ideologies and Evocations: A Voegelinian Critique of
Quentin Skinner
Joshua J Bowman, Louisiana State University
The Wealth of Persons as the Horizon of Politics
John McNerney, University College Dublin
Leo Strauss and Eric Voegelin on Humanism and the
Human Sciences
James R. Stoner, Louisiana State University
Preference or Experience?
James M. Patterson, Ave Maria University
61.4
GREEN POLITICS AND THEORY: GREEN
POLITICAL THOUGHT: THE POLITICS OF
TRANSFORMATION
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Michael Lipscomb, Winthrop University
Disc:
Sheryl Demorest Breen, University of Minnesota, Morris
Papers: Climate Change, Catastrophe, and The Circumstances of
Justice
Ross Mittiga, University of Virginia
Biophysical Limits and the Centrality of Fossil Fuels in
21st Century Politics
Daniel N. Lipson, SUNY New Paltz
Humanity's Will to Survive: Ecological Crisis and
Planetary Consciousness
Tony Affigne, Providence College
Navigating New Survivalist Eras: Is the Anthropocene
the New Club of Rome?
Kyle Haines, University of California, San Diego
Security, Justice, or Sovereignty? Competing Frames for
Food
Steven J. Vanderheiden, University of Colorado,
Boulder
61.5
LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION:
INEQUALITY, CRIME, AND VIOLENCE IN
LATIN AMERICA
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Cynthia McClintock
Disc:
Cynthia McClintock
Papers: Central American Revolutionary Ties
Michael E. Allison, University of Scranton
Indirect Effects of News Media on Attitudes Towards
Crime in Latin America
Krystin L. Krause, Emory & Henry College
Structure of Inequality and Support for Redistribution in
Latin America
Fabian A. Borges, California State University, San
Bernardino
The Roots and Sustainability of Argentinas New Tax
Burden
Gabriel Ondetti, Missouri State University
The take-off of land concentration in a post-conflict
Colombia
Diego Andres Lugo Vivas, University of Miami

Friday, 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM

Friday, 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM

67.11

APSA Events
62.1
APSA STATUS COMMITTEE OF LESBIANS,
GAYS, BISEXUALS AND TRANSGENDERS IN
THE PROFESSION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 308

Room:
67.12

Friday, 5:30 PM to 6:30 PM


APSA Events
63.1
APSA/ASA AFRICA PLANNING COMMITTEE
MEETING
Room: PCC, 101-A

Friday, 5:30 PM to 7:00 PM


APSA Events
64.1
CQ PRESS EVENT
Room: Loews, Congress A

Friday, 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM


APSA Events
65.1
PI SIGMA ALPHA BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8

Friday, 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM


APSA Events
66.1
EASTERN STATE PENITENTIARY HISTORIC
SITE (ESP) RECEPTION AND TOUR
Room: Offsite, 2027 Fairmont Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19130
66.2
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
PLENARY SPEAKER SESSION
Room: PCC, 204-C

Friday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM

Room:
67.15
Room:
67.16
Room:
67.17
Room:
67.18
Room:
67.19
Room:
67.20
Room:
67.21
Room:
67.22
Room:
67.23
Room:
67.24
Room:
67.25
Room:
67.26
Room:
67.27
Room:
67.28
Room:

Friday, 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM


APSA Events
68.1
CORNELL UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF
GOVERNMENT RECEPTION
Room: Offsite, Pennsylvania 6 (114 S. 12 St. at Sansom St.)

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 333

Daily Schedule

APSA Events
67.1
CLASS AND INEQUALITY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 407
67.2
CONFERENCE GROUP ON ITALIAN POLITICS
AND SOCIETY BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 413
67.3
CONFLICT PROCESSESS BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
67.4
DREXEL CENTER FOR PUBLIC POLICY
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Offsite, Three Parkway Building (1601 Cherry Street,
6th Fl., Ste. 612)
67.5
ELECTIONS, PUBLIC OPINION, & VOTING
BEHAVIOR SECTIONS BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
67.6
FEDERALISM AND IGR SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 411
67.7
FRENCH POLITICS GROUP BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
67.8
HUMAN RIGHTS SECTION RECEPTION
Room: Offsite, Caribou Cafe
67.9
INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Loews, Tubman
67.10
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 306

Room:
67.13
Room:
67.14

INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES AND


METHODS BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 304
IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #12 (BIOLOGY
AND POLITICS) BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 111-A
JOHN GAUS AWARD AND LECTURESHIP
Marriott, Franklin 11
JOURNAL OF WOMEN, POLITICS & POLICY
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
PCC, 303-AB
LATINO CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 414
LAW & COURTS SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
PCC, 204-B
LEGISLATIVE STUDIES SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 7
MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 1
POLITICAL COMMUNICATION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 5
POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 309
POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 305
POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A2
POLITICS AND HISTORY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Loews, Commonwealth A1
POLITICS, LITERATURE AND FILM SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 408
RUSSIAN POLITICS GROUP BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 412
SEXUALITY AND POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 308
URBAN & LOCAL POLITICS SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Offsite, Drexel University Stiles Hall Multipurpose
Room (325 N. 15th St.)
WOMEN AND POLITICS RESEARCH SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Franklin 13

333

Friday, 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM

Friday, 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM

70.16

APSA Events
69.1
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
69.2
POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: PCC, 112-A

Room:
70.17
Room:
70.18

Friday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM


APSA Events
70.1
2016 GESIS KLINGEMANN PRIZE FOR THE
BEST CSES SCHOLARSHIP
Room: PCC, 112-B
70.2
APSA STATUS COMMITTEE OF LESBIANS,
GAYS, BISEXUALS AND TRANSGENDERS IN
THE PROFESSION, SEXUALITY AND POLITICS
SECTION, AND LGBT CAUCUS RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Salon J

Room:
70.19

Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender


Caucus

Room:
70.22

70.3

Room:

APSA STATUS OF ASIAN-PACIFIC AMERICANS


IN THE PROFESSION COMMITTEE AND
STATUS OF LATINOS Y LATINAS IN THE
PROFESSION COMMITTEE RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 410
Co-sponsored by Asian Pacific American Caucus
Co-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science

70.4
Room:
70.5
Room:
70.6
Room:
70.7
Room:
70.8
Room:
70.9
Room:
70.10
Room:
70.11
Room:
70.12
Room:
70.13
Room:
70.14
Room:
70.15
Room:

334

CLAREMONT INSTITUTE RECEPTION


Loews, Commonwealth B
CLASS AND INEQUALITY RECEPTION AND
OUTREACH EVENT
Marriott, Franklin 6
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF
POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
PCC, 105-AB
DREXEL CENTER FOR PUBLIC POLICY
RECEPTION
Offsite, Three Parkway Building (1601 Cherry Street,
6th Fl., Ste. 612)
ELECTIONS, PUBLIC OPINION, AND VOTING
BEHAVIOR & POLITICAL COMMUNICATIONS
SECTIONS JOINT RECEPTION
Marriott, Salon C
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
RECEPTION
Marriott, Liberty Ballroom
GAUS RECEPTION - PUBLIC ADMINISTRATIVE
SECTION RECEPTION
Marriott, Franklin 10
IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND POLITICS
RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 310
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL SECTION RECEPTION
Marriott, Franklin 4
JACK MILLER CENTER RECEPTION
PCC, 103-C
LAW AND COURTS SECTION RECEPTION
PCC, 201-B
LEGISLATIVE STUDIES SECTION RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 406

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 334

Room:
70.20
Room:
70.21

Room:
70.23
Room:
70.24
Room:
70.25
Room:
70.26
Room:
70.27
Room:
70.28
Room:

MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP SECTION


RECEPTION
Offsite, Asian Arts Initiative
MIT DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
RECEPTION
PCC, 107-A
POLITICS AND ART IN PHILADELPHIA - A
RECEPTION SPONSORED BY THE SITING AND
ENGAGEMENT COMMITTEE AND ORGANIZED
SECTION ON POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND
FILM
Loews, Washington C
POLITICS AND HISTORY SECTION &
INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
SECTION JOINT RECEPTION
Loews, Washington A
RECEPTION HONORING TEACHING
Loews, Congress C
STANFORD POLITICAL SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
RECEPTION
PCC, 104-A
SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY POLITICAL SCIENCE
DEPARTMENT RECEPTION
PCC, 108-A
TEXAS RECEPTION
PCC, 103-A
THE JOURNAL OF POLITICS RECEPTION
PCC, 110-AB
UCLA POLITICAL SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
RECEPTION
PCC, 106-AB
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
RECEPTION
Marriott, Salon I
URBAN & LOCAL POLITICS SECTION
RECEPTION
Offsite, Drexel University Stiles Hall Multipurpose
Room (325 N. 15th St.)
UW-MADISON POLITICAL SCIENCE
DEPARTMENT RECEPTION
PCC, 104-B

Friday, 8:30 PM to 10:00 PM


APSA Events
71.1
APSA RECEPTION HONORING WOMEN OF
COLOR IN THE PROFESSION: WOMEN & POL.
SECTION, WOMENS CAUCUS & COMM.
Room: Marriott, Independence Ballroom
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science

71.2
Room:

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO DEPARTMENT OF


POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION, HOSTED BY
LOUIS PAULY, CHAIR
PCC, 102-A

Saturday, September 3, 2016


Saturday, 7:00 AM to 8:00 AM
APSA Events
72.1
2017 DIVISION CHAIRS - PROGRAM
COMMITTEE MEETING
Room: Marriott, Liberty Ballroom

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

72.2
Room:
72.3
Room:
72.4
Room:

APSA COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF


WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION BUSINESS
MEETING
Marriott, Room 301
APSA JOURNAL EDITORS BREAKFAST
MEETING
Marriott, Room 302
POLITY BUSINESS MEETING
Marriott, Room 413

74.3
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Types of Political Decentralization and the


Nationalization of Party Systems
Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Fabricio Vasselai
RACE AND CITIZENSHIP AFTER FERGUSON
PCC, Ballroom AB
Neil Roberts, Williams College
Candis Watts Smith, University of North CarolinaChapel Hill

Saturday, 7:30 AM to 11:30 AM


APSA Events
73.1
DISCUSSION ON SUB-SAHARAN AFRICAN
POLITICS (INVITE ONLY)
Room: PCC, 303-AB

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM


Theme Panels
74.1
AFFECT, POLARIZATION AND PARTISAN
IDENTITY
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University
Disc:
Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
Papers: Out-Party Negativity and the Changing Basis of Party
Identification
Carolyn E. Roush
When Independents Polarize: The Case of Partisan
Affect
Ryan Carlin, Georgia State University
Gregory Love, University of Mississippi
Sean Westwood, Dartmouth College
Americans, Not Partisans: National Identity & Affective
Polarization
Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania
The Effects of Domestic Partisan Conflict on Foreign
Opinion and Behavior
Sean Westwood, Dartmouth College
Yphtach Lelkes, University of Pennsylvania
The Despairing Electorate
Lilliana Hall Mason, University of Maryland, College
Park
74.2
PARTY SYSTEM NATIONALIZATION: NEW
RESEARCH FRONTIERS
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Disc:
Carolina De Miguel, University of Toronto

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:


HISTORICAL APPROACHES
76.1
REALISM
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Thomas J. Donahue, Haverford College
Disc:
Ryan Phillips, Connecticut College
Thomas J. Donahue, Haverford College
Papers: 'The Prince' Confronts 'Leviathan': Power Responding to
Trauma
James M. Glass, University of Maryland, College
Park
Carl Schmitt's Political Realism and Constrained
Democracy
Benjamin A. Schupmann, National University of
Singapore

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 335

335

Daily Schedule

Papers: District-Specific and Diffusion Effects in Party


Development
Imke Harbers, University of Amsterdam
Nationalization and Retrospective Voting & Clarity of
Responsibility
Scott Morgenstern, University of Pittsburgh
Economic Crises and the Nationalization of Party
Systems
Ignacio Jurado, University of York
Sandra Leon, UNIVERSITY OF YORK
Electoral Systems, Ethnic Diversity and Party Systems
in Developing Democracies
David I. Lublin, American University

Papers: Citizenship and Black Death: Black Lives Matter and


Democratic Aspirations
David W. McIvor, Colorado State University
Racial Innocence and the Archive of Race
Ali Aslam, Mount Holyoke College
Between Anger and Love: The Affective Intensities of
Black Lives Matter
Laura Grattan, Wellesley College
The White Call for Black Leaders, from Civil Rights to
BlackLivesMatter
Lena K. Zuckerwise, Simmons College
APSA Events
75.1
GENDER INEQUALITY IN THE US: BEYOND
POLITICAL REPRESENTATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University
Part:
Vesla Mae Weaver, Yale University
Jamila D. Michener, Cornell University
Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton University
Tiffany J. Willoughby-Herard, University of California,
Irvine
Samara Klar, University of Arizona
Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California
75.2
POVERTY, POLICE, AND RACE
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Max J. Skidmore, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Papers: Neocons and the Demise of Program for Treating
Juvenile Offenders
David Edward Kingsley, Kansas University Medical
Center
Moving Ferguson Forward: Charting a Path toward
Equality of Means and Understanding
Dan Stroud, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Poverty, Race, and Police: A Conversation
Andrew R. Cline
Division Panels

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Defiant Realism: Arendtian Reflections on Peace


Shinkyu Lee, University of Notre Dame
E. H. Carr and the Unacknowledged Leninist Roots of
Realism
Michael A. McIntyre, DePaul University
Power and Norms: Thucydides and Walzer on the
Conditions of Ethical Judgment
Ian R. Zuckerman, Stanford University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
76.2
CONDITIONS OF AGONISTIC POLITICS 1
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Andrew Schaap, University of Exeter
Disc:
David Owen, University of Southampton
Papers: Agonism and Metics: Tactics of Power and
Transformative Politics
Marina Kaneti, Columbia University
Affect and Agonism: Anger in U.S. "Fight for Fifteen"
Living Wage Campaigns
Holloway Sparks, Emory University
Conflicts on the Threshold of Politico-Legal Orders
Ferdinando G. Menga, Eberhard Karls Universitt
Tbingen
Agonistic Politics in a Comic Key
Lars Toender, University of Copenhagen
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
76.3
GOVERNING GREAT TRANSFORMATIONS:
TRANSPARENCY, ACCOUNTABILITY,
LANGUAGE
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Jonathan Bruno, Harvard University
Disc:
Matthew Landauer, University of Chicago
Papers: Transforming Judicial Accountability to Victims
Suzanne Dovi, University of Arizona
A Defense of Trusteeships: Accountability without
Democracy
Rahul Sagar, NYU Abu Dhabi
Transparency and Political Struggle
Jonathan Bruno, Harvard University
Scientific Racism and the American System of
International Relations
Joshua Simon, Columbia University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
76.4
NEW MATERIALISMS
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Jane Bennett
Disc:
Elisabeth Robin Anker, George Washington University
Papers: Materialisms Old, New, and Aleatory
Banu Bargu, New School for Social Research
GeoBio Matter-Flows: From the Anthropocene to the
Atmospheric Commons
Diana H. Coole
The objects and materialities of political affect
Samantha Frost, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Recycling Base Materialism: A Political Reading of
Georges Bataille
Robyn Marasco

336

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 336

DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY


76.5
DOMINATION AND INJUSTICE: NEW
PERSPECTIVES
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Clarissa Rile Hayward, Washington University in St.
Louis
Disc:
Amy Allen, Penn State University
Papers: Abstract Freedom, Concrete Injustice: Martin Luther
King Claims for Reparations
Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia
A Critical Examination of Accounts of Internal
Domination
Ainsley Nicole LeSure, University of Chicago
Temporal Structures and Injustice
Amy Hisaye Hondo, Princeton University
Violence and Legitimacy in the Global Economy
Benjamin McKean, Ohio State University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
76.6
JUSTICE, CITIZENSHIP, AND IMMIGRATION
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Burke Hendrix, University of Oregon
Disc:
Andrew Valls, Oregon State University
Papers: Can Liberals Deal with the Issue of Legalization?
Fumio Iida, Kobe University
Political Equality between Populism and Liberalism: A
Defense of (Left) Populism
Peter D. Breiner, SUNY, University at Albany
Equal Citizenship in the Digital Age
Sigal R. Ben-Porath, University of Pennsylvania
Means and Ends in Distributive Justice Arguments for
Immigration
Michael R. James, Bucknell University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
76.7
PERCEPTIONS AND MISPERCEPTIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: C. Daniel Myers, University of Minnesota
Disc:
Bethany Albertson, University of Texas, Austin
Papers: Incongruent Information and Political Thinking
Cengiz Erisen, TOBB University of Economics and
Technology
David P. Redlawsk, University of Delaware
Elif Erisen, Hacettepe University
Just the Facts, Please: Reevaluating the Partisan
Selective Learning Hypothesis
Kabir Khanna, Princeton University
The Psychological Effects of Politicized Fact Perceptions
Morgan Marietta, University of Massachusetts Lowell
David C. Barker, California State University,
Sacramento
Voting versus Fighting: Problem Representations and
Political Behavior
Jonathan Bendor, Stanford University
Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh
The Origin and Consequences of Economic
Misperceptions
Emily Thorson, Boston College
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
76.8
US VERSUS THEM
Room: Marriott, Room 408

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Chair:
Disc:

Joshua Ronald Gubler, Brigham Young University


Joshua Ronald Gubler, Brigham Young University
Michael Tesler, UC Irvine

Papers: Avoid Them like The Plague: Dehumanization and


Immigration
Stephen Michael Utych, Boise State University
Goodbye, American Creed? Anti-Muslim Attitudes &
the Rise of Ethnic Nationalism
Allyson Shortle, University of Oklahoma
How Media Coverage of Immigrants Affects Antiimmigration and Outgroup Attitudes
Emily Cochran Bech, Aarhus University, Department
of Political Science and Government
Lasse Laustsen, Aarhus University
Searching for My People: Authoritarianism, Group
Cues, & Political Attitudes
Julie Wronski, University of Mississippi
The Deed or the Perpetrator? The Effects of Ingroup
versus Outgroup Terror
Kristyn L. Karl, Stevens Institute of Technology
Carly Nicole Wayne
Ted Brader, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
76.9
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF REDISTRIBUTIVE
PREFERENCES
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Philipp Rehm, Ohio State University
Disc:
Philipp Rehm, Ohio State University
David Rueda, University of Oxford
Papers: Motivated Inequality: How Inequality Information
Reduces Redistributive Support
Vittorio Merola, The Ohio State University
Perceptions of the Income Distribution and Support for
Redistribution in the US
Gautam Nair, Yale University
Annabelle Hutchinson, Yale University
Personal student debt and preferences for redistribution
Cameron Ballard-Rosa
Political Sophistication and Support for Redistribution
Jason Jordan, Drew University
Seeing the In-group as a Less Valued Common Group:
Evidence from Mexico
Mauricio Fernandez Duque, Harvard Kennedy
School
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
76.10
CITIZENS, STATES, AND MARKETS
Room: PCC, 202-A
Chair: J. Nicholas Ziegler, Brown University
Disc:
Ryan Saylor, University of Tulsa

DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY


76.11
ESTIMATING SUB-NATIONAL PREFERENCES:
COMPLEX APPLICATIONS & IMPROVEMENTS
OF MRP
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Chair:
Disc:

Lucas Leemann
Santiago Olivella, Princeton University
Peter Enns, Cornell University

Papers: How Should We Estimate Sub-National Opinion Using


MRP?
Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University
Justin Phillips, Columbia University
Partisan Polarization in US State Publics from 19362015
Christopher Warshaw, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Devin Caughey, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
MRP for Religious Minorities
Christopher Claassen, University of Essex
Richard Traunmuller, Goethe University Frankfurt
Using Multi-Level Regression and Poststratification on
Quota-Sampled Data
Kelly T. Rader, Yale University
Katherine Krimmel, Boston University
Machine Learning and Multilevel Regression with PostStratification
Lucas Leemann
Philipp Christian Broniecki, University College
London
Reto Wuest, University of Geneva
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
76.12
USING AUXILIARY INFORMATION AND
EXPERT KNOWLEDGE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles
Disc:
Ryan Bakker, University of Georgia
Jens Hainmueller, Stanford University
Papers: Improving Statistical Analysis of Survey Experiments
with Auxiliary Information
Winston Chou, Princeton University
Bryn Rosenfeld, University of Southern California
Kosuke Imai, Princeton University
Anchoring Vignettes and Item Response Theory in
Cross-National Expert Surveys
Daniel Pemstein, North Dakota State University
Brigitte Seim, University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill
A Herding Model of Political Polling
Stephen Jessee, University of Texas, Austin
Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University
Engaging Experts: Dealing with Divergent Elicited
Priors in Political Science
Sarah Bouchat, University of Wisconsin, Madison

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 337

Daily Schedule

Papers: Making Citizen Investors: The Consequences of the


Liberty Loan Drives of WWI
Wendy M. Rahn, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
The Political Development & Consequences of the U.S.
Political Economy of Credit
Mallory SoRelle, Cornell University

State-level Origins of the United States Labor Relations


Order
Anthony Daniel, Columbia University
Regulating Movement in a Federalist System
Allan Colbern

337

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Gradations or Degradation? Dichotomous vs. Scale


Measures of Democracy
Shawn Treier, Australian National University
DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE
76.13
TEACHING POLITICAL SCIENCE STUDENTS
ABOUT ANALYTICS, POLICY AND
GOVERNANCE
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Chair: Jennifer Bachner, Johns Hopkins University
Part:
Kathy Wagner Hill, Johns Hopkins University
Ryan T. Moore, American University
Justin E. Esarey, Rice University
Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
Benjamin Ginsberg, Johns Hopkins University
Alex Corey Engler, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
76.14
ARMED GROUP TRANSFORMATION AND THE
TRANSITION TO POLITICS AFTER CIVIL WARS
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Disc:
Carrie Manning, Georgia State University
Papers: Who Is the Party? Career Paths and Party Loyalty in the
Ethiopias Ruling EPRDF
Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California,
Berkeley
Terrence Lyons
Josef Woldense, Indiana University, Bloomington
Enduring Civilian Support for Political Actors with
Coercive Legacies
Sarah Zukerman Daly, University of Notre Dame
Legacies of Civil War and Variation in the Electoral
Success of Former Rebels
Pellumb Kelmendi, Brown University
When the Rebels Win: State Building and Service
Provision after Rebel Victory
Kai Massey Thaler, Harvard University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
76.15
NEW WAYS TO THINK ABOUT COMPARATIVE
POLITICS: THE RUDOLPHS' INTELLECTUAL
LEGACY
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California,
Irvine
Disc:
Atul Kohli, Princeton University
Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania
Kanchan Chandra, New York University
John Echeverri-Gent, Department of Politics, University
of Virginia
Kamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine
Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Prerna Singh, Brown University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
76.16
THE POLITICS OF CITIZENSHIP
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Ruxandra Paul, Amherst College
Disc:
Ruxandra Paul, Amherst College
Papers: Asymmetric Citizenship and Empires
Jaime Gerardo Lluch, University of Puerto Rico, Rio
Piedras

338

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 338

Islands Divided: Claims to Citizenship in Japan and the


Dominican Republic
Marisha Lecea, Glenville State College
Attitudes on Immigration in Three Democracies: An
Elites-Mass Analysis
Reinet Loubser
Hendrik J. Kotze, University of Stellenbosch
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
76.17
AUTHORITARIAN RESILIENCE AND
WEAKNESS
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Matthew Goldman
Disc:
Jennifer C. Boylan
Papers: Agency under Authoritarianism: Why Do Opposition
Parties Refuse to Be Co-opted?
Sofia Fenner, Bryn Mawr College
Disruptive Class Formation and Financial Integration in
the Middle East
Joseph Florence, Cornell University
Hard Landings and Political Change in Nondemocracies
Thomas Pepinsky
Jeremy L. Wallace, Cornell University
The Implications of Past Coups for Contemporary Cases
in Egypt and Thailand
Yaprak Gursoy, Istanbul Bilgi University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
76.18
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON
INDIVIDUAL PARTICIPATION IN CONFLICT
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University
Papers: Womens Political Participation after Civil War:
Evidence from Peru
Omar Garcia Ponce, University of California, Davis
Violence Entrepreneurs: The Emergence of Military
Violence from Below
Devorah S. Manekin, Hebrew University
Anatomy of a Riot: Poverty and Participation in Ethnic
Violence in Nigeria
Alexandra Scacco, New York University
Civil Society Institutions and Anti-Regime Resistance:
Evidence from Palestine
Yael Zeira, University of Mississippi
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
76.19
DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS IN INDIA
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University
Disc:
Thad Dunning, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Privileging one's own? Voting patterns and politicized
spending in India
Francesca R. Jensenius, Norwegian Institute of
International Affairs
Pradeep Chhibber, University of California, Berkeley
Whose Power Gets Cut?
Brian Min, University of Michigan

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

The Rationale for Election-time Cash Handouts in


Mumbai
Simon Chauchard, Dartmouth College
Development or Rent-Seeking? Political Influence and
the Provision of Infrastructure in India
Anjali Thomas Bohlken, Georgia Tech
Whose Side Are You On? The Distributive Preferences
of Local Politicians in India
Mark Allan Schneider, Swarthmore College
Neelanjan Sircar, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
76.20
GOVERNING MARKETS & POLITICS IN
INFORMATION COMMUNICATIONS IN
CHINA & RUSSIA
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Harley D. Balzer, Georgetown University
Disc:
Harley D. Balzer, Georgetown University
Martin Dimitrov, Tulane University
Papers: Dynamic Authoritarianism: Market Pathways in China &
Russia Telecommunications
Roselyn Hsueh, Temple University
China Learns from the Soviet Union: Contrasting
Glasnost with Yulun Jiandu
Maria Repnikova, Georgia State University
Reforms to Chinas Internet Censorship System under
Hu Jintao and Xi Jinping
Christopher Cairns, Cornell University
Who Voices Political Views in Chinese Cyberspace?
Ting Luo, Leiden University
Daniela Stockmann, Leiden University
Rewiring Authoritarianism: The Evolution of Internet
Policy in Putins Russia
Jaclyn Kerr
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
76.21
NATIONAL PARLIAMENTS, PREFERENCES,
AND THE EUROPEAN UNION
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: A. Maurits van der Veen, College of William & Mary
Disc:
Amie Kreppel, University of Florida
Papers: Questioning Europe: Explaining EU Questions in
National Parliaments
Lauren Perez, University of Pittsburgh
Substitutive Governance: Evidence from the European
Union
Daniel Habchi
Towards Fiscalization of the European Union? The US
and EU Fiscal Unions
Tomasz P. Wozniakowski, European University
Institute

Papers: Follow the Laggard: Elite Capitulation on European


Identity after the Crisis
Sean Kates, New York University

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY


76.23
POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS AND FOREIGN
INVESTMENT
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia
Disc:
Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia
Rachel Wellhausen
Papers: Agricultural Foreign Investment and Host Country
Institutions: FDI as Usual?
Joe Weinberg, University of Southern Mississippi
Patrick Egan, Tulane University
Unpacking the Multiple Effects of Governance on
Investment Risk
Pablo Martin Pinto, University Houston
Susan Vivian Achury, University of Houston
Rodrigo Felipe Nunez-Donoso, University of Houston
The Importance of Judicial Performance for Attracting
Foreign Capital
Joseph L. Staats, University of Minnesota, Duluth
Glen Biglaiser, University of North Texas
Government Procurement and International Politics
Geoffrey Gertz, Brookings Institution
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
76.24
TRANSFORMATIONS AND VARIETIES OF
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: C. Randall Henning, American University-SIS
Part:
Andrew Walter, Melbourne School of Government,
University of Melbourne
Thomas N. Hale, Oxford University
Tana Johnson, Duke University
C. Randall Henning, American University-SIS
Mareike O. Kleine, London School of Economics
Henry Farrell, George Washington University
Abraham Newman, Georgetown University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
76.25
INTERNATIONAL INTERVENTION AND
STATEBUILDING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Giacomo Chiozza, Victoria University of Wellington,
Political Science and International Relations Programme
Disc:
Giacomo Chiozza, Victoria University of Wellington,
Political Science and International Relations Programme
Papers: The Challenge of Corruption
Stephen D. Krasner
Crippling Leviathan: How Hostile Neighbors Weaken
the State
Melissa M. Lee, Princeton University
Difficult Dances: UN Sovereignty-Sharing Arrangements
in Fragile States
John D. Ciorciari, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 339

339

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY


76.22
SOURCES OF OPPOSITION AND SUPPORT FOR
EUROPEAN INTEGRATION
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Florian Stoeckel, European University Institute
Disc:
Florian Stoeckel, European University Institute

Political Identity Formation in the EU & its Implications


for Integration
Eryn M Jones, Florida State University
Understanding the Role of Subnational Region of
Residence on Support for the EU
Carolin Maney Purser
The Emergence of New Anti-EU Parties in EP Elections
Magda Giurcanu, Charles University

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Strengthening Limited States from the Outside In


through Invited Intervention?
Aila M. Matanock, University of California-Berkeley
Natalia Garbiras Diaz, University of California
Berkeley
Does Statebuilding Work?
David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Kelly Matush, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
76.26
SECURITY DYNAMICS IN EAST ASIA
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Jennifer M. Lind, Dartmouth College
Disc:
Jennifer M. Lind, Dartmouth College
Papers: A Sea of Fire: Testing the Effects of Reputation on the
Korean Peninsula
Michael D. Cohen, Macquarie University
Andrew O'Neil, Flinders University
From the Pivot to Selective Engagement: A Case against
the Asia Rebalance
Nori Katagiri, Saint Louis University
Politics of Japans Constitutional Interpretation &
Security Reforms under Abe
Adam P. Liff, Indiana University School of Global
and International Studies
Smart Bully Explaining Chinese Coercion
Ketian Zhang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
76.27
TRANSFORMATIONS IN ASIAN SECURITY:
MULTIPLE CHALLENGES FOR THE 21ST
CENTURY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Christopher P. Twomey, Naval Postgraduate School
Disc:
Evan B. Montgomery, Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Assessments
Yuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan University
Papers: Asias Complex Nuclear Geometry
Christopher P. Twomey, Naval Postgraduate School
Japan's Military Security Options
Eric Heginbotham, Concil on Foreign Relations
Inadvertent Escalation in E. Asia: Strategic Implic. of
Joint Access & Maneuver
William J. Norris, Texas A&M University
An Analysis of Chinese Foreign Policy on Maritime
Disputes
Greg Chih-Hsin Sheen, London School of Economics
and Political Science
Weihao Huang, Rutgers University
The Status Quo Paradox in East Asian Territorial
Disputes
Seo-Hyun Park, Lafayette College
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL
76.28
LAW AND NORMS... PROGRESS OR RETREAT?
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Michael J. Reese, University of Chicago
Disc:
Marina Elisabeth Henke, Northwestern University
Papers: Devising Long-Term Solutions in the Fight Against
Terrorism: U.S. Drone Policy
Darren A. Wheeler, Ball State University

340

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 340

Ethics Training, Military Conduct and Civilians: Data


from Iraq and Afghanistan
Andrew Bell, U.S. Naval Academy
Norm Assassination: Rise of Targeted Killing; Fall of
Anti-Assassination Norms
Clifford Bob, Duquesne University
When Ends Justify the Means and What It Means for
Just War Theory
Ali Sanaei, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
76.29
THE PRACTICAL POLITICS OF GRAND
STRATEGIC ISSUES AND CHOICES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University
Disc:
David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University
Papers: The Utility of Commitments for Slowing Nuclear
Proliferation
Brendan R. Green, University of Cincinnati
Grand Strategy in the Islamic Republic of Iran
Mahsa Rouhi, Belfer Center
The Role of Nuclear Weapons in U.S. Grand Strategy
Nina Silove, Australian National Unversity
Governing By Violence: Success in Counterinsurgency
Warfare
Jacqueline L. Hazelton, Naval War College
Time Horizons and the Response to the Rise of the
United States
Chad Nelson, Brigham Young University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
76.30
BARGAINING MODEL AND WAR
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: William L. Reed, University of Maryland
Disc:
Scott Wolford, University of Texas
Papers: A Quantitative Bargaining Theory of War
Brenton Kenkel, Vanderbilt University
Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
Mutual Optimism and Costly Conflict: The Case of
Naval Battles
David Lindsey, University of California, San Diego
Negotiation in War
Eric Min, Stanford University
Rational Military Optimism and the Inability to
Communicate
Kars De Bruijne
Third Parties, Uncertainty and Civil War
Casper Sakstrup, Aarhus University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
76.31
CIVIL WARS AND INSURGENCY
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Zaryab Iqbal, Pennsylvania State University
Disc:
Alyssa Prorok
Aysegul Aydin, University of Colorado, Boulder
Papers: A Model of Spoiler Problems in Civil Wars
Julian Wucherpfennig, University College London
Civil Wars and Refugees
Oguzhan Turkoglu, Trinity College Dublin

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Insurgent Effectiveness in Civil Wars: Evidence from


Jordan, Syria, and Iraq
Samuel Plapinger, University of Virginia
Leaders and the Risk of Civil War Recurrence
Alyssa Prorok
Environmental Threat and Repression on Minority
Group Organizations
Ruoxi Du, University of Iowa
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
76.32
THE POLITICS OF COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Mirjam Dagefrde, Sciences Po Paris
Papers: Ambition and Seniority in European Parliamentary
Democracies
Jeremy Dodeigne
Jorge Miguel Fernandes, University of Bamberg
Distributing Party and Committee Posts: A
Parliamentary Theory of Distribution
Martin Ejnar Hansen, Brunel University London
The Electoral Consequences of Committee Chair
Nominations in Belgium
Audrey Andr, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
76.33
INSTITUTIONAL POWER OF COMPARATIVE
EXECUTIVES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Yu Ouyang, Purdue University Northwest
Disc:
Gisela Sin, University of Illinois at U-C
Papers: Executive Authorship Networks and their Legislative
Consequences
Lucio R. Renno
Sylvia Gaylord, Colorado School of Mines
Stefan J. Wojcik, Northeastern University and
Harvard IQSS
Institutional Presidency and Executives Legislative
Success in Latin America
Magna Incio, Federal University of Minas Gerais
The Executive Decree Dataset: Executive Approval and
Decrees in Latin America
Inaki Sagarzazu, Texas Tech University
Sarah Shair-Rosenfield, Arizona State University
Alissandra T. Stoyan, Kansas State University
The Institutional Presidency and Use of Unilateral Power
in Latin America
John Polga-Hecimovich, U.S. Naval Academy
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
76.34
POLICY FEEDBACKS IN EDUCATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Chair: Neil Kraus, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
Disc:
Neil Kraus, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
Saundra K. Schneider, Michigan State University

DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS


76.35
CRIMINALITY AND RACIAL SUBORDINATION:
PERSPECTIVES FROM LAW AND SOCIETY
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Darren Lenard Hutchinson, University of Florida
Papers: Criminal Justice Reform: The Absence of Courts
Darren Lenard Hutchinson, University of Florida
Bet on Black: Race, Resilience, and Universality in the
Law
Osamudia James, University of Miami
Race and School Surveillance: A Post-Newtown
Empirical Study
Jason Nance, University of Florida Levin College of
Law
The Racial Anxiety Paradigm: A New Model of Racial
Profiling and Violence
L. Song Richardson, University of California, Irvine
School of Law
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
76.36
HORIZONTAL AND VERTICAL INSTITUTIONAL
RELATIONS OF COURTS
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Stephen L. Wasby
Disc:
Stephen L. Wasby
Lisa M. Holmes, University of Vermont
Papers: The Dynamics of U.S. Supreme Court Auditing of the
U.S. Courts of Appeals
Ali Shiraz Masood, Virginia Commonwealth
University
The Whistleblower Effect on Supreme Court Review
Morgan L. W. Hazelton, Saint Louis University
Alicia Uribe, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Avoiding Overrides: Judicial Review Following
Congressional Court-Curbing
Lisa Hager, South Dakota State University
Judicial Federalism, State Policy, and Representation
John P. Kastellec, Princeton University
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
76.37
COMMUNITY, SCALE AND REGIONAL
GOVERNANCE
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University
Part:
Martin Papillon, Universit de Montral
Ann O'M. Bowman, Texas A&M University
Kent Eaton, University of California, Santa Cruz
Dawn Brancati, Columbia University
Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University
Richard O. Snyder, Brown University
Grace Skogstad, University of Toronto
Liesbet Hooghe, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam
Gary Marks, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
76.38
INEQUALITY IN THE AMERICAN STATES
Room: Marriott, Room 304

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 341

341

Daily Schedule

Papers: Building Institutions Around Data: No Child Left


Behind and Policy Feedback
Sean Miskell, Georgetown University
Common Core Politics: Feedback, Pushback and the
Problem of Legitimation
Douglas S. Reed, Georgetown University
Experiences with Public School Closure and Political
Blame
Sally Nuamah

The Effects of Private School Vouchers on Political


Behavior in India
Emmerich Davies
Transformation of Education Accountability? Evidence
from Three School Districts
John Portz, Northeastern University

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Chair:
Disc:

Joseph E. Campbell, Rose State College


Jacqueline M. Chattopadhyay, University of North
Carolina at Charlotte
Eunju Kang, SUNY Geneseo

Papers: Building Inequality: Permanent Infrastructure and the


Limits of Representation
Clayton M. Nall, Stanford University
Simon Ejdemyr, Stanford University
Zachary O'Keeffe, University of Michigan
Organized Labor's Check on Rising Economic Inequality
in the U.S. States
Laura Bucci, Indiana University, Bloomington
The (Dis)Enfranchisement of Poor, Minority Voters: Site
Selection in Texas
Robert Lucas Williams, University of Houston
Andrea Kathryn Eckelman
Markie McBrayer, University of Houston
The Effect of State Responses to Economic Crisis on
Income Inequality
William W. Franko, West Virginia University
The Cost of Voting in the United States
Scot Schraufnagel, Northern Illinois University
Michael J. Pomante, Tulane University
Quan Li, Wuhan University
DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
76.39
POLITICS AND POLICY OF URBAN TRANSIT
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Armando Xavier Mejia, University of Wisconsin,


Madison
Derek Kauneckis, Voinovich School of Leadership and
Public Affairs

Papers: Networked Urban Governance: The Case of


Transportation in NYC
Nuno Ferreira da Cruz, LSE Cities
Regionalism and Institutional Capacity in Transportation
Choice
Daniel E. Bliss, Illinois Institute of Technology
Taxis, Uber, and Ridesharing Regulation in Ten North
American Cities
Gabriel Eidelman, University of Toronto
Zachary Spicer
The Jewel of Bogot: TransMilenio Knowledge
Production and Policy Decisions
Stacey Leigh Hunt, Auburn University
The Trans-Hudson Tunnels: Getting Metropolitan
Infrastructure Built in America
Jen Nelles, Hunter College CUNY
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
76.40
GENDERED ACTIVISM: PROTEST,
COLLECTIVE ACTION, AND GOOD
GOVERNANCE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Chair: Kimberly B. Cowell-Meyers, American University
Disc:
Manal A. Jamal, James Madison University
Janet E. Johnson, CUNY-Brooklyn College
Papers: An Epicentre of Liminal Solidarity: Women's
Recollections of the 18-day Uprising
Nermin Allam, University of Alberta

342

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39

Page 342

Spatial Shenanigans & Gendered Streets: Making


Political Gendered Public Space
Paromita Sen, University of Virginia
Descriptive Representation and Women's Particiaption in
Social Movements
Amy C. Alexander, Quality of Government Institute,
University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Diana Z. O' Brien, Indiana University
Social Movements and the Constitutional Politics of
Abortion in Latin America
Alba M. Ruibal, CONICET
Womens Empowerment: A Necessary Precursor to
Good Governance
Ginger Reeves Feather, University of Kansas
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
76.41
PROTEST AND REVOLT: FROM
RESPECTABILTY TO OUTRAGE POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Debra Thompson, Northwestern University
Disc:
Debra Thompson, Northwestern University
Papers: American Exceptionalism, BlackLivesMatter, and the
Politics of Racial Distance
Debra Thompson, Northwestern University
Bodies in Revolt: The Limits of Color-Blind Democracy
Lindsey Smith
Respectability Politics: a New Measure of Black Politics
Mackenzie Leigh Israel-Trummel, University of
Oklahoma
The Changing Impacts of Protest and Representation on
Black Agenda Setting
Matthew B. Platt, Morehouse College
Race and Fair Housing: Comparing Black and Latino
Complaints and Outcomes
Charles M. Lamb, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Eric M. Wilk
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
76.42
THE POLITICS OF IDENTITY
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Natasha Altema McNeely, University of Texas, Rio
Grande Valley
Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: The Participatory Effects of Transnational Solidarity
among African Americans
Julie Lee Merseth, Northwestern University
The Political Construction of Contemporary Racial
Boundaries in the U.S.
Lauren D. Davenport, Stanford University
A Theory of Belonging and its Implications for Latino
Political Participation
Angela Ximena Ocampo, University of California,
Los Angeles
The Color of Our Skin and the Content of Our Politics
Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Hakeem Jerome Jefferson, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor
Neil Lewis
Nicole Yadon, University of Michigan

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Black In Name Only?: How Racialized Rhetoric Affects


White Republican Affect
Chryl Laird, Saint Louis University
Julian Wamble
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
76.43
PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN AMERICAN
POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: John H. Aldrich, Duke University
Disc:
Rick Valelly, Swarthmore College
John H. Aldrich, Duke University
Papers: Debates and Intra-Party Democracy
Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University
Seth E. Masket, University of Denver
Electoral Monopolies and the Provision of Public Goods:
A Contrarian Perspective
Jeffrey D. Grynaviski, Wayne State University
Black-and-Tans vs. Lily-Whites: the South and
Republican Conventions, 1872-1948
Boris Heersink, University of Virginia
Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Virginia
Anthony Paul Sparacino
Financial Service and the Democrats: Groping toward
Partnership in the 1980s
Daniel Schlozman
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
76.44
U.S. FEDERAL CAMPAIGN FINANCE IN A TIME
OF TRANSITION
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: Nathaniel Persily, Stanford University
Part:
Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico
Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University
Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University
Travis N. Ridout, Washington State University
David M. Primo, University of Rochester
David B. Magleby, Brigham Young University
Jeffrey Milyo, University of Missouri
Abby K. Wood
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
76.45
ACCOUNTABILITY AND ATTRIBUTION OF
RESPONSIBILITY IN ELECTIONS
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Toni Rodon, Stanford University
Disc:
Dominik Duell, University of Essex

DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR


76.46
TURNOUT: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern Denmark
Disc:
Christopher P. Donnelly, University of California, Davis
Patrick Tucker, Washington University in St Louis
Papers: Consequences of Long Lines: How Waiting at the
Precinct Depresses Future Turnout
Stephen Pettigrew, Harvard University
Contact with the Criminal Justice System and Voter
Turnout
Paul Franz Testa, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Does Turnout Matter?
John David Rausch, West Texas A&M University
Mary S. Rausch, West Texas A&M University
Democracy and the Disengaged: Exploring the Limits of
Mobilizing Policy Targets
Josh Carpenter, Oriel College, Oxford University
Florian Foos, University of Zurich
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
76.47
JUST THE WAY YOU ARE: IMMIGRATION AND
POLITICAL TOLERANCE
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Justin H. Gross, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Disc:
Michael Bang Petersen, University of Aarhus
Papers: If Men Were Angels: The Institutional Roots of Political
Tolerance
Paul A. Djupe, Denison University
Andrew R. Lewis, University of Cincinnati
Jacob R. Neiheisel, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Partisanship of Young Latinos: The Influence of
Immigration Opinion
Andrea Vieux, University of Central Florida
The Development of Immigration Attitudes over Time
Ali Abdelzadeh
Erik Amn, rebro University
Jennifer Fitzgerald
Islamophobia: Elite Messaging and the Nature of Beliefs
about Muslims
Rolfe Daus Peterson, Susquehanna University
Randy S. Clemons, Mercyhurst University
Carl L. Palmer, Illinois State University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
76.48
THE MAKING OF MODERN CAMPAIGN
COMMUNICATION
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Jessica Baldwin-Philippi, Fordham University
Disc:
Stephanie Burkhalter, Humboldt State University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 343

Daily Schedule

Papers: Getting Away With Murder: Mayoral Accountability and


the 30-Year Rise in Crime
Sean Freeder, University of California Berkeley
Gabriel Lenz
All the President's Congressmen: Watergate as a QuasiNatural Experiment
Roosmarijn Adrienne Geus, Oxford University
Attribution in Federalist Systems: When Presidents are
Punished for Local Taxes
Michael Sances, University of Memphis
Leaders' Valence and Accountability
Rodolpho Bernabel, New York University

Do Citizens Hold Elites Accountable? Experiments on


Non-equilibrium Positions
Andrew Gooch, Yale University
Alan Gerber, Yale University
Gregory Huber, Yale University

343

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Papers: A Network Analysis of the Production of Campaign


Communication in a Digital Age
Daniel Kreiss, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Adam J. Saffer, University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill
Jennifer Harker, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Kylah Hedding, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Candidates' Strategic Use of Humor across Talk-show
Sub-genres
Dannagal G. Young, University of Delaware
Johanna McHale Lukk, University of Delaware
Negative Partisanship on Twitter in the 2016 Presidential
Pre-primary Campaign
Kate M. Kenski, University of Arizona
Christine R. Filer, University of Arizona
Bethany Anne Conway, California Polytechnic State
University
Instastyle: Campaign Communication in the Selfie Era
Shannon C McGregor, University of Texas
Daniel Kreiss, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Regina G. Lawrence, University of Oregon
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
76.49
THE CAUSES AND OUTCOMES OF DIVERSE
NATIONAL AND SUB-NATIONAL CLIMATE
POLICIES
Room: Marriott, Room 310
Chair: Kathryn Harrison, University of British Columbia
Disc:
Robert V. Bartlett, University of Vermont
Papers: Normative Framing and Climate Policy Innovation
Leigh S. Raymond, Purdue University
Heather W. Cann
Extreme Weather Exposure and Support for Climate
Change Adaptation
Llewelyn Hughes, Australian National University
Charles Kaylor, Temple University
David Konisky, Indiana University, Bloomington
Aaron D. Ray
The Logic of Double Representation in Comparative
Climate Policymaking
Matto Mildenberger, University of California Santa
Barbara
Evaluating the Impact of Polycentric Climate Initiatives
on US GHG Emissions
Mark C. Stephan, Washington State University,
Vancouver
Dorothy Daley, University of Kansas
Troy D. Abel, Western Washington University
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
76.50
CRITICAL THEORY IN THE 21ST CENTURY:
NEW CHALLENGES AND DIRECTIONS
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY

Chair:
Part:

344

William L. Niemi, Western State Colorado University


Bradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech
Katherine Young, University of Hawaii at Hilo
Judith Grant, Ohio University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39

Page 344

Michael Forman, University of Washington, Tacoma


DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
76.51
THE INSTRUMENTAL USES OF NORMS IN
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: Jennifer M. Dixon, Villanova University
Part:
Jennifer L. Erickson, Boston College
Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin
Tanisha Fazal, University of Notre Dame
Martha Finnemore, George Washington University
John A. Gentry, Georgetown University
Judith Kelley, Duke University
Frank Schimmelfennig
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
76.52
PROBLEMS OF AUTHORITARIAN STABILITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
Disc:
Anna Luehrmann
Kyle L. Marquardt, University of Gothenburg
Papers: Suicide by Competition: Authoritarian Adaptation and
Regime Fragility
Michael Bernhard, University of Florida
Amanda Brooke Edgell, University of Florida
Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Gothenburg
Repression and Resistance across Regime Type
Marc Morje Howard, Georgetown University
Meir R. Walters, Georgetown University
Autocratic Elections: Stabilizing Tool or Force for
Change?
Carl Henrik Knutsen, Department of Political
Science, University of Oslo
Legalizing Opposition in Closed Authoritarian Regimes
Jennifer Raymond Dresden, Georgetown University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
76.53
MIGRATION AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP

Chair:
Disc:

Richard W. Frank, Australian National University


Jeannette Money

Papers: Humanitarian Protection and Policy in the United States


Linda Camp Keith, University of Texas at Dallas
Banks P. Miller, University of Texas at Dallas
Jennifer Smith Holmes, University of Texas at Dallas
International versus Transnational Frameworks for
Migrant Worker Protection
Leila Kawar, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Remittances and Human Rights in Latin America
Cristiane Carneiro, University of Sao Paulo
Ana Magdalena Figueroa, University of Sao Paulo
The Humane Economy: Migrant Labour and Islam in
Qatar and the UAE
Zahra R Babar, Georgetown University
Variations in Subnational Anti-human Trafficking
Efforts: Evidence from India
Richard W. Frank, Australian National University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
76.54
UNITED STATES FOREIGN POLICY ON
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Leslie Vinjamuri, University of London, SOAS

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Part:

Zachary Daniel Kaufman, Harvard University John F.


Kennedy School of Government
Annie Bird, State Department/ London School of
Economics
Ruti G. Teitel, New York Law School
Bronwyn Anne Leebaw, University of California,
Riverside

DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS


76.55
PUTTING CONCEPTS TO WORK
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University
David Waldner
Papers: How can Scholars Cooperate to Develop and Enrich
Concepts?
Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin
The Invention of the Voter
Frederic C. Schaffer, University of Massachusetts
Amherst
Multi-Method Conceptualization and Measurement:
Hidden Challenges
Jason Seawright, Northwestern University
Design-Based Inference in Qualitative Analysis
Marcus J. Kurtz, Ohio State University
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
76.56
CITIZENS, COMMUNITIES, AND CONSUMERS:
THE POLITICS OF GRASSROOTS HEALTH
ADVOCACY
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Lawrence D. Brown
Disc:
Lawrence D. Brown
Papers: Advocacy on Immigrant Health: Language Access in
New York Pharmacies
Alice Sardell
Health Reform in the South: Re-Tracing Robert
Kennedy's Steps
David K. Jones, Boston University
Limits and Dimensions in Consumer Citizen Politics:
The NYC Trans Fat Policy
Kimberly Elizabeth Johnson, West Chester
University
The Meaning of Community in Community Health
Daniel Skinner, Ohio University
Berkeley A Franz, Ohio University Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine

DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH


76.58
NEW DIRECTIONS IN EXPERIMENTS ON
VOTING AND ELECTIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 407
Chair: Johannes Bergh, Institute for social research
Disc:
Craig M. Burnett, Hofstra University
Papers: Encouraging Collective Action in Homeowners
Associations: Evidence from Russia
Georgiy Syunyaev, Columbia University
Ekaterina Borisova, National Research University
Higher School of Economics
Timothy Frye
The Importance of Candidate Race in Brazilian Elections
Andrew Janusz, University of California, San Diego
When is a Reminder Enough? Text Message Voter
Mobilization in a European Context
Johannes Bergh, Institute for social research
Dag Arne Christensen, Uni Research Rokkan Centre
Richard E. Matland, Loyola University, Chicago
Two Field Experiments Mobilizing Convicted Felons,
Estimating Downstream Effects
Victoria Anne Shineman, University of Pittsburgh
Voting on Policy, Thinking of Politics:The Impact of
Ads in Initiative Campaigns
Rafael Jacob, Temple University
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS
76.59
PRECARIOUS RELATIONS BETWEEN STATE
AND SOCIETY IN AFRICA'S SAHEL
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Landry Signe
Disc:
Landry Signe

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS


76.57
POLITICAL NETWORKS: POLITICAL
DISCUSSION AND SOCIAL INFLUENCE
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Ethan Porter, University of Chicago
Disc:
Joshua Boston, Washington University in Saint Louis
Constanza F. Schibber, Washington University in St.
Louis

Papers: Discussion Networks, Motivated Reasoning, and


Information Seeking
Anand Edward Sokhey, University of Colorado,
Boulder
Jeffrey Lyons
Drew Seib
Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University,
Carbondale
Social Influence Over Time: Depicting the Process and
Testing the Mechanisms
Lauren Ratliff
When Political Talk Is Pillow Talk: Spousal Political
Talk and Gender Gaps
Amy Erica Erica Smith, Iowa State University
Who Discuss Politics, Why, and How?
Hyunjin Song, University of Vienna, Austria
William Minozzi, Ohio State University
Katherine Ognyanova, Northeastern University
David Lazer
Michael Neblo, Ohio State University
Contagious Political Concerns: Unemployment Concern
Peer Effects in Denmark
James E. Alt, Harvard University
Amalie Sofie Jensen, University of Copenhagen
Horacio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard University
David Dreyer Lassen, University of Copenhagen
John Marshall, Columbia University

Papers: The Puzzles of Africa's Third Wave of Protests


Lisa Mueller, Macalester College

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 345

345

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Related
77.1
Room:
Chair:
Part:

77.2

Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Contentious Politics and Elite Bargaining in Burkina


Faso's Regime Transition
Daniel Eizenga, University of Florida
Political Determinants of Business Formalization
Abhit Bhandari
Public Goods Provision and Bureaucracy in Burkina
Faso
Margaret H. Ariotti, Pennsylvania State University
Citizen Evaluations of Local Public Goods Investments:
Evidence from Senegal
Martha Wilfahrt, Northwestern University
Groups
AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT: THE
CONSTITUTION AND PRESIDENTIAL
ELECTION 2016: WOULD A DOSE OF IT HELP?
Loews, Commonwealth D
James R. Stoner, Louisiana State University
James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia
Tom E. Cronin, Colorado College
Jeffrey K. Tulis, University of Texas, Austin
William Kristol, The Weekly Standard
Rogers M. Smith
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: HOBBES, ROUSSEAU, AND
BURKE ON RELIGION AND THE STATE
Loews, Commonwealth B
Luigi Bradizza, Salve Regina University
David L. Schaefer
Paul O. Carrese, U.S. Air Force Academy

Papers: Rousseau on the Psychological Origins of Piety


Zachary Bennett, University of Texas, Austin
Rousseau on Citizen Religion, Christianity, and the State
Alyssa Bornhorst, Hillsdale College
The Sphinx of Political Economy: Edmund Burke on
Free Trade, Adam Smith, and American Taxation
Gregory Collins, Catholic University of America
77.3
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: REPRESENTING
THE REAL: VOEGELINIAN PERSPECTIVES
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: Charles R. Embry, Texas A & M Commerce
Disc:
Paulette W. Kidder
Paul E. Kidder, Seattle University
Papers: Eric Voegelin as Diagnostician of Discourse
Alan I. Baily, Stephen F. Austin State University
Strauss, Heidegger and Voegelin on the Principle of
Sufficient Reason
Jeremy J. Mhire, Louisiana Tech University
Political Religions in the 21st Century: The Second
Reality of ISIS
Scott Robinson, King University
Salvation through Science? Bacons New Atlantis and
Transhumanism
David N. Whitney, Nicholls State University
77.4
EUROPEAN CONSORTIUM FOR POLITICAL
RESEARCH: MIGRATION AND THE
MIGRATION CRISIS TODAY: POLICIES,
EXPERIENCES, IMPACT
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Chair: Martin J Bull, University of Salford

346

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 346

Papers: The Evolving European, Eurasian, and North American


Regional Migration Systems
Andrei Korobkov
Restrictive Rights and Categorisation in European
Migration Policy
Julia Mouro Permoser, University of Vienna
-Faculty of Political science
The Contribution of Migrants to the Expansive
Dynamics of Capitalist Systems
David Kaufmann, University of Bern
Markus Hinterleitner
Eva Thomann, Heidelberg University
"I was One of Them Once": Migrants, their
Descendants, and the Migrant Crisis
Constanza Vera-Larrucea, Stockholm University
Migrant Workers vs. Brides: the Care Crisis in Southern
Europe and East Asia
Tiziana Caponio, University of Turin and Collegio
Carlo Alberto
Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University
77.5
GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICAL
SCIENTISTS: COMPETING INTERESTS AND
PARADIGMS IN EAST ASIAN POLITICAL
ECONOMY
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, University of South Carolina
Disc:
John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, University of South Carolina
Papers: The Changing Role of Taiwanese Investors in the PRC
and Southeast Asia
Shelley Rigger, Davidson College
Building a Fishery Resource Management Mechanism in
the South China Sea
Dustin Kuan-Hsiung Wang, National Taiwan Normal
University
Will International Law Change Taiwan's East China Sea
Policy after 2016?
Chi-ting Tsai, National Taiwan University
My Lawn Is Greener Than Yours: US and China's
Views on International Order
Yeh-Chung Lu, National Chengchi University
77.6
LABOR PROJECT: WORKERS, CORPORATIONS,
AND POLICY: GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES ON
LABOR AND CAPITAL
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE

Chair: Ian M. Hartshorn, University of Nevada, Reno


Papers: Church and Labor in the Millenium: Religious Freedom
and the Right to Organize
Clayton Sinyai, CPWR -- The Center for
Construction Research and Training
Understanding Corporate Political Mobilization in Our
Time
Gordon Lafer, University of Oregon
How Local Unions Tranformed Policy: The Case of
Mental Health in France
Isabel Maria Perera, University of Pennsylvania
New Coalitions in Employment Relations: Why
Corporations Support Labor Activists
Marissa Brookes, University of California, Riverside

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 5:30 PM

77.7
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP:


METHODOLOGICAL INNOVATIONS IN
ELECTION FORECASTING
Marriott, Room 412
Matthew Lebo, Stony Brook University
Ruth Dassonneville, Universite de Montreal
Matthew Lebo, Stony Brook University

Papers: Election Forecasting and Lead Time: Too Far Out?


Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, university of iowa
Combining Forecasts for US Presidential Elections.
PollyVotes Advances since 2004
Andreas Graefe, LMU Munich
J. Scott Armstrong, University of Pennsylvania
Randall J. Jones, University of Central Oklahoma
Alfred G. Cuzan, The University of West Florida
A State-Level Time-for-Change Presidential Election
Forecast Model
Jay A. DeSart, Utah Valley University
Newspaper Endorsements and Election Outcomes: A
State-Level Prediction Model
John P. McIver, University of Texas, Austin
77.8
RUSSIAN POLITICS GROUP: WHITHER
RUSSIA?
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Ivan Katchanovski, University of Ottawa
Disc:
Fred Eidlin, Karlova Universita (Charles University)
Papers: Bolstering Russian Soft Power: Evidence from Serbia
Michael O. Slobodchikoff, Troy University
G. Doug Davis, Troy University
Good for the Gander? Russian Identity and Strategic
Adjustment under Unipolarity
Boris Barkanov, West Virginia University
Putins State Tdeology: Conservatism between
Nationalism and Patriotism
Denys Kiryukhin, Skovoroda`s Institute of Philosophy,
National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
The Lost Generation: Russian Analysis and the Dulling
of Generation X
Matthew Crosston, Bellevue University
Vladimir Putin and Systemic Sources of Russias
Problems
Fred Eidlin, Karlova Universita (Charles University)

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM


Division Panels

Papers: Does a Democratic Hegemon Make Democracy a Fitter


Regime?
John M. Owen, University of Virginia

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 5:30 PM


Division Panels
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
79.1
CHANNELING BUREAUCRATIC AMBITION:
GOVERNMENT PROFESSIONS & CAREER
SYSTEMS
Room: Marriott, Room 415
Papers: Bureaucratic Leadership and Organizational Performance
in US Federal Agencies
George A. Krause, University of Pittsburgh
Politicized Bureaucracy in a Merit-based System:UK
Permanent Secretaries' Tenure
Oliver James, University of Exeter
A Multi-Decade Longitudinal Analysis of Public Service
Motivation in the US
Michael Bednarczuk, University of WisconsinMilwaukee
For Those Who Care: The Effect of Public Service
Motivation on Sector Choice
Stephen Holt, American University
Elections, Employee Turnover, and Human Capital in
U.S. Federal Agencies
Alexander Bolton, Duke University
John de Figueiredo, Duke University
David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt University
Incentives for Political versus Technical Expertise in the
Public Bureaucracy
Tim Johnson, Willamette University
Jowei Chen, University of Michigan
Variation in State Bureaucrat Professionalism: A Matter
of Personnel Preference?
Denise Lillvis, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 347

347

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY


78.1
GREAT POWERS AND DEMOCRACY:
CONGRUITIES AND TENSIONS
Room: Marriott, Independence Ballroom
Disc:
Daniela Donno, University of Pittsburgh
Ronald R. Krebs
Hvard Hegre, Uppsala University
Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin
Jon C. W. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Do Old Habits Die Hard? Power Transitions and Norm


Cascades in Global Politics
Seva Gunitsky, University of Toronto
Reconsidering Regime Type in International Relations:
A Review Essay
Susan D. Hyde, University of California, Berkeley
Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, George Washington
University
Process or Party? Realpolitik and the Demand for
Electoral Integrity
Nikolay V. Marinov, University of Mannheim
The Political Economy of Democracy Promotion
Kevin Narizny, Lehigh University
Election Observation and Local Perception of Election
Credibility in Tunisia
Sarah S. Bush, Temple University
Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
Threats and Promises: Why Democracy Promotion
Sometimes Leads to Civil Conflict
Daniel McCormack, University of Pennsylvania
Strategic Election Monitoring: How Mixed Objectives
Can Undermine Monitoring
Arturas Rozenas, New York University
Not All Opposition Is the Same: Islamic Opposition and
Fraud Evaluation
Kerim Can Kavakli, Sabanci University
Patrick Michael Kuhn, Durham University
A Direct Test of the Kantian Logic of Democracy
Promotion
Arman Grigoryan

Saturday, 8:00 AM to 5:30 PM

Part:

Revisiting the Gender Wage Gap in the Federal


Workforce
Alexander Bolton, Duke University
John de Figueiredo, Duke University
Gender, Career Paths, and Bureaucratic Ambition
Robert Maranto, University of Arkansas
Manny P. Teodoro, Texas A&M University
Kristen Carroll, Texas A&M University
Representation and Pay of Women and Minorities in
State and Local Governments
Gregory B. Lewis, Georgia State University
Rahul Pathak, Georgia State University
Jonathan Ross Boyd, Georgia State University
Manny P. Teodoro, Texas A&M University

Saturday, 9:30 AM to 11:30 AM


APSA Events
80.1
THE FUTURE OF U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION
AND THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN POLITICAL
SCIENCE AS A MODE OF SCHOLARSHIP,
TEACHING, AND WORKING
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Jeffrey C. Isaac, Indiana University, Bloomington
Part:
Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University
Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, Whitman College
Joseph M. Schwartz, Temple University
Paula D. McClain, Duke University
Romand Coles, Australian Catholic University
Michael W. McCann, University of Washington, Seattle
Katherine J Cramer, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM


Theme Panels
81.1
GREAT TRANSFORMATIONS IN
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Adam Lebovitz
Disc:
Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth College
Papers: The Structural Articulation of 'Equal Dignity'
Connor Ewing, University of Virginia
Domination, Democracy, and Constitutional Political
Economy
K Sabeel Rahman, Brooklyn Law School
Why Campaign Finance Matters A Normative
Evaluation of Citizens United v FEC
Prithviraj Datta, Center for Ethics in Society,
Stanford University
81.2
THE 2015 TERROR ATTACKS IN PARIS AND
THE FRENCH RESPONSE
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Jennifer Fredette, Ohio University
Papers: The Paris AttacksTerrorist Events, Emotional
Reactions, Political Participation
Martial Foucault, Sciences Po Paris
George E. Marcus, Williams College
Pavlos Vasilopoulos, CEVIPOF
Muslims in Europe and the US: Drivers of Integration
Beyond Resource Determinism
Justin Gest, George Mason University
Lacit through Nonwestern LensesComparing State
Efforts to Incorporate Muslims
Brandon Kendhammer, Ohio University
Jennifer Fredette, Ohio University

348

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 348

81.3
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

French Politics and the Emergence of Homegrown


Jihadism: 2012-2016
Antoine JARDIN
THEORY MEETS CRISIS: WHAT DOES THE
EUROCRISIS SAY TO COMPARATIVE
POLITICS?
PCC, 204-C
Gary Marks, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam
John D. Stephens, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University

Papers: The Implications of the Euro Crisis for Varieties of


Capitalism
Peter A. Hall, Harvard University
The Political Economy of Inequality in Good and Bad
Times
Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva
Neofunctionalism, Intergovernmentalism,
Postfunctionalism Face the Eurocrisis
Liesbet Hooghe, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU
Amsterdam
Gary Marks, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam
How Technocratic Supranationalism Fuels
Euroscepticism
Tanja A. Boerzel, Free University Berlin
Thomas Risse, Freie Universitt Berlin
APSA Events
82.1
LIAISING WITH THE MEDIA: TIPS AND
TACTICS
Room: PCC, 202-A
Part:
Kara Miriam Abramson, American Political Science
Association
Andra Gillespie, Emory University
Fredrick C. Harris, Columbia University
David Niven, University of Cincinnati
82.2
POLICY STUDIES, WICKED PROBLEMS AND
POLICY CHANGE?
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Philippe Zittoun, University of Lyon
B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh
Papers: Poverty Alleviation in Mexico: Solidaridad to Prospera,
Policy Design & Results
Jose Luis Mendez, El Colegio de Mxico, CEI
Understanding the Domestication of the Wicked-wild
Problems in the Political Agenda Setting
Philippe Zittoun, University of Lyon
How are Big Problems Solved? Run-away Bandwagons
and the Construction of Rationality in the Face of
'Wicked' Ambiguity
Grace Skogstad, University of Toronto
Matt Wilder, University of Toronto
82.3
WORKING GROUP: CONSOLIDATING
DATABASES ON POLITICAL ELITES IN CHINA
AND RUSSIA
Room: Marriott, Room 301
82.4
WORKING GROUP: PHILANTHROPY, POLICY,
AND POWER
Room: PCC, 101-A

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
83.1
HEGEL PLUS ONE
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Jeffrey Church, University of Houston
Disc:
Jeffrey Church, University of Houston
Papers: Can the Recognition Paradigm Accommodate Nature?
Umur Basdas, Yale Political Science Department
Carl Schmitt's Critique of Hegel's Protestant History
Jenna Silber Storey, Furman University
Hegel's Speculative Appropriation of Montesquieu
James Tussing, University of Notre Dame
Marx's Eurocentric Theories of History and Revolution
and their Hegelian Sources
Daniel Skidmore-Hess, Armstrong State University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
83.2
CONDITIONS OF AGONISTIC POLITICS 2
Room: PCC, 108-B
Co-sponsored by Political Studies Association

Chair:
Disc:

Holloway Sparks, Emory University


Moya Lloyd, Loughborough University

Papers: Conditions of Dissensus: Arendt and Ranciere on


Slavery and Statelessness
Andrew Schaap, University of Exeter
Defending Politics in the Midcentury and Today -- Old
Formulas, New Stakes?
James D. Ingram, McMaster University
Civility by Accident: Hall, Dunn, and Democracys
Demise
Jason Edwards, Birkbeck College, University of
London
Agonism and Cosmopolitanism
Mark Wenman, University of Birmingham
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
83.3
HOME IS WHERE THE POLITICS IS
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Mark Reinhardt, Williams College
Disc:
Mark Reinhardt, Williams College
Papers: Home as Prison, Prison as Home: Herman Wallaces
Imaginary House
Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College
Domestic Politics: Chantal Akerman on Leaving Home
Lori Marso, Union College
Objects of Possession
Torrey Shanks, University of Toronto
The Aging Body and Political Theory
Laurie E. Naranch, Siena College

DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY


83.5
IDEAL AND NON-IDEAL POLITICAL
AUTHORITY
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Anna Stilz, Princeton University
Disc:
Anna Stilz, Princeton University
Papers: The Authority of Undemocratic Elections
Alexander Kirshner, Duke University
Democratic Authority and Political Obligation
George Klosko, University of Virginia
Real Legitimacy
Amanda Greene, University College London
Disobeying Democratic Decisions
Daniel Viehoff, New York University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
83.6
BEHAVIORAL POLITICAL THEORY
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Richard Van Weelden, University of Chicago
Disc:
Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Electoral Imbalances and their Consequences
Carlo Prato, Georgetown University
Stephane Wolton, London School of Economics
Endogenous Party Identities
Christopher Li
Daniel Diermeier, Harris School of Public Policy
Ethical Strategic Voting
Deniz Selman, Bogazici University
Emekcan Yucel, University of Maryland
Ethical Voting in Multicandidate Elections
Laurent Bouton, Universit Lbre de Bruxelles
Benjamin Ogden, Texas A&M University
Political Legitimacy An Analysis Using Belief
Dependent Utilities
Barry O'Neill, University of California, Los Angeles
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
83.7
NATURE, NURTURE, AND POLITICAL
SOCIALIZATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Jaime E. Settle, College of William & Mary
Disc:
Casey A. Klofstad
Papers: Child Agency and the Transmission of Political Values:
Evidence from Australia
Christopher Ojeda, Stanford University
Pete Hatemi, Pennsylvania State University
Is there a Genetic Bias to the Civil-Military Divide?
Matthew R Miles, Brigham Young University, Idaho
Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas

Papers: Equality and Equity in Deliberative Design


Andre Bchtiger, Universitat Luzern
Edana Beauvais

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 349

349

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY


83.4
EQUALITY, EQUITY, AND DELIBERATION
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Edana Beauvais
Disc:
Archon Fung, Harvard University

Ideals of Inclusion in Deliberation


Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University
Chad Raphael, Santa Clara University
Deliberation and Democracy
David RH Moscrop, University of British Columbia
Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Physiological and Psychological Correlates of Political


Ideology
Mathias Osmundsen
David J. Hendry, Aarhus Universitet
Lasse Laustsen, Aarhus University
Kevin B. Smith, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
John R. Hibbing, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Michael Bang Petersen, University of Aarhus
The Relationship between Infant Temperament and
Adult Political Ideology
Howard Lavine, University of Minnesota
Marti Hope Gonzales, University of Minnesota
Christopher M. Federico, University of Minnesota,
Twin Cities
Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
83.8
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF VOTE BUYING AND
CLIENTELISM
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University
Disc:
Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University
Papers: Are Poor Citizens the Targets of Vote Buying?
Ezequiel Alejo Gonzalez Ocantos
Chad Kiewiet de Jonge, Langer Research Associates
Carlos Melendez, Universidad Diego Portales
Clientelism, Trust, and Historical State Capacity
Lenka Bustikova, Arizona State University
Cristina Corduneanu-Huci, Central European
University
Substituting for Clientelism? Welfare States and Vote
Buying in Brazil
Elin Bergman, University of Gothenburg
The Political Economy of Public Goods Provision in
Slums
Mahvish Shami, London School of Economics
Political Connections, Local Democracy, and
Government Performance in India
Aditya Dasgupta
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
83.9
ELITE POLITICS AND EARLY POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Brett Meyer, London School of Economics
Disc:
Gretchen Helmke, University of Rochester
Papers: Leaders, Institutions, and Credible Commitment
Scott Abramson, University of Rochester
Industrial Revolution and Political Change
Adriane Fresh, Stanford University
Political Dynasties and Institutional Change in the
Netherlands (1815-1918)
Brenda Van Coppenolle, Leiden University
Electoral Reform and Dynastic Politics in the French
Third Republic
Carlos Velasco Rivera, Princeton University
Alexandra Cirone, London School of Economics;
Columbia University, New York
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
83.10
NEW TOOLS AND STANDARDS FOR RESEARCH
TRANSPARENCY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Chair: Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University

350

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 350

Disc:

Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University


Justin Grimmer, Stanford University

Papers: Standard Operating Procedures: A Safety Net for PreAnalysis Plans


Donald P. Green, Columbia University
Winston Lin, Columbia University
Transparent Social Inquiry and the Meaning of Political
Science
Colin Elman, Syracuse University
Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Plain Text? Transparency in Computer-Assisted Text
Analysis
David Alexander Romney, Harvard University
Brandon Michael Stewart, Harvard University
Dustin Halliday Tingley, Harvard University
Formally Characterizing Research Designs to Encourage
Diagnosis and Registration
Graeme Blair, UCLA
Jasper Jack Cooper
Alexander Coppock, Yale University
Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
83.11
CIVIC ENGAGEMENT AND DEMOCRATIC
PRACTICE BEYOND THE CLASSROOM
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Chair: Michelle D. Deardorff, University of Tennessee at
Chattanooga
Disc:
Richard M. Battistoni, Providence College
Elizabeth C. Matto, Rutgers University
Papers: Best Practices for Political Learning in Campus Life
J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University
Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University
The Long Term Impact of Experiential Learning
Mary A. McHugh, Merrimack College
Russell Mayer, Merrimack College
Impact of Personal Narratives on Student Engagement in
Social Justice Education
Ari Kohen, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Deliberation in Adolescence
Ellen Claes, University of Leuven
The History of Civic Education in Political Science
Michael T. Rogers, Arkansas Tech University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
83.12
CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS AND REGIME
DURABILITY
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Maiah Jaskoski, Northern Arizona University
Disc:
Maiah Jaskoski, Northern Arizona University
Papers: Reconceptualizing Civil-Military Relations in
Autocracies
Risa A. Brooks, Marquette University
The Efficacy of Ethnic Stacking: Military Defection
during Uprisings in Africa
Julien Morency-Laflamme, Universit de Montral
Theodore D. McLauchlin, Universit de Montral
When Do Military Prerogatives Threaten Democracy in
Post-Authoritarian States?
Danielle M. Higgins, American University
Yasser Kureshi, Brandeis University

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Why Military Regimes Collapse: Collective Action and


the Promise of Reform
Mashail Aman Malik, Stanford University
Scott Williamson, Stanford University
Militarization and Democratic Oversight in Mexico and
Colombia
Jacob Dizard, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
83.13
POLITICAL VIOLENCE, CIVILIAN
SENTIMENTS, AND CONFLICT OUTCOMES
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Barbara F. Walter, University of California, San Diego
Disc:
Page Fortna, Columbia University
Papers: How Fighting over Issues Leads to Hatred towards
Identities
Sebastian Schutte, University of Konstantz
State Power, Territorial Reach, and Popular Support in
Civil Conflicts
Richard Kenneth Morgan, Emory University
Accountability in Rebel Regimes
Michael A. Rubin, Columbia University
Analyzing the Impact of Micro-dynamics of Fighting on
Conflict Outcomes
Kaisa H. Hinkkainen, University of Lincoln
Gaku Ito, University of Toyama
Social Norms, Sexual Violence and Violence against
Women in DR Congo
Summer E. Lindsey, Columbia University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
83.14
THE POLITICS OF INFORMALITY
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Nita Rudra, Georgetown University
Disc:
Melina Altamirano, Duke University
Alisha Caroline Holland, Princeton University
Papers: Globalization and the Politics of Informality
Helen V. Milner, Princeton University
Nita Rudra, Georgetown University
Shareen Joshi, Georgetown University
Who Do Informal Slum Leaders Serve? Experimental
Evidence from Urban India
Adam Michael Auerbach, American University-SIS
Tariq Thachil, Vanderbilt University
Is the Informal Sector Politically Different from the
Formal Sector?
Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder
Informality, Firm Size and Trade over the Decades
John Stephen Ahlquist, University of California, San
Diego
Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University

Papers: Attitudes on Oil Drilling and Social Movements on


Ecuador's Extractive Frontier
Todd A. Eisenstadt, American University
Karleen West, SUNY Geneseo

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING


COUNTRIES
83.16
LAND AND CONFLICT: RURAL POLITICS IN
CHINA, INDIA, AND AFRICA
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Tyson Roberts, University of California, Irvine
Disc:
Hans Hanpu Tung, National Taiwan University
Papers: Campaign Strategies and Land Sales in Chinas Village
Elections
Tan Zhao
Hindu-Muslim Violence in Unexpected Places: Evidence
from Rural India
Aditi Malik, California State University San Marcos
Selecting the State or Choosing the Chief?Political
Determinants of Land Titling
Lauren Honig, Cornell University
The politics of race in the fast-track land reform in
Zimbabwe
Wilson Muzorewa, Scotiabank Ireland
Morris D. Bidjerano, Walden University
William J. Benet, Walden University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
83.17
RIGHT-SIZING THE RESOURCE 'CURSE': OIL'S
VARYING POLITICAL DYNAMICS
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Benjamin Smith, University of Florida
Paasha Mahdavi, Georgetown University
Disc:
Victor Menaldo
Paasha Mahdavi, Georgetown University
Papers: Colonial Origins of the Resource Curse: Rent
Distribution in Arabia and Africa
Desha Girod, Georgetown University
Meir R. Walters, Georgetown University
Energy Security After Hegemony: Resource Bargaining
During Systemic Change
Yu-Ming Liou, Georgetown University
Paul Musgrave, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Separatist Violence, Center-Seeking Peace? The
Heterogeneous Oil-Conflict Curse
Jack Paine, University of Rochester
The Oil 'Cushion' in New Democracies: Resource
Wealth as a Potential Blessing
Benjamin Smith, University of Florida
Pax Petrolica? Rethinking the Oil-Interstate War Linkage
Benjamin Smith, University of Florida
Hye Ryeon Jang

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 351

351

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING


COUNTRIES
83.15
CONTEXT AND CAUSATION OF ANTIEXTRACTIVE CONFLICTS IN LATIN AMERICA
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Matthew Amengual
Disc:
Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University

Indigenous Movements and State-led Extractivism in


Leftist Bolivia
Simon Velasquez
Mapuche Communities' Pursuit of Territorial Rights in
Southern Chile
Kelly Bauer, Nebraska Wesleyan University
Land-use Planning to Deepen Democratic Natural
Resource Governance
Maria-Therese Gustafsson
Intergovernmental Competition, Oil Rents and
Subnational Democracy in Argentina
Diego Diaz Rioseco, Brown University

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING


COUNTRIES
83.18
THE ROLE OF IDEAS IN LATIN AMERICAN
JUSTICE REFORMS
Room: PCC, 113-A
Part:
Matthew C. Ingram, University at Albany, SUNY
Tulia G. Falleti, University of Pennsylvania
Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Julio Rios-Figueroa, CIDE
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
83.19
OLIGARCHS AND ENERGY IN RUSSIA
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Stephen Crowley, Oberlin College
Disc:
Samuel A. Greene, King's College London
Papers: Oligarchy Revisited: Post-Communism and the
Operation of Capitalism in Practice
Andrew S. Barnes, Kent State University
State Capitalism in Hard Times: Russias National
Champions Policy in Crisis
Masha Hedberg, Johns Hopkins University School of
Advanced International Studies
State Power and Collective Action: Explaining Tax
Exemptions for Oil in Russia
Adnan Vatansever, King's College London
Poisoned by Gas: Post-Communist Energy Security
Strategy
Emily Holland
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
83.20
THE POLITICS OF GLOBAL CAPITAL FLOWS
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Chia-yi Lee, Nanyang Technological University
Disc:
Benjamin A.T. Graham, University of Southern
California
Noel Pereyra Johnston, University of California at
Riverside
Papers: The Political Determinants of FDI Flows: New
Modelling Approaches
Christopher J. Fariss, Penn State University
Benjamin A.T. Graham, University of Southern
California
On the Fallacy of Composition in International Relations
Faisal Z. Ahmed, Princeton University
Ida Bastiaens, Fordham University
Noel Pereyra Johnston, University of California at
Riverside
Local Firms & Foreign Investors: Domestic Industry &
Investment Treaty Formation
Sarah Bauerle Danzman, Indiana University
Citizenship and Foreign Direct Investment in Latin
America
Alexander Slaski, Princeton University
Safe hands: Political leaders, autocratic regimes, and
market confidence
Aditya Ranganath
Jason Kuo, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
83.21
THE POLITICS OF TRADE AND INVESTMENT
AGREEMENTS
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Adam Dean

352

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 352

Disc:

Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania


Tim Buthe

Papers: Does Trust Matter for Institutional Design? Evidence


from Trade Agreements
Manfred Elsig, University of Bern
Simon Wuethrich, University of Bern
Do BITs Reflect the Interests of Powerful States?
Todd L. Allee
Andrew David Lugg
A BIT Far? Geography, International Economic
Agreements, and FDI
Laura Gomez-Mera, University of Miami
Tenure Security and Bilateral Investment Treaty Signing
in Authoritarian Regimes
Fangjin Ye, Michigan State University
Jia Chen, National University of Singapore
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
83.22
INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN IN WORLD POLITICS
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Stephen D. Krasner
Disc:
Stephen D. Krasner
Papers: Documenting State Presence along Transnational Border
Crossings
Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University
Locating Islamic States on the Continent of International
Law
Barbara Koremenos, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Flexibility by Design
Christina Davis, Princeton University
From Complex Interdependence to Complex Governance
Miles Kahler, American University
The Politics of Informal Governance
Oliver Westerwinter, University of St. Gallen
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
83.23
COMPLEXITIES OF COERCION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Disc:
Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University
Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: Coercion and the Credibility of Assurances
Matthew Cebul, Yale University
Allan Dafoe, Yale University
Nuno P. Monteiro, Yale University
Democracies, Dictators, and Coercive Diplomacy
Alexander B. Downes, George Washington University
Todd S. Sechser, University of Virginia
Making It Personal: The Role of Leader-Specific Signals
in Extended Deterrence
Roseanne McManus, Baruch College, CUNY
Procedural Justice and the Construction of Intractable
Conflict
philippe Assouline, UCLA
Robert F. Trager, UCLA
Rethinking Signals of Resolve: Tying Hands, Sinking
Cost and Leaders Beliefs
Keren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton University
Joshua D. Kertzer, Harvard University
Jonathan Renshon

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY


83.24
LOCAL PEACE, INTERNATIONAL BUILDERS:
PEACEBUILDING THROUGH LOCAL
ENGAGEMENT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Lise Morje Howard, Georgetown University
Disc:
Kyle Beardsley, Duke University
Jessica Steinberg, Indiana University
Papers: International Peacebuilding and Local Success:
Assumptions, Myths, and Reality
Severine Autesserre, Barnard College, Columbia
University
How Can International Actors Build Interethnic Trust?
Evidence from Mali
William G. Nomikos, Yale University
UN Mission Leaderships and Peacekeeping Effectiveness
Andrea Ruggeri, University of Oxford
Vincenzo Bove, University of Warwick
The Varieties of Electoral Strategies by Insurgents:
Evidence from Afghanistan
Luke N. Condra, University of Pittsburgh
James D. Long
Andrew C Shaver, Princeton University
Austin Wright, Princeton University
Training Local Security Forces: Evidence from U.S. and
U.N. Efforts
Chris Price, Yale University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL
83.25
ASSESSING THE RISE OF CHINA: FROM
SUPPLY CHAINS TO CHINA'S ECONOMIC
STRUCTURE
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Lori Helene Gronich, George Washington University
Papers: Back to Bipolarity: Structural-Realist Theory and the
Rise of China
Karen Ruth Adams, University of Montana
China in the US Defense Supply Chain: New Kinds of
Dependence and Vulnerability?
Charles Eugene Gholz, University of Texas at Austin
China's Political and Economic Risk: Consequences in
Africa and the Middle East
Wojtek M. Wolfe, Rutgers University
The Geostrategic Implications of Chinas Economic
Transition
William J. Norris, Texas A&M University
The South China Sea: Implications for Global Order
Michael P. Tkacik, Stephen F. Austin State University

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


83.27
CRIME AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Richard Pell Jordan, Baylor University
Disc:
Benjamin Lessing, University of Chicago
Papers: Crime Embeddedness in the Evolution of the Somali
Piracy
Keunsoo Jeong
Crime, Conquest, and Costly Commitments: How Rebels
Signal Revolutionary Resolve
Richard Pell Jordan, Baylor University
Drugs, Insurgency, and Violence in Peru 1980-1995.
Angelica Duran-Martinez, University of
Massachusetts, Lowell
Hillel David Soifer, Temple University
How do Campaigns and Criminal Organizations Affect
Violence?
Aldo Fernando Ponce, CIDE
Jaime Sainz
The Economic Consequences of Drug Trafficking in
Mexico
Gustavo Adolfo Robles
Beatriz Magaloni
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
83.28
FOREIGN AID AND SECURITY
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Deniz Cil, University of Maryland, College Park
Disc:
Martin C. Steinwand, Stony Brook University
Papers: Development and Security: Emerging Powers and
Fragile States
Agnieszka Paczynska, George Mason University
Introducing the Afghan Aid Worker Attacks Dataset
Neil Narang, University of California, Santa Barbara
Local Ownership of Aid: Aid in Conflict Zones and
Civilian Support
Deniz Cil, University of Maryland, College Park
Jacob Aronson, University of Maryland, College Park
Subnational Violence and Aid: Why Local Conflict May
Encourage Local Development
Susanna Campbell, American University
Karsten Donnay, Graduate Institute Geneva
The Development of Humanitarian Contractors in
Conflict
Michael B. Prather

Papers: Great Transformations: Quantum Theory and Foreign


Policy Analysis
Stephen G. Walker, Arizona State University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 353

353

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY


83.26
ANALYZING FOREIGN POLICY CHANGE:
TURNABOUTS AND TRANSFORMATIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Bartholomew H. Sparrow, The University of Texas at
Austin
Disc:
Bartholomew H. Sparrow, The University of Texas at
Austin
Kyle Haynes, Purdue University

Island or Enclave Building: How Expansionist Regimes


Extend Borders
Samuel S. Stanton, Grove City College
Joseph J. St. Marie
TRs Transformation of Latin America Policy and the
2nd Pan American Conference
Ronnie Grant, Florida International University
The Logic of Realignment
Muhammad Kabir, The Graduate Center, The City
University of New York
When To Switch? The Determinants of Turbulence in
Foreign Policy
Eleonora Mattiacci, Amherst College

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


83.29
THE CHANGING DYNAMICS OF NEGOTIATION
AND MEDIATION IN ARMED CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Johannes Karreth, Ursinus College
Disc:
Caroline A. Hartzell, Gettysburg College
David E. Cunningham, University of Maryland, College
Park
Papers: Battles and Concession-Making in Interstate Conflicts
J. Michael Greig, University of North Texas
mustafa kirisci
The Structure of Peace Processes and the Duration of
Post-Civil Conflict Peace
Benjamin Thomas Jones, The University of
Mississippi
Technical Election Assistance and Electoral Violence
Inken von Borzyskowski, Florida State University
Multiparty Mediation Onset: Patterns of Selection
Elizabeth J. Menninga, University of Iowa
Third Parties and Political Contestation in Domestic
Armed Conflicts
Johannes Karreth, Ursinus College
Madhav Joshi, University of Notre Dame
Jason Michael Quinn, University of Notre Dame
Jaroslav Tir, University of Colorado Boulder
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
83.30
AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT AND
CONGRESS
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego
Disc:
Carolina Ferrerosa-Young, Columbia University
Papers: Petitions and the Emergence of Congressional
Committees, 1789-1865
Daniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University
Benjamin Schneer, Florida State University
Tobias Resch, Harvard University
Maggie McKinley, Harvard Kennedy School of
Government
Steering the Senate: The Consolidation of Party
Leadership, 1879-1913
Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester
Steven S. Smith, Washington University in St. Louis
The Republican Turn Against Civil Rights Legislation,
1968-1980
Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Virginia
Justin Peck, San Francisco State University
Was Gillett the Best Man the House Could Get?
Gisela Sin, University of Illinois at U-C
Brian J. Gaines, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Yielding the Floor for the Last Time: Senate Retirement
Dynamics, 1916-2014
L. Marvin Overby, University of Missouri
Theodore J. Masthay, University of Missouri
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
83.31
LEGISLATIVE EFFECTIVENESS
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: Eleanor Neff Powell, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Disc:
LaGina Gause, University of Michigan

354

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 354

Papers: Congressional Absorptive Capacity and the Partisan


Divide
Brian Scholl, US Senate Budget Committee
Legislative Effectiveness and Problem Solving in the
U.S. House
Craig Volden, University of Virginia
Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University
Legislative Productivity and Expressive Polarization in
Political Rhetoric.
stonegarden grindlife, UCLA
Passing the Buck: The Extent and Effectiveness of
Blaming Others for Inaction
David Doherty, Loyola University Chicago
Laurel Harbridge, Northwestern University
On Legislative Effectiveness and Attentiveness to
Constituency Opinion
Claire Abernathy, Stockton University
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
83.32
PRESIDENTS, THE COURTS, AND THE LAW
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Michael L. Mezey, DePaul University
Disc:
Robert J. Spitzer, SUNY, Cortland
Papers: Marbury v. Madison 2.0: Judicial Review of Executive
Policy
Jennifer Selin, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Carrie Archie Russell
Obamas Law and The Democrats: Abandoning the
Church of Judicial Policymaking
David A. Yalof, University of Connecticut
Presidential Personality, Strategy, and Supreme Court
Response
Natalie C Rogol, Georgia State University
Taking the Obama Administration to Court over Policy,
Process and Power
Nancy Kassop, SUNY New Paltz
White House Legal Advising during the Obama Years:
Continuity or Departure
Darby Morrisroe, DePauw University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
83.33
COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF RULEMAKING,
REGULATION, AND POLICYMAKING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

John W. Hogan, Dublin Institute of Technology


Francesca Gains, University of Manchester

Papers: Better Regulation for Stronger Legitimacy? An European


Commission's Policy.
PIERRE-YVES SAGNIER, University of Lille,
France
Convergence of Executive Rulemaking in EU and
OECD countries
Fabrizio De Francesco, Unversity of Stratchclyde
Explaining Stakeholders' Preferences for a Better
Regulation Policy in the EU
Adriana Bunea, University College London
Raimondas Ibenskas, Department of Politics,
University of Exeter

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Why Some Bureaucratic Autonomy is Key for the


Integrated Operation of States
Patrick John Dunleavy, London School of Economics
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
83.34
ON PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR LAW AND COURTS
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Michael J. Nelson, The Pennsylvania State University
Disc:
Michael J. Nelson, The Pennsylvania State University
Papers: Thinking about Government Authority: Constitutional
Rules and Political Context
Eileen Braman
Policy, Process, and the Public Foundations of Supreme
Court Legitimacy
Brandon L. Bartels, George Washington University
Christopher David Johnston, Duke University
Local Context, Judicial Elections, and their Impact on
Supreme Court Perceptions
April A. Johnson, Kennesaw State University
Joshua Johnson, Kennesaw State University
Qualifications & Public Evaluation: The Legitimating
Power of Judges' Experience
Michael Salamone, Washington State University
Brenden Higashi, Washington State University
Social Capital and Perceptions of State Court Legitimacy
Damon M. Cann
Jeff Yates, SUNY, Binghamton University
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
83.35
PUBLIC POLICY IN THE AMERICAN STATES
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Chair: Thomas R. Dye
Disc:
Iris Hui, Stanford University
Ginger Silvera, Zayed University
Papers: Causes of Pension Underfunding among the States,
1957-2013
Robert Mickey, University of Michigan
Alton Boyd Hale Worthington, University of
Michigan
Conditions of Defiance: When a States Policy is to
Ignore Federal Policy
Isaac Pollert, University of Illinois in Chicago
Rebecca J Clendenen, University of Illinois in
Chicago
Constitutional Borrowing Limitations: Analysis of State
Indebtedness Revisited
Welmar Eduardo Rosado-Buenfil, California Institute
of Technology
Immigration Policies at the State-Level and the Role of
the Media
Raul Madrid, Claremont Graduate University
It's in the Measure: How Policy Measures Affect State
Immigrant Policy Research
Michael Rivera

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC


ADMINISTRATION

Chair:
Disc:

Justin de Benedictis-Kessner, MIT


Hannah Walker, University of Washington

DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH


83.37
STRUCTURING DISADVANTAGE: THE FAMILY,
PRISONS, AND THE UNIVERSITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE

Chair:
Disc:

Karen L. Baird, Purchase College, SUNY


Martha A. Ackelsberg, Dr. Martha A. Ackelsberg
Andrea Benjamin, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill

Papers: The Abolition of Gender: Susan Okin's Solution to


Gender Injustice
Katerina Apostolides
Sex Segregated Prisons, Sex Identity Autonomy and
Transgender Discrimination
Heath Fogg Davis
On Applying Youngs Concept of Social Structures in
Intersectional Scholarship
Lee MacLean
Diasporic Researcher: An Autoethnography of Gender
and Race in Political Science
Natasha Behl, Arizona State University
From the Bottom and the Top: Changing Gendered
Universities
Amy Fried, University of Maine
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
83.38
THE NEW POLITICS OF IMMIGRATION
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Sergio I Garcia-Rios, Cornell University
Disc:
Sergio I Garcia-Rios, Cornell University
Papers: Operation Endgame and the New Politics of Immigration
Rene R. Rocha, University of Iowa
Emerging Immigrants and Organizations in the UK &
US
Heath Brown, City University of New York,
Graduate Center and John Jay College
Naturalization as Mobilization: State Variations in
Naturalization Petitions
David L. Leal, University of Texas at Austin
Ngoc Phan, University of Southern Mississippi

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 355

355

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS


83.36
POLICING CITIES
Room: Marriott, Room 310

Papers: Over-policing, Under-policing, or Both? Analyzing


Police Resource Allocation
Rebecca Goldstein, Harvard University
Hye Young You, Vanderbilt University
Bringing Politics Back to Policing: The Key to Local
Control
Matthew O. Thomas, California State University,
Chico
Peter F. Burns, Soka University of America
Two Cities on a Divergent Path: Police Violence &
Race, Baltimore & San Antonio
Keesha M. Middlemass, Trinity University
Brendan Kennedy, Trinity University
Use of Deadly Force: A Local-level Analysis of Fatal
Police-Involved Shootings
Jay T. Jennings, Temple University
Meghan E Rubado, Temple University
Who Governs the Police? Police Repertoires and
Electoral Representation
Laurel Eckhouse

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Proving Patriotism: Latino Views on Military


Recruitment and Service
Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, Pace University
Adam McGlynn, East Stroudsburg University
When Stigma is "In the Air": Latino Beliefs about
Discrimination and Mobility
Bradford S. Jones, University of California, Davis
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
83.39
GLOBALIZATION, DEVELOPMENT, AND
RELIGIOUS PLURALISM IN ASIA
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Matthew J. Nelson, University of London, SOAS
Disc:
Matthew J. Nelson, University of London, SOAS
Papers: Economic Globalization and Rising Religiosity: Is There
a Link?
Yonca zdemir, Middle East Technical University,
Northern Cyprus Campus
The Impact of Economic Growth on the Spread of
Christianity in Post-Mao China
Siyun Jiang, Hong Kong University of Science and
Technology
Spiritual State, Material Temple: Religious
Commodification in China
Kuei-Min Chang, Columbia University
Muslim Minorities and Provision of Public Goods:
Mosques in China
Yichen Guan, Harvard University
Managing Religious Pluralism: The Pancasila and State
Formation in Indonesia
Robert K. Arakaki, Hawaii Tokai International
College
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
83.40
METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES IN THE STUDY
OF DISTRICTING AND APPORTIONMENT
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Chair: Yuko Kasuya, Keio University
Disc:
Yusaku Horiuchi, Dartmouth College
John M. Carey, Dartmouth College
Papers: A New Automated Redistricting Simulator Using
Markov Chain Monte Carlo
Kosuke Imai, Princeton University
The State of Malapportionment in the World
Junichiro Wada
Yuta Kamahara, Yokohama National University
Yuko Kasuya, Keio University
The Role of Government Fiscal Transfers on Crime
Masataka Harada, Fukuoka University
Daniel M. Smith, Harvard University
The Effects of Malapportionment on Economic
Development: Evidence from India
Rikhil R Bhavnani, University of Wisconsin, Madison
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
83.41
PRIMARIES AND CANDIDATE SELECTION
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Jason Thomas, Syracuse University
Disc:
David Karol, University of Maryland

356

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 356

Papers: Donor Networks in Congressional Primaries


Zachary Albert, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Bruce Desmarais, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Party Asymmetry in the 2016 Presidential Nomination
Contest
David A. Hopkins, Boston College
Party Organization and Candidate Characteristics
Georgia Kernell, UCLA
The Politics of State Legislative Endorsements in the
2016 Presidential Election
Boris Shor, Georgetown University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
83.42
POLITICAL PREFERENCES AND ELECTORAL
BEHAVIOR IN THE ARGENTINE 2015
ELECTIONS
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University
Disc:
David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Papers: Blaming Local: A Survey Experiment on Networks and
Attribution of Responsibility
Isabella Alcaniz, GVPT, University of Maryland
Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Maryland
Marcelo Escolar, University of Buenos Aires
Campaign Effects in Latin Americas Democracies
Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin
Clientelism in Argentina: Evidence from Survey
Experiments Among Slum Dwellers
Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University
Virginia Oliveros, Tulane University
Rodrigo Esteban Zarazaga, CIAS
Misattribution and Incumbency Avantage: Evidence
from a Survey Experiment
Luis Schiumerini, University of Oxford
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
83.43
EVERYBODY HAS A DREAM: EFFECTS OF
RACE AND RACIALIZATION ON PUBLIC
OPINION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Stanley Feldman, Stony Brook University
Disc:
Michael Tesler, UC Irvine
Papers: Does Racial Priming Explain Attitudes toward
Immigration?
Daniel J. Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania
Mara Cecilia Ostfeld
The Dynamics of Racialization
Paul Goren, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
The Tea Party Coalition: Some Racial Resentment, Lots
of Economic Resentment
Emily McClintock Ekins, Cato Institute
Competition and White Group Consciousness: Linked
Fates Meaning and Measurement
Matthew Fowler, Indiana University

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION


83.44
SURPRISES: A MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR OF
PUBLIC OPINION AND POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY

Chair:
Disc:

Aleksander Ksiazkiewicz, University of Illinois at


Urbana-Champaign
Jennifer Jerit

Papers: Implicit Cues and Frames in Citizens Decisions to


Follow the Leader
Dennis Chong, University of Southern California
Morris E Levy, University of Southern California
Motivated Reasoning in the Perceived Credibility of
Public Opinion Polls
Ozan Kuru
Michael W. Traugott, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Josh Pasek, University of Michigan
Taking Cues from Fellow Citizens: How Poll Results
Serve as Social Heuristic
Benjamin Toff, Oxford University
Knowing Too Much? How Political Knowledge and
Intelligence relate to Competency
Matthew P. Motta, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
Whats in a Username? Online Profiles and Evaluations
of Political Arguments
Benjamin T. Bowyer, Mills College
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
83.45
FLIP IT AND REVERSE IT: MEDIA EFFECTS ON
POLITICAL ELITES
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Mary Layton Atkinson, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
Disc:
Danny Hayes, George Washington University
Kathleen Searles, Louisiana State University
Philip Habel, University of Glasgow

DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION


83.46
VOICE, DELIBERATION, DISCUSSION,
EXPRESSION
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Mario Guerrero, California State Polytechnic University,
Pomona
Disc:
Samara Klar, University of Arizona

Papers: He Said, She Said: How Gender Affects Public Opinion


toward Transgender Rights
Brian F. Harrison, Northwestern University
Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College
Media Polarization and Discussion Homophily
Michael Barthel, Pew Research Center
Jeffrey A. Gottfried, Pew Research Center
Katerina Eva Matsa, Pew Research Center
Galen Stocking, Pew Research Center
Online versus Face-to-Face Deliberation
Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University
Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
Political Voice and the People Who Use It
Roderick P. Hart, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
83.47
BORDER POLITICS AND ACTIVISM:
MIGRANTS, REFUGEES, DRUG TRAFFICKING
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP

Chair:
Disc:

Susan Catherine Alunan, Temple University


Linda Choi Hasunuma, Franklin and Marshall College
Cary Fraser, Appalachian State University

Papers: Banished by Culture, Violated in its Midst: Homeless


Afghans Between Minarets
Bojan Savic, University of Kent, Brussels School of
International Studies
Drug Trafficking Organizations as Agents of the State:
The Case of Ayotzinapa
Bonny Wells, Temple University
The Transformative Politics of Migrant Organizing
Ethel Tungohan, University of Alberta
Trail of Dreams: Queering across the Fight for Migrant
Rights
Rafael Ramirez Solrzano, University of California,
Los Angeles
Discrimination against Refugees?: Experimental
Evidence from South Korea
Jae Yeon Kim, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
83.48
NATIONALIST IDEOLOGIES: LEGACIES OF
THE PAST AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THE
FUTURE
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: Evan B. Montgomery, Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Assessments
Disc:
Evan B. Montgomery, Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Assessments
Papers: Command and Conquer: Ideologies of Superiority,
Democracy, and Annexation
Richard W. Maass, University of Evansville
The (Re)Construction of 'Chineseness' in Post-colonial
Hong Kong
Alvin Leung, University of Cambridge

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 357

Daily Schedule

Papers: Cable News and the Ballot Box: Does Partisan News
affect Electoral Success?
Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University
Johanna Dunaway, Texas A&M University
Martin Johnson, Louisiana State University
Ryan J. Vander Wielen, Temple University
How News Matters: Coverage of Inequality's Effect on
Public Policymaking
Michael W. Wagner, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
The PMP Principle and the Role of the Media in
Political Change
Gadi Wolfsfeld, IDC, Herzliya
Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Scott L. Althaus, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign

C. Daniel Myers, University of Minnesota

357

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Threat and Fear of Reversion: The Rise of Hitler, Putin's


Russia, and ISIS
Manus I. Midlarsky
Elizabeth R. Midlarsky, Teachers College, Columbia
University
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
83.49
PATRIMONIALISM, DEMOCRACY, STABILITY
AND GROWTH: CROSS-REGIONAL
PERSPECTIVES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Agustina Giraudy, American University
Disc:
Gerardo L. Munck, University of Southern California
Papers: Neopatrimonialism and Democracy in Latin America: A
Cross-National Examination
Agustina Giraudy, American University
Jonathan Hartlyn, Univ North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Why and When Do Patronal Presidents Fall from
Power? Evidence from Eurasia
Henry E. Hale, George Washington University
Party Networks and Accountability in Young
Democracies: Evidence from Bosnia
Kiran Auerbach, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Patrimonialism Against Growth: When, Where, and Why
Sebastin Mazzuca, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
83.50
THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF
DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE: NEW
QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh
Papers: The Origins of Egalitarian Democracy Across the World
Rachel Sigman, University of Gothenburg
Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Gothenburg
Towards A Natural History of Regimes
Andrew Colopy, UC-Irvine
Democratic Governance and Horizontal Inequality:
Emerging Cross-Country Evidence
Rachel M. Gisselquist, United Nations University
Democracy, Quality of Government, and Human
Development
John Gerring, Department of Political Science,
Boston University
Carl Henrik Knutsen, Department of Political
Science, University of Oslo
Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University
Jan Teorell, Lund University
Federalism and Democracy: Subnational (Un)Democratic
Regimes and Economic Growth
Amanda Fidalgo, Pennsylvania State University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
83.51
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS, LABOR, AND HUMAN
RIIGHTS
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE

Chair: David L. Cingranelli, Binghamton University, SUNY


Papers: A New Era for Labor Activism? Mobilizing Human
Rights against Blacklisting
Filiz Kahraman, University of Washington

358

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 358

Dealing with 'Divide and Conquer' when Struggling for


Social Rights
Sebastian G. Guzman, Universidad Andres Bello
Rights Consciousness after Protest and Change in the
Middle East
Shadi Mokhtari
The Ethics of Activism: Dilemmas in Campaigns
Against Violent State Officials
Rachel Lee Wahl, University of Virginia
Protecting Organized Labor Helps All Workers: A
Comparative Analysis
David L. Cingranelli, Binghamton University, SUNY
Zhiyuan (Sebastian) Wang, Binghamton University
(SUNY)
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
83.52
NEW ETHNOGRAPHIC APPROACHES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Timothy Pachirat
Disc:
Timothy Pachirat
Papers: American Swine: Ethnographic Value Chain Research as
Epistemic Cartography
Jan Dutkiewicz, New School for Social Research
Authority and Contention among Syrian Refugees in
Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan
Killian Clarke, Princeton University
Ethics after Fieldwork in Politically Dynamic Settings
Eleanor Knott, London School of Economics
From the Street to the State House: Making the Case
For Ethnography in APD
Shannon Sanchez-Youngman, University of New
Mexico
Anna Calasanti, University of New Mexico
DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS
83.53
IDENTITIES, PUBLIC POLICIES AND
PARTICIPATION IN CANADA
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Melissa Haussman, Carleton University
Disc:
Valerie-Anne Maheo, Universite de Montreal
Papers: Prejudice and Political Mobilization
Randy Besco, University of Toronto
The Forgotten in Democracy: Civic Engagement of the
Canadian Homeless
Anna Kopec, University of Guelph
Religious Education in Canada: Understanding
Provincial Variation
Clark Banack, Brock University
When Quebec Participates: The Hidden Side of
Intergovernmental Relations
Jean-Philippe Gauvin, Universit de Montral
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
83.54
POLITICAL NETWORKS: LEADERSHIP
NETWORKS
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Richard McGrath Skinner, Sunlight Foundation
Disc:
Robert Bond, The Ohio State University
Patrick Tucker, Washington University in St Louis
Papers: Crafting a Broad Appeal: Audiences and Collaborators
in the U.S. Congress
Alison Craig, Ohio State University

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Nominations and Coalition Politics: Detecting Party


Factions In Network Data
Rachel Blum, Miami University
Hans Noel, Georgetown University
Pen Pals: Collaboration in Congressional Letter-Marking
Networks
Nicole Kalaf-Hughes, Bowling Green State University
Russell W. Mills
Rapporteur Networks in the EP: Policy Leaders as
Representatives or Outliers?
Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Frank Michael Haege, University of Limerick
Social Networks and Constituent Correspondence in
Congressional Offices
Michael Crespin, University of Oklahoma
Matthew James Geras, University of Oklahoma
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
83.55
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES OF SENDING
STATES ENGAGEMENT WITH DIASPORAS
ABROAD
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Maria V. Koinova, University of Warwick
Disc:
Gerasimos Tsourapas, University of Birmingham
Papers: States or Parties? Comparing Patterns of Diaspora
Outreach
Katrina Burgess, Tufts University
The Limits of Sending-State Power: The Philippines and
Sri Lanka
Patrick R. Ireland, Illinois Institute of Technology
Diaspora Engagement Policies in Central and Eastern
Europe
Myra A. Waterbury, Ohio University
Government vs Party Efforts to Engage Diasporas in
Different Contexts
Maria V. Koinova, University of Warwick
Altruistic Remittances? Emigrants, Crime, and Protest in
Mexico
Sandra Jessica Ley Gutierrez, CIDE
Covadonga Meseguer, London School of Economics
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
83.56
THE EFFECTS OF CONTEXTS AND POLICIES
ON IMMIGRANT INTEGRATION
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Margit Tavits, Washington University in St. Louis
Disc:
Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University
Viktoryia Schnose, Washington University in St. Louis

DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS


83.57
ELECTORAL STRATEGIES IN AFRICA
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Melinda J Adams, James Madison University
Disc:
Adrienne LeBas, American University
Papers: Democratization within Parties: Do Primaries Select
Better Politicians?
Shana Warren, New York University
Rally Supporters, Canvas Swing Voters: Segmented
Targeting in Tanzania
Daniel Paget, University of Oxford
Elections, Strategies of Incorporation, and the Informal
Urban Economy in Uganda
Adam R. Culver, Makerere Institute of Social
Research
Do Governments Favor their Core? Ethnicity, Voting,
and Goods Provision in Uganda
Peter Carroll
Can Personal Exposure to Political Processes Increase
Performance-Based Voting?
Malte Lierl, Yale University
Marcus Holmlund, The World Bank
Related Groups
84.1
AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT: THE
JURISPRUDENCE AND AMERICAN LEGACY OF
JUSTICE ANTONIN SCALIA
Room: Loews, Commonwealth D
Chair: Phillip Munoz, University of Notre Dame
Part:
Ralph A. Rossum, Claremont McKenna College
Jack M. Balkin, Yale University
Michael S. Greve, American Enterprise Institute
Hadley Arkes, Amherst College
84.2
ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS:
CONTEXUALIZING RACE NARRATIVES IN
ASIAN AMERICAN POLITICAL ACTIVISM
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Sangay K. Mishra, Drew University, New Jersey
Disc:
Janelle Wong
Papers: Asian Americans and Disruption of the Dominant
Narrative
Sudip Bhattacharya, Rutgers University
It Depends on Who You Run Against: Racial
Stereotyping in Candidate Evaluation
Min Hee Go, CUNY - Brooklyn College
Chinbo Chong
Understanding Co-Ethnic Support for APA Elected
Officials across the US
Rhoanne Esteban, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Ongoing Group Processes and Social Justice Activism:
A Case Study of APAs
Nicole Filler, University of California, Santa Barbara

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 359

359

Daily Schedule

Papers: Lives on Hold: The Effect of Asylum Policies on LongTerm Refugee Integration
Jens Hainmueller, Stanford University
Dominik Hangartner, London School of Economics
Duncan Lawrence, University of Colorado, Boulder
Civic Conceptions of the Nation in an Ethnocentric
Country
Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Are Noncitizens Discriminated Against in the Hiring
Process?
Kare Vernby, Stockholm University

Immigration, Perceived Threats, and Partisanship


Margit Tavits, Washington University in St. Louis
Jonathan Homola, Washington University in St.
Louis
Local Political Contexts and Immigrant Incorporation
Dalston G Ward, Washington University in St. Louis

Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

84.3
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Politics & Preferences of New Americans: Chinese


Americans on Affirmative Action
Jeanette Yih Harvie, California State University, Los
Angeles
Pei-te Lien, University of California Santa Barbara
BRITISH POLITICS GROUP: CONTROLS, CUES,
AND INCENTIVES: STATE - SOCIETY
RELATIONS IN U.K. POLITICS
Marriott, Room 414
Susan Scarrow, University of Houston
Karen Beckwith, Case Western Reserve University
Timothy Vercellotti, Western New England University
Terry J. Royed, University of Alabama

Papers: Public Opinion on Same-Sex Marriage and Abortion in


Northern Ireland
Jonathan Tonge, University of Liverpool
Jim McAuley, University of Huddersfield
The Evolution of District-Level Campaigning in Britain
Justin T. Fisher, Brunel University
David John Cutts, University of Bath
Edward A. Fieldhouse, University of Manchester
Bettina Rottweiler, Brunel University London
The Palace Politics of NHS Reform: Ministers,
Mandarins, and Managers
Scott L. Greer, University of Michigan
Holly Jarman, University of Michigan
84.4
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: THE IMPERIAL PRESIDENCY
REVISITED
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: Ryan P. Williams
Disc:
Benjamin A. Kleinerman, Michigan State University
Richard J. Dougherty, University of Dallas
Papers: Going to War: The Constitutional and Strategic Roots of
the Imperial Presidency
Gary James Schmitt, American Enterprise Institute
Lincoln: The First Imperial President?
David K. Nichols
Imperial Administration
Adam White, Hoover Institution
84.5
CONFERENCE GROUP ON THE MIDDLE EAST:
SECTARIANISM AND FUTURE OF RELIGIOUS
AND ETHNIC MINORITIES IN THE ARAB
WORLD
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Augustus Richard Norton, Boston University
Disc:
Noora Anwar Lori, Boston University
Denis J. Sullivan, Northeastern University
Papers: Conflicting Narratives: Sectarianism, Class, and the War
in Syria
Emily Cury
The Institutional Legacies of Ethno-religious Discord in
Iraq
Shamiran Mako, Northeastern University
Sectarianism and Identity Among Syrian Refugees in
Jordan
Sarah Tobin, Brown University

360

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 360

84.6
Room:
Chair:
Part:

84.7

Room:
Chair:
Disc:

ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: ROUNDTABLE ON


DAVID WALSHS POLITICS OF THE PERSON AS
THE POLITICS OF BEING
Loews, Commonwealth C
John F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge
Barry Cooper, University of Calgary
Steven McGuire, Eastern University
Brendan Purcell, University of Notre Dame Australia,
Sydney
David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America
Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College
Cyril O'Regan, University of Notre Dame
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE
STUDY OF GERMAN POLITICS:
TRANSFORMING GERMAN POLITICS: NEW
IMPULSES IN THE NEW MILLENNIUM
Marriott, Room 411
Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami
Dept. of Political Science
Dan Hough, University of Sussex
Sara Wallace Goodman, University of California, Irvine

Papers: Political Mobilization of Turkish Immigrant


Organizations in Germany
Ayca Arkilic, University of Texas, Austin
How Social Movements & Movement Parties Bring New
Issues to German Politics
Steffen Blings, Cornell University
The Intersection of Gender and Immigrant
Representation in Legislatures
Colin M Brown, Harvard University
84.8
SOCIETY FOR ROMANIAN STUDIES: SOCIETY
FOR ROMANIAN STUDIES
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Chair: Claudiu Daniel Tufis, Universitatea Bucuresti
Disc:
Ruxandra Paul, Amherst College
Claudiu Daniel Tufis, Universitatea Bucuresti
Papers: Anti-Corruption Campaigns and Migrant Attitudes:
Evidence from Romania
Amy H. Liu, University of Texas at Austin
Fear or Conformism? Exploring Prejudice and
Intolerance in Romania
Oana Lup, Central European University
Marina Popescu, Central European University
Tania Chilin, Median Research Centre
Leaders, Members, and Coalitions: Explaining
Bargaining Strategies of Unions
Aurelian Daniel Muntean, National School of
Political Studies and Public Administration
Rethinking Holocaust Categories: A Case Study on
Students Perception
Adina Babes, 'Elie Wiesel' National Institute for the
Study of Holocaust in Romania
Democratic Citizenship and Social Polarization: Mezzolevel Contexts
Gabriel Badescu
Paul E. Sum, University of North Dakota

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM


APSA Events
85.1
COMMUNITY COLLEGE STATUS COMMITTEE
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: PCC, 101-A

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM


Theme Panels
86.1
CONTENTIOUS POLITICS AND THE INTERNET
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Jason Lyall
Disc:
Richard Nielsen

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC


ADMINISTRATION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

Chair:

Beryl A. Radin, McCourt School of Public Policy


Georgetown University
Part:
A. Stanley Meiburg, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency
Todd M. La Porte, George Mason University
Susan Opp, Colorado State University
Paul L. Posner, George Mason University
Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
88.1
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: STEVEN B. SMITH,
MODERNITY AND ITS DISCONTENTS
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Joshua L. Cherniss, Georgetown University
Part:
Teresa M. Bejan, University of Oxford
Aurelian Craiutu, Indiana University
Ryan Patrick Hanley, Marquette University
Samuel Goldman, George Washington University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 361

361

Daily Schedule

Papers: Reporting Bias and Information Warfare: Evidence from


Eastern Ukraine
Yuri M. Zhukov, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Matthew A. Baum, Harvard University
The New Media Bias: How does the Internet change
what we know about violence?
Anita R. Gohdes, Harvard University
Jihadist Clickbait
Richard Nielsen
How Government Censorship Affects the Collective
Action Opportunity Structure
William Hobbs, UC San Diego
Margaret E Roberts, University of California, San
Diego
Internet Service Provision under Authoritarian Rule: A
Field Experiment
Charles David Crabtree, Pennsylvania State
University
Nils B. Weidmann, University of Konstanz
86.2
THE RISE OF THE RADICAL RIGHT IN
EUROPE AFTER THE MIGRANT CRISIS AND
PARIS
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Eric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University of
London
Papers: The Left Behind?: Reconciling Individual and
Aggregate UKIP Voting
Eric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University of
London
The Politicization of Immigration and Welfare: A New
Swedish Dilemma
Maureen A. Eger, Ume University
Does Diversity Produce White Hostility?: A Meta
Analysis
Matthew Thomas James Goodwin, University of Kent
Eric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University of
London
Subnational Drivers of Nationalism: France, Germany,
Netherlands and UK
Carl Clemens Berning, Johannes Gutenberg
University of Mainz
Kai Arzheimer, University of Mainz
Jocelyn Evans, University of Leeds
86.3
THEORIZING BORDERS: CONSIDERATIONS ON
THE DEHUMANIZING CHARACTER OF
BORDERS
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Michael A. Mosher, University of Tulsa
Papers: Border Myths or Paradox? Territorial Sovereignty and
Uprootedness
Kathleen R. Arnold, DePaul University
Borders, Violence, and Immobility
Julie Mostov, Drexel University
Derechos en Crisis: Asylum Claims in the Age of
Neoliberalism
Alfonso Gonzales, UT Austin

Occupied Body, Occupied Mind: Transforming


Vulnerability in Raja Shehadeh
John Randolph LeBlanc
APSA Events
87.1
APSA COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF
BLACKS IN THE PROFESSION BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 301
87.2
ITHIEL DE SOLA POOL AWARD AND
LECTURESHIP
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
87.3
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 413
87.4
JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
EDUCATION EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Room: Loews, Tubman
87.5
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE EDITORIAL BOARD
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 302
87.6
PEARSON FOCUS GROUP
Room: PCC, 303-AB
87.7
PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS EDITORIAL
BOARD MEETING
Room: Loews, Washington C
87.8
PRESIDENCY AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
87.9
PRQ EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 308
87.10
RELATED GROUP MEETING
Room: Loews, Congress C
87.11
SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 310
87.12
SITING AND ENGAGEMENT COMMITTEE
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Offsite, Offsite TBD
87.13
THE APSA PRACADEMIC FELLOWSHIP:
EXPERIENCE FROM THE FIRST YEAR
Room: PCC, 113-A

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Susan Shell
Steven B. Smith, Yale University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
88.2
THE USE AND ABUSE OF RATIONALITY
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Michael T. Gibbons
Disc:
David W. McIvor, Colorado State University
Michael T. Gibbons
Papers: "Artful Odysseus": Phronesis and Cleverness in Ancient
Greek Thought
Joshua Preston Miller, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
An Enlightenment Fable: Leibniz and the Boundaries of
Reason
Tae-Yeoun Keum, Harvard University
Richard Rorty and the Genealogy of Pragmatism
Michael T. Gibbons
Superfluous Supermen: Dostoevsky, Nietzsche, Adorno,
and the Tyranny of Reason
Matthew Harrison Hartman, University of Notre
Dame
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
88.3
IN MEMORIAM: SHELDON S. WOLIN
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley
Part:
Joan C. Tronto, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
Nicholas Xenos, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania
Corey Robin
Uday Singh Mehta, CUNY-Graduate Center
Stephen L. Esquith, Michigan State University
Joshua I. Miller, Lafayette College
Cornel West, Princeton University
Chris L. Hedges
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
88.4
POWER AND CONTROL ACROSS SPACE
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Theodore Christov, George Washington University
Disc:
Megan Gallagher, Brown University
Papers: Outline of a Theory of Practice Revisited
Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine
Active Intolerance of the Prison: Foucault and the Power
of Affect
Anna M. Terwiel, Northwestern University
Circulations of Power: Policing and Criminality in 18th
Century France
Nancy Luxon, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities.
Command and Control: David Easton and the Cost of
Democratic Stability
Kyong-Min Son, University of Delaware
Psychotic Power: How Medicine Drives Political
Transformation
James M. Glass, University of Maryland, College
Park
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
88.5
POLITICAL THEORY BEYOND THE NATIONSTATE
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Minh V Ly, Princeton University

362

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 362

Disc:

Yvonne Chiu, University of Hong Kong

Papers: Universality and Contingency in the Theory of Human


Rights: A New Approach
Andrew DiMaggio Gates, University of Virginia
The Law of Peoples as Inclusive International Justice
Zhichao Tong
Space, Time, and Philosophy of History: Kant's Anticolonialism in a New Light
Ines Valdez, Ohio State University
A Global Perspective on Democratic Political Obligation
Shmuel Nili, Yale University
Adaptive Preferences and the Developed World: A Basis
for Global Solidarity
Avery Fox White, Ohio State University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
88.6
WHAT IS NEOLIBERALISM, AND WHY DOES IT
MATTER? AUTHORS MEET/AS CRITICS
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Abraham A. Singer, University of Rochester
Part:
Sonja M. Amadae, University of Helsinki
David Michael Kotz, University of Massachusetts
Amherst
Bethany Ellen Moreton, Dartmouth College
Ivan Andre Ascher, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
William Callison, UC Berkeley
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
88.7
HOW AUTOCRATS HOLD POWER: FORMAL
THEORIES AND EMPIRICAL TESTS
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: James R. Hollyer, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Disc:
Haifeng Huang, University of California, Merced
Papers: Promises and Patronage: Commitment Power in
Autocratic Bargaining
Anne Meng, University of Virginia
Can Citizen Communication Hinder Successful
Revolution?
Mehdi Shadmehr, University of Miami School of
Business
Dan Bernhardt, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Content and Coordination Censorship in Authoritarian
Regimes
Maxim Ananyev, UCLA
Maria Petrova, New Economic School
Galina Zudenkova, University of Mannheim
On the Initiation and Strategic Implications of Mass
Killings
Scott Tyson, University of Chicago
Both Principal and Agent: Reconciling Conflicting
Conceptions of Autocracy
Peter L. Lorentzen, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
88.8
RACIALIZED POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Timothy J. Ryan, UNC Chapel Hill
Disc:
Camille Danielle Burge, Villanova University

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Papers: Ferguson in Black & White: Motivated Reasoning and


Responses to Police Shootings
Hakeem Jerome Jefferson, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor
Fabian Guy Neuner, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Josh Pasek, University of Michigan
Revisiting the Welfare Mother: Moving beyond White
Opinion and One Way Causation
Avram Munoz, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Paul Goren, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Self Interest and Symbolic Politics in Obamacare
Enrollments
Michael Tesler, UC Irvine
Self-Image, Discrimination and In-group Voting:
Experiments with Race and Gender
Emily Anne West, New York University
Social Tolerance and Everyday Action: Why Attitudes
are Insufficient
Tarah Williams, University of Illinois Department of
Political Science
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
88.9
BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT LINKAGES AND
POLITICAL RISK
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Samuel Brazys, University College Dublin
Disc:
Nicole Rae Baerg, University of Mannheim
Stanislav Markus, Darla Moore School of Business
Papers: How do Firms Deal with Political Risk?
Quintin H. Beazer, Florida State University
Daniel J. Blake, IE Business School
Incentives and Performance of Politically Connected
Firms: The Case of Japan
Yusaku Horiuchi, Dartmouth College
Rieko Kage, University of Tokyo
Hiroto Katsumata, The University of Tokyo
Threat or Reform? Market Responses to Democratization
in Argentina
Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston
Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San
Diego
Can Governments Harvest Connections with Firms?
Evidence from China
Yu-Hsiang Lei, London School of Economics
Selective Protectionism under Japan's LDP: Evidence
from Small Business Policies
Scott Wilbur, University of Southern California
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
88.10
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF PUBLIC GOODS
PROVISION
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Ling Chen, Johns Hopkins University
Disc:
Ling Chen, Johns Hopkins University

DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY


88.11
"CAUGHT: THE PRISON STATE AND THE
LOCKDOWN OF AMERICAN POLITICS"
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University
Part:
Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania
Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University
Megan Ming Francis, University of Washington
Lester Kenyatta Spence, Johns Hopkins University
Adolph L. Reed
Jacqueline Stevens, Northwestern University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
88.12
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON WELFARE STATE
DEVELOPMENT
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Tobias Schulze-Cleven, Rutgers University
Disc:
Herschel Nachlis, Dartmouth College
Papers: Bread and Onions: Food Riots and Agricultural Policy
Jennifer Rutledge, CUNY-John Jay College
Nutrition, Welfare, or Work Support: Politics and Goals
of Food Stamps 1964-2014
Tracy Roof, University of Richmond
Social Policy in the Postcolonial World
Carina Schmitt
Visions of National Strength: The Modern Presidency
and the Politics of Linkage
Jeremy Strickler, University of Tennessee Chattanooga
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
88.13
TEXT ANALYSIS: APPLICATIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Justin Grimmer, Stanford University
Disc:
Pamela Ban, Harvard University
Robert Shaffer, University of Texas, Austin
Papers: Automated Measurement of Policy Similarity in
Legislation
Fridolin Jakob Linder, Pennsylvania State University
Bruce Desmarais, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Eugenia Giraudy, University of California, Berkeley
Automated Sentiment Analysis for Citations in Legal
Texts
Anton Strezhnev, Harvard University
Beyond Money in Politics: Detection of Interest Group
Influence in Bill Text
Eugenia Giraudy, University of California, Berkeley
Measures of Ideology: Agendas, and Positions on
Agendas
Gaurav Sood, Independent
Andrew Guess, New York University
Using Ideas as My Maps: Exploring the Flow of Ideas
in Legislation
Joshua Yoshio Lerner, Duke University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 363

363

Daily Schedule

Papers: A 'Structural' Model for Public Goods Provision


Neeraj Vimal Prasad, The Fletcher School, Tufts
University
Autocratic Elites and Investments in Public Goods in
19th Century Prussia Cities
Florian Max Benjamin Hollenbach, Texas A&M
University

Ethnic Diversity, Political Institutions, and the Provision


of Public Goods
Su-Hyun Lee, Nanyang Technological University,
Singapore
Ethnic Parties, Voter Turnout & Public Goods
Distribution
Sayan Banerjee, University of Essex

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY


88.14
THE STATISTICS OF CAUSAL INFERENCE: A
VIEW FROM POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Chair: Nathaniel Beck, New York University
Part:
Luke Keele, Georgetown University
Donald P. Green, Columbia University
Gregory Huber, Yale University
Jeffrey B. Lewis, UCLA
DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE
88.15
USING SIMULATIONS TO TEACH
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Part:
Samuel R. Greene, National Defense College
Andrew J. Nolte, Catholic University of America
Mark David Hamilton, Inter-American Defense College
Jennifer Jefferis
Daniel Baltrusaitis, National Defense College, UAE
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
88.16
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON CHINAS
REGULATORY STATE
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: John Yasuda, Indiana University - Bloomington
Part:
Tim Buthe
Michael R Davidson, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Jacques deLisle, University of Pennsyvlania
Roselyn Hsueh, Temple University
Margaret M. Pearson
Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago
John Yasuda, Indiana University - Bloomington
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
88.17
CORRUPTION AND CORRUPTION CONTROL IN
THE ASIA-PACIFIC REGION
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Jong-sung You, The Australian National University
Disc:
Bo Rothstein, University of Oxford
Yoonkyung Lee, University of Toronto
Papers: Collective Action Problems for Principals, Agents, and
Clients in Corruption
Jong-sung You, The Australian National University
Collective Action, Electoral Clientelism and Pervasive
Corruption in Indonesia
Edward Aspinall, Australian National University
Collective Action and the Fight Against Corruption in
Papua New Guinea
Grant W Walton
Explaining Chinas Selective Anticorruption Efforts in
the Reform Era
Jing Vivian Zhan, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Jiangnan Zhu, The University of Hong Kong
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
88.18
THE POLITICS OF POLICY REFORM IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Nancy Bermeo, Princeton University
Disc:
Nancy Bermeo, Princeton University
Illan Nam, Colgate University

364

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 364

Papers: Translating a Great Transformation in Policy into


Practice
Susan Dodsworth, University of Oxford
The Politics of Healthcare Reform in Thailand
Erik Martinez Kuhonta, McGill University
From Periphery to Center: The Emergence of Universal
Healthcare in Indonesia
Diego Fossati, ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute
Sebastian Dettman, Cornell University
"Professional Movements" and Access to Healthcare in
Thailand and Brazil
Joseph Harris, Boston University
A New World of Welfare: Great Transformations in the
Global South
Sanjay Ruparelia, New School for Social Research
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
88.19
THE POLITICS OF RELIGION AS IDENTITY,
IDEOLOGY, AND INSTITUTION
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Amaney Jamal, Princeton University
Disc:
Monika Nalepa, University of Chicago
Mirjam Kuenkler, University of Gttingen
Papers: The Christian Minority in Dakar: How Does it Fare in a
Muslim Dominant State?
David D. Laitin, Stanford University
Religion and Civil War Interventions: Theory-Building
Through the Iranian Case
Reyko Huang, Texas A&M University
Mohammad Ayatollahi Tabaar, Texas A&M
University
Does Islam Induce Altruism? A lab-in-the-field
Experiment in Morocco
Amaney Jamal, Princeton University
Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University
Sharan Grewal, Princeton University
Political Origins and Evolution of Catholic Influence
Anna M. Grzymala-Busse, Stanford University
Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Party Politics and Religious Ideology
Mohammad Ayatollahi Tabaar, Texas A&M
University
A.Kadir Yildirim, Rice University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
88.20
POLITICAL PARTIES IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES: LOCAL VS. NATIONAL
DIMENSIONS
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Nestor Castaneda, University College London
Disc:
Yann Kerevel, Louisiana State University
Papers: Creating Partisans: New Political Parties and Societal
Linkages in Latin America
Mathias Poertner, UC Berkeley
Ignoring Them Will Cost You: When Parties Over-Rule
Grassroots Candidate Choice
Shana Warren, New York University
National Parties and Local Development: Evidence from
Peruvian Municipalities
Fernando Martin Aragon, Simon Fraser University
Alexey Makarin, Northwestern University
Ricardo Pique, Northwestern University

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Programmatic Parties and Local Governance: Evidence


from Brazil
Peter G. Johannessen, Princeton University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
88.21
SOCIAL PROTECTION, CONFLICT, AND THE
INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Manal A. Jamal, James Madison University
Disc:
Patrick Egan, Tulane University
Papers: Social Protection in Tanzania: Impacts, Influences and
International Pressures
Alesha Nicole Towers Porisky, University of Toronto
Sectoral Allocation of Foreign Aid and Political Stability
Steven R. Hall, Ball State University
Misa Nishikawa, Ball State University
Service Delivery and State Legitimacy in Conflictaffected Contexts
Ghazia Aslam, George Mason University
Social Movements and Counter-Drug Policy in the
Andes
Susan Virginia Norman, Hobart and William Smith
Colleges
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
88.22
GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN THE RUSSIAN
POLITICAL LANDSCAPE
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Katerina Tertytchnaya, University of Oxford
Disc:
Allison D. Evans, Western New Mexico University
Papers: Putin the Sex Back in Politics: Masculinity and Russian
Foreign Policy
Valerie Sperling, Clark University
Are Gender Stereotypes Universal? An Experimental
Test in Russia
Olga A. Avdeyeva
Richard E. Matland, Loyola University, Chicago
The Demography of Prejudice: Postcommunist
Homophobia in Comparative Perspective
Conor O' Dwyer, University of Florida
Dong-Joon Jung
Guerrilla Feminism: From Russias Pussy Riot to
Icelands Big Sister
Janet E. Johnson, CUNY-Brooklyn College
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
88.23
THE BEHAVIOR OF THE NEW WELFARE STATE
IN CHINA
Room: PCC, 202-A
Chair: Reza Hasmath, University of Alberta
Disc:
Dorothy J. Solinger
Mitchell A Orenstein, University of Pennsylvania

DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY


88.24
IMMIGRATION AND POLITICAL BEHAVIOUR
IN CONTEXT
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Daniel J. Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Andrew C. Eggers, Nuffield College, Oxford
Papers: We Should Help Our Own First: Resource Scarcity
and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment
Charlotte Cavaille, Institute for Advanced Study in
Toulouse
Jeremy Ferwerda, Dartmouth College
Social Structure, Information, and Personal Economies
Michael J. Donnelly, University of Toronto
Henning Finseraas, Institute for Social Research Oslo
Cultural Diversity, Political Behaviour, and Public
Spending
Henning Finseraas, Institute for Social Research Oslo
Working Together? Ethnic Diversity in the Workplace
and Social Trust
Peter Thisted Dinesen, University of Copenhagen
Frederik Thuesen, SFI - The Danish National Center
for Social Research
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
88.25
ATTITUDES TOWARD IMMIGRATION
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: David Leblang, University of Virginia
Disc:
Kenneth F. Scheve, Stanford University
Adrian J. Shin, University of Colorado, Boulder
Papers: A Hidden Economic Dimension to Individual
Immigration Preferences?
David H. Bearce, University of Colorado, Boulder
Megan Roosevelt, University of Colorado Boulder
Public Opinion toward Migration in Net Sending
Countries: Evidence from India
Tara L Slough, Columbia University
Reducing Public Hostility to Immigration: The Impact of
Information Campaigns
Giovanni Facchini, University of Nottingham
Yotam Margalit, Tel Aviv University
Hiroyuki Nakata, University of Leicester
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
88.26
POLITICS AND FOREIGN DIRECT
INVESTMENT
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Rachel Wellhausen
Disc:
Stephen Weymouth, Georgetown University
Papers: Outward Foreign Direct Investment and Chinas Energy
Security Strategy
TIYI FENG, Shanghai University of International
Business and Economics
Quan Li, Texas A&M University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 365

365

Daily Schedule

Papers: Two Worlds of Welfare Communism? The Last Decade


of Welfare Reform in China
Nara Dillon, Harvard University
Governance Decentralization and Service Provision in
China
Jessica C. Teets, Middlebury College
Junbo Yu, Jilin University

Government Surveillance and Selective Welfare


Provision in China
Jennifer Pan, Stanford University
The Discretionary Treatment of Ethnic Minorities in
Chinas Welfare System
Andrew MacDonald, University of Louisville
Reza Hasmath, University of Alberta

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Immediate Reputational Consequences of Contract


Breach in Financial Markets
Noel Pereyra Johnston, University of California at
Riverside
Pandering Upward: Tax Incentives and Credit Claiming
in Authoritarian Countries
Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University
Nathan M. Jensen, University of Texas at Austin
Monopoly Rents and Foreign Direct Investment in Fixed
Assets
Joseph Wright, Pennsylvania State University
Boliang Zhu, Pennsylvania State University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
88.27
ROUNDTABLE ON THE OXFORD HANDBOOK
OF COMPARATIVE REGIONALISM
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Thomas Risse, Freie Universitt Berlin
Part:
Tanja A. Boerzel, Free University Berlin
Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University
Soo Yeon Kim, National University of Singapore
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
Amichai Magen, IDC, Herzliya
Liesbet Hooghe, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
88.28
THE MORE THINGS CHANGE: GLOBAL
TRANSFORMATIONS AND INSTITUTIONAL
COMPLIANCE
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Lauren Peritz, University of California, Davis
Papers: Not Signaling, Just Stalling: Domestic Constraints and
International Agreements
Julia Gray, University of Pennsylvania
Philip B. K. Potter, University of Virginia
International Institutions and Outsourced Market
Enforcement
Julia C. Morse, Princeton University
Overlapping Membership and Firm Participation in
Climate Governance
Thomas N. Hale, Oxford University
Deference and Hierarchy in International Regime
Complexes
Tyler Pratt
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
88.29
THE POLITICS OF MILITARY LABOR
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Bruce M. Russett, yale university
Disc:
Jonathan D. Caverley, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Papers: Drafting Disputes: Military Labor, Regime Type and
Interstate Conflict
Erik Gartzke, UCSD
Rich Mans War, Poor Mans Fight? A Socio-Economic
Analysis of the US Military
Mauro Gilli, Dartmouth College
Andrea Gilli, European University Institute
Conscription, Nationalism, and Autocracy: Is the Gulf
Today Like Europe in 1914?
Nathan Toronto, UAE National Defense College
The Determinants of Military Manpower Decisions in
New States
Max Zeldes Margulies

366

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 366

They Stand Up, We Stand Down: Withdrawal and Free


Riding in Counterinsurgency
Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania
Barbara Elias, Bowdoin College
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL
88.30
THE POLITICS OF SECRECY AND
UNCERTAINTY
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Robert Jervis, Columbia University
Disc:
Joshua Rovner, Southern Methodist University
Papers: The Domestic Politics of Intelligence Revelation
Allison Carnegie, Columbia University
Austin Carson, University of Chicago
Lindsay Dolan, Columbia University
Uncertainty and Blame: Public Attitudes and Probability
Assessments
Jeffrey A. Friedman
The Causes and Effects of Leaks in International Trade
Negotiations
Matthew Castle, Victoria University of Wellington
Krzysztof J. Pelc, McGill University
Secrecy and Cyber Warfare
Michael Poznansky, Harvard Kennedy School
Evan Perkoski, Harvard Kennedy School
Marginalized Advisers, Estimative Errors, and the Use
of Force
Robert Schub, Nuffield College
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
88.31
THE MICROFOUNDATION OF FOREIGN
POLICY ATTITUDE: EXPERIMENTAL
INVESTIGATIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Barry O'Neill, University of California, Los Angeles
Disc:
Deborah Welch Larson, UCLA Political Science
Department
Papers: Crisis Management in the Shadow of Audience Costs
Kai Quek, University of Hong Kong
Alastair Iain Johnston, Harvard University
Democratic Leaders, Crises, and War
Jonathan Renshon
Joshua D. Kertzer, Harvard University
Keren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton University
Authoritarian Audiences in International Crises:
Evidence from China
Allan Dafoe, Yale University
Jessica Chen Weiss, Yale University
The Impact of Humiliation on International Behavior
Joslyn N. Barnhart, Wesleyan University
A Prelude to Violence? The Effect of Nationalism on
Foreign Policy Preference
Jiyoung Ko, Yale University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
88.32
VOX POPULI: PUBLIC OPINION, SOCIETAL
ACTION, AND WAR
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Brian Lai, University of Iowa
Disc:
Brian Lai, University of Iowa
Richard Sobel, Northwestern University

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Papers: "The People Want": Popular Revolution Meets Foreign


Policy in Syria
Layla Saleh, Qatar University
Revenge in U.S. Public Support for War Against Iraq
Peter John Liberman
Linda J. Skitka, University of Illinois, Chicago
Shaping Global Public Opinion on American Foreign
Policy
Joshua Massey, University of Georgia
Three Natural Experiments Examining the Determinants
of Attitudes toward War
Philip Paolino, University of North Texas
The Millennial Generation and Foreign Policy: Attitude
Dimensions and Sources
Douglas C. Foyle, Wesleyan University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
88.33
CONFLICT MANAGEMENT AND MEDIATION
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Krista E. Wiegand, University of Tennessee
Disc:
Molly M. Melin, Loyola University, Chicago
Papers: Conflict Management Venues and Public Opinion in
Border Disputes
Florian Justwan, University of Idaho
Democratization, Issue Salience, and Territorial Dispute
Resolution
Benjamin Denison, University of Notre Dame
Krista E. Wiegand, University of Tennessee
Hegemony and Institution: How Does the US Affect IO
Mediation?
Frederick R. Chen, Peking University
Relational Power & Bias: An Experimental Study of
Conflict Mediation
Scott Sigmund Gartner, Pennsylvania State
University
The Consequences of Peaceful Settlement for Managing
Other Claims
Vanessa Lefler
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
88.34
REBEL GROUPS AND THE LAWS OF WAR
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of
Maryland, College Park
Disc:
Yonatan Lupu, George Washington University

DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES


88.35
STATE AND LOCAL POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 306

L. Marvin Overby, University of Missouri


Brian J. Gaines, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign

Papers: Are State Legislative Leaders Centrists or Extremists?


Boris Shor, Georgetown University
Legislative Institutions and Party Machines
Thomas Guarrieri, University of Missouri, Columbia
Kenneth Bryant, University of Missouri - Columbia
Legislators and Civil Rights in Louisiana and the United
States
Henry B. Sirgo, McNeese State University
Politics, Parties & Prosperity: Party Competition &
Policy Outcomes in 50 States
Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester
Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego
Latino Leadership in California: A Model for the
Future?
Lisa Pringle, Claremont Graduate University
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
88.36
THE PRESIDENT AS PUBLIC AGENT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Karen S. Hoffman, Marquette University
Disc:
Daniel E. Ponder, Drury University
Papers: Congress, the Presidency, and the Distribution of Federal
Spending
Kenneth Lowande, University of Virginia
Constituent Approval and Congressional Support For
The President
Jeffrey E. Cohen, Fordham University
Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston
Going Global
Amnon Cavari, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)
Herzliya
Micah Ables
The American Presidency and Rhetoric about the Global
Economy
Christopher Olds, University of Central Florida
The Power of Money: How the US Dollar Contrains
Executive Actions
Matthew R Miles, Brigham Young University, Idaho
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
88.37
EXAMINING THEORIES ABOUT
POLICYMAKING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Chair: Wendy Whitman-Cobb, Cameron University
Disc:
Thomas R. Dye
Wendy Whitman-Cobb, Cameron University
Papers: "Wicked Wicked Problems" and "Wicked Walks": The
Logic of Wicked Problems
Barry M. Mitnick
Caitlin Coulton Corrigan, University of Pittsburgh
Robert C. Ryan, University of Pittsburgh
Events & Policy Change: Applying Narrative Policy
Framework to Multiple Streams
Megan Kathryn Warnement, North Carolina State
University
Policies as Species: Policy Change From an
Evolutionary Perspective
Samantha Mosier, Missouri State University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 367

367

Daily Schedule

Papers: Islamic Humanitarian Law and Islamic Insurgent Groups


Tanisha Fazal, University of Notre Dame
Emilia Justyna Powell, University of Notre Dame
Choosing Terror: Rebels Use of Terrorism in Internal
Armed Conflict 1970-2010
Page Fortna, Columbia University
Rebels Laws of War: From Commitment to Compliance
Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University
The Regulation of Armed Non-State Actors under
International Humanitarian Law
Giovanni F. Mantilla Casas, CIDE - Mexico City
The Impact of Domestic Prosecutions for Terrorism in
Civil War
Jessica Stanton, University of Pennsylvania

Chair:
Disc:

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

The Dynamics of Policy Change


Christian Breunig, University of Konstanz
Martin Elff, Zeppelin University
Samuel Workman
"Get it Done": Achieving Reform in Major U.S. Social
Policy Programs
Adam Hannah
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
88.38
IMPROVING DEMOCRACY WITH NEW
TECHNOLOGIES, CIVIC ACTION, & SOCIAL
SCIENCE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley


Archon Fung, Harvard University

Papers: Public discourse and political impact: Social media and


anti-fracking activism
Edward T. Walker, University of California, Los
Angeles
Empowering Citizens through Governance
Hollie Russon-Gilman, Columbia University
Citizen Audits
K Sabeel Rahman, Brooklyn Law School
Federal Agency Usage of Challenge.gov: Predicting the
Adoption of Open Innovation
Taha Hameduddin, Indiana University
Sergio Fernandez, Indiana University
The Perilous Value of Social Science in a Changing
Communicative Age
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
88.39
THE EUROPEAN COURT OF JUSTICE AND
BEYOND
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Disc:
R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Papers: The Supranational Dodge and Massage in The European
Court of Justice
Kelley G. Littlepage, Miami University
Technocrats at Court: Does Expertise Sway International
Courts?
Cliff Carrubba, Emory University
Braden Dauzat, Emory University
Joshua Camden Fjelstul
Matthew Gabel, Washington University in St. Louis
Lecourt as Judge and Writer: Legal Philosophy of the
Great President of the ECJ
William Phelan, Trinity College, Dublin
The ECJ and the Protection of Human Rights in the
Fight Against Terrorism
Michael F. Harsch, New York University Abu Dhabi
Transplanting International Courts; Law & Politics of
the Andean Tribunal
Karen J. Alter, Northwestern University
Laurence R. Helfer, Duke University

368

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 368

DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY


88.40
INTEREST GROUPS AND LOBBYING IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: Isaac Castellano, Boise State University
Disc:
Janine A. Parry, University of Arkansas
Papers: Do Campaign Contributions Influence State Level
Climate Change Policies?
Shuang Zhao, University of Alabama Huntsville
Andree E. Reeves, University of Alabama in
Huntsville
The Third House: Group Bills in the California State
Legislature
Mary Kroeger
When Lobbying Leads to Polarization: Evidence from
Colorado and Ohio
Alex Garlick, University of Pennsylvania
Informational Need & Institutional Capacity: Amici
Activity in State High Courts
Jenna Becker Kane, West Chester University of
Pennsylvania
DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
88.41
EXPLORING SOURCES OF BIAS IN LOCAL
POLITICAL OUTCOMES
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY

Chair:
Disc:

Sarah F. Anzia, University of California, Berkeley


Sarah F. Anzia, University of California, Berkeley

Papers: Public Perceptions of Bias: How is Inequality Viewed in


a Metropolitan Context?
Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan
How High-Income Areas Receive More Service From
Municipal Government
Andrew B Hall, Stanford University
Complex Interactions: Candidate Race, Sex, Electoral
Institutions, and Voting
Melody Crowder-Meyer, Sewanee: The University of
the South
Shana Kushner Gadarian, Syracuse University
Jessica Luce Trounstine, University of California,
Merced
Intergovernmental Lobbying and Local Economic
Inequality
Julia Payson, Stanford University
Information v. Context: Urban Space and Attitudes
Toward Income Inequality
Scott Louis Minkoff, SUNY New Paltz
Jeffrey Lyons
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
88.42
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN: POLICY,
PASSION, AND THE POLICE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Chair: Samantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay College
Disc:
Cheryl O'Brien, San Diego State University
Linda Kay Mancillas
Papers: Countries that Protect and Those that Fail: Explaining
Rape Law
Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Nazli Avdan, Kansas University

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Securitization, Activism, and Women's Rights in Jordan


Summer Forester, Purdue University
Institutions & Incentives: Transforming Responsiveness
to Violence Against Women
Shannon Drysdale Walsh, University of Minnesota
Duluth
Mass Incarceration and Crimes against Women: A
Feminist Analysis
Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
88.43
HOW POLICY SHAPES RACIAL POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Rene R. Rocha, University of Iowa
Disc:
Rene R. Rocha, University of Iowa
Eric Gonzalez Juenke, Michigan State University
Papers: Contraception Deserts: Race, Class and Access to
Affordable Family Planning
Rebecca J. Kreitzer, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Candis Watts Smith, University of North CarolinaChapel Hill
Race and Incarceration's Effects on Individual and
Neighborhood Voter Turnout
Ariel Rebecca White, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Race, Poverty and Federalism in the United States
Jamila D. Michener, Cornell University
Violence, Mass Incarceration and the Racialized Failure
of the American State
Lisa L. Miller, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Words and Deeds: Rhetoric on Racial Health Inequality
and Policies that Follow
Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
88.44
ETHNIC, RACIAL, RELIGIOUS, AND SECULAR
BELONGING
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Brendan J Wright, Princeton University
Disc:
Danielle Nicole Lussier, Grinnell College

DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL


SYSTEMS
88.45
PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION IN NEW
ZEALAND AFTER TWENTY YEARS
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Chair: Jack H. Nagel, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Richard Johnston, University of British Columbia

Papers: The New Zealand Party System and MMP: Testing


Duvergers Psychological Effect
Jack Vowles, Victoria University of Wellington
Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside
System Support and Representation: MMP in New
Zealand After Twenty Years
Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter
Reforming Select Committees in New Zealand
Raymond Miller, University of Auckland
MMP and The Representation of Ethnic Minorities in
New Zealand
Fiona C. Barker, Victoria University of Wellington
Hilde Roza Coffe, Victoria University of Wellington
Electoral Reform in New Zealand: Establishing a
Convention for the Future
D. Therese Arseneau, University of Canterbury
Janine Hayward, University of Otago
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
88.46
FORMS OF PARTY ORGANIZATION AND
LEADERSHIP
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Beth Ginsberg
Disc:
Beth Ginsberg
Richard McGrath Skinner, Sunlight Foundation
Papers: A Measure of the Power of Party Leaders in State
Legislatures and Congress
Lynda W. Powell, University of Rochester
Extending the Majority: How Parties Use Contributions
to Discipline Its Members
Aaron Marc Goldzimer, Yale Law School
Brian T. Hamel, University of California, Los Angeles
John A. Henderson, Yale University
Organization, Factionalism and the Collapse of Italian
Christian Democracy
Matthias Dilling, University of Oxford
The Role of Local Party Chairs in the Candidate
Recruitment Process
Conor M. Dowling, University of Mississippi
David Doherty, Loyola University Chicago
Michael G. Miller, Barnard College
The State of Party Organization: Democratic Party
Organization in Ohio 2006-2014
Aaron B Shapiro, CUNY Graduate Center
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
88.47
ACHEN AND BARTELS' DEMOCRACY FOR
REALISTS: AUTHORS MEET CRITICS
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Part:

Morris Paul Fiorina


Susan C. Stokes, Yale University
Eric Schickler, University of California, Berkeley
Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook
Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University
Christopher H. Achen, Princeton University
Larry M. Bartels, Vanderbilt University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 369

Daily Schedule

Papers: Structuring Ethnic Boundaries: The Secular Kurdish


Movement and Islam
Zeki Sarigil, Bilkent University
"It's MY Party..." Holidays as Sites of Identity
Contestation
Lisel S. Hintz, Barnard College
Allison Quatrini, George Washington University
Ethnocentrism and Integration of Muslims into Western
Societies
Kerem Ozan Kalkan, Eastern Kentucky University
Immigrant and Minority "Nones": Politically Isolated or
Engaged in Politics?
Narayani Lasala-Blanco, UC Santa Barbara
David L. Leal, University of Texas at Austin

Alan Renwick

369

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR


88.48
ELECTORAL RULES, ELITE STRATEGIES AND
VOTE CHOICES
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Mogens K. Justesen, Copenhagen Business School
Disc:
Matt Golder, Pennsylvania State University
Papers: Electoral Rules, Constituency Spending, and the
Cultivation of Personal Vote
Konstantinos Matakos, King's College London
Elias Dinas, University of Oxford
Voter Reactions to Opportunistic Election Timing
Petra Schleiter, University of Oxford
Margit Tavits, Washington University in St. Louis
Electoral Rules, Legislative Behaviour and Political
Accountability
Nicola Mastrorocco, London School of Economics
Mechanical and Psychological Effects of Electoral
Systems: A Dynamic Perspective
Jessica Fortin-Rittberger, University of Salzburg
Philipp Harfst, University of Greifswald
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
88.49
KEEPING THE FAITH: RESISTANCE TO FACTS
AND EFFECTS OF MISINFORMATION
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Christina Farhart, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Disc:
Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College
Papers: It's a Matter of Trust: Nonpartisan Factors Affecting
Resistance to Facts
Leslie Caughell, Virginia Wesleyan College
Misinformation and Collective Public Opinion
D.J. Flynn, Dartmouth College
The Effect of Corrections on Factual Misperceptions
Thomas Wood, The Ohio State University
Ethan Porter, University of Chicago
The Effects of Online Hoaxes on Vaccination on Public
Opinion
Laura Sudulich, University of Kent
Gabriel Katz, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies
Lucca
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
88.50
MEDIA COVERAGE OF INSTITUTIONS AND
POLICY DEBATES
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Mark Major, Pennsylvania State University
Disc:
Tim Groeling, University of California-Los Angeles
Papers: Analyzing PolitiFact.com Assessments of Claims
Regarding President Obama
Stephen J. Farnsworth, University of Mary
Washington
S. Robert Lichter, George Mason University
Blind Spots in News Coverage: Time Series Analysis of
NY Times Content 1945-2005
Amanda Beth Cronkhite, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
Communication of Information and Cues in Media
Coverage of Policy Debates
Dennis Chong, University of Southern California
Kevin J. Mullinix, Appalachian State University

370

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 370

Dont Hate the Court Hate the Game: How the Media
Cover Supreme Court Decisions
Kathleen Searles, Louisiana State University
Matthew P. Hitt, Louisiana State University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
POLITICS
88.51
SOCIAL MEDIA AND POLITICAL
CONVERSATION ONLINE
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION

Chair:
Disc:

Kevin Jay Wallsten, California State University, Long


Beach
Andreas Jungherr, University of Mannheim

Papers: Everyday Online Political Talk: From Deliberation to


Action
Scott Wright, University of Melbourne
Andrea Carson, University of Melbourne
Todd Graham, University of Groningen
Verity Anne Trott, University of Melbourne
Norm Transference: How Journalistic Norms Make
Their Way into Online Discussion
Heather Elina Hodges, Reed College
Ariel Hasell, University of California, Santa Barbara
Populist Disruption: Sanders and Trump Tweets in 2016
US Presidential Primaries
Ann N. Crigler, University of Southern California
Marion R. Just, Wellesley College
Populist Politics in a Time of Twitter: Tea Party,
Lexi4Pres, Corbyn for Labor
John S. Nelson, University of Iowa
George Robert Boynton, University of Iowa
Talking Past Each Other: The Syrian Refugee Crisis and
Real Online Conversation
Kenneth S. Rogerson, Duke University
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
88.52
HOUELLEBECQS SUBMISSION: POLITICS,
LITERATURE AND THE CLASH OF
CIVILIZATIONS
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Joshua Foa Dienstag, University of California, Los
Angeles
Disc:
Ruti G. Teitel, New York Law School
Papers: Houellebecq and the French Tendentious Novel
Denis Charbit, The Open University of Israel
Michel Houellebecq and the Rewards of Scholarship
Alexander Israel Orwin, Harvard University
Houellebecq, the Republic, the Radical Right and the
Ultimate Other
Alberto Spektorowski, Tel Aviv University
Houellebecqs Failure
Michael S. Kochin, Tel Aviv University
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
88.53
POPULAR SUPPORT FOR AUTHORITARIAN
REGIMES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: James Loxton, University of Sydney
Disc:
Jorge I. Dominguez, Harvard University

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Papers: Assessing Popular Support in Single-Party Communist


Autocracies
Martin Dimitrov, Tulane University
What Makes Governments Popular?
Daniel S. Treisman, University of California, Los
Angeles
Sergei Guriev
The Frequency and Success of Authoritarian Successor
Parties Worldwide
James Loxton, University of Sydney
Institutional Blockage and Anti-Democratic Movements
in Thailand
Aim Sinpeng, University of Sydney
DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS
88.54
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND NATIONAL UNITY:
POLICY PREFERENCES AND PARTY POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Triadafilos Triadafilopoulos, University of Toronto
Disc:
Scott Matthews, Memorial University
Papers: A Viable Plan for Success? Examining the Parti
Qubcois Strategy for Victory
Sean D Harris, Temple University
Is the Parti Qubcois Bound to Disappear?
Valerie-Anne Maheo, Universite de Montreal
Eric Belanger, McGill University
National Frenemies? Linguistic Intergroup Attitudes in
Canada
Mike Medeiros, McGill University
Political culture and policy preferences in Canada
Eric Montpetit, Universite de Montreal
Erick Lachapelle, Universite de Montreal
Simon Kiss
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
88.55
EXPERIMENTS WITH ELITE SUBJECTS
Room: Marriott, Room 408
Chair: Ryan Steele Jablonski, London School of Economics
and Political Science
Disc:
C. Daniel Myers, University of Minnesota

Papers: Free Movement, Migration Crises, and Resurgent


Nationalism: The Case of the UK
Meghan Moquin Luhman
Creating Undocumented EU Migrants through Welfare:
The Case of Belgium
Jean-Michel Lafleur, Universite de Liege
Elsa Mescoli, University of Liege
Free Movement and EU Overseas Territories: The Case
of the Dutch Kingdom
Michael Orlando Sharpe, CUNY-York College
No-Exit Policies and the Restricting of Internal
Movement
Patti Tamara Lenard, University of Ottawa
Free Movement and Internal Borders in Europe, North
America, and Beyond
Willem Maas, York University & European
University Institute
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
88.57
MIGRATION AND HUMAN SECURITY
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Sarah Elizabeth Spengeman, Catholic University of
America
Disc:
Barbara Buckinx, Princeton University
Papers: Afraid of Arabs and Attacking Asylum Seekers What
Fearful People Might Do
Keren LG Snider
Daphna Canetti, University of Haifa
Engineering Citizenship: The Regulation of Immigrants
in India and Malaysia
Kamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine
International Migration and Global Justice
Fiona B. Adamson, University of London, SOAS
Migration-based Insecurity: Public Attitudes towards
Refugee Resettlement
Erik Amundson, University of Southern Mississippi
The Emerging Migration State
James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University
Rahfin Faruk
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS
88.58
CONFLICT AND VIOLENCE: ISSUES AND
INTERVENTIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 409
Chair: Anu Chakravarty
Disc:
Laura Seay, Colby College
Papers: Effects of Civic Education and Electoral Observation
During Violent Elections
Manuela Travaglianti
Justine Davis, University of California, Berkeley
Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California,
Berkeley
Aila M. Matanock, University of California-Berkeley

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 371

371

Daily Schedule

Papers: Delay, Delegation, and Obfuscation: The Politics of


"No-Win" Situations
Adam Michael Dynes, Brigham Young University
Justin Fox, Washington University in St. Louis
How Information, Transparency and Credit Claiming
impacts Aid Allocation
Ryan Steele Jablonski, London School of Economics
and Political Science
Brigitte Seim, University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill
Nonrepresentative Representatives: Directly Assessing
Politicians Choice Biases
Lior Sheffer
Peter John Loewen, University of Toronto
The Effect of Public Opinion on Legislator Behavior:
Evidence from Uganda
Gabriella Sacramone-Lutz
The Long-lasting Effects of Newspaper Op-Eds on Elite
and Mass Public Opinion
Alexander Coppock, Yale University
Emily McClintock Ekins, Cato Institute
David Richard Kirby, Cato Institute

DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP


88.56
FREE MOVEMENT AND INTERNAL BORDER
POLITICS: EUROPE IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Willem Maas, York University & European University
Institute
Disc:
Matthew Longo, University of Oxford

Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM

Turn by Turn Politics: Understanding Cte dIvoires


Post-Election Civil War
Faith I. Okpotor, University of Delaware
Contextual Violence and Support for Violent Extremism
Steven E. Finkel, University of Pittsburgh
John F. McCauley, University of Maryland, College
Park
Chris A. Belasco, University of Pittsburgh
Michael Neureiter, University of Pittsburgh
The Implications of Civil/Military Relation in
Understanding Terrorism
Patricia C. Agupusi, Brown University
Related Groups
89.1
AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT:
HOLLOWAY'S HAMILTON V. JEFFERSON:
COMPLETING OR BETRAYING THE
FOUNDING?
Room: Loews, Commonwealth D
Chair: Stephen F. Knott, Naval War College
Part:
Matthew J. Franck, Witherspoon Institute
Jean M. Yarbrough, Bowdoin College
Jeremy D. Bailey, University of Houston
Matthew Van Hook, United States Air Force Academy
Carson L. Holloway, University of Nebraska, Omaha
89.2
BRAZILIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE
ASSOCIATION: DEMOCRACY IN LATIN
AMERICA
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Leonardo Avritzer, Universidade Federal de Minas
Gerais
Papers: Participation in Brazil: From Popular Hegemony to
Middle Class Protest
Leonardo Avritzer, Universidade Federal de Minas
Gerais
Participatory Democracy in Latin America
Thamy Pogrebinschi, WZB Berlin Social Science
Center
Kirchnerismo, Macrismo and Democratic Theory
Enrique Peruzzotti, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella
Legal Power in the Fight Against Corruption: A
Genealogy of the Legal Field and Corruption Control in
Contemporary Brazil
Fabio de Sa e Silva, Institute for Applied Economic
Research, Ipea
89.3
CAMPAIGN FINANCE RESEARCH GROUP:
ROUND TABLE: MONEY AND POLITICS, 2016
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Michael J. Malbin, University at Albany, SUNY
Part:
Robert G. Boatright, Clark University
Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University
Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University
Michael J. Malbin, University at Albany, SUNY
Travis N. Ridout, Washington State University
89.4
CHURCHILL CENTRE, THE: WINSTON S.
CHURCHILL ON THE BIG QUESTIONS OF
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: Michael Barone, American Enterprise Institute
Disc:
Ted R. Bromund
Papers: The Paragon of the Regime: Churchill and Horatio
Nelson
Guy Fred Burnett, Hampden-Sydney College

372

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 372

89.5
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Churchill's Critique of Kitchener in "The River War"


James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage
Churchill and Chamberlain: Appeasement Revisited
John H. Maurer, Naval War College
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: THE CHALLENGE
OF SPIRITUAL DISCERNMENT
Loews, Commonwealth C
Jerry L. Martin, University of Colorado at Boulder
Sarah Shea, McGill University
Wolfgang Leidhold, University of Cologne

Papers: Eric Voegelin on Spiritual Outbursts


Macon W. Boczek, Kent State University
Max Schelers Notion of the "Ordo Amoris"
William Petropulos, Voegelin - Archiv Munich
Challenges of Discernment in the Life and Trials of Joan
of Arc
Jerry L. Martin, University of Colorado at Boulder
The Challenges of Discernment Explored in Dante's
"Divine Comedy"
Ellis Sandoz
Anthony Esolen, Providence College
89.6
IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE 1 (CONCEPTS
AND METHODS): CONCEPTUALIZING
DIFFERENCE
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: Robin L. Turner, Butler University
Disc:
Aarie Glas, University of Toronto
Papers: Defining Politics: Women and Mens Conceptions of the
Political
Gema M. Garcia Albacete, Carlos III-Juan March
Institute of Social Sciences (IC3JM)
Marta Fraile, CSIC
Mnica Ferrn, Collegio Carlo Alberto
Raul Gomez, University of Derby
Perceptions Matter: How Participant Perceptions Shape
our Data
Robin L. Turner, Butler University
Transformations of Taiwanese Peoples State Identity
Frank Liu, National Sun Yat-Sen University
89.7
SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT:
THE PROBLEM OF VIRTUE AND THE LIMITS
OF REASON IN CLASSICAL POLITICAL
THOUGHT
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Lorraine Pangle, University of Texas, Austin
Disc:
Lorraine Pangle, University of Texas, Austin
Clifford Orwin, University of Toronto
Papers: The Failed Promise of Cyrus the Great
Timothy W. Burns, Baylor University
Socrates Second Apology
Laura Rabinowitz, University of Colorado
The Apology of Plato: Approaching the Platonic
"Letters" as an Epistolary Novel
Ariel Helfer, Michigan State University
The New Athens: Hermocrates' Attempted
Reconciliation of Reason and Ambition
Carly Tess Herold, SUNY Geneseo

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM


Theme Panels
90.1
ADVANCING PHILANTHROPIC SCHOLARSHIP:
THE IMPLICATIONS OF TRANSFORMATION
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Steven Rathgeb Smith, American Political Science
Association
Disc:
Steven Rathgeb Smith, American Political Science
Association
Kristin Goss, Duke University
Papers: A Critical Assessment of the Effective Philanthropy
Movement
Roseanne M. Mirabella, Seton Hall University
Angela M. Eikenberry, University of NebraskaOmaha
Philanthropy and the Transformation of the Politics of
Well-Being
Patricia M Nickel, Virginia Tech
The Public Benefit of Benefit Corporations
Shannon K. Vaughan, Western Kentucky University
Shelly R. Arsneault, California State University,
Fullerton
Philanthropy: Thematic Changes in the Practice and
Scholarship
Kathryn E. Webb Farley, Appalachian State
University
90.2
PLENARY SESSION: ARE WE MAKING
PROGRESS ON HUMAN RIGHTS?
TRANSFORMATIONS IN KNOWLEDGE AND
ACTIVISM
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University
Part:
Kathryn Sikkink, Harvard University
90.3
STATE CAPACITY, STRATEGIES OF
GOVERNANCE AND DEVELOPMENT
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University
Disc:
Anna M. Grzymala-Busse, Stanford University

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:


HISTORICAL APPROACHES
92.1
CRITIQUES OF LIBERALISM IN AMERICAN
POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Michael L. McLendon, California State University, Los
Angeles
Disc:
Jennet Kirkpatrick, Arizona State University
Michael L. McLendon, California State University, Los
Angeles
Papers: Liberalism and the Ripening State, la Henry David
Thoreau
Russell L. Hanson, Indiana University, Bloomington
Mark Twain on the Failure of Liberal Democracy
William F. Byrne, St. John's University
Whitman and Emerson's Unexpected Challenges to
Jacksonian Democracy
Lisa Gilson, Yale University
Audre Lorde and the Four Faces of Difference
Jack Turner, University of Washington
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
92.2
THE POITICAL THEORY OF SHELDON WOLIN
(1922-2015)
Room: PCC, 107-B
Chair: Mary G. Dietz, Northwestern University
Part:
John R. Wallach
Alexander Keller Hirsch, University of Alaska
Joshua I. Miller, Lafayette College
Nicholas Xenos, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 373

373

Daily Schedule

Papers: How States Project Political Power: Rethinking the


Concept of State Capacity
Johannes Lindvall, Lund University
Jan Teorell, Lund University
Patterns of State Capacity Diffusion
Agustin Alonso Goenaga Orrego, Lund University
Alexander Von Hagen-Jamar, Lund University
Laying the Foundations of the State
Jonathan Hanson, University of Michigan
Strong States and Strategic Governance: Territorial
Variation in State Presence
Jessica Steinberg, Indiana University
Toward a Theory of Social Institutions
Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg
90.4
TO STAY NEUTRAL OR NOT WHEN TEACHING
THE 2016 ELECTION: ETHICAL AND
PEDAGOGICAL CHALLENGES
Room: Marriott, Room 407
Chair: Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University
Part:
Christina M. Greer, Fordham University
Samuel Goldman, George Washington University
David L. Leal, University of Texas at Austin

Efren Osvaldo Perez


Robert D. Putnam, Harvard University
APSA Events
91.1
APSA TECHNOLOGY TASK FORCE MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 302
91.2
RBSI 30TH ANNIVERSARY ROUNDTABLE
Room: PCC, 202-A
Chair: Paula D. McClain, Duke University
Kimberly A. Mealy, American Political Science
Association
Part:
Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University
Gabriel Sanchez, University of New Mexico
Muhammed Y. Idris, Concordia University
Vesla Mae Weaver, Yale University
Sherri L. Wallace, University of Louisville
91.3
THE 114TH CONGRESS: OBSERVATIONS FROM
THE 2015-16 APSA CONGRESSIONAL FELLOWS
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: Tyson D. King-Meadows, University of Maryland,
Baltimore County
Part:
Thomas Ringenberg, Rockhurst University
Lisa Hager, South Dakota State University
Nathan A. Paxton, American University-SIS
Brian Alexander, George Mason University
Nicholas Howard, Auburn University Montgomery
Mark E. Owens, University of Texas at Tyler
91.4
WORKING GROUP: SOCIAL POLICY IN NONDEMOCRACIES
Room: Marriott, Room 301
Division Panels

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


92.3
NATURE, ANIMAL, AND THE NONHUMAN
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Simon Glezos, University of Victoria
Disc:
Simon Glezos, University of Victoria
Papers: Bovine Bellows & Aquiline Vision: Aquinas' Ecological
Approach to Law & Politics
Zach Low Reyna, Johns Hopkins University
Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the Politics of Becoming
Human
Rebecca Aili Ploof, Harvard University
Politics and the Signs of Animal Life: Biosemiotics and
Human-Animal Relations
Ike Sharpless, UC San Diego
What Ideology Critique for Non-humans?
Benoit Dillet, University of Freiburg, Germany
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
92.4
POLITICAL AFFECTS
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Callum Ingram, DePauw University
Disc:
Andrew Poe, Amherst College
Papers: Communist Generosity
William Corlett, Bates College
King, Father, State: The Anxiety of the Popular in
Tagore, Gandhi, and Nehru
Sandipto Dasgupta, Kings College London
Severed Heads, Pulverized Bodies: Horror in
Contemporary Political Thought
Francois Debrix, Virginia Tech
Toward a Politics of the Sublime
Michael J. Shapiro, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Weber's Bureaucracies and the Contemporary
Managerial Co-optation of Charisma
Jennifer M Hudson, Bard College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
92.5
THE BIOS: FOOD, BODIES, LIFE ITSELF
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Susan P. Liebell, Saint Joseph's University
Disc:
Chad Lavin, University at Buffalo
Papers: Digestion as Political Practice in Marx, Nietzsche, and
Whitman.
Tripp Rebrovick, Johns Hopkins University
On the Politics of Life Itself
Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee
Rationality Beyond One Life
Tun Myint, Carleton College
Transformation is in the Details: Food, Neo-Materialism,
Traveling Citizenship
Charles T. Lee, Arizona State University
Medicalization and Recognition
Adam Smith, Brandeis University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
92.6
EMPATHY IN POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Joshua Ronald Gubler, Brigham Young University
Disc:
Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University

374

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 374

Papers: When Empathy Suceeds and Fails: Public Support for


Social Welfare Policies
Stanley Feldman, Stony Brook University
Patrick Lown, University of Essex
Julie Wronski, University of Mississippi
Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook
Partisanship, Empathic Ability, and Attribution in
Empathizing with Others
Lilach Nir, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Erasing Empathy: How Dissonance Disrupts Attempts to
Humanize Outgroups
Joshua Ronald Gubler, Brigham Young University
Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University
Quin Monson, Brigham Young University
James Lucien Martherus, Brigham Young University
Group Empathy Abroad: U.S. Attitudes on Military
Interventions and Foreign Aid
Cigdem V. Sirin, University of Texas, El Paso
Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Jose D. Villalobos, University of Texas at El Paso
Intuitions of Terror: People Equate "Terrorism" With
Coalitional Aggression
Miriam Lindner, Aarhus University
Michael Bang Petersen, University of Aarhus
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
92.7
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF LOCAL POLITICS
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Joe Weinberg, University of Southern Mississippi
Disc:
Joe Weinberg, University of Southern Mississippi
Papers: Criminal Violence and Governmental Access to Capital
Markets in Municipal Mexico
Allyson L. Benton, CIDE
Foreign Investors and the Local Economy - Sub-national
Evidence from Liberia
Jonas Bunte, University of Texas at Dallas
Bradley C. Parks, College of William and Mary
Daniel Runfola, University of Colorado
Local Currency Bond Market Development and Policy
Space in Sub-Saharan Africa
Florence Dafe, German Development
Urban Politics in Brazil and in the US: The Local Role
of Economic Actors
NELSON ROJAS CARVALHO, UFRRJ
Blame It on the Crisis: Understanding the Political Cost
of Taxation
Thomas Brambor, Lund University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
92.8
QUADRATIC VOTING
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Steven J. Brams, New York University
Disc:
Sean Ingham, University of Georgia
Papers: An Efficient Competitive Economy with Public Goods
Richard Zeckhauser, Harvard University
Eric Glen Weyl, Microsoft Research New England
Cardinal Preferences, Representation, and Polarization
John W. Patty, University of Chicago
Elizabeth Maggie Penn, Washington University in St.
Louis

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Public Priorities and Public Works: Evidence from


Bogot, Colombia
Alisha Caroline Holland, Princeton University
Quadratic Voting Versus Likert: An Empirical Test
Ellen Konar, Stanford University
Kevin Slavin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
92.9
LAW AND PATTERNS OF POLITICAL
CONTESTATION
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Andrew C. Rudalevige, Bowdoin College
Disc:
Zachary Daniel Kaufman, Harvard University John F.
Kennedy School of Government
Papers: Judicial Systems, Political Crimes, and Social Control in
Undemocratic Regimes
Fiona Shen-Bayh
Shinhye Choi, University of California, Berkeley
Justice For Sale: State Revenue Collection and the
Development of a Legal System
Hannah Simpson, New York University
Law, Politics, and the Progressive Shift of the American
Bar Association
Paul Brian Nolette, Marquette University
Is Universal Jurisdiction Imperialist?
Mackenzie Eason, University of California, Los
Angeles
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
92.10
THE FAMILY AND THE STATE: THE POLITICS
AND POLICIES OF PUBLIC/PRIVATE
BOUNDARIES
Room: Marriott, Room 310
Chair: Carol Nackenoff, Swarthmore College
Disc:
Julie L. Novkov
Papers: Family Ideals, Race Determination, and Judicial Policy
in Antebellum Louisiana
Gwendoline M. Alphonso, Fairfield University
The Family and the State: Crucial Components of First
Wave Democratization
Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University
Child Abuse, Policy Communities, and the Definition of
Social 'Problems'
Ann-Marie E. Szymanski, University of Oklahoma
Birth Control in the Wake of Eugenics: A Right to
Privacy in Reproduction
Elspeth Wilson, Franklin & Marshall College
What Makes a Family: Criminal Prosecution,
Deportation, and Family Politics
Priscilla Yamin, University of Oregon
Alison Gash, University of Oregon

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE


POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

Chair:
Disc:

Kenneth R. Benoit
Justin Grimmer, Stanford University

DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL


SCIENCE
92.12
VALUES, PARTICIPATION, AND TEACHING AND
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Chair: Barry J. Balleck, Georgia Southern University
Disc:
William E. Hudson, Providence College
Papers: Before They Are Ours: Asking High Schools' Future
Poli-Sci Majors about College
James M. Quirk
Civics Education and Voter Turnout
Jason Giersch, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
How the School Context Can (or Cannot) Influence an
Open Discussion Climate
Lies Maurissen, University of Leuven
Impact of College Education on Social and Political
Attitudes
George E. Shambaugh, Georgetown University
Policy Debates on American Elite Campuses
George R. La Noue, University of Maryland,
Baltimore County
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
92.13
POPULAR MOBILIZATION AND REGIME
CHANGE
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Samuel A. Greene, King's College London
Disc:
Manal A. Jamal, James Madison University
Papers: Explaining Protesters' Demands for Regime Change in
the Arab World
Konstantin Ash, UC -San Diego
Mechanisms of Protest Diffusion in the Arab Spring
Killian Clarke, Princeton University
Korhan Kocak, Princeton University
When Great Transformations Ebb Out: How to Study
Discontinuance of Diffusion
Sarah Lehtinen, bo Akademi University
The Current Epoch of Contention: The Logic of Social
Movement Politics
Peter Nikolaus Funke, University of South Florida

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 375

375

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY


92.11
METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES IN MODELING
LEGISLATIVE SPEECH
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11

Papers: Elite Polarization in the House of Commons, 1935-2014: A Supervised Approach


Arthur Spirling, New York University
Andrew Peterson, New York University
The Rhetoric of Parliamentary Debate
Christopher Lucas, Harvard University
Dean Knox, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Max Goplerud, Harvard University
Multilingual Sentiment Analysis: Measuring Conflict in
Parliamentary Speeches
Sven-Oliver Proksch, McGill University
Will Lowe, Princeton University
Stuart N. Soroka, University of Michigan
Electoral Reform and the Representation of Citizen
Preferences in Japan
Amy Louise Catalinac, New York University
Kuniaki Nemoto, Musashi University

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


92.14
THE ORIGINS OF COLONIALISM:
INVESTMENTS, INSTITUTIONS AND THEIR
LONG-TERM IMPACT
Room: PCC, 204-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Chair:
Disc:

Nicolas van de Walle


Philip Roessler, College of William & Mary
Joan Ricart-Huguet, Princeton University

Papers: The Impact of Pre-Colonial Institutions on Colonial


Investments
Philip Roessler, College of William & Mary
Nicolas van de Walle
Yannick Immanuel Pengl, ETH Zurich
Colonial Investments: Locational Fundamentals and
Increasing Returns
Joan Ricart-Huguet, Princeton University
Causally identifying the effects of Colonial Institutions
Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University
The Long-Run Influence of Institutions Governing Trade
Jenny Guardado, Georgetown University
Daphne Alvarez Villa, University of Oxford
Pre-colonial Institutions and State Capacity: Evidence
from Indonesia
S P Harish, New York University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
92.15
THE RELATIONAL-CULTURAL APPROACH TO
POPULISM IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon
Disc:
Francisco Panizza, London School of Economics
Papers: Populism in Government: Laclau's Impasse, the "Low",
and Dirty Institutionality
Pierre Ostiguy, Pontificia Universidad Catolica
Donald Trump and the Violent Populism of Decline
Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon
The New Populist Actors in Australia: Mapping the
'Low of Populist Performances
Benjamin Moffitt, Stockholm University
Looking Forward, Looking Backward: Latin American
and European Populisms
Maria Esperanza Casullo, Universidad Nacional de
Ro Negro
The Populist Appeal of the JDP: The High-Low Divide
in Turkish Politics
Toygar Sinan Baykan, University of Sussex
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
92.16
WHY AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES ENDURE (OR
NOT)
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University
Disc:
Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University
Papers: Events, Trasformative Events, and Democratization
Doron Shultziner, Hadassah Academic College
Monetary Constraints, Spending, and Dictatorship
Survival
Cristina Bodea, Michigan State University
Ana Carolina Garriga, CIDE
Masaaki Higashijima, Tohoku University

376

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 376

The International Dimension of Authoritarian Survival


Maria Josepha Debre, Free University Berlin
Waiting for Change: Leader Death and Democratization
Sarah Hummel, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
92.17
THE POLITICAL LOGIC(S) OF ANTICORRUPTION CAMPAIGNS IN ASIA
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Cheng Chen, SUNY, Albany
Disc:
Meredith L. Weiss, University at Albany, SUNY
Cheng Chen, SUNY, Albany
Papers: The Evolution of Chinas Anti-Corruption Strategy
Andrew Wedeman, Georgia State University
Disappointed by Design? Media Bias in Anti-Corruption
Reporting in Taiwan
Christian Goebel, University of Vienna
The Politics of Anti-Corruption Campaigns in the
Philippines
Antoinette Raquiza, University of the Philippines
Enabling Authoritarian Liberalism: Anti-Corruption
Politics in Thailand
Michael K Connors, University of Nottingham,
Malaysia Campus
Does the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention Work?
Foreign Investor Behavior in Vietnam
Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University
Nathan M. Jensen, University of Texas at Austin
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
92.18
VARIETIES OF COLLECTIVE ACTION:
EXPLAINING LABOR MOBILIZATION IN LATIN
AMERICA
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: David Rueda, University of Oxford
Disc:
Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University
Papers: Teachers, Unions, and Political Parties: Education
Politics in Latin America
Christopher Chambers-Ju
Disobedient Markets: Street Vendors and State
Intervention in Collective Action
Calla Hummel, University of Texas at Austin
Moving Away from Maternalism? The Politics of Work
and Family in Latin America
Merike Blofield, University of Miami
Michael Touchton, University of Miami
Me Deram Uma Oportunidade: The Domestic Workers
Union in Salvador, Brazil
Jaira J. Harrington, Wake Forest University
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
92.19
STATE POWER AND DISCOURSE IN
CONTEMPORARY RUSSIA
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Adnan Vatansever, King's College London
Disc:
Janet E. Johnson, CUNY-Brooklyn College

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: Soft Power and the Media: Russia's Media Strategy in


the Near Abroad
Hannah Chapman, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Theodore P. Gerber, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
What Topics in the Kremlins Rhetoric Reveal about
Russian Politics
Alexander Baturo, Dublin City University
Johan A. Elkink
Mapping Post-Soviet Ideology in Contemporary Russia
Christy Brandly, University of Chicago
Susanne A. Wengle, University of Notre Dame
Nation-Expanding and Nation-Refining Mobilization in
the Kremlins Discourse
Jessica Mahlbacher, Baruch College
Examining the Effects of Electoral Protests on Public
Opinion in Autocracies
Tomila Lankina, London School of Economics and
Political Science
Katerina Tertytchnaya, University of Oxford
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
92.20
WHO DOESN'T VOTE? TURNOUT AND
ABSTENTION IN EUROPE
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Carl Clemens Berning, Johannes Gutenberg University
of Mainz
Disc:
Mark N. Franklin, Trinity College
Papers: Alienation or Indifference? Voter Abstention at the
National and European Level
Peter Grand, Institute for Advanced Studies
Exit to the Right? Comparing Far Right Voters with
those Who Just Stay Home
Trevor J Allen, University of California, Irvine
Neighborhood Effects on Voter Turnout: Evidence from
Germany
Carl Clemens Berning, Johannes Gutenberg
University of Mainz
Where Have Voters Gone? Dualization & the Rise of
Europe's Nationalist Parties
Anthony Ocepek
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
92.21
MEMBERSHIP POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATIONS
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Duncan Snidal, Nuffield College, Oxford
Disc:
Brian D. Greenhill, Dartmouth College
Duncan Snidal, Nuffield College, Oxford

DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION


92.22
NGO-STATE RELATIONS
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Judith Kelley, Duke University
Disc:
Amanda Marie Murdie, University of Georgia
Felicity Vabulas, University of Chicago, Harris School
of Public Policy Studies
Papers: Targeting States: How Status Shapes NGO Strategies
Wendy Wong, University of Toronto
Sarah S. Stroup, Middlebury College
Top-down Activism: How IGOs Fund NGOs to Advance
their Agenda
Maya Wilson, Emory University
The Assault on Democracy Assistance: Explaining Legal
Restrictions Against NGOs
Suparna Chaudhry, Yale University
Do Donors Punish Countries with Restrictive NGO
Laws? A Panel Study, 1993-2009
Kendra E Dupuy, University of Washington
Aseem Prakash, University of Washington
James Ron, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Altruists on the Campaign Trail? NGO Work as a Path
to Political Office
Karisa Tritz Cloward, Southern Methodist University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
92.23
HOW IS INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL
HIERARCHY PRODUCED AND WHAT IS IT
MADE OF?
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Disc:
Lindsey O'Rourke, Boston College
Papers: Infrastructure, Not Institutions: How China's Hierarchy
Differs from America's
Ahsan Ishaq Butt
The Informal Origins of American Empire
Eric Grynaviski, George Washington University
Coercion or Contract? Rethinking Hierarchy in
International Politics
Paul K. MacDonald, Wellesley College
Revealing Hierarchy through Gendered Lenses
Laura E Sjoberg
Core-Periphery Dynamics in the International Status
Hierarchy
Marina Duque, Harvard University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
92.24
PEACEKEEPING AND MULTILATERAL
INTERVENTION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: ANIL SIGDEL, Advanced Research and Training
Institute
Disc:
Stephen M. Saideman
Papers: Allies for Sale
Marina Elisabeth Henke, Northwestern University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 377

Daily Schedule

Papers: Aiming Too High: Security and the Implementation Gap


in Regional Economic IOs
Julia Gray, University of Pennsylvania
The Social Dynamics of Intergovernmental Organization
Membership
Brandon J. Kinne, University of California, Davis
Joining the Club: New Data on the Accession Rules of
International Organizations
Paul Poast, University of Chicago
Johannes Urpelainen, Columbia University
Christodoulos Kaoutzanis

The Forces of Attraction: Security Interests and


Economic Institution Membership
Christina Davis, Princeton University
Tyler Pratt

377

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

From If to How: Taking Stock of R2P "Fire-Prevention"


Capacity Building
Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University
Status-enhancing multilateralism: France in Africa since
1994
Stefano Recchia, University of Cambridge
The Local Security Effects of UN Peacekeeping
Deployments
Bernd Beber, New York University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL
92.25
HOW TO GET DOCTRINE RIGHT?
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Clayton J. Cleveland, Ohio University
Disc:
Charles Eugene Gholz, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Innovation in the Shadow of Vietnam: Making US Army
Doctrine in 1968
Peter P. Campbell
Getting it Right: AirSea Battle Concept and the Lessons
of the Past
J. Thomas Moriarty, School of International Service
at American University
Integrating the Gender Perspective in Security
Organizations: The Case of NATO
Heidi Hardt, University of California, Irvine
Stefanie von Hlatky, Queen's University
Is Space War Imminent? Expanding the Envelope of
Possibility
Roger B. Handberg, University of Central Florida
The Struggle to Consolidate the New Army Paradigm
Adam Joyce, Hunter College
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
92.26
ROUNDTABLE HONORING FP SECTION
DISTINGUISHED SCHOLAR ROBERT JERVIS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Dan Reiter, Emory University
Part:
Robert Jervis, Columbia University
John Schuessler, Bush School of Government and Public
Service
Thomas J. Christensen, Princeton University
Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University
Deborah Welch Larson, UCLA Political Science
Department
Rose McDermott
Stephen Rosen, Harvard University
Stacie E. Goddard, Wellesley College
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
92.27
DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL
CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Ryan D. Grauer, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania
Bruce M. Russett, yale university
Papers: Causal Attributions in Media Framing of an International
Conflict
Natalia V. Kovalyova, n/a
Communication Technology, Audience Effects, and the
Logic of Civilian Targeting
Daniel Krcmaric, Northwestern University

Less than Meets the Eye? The Effects of Casualty News


on Popular Support for War
Scott L. Althaus, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Mandate to Fight? Electoral Margins and Interstate
Conflict
Kyle Haynes, Purdue University
The Impact of Public Opinion on Intergovernmental
Treaty Negotiation
Hartmut Lenz, SOKA, University Tokyo
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
92.28
REFUGEES AND ARMED CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Kerstin Fisk, Loyola Marymount University
Papers: Closed Borders, Open Fists: The Refugee-Hostage
Dilemma
Katrina Browne, Cornell University
Human Security in the Shadow of State Collapse
Zaryab Iqbal, Pennsylvania State University
Harvey Starr, University of South Carolina
Networks of Communication and Refugees in Civil War
Benjamin Laughlin, University of Rochester
Plausible Deniability? State versus Militia Violence in
Refugee Hosting Areas
Kerstin Fisk, Loyola Marymount University
The Determinants of State Violence against Refugees
Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh
Christian Gineste
Joshua Kaasik, University of Pittsburgh
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
92.29
ASSESSING CONGRESS'S CAPACITY TO SOLVE
PROBLEMS
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Kevin R. Kosar, R Street Institute
Disc:
Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Papers: Inter-Branch Arms Race: Presidential Activism &
Professional Staff in Congress
Anthony Madonna, University of Georgia
Ian Ostrander, Michigan State University
Why Congressional Staffers Leave
Lee Drutman, New America
Alexander Charles Furnas
Congressional Analytic Capacity and the Market for
Lobbying Services
Timothy M. LaPira, James Madison University
Herschel F. Thomas, University of Texas, Arlington
Congressional Dysfunction and the Decline of Problem
Solving
Jonathan Lewallen, University of Texas at Austin
Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin
Bryan D. Jones, University of Texas, Austin
Tracking Statutory Reauthorizations: A New Metric for
Legislative Productivity
Scott Adler, University of Colorado, Boulder
Stefani Rene Langehennig
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
92.30
RELIC, AUTHORS WILLIAM HOWELL AND
TERRY MOE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY

Chair:

378

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 378

Sidney M. Milkis, University of Virginia

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Part:

Stephen Skowronek
Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University
Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland, College Park
William G. Howell, University of Chicago
Terry M. Moe, Stanford University
Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University

DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY


92.31
DYNAMICS OF RACE, GENDER, AND PUBLIC
POLICIES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Carolina Ferrerosa-Young, Columbia University


Samantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay College
Carolina Ferrerosa-Young, Columbia University

Papers: Working Around the Law: Limiting the Impact of Bans


on Affirmative Action
Lauren Foley, Johns Hopkins University
Ill Just Stay Home: Employment Inequality among
Parents
Lindsay B. Flynn, Wheaton College
No Woman No Crime: Ban-the-Box Legislation,
Employment, and Upskilling
Daniel Shoag, Harvard University
Stan Antonius Veuger
Stereotypes about Students: The Influence of Bias on
Education Policy Attitudes
Rachel L. Moskowitz, Trinity College
The Dynamic Returns of Descriptive Representation
Stephanie Hawke, Portland State University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
92.32
NEW RESEARCH ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND
THE CARCERAL STATE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Travis Johnston, University of Massachusetts, Boston


Travis Johnston, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Melanie Marie Bowers, Rutgers University, Camden

DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS


92.33
LAW IN LAWLESS PLACES: INSTITUTIONS OF
JUSTICE IN NON-DEMOCRACIES
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Rachel Stern, UC Berkeley

Yuhua Wang, Harvard University

Papers: Guns, Gavels, and Bribes: Securing Property Rights in


Contemporary Russia
Jordan Luc Gans-Morse, Northwestern University
The Chief Justice as Political Agent: The Politics of
Managing a Loyal Judiciary
Rachel L Ellett, Beloit College
Raul Alberto Sanchez Urribarri, La Trobe University
Alexei Trochev, Nazarbayev University
Laws in Conflict: Preferences for Alternative Legal
Systems in Chechnya
Egor Lazarev, Columbia University
The Rules of the Law: Property, Civil Courts, and
Authoritarian Governance
Margaret Hanson, The Ohio State University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
92.34
WORKING LAW: COURTS, CORPORATIONS,
AND SYMBOLIC CIVIL RIGHTSREADERS
MEET AUTHOR
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University
Part:
Charles R. Epp, University of Kansas
Paul Frymer, Princeton University
Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University
Michael W. McCann, University of Washington, Seattle
Lauren B. Edelman, University of California-Berkeley
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
92.35
DIRECT DEMOCRACY AND STATE
CONSTITUTIONS
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Patricia Amberg-Blyskal
Disc:
Saundra K. Schneider, Michigan State University
Jonathan Parent, Le Moyne College
Papers: Do Reelection and Policies Drive Legislators in Direct
Legislation Campaigns?
Marie-Catherine Wavreille, Universit libre de
Bruxelles
Sticky Legacies: Persistence and Diffusion of State
Constitutional Provisions
Nancy Martorano Miller, University of Dayton
Keith E. Hamm, Rice University
Ronald D. Hedlund, Northeastern University
Maria Aroca, Rice University
The Policy Effects of Unlimited Spending in State
Referenda
John Edward Brooks, Duke University
Lefteris Jason Anastasopoulos, University of Georgia
Voter Recall of Ballot Measures
Craig M. Burnett, Hofstra University
Janine A. Parry, University of Arkansas
Jay Barth, Hendrix College
State Constitutions on a Pedestal? Constitutional
Veneration vs Amendment Rates
Adam R. Brown, Brigham Young University
DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
92.36
MAYORAL POLITICS IN AMERICAN CITIES
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
EXECUTIVE POLITICS

Chair:

Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri-St. Louis

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 379

379

Daily Schedule

Papers: Police Profiling, Legitimacy, and Compliance:


Experimental Evidence
Sanford C. Gordon, New York University
Gregory Huber, Yale University
Eric Dickson, New York University
Police Militarization in the United States: national and
local transformations
Benjamin T. Krupicka, University of California,
Berkeley
Incarcerated Gang Members in El Salvador: Policy and
Human Rights Challenges
Sonja Wolf, Centro de Investigacin y Docencias
Econmicas (CIDE)
Police Officer Misconduct and Police Chief
Accountability
Andrew James McCall, University of California,
Berkeley

Disc:

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: Are Former Mayors More Effective Members of


Congress?
Katherine Levine Einstein, Boston University
David Glick, Boston University
Maxwell B. Palmer, Boston University
Campaign Ads in Mayoral Elections: The Role of
Candidate Character Traits
David B. Holian, University of North Carolina,
Greensboro
Timothy B. Krebs, University of New Mexico
Off-Cycle and Out of Office: Election Timing and
Incumbency in Mayoral Elections
Justin de Benedictis-Kessner, MIT
Resurrection Mayors
Jonathan L. Wharton, Southern Connecticut State
University
The Business of Being Mayor: Mayors and Fiscal Policy
in U.S. Cities
Patricia Kirkland, Columbia University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
92.37
TRANSFORMING AND GENDERING THE
EXECUTIVE BRANCH
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
EXECUTIVE POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Diana Z. O' Brien, Indiana University


Diana Z. O' Brien, Indiana University

Papers: Presidentas and Policy Making: Substantive


Representation for Women?
Farida Jalalzai, Oklahoma State University
Conservative Feminists in Sheeps Clothing? Angela
Merkel & Ursula von der Leyen
Malliga Och, Idaho State University
Transforming the Executive Branch: Womens Cabinet
Participation in Ghana
Melinda J Adams, James Madison University
Representing Women, Differently: Jenny Shipley and
Helen Clark
Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami
Dept. of Political Science
Contextual Constraints: SSA Women Cabinet Ministers
Substantive Representation
Chiedo Nwankwor, University of Delaware
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
92.38
WHEN WOMEN RUN: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
GENDER AND POLITICAL RECRUITMENT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
VOTING BEHAVIOR

Chair:
Part:

Jennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental College


Tnia Verge, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Meryl Kenny, University of Edinburgh
Francesca R. Jensenius, Norwegian Institute of
International Affairs
Magda Hinojosa, Arizona State University
Kelly Dittmar, Rutgers University-Camden
Karen I.L. Celis, Free University of Brussels

DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS


92.39
IT'S WHERE YOU'RE FROM THAT MATTERS:
GEORGRAPHY INFOMRING THE POLITICAL
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern University

380

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 380

Disc:

Ariel Rebecca White, Massachusetts Institute of


Technology
Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern University

Papers: Its Location Stupid! Exploring the Impact of Political


Culture and Spatial Arrangements on the Political
Orientations of African Americans
Princess Hope Williams, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Block-by-Block Barriers: Neighborhood Effects on
Views of Discrimination
Jessica Lynn Stewart, University of California, Los
Angeles
Fight or Flight: Residential Mobility and Immigration
Restriction
Yamil Velez, Wesleyan University
Cultivating Membership via Institutional and
Community Organizations
Chinbo Chong
Marcela Garca-Castaon, San Francisco State
University
Kiku Huckle, Pace University
Hannah Walker, University of Washington
Neighborhoods that Matter: How Place and People
Increase Participation
Carrie Levan, UCLA
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
92.40
AUTHORITY IN ISLAMIC POLITICAL
THOUGHT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Yasmeen Daifallah, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Disc:
Yasmeen Daifallah, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Papers: Ulu Al Amr & Authority, The Central Pillars of Sunni
Political Thought
Hisseine K Faradj, Bronx Community College The
CIty University of New York
Conservatism in Iran: Ayatollah Javadi Amoli's Theory
of Guardianship
Nura Alia Hossainzadeh, University of California,
Berkeley
Deconstructing the Roots of Salafi Political Philosophy
Muqtedar Khan, University of Delaware
Freedom of Religion, Islam and Human Rights
Epistemology
Zara Khan, City University of New York Graduate
Center
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
92.41
ELECTORAL REFORM AND RULE CHOICE
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Chair: Santiago Olivella, Princeton University
Disc:
Santiago Olivella, Princeton University
Santiago Alles, Rice University
Papers: Personalized Electoral Systems: Curing the Democratic
Malaise?
Pedro Riera, Carlos III University of Madrid
Are Majoritarian Systems More Likely to Investigate
Electoral Reform?
Laura Levick, Queen's University

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

The Politics of Institutional Change: Electoral Reforms


in Turkey
Esra Issever Ekinci
Endogenous Ballot Structures: The Case of Colombia's
Legislative Elections
Francisco Cantu, University of Houston
Margarita Maria Ramirez
Susan Vivian Achury, University of Houston
Choosing Electoral Systems: Analyzing a PR System
with Both Open and Closed Lists
Dominik Hangartner, London School of Economics
Nelson Alejandro Ruiz-Guarin, London School of
Economics
Janne Tukiainen, VATT
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
92.42
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND INTEREST GROUPS
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University
Disc:
Rachel Blum, Miami University
Papers: When Do Radical Flanks Work?: Identity- versus
Affinity-based Social Movements
Tamar Malloy, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Mallory SoRelle, Cornell University
Militia Membership and Civic Participation in the US
Isaac Castellano, Boise State University
The Influence of Legislative Threats on Membership
Levels in the NRA
Justin Abbott Tucker
Steven M. Sylvester, Utah Valley University
Chelsie Lynn Moore Bright, University of Kansas
Two Sides of the Same Coin? Advocacy and Social
Entrepreneurship in US Politics
Kimberly H. Conger, University of Cincinnati
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
92.43
PARTY COMPETITION AND VOTER
RESPONSES
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University
Disc:
James Adams, University of California, Davis

Papers: Breaking Clientelism or Rewarding Incumbents?


Evidence from Mexico
Horacio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard University
John Marshall, Columbia University
Ballot Reform as Suffrage Restriction: Evidence from
Brazils Second Republic
Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia
Self-efficacy and Political Participation in Autocracy:
Evidence from Zimbabwe
Lauren E Young, Columbia University
Incumbency and the Varieties of Clientelism: Evidence
from Eastern Europe
Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Lauren E Young, Columbia University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
92.45
THE (COMPARATIVE) STRANGER:
PERSPECTIVES ON REGIME SUPPORT AND
REPRESENTATION
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Amy Erica Erica Smith, Iowa State University


Timothy Hellwig, Indiana University, Bloomington

Papers: Beyond the Balance Sheet: An Organizational Justice


Model of Regime Support
Matthew Rhodes-Purdy, University of Texas, Austin
Elite Constraint in Transitioning Democracies: The
Cases of Ukraine and Moldova
Michael O. Slobodchikoff, Troy University
How Government Fragmentation Influences its Approval
Alon Peretz Kraitzman, Michigan State University
Unfulfilled Pledges and Responsibility Attribution in
Coalition Governments
Nick Lin, Mannheim University
Katsunori Seki, University of Mannheim
Nikoleta Yordanova
The Comparative Macropolity: Public Opinion,
Proportionality and Veto Gates
Anthony J. McGann, University of Strathclyde
Sebastian Dellepiane, University of Strathclyde
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
92.46
THE POWERS THAT BE: MEDIA SYSTEMS AND
REGULATIONS AROUND THE WORLD
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Sebastian Stier, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social
Sciences
Disc:
Stephen E. Frantzich, U.S. Naval Academy
Papers: Online Political News Media and Media System Change:
A Cross-National Comparison
Marina Popescu, Central European University
Gabor A. Toka, Central European University
Roxana Bodea, Median Research Centre

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 381

381

Daily Schedule

Papers: Multidimensional Congruence and European Parliament


Electoral Performance
Ryan Bakker, University of Georgia
Seth Jolly, Syracuse University
Jonathan Polk, University of Gothenburg
Party Policy Diffusion Conditions
Lawrence Ezrow, University of Essex
Tobias Friedrich Karl Boehmelt, University of Essex
Roni Lehrer
Hugh Ward, University of Essex
Citizens Responses to Constrained Political Choice
Sara B Hobolt, London Scool of Economics
Julian Hoerner, London School of Economics and
Political Science
Putting Downs to the Test: Evidence for Voter
Divergence When Parties Converge?
Heike Klver, University of Hamburg
Jae-Jae Spoon, University of Pittsburgh

DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR


92.44
VARIETIES OF ELECTORAL CLIENTELISM
AND COERCION
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Disc:
Katharine A. Baldwin, Yale University

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Roots of Political Disagreements in the News: Panel


Analysis of the EU Countries
Gergo Zvecz, Central European University
The Dilemma of State Power: New Media, Old
Challenges in China
Michael L Miller, The Graduate Center, CUNY
The Regulation of Electoral Advertising across the
World
Christina Holtz-Bacha, University of ErlangenNuremberg
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
92.47
INFORMATION, INVESTMENT, AND
VOLUNTARINESS IN ENVIRONMENTAL
GOVERNANCE
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Chair: Steven F. Bernstein, University of Toronto
Disc:
Sijeong Lim, University of Amsterdam
Papers: Can Industry-Led Environmental Standards Be Credible?
Hamish van der Ven, Yale University
Forestry Standards as Firm Political Strategies
Thibaud Henin, University of Oregon
Transparency, Transformation, and Information-Based
Environmental Governance
Graham Bullock
Globalization Trends: Chinese FDI and the environment
in developing countries
Jessica Elizabeth Neafie, University of Oregon
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
POLITICS
92.48
SOCIAL MEDIA AND ELECTORAL CAMPAIGNS
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION

Chair:
Disc:

Jason Gainous, University of Louisville


Josh Pasek, University of Michigan

Papers: An Online Crystal Ball? Using Social Media to Predict


Elections
Mickael N. Temporo, Universit Laval
Yannick Dufresne
Corentin Vande Kerckhove, Universit catholique de
Louvain
Digital Media Expenditures in Congressional Elections:
Impacts and Trends
Jeff Gulati, Bentley University
Christine B. Williams, Bentley University
Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, Southern Methodist
University
Online Voter Contacting in Context: Digital Appeals and
Political Engagement
Cristian Vaccari, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Social Media Affordances, Election Campaigns and
Follower Interactions
Karolina Koc Michalska
Darren Lilleker, Bournemouth University
Tomasz Michalski, HEC Paris
To Read or Not To Read: Why Email GOTV
Experiments Don't Work & How To Fix Them
Katherine Haenschen, University of Texas at Austin

382

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 382

DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM


92.49
POLITICS AT THE THRESHOLD: MIGRATION,
IDENTITY, AND STATEHOOD
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Paul W. Ludwig, St. John's College, Annapolis
Disc:
Kevin Cherry, University of Richmond
Papers: Citizenship in an Age of Representation: Spike Jones'
Her
Joshua Foa Dienstag, University of California, Los
Angeles
Grammar of Arrival: Imagining a Changed Europe
Claudia Franziska Bruehwiler Haeusermann,
University of St. Gallen
The Role of Synthetic Experiences in Shaping
International Relations
Paul Musgrave, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
J. Furman Daniel, Lycurgus Fund, LP
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
92.50
DEMOCRATIC BACKSLIDING: CURRENT AND
PAST
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Michael Wahman, University of Missouri
Disc:
Nancy Bermeo, Princeton University
Papers: Conservative Populism in a Neo-liberal Age: The Cases
of Turkey and Hungary
Berk Esen, Bilkent University
Erosion of Democracy in Thailand and Turkey:
Strategies and Alliances
Alper Yildiz, City University of New York - Graduate
Center
The Euromaidan, Democracy, and Political Values in
Ukraine
Ivan Katchanovski, University of Ottawa
Rethinking Backsliding in Interwar Europe: Comparing
the U.K. and Germany
Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
92.51
EXPANDING THE SCOPE OF HUMAN RIGHTS
AND HUMANITARIANISM: NEW DIRECTIONS
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Darren Walhof, Grand Valley State University
Disc:
Darren Walhof, Grand Valley State University
Papers: Human Rights of Older Persons: Barriers Toward Equal
Enjoyment
Bethany Barratt, Roosevelt University
A Global Approach to Soundscapes: Reconsidering
Environmental Human Rights
Alison Dundes Renteln, University of Southern
California
Autism and Transitional Justice
Adam R. Rosenblatt, Haverford College
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
92.52
QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO CAUSAL
INFERENCE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Alyssa Maraj Grahame, University of Massachusetts
Amherst

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Disc:

Alyssa Maraj Grahame, University of Massachusetts


Amherst

Papers: Causal modeling in Qualitative Comparative Analysis


Ingo Rohlfing, University of Bremen
Carsten Q. Schneider, Central European University
Holger Dring, University of Bremen
Does Learning Bayesian Probability Change Case Study
Analysis?
Tasha A. Fairfield, London School of Economics
Triangulation & Qualitative Research: What, Why,
When and How
Veronica Herrera, University of Connecticut
Why Causal Mechanisms and Process Tracing Should
Relax Case Selection Strictures
Ryan Saylor, University of Tulsa
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
92.53
ROUNDTABLE: THE UPSIDES AND DOWNSIDES
OF STUDYING POLITICS AS NETWORKS
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Jennifer Nicoll Victor, George Mason University
Part:
Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University
David Lazer
Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland, College Park
Justin H. Gross, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Gregory Koger
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
92.54
MUSLIM IMMIGRANTS: MULTIPLE
PERSPECTIVES
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Sara Wallace Goodman, University of California, Irvine
Papers: Do Income and Education Drive Integration? Muslims in
France, Britain, and the US
Justin Gest, George Mason University
Domestic and Global Dimensions of Muslim
Racialization
Sangay K. Mishra, Drew University, New Jersey
Portrayals of Muslims, Jews, and Catholics in British
and US Newspapers
Erik J. Bleich, Middlebury College
A. Maurits van der Veen, College of William & Mary
Triangulation of Asian Immigrants
Maneesh Arora, University of California, Irvine
DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND POLITICS
92.55
ADVANCES AND LIMITS IN EPISTEMIC
DEMOCRACY
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Jacob Roundtree, Harvard University
Disc:
Helene E. Landemore

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL


POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Alice Siu, Stanford University


Lynn M. Sanders, University of Virginia
Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania

Papers: 26 Years of Participative Budgeting Porto Alegre:


Progress and Challenges
Cezar Busatto, Porto Alegre Government
Consulting the People on Urban Issues: Ghanas First
Deliberative Poll
Dennis Chirawurah, Stanford University
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University
Niagia Santuah
Alice Siu, Stanford University
Ayaga Bawah
Kathleen Giles
Deliberative Democracy in Shanghai: Deliberative
Polling in Puxing Subdistrict
Fuguo Han
Alice Siu, Stanford University
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University
Urban Planning through Deliberative Democracy in
Mongolia
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University
Alice Siu, Stanford University
Mark Koenig
amarzaya naran
93.4
CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:
PREFERENCES, IDENTITY, AND TAIWAN'S 2016
ELECTION
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: Da-Chi Liao, National Sun Yat-sen University
Disc:
Kharis Ali Templeman, Stanford University
Lu-Chung Dennis Weng, SUNY, Cortland

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 383

383

Daily Schedule

Papers: Epistemic Democracy in a Multidimensional Issue


Space: An Empirical Analysis
Richard Jankowski, SUNY, Fredonia
Federalism and the Epistemic Virtues of Democracy
Through Diversity
William J Berger, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Silent Majority Rule: Rethinking the Epistemic Value of
Non-unanimous Decisions
Christopher Manick, University of Florida
The Public and the Problem of Political Bullshit
Olivia Newman, Rider University

Related Groups
93.1
AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT: CARRESE'S
"DEMOCRACY IN MODERATION:
MONTESQUIEU, TOCQUEVILLE, AND
LIBERALISM"
Room: Loews, Commonwealth D
Chair: Alan Levine
Part:
Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College
Aurelian Craiutu, Indiana University
Alan Levine
Bryan Garsten, Yale University
Paul O. Carrese, U.S. Air Force Academy
93.2
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: ROUNDTABLE ON THE CAMPUS
PROTESTS
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: John B. Kienker, Claremont Review of Books
Part:
Charles R. Kesler, Claremont McKenna College
Larry P. Arnn, Hillsdale College
Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College
Gerard Alexander, University of Virginia
93.3
COMPARATIVE URBAN POLITICS:
CONSULTING THE PEOPLE ON URBAN ISSUES:
PARTICIPATION AND INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN
Room: Marriott, Room 412

Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Papers: Coattail and Reverse Coattail Effects: The Case of


Taiwan's 2016 Election
Chi Huang, National Chengchi University
Kah-yew Lim, National Chengchi University
Legislative Cosponsorship Networks in Taiwan
Jinhyeok Jang, University of Louisville
Political Cleavage in Taiwan: Is there a Shift?
T.Y. Wang, Illinois State University
Su-Feng Cheng, National Chengchi University
The Legal Complex in Taiwanese Democratization
Chin-shou Wang, National Cheng Kung University
The Psychological Cognition and Vote Choices in
Taiwan
Chung-li Wu, Academia Sinica
Hsiao-Chien Tsui
93.5
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: ROUNDTABLE:
LEON CRAIG'S THE PHILOSOPHER'S ENGLISH
KING
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: Charles R. Embry, Texas A & M Commerce
Barry Cooper, University of Calgary
Part:
Glenn Hughes, St. Mary's University
Paul A. Cantor, University of Virginia
Charles R. Embry, Texas A & M Commerce
Leon Harold Craig
93.6
PRACTICING POLITICS: PUBLISHING
CHALLENGES: PRODUCING ACADEMICALLY
RIGOROUS PRACTICABLE RESEARCH
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Kevin Costa, Radio France Internationale
Part:
Rick D. Farmer, Extra Point Productions
Irene S. Wu
Jeffrey Ryan Smith, The New School
Alisa DiCaprio, Asian Development Bank Institute
Craig B. Holman, Public Citizen
Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of
Pennsylvania
Henry B. Sirgo, McNeese State University
93.7
SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT:
DEMOCRATIC ARGUMENTS IN THE
PEDAGOGY OF PLATO'S "REPUBLIC"
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Nathan Sawatzky, University of Notre Dame
Disc:
Arlene W. Saxonhouse, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Susan D. Collins, University of Notre Dame

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM


Theme Panels
94.1
TERRORISM AND POLITICAL
TRANSFORMATIONS
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: Michael Allen Gillespie, Duke University
Part:
Seyla Benhabib
John P. McCormick, University of Chicago
Tracy Strong, University of Southampton and University
of California, San Diego
Michael Walzer
Roxanne L. Euben, Wellesley College
94.2
THE DYNAMICS AND CONSEQUENCES OF
PARTISAN POLARIZATION
Room: PCC, Ballroom AB
Chair: Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
Papers: Affective Polarization in Presidential Politics
Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University
Thomas J. Rudolph, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Has Polarization Killed the Study of Presidential
Approval?
Paul M. Kellstedt, Texas A&M University
Matthew Lebo, Stony Brook University
Revisiting Identity and Issue Preferences in Affective
Polarization
Lori Bougher
APSA Events
95.1
AMERICA'S DIPLOMATS FILM
Room: PCC, 114
Sponsored by the Diplomacy Center Foundation and the
Foreign Policy Association

95.2
Room:
Chair:
Part:

95.3
Room:

HOW TO THRIVE IN GRAD SCHOOL:


STRATEGIES AND TIPS
PCC, 202-A
Julia Schwarz, American Political Science Association
Lisa Mueller, Macalester College
K. Chad Clay, University of Georgia
Jennie Choi Ikuta, University of Tulsa
Meir R. Walters, Georgetown University
Travis Johnston, University of Massachusetts, Boston
INNOVATIVE TEACHING METHODS IN
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION
Marriott, Franklin 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION

Papers: There Must Be Some Way Out of Here: Foreign


Music and Politics in the Republic
Rebecca LeMoine, Florida Atlantic University
Philosophy for the Many: The Political Consequences
of Philosophical "Mythos"
Yoshiaki Nakazawa
Socrates Liberal Feminism
Nathan Sawatzky, University of Notre Dame
The Epic Consequences of the Elimination of Private
Life in Plato's Republic
Michelle M. Kundmueller, Christopher Newport
University

384

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 384

Chair:

Steven Rathgeb Smith, American Political Science


Association
Papers: How to Use Bolman and Deals Reframing
Organizations Effectively in Leadership Development
Poul Erik Mouritzen, Aarhus University
Case Teaching in Nonprofit Management Education
Steven Rathgeb Smith, American Political Science
Association
Teaching Public Service Ethics Using Codes of Ethics
James H. Svara, University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill
Classroom Simulations in Real Time
Kent Weaver, Georgetown University

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

95.4
Room:
Chair:
Part:

95.5
Room:
Chair:
Part:

95.6

Room:
95.7
Room:
Division

MAKING CONNECTIONS: HOW TO BUILD A


PROFESSIONAL NETWORK AND WHY YOU
NEED ONE
PCC, 110-AB
Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University
David C. Wilson, University of Delaware
Nancy Kassop, SUNY New Paltz
Brian Alexander, George Mason University
Pei-te Lien, University of California Santa Barbara
Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, Pace University
WHO PUBLISHES, WHO PERISHES?
CHALLENGES IN RESEARCH WITH
VULNERABLE POPULATIONS
Loews, Commonwealth C
Shareen Hertel, University of Connecticut
Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University
Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago
Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy School
Sarah E. Parkinson, University of Minnesota
Deborah Yashar, Princeton University
WORKING GROUP: ELECTION SCIENCES,
ELECTION LAW, AND ELECTION
ADMINISTRATION: CHARTING A RESEARCH
AGENDA
Loews, Tubman
WORKING GROUP: INTERSECTIONALITY AND
PEDAGOGY
Marriott, Room 413
Panels

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:


HISTORICAL APPROACHES
96.1
KANT
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Ryan Patrick Hanley, Marquette University
Disc:
Alan Joseph Kellner, Northwestern University
Alexander Kaufman, University of Georgia
Papers: "The Conflict of the Faculties": Kant's Meta-Political
Doctrine
Gent Carrabregu
Kant's Critique of the Law of Nations
Christopher Meckstroth
Kant's Provisionality: Race, Religion, and Indigenous
Property Rights
Timothy P. Waligore, Pace University
The Transformation of the Highest Good after Kant
Jeffrey Church, University of Houston
Two Models of Political Judgment: Arendt and Lyotard
on Kants Aesthetics
Javier Burdman, Northwestern Universty

Papers: Bureaucratic Democracy: Recovering Durkheim, Duguit,


and Saint-Simon
Jennifer M Hudson, Bard College
Charismatic Authority and Democratic Legitimation
Xavier Marquez, Victoria University of Wellington

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


96.3
GENRES OF ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Mark Reinhardt, Williams College
Disc:
Mark Reinhardt, Williams College
Papers: Tragedies of Emancipation: Freedom and Theft after
Slavery
Elisabeth Robin Anker, George Washington
University
Genres of Political Arithmetic: On the Algorithm
Dispositif
Davide Panagia, UCLA
Theorizing Change in a Moment of Impasse
George M. Shulman, New York University
Declaration as Disavowal: Race and Empire in the
UDHR
Emma Stone Mackinnon, University of Chicago
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
96.4
NEW THEOLOGIES
Room: PCC, 108-A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina, Chapel


Hill
Lars Toender, University of Copenhagen

Papers: Demobilized Democracy: Plebiscitarianism as Political


Theology
Ian R. Zuckerman, Stanford University
Eucharistic Economies: Blood and Money in Hobbes
and Anidjar
Char Roone Miller, George Mason University
The Power of the Spirit: Evangelical Political Thought
and Post-Secular Methods
Joanna Tice, The Graduate Center, CUNY
The Truth about Academic Faiths
Shalini Pradeepa Satkunanandan, University of
California, Davis
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
96.5
POLITICAL THEOLOGY AND CIVIL RELIGION
Room: PCC, 113-A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Charles Barbour, University of Western Sydney


Matthew Scherer, George Mason University

Papers: Arabic Prophetology, Civil Religion, and Modern


Constitutionalism
Miguel Vatter, UNSW Australia
Machiavelli and the Subversion of Civil Religion
James R. Martel, San Francisco State University
The Critique of Politics in Modern Jewish Thought
Julie E. Cooper, Tel Aviv University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 385

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:


HISTORICAL APPROACHES
96.2
LEADERSHIP AND GOVERNANCE
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Aaron L Herold, SUNY Geneseo
Disc:
Aaron L Herold, SUNY Geneseo
Peter D. Breiner, SUNY, University at Albany

Governmentality and Practices of Self: Foucaults Link


of Ethics and Politics
Harvey S. Goldman, University of California, San
Diego
Plutarch the Philosopher: A Theory of Moral Leadership
Michael Promisel, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Sympathy and Leadership in the Early Du Bois
Daniel Henry

385

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Western Political Theology, Civil Religion and The


Empire of Management
Marinos Diamantides
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
96.6
BEYOND THE SOCIAL CONTRACT:
LIBERALISM WITHOUT CONSENT
Room: PCC, 107-B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES

Chair:
Disc:

Sharon R. Krause, Brown University


Andrew Sabl, Yale University

Papers: Liberal Freedom


Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State University
The Tory Consequences of Whig Foundations:Humes
Critique of the Social Contract
Chandran Kukathas, London School of Economics
After Monarchy: Modernity, Social Contract, and Liberal
Critique
Aimee Barbeau, University of Illinois, Springfield
Liberalism as Satire
Jacob T. Levy, McGill University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
96.7
THE PERSONAL IS THE NEOLIBERAL:
FEMINISM, MARKETS, AND FAMILIES
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Michaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado, Boulder
Disc:
Sara L. Rushing, Montana State University, Bozeman
Papers: Work-Family Balance Debates, Feminism, and the
Neoliberal Politics of Care
Tamara Metz, Reed College
Revolution from Within: The Personalization of Feminist
Self-Help
Michaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado,
Boulder
Market-Cautious Feminism
Maxine Eichner, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Neoliberal Family Values: Social Conservatives and
Womens Liberation
Karen K. Seat, The University of Arizona
Neoliberalization of Breast Cancer Politics:
Capitalization of Sentiment
Claire C. McKinney, College of William & Mary
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
96.8
SOCIAL CHOICE, INFORMATION
AGGREGATION, AND WELFARE
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Elizabeth Maggie Penn, Washington University in St.
Louis
Disc:
Adam H. Meirowitz
Papers: Generalizing May's Theorem to Social Welfare
Functions
Mahendra Prasad
Information Aggregation in Multi-District Elections
Niall Hughes, University of Warwick
Reason-giving and Accountability
Marlene Guraieb, New York University
Dimitri Landa, NYU

386

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 386

The Interaction of Interests: Rulemaking and Societal


Welfare
Peter Bils
Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester
The Paradox of Grading Systems
Steven J. Brams, New York University
Richard F. Potthoff
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
96.9
POLITICAL VALUES OVER TIME AND ACROSS
GROUPS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Stanley Feldman, Stony Brook University
Disc:
Paul Goren, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Papers: Ethnic Heterogeneity in the Measurement of Core
Political Values Scales
Angel Saavedra Cisneros, The University of Texas
Rio Grande Valley
Joshua Johnson, Kennesaw State University
Christopher David Johnston, Duke University
Tony E. Carey, University of North Texas
Morally Convicted Attitudes Are More Stable over Time
Scott Clifford, University of Houston
Timothy J. Ryan, UNC Chapel Hill
Rage Within the Machine: Political Cynicism Among
Party Leaders
Nicholas Carnes, Duke University
The Political Values of Politicians: Stability and Change
Over Four Decades
William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University
Donald D. Searing, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Explaining Changes in Patriotism over Time
Jennifer Wolak, University of Colorado, Boulder
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
96.10
THE POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY OF
RELIGIOSITY AND RELIGIOUS IDENTITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Quin Monson, Brigham Young University
Disc:
Allyson Shortle, University of Oklahoma
David C. Barker, California State University,
Sacramento
Papers: Christian Identity in American Politics
Bethany Albertson, University of Texas, Austin
Religion, Ideology or Economic Competition? Ethnic
Discrimination in Israel
Ryan D. Enos, Harvard University
Noam Gidron, Harvard University
Religiosity, Openness, Ideology: Comparing Twin
Studies in Australia and U.S.
Aleksander Ksiazkiewicz, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
Amanda Friesen, Indiana University-Purdue
University at Indianapolis
Youth Support for Muslim and Christian Religious
Symbols in Public Life
Dietlind Stolle, McGill
Allison Harell, Universit du Qubec Montral
Valerie-Anne Maheo, Universite de Montreal

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY


96.11
ACCOUNTABILITY AND TRANSPARENCY IN
DEMOCRACIES AND AUTOCRACIES
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Thomas Brambor, Lund University
Disc:
Patrick Egan, Tulane University
Papers: Complexity and Accountability: Experimental Insights
Raymond Duch, CESS Nuffield
Expansion of Radio and Political Accountability,
Evidence from Colombia
Dario Jos Salcedo Monroy, Universidad del Rosario
Origins of Authoritarian Transparency: Evidence from
China
Feng Yang, University of California, Los Angeles
Chao-yo Cheng, University of California, Los Angeles
Democracy versus Dictatorship? The Political
Determinants of Growth Episodes
Kunal Sen, University of Manchester, UK
Lant Pritchett, The World Bank
Representation, Accountability, Or Both? Electoral
Regimes and Population Health
Andrew C Patterson, University of Lethbridge
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
96.12
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF LOCAL
DEVELOPMENT
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Megan Eisenman Bowman
Disc:
Megan Eisenman Bowman
Papers: Factor Endowments and Local Democratization in
Colombia.
Mauricio Velasquez
Land Reform, Latifundia, and Local Development in
Colombia
Jean-Paul Faguet, London School of Economics
The Delivery and Distribution of Development Projects:
Evidence from Ghana
Martin J. Williams, University of Oxford
Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University
Nahomi Ichino, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
The Political Economy of Protein
David S. Brown, University of Colorado, Boulder
Traditional Local Authorities Role in Maternal and Child
Health in Ghana
Kristine Lykens, University of North Texas Heal
Lynette Ametewee, Georgia State University
Mathias Kwadwo Akuoko
Charles Kwame Acolatse

Papers: Path Dependence in European Development: Medieval


Politics and State Building
Avidit R. Acharya, Stanford University
Alexander Lee, University of Rochester

DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY


96.14
THE INTERPLAY OF STATES AND MARKETS
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Maya Jessica Tudor
Papers: Conflict Displacement and Dual Inclusion in State
Formation
John F. Padgett, University of Chicago
Jonathan Obert, Amherst College
Military Alliance Networks and State Formation
Mark Dincecco, University of Michigan
Cesi Cruz, University of British Columbia
Massimiliano G. Onorato, IMT Institute Advanced
Studies Lucca
How Did Development Actually Happen? Insights from
Three Analytic Narratives
Yuen Yuen Ang, University of Michigan
Labels or Lobbying?
Andrew Schrank
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
96.15
ROUNDTABLE ON MENTORING AND
DIVERSITY IN POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Chair: Tiffany D. Barnes, University of Kentucky
Part:
R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of Technology
Justin E. Esarey, Rice University
Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa
Shane Nordyke, University of South Dakota
Margaret E Roberts, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
96.16
TRANSFORMATIONAL LEARNING IN THE US
POLITICS CLASSROOM
Room: Marriott, Room 305
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

Chair:
Disc:

Thomas Ringenberg, Rockhurst University


Arthur Sanders, Drake University

Papers: By the People


Eric Hodges, University of South Florida SarasotaManatee
Gerrymandering as Art: A New Method for Teaching
Redistricting
Brooke Thomas Allen, Macomb Community College
The Semisoverign People in the Intro Classroom:
Race, Inequality, & Pluralism
Thomas Ringenberg, Rockhurst University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 387

387

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY


96.13
HISTORICAL ORIGINS OF POLITICAL AND
ECONOMIC INSTITUTIONS
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: James A. Robinson, Harvard University
Disc:
Isabela Mares, Columbia University
David Stasavage, New York University

Enduring Effects of Displacement: How WWII


Continues to Shape Polish Politics
Volha Charnysh, Harvard University
Capital Meets Democracy: Sovereign Bond Market
Responses to Franchise Expansions
Aditya Dasgupta
Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University
Slavery, Reconstruction, and Fiscal Capacity in the
American South
Pavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins University
Steven White, Lafayette College
War and Political Change: Military Experience and the
French Revolution
Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University
Saumitra Jha, Stanford University

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Cant the President Just Fix That? Teaching American


Politics & Democracy Abroad
Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, Northwestern University in
Qatar
RU Ready - Political Learning Outside the Classroom
Elizabeth C. Matto, Rutgers University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
96.17
DEMOCRACY AND DEVELOPMENT
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: German Feierherd, Yale University
Disc:
German Feierherd, Yale University
Papers: Modernization Theory & Development Without
Democracy: Iranian Elections 1906-75
Navid Hassanpour, Columbia University
Physical Development and Citizenship in Minority
Regions of Israel and Turkey
Esra Bakkalbasioglu, University of Washington
The Political Logic of Electrification in Post-conflict
Uganda
David Dow, University of California-Berkeley
The New Politics of Patents in Development: The
Second Image Reversed, Revisited
Kenneth Shadlen, London School of Economics
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
96.18
IMMIGRATION AND IDENTITY: PROCESSES OF
ASSIMILATION AND DISCRIMINATION
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Amanda Lea Robinson, The Ohio State University
Disc:
Matt A. Barreto, University of California, Los Angeles
Candis Watts Smith, University of North CarolinaChapel Hill
Papers: Self-Fulfilled Prophecy: How Political Elites Undermine
Immigrant Assimilation
Efren Osvaldo Perez
Maggie Deichert
Andrew M. Engelhardt
Becoming Black: How African Immigrants Assimilate
into Racialized America
Amanda Lea Robinson, The Ohio State University
Claire Leslie Adida, UCSD
Fellow Victim or Muslim Outsider? Serbian Reactions to
the Refugee Crisis
Ana Bracic, University of Oklahoma
Disentangling Discrimination Against Muslim-Americans
Kassra AR Oskooii, University of Washington
Making the Nation-State: Migration, Social Mobilization,
and State-Building
Erica S. Simmons, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Margaret E. Peters, University of California, Los
Angeles
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
96.19
POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF SOCIAL
POLICIES
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder
Disc:
Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder
Papers: Social Assistance and Electoral Competition for the
Kurdish Vote
Ozge Kemahlioglu, Sabanci University

388

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 388

Preferences for noncontributory social policy in Latin


America
Santiago Lpez-Cariboni, Catholic University of
Uruguay
Matthew E. Carnes, Georgetown University
Are Conditional Transfers a Politically Acceptable Form
of Redistribution?
Cesar Zucco, Fundacao Getulio Vargas
Juan Pablo Luna, Instituto de Ciencia Poltica, PUCChile
Ozgen Gokce Baykal, Bogazici University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
96.20
CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON DEMOCRACY
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Caroline Tynan, Temple University
Papers: Contested Nationalisms as Source of Democratic
Erosion: The Case of Bangladesh
S. Mohsin Hashim, Muhlenberg College
Democratic Transition and the Environment:
Comparative Evidence from Asia
Fengshi Wu, Nanyang Technological University
Islamist Parties, Democracy and Administrative
Legitimacy in North Africa
Frances Loustau-Williams, University of Pittsburgh
Protest and Voting in Latin America's Subnational
Authoritarian Enclaves
Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University
Mason Wallace Moseley, West Virginia University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
96.21
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF DEVELOPMENT
AND FULLER'S PAPER TIGERS, HIDDEN
DRAGONS
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Margaret M. Pearson
Part:
Douglas B. Fuller, Zhejiang University
Aseema Sinha, Claremont Mckenna College
Richard F. Doner, Emory University
Richard E. Deeg, Temple University
Ben Ross Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
96.22
POLITICS OF SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL
RISKS IN CHINA
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago
Disc:
Gang Guo, University of Mississippi
Papers: Chinese Regulatory State-building in Comparative
Perspective
Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago
The Politics of Social Health Insurance Integration in
China
Xian Huang, Rutgers University
State Capacity and Pollution Control in China: A
Natural Experiment
Junyan Jiang, University of Chicago
Politics of Poverty Alleviation in China: A Quasiexperimental Approach
Fubing Su, Vassar College
Ran Tao, Economics

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND


FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
96.23
ECONOMIC INFLUENCES ON
POSTCOMMUNIST POLITICS
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: Amy H. Liu, University of Texas at Austin
Disc:
Scott B. Cooper, Brigham Young University
Papers: Back to the USSR? The Perils and Promise of the
Eurasian Economic Union
Aleksander Lust, Appalachian State University
Fridge vs TV: The Economy, the Media, and Incumbent
Approval in a Hybrid Regime
Kohei Watanabe, London School of Economics
Katerina Tertytchnaya, University of Oxford
Bryn Rosenfeld, University of Southern California
Healthcare Reform and Variable Communist Legacies:
The Case of Ukraine
Brittany Holom, Princeton University
Shifts in Eastern Europeans Support for Income
Redistribution from 1992-2009
Katelyn Finley, University of California, Irvine
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
96.24
REGIONALIST POLITICS IN EUROPE: CAUSES
AND CONSEQUENCES
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Laia Balcells, Duke University
Disc:
Rachael McLellan, Princeton University
Papers: Language, National Identity, and Vote Choice in
Catalonia, 1984-2015
Lluis Orriols, University Carlos III of Madrid
Pablo Simon, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Leaving the Nest: The Impact of Elections on ProIndependence Attitudes
Pedro Riera, Carlos III University of Madrid
Macarena Ares, European University Institute
Enrique Hernndez, European University Institute
The Right (Time) to Secede: Why and When Regionalist
Parties Want Independence
Gemma Sala, Grinnell College
The Effects of Ethnic Mobilization on Trust: The
Catalonian Secessionist Process
Francisco Herreros, CSIC
Henar Criado, Fundacion Juan March
Luis Miller
Paloma Ubeda
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
96.25
NEW FRONTIERS IN WTO RESEARCH
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Krzysztof J. Pelc, McGill University
Disc:
Krzysztof J. Pelc, McGill University
Timm Betz, Texas A&M University

DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION


96.26
STABILITY AND CHANGE IN THE GLOBAL
ORDER: THE ROLE OF THE UNITED STATES
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Alan S. Alexandroff
Part:
G. John Ikenberry, Princeton University
John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago
Deborah Avant, University of Denver
Martha Finnemore, George Washington University
Miles Kahler, American University
Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
96.27
NEW RESEARCH ON TERRORISM
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Peter Shane Henne, University of Vermont
Disc:
Peter Shane Henne, University of Vermont
Papers: Agency Loss and Control Mechanisms in State
Sponsorship of Terrorism
Jeremy Matthew Berkowitz
Deterring Terrorism: Evidence from Israeli Military
Courts
Jonathan Monten, University College London
Drone Strikes and the Internal Organisation of Terrorist
Groups
Anouk S Rigterink, London School of Economics and
Political Science
Jihad al Nikah: Women in ISIS and Boko Haram
Mia M. Bloom, Georgia State University
Trigger Networks: Uncovering How and Why
Governments Sponsor Terrorist Groups
Nakissa Puneh Jahanbani, University at Albany
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
96.28
CHINA AND ITS NEIGHBORS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Feng Zhu, China Center for Collaborative Studies of the
South China Sea, Nanjing University
Disc:
Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: Persuasive Diplomacy: The Use of Advice in Sino-U.S.
Negotiations
Patricia M. Kim, Princeton University
Private Diplomacy, Tacit Understandings, and Lessons
from Chinas Rapprochement
Dalton Lin, Georgia Institute of Technology
Non-Leading States, Aggregated Reactions, and the
Problems of Power Transition
Ja Ian Chong, National University of Singapore
Undermining Power for the Sake of Prestige: China's
Response to India's Rise
Oriana Skylar Mastro, Georgetown University
China Visits the World: Civilian and Military
Diplomatic Exchanges in the Modern Era
Tyler Carl Jost
Austin Michael Strange

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 389

389

Daily Schedule

Papers: Third parties as amicus curiae: do they contribute to the


legalization of WTO?
Jeheung Ryu, University of Rochester
The Cost of Conditionality: Why Non-Democracies Are
Less Likely to Use GSP
Marc L. Busch, Georgetown University
Peter Sima-Eichler, Georgetown University
Jennifer L Tobin, Georgetown University

Free Riding in Multilateral Trade Negotiations? The


Case of WTO Accessions.
Amanda Kennard
The Impact of WTO Rules on Chinese Industrial Policy
Yeling Tan, Harvard University

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY


96.29
TAKING LEGISLATURES AND PARTIES
SERIOUSLY IN FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Glenn P. Hastedt, James Madison University
Disc:
Glenn P. Hastedt, James Madison University
Dov H. Levin, Carnegie Mellon University
Papers: A Farewell to Argument? Elite Consensus on National
Security
David Sylvan
Ashley Thornton, Graduate Institute
An Analysis of the Hillary Doctrine and US Foreign
Policy Legislation
Sara Angevine, Whittier College
Explaining Variation in US Foreign Policy
Bipartisanship
Jordan Tama, American University-SIS
Small Parties and National Security: Japan after
Electoral Reform
Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University
Amy Louise Catalinac, New York University
Hikaru Yamagishi, Yale University
The Politics of Foreign Security Policy Change
Yoon Jin Lee, Harvard University Government
Department
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
96.30
THE INFLUENCE OF TERRITORIAL CONTROL
ON CIVIL VIOLENCE
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Paul K. Huth, University of Maryland, College Park
Disc:
Joseph K. Young, American University
Emma Leonard Boyle
Papers: Constituency Control and Violence: Kenyan Election
Dynamics and Local Conflict
Andrew Martin Linke, University of Utah
Catherine Boone, London School of Economics and
Political Science (LSE)
Rebel Violence Against Civilians in Civil War
Nicholas Dietrich, Pennsylvania State University
Terrorist and Rebel Group Responses to Foreign Troops
and Military Bases
Alex Braithwaite, University of Arizona
Territorial Control and Violence Against Civilians in
Civil War
Michael Findley, University of Texas, Austin
Daniel Strandow
James Igoe Walsh, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
Jean-Claude Thill, University of North Carolina at
Charlotte
Matching Security to Development: The Impact of
Localized Aid on Insurgency
Jacob Aronson, University of Maryland, College Park
Deniz Cil, University of Maryland, College Park
Paul K. Huth, University of Maryland, College Park
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
96.31
THE MICRO-FOUNDATIONS OF
INTERNATIONAL COMMERCE AND CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Quan Li, Texas A&M University
Disc:
Erik Gartzke, UCSD

390

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 390

Papers: How the Degree of Commercial Power Deters the


Escalation of Inter-state Disputes
Anita R Kellogg, University of California, Los
Angeles
Enforcing Openness: Trade Protectionism and
Intervention in Civil War
Aysegul Aydin, University of Colorado, Boulder
Politics, Economics, and the Development of
International Rivalry
Katja B. Kleinberg, SUNY, Binghamton University
Benjamin O. Fordham, SUNY, Binghamton
Multinational Firms and the Microfoundations of the
Commercial Peace
Jiakun Zhang, UC San Diego
Trade Networks and Vulnerability to Sanctions
Timothy M. Peterson, University of South Carolina
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
96.32
LEGISLATIVE PROCEDURES: LESSONS FROM
BRAZIL
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Chair: Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston
Disc:
Jose Antonio Cheibub, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Papers: Partial Vetoes and Presidential-Legislative Relations in
Brazil
Valeria Palanza, Universidad Catolica de Chile
Gisela Sin, University of Illinois at U-C
Campaign Finance and Committee Assignment in Brazil
Chamber of Deputies.
Marco Aurelio Ruediger, Fundao Getulio Vargas
Luis Felipe Guedes Graca, Fundao Getulio Vargas
Corruption and Personal Ability in Brazilian LegislativeExecutive Relations
Rodrigo Burgarelli
Guilherme Jardim Duarte, University of Sao Paulo
Legislative Activism and Obstruction in Coalitional
Presidential Systems
Taeko Hiroi, University of Texas at El Paso
Lucio R. Renno
The Hidden Electoral Connection: Analyzing Legislators'
Information Requests
Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston
Juan Pablo Micozzi, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo
de Mexico
Margarita Maria Ramirez
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
96.33
POLITICAL ANGLES OF THE MODERN
PRESIDENCY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Adam L. Warber, Clemson University
Disc:
John J. Pitney, Claremont McKenna College
Papers: Can Presidents Change Their Party's Ideology?
William G. Mayer, Northeastern University
Did Nixon Quit Before He Resigned?
Matthew N. Beckmann, University of California,
Irvine
Helping Which Part of the Party? Presidential
Fundraising, 1977-2014
Brendan J. Doherty, U.S. Naval Academy

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Looking Forward to the New Administration


James D. King, University of Wyoming
James W. Riddlesperger, Texas Christian University
Political Humor and the 2016 Presidential Campaign
Todd L. Belt, University of Hawaii at Hilo
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
96.34
UNDERSTANDING MASS OPINION ABOUT
PUBLIC POLICIES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Chair:
Disc:

Melanie Marie Bowers, Rutgers University, Camden


Alison N Novak, Rowan University
Melanie Marie Bowers, Rutgers University, Camden

Papers: How Much Do Americans Know About the Taxes They


Pay?
Vanessa Williamson, Brookings Institution
Evaluating ANES Feeling Thermometers as Predictiors
of Support for Public Policy
Joseph Anthony, University of Missouri at St. Louis
Gender, Gender Bias, and Gun Policy Preferences: A
Quantitative Analysis
Noah J. Kaplan
Alexandra Filindra, University of Illinois at Chicago
Imagine All the People: Images of Rich and Poor and
Effects on Public Opinion
Meghan Condon, DePaul University
Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University
Public Opinion, Trust, and Social Investment: Evidence
from a New Survey
Julian Leonce Garritzmann, University of Konstanz
Marius R. Busemeyer, University of Konstanz
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
96.35
COURTS AND REGIME POLITICS
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Druscilla L. Scribner, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
Disc:
Druscilla L. Scribner, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
Julio Rios-Figueroa, CIDE

DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY


96.36
ELECTIONS, VOTING, AND PUBLIC OPINION IN
THE AMERICAN STATES
Room: Marriott, Room 306
Chair: Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State University

Papers: Early Voting: Do More Sites Lead to Higher Turnout in


Midterm Elections?
Elliott B. Fullmer, Randolph-Macon College
Economic Voting and Support for Constitutional
Conventions
William Dawes Blake, University of Maryland,
Baltimore County
Ian G. Anson, University of Maryland, Baltimore
County
Gender, Party Networks, and Women's Electoral Success
in the US States
Justin Kirkland, University of Houston
Jason H. Windett, Saint Louis University
Revisiting Majority-Minority Districts and Descriptive
Representation
Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida
Seth C. McKee, Texas Tech University
William D. Hicks
Carl E. Klarner, KlarnerPolitics
Immigration and the Changing Regional Subcultures of
the United States
Joel A. Lieske, Cleveland State University
DIVISION 30: URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
96.37
DEMOCRACY AND ENGAGEMENT IN URBAN
AND LOCAL POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 307
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

Chair:
Disc:

Hongtao Yi, The Ohio State University


Sara Hughes, University of Toronto

Papers: (Re)Building Local Democracy in Detroit


Lara Rusch, University of Michigan, Dearborn
Democracy Postponed: Changes in Democracy and
Participation at the Local Level
Meghan Wilson, Brown University
In No Uncertain Terms: Term Limits and the Story of
Municipal Reform
Douglas M. Cantor, University of Illinois, Chicago
New School Houses of Democracy? Nonprofit Services
and Political Engagement
Carolyn Barnes, Duke University
The More the Merrier? The Paradox of Citizen
Involvement in Local Politics
Wouter Van Erve, University of MassachusettsAmherst
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
96.38
WOMEN AND POLICYMAKING IN THE U.S.
STATES
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND
POLICY

Chair:
Disc:

Erin Heidt-Forsythe, Pennsylvania State University


Karen L. Baird, Purchase College, SUNY
Erin Heidt-Forsythe, Pennsylvania State University

Papers: Gender and Preventing Corruption in the US States


Jennifer C. Lucas

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 391

Daily Schedule

Papers: Auxiliary Justice in Authoritarian Regimes


Fiona Shen-Bayh
Bending but Not Breaking: Rule of Law Tensions and
Democratic Regime Survival
Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
Christopher M. Reenock, Florida State University
Beyond Competition: Party System Institutionalization
and Judicial Independence
Lucia Manzi, University of Notre Dame
Governing with Courts: The Political Origins of
Constitutional Justice
Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas at Austin
Abby Blass, University of Texas at Austin,
Government Dept.
Monitoring Compliance: Explaining Government
Compliance with Judicial Decisions
Yasser Kureshi, Brandeis University

Justin Levitt, California State University, Long Beach

391

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Partnering Up: Coalitions Between African American


Female and Latina Legislators
Ivy A.M. Cargile, California State University,
Bakersfield
Natasha Altema McNeely, University of Texas, Rio
Grande Valley
Representing Women: The Conceptualization of
Women's Interests in the US States
Regina Wagner
Who Represents the Needs of Domestic Violence
Victims in State Welfare Policy?
Anne Whitesell, Pennsylvania State University
Womens Representation in the State Legislature and
Trust in State Government
Mileah Kay Kromer, Goucher College
Ashley Aylward, Goucher College
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
96.39
RETHINKING EPISTEMOLOGY &
METHODOLOGY ASSUMPTIONS IN RACE &
ETHNIC STUDIES
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Papers: Epistemological Bias in US Political Behavior Research
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California,
Berkeley
The Other Side of the Curve: Reconsidering the Racial
Lesson of Obama's Election
Eric Gonzalez Juenke, Michigan State University
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
96.40
NEW APPROACHES TO RELIGION AND
VIOLENCE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Murad Idris, University of Virginia
Disc:
Murad Idris, University of Virginia
Papers: Measuring Violence in Religious Scriptures Using
Machine Learning Algorithms
Lefteris Jason Anastasopoulos, University of Georgia
Muhammed Y. Idris, Concordia University
Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University
Richard Zeckhauser, Harvard University
Unforeseen Consequences: Religious Violence and
Electoral Competition
Robert Thuan Brathwaite, Michigan State University
Baekkwan Park
An Integrated Theory of the Political Psychology of
Religious Violence
Carter A. Wilson, Northern Michigan University
Radical Honor: The Cultural Roots of Jihadist Ideology
Michael Marcusa
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
96.41
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND POLITICAL
PARTIES
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Disc:
Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University
Papers: Separate Yet Aligned: How Parties Remain
Programmatically Aligned with Movements
Steffen Blings, Cornell University
Social Movements and Electoral Politics: Effects of
Organization on Strategy
Stephanie Stanley, University of Washington

392

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 392

Tea Party Ideology: Party Platform or Party Faction?


Rachel Blum, Miami University
Why Party?: Organizational labels and American minor
party strategy and support
Catherine Kane
Kanisha Bond, University of Maryland, College Park
Workers of the World, Divide! - Organizational
Framework and Leftist Cohesion
Joseph Phillips, Pennsylvania State University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
96.42
ECONOMIC VOTING
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Timothy Hellwig, Indiana University, Bloomington
Disc:
Mary Stegmaier, University of Missouri
Papers: Inequality and Deviations from Economic Voting
Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside
Christopher Ojeda, Stanford University
Gary M. Segura, Stanford University
When Does the Economy Matter? A Multilevel Analysis
of Economic Voting
Johannes Bergh, Institute for social research
Anders Todal Jenssen, NTNU Trondheim
Partisan Bias in Economic Perceptions for Politically
(Un)Aware (Non)Partisans
Denver James Walton McNeney, McGill University
Daring to Fail: When Bad Economic Management can
be Electorally Rewarding
Ignacio Jurado, University of York
Elias Dinas, University of Oxford
Nikitas Konstantinidis, University of Cambridge
Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
96.43
PARTY COMPETITION IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Bonnie M. Meguid, University of Rochester
Disc:
Jae-Jae Spoon, University of Pittsburgh
Papers: Campaign Sentiment in European Party Manifestos
Matt Golder, Pennsylvania State University
More Than Words: Predicting Ambiguity and Position of
Party Manifestos
Daniel Lee, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Christian B. Jensen, UNLV
Voter Dealignment and Party Convergence
Ruth Dassonneville, Universite de Montreal
Survival of the Fittest. Party Entry and Exit among
Niche and Mainstream Parties
Marc van de Wardt, University of Amsterdam
Why Rhetoric about Unsavory Political Tactics
Threatens Electoral Accountability
Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University
Robyn Stiles, Louisiana State University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
96.44
YOU'RE ONLY HUMAN: ANTECEDENTS AND
CONSEQUENCES OF POLITICAL
POLARIZATION
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Kyle L. Saunders, Colorado State University
Disc:
Douglas Ahler, University of California, Berkeley

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

Papers: Culture War? A Theory and Evidence of Cultural


Conflict and Coalition in the US
Brendon Swedlow, Northern Illinois University
Was There a Cultural War? Polarization and Secular
Trends in US Public Opinion
Delia Baldassarri, New York University
Barum Park, New York University
Local News and Political Polarization
Joshua P. Darr, Louisiana State University
Johanna Dunaway, Texas A&M University
Matthew P. Hitt, Louisiana State University
Party Sorting: Are Identity- and Issue-based Sorting Two
Sides of the Same Coin?
Nicholas Davis, Louisiana State University
The Polarizing Effect of Unit Response Rate
Amnon Cavari, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)
Herzliya
Guy Freedman, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)
Herzliya
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
96.45
THE EFFECTS OF CAMPAIGN ADVERTISING
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Stephen K. Medvic, Franklin & Marshall College
Disc:
Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University
Papers: Are Candidate Advertisements More Persuasive in
English or in Spanish?
Alexander Coppock, Yale University
Alejandro Flores, University of Chicago
Do Mentions of Military Service Affect Evaluations of
Political Candidates?
Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
Jonathan D. Caverley, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Negativity in Campaigns: Unpacking the Effectiveness
of Negativity
Kim L. Fridkin, Arizona State University
Patrick Kenney, Arizona State University
Racial Cues in Political Ads: Comparing Affective vs.
Visual Attention
Charlton D. McIlwain, New York University
Stephen Maynard Caliendo, North Central College
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
96.46
INTERNATIONAL CLIMATE CHANGE POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 310
Chair: Joel R. Campbell, Troy University
Disc:
Mark Buntaine, University of California, Santa Barbara

DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND


POLITICS
96.47
THE PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE OF DIGITAL
POLITICS RESEARCH: A ROUNDTABLE
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: Andrew Chadwick
Part:
Jessica Baldwin-Philippi, Fordham University
Jessica L. Beyer, University of Washington
Shelley Boulianne, MacEwan University
David A. Karpf, George Washington University
Daniel Kreiss, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Chris Wells, University of Wisconsin-Madison
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
96.48
BEYOND POWER: WOMEN, POLITICS, AND
DEMOCRACY
Room: PCC, 111-A
Chair: Jerome C. Foss, Saint Vincent College
Disc:
Susan Catherine Alunan, Temple University
Mary A. McHugh, Merrimack College
Papers: Fictional Drama, Real Power: Gender & Power in
Popular Culture
Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University
Linda Beail, Point Loma Nazarene University
Fictional Political Dramas, Priming, and Gender Cues
for the Presidency
Ruthie Kelly
The Risk of Solidarity in Ergven's "Mustang"
Angela Maione, Harvard University
The Incarnation of My Native Land: Henry James on
Clover Adams & America
Natalie Taylor, Skidmore College
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
96.49
DICTATORS, REBELS, AND MILITIAS
PARTICIPATION IN POLITICS: CAUSES AND
EFFECTS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: Sarah Zukerman Daly, University of Notre Dame
Disc:
John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Papers: When a Dictator Becomes a Democrat: The Case of
Guatemala's Efran Ros Montt
Regina A. Bateson, MIT
Recycling Dictators: Former Military Regime Governors
in Argentina
Brett J. Kyle, University of Nebraska Omaha
Explaining the Success of Rebel and Militia Successor
Parties
Sarah Zukerman Daly, University of Notre Dame
When Successful Rebellion Brings Stable and
Democratic Rule
Benjamin Acosta
Kristen Ramos
Effects of Armed Actor Electoral Participation on Peace
Aila M. Matanock, University of California-Berkeley
Paul Staniland, University of Chicago

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 393

393

Daily Schedule

Papers: ENGO Networks: A Reaction to UNFCCC Participation


and Climate Policy Development
Aja Jacqueline Binette, Temple University
In Search of a Silver Bullet: Climate Change,
Technology, and the Global Ethos
Matthew Hodgetts, Brown University
The Politics of Civil Society Representation in Global
Environmental Governance
Prakash Kashwan, University of Connecticut
Frank Griggs
Transnational Climate Governance: Linking Institutional
Design to Effectiveness
Lily YW Hsueh, Arizona State University
Stefan Renckens, University of Toronto

Stuck in the Middle with Who? Identity and State


Commitments to the Environment
Colin Kuehl, University of California - Santa
Barbara

Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM

DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS


96.50
THE ROLE OF NORMS AND MEDIA IN
FULFILLING HUMAN RIGHTS
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Eric Michael Fattor, Hendrix College
Disc:
Eric Michael Fattor, Hendrix College

DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP


96.53
THE REFUGEE CRISIS: THEORY AND
PRACTICE
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University
Disc:
Robbie J. Totten, American Jewish University

Papers: The Quest for Human Rights in the Digital Age: Trends
and Transformation
Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State
University
Human Rights in Washington Declines While
Hollywood Increasingly Shows Concern
Michael Haas, California Polytechnic University,
Pomona
Media Freedom, Internet Access, and Gay Rights as
Human Rights
Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, University of
Massachusetts, Lowell
Christopher McKallagat
Evaluating the Impact of NGO Collective Standards on
NGO Behavior
Maryam Zarnegar Deloffre, Arcadia University
Transforming Transitional Justice from Below:
Colombias Pioneering Peace Accord
Jennifer McCoy, Georgia State University
Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University
Ryan Carlin, Georgia State University

Papers: How Do European States Respond to Mass


Displacement Crises?
Jessica L Jones, University of New Mexico
Increased Asylum Claims: The Impact on the European
Community
Aubrey Leigh Grant, George Mason University
Phoenix Rising or Dead Man Walking? UNHCRs
campaign to end statelessness
Kristy A. Belton
Explaining Migration and Refugee Issues in UN
Development Strategies
Daniel Naujoks, Columbia University

DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS


96.51
QUALITATIVE METHODS IN THE POLITICAL
SCIENCE DISCIPLINE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Ingo Rohlfing, University of Bremen
Disc:
Ingo Rohlfing, University of Bremen
Papers: Qualitative Methods Training in Political Science
Doctoral Programs
Cassandra Emmons, Princeton University
Andrew Moravcsik, Princeton University
Standing Your Ground: Qualitative Comparative
Analysis vs. Statistical Methods
Dawid Tatarczyk, Western Michigan University
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
96.52
PUBLIC OPINION, POLICY FEEDBACK AND
THE TRANSFORMING HEALTH SYSTEM
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Eric M. Patashnik, Brown University
Disc:
Eric M. Patashnik, Brown University
Papers: Is the ACAs Dependent Coverage Provision Generating
Policy Feedback Effects?
Jacqueline M. Chattopadhyay, University of North
Carolina at Charlotte
Transforming the Welfare State: The ACA and
Perceptions of Means-Tested Programs
H. Abbie Erler, Kenyon College
Should Government Care for the Sick? Explaining
Health Care Spending Preferences
Elizabeth Suhay, Government, American University
Toby Jayaratne, University of Michigan

394

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 394

DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND POLITICS


96.54
IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE AND THE PROMISE OF A
POLITICAL 'SCIENCE'
Room: Marriott, Room 309
Chair: Jeffrey Friedman, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Paul M. D. Gunn, Goldsmiths, University of London
Papers: Beyond Theory as Usual: Feminist Epistemology as
Theoretical Method
Emily Crandall, Graduate Center, CUNY
Political Acts, Generational Minds: Culture, Power, and
the Politics of Autonomy
Christopher Paul Harris, The New School for Social
Research
The "Behavioral Revolution" and the Great
Transformation in Political Science
Joshua R. Berkenpas, Minnesota State University,
Mankato
The Pitfall of Hypostatization/Reification and the Reality
of Social Things
Fred Eidlin, Karlova Universita (Charles University)
Translating Inequality: The Crafting of Affirmative
Action Policy
Tamar Hofnung, The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
Related Groups
97.1
AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT: CAN THE
LEFT GET RIGHT WITH THE FOUNDING?
Room: Loews, Commonwealth D
Chair: Carson L. Holloway, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Disc:
Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame
Carson L. Holloway, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Papers: Can the Left Get Right with the Founding?
Alan Ray Gibson, California State University, Chico
The Old Regime and the New Deal
Greg Weiner, Assumption College
Public Constitutional Argument: Have Progressives
Abandoned the Field?
James H. Read, St. John's University/ College of
Saint Benedict

Saturday, 5:30 PM to 6:30 PM

97.2

Room:
Chair:
Disc:

ASSOCIATION OF CHINESE POLITICAL


STUDIES: CONFLICT AND COOPERATION:
STATE AND SOCIETY IN CONTEMPORARY
CHINA
Marriott, Room 412
Vera Leigh Fennell, Lehigh University
June Park
Vera Leigh Fennell, Lehigh University

Papers: Close Encounters of the First Time: Tourist Peace in the


Cross-Strait Relations
Hsin-Hsin Pan, National Taiwan University
Wen-Chin Wu, Academia Sinica
Yu-tzung Chang, National Taiwan University
Internet Political Participation Activity and Political
Trust in China
Dapeng Wang, Peking University
Chunying Yue, Peking University
Major Event and Political Career in China: Evidence
from the 2008 Olympics
Li Fang, University of Maryland, College Park
Who Runs the Power? Anticorruption Enforcement and
Political Power in China
LI LI, Tsinghua University
Rising Image of Rising China? Exploring Mass
Perception of China
Narisong Huhe, University of Strathclyde
Min Tang, Shanghai University of Finance and
Economics
Jie Chen, James Madison University
97.3
ASSOCIATION OF KOREAN POLITICAL
STUDIES: POLITICS OF KOREAN PENINSULA
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Taehyun Nam, Salisbury University
Disc:
Mikyoung Kim, Hiroshima Peace Institute

Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee 1 (Concepts


and Methods)

Chair:
Disc:

Philip G. Cerny, Manchester/Rutgers


Giulio M. Gallarotti, Wesleyan University
Julie Mostov, Drexel University

Papers: Analyzing Power in a Post-Westphalian World


Thomas Biebricher, Goethe University Frankfurt
Wielding Soft Power through Narration
Sarina Theys, Newcastle University
Relational Freedom, Power-with, and the Sociality of
Authority
Carol C. Gould, City University of New York
Migration and the Transformation of Political Power
Gallya Lahav, Stony Brook University
Political Power in Russia: Consolidation, Transition or
Fragmentation?
Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University
97.7
LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDY
GROUP: REDISTRICTING AFTER EVENWEL:
THE PROSPECTS FOR ONE PERSON, ONE
VOTE
Room: Marriott, Room 410
Chair: Bruce E. Cain, Stanford University
Part:
Joseph Fishkin, University of Texas
Luis Ricardo Fraga
Jonathan N. Katz, California Institute of Technology
Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
Nathaniel Persily, Stanford University
Douglas Smith

Saturday, 5:30 PM to 6:30 PM


APSA Events
98.1
APSA STATUS COMMITTEE CHAIRS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 301

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 395

395

Daily Schedule

Papers: Exchange Rate Policy and Policy Diffusion: The Case of


South Korea
Hyunsook Moon-Chen, University of California,
Santa Barbara
Foreign Aid to North Korea and Its Determinants
Heon Joo Jung, Yonsei University
Geon Woo Park, yonsei university
Myeonggeun Ji, Yonsei University
Gender Politics: Unexpected Turn of the Sewol Ferry
Sinking
Mikyoung Kim, Hiroshima Peace Institute
The International Political Economy of Yellow Dust
Matthew A. Shapiro, Illinois Institute of Technology
The Mysterious Overvaluation of KRW in the 1990s
Byunghwan Son, George Mason University
Is there Class Voting under Rising Inequality in Korea?
Yoonkyung Lee, University of Toronto
Jong-sung You, The Australian National University
97.4
CICERONIAN SOCIETY: CICERONIAN SOCIETY
2016 APSA RELATED GROUP PANEL
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: Peter Daniel Haworth, Ciceronian Society
Disc:
Peter Daniel Haworth, Ciceronian Society
Joshua J Bowman, Louisiana State University

Papers: State, Individual, and Association: Robert Nisbet and the


First Amendment Dyad
Luke Charles Sheahan, Duke University
Scientism, Politics, and Destruction in Robert Penn
Warrens All the Kings Men
Justin David Garrison, Roanoke College
The Confines of Prudence: Montesquieus Spirit and
the Science of Politics
Zachary German, University of Notre Dame
Did the Constitution Destroy a Politics of Place? The
Debates Reconsidered
Jeffrey Polet, Hope College
97.5
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY: SUPREME COURT ROUNDTABLE
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: Bradley C.S. Watson, Saint Vincent College
Part:
John C. Eastman, Chapman University
Robert Alt, The Buckeye Institute
Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin
Hadley Arkes, Amherst College
97.6
IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #36 (POWER):
SOCIAL TRANSFORMATIONS AND THE
CHANGING FACES OF POWER
Room: Marriott, Room 409

Saturday, 5:30 PM to 7:00 PM

Saturday, 5:30 PM to 7:00 PM

102.2

APSA Events
99.1
PEARSON RECEPTION
Room: PCC, 303-AB

Room:
102.3

Saturday, 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM

Room:
102.4

APSA Events
100.1
MENA WORKSHOPS ALUMNI AND FRIENDS
RECEPTION
Room: Offsite, Offsite TBD
100.2
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE INVITED LECTURE
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1

Saturday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM


APSA Events
101.1
APSA CONGRESSIONAL FELLOWS, ALUMNI,
AND FRIENDS HAPPY HOUR
Room: Marriott, Circ Bar
101.2
BOOK RECEPTION FOR CONTESTED
TRANSFORMATION: RACE, GENDER AND
POLITICAL LEADERSHIP IN 21ST CENTURY
AMERICA
Room: Marriott, Room 308
101.3
CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: PCC, 104-B
101.4
COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 309
101.5
COMPARATIVE POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
101.6
EITM BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 408
101.7
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
101.8
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 305
101.9
HEALTH POLITICS & POLICY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
101.10 IN THE FIELD: POLITICAL SCIENCE MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 409
101.11 JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 303
101.12 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Loews, Washington C
101.13 REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING AND AWARDS
CEREMONY
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
101.14 WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 306

Saturday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM


APSA Events
102.1
APSA GRADUATE STUDENT HAPPY HOUR
Room: Marriott, Liberty Ballroom

396

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 396

Room:

CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES


RECEPTION
Marriott, Room 411
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF
POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
Loews, Congress B
UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER DEPARTMENT
OF POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
Loews, Congress A

Saturday, 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM


APSA Events
103.1
THE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION
FOUNDATION BOARD OF EDITORS ANNUAL
MEETING
Room: Marriott, Salon A

Saturday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM


APSA Events
104.1
COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION SECTION
RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Room 310
104.2
COMPARATIVE POLITICS SECTION
RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
104.3
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY RECEPTION
Room: Loews, Tubman
104.4
HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY SECTION
RECEPTION
Room: Loews, Congress C
104.5
NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
104.6
RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER INSTITUTE (RBSI)
30TH ANNIVERSARY RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Independence Ballroom
104.7
THE WILF FAMILY DEPARTMENT OF POLITICS
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY RECEPTION
Room: Loews, Commonwealth D
104.8
YALE UNIVERSITY, POLITICAL SCIENCE
RECEPTION
Room: Marriott, Room 407

Saturday, 8:00 PM to 9:00 PM


APSA Events
105.1
CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Marriott, Room 410

Sunday, September 4, 2016


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
APSA Events
106.1
STRUCTURES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
REVOLUTIONS: DA-RT AND AUDIT CULTURES
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Chair: Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University
Part:
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University
Ido Oren, University of Florida
Timothy Pachirat
Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
107.1
EARLY MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine
Disc:
Jerome C. Foss, Saint Vincent College
Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine
Papers: John Milton on Toleration, Liberty of Conscience, and
Religious Worship
Amy Gais, Yale University
Playing Cards as Political Theory: From Popish Plot to
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Andrew R. Murphy, Rutgers University, New
Brunswick
The Cruelty of the Spaniards in Peru: Liberty refigured
on stage for Cromwell
Ted H. Miller, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
The Treasures of the Kingdom: Localism in Early
Modern Europe
Ethan Alexander-Davey, University of Richmond
Theories of Slavery in Early-Modern Theories of Natural
Rights
John Harpham, Harvard University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
107.2
BEYOND CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE: NEW
PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICAL
TRANSFORMATION
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Jennet Kirkpatrick, Arizona State University
Disc:
Jennet Kirkpatrick, Arizona State University
Papers: The Civil Rights Movements Exemplarity in Liberal
Political Philosophy
Brandon M. Terry, Harvard University
Inventing Civil Disobedience
Alexander Livingston, Cornell University
Neither Civil Nor Uncivil: The Strike as a Political
Problem
Alexander H. Gourevitch, Brown University
Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights, and American
Exceptionalism
Erin Pineda, University of Chicago
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
107.3
JUDGEMENT AND RESPONSIBILITY
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Shalini Pradeepa Satkunanandan, University of
California, Davis
Disc:
Shalini Pradeepa Satkunanandan, University of
California, Davis

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


107.4
OUT OF THE PAST: RACE, AFFECT, AND
RADICAL FUTURES
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Bonnie Honig, Brown University
Disc:
Jaskiran Dhillon, The New School
Papers: Settler Memory, US Race Politics, and the Fear of an
Indigenous Futurity
Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson College
Neoliberal Latinidad and Community-Time in the Day
Labor Movement
Paul C. Apostolidis, Whitman College
Straight Outta Congress: Conservative Latinidad and the
2016 Election
Cristina Beltran, New York University
Epigenetic Politics: Promises and Perils
Annie Menzel, Vassar College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
107.5
PRIMITIVE ACCUMULATION AND THE GREAT
TRANSFORMATION
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: William Clare Roberts, McGill University
Disc:
Banu Bargu, New School for Social Research
Alexander Keller Hirsch, University of Alaska
Papers: Theorizing the Violence of Capital: Beyond Primitive
Accumulation
Onur Ulas Ince, Koc University
Dispossession: A Conceptual Reconstruction
Robert Nichols, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
The Primitive Accumulation of Land in America
K-Sue Park, Texas RioGrande Legal Aid
The Past, Present, and Future of Primitive
Accumulation
William Clare Roberts, McGill University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
107.6
DEMOCRATIC VALUES: KNOWLEDGE,
FLEXIBILITY, AND POLITICAL EQUALITY
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: David W. McIvor, Colorado State University
Disc:
David W. McIvor, Colorado State University
Papers: Democracy as Good in Itself: Three Kinds of NonInstrumental Justification
Christian F. Rostboll, University of Copenhagen
Democratic Competence and Normative Democratic
Theory
Matthew Stephen McCoy, University of Pennsylvania
Expert Knowledge and Democratic Politics
Zeynep Pamuk, Harvard University
Getting it Right: Democracy and Flexibility
David Watkins, University of Dayton
Risk Taking in War and Democratic Inclusivity
Jason Toby Reiner, Dickinson College
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
107.7
THEORY AND METHODS / METHODS OF
THEORY
Room: PCC, 106-AB

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 397

397

Daily Schedule

Papers: An Ideal of Political Maturity for Us Ordinary People


Farid Abdel-Nour, San Diego State University
Friendship Reconsidered: How Does Friendship Matter
to Politics?
Paige Digeser, University of California, Santa
Barbara
From Resentment to Responsibility: Nietzsche and
Political Responsibility
Michael Christopher Sardo, Northwestern University

Ich fhle mich nicht schuldig (I do not feel guilty):


From Doubts to Murder
Claudia Leeb, Washington State University

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Chair:
Disc:

Michael T. Gibbons
Michael Neblo, Ohio State University

Papers: Manipulation and the Ethics of Field Experiments in


Political Science
Gregory Whitfield, Washington University
Ronald Coases Moral Psychology: Institutions, Markets,
and Norms
Abraham A. Singer, University of Rochester
The Utopian Shadow of Normative Reconstruction
Matthew T. C. Shafer, Yale University
Democratic Design: Modelling Political Futures
Michael Saward, University of Warwick
The Logic of Inference of Thought Experiments in
Political Theory
Adrian Blau, King's College London
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
107.8
THEORY OF ELECTIONS
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Stephane Wolton, London School of Economics
Disc:
Christopher Li
Papers: A Dynamic Model of Primary Elections
Tara L Slough, Columbia University
Michael M. Ting, Columbia University
Erin York
Electoral Competition in Legislative Elections
Gleason Judd, University of Rochester
Ideological Networks
Torun Dewan, London School of Economics
Francesco Squintani
Issue Salience and Electoral Campaigns
Tiberiu C. Dragu, New York University
Xiaochen Fan, New York University
Parties versus Presidents: The Strategic Use of
Legislative Primaries
Shinhye Choi, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
107.9
ANGRY AND ANXIOUS POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Room 408
Chair: Jennifer Wolak, University of Colorado, Boulder
Disc:
Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Shana Kushner Gadarian, Syracuse University
Papers: Emotional Reactions to Threat Motivate Different Types
of Information Seeking
Travis Coan
Jennifer L. Merolla, University of California,
Riverside
Elizabeth J. Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University
Daniel Zizumbo-Colunga, Centro de Investigacin y
Docencia Econmicas
Examining Contempt and Anger as Factors in Candidate
Evaluation
David P. Redlawsk, University of Delaware
Kyle Mattes, University of Iowa
Ira Roseman, Rutgers University, CCAS
Ideology, Motivated Reasoning, and Emotion
Elizabeth Suhay, Government, American University
Cengiz Erisen, TOBB University of Economics and
Technology

398

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 398

Voting for Radical Right-Wing Parties: The Role of Fear


Michael F. Meffert, Leiden University
Explaining Bias against LGBT Americans: A Validation
of an LGBT Animus Scale
Andrew Thomas Proctor, Princeton University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
107.10 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF AUTHORITARIAN
POLITICS
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Nicole Rae Baerg, University of Mannheim
Disc:
Nicole Rae Baerg, University of Mannheim
Papers: Authoritarian Lobbying and Local Officials' Incentives
in Education Provision
Fengming Lu, Duke University
Xiaoyang Ye, University of Michigan
Authoritarian Politics as Origins of Tax Capacity
Nikola Milicic, University of Toronto
Breaking down Authoritarian Regimes: an Analysis of
Economic Growth Theories
Scott G. Feinstein, University of Florida
Elections, Economic Shocks, and Authoritarian
Breakdown
Adrian Lucardi, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de
Mexico
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
107.11 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF VIOLENCE
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Haley J. Swedlund, Radboud University Nijmegen
Disc:
Caroline Tynan, Temple University
Haley J. Swedlund, Radboud University Nijmegen
Papers: Forces of Darkness: Proto-states, Armed Conflict, and
Resource Allocation
Christopher K. Butler, University of New Mexico
Scott Gates, PRIO
Hvard Mokleiv Nygrd, Peace Research Institute
Oslo (PRIO)
Siri Aas Rustad, Peace Research Institute Oslo
General Deprivation, Attributable Grievances, and Mass
Unrest
Henry Thomson, Nuffield College, University of
Oxford
Inequality and Military Mass Mobilization in the United
States and Europe
Ronald L. Rogowski, University of California, Los
Angeles
Dan Vese, University of California, Los Angeles
The Economic Determinants of Political Violence
Leonardo Baccini, McGill University
State Formation and Social Conflict: Evidence from the
Swiss Old Confederacy
Jakob Schneebacher, Yale University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
107.12 HISTORY, POLITICS, AND LAND CONFLICT
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Disc:
Michael Albertus, University of Chicago
Papers: Indigenous Movements, Histories of Conflict, and Land
Governance in Argentina
Matthias vom Hau, Institut Barcelona d'Estudis
Internacionals

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Of Lawyers and Experts: Language of Law and the


Limits of Social Transformation
Sandipto Dasgupta, Kings College London
The Strength of Land Rights under the Porfiriato
Maria Paula Saffon, Princeton University
Juan F. Gonzalez Bertomeu, New York University
Colonial Indirect Rule, Land Inequality and Maoist
Insurgency in India
Shivaji Mukherjee, University of Toronto
Institutions and Values in Rural Liberia: A Theory of
Land Dispute Dynamics
Alexandra Hartman, Yale University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
107.13 ADVANCES IN IDEAL POINT ESTIMATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

Chair:
Disc:

Jeffrey B. Lewis, UCLA


Adam Bonica
Miranda Yaver, Washington University in St. Louis

Papers: A Bayesian Common Space for Citizens and Legislators


Within and Across Countries
Constanza F. Schibber, Washington University in St.
Louis
Legal Ideal Points: Estimating a Legal Common Space
for Federal Political Actors
Matthew James Sweeten, University of Rochester
Time-Invariant Estimates of Agency Ideology on a
Congressional Common Space
Mark D. Richardson
Joshua D. Clinton, Vanderbilt University
David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt University
Using Experiments to Improve Ideal Point Estimation in
Text in Advertisements
John A. Henderson, Yale University
Selection Effects and Supreme Court Ideal Points:
Evidence from Cert Votes
Ben Johnson, Princeton University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
107.14 VARIABLE SELECTION: METHODS AND
APPLICATIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Disc:
Chiara Superti, Columbia University
Yuki Shiraito, Princeton University

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


107.16 INFORMAL INSTITUTIONS OF GOVERNANCE:
ORIGINS, DYNAMICS, AND CONSEQUENCES
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Eduardo Moncada, Barnard College, Columbia
University
Disc:
Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Permanently Deportable: Formal & Informal Institutions
of a Guest Worker System
Noora Anwar Lori, Boston University
Do Weberian Bureaucracies Lead to Markets or Vice
Versa?
Yuen Yuen Ang, University of Michigan
A Party of One: Origins and Success of Personalistic
Parties in Eastern Europe
Gavril K. Bilev, Merrimack College
Kiril Kolev
Conceptualizing Informal Institutions: A Content
Analysis on Vigilantism
Eduardo Moncada, Barnard College, Columbia
University
Jorge Antonio Alves, Queens College, CUNY
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
107.17 STATE BUILDING AND DEVELOPMENT:
THEORY AND METHOD
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Florian Max Benjamin Hollenbach, Texas A&M
University
Disc:
Florian Max Benjamin Hollenbach, Texas A&M
University
Papers: Civil War, State Consolidation, and the Spread of Mass
Education
Agustina S Paglayan, Stanford University
Postal Services and Development: An Infrastructural
Story
John Gerring, Department of Political Science,
Boston University
Jon C. Rogowski, Harvard University
Social Policy and State-building in Southeast Asia
Arun R. Swamy, University of Guam

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 399

399

Daily Schedule

Papers: A Method for Identifying Optimal Minimum Sets of


Variables
Stephanie Dornschneider, University College Dublin
Stefan Dantchev, Durham University
Macroeconomic Conditions and Presidential Approval:
Mechanisms and Measurements
Taeyong Park
Making Good Prediction: A Theoretical Framework
Adeline Lo
Modeling Changes in Legislators Information Source
Usage in the Policy Process
Chi Chang, Michigan State University
Cynthia Jackson-Elmoore, Michigan State University
Frank Lawrence
Kent Patrick Dell, Michigan State University Honors
College

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


107.15 HOW CULTURAL FRAMEWORKS SHAPE THE
POLITICS OF CRISIS
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University
Papers: Imagine all the People: the Cultural and Literary Origins
of Education Reform
Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University
How Do We Know What Politics Means? Analytics for
Thinking Through Culture
Mabel Berezin, Cornell University
How Cultural Frameworks Shape the Politics of Crisis:
Portugal and Spain
Robert M. Fishman, Carlos III University, Madrid
Icons of Rebellion and Quiescence: The Politics of
Visual Confrontations
Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Church Space, State Space: A Comparative History of
Nonprofit Sector Variations
Sigrun Kahl, Yale University

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Surveying State Capacity: New Methods and Data from


Chile
Hillel David Soifer, Temple University
Juan Pablo Luna, Instituto de Ciencia Poltica, PUCChile
Elite Networks and State Capacity: Evidence from a
Natural Experiment in China
Junyan Jiang, University of Chicago
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
107.18 THE POLITICS OF PUBLIC GOODS
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Cristina Corduneanu-Huci, Central European University
Disc:
Steven Brooke, University of Louisville
Papers: Autocratic Ways of Regime Legitimation through Social
Policies
Stefan Wurster, University Trier
Steffen Kailitz, Hannah Arendt Institute
Education as Public Good or Private Resource in
Postrevolutionary Iran
Shervin Malekzadeh, Swarthmore College
Expansion of the Left?: Social Security Taxation and
Spending in LDCs
Melissa Ziegler Rogers, Claremont Graduate
University
Eunyoung Ha, Claremont Graduate University
Models of Social Protection: The Left and the Popular
Sectors in Latin America
Andres Schipani, UC Berkeley
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
107.19 AUTHORITARIAN LEGISLATURES
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Ching-Hsing Wang, Hobby Center for Public Policy at
the University of Houston
Disc:
Mayling Birney, London School of Economics
Papers: Careers and Causes: Participation in Authoritarian
Legislatures
Sarah Bouchat, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Defection in Authoritarian Legislatures: Evidence from
Peru's Fujimori Regime
Jessie Bullock, Harvard University
Solving Principal-Agent Problems in Authoritarian
Legislatures
Joy Langston, CIDE
Democratization without Demolition? Legislature
Transformation in China
Qinghua Yi, Simon Fraser University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
107.20 POST-CONFLICT PUBLIC GOODS PROVISION
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Svetoslav Misak Derderyan
Disc:
Ila Singh
Papers: Constructing the Caliphate: Patterns of State-Building in
the "Islamic State"
Quinn Mecham, Brigham Young University
Democratization and the Resolution of Civil Conflicts in
Southeast Asia
Terence C. Lee, National University of Singapore

400

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 400

Imagined Statehood: Rebel Governance and Subnational


Identity in Sri Lanka
Yuichi Kubota, University of Niigata Prefecture
Reconciling Tradition & Modernity for Peace Building
Assessing Attitudes among Somalis
Rahma Abdulkadir, New York University-Abu Dhabi
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
107.21 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF UPS AND
DOWNS: THE BRAZILIAN CASE
Room: PCC, 113-A
Chair: Umberto Mignozzetti, New York University
Disc:
Taylor C. Boas, Boston University
Rodolpho Bernabel, New York University
Papers: Innovation with Rent-seeking: Petrobras and the Limits
of State Capitalism
Renato Lima De Oliveira, MIT
Enduring Democracies but Unsatisfied Citizens? Political
Distrust Revisited
Thiago Nascimento da Silva, Texas A&M University
Promotions to General in the Brazilian Army: Does
Civilian Input Matter?
Bruno Hoepers, University of Pittsburgh
2015 Brazilian Economic Crisis and Government
Approval: a Comparative Study
Alessandro Farage Figueiredo, Oswaldo Cruz
Foundation
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
107.22 POLITICAL CHANGE IN EASTERN EUROPE
Room: PCC, 202-B
Disc:
Marc P. Berenson, King's College London
Papers: Radical Right Parties in Ukraine
Lenka Bustikova, Arizona State University
The Political Survival of Prime Ministers in Central and
Eastern Europe
Florian Grotz, Helmut-Schmidt-University Hamburg
Till Weber, Baruch College, CUNY
Through Thick and Thin: Group Loyalties and Party
Switching in CEE
Peter Jan Tunkis, The Ohio State University
Testing the Role of Ethnicity in the Collapse of the
Soviet Union Using New Data
Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley
Cynthia S. Kaplan, University of California, Santa
Barbara
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
107.23 DEMOCRACY AND LEGITIMACY IN THE
EUROZONE
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: David R. Cameron, Yale University
Disc:
Vivien A. Schmidt, Boston University
Papers: Can the EU Creat a Deep, Genuine and Democratic
EMU?
David R. Cameron, Yale University
Challenges to Power in European Integration Theory
Joel D. Wolfe, University of Cincinnati

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Asymmetric Governance and the Eurozone Debt Crisis:


The Influence of Ideas
Miguel Glatzer, La Salle University
Michel Goyer, University of Birmingham
Rocio Valdivielso del Real, University of Warwick
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
107.24 EMPLOYERS, LABOR, AND POLICY REFORMS
IN EUROPE
Room: PCC, 203-A
Chair: Daniel Phillip Kinderman, University of Delaware
Disc:
Tobias Schulze-Cleven, Rutgers University
Papers: In the Interest of Labor: Trade Unions and Taxation in
Europe
Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh
Achim Kemmerling, CEU Budapest
Neo-Liberal Think-Tanks and Employers Quest for
Liberalization in DE and SE
Daniel Phillip Kinderman, University of Delaware
Non-Corporatist Social Bargaining in Welfare Reforms
Sung Ho Park, Yonsei University, Wonju Campus
The Not So Different Politics of Inequality in Social
Europe and Liberal America
Michael Baggesen Klitgaard, University of Southern
Denmark
Melike Wulfgramm, University of Southern Denmark
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
107.25 EMERGING FRONTIERS IN THE GLOBAL
ECONOMY
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Tamar Gutner, American University-SIS
Disc:
Miles Kahler, American University
Soo Yeon Kim, National University of Singapore
Papers: Intra-industry Trade and Vulnerability to Sanctions
William Akoto, University of South Carolina
Timothy M. Peterson, University of South Carolina
Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University
Investing in the Homeland: The Political Economy of
Diaspora Direct Investment
Benjamin A.T. Graham, University of Southern
California
Paternalism and Collective Action in GATT
Negotiations
J.P. Singh, George Mason University
Taking Exception to Imported Culture: Globalized
Entertainment & Trade Conflicts
Kerry A. Chase, Brandeis University
Nanotechnology and Global Governance in OECD
countries
Kirsten L. Rodine-Hardy, Northeastern University

Papers: Institutional Lock-in and the Limits of


Diffusion:Evidence from Trade Agreements
Lisa Lechner, University Salzburg

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY


107.27 THE POLITICS OF FOREIGN DIRECT
INVESTMENT
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Amy Pond, Texas A&M University
Disc:
Andrew Kerner, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia
Papers: Firm Preferences over Multidimensional Trade Policies
and Investor Protection
Helen V. Milner, Princeton University
In Song Kim, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Expropriation, Political Institutions, and Openness
Vincent Arel-Bundock, Universite de Montreal
Amy Pond, Texas A&M University
Foreign Presence, Market Structure, and Corruption
Pablo Martin Pinto, University Houston
Boliang Zhu, Pennsylvania State University
Do Democracies Attract More Foreign Direct
Investment? A Meta Analysis
Quan Li, Texas A&M University
Erica Owen, Texas A&M University
Kelly McCaskey, State University of New York at
Buffalo
Austin Michael Mitchell, Texas A&M University
Foreign Direct Liberalization for One, or for All?
Nathan M. Jensen, University of Texas at Austin
Aparna Ravi
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
107.28 THE DESIGN OF INTERNATIONAL
INSTITUTIONS
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Tobias Hofmann, National University of Singapore
Disc:
Tobias Hofmann, National University of Singapore
Papers: Breadth versus Depth in International Security
Institutions
Jeffrey Kaplow, College of William & Mary
Designing Cooperation: Incentive and Screening under
Objective Uncertainty
Jia Chen, National University of Singapore
Rethinking the Concept of Flexibility in International
Institutions
Erin R. Graham, Drexel University
Zoltan I. Buzas, Drexel University
The Changing Rules of International Organizations:
Evidence from a New Dataset
Erica R Gould, Stanford University
The Design of International Institutions for Humanitarian
Aid
Matthew DiLorenzo, Vanderbilt University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 401

401

Daily Schedule

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY


107.26 POLICY DIFFUSION IN THE INTERNATIONAL
ECONOMY
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Kathryn C. Lavelle, Case Western Reserve University
Disc:
Alexandra Guisinger, Temple University

Migrant Networks and International Immigration Policy


Diffusion
Adrian J. Shin, University of Colorado, Boulder
The Global Diffusion of Competition Policy: A Spatial
Analysis
Tim Buthe
Shahryar Minhas, Duke University
Politics of Peripheral Diffusion:Non-member Responses
to Basel Banking Standards
Alexandra Olivia Zeitz, University of Oxford

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY


107.29 CULTURE IN POWER TRANSITIONS: SINOAMERICAN CONFLICT IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Robert Jervis, Columbia University
Disc:
David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University
Will Lowe, Princeton University
Papers: Chinas Shopping Spree for Legitimacy: How Much Can
China=Money Buy?
Victoria Tin-bor Hui, University of Notre Dame
Culture in Hegemonic Power Transitions: The United
States and Britain 1870-1900
Gregory Mitrovich, Saltzman Institute of War and
Peace Studies
Assessing Chinese Soft Power across Media Markets:
Determinants of Success
Erin K. Jenne, Central European University
Juraj Medzihorsky, Central European University
Chinese versus Russian Soft Power: Confucius Institutes
and Russkiy Mir Programs
Milos Popovic, Columbia University
Juraj Medzihorsky, Central European University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
107.30 LEADER SURVIVAL, COUPS AND MASS
PROTESTS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Chair: Clayton L Thyne, University of Kentucky
Disc:
Nikolay V. Marinov, University of Mannheim
Papers: Non-Violent Anti-Regime Uprisings and Coups
Nam Kyu Kim, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Alex Kroeger, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Coups, Economy and Political Institutions in Autocracies
Jun Koga Sudduth, University of Strathclyde
Curtis Bell, University of Tennessee at Knoxville
U.S. Military Assistance and Civil-Military Relations
during Mass Protests
Clayton L Thyne, University of Kentucky
Jonathan M. Powell, University of Central Florida
Leader Survival, Coups, and Sanctions
Livio Di Lonardo, New York University
Scott Tyson, University of Chicago
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
107.31 WOMEN, THE STATE, AND WAR: NEW
RESEARCH ON WOMEN IN COMBAT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
RESEARCH

Chair:
Disc:

James H. Lebovic, George Washington University


Anita R. Gohdes, Harvard University

Papers: Survivors, Perpetrators, and Cases of Sexual Violence in


National Action Plans
Kerry Frances Crawford
Womens Representation in War Photography: The
Perpetuation of a Grand Narrative
Emerald Archer, Woodbury University
To Fire or Not to Fire? Psychological Responses to
Women in War
Julia M. Macdonald, University of Denver
Jacquelyn Schneider, Naval War College

402

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 402

Women at Arms: Full Combat Inclusion and Workforce


Optimization
Katherine Kidder, Center for a New American
Security
Female Combatants, Rebel Legitimacy, and Civil
Conflict Termination
Reed M. Wood, Arizona State University
Jakana Thomas, Michigan State University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
107.32 STATUS, POWER TRANSITION, AND CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Chair: Deborah Welch Larson, UCLA Political Science
Department
Disc:
Steven Ward, Cornell University
Papers: International Status Loss and Presidential Approval
Ryan M. Powers
Jonathan Renshon
Asymmetrical Competitors: Status Competition and
Sino-India Rivalry
Xiaoyu Pu, University of Nevada, Reno
When Do Great Power Aspirations Lead to Conflict?
Russia vs. China
Deborah Welch Larson, UCLA Political Science
Department
Alexei Shevchenko, California State University,
Fullerton
Power Transitions, Status, and War: The Sino-Japanese
War of 1894-1895
Andrew Q. Greve, Rutgers University
Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University
Accounting for Turkey Inc.: A Paradigm-Bridging
Approach to Emerging Powers
Sebnem Gumuscu, Middlebury College
Nora Fisher Onar
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
107.33 NEW DATA ON MILITANT GROUPS: A SURVEY
OF FORTHCOMING DATASETS
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Laila Wahedi
Part:
Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Page Fortna, Columbia University
Justin Conrad, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Matthias Basedau, GIGA German Institute of Global and
Area Studies
Jonathan Pinckney, Sie Cheou-Kang Center, University
of Denver
Lisa Singh, Georgetown University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
107.34 THE LOGIC OF TERRORISM
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: MaryBeth E. Altier, New York University
Disc:
Sebastian Schutte, University of Konstantz
Papers: Spatial Spill-overs in the Impact of Islamist Terrorism
on Western Tourism
Eric Neumayer, London School of Economics
Thomas Pluemper, University of Essex

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Terrorist Transformations: The Link Between


Organizational Roles & Disengagement
MaryBeth E. Altier, New York University
Emma Leonard Boyle
John G. Horgan, Pennsylvania State University
Neil David Shortland, Pennsylvania State University
Terrorists and Civilian Support: The Importance of
Territory
Srobana Bhattacharya, Georgia Southern University
The Logic of Selective and Indiscriminate Terrorist
Violence
Sara Polo, Rice University
The Effect of Leaders and Leader Transition on the
Survival of Terrorist Groups
Brian Lai, University of Iowa
Stephen C. Nemeth, Oklahoma State University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
107.35 VIOLENT AND NONVIOLENT MOBILIZATION
PROCESSES IN ARMED CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex
Disc:
Yael Zeira, University of Mississippi
Papers: Feeling the Pinch: Economic Shocks, Government
Credibility, and Mass Mobilization
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex
Gerald Schneider, University of Konstanz
Social Roots of Revolution: Gandhians, Maoists, and
Insurgent Strategy in Nepal
Ches Thurber, Northern Illinois University
Walls as a Nonviolent Strategy in Armed Conflict: The
Case of Colombia
Natalie Southwick, University of Denver
Oliver Kaplan, University of Denver
From Onset to Sustained Opposition: Explaining
Dissident Organizational Success
Consuelo Amat, Yale University
Marketing Rebellion: Choices of Violence and
Nonviolence in National Movements
Victoria McGroary, Brandeis University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
107.36 LEGISLATIVE PARTY DISCIPLINE
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Shane Martin, University of Essex
Disc:
Shane Martin, University of Essex

DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS


107.37 DYNAMICS OF UNILATERAL POWER
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Robert A. Cooper, University of Georgia
Disc:
Sharece Thrower, Vanderbilt University
Fang-Yi Chiou, Academia Sinica
Papers: Agency Variation in Presidential Management of
Executive Orders
Andrew C. Rudalevige, Bowdoin College
Landmark Executive Orders: Presidential Leadership
Through Unilateral Action
Adam L. Warber, Clemson University
Yu Ouyang, Purdue University Northwest
Richard W. Waterman, University of Kentucky
Signing Statements and Legislative Coalitions
Ashley Moraguez, University of North Carolina,
Asheville
Supreme Court Constraint on Executive Unilateral
Action
Dino P. Christenson, Boston University
Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
107.38 AUTHOR MEETS CRITIC: PATRICIA STRACHS
HIDING POLITICS IN PLAIN SIGHT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND
HEALTH POLICY

Chair:
Part:

Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton University


Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Hahrie C. Han, University of California, Santa Barbara
Wendy M. Rahn, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Patricia Strach, University at Albany, SUNY
Edward T. Walker, University of California, Los
Angeles

DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS


107.39 JUDICIAL SELECTION IN US STATES
Room: PCC, 204-C
Chair: James R. Rogers, Texas A&M University
Disc:
Joshua Boston, Washington University in Saint Louis
Papers: Random Strikes or Targeted Hits? Attack Ads in State
Supreme Court Elections
Melinda Gann Hall, Michigan State University
Matthew Zalewski, Michigan State University
How Do Vigorous Campaigns Affect Judicial
Decisionmaking?
Michael J. Nelson, The Pennsylvania State University
A Matter of Timing: Contributions and Challenges to
Judicial Incumbents
Joseph V. Ross, Florida Gulf Coast University
The Mechanics of Merit Selection
Greg Goelzhauser, Utah State University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
107.40 LEGAL MOBILIZATION IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
Room: Loews, Commonwealth B
Chair: Charles R. Epp, University of Kansas
Disc:
Charles R. Epp, University of Kansas

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 403

403

Daily Schedule

Papers: Ideology, Rebellion, and Grandstanding in the British


House of Commons
Justin Kirkland, University of Houston
Joseph Lazzaro, University of Houston
Patrick Leslie, University of Essex
Jonathan B. Slapin, University of Essex
Party Loyalty of Career Politicians in the UK House of
Commons, 2005-2015
Raphael Heuwieser, University of Oxford
Legislator Income and Voting Behavior
Reto Wuest, University of Geneva
Transparency in Parliamentary Voting
Christine Benesch, University of St.Gallen
Monika Btler, University of St.Gallen
Katharina Eva Hofer, University of St.Gallen

Factionalism, Internal Democracy, and Voting Unity of


Governing Parties
Cristina Bucur, University of Oslo

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Janice Kreinick Gallagher, Rutgers-Newark


Papers: Cooperation and Conflict at the LGBT Litigators'
Roundtable
Eric van der Vort
Gender Provisions in National Constitutions and
Womens Rights Advocacy
Priscilla A. Lambert, Western Michigan University
Druscilla L. Scribner, University of Wisconsin,
Oshkosh
Legal Mobilization and Responsiveness on the Canadian
Supreme Court 1987-2010
Christine Rothmayr Allison, University of Montreal
Audrey L'Esperance
Mobilizing Doubt: The Legal Mobilization of Climate
Denialist Groups
Aaron J. Ley, University of Rhode Island
The Peculiar Beneficiaries of South African Free Speech
Guarantees
Stephan Stohler, SUNY, University at Albany
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
107.41 WOMEN AND POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
VOTING BEHAVIOR

Chair:
Disc:

Heather L. Ondercin, University of Mississippi


Heather L. Ondercin, University of Mississippi
Nichole Bauer, University of Alabama

Papers: Can the Picture Speak: Black Women Confronting State


Violence
Julia S. Jordan-Zachery, Providence College
Globalization Issues Within the American Women's
Movement
Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina
Women as Contributors: An Exploratory Analysis
Kristin Kanthak, University of Pittsburgh
All You Need to do is Ask: How Gender Affects
Mobilization and Participation
Anna Talley
Eric Groenendyk, University of Memphis
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
107.42 RACE AND PARTY IDENTIFICATION AT THE
BALLOT BOX
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Bradford S. Jones, University of California, Davis
Disc:
Bradford S. Jones, University of California, Davis
Papers: Becoming Blue: Deconstructing Asian American Vote
Choice
Tanika Raychaudhuri, Princeton University
Uplift and Black Party Identification
Andra Gillespie, Emory University
Tyson D. King-Meadows, University of Maryland,
Baltimore County
Shayla C. Nunnally, University of Connecticut
Niambi M. Carter, Howard University
Perceptions of Discrimination and Partisanship among
Asian Americans and Latinos
Daniel J. Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania
Efren Osvaldo Perez

404

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 404

In the Presence of Blackness: Social Pressure and Black


Expressions of Party ID
Chryl Laird, Saint Louis University
Julian Wamble
Ismail K. White, Ohio State University
Direct Democracy Rules: Direct Democracy Shaping
State Immigration Legislation
Andrea Silva, University of North Texas
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
107.43 ROMAN CATHOLICISM BEFORE AND AFTER
FRANCIS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: David T. Buckley, University of Louisville
Papers: Popular Literature and the Changing Politics of 19th
Century American Catholics
Eileen P Sullivan, Rutgers University
The Transformation of Catholic Politics in Twentieth
Century Italy
Rosario Forlenza, University of Padua
Bjorn Thomassen, Roskilde University
A/Political Gender Policy Debates: The Holy See in the
Inter-American System
Anne Marie Choup, University of Alabama,
Huntsville
Green Encyclical: Pope Francis and International
Environmental Negotiations
Jose Rodriguez Aquino, Johns Hopkins University
Moral Authority as Soft Power: Pope Francis Foreign
Policy
Christina Gregory, University of California, Riverside
Ricardo Crespo, University of California, Riverside
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
SYSTEMS
107.44 ELECTORAL RULES AND ETHNIC GROUP
REPRESENTATION
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Sarah Khan, Columbia University


Sarah Khan, Columbia University

Papers: Ethnic Parties and Strategic Voting: Theory and


Evidence from Bosnia-Herzegovina
Benjamin Patrick McClelland
The Impact of Communally Reserved Seats: A New
Theory with Evidence from Croatia
Geoff Allen, University of California Santa Barbara
The Institutional Origin of Multiethnic Politics
Geoffrey Macdonald, George Washington University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
107.45 ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF PARTISAN
POLARIZATION
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Morris Paul Fiorina
Disc:
Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis
Timothy J. Ryan, UNC Chapel Hill
Papers: Bayesian Updating About Political Facts
Seth J. Hill, University of California, San Diego
How Citizens Learn from Parties but Resist Partisan
Influence
Thomas J. Leeper
Rune Slothuus, Aarhus University

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Defining Polarization
Jeremy Clayne Pope, Brigham Young University
Untangling a Dislike for the Opposing Party from a
Dislike of Parties
Samara Klar, University of Arizona
Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
John Barry Ryan, Stony Brook University
Democratic Legitimacy And Partisans' Perceptions Of
Each Other
John Bullock, University of Texas at Austin
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
107.46 VOTER PERCEPTIONS OF POLITICIANS'
COMPETENCE
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Matt Golder, Pennsylvania State University
Disc:
Andrew C. Eggers, Nuffield College, Oxford
Papers: Political Legacies
Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
Yotam Margalit, Tel Aviv University
Christian Fong, Stanford University
"You are Fired": How Voters Come to Believe that
Party Systems are Incompetent
Robert Rohrschneider, University of Kansas
Rudiger Schmitt-Beck, University of Mannheim
Three Concepts of Competence and their Electoral
Consequences
Jane Green, University of Manchester
Will Jennings, University of Southampton
Every Vote Counts: The Effect of Election Results on
Their Interpretation
Liron Lavi, Tel Aviv University
Michal Shamir, Tel Aviv University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
107.47 LAST OF THE BIG TIME SPENDERS: THE
ATTITUDINAL EFFECTS OF SES AND
INEQUALITY
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Charlotte Cavaille, Institute for Advanced Study in
Toulouse
Disc:
Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University

Papers: A Field Experiment on Media and Attitudes about


Electoral Malpractice
Devra Coren Moehler, Facebook
Jeffrey K. Conroy-Krutz, Michigan State University
Publicizing Scandal: Results from Five Field
Experiments
Donald P. Green, Columbia University
Adam Zelizer
David Richard Kirby, Cato Institute
Sense & Sensibility: Citizens Reactions to Civility in
the Legislative Process
Celia Paris, Loyola University Maryland
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
107.49 CONFLICT, COOPTATION, AND
MANIPULATION: THE POLITICS OF NONDEMOCRATIC ELECTIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4
Chair: Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University
Disc:
Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University
Andrew Little, Cornell University
Papers: Competition for Activists and the Determinants of
Opposition Party Cooptation
Grant T. Buckles, Emory University
Democratic Breakdown in the Post-Cold War Era: The
Rise of Incumbent Takeovers
Erica Frantz, Michigan State University
Christian Houle, Michigan State University
Non-Competitive Elections and Incentives for
Insurgency
Arturas Rozenas, New York University
A Bottom-up Theory of Election Manipulation with
Application to Africa
Michael Wahman, University of Missouri
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
107.50 EFFECTIVE DEMOCRACY AID? EXPLORING
FAVORABLE AND UNFAVORABLE CONDITIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Sarah S. Bush, Temple University
Disc:
Sarah S. Bush, Temple University
Paulina Pospieszna, Adam Mickiewicz University of
Poznan
Papers: Under What Conditions Does Democracy Assistance
Work
Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh
Steven E. Finkel, University of Pittsburgh
Mitchell A. Seligson, Vanderbilt University
Democracy Promotion and Electoral Quality: A
Disaggregated Analysis
Carie Steele, Texas Tech University
Daniel Pemstein, North Dakota State University
Stephen August Meserve, Texas Tech University
Strengthening Electoral Assistance: Evaluating Training
for Electoral Officials
Pippa Pippa Norris, Harvard University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 405

405

Daily Schedule

Papers: Income, Party, and Vote Among Whites in 2012


Charles L. Prysby, University of North Carolina,
Greensboro
Regional Variation in Income Inequality and Preference
for Redistribution
Adrienne Hosek, University of California, Davis
David L Vannette, Stanford University
The Selfish Class?: Middle Class Preferences and
Universalism
Anthony Kevins, Aarhus University
Carsten Jensen, Aarhus University
Alexander Horn, Aarhus University, Political Science
Dep.
Simultaneous Feedback between Public Opinion and
Social Policy
Nate Breznau, Mannheim Centre for European Social
Research (MZES)
Economic Risk and Political Preference
Elad Zippory, NYU

DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION


107.48 CAN THE MEDIA PUNISH AND SUPPRESS BAD
BEHAVIOR?
Room: PCC, 112-B
Chair: Erik Peterson, Stanford University
Disc:
Lasse Laustsen, Aarhus University

Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM

Democracy Assistance, Areas of Limited Statehood, and


Non-State Armed Governors
Amichai A. Magen, Stanford University
Political Conditions for Effective Democracy Assistance
Anna Luehrmann
Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University
Carolien Van Ham, University of New South Wales
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
107.51 WHAT FACTORS AID IN HUMAN RIGHTS
ACCEPTANCE AND FULFILLMENT?
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Jacob P. Wobig, Wingate University
Disc:
Anu Chakravarty
Papers: Assessing Effectiveness of Human Rights Rhetoric:
Empirical Test of Spiral Model
Slava Mikhaylov, University College London
Monitoring and Progress in Human Rights: Investigating
the Success of CEDAW
Jacob P. Wobig, Wingate University
Political Quota, NGO Initiative and Dalits Human
Rights
Suparna Soni, Buffalo State College
Prosecution or Persecution? Gacaca and the Elimination
of Political Rivals
Christian Davenport, University of Michigan
Cyanne E. Loyle, Indiana University
Priyamvada Trivedi, University of Michigan
Human Rights and Democratic Wrongs? Legislative
Capacity Building in Africa
Carl LeVan, American University
Nicholas Timothy Smith
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
107.52 CAUSAL INFERENCE AND BAYESIAN
ANALYSIS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Marcus Kreuzer, Villanova University
Papers: Bayesian Probability: A Unified Logic of Inference
Tasha A. Fairfield, London School of Economics
Andrew Charman, University of California, Berkeley
Bayesian Process Tracing
Marcus Kreuzer, Villanova University
Robert Defina, Villanova University
Can We Establish Causation in Very Small-N Designs?
Benedetta Cotta
Alessia Damonte, Universita degli Studi di Milano
Causal Inference and Epistemic Uncertainty in Process
Tracing
Ingo Rohlfing, University of Bremen
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
107.53 REVIVING CONCEPT FORMATION. OR,
RETURNING TO BIG QUESTIONS IN
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: Melani Cammett, Harvard University
Disc:
Melani Cammett, Harvard University
Papers: Constitutionalism with Adjectives: Conceptual
Innovation and Global Rule of Law
Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University
Katja Newman

406

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 406

Related
108.1

Room:
Chair:
Part:
108.2
Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Ideas in Crisis: Indias Consultative Democracy, 19912014


Bilal Baloch, University of Oxford
Beyond the Religion/State Dichotomy: Promoting
Moderate Islam in Jordan and Oman
Annelle Rodriguez Sheline, George Washington
University
The Populist Syndrome: Recognizing Family
Resemblance
Binio Slavov Binev, Georgetown University
Groups
COMPLEXITY AND PUBLIC POLICY GROUP:
COMPLEXITYTHE SECRET: TO UNIFY &
IMPROVE POLITICAL SCIENCE & POLICY
RESEARCH
Marriott, Room 414
Liz Johnson, Complex Systems Institute UNCC
Michael Steven Givel, University of Oklahoma
Joseph Cochran, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
DISASTERS AND CRISES: FRONTIERS IN
DISASTER RESEARCH: THE POLITICS OF
CATASTROPHE
Loews, Commonwealth A1
Daniel P. Aldrich
Gavin Smith

Papers: Before Disaster: A Narrative Policy Analysis of the


Rhetoric of Preparedness
Rob A. DeLeo, Bentley University
Do Disasters Affect Local Political Conditions?
Yoshikuni Ono, Tohoku University
The Dynamics of Policy Change: Inter-organizational
Response to Extreme Events
Thomas W. Haase, Sam Houston State University
Gunes Ertan
Namkyung Oh, University of Akron
Louise K. Comfort
The Logic of Authoritarian Reaction to Foreign Relief
Bann Seng Tan, Boazii University
Nicholas R. Davis, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
108.3
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: APOCALYPTIC
INFLUENCES IN CONTEMPORARY POLITICS
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: Michael Allen Gillespie, Duke University
Disc:
Thomas W. Heilke, The University of British Columbia,
Okanagan
Alison McQueen, Stanford University
Papers: What Apocalyptic Scenario does IS follow?
David B. Cook, Rice University
The Apocalypticism of ISIS and the Relationship
Between Religion and Violence
Megan K McBride, Brown University
Revolutionary Apocalypticism and the Modern Myth of
Armageddon
Matthias Riedl, Central European University
The Paradox of Secular Apocalyptic Thought
Benjamin Taylor Jones, University of Kansas

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

108.4
Room:

FRENCH POLITICS GROUP: SECOND ORDER


ELECTIONS AND BEYOND: THE 2014 AND 2015
FRENCH LOCAL ELECTIONS
Loews, Commonwealth D
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

Chair:
Disc:

Michael S. Lewis-Beck, university of iowa


Vincent Pons, Harvard Business School

Papers: The Effects of Ranking and Distance in a Mixed Runoff System


Sylvain Brouard, Sciences Po
Martial Foucault, Sciences Po Paris
Rank Matters: Strategic Desertion in the Second Round
of French Local Elections
Bernard Dolez, Universit Paris 1
Annie Laurent, Universit de Lille
Andr Blais, University of Montreal
Are First-Order Elections becoming Second-Order
Elections?
Cal Angus Le Gall
Raul Magni-Berton, Sciences Po Grenoble, Univ.
Grenoble-Alpes
Strategic or Sincere Voters? Evidence from a RDD in
French Elections
Vincent Pons, Harvard Business School
Clmence Tricaud
108.5
PROJECT ON THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION:
FROHNEN'S AND CAREY'S CONSTITUTIONAL
MORALITY AND RISE OF QUASI-LAW
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Chair: Greg Weiner, Assumption College
Disc:
Bruce P. Frohnen
Papers: American Self-Rule and the Problem of Democracy
Ted McAllister, Pepperdine University
The Framers' Constitution?
Barry Alan Shain, Colgate University
Quasi-Law as Real Law, and Why That Might Not
Matter
Mark Tushnet
108.6
SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT:
VISIONS OF CITIZENSHIP IN PLATO AND
THEIR ROLE IN CONTEMPORARY
DEMOCRACIES
Room: Marriott, Room 412
Chair: Rebecca LeMoine, Florida Atlantic University
Disc:
Jill Frank, Cornell University
Rebecca LeMoine, Florida Atlantic University

Division Panels
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
109.1
ARISTOTLE
Room: PCC, 106-AB
Chair: Stephen G. Salkever, Bryn Mawr College
Disc:
Kevin Cherry, University of Richmond
Stephen G. Salkever, Bryn Mawr College
Papers: Aristotle and the Possibility of Liberal Civic Friendship
Paul W. Ludwig, St. John's College, Annapolis
Aristotle on Experience, Moral Education, and Political
Activity
Giuseppe Cumella, Northwestern University
Aristotles Politics: Ethical Politics or Political Realism?
Emma Cohen de Lara, University of Amsterdam
Regime Change in Aristotles Politics: How Do You
Make a City Virtuous?
Benjamin Miller, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Agency and Restraint: Evaluating Aristotles Mean for
Political Judgment
Jack L. Amoureux, Wake Forest University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
109.2
REPUBLICANISM ANCIENT AND MODERN
Room: PCC, 102-A
Chair: Burke Hendrix, University of Oregon
Disc:
Douglas C. Dow, University of Texas at Dallas
Burke Hendrix, University of Oregon
Papers: Conceptual Silences: Republican Paradigms and PostColonial Thinking
Manjeet K. Ramgotra
Madison and Expanding the Republican Tradition
James Noel Hubler, Lebanon Valley College
Plutarch's Prism
Rebecca Kingston
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
109.3
ACTION AND SKEPTICISM: THE POLITICAL
THEORY OF HANNAH ARENDT AND STANLEY
CAVELL
Room: PCC, 108-B
Chair: Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Disc:
Tracy Strong, University of Southampton and University
of California, San Diego
Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Papers: Soul-blindedness in Arendt and Cavell
David Owen, University of Southampton
Thinking After Heidegger: Arendt and Cavell
Andrew Norris
Arendt, Cavell and Butler
Rosine Judith Kelz
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
109.4
DEMOCRACY AND COMPARATIVE POLITICAL
THOUGHT
Room: PCC, 108-A
Chair: Melissa S. Williams, University of Toronto
Disc:
Melissa S. Williams, University of Toronto

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 407

407

Daily Schedule

Papers: Citizenship as a Mutual Shaping and Being Shaped by


Common Notions of Beauty
Richard A. Barrett, Mount Mercy University
Reasons Companions: Experiences of Knowing in Plato
Susan Bickford, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Reputation in Platos Republic
Andreas Avgousti, Columbia University
Moral Education, Civic Education, and Platos Virtue
Politics
Stephen G. Salkever, Bryn Mawr College

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: The Dialectic of Divine and Popular Sovereignty in


Modern Islamic Thought
Andrew F. March, Yale University
Territorial Grounds of Democracy: Property and
Jurisdiction in Derecho Indiano
Paulina Ochoa Espejo, Haverford College
Sino-Feminism and Feminist Confucianism: Gender in
Chinese Politics, 1890-1920
Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University
Wei Li, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Ambedkars Idea of Personal Representation and
Theories of Group Representation
Jaby Mathew, University of Toronto
For the Welfare of All: Gandhis Economics and the
Limits of Constitutional Law
Tejas Parasher, University of Chicago
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
109.5
LIBERALISM REVISITED
Room: PCC, 113-C
Chair: Dimitrios E. Efthymiou, Goethe University Frankfurt
Disc:
Dimitrios E. Efthymiou, Goethe University Frankfurt
Papers: Berlin, Analytical Philosophy, and the Revival of
Political Philosophy
Naomi Choi, University of Houston
Is Liberalism Bad for Women? Reclaiming Okin for
Feminist Democratic Theory
Liza Taylor, Loyola Marymount University
No Domination, No Politics: The Deficit in Liberal
Theory
Carla Yumatle, Brown University
Rationality as a Duty to Others
Alexander Moon, Ithaca College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
109.6
THINKING ANEW WITH FRANTZ FANON
Room: PCC, 114
Chair: Jane A. Gordon, University of Connecticut, Storrs
Disc:
Jane A. Gordon, University of Connecticut, Storrs
Robyn Marasco
Papers: Frantz Fanon on the Question of Fraternity under French
Colonialism
Anuja Bose, University of California Los Angeles
Spoken into Being: Creolism as Revolutionary
Liberation Towards Decoloniality
Derefe Kimarley Chevannes, University of
Connecticut
Reading Black Skin, White Masks Phenomenologically
Ainsley Nicole LeSure, University of Chicago
What Does It Mean to Hold? Property and The Lived
Experience of Blackness
Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania
Fanon, Feminism, and Decolonization
Drucilla Cornell, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
109.7
AUTHOR-MEETS-CRITICS ON DAVID MILLER'S
STRANGERS IN OUR MIDST
Room: PCC, 107-B
Part:
David Miller, University of Oxford
Anna Stilz, Princeton University
Sarah Song, University of California, Berkeley
Kieran John Oberman, Edinburgh University

408

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 408

Caleb Yong, Goethe University Frankfurt


DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
109.8
LOTTERIES AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF
DEMOCRATIC THEORY
Room: PCC, 105-AB
Chair: Alexander Kirshner, Duke University
Part:
Helene E. Landemore
Emilee Chapman, Stanford University
Alexander A. Guerrero
Claudio Lopez-Guerra, Centro de Investigacion y
Docencia Economicas
Arash Abizadeh, McGill University
Peter C. Stone, Trinity College
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
109.9
POLITICS OF EXTREMISM
Room: PCC, 107-A
Chair: Gail Buttorff, University of Kansas
Disc:
Scott Tyson, University of Chicago
Papers: Developing Risky Partnerships: How Terrorist Groups
Form Relationships
Saurabh Pant
In or Out? Supranational Integration and the Rise of
Populist Extremes
Nikitas Konstantinidis, University of Cambridge
Konstantinos Matakos, King's College London
Hande Mutlu-Eren, New York University
On Political Parties and Terrorist Groups
Livio Di Lonardo, New York University
The Dynamics of Repression and Decentralization
Michael Gibilisco, University of Rochester
What Can (and Can't) Participation Shocks Teach Us
About Political Violence
Scott Tyson, University of Chicago
Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
109.10 ELITE PERSONALITY AND POLITICAL
INSTITUTIONS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 9
Chair: Peter John Loewen, University of Toronto
Disc:
Conor M. Dowling, University of Mississippi
Papers: What Justices Want: Goals and Personality on the U.S.
Supreme Court
Matthew E.K. Hall, University of Notre Dame
The Reliability of Self-Reported Personality Responses
in Political Elites
Megan Lee Remmel, Bradley University
Personality Traits, Candidate Emergence, and Political
Ambition
Adam Michael Dynes, Brigham Young University
Hans J.G. Hassell, Cornell College
Matthew R Miles, Brigham Young University, Idaho
What I Like About You: Legislator Personality and
Legislator Approval
Jonathan David Klingler, Institute for Advanced
Study in Toulouse
Gary E. Hollibaugh, University of Notre Dame
Adam Ramey, New York University Abu Dhabi
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
109.11 THE EFFECTS OF PERSONALITY ACROSS
CONTEXTS
Room: Marriott, Room 408

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Chair:
Disc:

Eun Bin Chung, University of Utah


David Doherty, Loyola University Chicago

Papers: Personality Traits and Individual Feeling of National


Pride in South Korea
Ching-Hsing Wang, Hobby Center for Public Policy
at the University of Houston
Lu-Chung Dennis Weng, SUNY, Cortland
Personality Types and Explaining Political Behavior
Grant Ferguson, Texas Christian University
Personality and Political Participation in Ghana
Kevin S. Fridy, University of Tampa
Mary R. Anderson, University of Tampa
William Myers, University of Tampa
Personality traits influence vote choices if you are
politically sophisticated
Stig Hebbelstrup Rye Rasmussen, University of
Southern Denmark
Asbjoern Sonne Noergaard, SDU
Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern
Denmark
The personality basis of environmental policy
preferences
Didier Caluwaerts, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Michael Kenneth MacKenzie, University of
Pittsburgh
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
109.12 COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON EMPLOYEE
AND EMPLOYER POLITICAL VOICE AND
POWER
Room: PCC, 103-C
Chair: Alexander Warren Hertel-Fernandez, Harvard University
Disc:
Simeon C. Nichter, UC San Diego
Papers: Wage Theft and the Rise of Alt-Labor
Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University
Employers and Elections in the United States
Alexander Warren Hertel-Fernandez, Harvard
University
Vote Brokers and Voter Turnout in Russia: Evidence
from a Survey Experiment
Timothy Frye
Ora John Reuter, University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee
David Szakonyi
Territorial and Segmental Authoritarianism Compared:
The Mexican Teachers Union
Christopher Chambers-Ju
Leslie Finger, Harvard University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
109.13 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES
Room: PCC, 103-B
Chair: Patrick Egan, Tulane University
Disc:
Adnan Vatansever, King's College London

DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY


109.14 STATE-LEVEL ORIGINS OF AMERICAN
POLITICS
Room: PCC, 112-A
Chair: Amy B. Bridges, University of California SanDiego
Disc:
Donald D.A. Schaefer, Georgia State University
Papers: Slavery, Civil War, and the Early Development of
Income Tax Politics in the U.S.
Jeff Selinger, Bowdoin College
Submerged Nation and Visible States: 19th Century
State Spending and Patriotism
Emily Pears, Claremont McKenna College
Why No Workers' Party?: The Impact of Institutional
Change in the United States
Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Reorganizing Federalism: Conservatives and Institutional
Innovation, 1947-1996
Philip B. Rocco, Marquette University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
109.15 MEASUREMENT ISSUES IN SURVEY
RESEARCH
Room: Marriott, Franklin 11
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

Chair:
Disc:

Jennifer L. Merolla, University of California, Riverside


Regina P. Branton, University of North Texas
Jennifer L. Merolla, University of California, Riverside

Papers: How Should We Measure Gender in Survey Research?


Amanda Bittner, Memorial University of
Newfoundland
Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant, Queen's University
Utilizing the Options of Multiple-Choice Items for
Measuring Political Knowledge
Tsung-han Tsai, National Chengchi University
Measurement Invariance of Political Participation and
Social/Political Involvement
Yiran Wang, Washington State University
Response Ordering and Ideological Self-Placement? 204
Split-Ballot Experiments
Alexandre Morin-Chass, Universit de Montral
Modeling Spending Preferences and Public Policy
Alex Branham
Stephen Jessee, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
109.16 ROUNDTABLE ON REPLICATION AND
PREREGISTRATION
Room: Marriott, Franklin 3
Chair: James Edward Monogan, University of Georgia
Part:
Sunshine Hillygus, Duke University
William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University
Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39

Page 409

409

Daily Schedule

Papers: The Market for Creampuffs: Big Data and the


Transformation of the Welfare State
Torben Iversen, Harvard University
Philipp Rehm, Ohio State University
Fiscal Foundations of Innovation
Benjamin Barber, IE Business School
Pablo Beramendi, Duke University

The Performance of Unified Governments: Evidence


from Close Elections in Denmark
Asmus Leth Olsen, University of Copenhagen
Martin Vins Larsen, University of Copenhagen
Borrowed Dreams: How Household Debt Drives the
Knowledge Economy.
Andreas Wiedemann, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Gary King, Harvard University


Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Ryan T. Moore, American University
Raul Sanchez de la Sierra, Harvard University
Vera Eva Troeger, University of Warwick
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
109.17 CORRUPTION: CAUSES AND EFFECTS
Room: PCC, 204-B
Chair: Emanuel Coman, Corpus Christi College, University of
Oxford
Papers: Anti-corruption Campaigns and Popular Support for
Authoritarian Regimes
Yaoyao Dai, Pennsylvania State University
Buying the Peace? Resource Distribution Patterns in Oil
States
Megan Eisenman Bowman
Perception of Corruption and Approval Ratings of
Female Incumbents
Frederico Batista Pereira, Vanderbilt University
The Political Logic of Anticorruption in Authoritarian
Regimes
Junyan Jiang, University of Chicago
Yan Xu, University of Chicago
What Use is Corruption? Authoritarian Regimes and
Discriminating Bribery
Noah Buckley, Columbia University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
109.18 EXPLAINING TRANSITIONS TO
PROGRAMMATIC POLITICS
Room: PCC, 201-C
Chair: Frances Hagopian, Harvard University
Disc:
Beatriz Magaloni
Philip Keefer, Inter-American Development Bank
Papers: Clients or Constituents? Citizens, Intermediaries, and
Distributive Politics
Jennifer L. Bussell, University of California, Berkeley
Including the Other Half: How Financial Modernization
Disrupts Patronage
Nancy Hite-Rubin, Tufts University
Business Demands and Programmatic Reforms
Joanna Didi Kuo
Escaping the Patronage Trap: Comparative Party
Advantage in Latin America
Frances Hagopian, Harvard University
Politics Against the Grain: Explaining Subnational
Programmatic Transformations
Jonathan Phillips
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
109.19 THE GREAT TRANSFORMATION: THE ORIGINS
OF THE STATE IN EUROPE AND CHINA
Room: PCC, 201-B
Chair: Mark Dincecco, University of Michigan
Disc:
David Stasavage, New York University
Mark Dincecco, University of Michigan
Papers: The Economic Legacy of Warfare: Evidence from Urban
Europe
Mark Dincecco, University of Michigan
Massimiliano G. Onorato, IMT Institute Advanced
Studies Lucca

410

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 410

Fiscal Innovation in Non-democratic Regimes


Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Didac Queralt, Institute of Political Economy and
Governance
Emperors Gift: The Intellectual Origins of State
Capacity in China
Yuhua Wang, Harvard University
From Click to Boom: The Political Economy of ECommerce Growth in China
Lizhi Liu, Stanford University
Representation and Consent: Why They Arose in Europe
and Not Elsewhere
David Stasavage, New York University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
109.20 TRANSFORMATIONS FOR UNDERSTANDING
STATE CAPITALISM
Room: PCC, 109-AB
Chair: Jonathan GS Koppell, Arizona State University
Disc:
Kellee S. Tsai, Hong Kong University of Science and
Technology
Papers: Finance in State Capitalism: Brazilian Financial
Repression Revisited
Giselle Datz, Virginia Tech
Maria Antonieta Del Tedesco Lins, University of Sao
Paulo
Public Policy and the Internationalization of State
Capitalism
Tana Johnson, Duke University
Market Governance and Globalization: National and
Sectoral Paths To Development
Roselyn Hsueh, Temple University
Costs of Political Connections
Xiaojun Li, University of British Columbia
Jean C. Oi, Stanford University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
109.21 COMPARATIVE STATE FORMATION: BRIDGING
IR AND COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Room: PCC, 201-A
Chair: Tuong Vu, University of Oregon
Disc:
Ja Ian Chong, National University of Singapore
Papers: Why War Both Made And Unmade The State: The
China Case
Victoria Tin-bor Hui, University of Notre Dame
Between the Sinosphere and Westphalia: E. Asian
International Order in Transition
Amanda Cheney, Cornell University
External Interventions & Political Instability in
Postcolonial State Building
Sean L. Yom, Temple University
Revolutionary Path to Modern State Building in Vietnam
and Iran
Tuong Vu, University of Oregon
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
109.22 LOCAL SERVICE PROVISION: INSTITUTIONS,
SOCIAL IDENTITIES, AND CLIENTELISM
Room: PCC, 111-B
Chair: Katharine A. Baldwin, Yale University
Disc:
Melani Cammett, Harvard University

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: The Demand Side of Clientelism: The Role of Client


Perceptions and Values
Lindsay J. Benstead, Portland State University
Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg
Miquel Pellicer, German Institute of Global and Area
Studies (GIGA)
Eva Wegner, GIGA
Electoral Institutions and Ethnic Clientelism:
Authoritarianism in Jordan
Kristen Kao, University of Gothenburg
Co-Ethnic Discrimination: Local Service Delivery in
Malawi
Adam Harris, University of Gothenburg
Kristen Kao, University of Gothenburg
Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg
Measuring the Joyce Banda Symbolic Effect on
Womens Representation in Malawi
Lindsay J. Benstead, Portland State University
Boniface Madalitso Dulani
Ragnhild Louise Muriaas, University of Bergen
Lise Rakner, University of Bergen
Vibeke Wang, University of Bergen
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
109.23 SELECTED ISSUES IN SOUTHEAST ASIAN
POLITICS AND POLITICAL ECONOMY
Room: PCC, 113-A
Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics Group

Chair: Nico Ravanilla, Stanford University


Papers: The Political Economy of State Integration in Southeast
Asia
Mai Nguyen, New York University
The Logic of (Not-) Governing: Selective State Building
in Southeast Asia
Min Jung Kim, American University-SIS
The Socio-economic Impact of Border Casinos in Rural
Cambodia
Erin Lin, Princeton University
Temporary Migration and Democratic Accountability:
Evidence from the Philippines
Nico Ravanilla, Stanford University
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
109.24 POPULAR PROTEST IN CHINA
Room: PCC, 202-B
Chair: John James Kennedy, University of Kansas
Disc:
Ethan Michelson, Indiana University

DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY


109.25 THE POLITICS OF CREDIT AND DEBT IN
EUROPE
Room: PCC, 203-B
Chair: Mark I. Vail, Tulane University
Disc:
Mark I. Vail, Tulane University
Papers: The Politics of Mortgage Regulation in the Netherlands
and Sweden.
Karen M. Anderson, University of Southampton
Paulette Kurzer, University of Arizona
The Politics of Homeownership: Supporting
Homeowners in Germany and the U.S.
Alexander Reisenbichler, George Washington
University
Credit Access and Subjective Well-Being during the
Eurocrisi
Alexander J. Jakubow, University of Virginia
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
109.26 DISTRIBUTIVE CONFLICTS AND GLOBAL
FINANCIAL (IM)PRUDENCE
Room: PCC, 103-A
Chair: Nita Rudra, Georgetown University
Disc:
Leonardo Baccini, McGill University
Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University
Papers: How Do Developing Countries Stay Committed to
Liberalization?
Stephen Chaudoin, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Nita Rudra, Georgetown University
Understanding Bilateral Bailouts: Political and Economic
(Dis)incentives
Christina J. Schneider, University of California, San
Diego
Jennifer L Tobin, Georgetown University
Preferential Treatment? GSP Programs, Trade and
Human Rights
Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of
California, San Diego
Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Informational and Distributive Theories of International
Institutions
Erik Voeten, Georgetown University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
109.27 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF CHINESE
FOREIGN POLICY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 1
Chair: Songying Fang, Rice University
Disc:
Yao-Yuan Yeh, University of St. Thomas
Papers: Gauging Chinese Public Support for Chinas Role in UN
Peacekeeping
Songying Fang, Rice University
Fanglu Sun, Rice University
Audience Costs with Chinese Characteristics?
Ray Thomas Hartman, Seoul National University

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 411

411

Daily Schedule

Papers: A Tale of Two Deltas: Labor Unrest and Changing


Local Governance in China
Manfred Elfstrom, Cornell University
Protest or Litigation? Pushing forward Environmental
Accountability in China
Phoebe Mengxiao Tang, University of Southern
California
Capitalizing on Rioting: Intra-Bureaucratic Bargaining
and Protests in China
Xiao Ma, University of Washington
Protest in China: A Comparison between Migrant
Workers and Non-Migrant Workers
Yen-Hsin Chen

The Long-Term Impact of Mobilization and Repression


on Political Trust in China
Scott W. Desposato, UCSD
Gang Wang, University of California, Berkeley

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Pursuing Professionalism: Networks and Loyalties in the


Peoples Liberation Army
Eric Hundman, University of Chicago
Why Did China Sign and Ratify the UNCLOS that
Seems to Hurt Its Interests?
Jing Tao, Cornell Law School
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
109.28 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Franklin 2
Chair: Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania
Disc:
Michael J. Reese, University of Chicago
Papers: Brutal Externalities: How Repression Increases
International Conflict
Calla Hummel, University of Texas at Austin
Emergency Powers in Democracies and International
Conflict
Bryan Rooney, Vanderbilt University
Endogenous Leader Selection and Interstate Targets
Jeff Carter, University of Mississippi
Radical Policy Change and International Conflict
Silvana A. Toska
Reassessing the Democratic Peace: A New Test using
the V-Dem Dataset
Michael Bernhard, University of Florida
Haavard Hegre, Peace Research Institute Oslo
Jan Teorell, Lund University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL
109.29 INFORMATION AND SIGNALLING:
DISTORTION, TRANSMISSION, AND
MALFEASANCE
Room: PCC, 104-B
Chair: Charles Eugene Gholz, University of Texas at Austin
Disc:
David Lindsey, University of California, San Diego
Papers: Error Recall: Knowledge Acquisition among Security
Organization Elites
Heidi Hardt, University of California, Irvine
Fighting by OSMOSIS: Offensive Social Media
Operations and Information Security
Drew Herrick, George Washington University
Inadvertent Signaling and Security Dilemma: US Missile
Defense in Asia
Ji-Young Lee, American University-SIS
Eleni Georgia Ekmektsioglou, American University
Talking Tough: Electoral Rhetoric, Crises, and the
Stability-Instability Paradox
Carrie A Lee, University of Notre Dame
The Menace, Malfeasance and Public Misapprehension
of National Missile Defense
Jane Kellett Cramer, University of Oregon
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
CONTROL
109.30 NUCLEAR STRATEGY AND
NONPROLIFERATION POLICY RECONSIDERED
Room: PCC, 110-AB
Chair: Matthew Fuhrmann, Texas A&M University
Disc:
Andrew J. Coe, University of Southern California

412

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 412

Papers: The Disclosure Dilemma: Intelligence and Global


Nuclear Governance
Austin Carson, University of Chicago
Allison Carnegie, Columbia University
Rival Hierarchies and the Dynamics of Nuclear
Technology Sharing
Jeff Colgan, Brown University
Nicholas Miller, Brown University
Explaining Great Power Coercive Policy Toward
Nuclear-Aspiring Allies
Gene Gerzhoy, Harvard University
Credibility in Crises: Leadership Beliefs in Assessments
of Nuclear Threats
Julia M. Macdonald, University of Denver
The Limits of Pax Pretoriana: Explaining South Africas
Cold War Strategy
Noel Anderson, MIT
Mark S. Bell
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
109.31 IDEAS, PERCEPTIONS, AND INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY BEHAVIOR
Room: Marriott, Franklin 6
Chair: Brent Durbin, Smith College
Disc:
Brent Durbin, Smith College
Papers: India-US Relations: The Impact of Indias Elite-Mass
Discourses
Shivaji Kumar
Launching a Thousand Ships? Gendered Violence &
Overreactions in Foreign Policy
Kayce Mobley, Pittsburg State University
Sarah Fisher, Emory & Henry College
Regional Threat Perceptions in the Persian Gulf
Mehran Kamrava, Georgetown University-Qatar
Successful Socialization? Understanding Logics of
China-ASEAN States Interaction
Yao Wen, University of Toronto
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
109.32 ETHNIC CONFLICT AND SEPARATISM
Room: Marriott, Salon B
Chair: Morgan L. Kaplan, Harvard University
Disc:
Bridget Coggins, University of California, Santa Barbara
Papers: Conflict in the Neighborhood: Ethnic Rapprochement in
Assessment of Threats
Efe Tokdemir, Binghamton University
seden akcinaroglu, binghamton university
Dangerous Neighborhoods: Internal Sources of the
Spread of Ethnic Conflicts
Rita Konaev, University of Notre Dame
Kirstin J. Hasler Brathwaite, Michigan State
University
Ethnic Identity, Discrimination, Identity and Interstate
Conflict
Christopher E. Pace, University of North Texas
John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Seceding From Rebellion? Separatist Alliance Politics in
Mixed Insurgencies
Morgan L. Kaplan, Harvard University
Power-Sharing Coalitions and Ethnic Civil War
Nils-Christian Bormann, University of Exeter
Martin C. Steinwand, Stony Brook University

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES


109.33 POST-CONFLICT POLITICS
Room: Marriott, Salon A
Chair: Elizabeth J. Menninga, University of Iowa
Disc:
Hanne Fjelde, Uppsala University
Papers: Doomed to Fail? How the Conflict Environment
Influences Post-Civil War Peace
Julia Leib, Goethe University
Human Rights Prosecutions and Conflict Recurrence in
Post-Conflict States
Geoff Dancy, Tulane University
Post-Conflict Militias and Repeat Civil War
Adrian Arellano, University of Michigan
Transitional Justice and Resilience in Post-Conflict
Societies
Eric Wiebelhaus-Brahm, University of Arkansas at
Little Rock
How Alliances Foster Democratic Consolidation for
New Democracies
Wilfred Ming Chow, University of Hong Kong
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
109.34 THE ORGANIZATIONAL CAPACITY OF ARMED
GROUPS DURING AND AFTER CONFLICT
Room: Marriott, Salon C
Chair: Steven Levitsky, Harvard University
Disc:
Paul Staniland, University of Chicago
Papers: Armed Conflict and Ruling Party Durability in
Authoritarian Regimes
Anne Meng, University of Virginia
Fragmentation, Formation, and the Survival of Militant
Splinter Groups
Evan Perkoski, Harvard Kennedy School
Introducing the Revolutionary and Militant
Organizations Dataset (REVMOD)
Benjamin Acosta
Elite Connections in Armed Rebellion
Reyko Huang, Texas A&M University
Band of Believers?: How Religion Impacts Rebel Group
Cohesion and Fragmentation
Jason A. Klocek, UC, Berkeley
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
109.35 RACE, CLASS, GENDER AND POLITICAL
REPRESENTATION
Room: Marriott, Room 304
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Valeria Sinclair-Chapman, Purdue University


Matthew B. Platt, Morehouse College

DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY


109.36 A ROUNDTABLE ABOUT POLICY FEEDBACK,
PATH DEPENDENCY, & POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Room: Marriott, Franklin 8
Chair: Edella C. Schlager, University of Arizona
Part:
Anne L. Schneider
Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin
Richard C. Fording, University of Alabama
Daniel Beland
Kristin Goss, Duke University
Nate Breznau, Mannheim Centre for European Social
Research (MZES)
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
109.37 DIVERSIFICATION OF THE BENCH:
MECHANISMS AND EFFECTS
Room: PCC, 113-B
Chair: Meghan E. Leonard, Illinois State University
Disc:
Meghan E. Leonard, Illinois State University
Todd A. Collins, Western Carolina University
Papers: Gender Diversity on High Courts: The Causal Effects of
Institutional Change
Nancy Bays Arrington
Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
Leeann Bass
Adam Glynn, Emory University
Internationalizing the Domestic? African Women Judges
in International Courts
Josephine J. Dawuni, Howard University
Judicial Selection Methods and the Diversity of the
Bench
Allison P. Harris, University of Chicago
Allen Louis Linton
The Presentational Style of Female Judges
Sally Friedman, SUNY, Albany
Ann M Johnson, California State University San
Bernardino
Jennifer Woodward, Middle Tennessee State
University
Transforming the Judiciary: Diffusion vs. Institutions
Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University
Valerie J. Hoekstra, Arizona State University
Alice Kang, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Miki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS RESEARCH
109.38 WOMENS PRESENCE AND PERFORMANCE:
QUOTAS, PARTIES, AND INTERSECTIONALITY
Room: Marriott, Franklin 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

Chair:
Disc:

Sarah Childs, University of Bristol


Ginger Reeves Feather, University of Kansas
Jennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental College

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 413

413

Daily Schedule

Papers: Black Legislative Strategies: The Persistence of Floor


Advocacy
Jennifer Garcia, Oberlin College
African American Legislators in the Post-War House
Mary Layton Atkinson, University of North Carolina,
Charlotte
How Legislator Identities Matter for Substantive
Minority Representation
Albert Fang, Yale University

Constituency Representation in Congress? Not for the


Poor
Kristina Miler, University of Maryland, College Park
The Influence of Race on the Legislative Response to
Collective Action
LaGina Gause, University of Michigan

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: Global Gender Quota Adoption and Reform Using a


Longitudinal Design
Pamela Paxton, University of Texas, Austin
Amanda Clayton, Vanderbilt University
Melanie M. Hughes, University of Pittsburgh
Par Zetterberg, Uppsala University
Not Without A Gender Quota? Conservative Parties
Recruitment Practices
Christina Xydias
Women in Islamic Political Parties: Increasing Visibility,
Utility, and Power?
Sarah Fischer, American Univesity
Uneasy Representation: Gender and Ethnicity in
Parliamentary Politics
Liza Mugge, University of Amsterdam
Substantive Representation of Women in Turkey
saadet konak unal, university of houston
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
109.39 RACE AND AMERICAN POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
Room: Marriott, Room 303
Chair: Desmond King
Disc:
Desmond King
Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University
Papers: Before the Revolution: African-American Political
Participation Prior to the VRA
Bernard L. Fraga, Indiana University
Congressman Charles C. Diggs and the Transformation
of Black Politics
Marion Orr, Brown University
Latino Time and Latino Moments: A Study of Latino
Identity Development
Sergio I Garcia-Rios, Cornell University
Trial By Fire: The Making of the Mexican American
Legal Defense Fund
Benjamin Marquez, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
The Backlash That Wasnt There: Japanese-Americans
and the Democratic Party
Chris S. Haynes
Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California
Riverside
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
109.40 RIGHTS CLAIMS, RELIGION, AND THE LAW
Room: Marriott, Franklin 10
Chair: Kathryn A. Heard, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Kathryn A. Heard, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Law and the Democratic State: Politics by Other Means
Catherine Warrick, Villanova University
Human Rights Debates: Is there a Place for Traditional
Islamic Legal Theories
Sussan Siavoshi, Trinity University
The Effect of State Institutionalized Islam on Women's
Economic Rights
Fatima Z. Rahman
Women and Gender in Religious Nationalist Politics in
India
Rina Verma Williams, University of Cincinnati

414

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 414

DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL


SYSTEMS
109.41 REPRESENTATION IN VARIOUS FORMS
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 501
Chair: Robert Thomson, University of Strathclyde
Papers: Why do Governments Fulfill Opposition Parties
Election Pledges?
Robert Thomson, University of Strathclyde
Terry J. Royed, University of Alabama
Elin Naurin, University of Gothenburg
Joaquin Artes, Universidad Complutense
Rory Costello, University of Limerick
Dominic Duval, Universit Laval
Mark J. Ferguson, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
Petia A. Kostadinova, University of Illinois at
Chicago
Catherine Moury, Nova University of Lisbon
Francois Petry, Laval University
Katrin Praprotnik
Congressional Campaigning and Clientelist Networks
Joy Langston, CIDE
Socioeconomic Development and Party System
Transformation in Botswana
Christopher D. Raymond, Queen's University Belfast
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
109.42 CONCEPTUALIZING POLITICAL PARTIES
Room: Marriott, Salon I
Chair: Hans Noel, Georgetown University
Disc:
Hans Noel, Georgetown University
Papers: The Changing Intermediary Structure of American
Politics
Byron E. Shafer, University of Wisconsin
Regina Wagner
The Declinist Era of Party Scholarship: An Intellectual
History
Sam Rosenfeld, Hamilton College
The Family of Party Institutionalization Concepts and
Democratic Development
Denise L. Baer, Center for International Private
Enterprise
V.O. and Schatt: the conflict between behaviouralism
and institutionalism
Mark Wickham-Jones, University of Bristol
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
109.43 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND POLICY
Room: Marriott, Salon J
Chair: Richard McGrath Skinner, Sunlight Foundation
Disc:
Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University
Papers: College Comes to Capitol Hill: University Lobbying in
the US Congress
Christopher R. Marsicano
Interest Group Density and Policy Change in the States
Eric Hansen, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Virginia H. Gray, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Parties' Preferences over Policy vs Office Goals and


Government Formation.
Anna Bassi, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Policy Differences: State Party Platforms and National
Politics, 1960-2016
Matthew Carr
Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester
Justin Phillips, Columbia University
Women's Candidate Recruitment as a Function of Policy
Demanders
Rosalyn Cooperman, University of Mary Washington
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
109.44 ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF PARTISANSHIP
AND PARTISAN BIASES
Room: Marriott, Salon D
Chair: Oliver Heath, Royal Holloway
Disc:
Elias Dinas, University of Oxford
Papers: The Uneven Pace of Partisan Change within the PostWar South
James G. Gimpel, University of Maryland, College
Park
Nathan Lovin, University of Maryland, College Park
Partisan Biases and Perceptions of Political Violence: A
Survey Experiment
Spyros Kosmidis, University of Oxford
Changing Modes of Partisanship and Implications for
Political Behaviour
Eri E Bertsou, University of Zurich
Explaining Contextual Variation in the Strength of
Partisan Screen
Lie Philip Santoso, Rice University
Making America Safe for Democrats: FDR, Military
Service, and Partisanship
Helmut Norpoth, Stony Brook University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
109.45 COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICAL
BEHAVIOUR: NOVEL INSIGHTS USING THE
CSES
Room: Marriott, Salon KL
Chair: Julian Hoerner, London School of Economics and
Political Science
Disc:
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, university of iowa

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION


TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Chair:
Disc:

Arthur Sanders, Drake University


Michael Hagen, Temple University
Kate M. Kenski, University of Arizona

Papers: How Can Online Discussion Translate Into Offline


Collective Action?
Kam-hon (Steven) Yet, University of Toronto
Online Networks and Offline Protest: Evidence from
Turkey and Ukraine
Megan MacDuffee Metzger, New York University
Persistent Civic Virtue of Online News Exposure: A
Field Experiment
Tetsuro Kobayashi, City University of Hong Kong
The (De)mobilizing Role of the Internet during the 2011
Egyptian Evolution
Jin Woo Kim, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
109.47 ENERGY POLITICS AND POLICY
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY

Chair:
Disc:

David Konisky, Indiana University, Bloomington


Kathryn Harrison, University of British Columbia

Papers: Power to the People or Regulatory Ratcheting?


Explaining US Nuclear Power Siting
Daniel P. Aldrich
Eric Berndt, Purdue University
Power Politics: Renewable Energy Policy Change in US
States
Leah Stokes, UCSB
Lobbying in Good and Bad Times: Quasi-Experimental
Evidence from Shale Gas
In Song Kim, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Johannes Urpelainen, Columbia University
No Taxation, No Representation? Citizen Preferences &
the Alaska Permanent Fund
Paasha Mahdavi, Georgetown University
Globalizing Solar: Global Supply Chains and Trade
Preferences
Jonas Meckling, University of California, Berkeley
Llewelyn Hughes, Australian National University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
POLITICS
109.48 DIGITAL ADAPTATIONS: INSTITUTIONS AND
BEHAVIOR IN THE DIGITAL AGE
Room: PCC, 104-A
Chair: Shelley Boulianne, MacEwan University
Disc:
David A. Karpf, George Washington University
Papers: Digital Inequality, Place and Access to Government
Karen Mossberger, Arizona State University
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
Yang Zhang, Washington University in St. Louis

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 415

Daily Schedule

Papers: Patrimonial Economic Voting: A Comparative Analysis


of Wealths Impact on Vote
Stephen Patrick Quinlan, GESIS Leibniz Institute for
the Social Sciences
Public Perceptions of Risk and Insecurity in the Wake of
the Great Recession
Timothy Hellwig, Indiana University, Bloomington
Jack Vowles, Victoria University of Wellington
Compulsory Voting, (In)Equality, and Quality of the
Vote
Peter Miller, University of Pennsylvania
Ruth Dassonneville, Universite de Montreal
Marc Hooghe, University Leuven
(Equi)Distant Political Alternatives: Abstention,
Indifference, and Alienation
Toni Rodon, Stanford University

DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION


109.46 POLITICAL PARTICIPATION AND THE
INTERNET
Room: PCC, 112-B

415

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

More Means Less: The Effect of the "Digital


Switchover" on Political Behavior
Yphtach Lelkes, University of Pennsylvania
Gaurav Sood, Independent
On the Go, Political, and Uncivil: Civic Discourse on
Mobile Social Networks
Jacob Groshek, Boston University
Primary Definers Online: Social Media and Think Tank
Authority in the UK
Nick Anstead, London School of Economics
Andrew Chadwick
Why Your Local Government Offers So Many (Or So
Few) E-government Services
Ben Epstein, DePaul University
Leticia Bode
Jennifer M Connolly, University of Miami
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
109.49 WHERE IS THE COUNTERMOVEMENT? LABOR
MOBILIZATION IN AN ERA OF
PRECARIOUSNESS
Room: Marriott, Meeting Room 502
Co-sponsored by Labor Project

Chair:
Disc:

Tobias Schulze-Cleven, Rutgers University


Jefferey M. Sellers
Joel E. Rogers, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Papers: When Is Public Policy A Pathway to Worker Power and


When Isnt It?
Janice R Fine, Rutgers University-New Brunswick
Organizing Fast Food Workers in an Era of HyperFlexible Employment
Lucas Franco, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Labor Organizing in the Sharing Economy
Immanuel Ness
A Comparative Case Analysis of Workplace
Representation of Young Workers
Lowell Turner, Cornell University
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
109.50 INSTITUTIONS, ECONOMIC RESOURCES AND
THE DURABILITY OF AUTHORITARIANISM
Room: Marriott, Franklin 5
Chair: Karen L. Remmer, Duke University
Disc:
Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University
Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin
Papers: Explaining The Selection And Survival Of Bicameralism
In Non-Democracies
Alexander Baturo, Dublin City University
Robert Elgie, Dublin City University
How Institutions Affect Repression in Dictatorships
Chao-yo Cheng, University of California, Los Angeles
Yuree Noh
Why Do Autocrats Give Up Electoral Hegemony?
Merete Bech Seeberg, Department of Political
Science, Aarhus University
Persistent Authoritarianism and the Stabilizing Effect of
Resource Wealth
Nicholas R. Davis, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
109.51 THE INTERNATIONAL SOURCES OF
DEMOCRATIZATION AND AUTHORITARIANISM
Room: Marriott, Franklin 4

416

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Even

Page 416

Chair:
Disc:

Michael J. Coppedge, University of Notre Dame


Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto

Papers: Varieties of Democratic Diffusion: Neighbor, Trade, and


Religious Networks
Michael J. Coppedge, University of Notre Dame
Benjamin Denison, University of Notre Dame
Lucia Tiscornia, University of Notre Dame
Interrogating the Democratic Coup Thesis: The Limits
of Democratic Enforcement
Alexander Schmotz, King's College London
Oisin Tansey, King's College London
Democracy Promotion and Authoritarian Resilience after
the Arab Spring
Eva-Maria Maggi, University of Arizona
External Sponsorship of Authoritarian Regimes Under
Democratic Pressures
Wonjun Song, Pennsylvania State University
Remittances and Democratization: The Influence of
Migrant Destinations
Barry Maydom, Nuffield College, University of
Oxford
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
109.52 TRESPASSING OR TRANSFORMATION: HUMAN
RIGHTS AND STATE SOVEREIGNTY
Room: Loews, Commonwealth A2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL
COLLABORATION

Chair:
Part:

Christian Reus-Smit, University of Queensland


Leslie Vinjamuri, University of London, SOAS
Alison Brysk, UCSB
Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University
Thania Sanchez, Yale University
Courtney Hillebrecht, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Yonatan Lupu, George Washington University

DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS


109.53 MECHANISMS AND PROCESS-TRACING
WHAT ARE WE ACTUALLY TRACING?
Room: Marriott, Franklin 13
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS

Chair: David Waldner


Papers: Mechanisms as Invariant Causal Principles that Exercise
Causal Powers
David Waldner
The Methodological Implications of Interventionism for
Process-tracing
Rosa Willemijn Runhardt, London School of
Economics and Political Science
Making Causal Inferences using Mechanistic within-case
Evidence
Derek Beach, University of Aarhus
Competing Definitions of Causal Mechanisms
Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University
Rival Hypotheses and Mechanisms
Sherry Zaks, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
109.54 WHEN, WHERE, AND HOW TO ADOPT MIXEDMETHODS RESEARCH DESIGNS
Room: Marriott, Franklin 12
Chair: Kendra L. Koivu
Disc:
Gary Goertz

Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Papers: Specifying the Role of Focus Groups in Mixed-Methods


Research
Jennifer Marie Cyr, University of Arizona
Evaluating Causal Mechanisms in Mixed-Method
Research
Marissa Brookes, University of California, Riverside
Jesse Dillon Savage, University of Melbourne
Cases of Convenience? Theory and Practice in Mixed
Methods Research
Annika M. Hinze
Kendra L. Koivu
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
109.55 CONSTRUCTING MIGRANTS
Room: PCC, 202-A
Chair: Cierra Belin, American Political Science Association
Papers: Debates over Religious Accommodation as Instances of
Competitive Group Formation
Triadafilos Triadafilopoulos, University of Toronto
Constructing Refugees on the Campaign Trail
Rachel Navarre, University of Texas, Austin
An Epistemology of Migration: Migrant Domestic Work
in Israel/Palestine
Rachel Brown, The Graduate Center, City University
of New York
Related Groups
110.1
CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:
CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS AND ECONOMIC
INTEGRATION
Room: Marriott, Room 414
Chair: Shelley Rigger, Davidson College
Disc:
Dennis Hickey, Missouri State University
Hans J. Stockton, University of Saint Thomas

Room:
Chair:
Disc:

Papers: Community and the Order of Being


James Greenaway, St. Mary's University
How to Think About Human Origins
Brendan Purcell, University of Notre Dame Australia,
Sydney
Gods and Saints: Aquinas and Principle of
Transcendence
Gustavo A. Santos, Oficina Municipal
Conservatism and Spiritual and Social Recovery
Richard J. Bishirjian, Yorktown University
What the Church Means by Faith; What Voegelin
Meant by Faith
Thomas E. Lordan, Independent scholar
110.4
GREEN POLITICS AND THEORY:
INTERROGATING THE ANTHROPOCENE
Room: Marriott, Room 411
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE

Chair:
Disc:

Jennifer Lawrence
Sean Parson, Northern Arizona University

Papers: Climate Change and the Discursive Gap: Querying


Nonhuman Political Agencies
Yogi Hale Hendlin, University of California, Los
Angeles
On The Singularity of New Planetary Objects:
Reconsidering Mountain Governance
Rafi Youatt, New School for Social Research
Urban Subversion: Resisting inequality in city
infrastructures
Sarah Surak, Salisbury University
Energy's Power: Resisting Fossil Fuels through a
Feminist, Post-work Politics
Cara Daggett, University of South Florida
Hiding in the Hybridities of Climate Change
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech

Daily Schedule

Papers: Chinas Foreign Policy Transformation: Implications for


Cross-Strait Relations
Nien-Chung Chang Liao, Academia Sinica
Cross-Strait Relations in the Aftermath of Taiwans
2016 Elections
John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, University of South Carolina
Prospect of the TPP under the Scope of Taiwans Party
Realignment
Rou-lan Chen, National Sun Yat-sen University
Reconciliation without Convergence? Theorizing
Taiwan-China Relations
Vincent Wei-cheng Wang, Ithaca College
When Frictions Do Not Cause Rift: Explaining
Ambiguity in Alliance Management
Ping-Kuei Chen, University of Maryland, College
Park
110.2
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: THE POLITICAL
PERSISTENCE OF RELIGION
Room: Loews, Commonwealth C
Chair: Robert P. Kraynak, Colgate University
Disc:
Glenn Hughes, St. Mary's University
Carol B Cooper, Independent Scholar

110.3

Modernity as Secular Religion, Hegel, Nietzsche, and


Voegelin
Robert P. Kraynak, Colgate University
ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: TRANSCENDENCE
AS THE HORIZON OF POLITICS
Loews, Commonwealth B
James Greenaway, St. Mary's University
Jerry L. Martin, University of Colorado at Boulder
Thomas J. McPartland, Kentucky State University

Papers: Carl Schmitt and Erik Peterson on Political Theology


Eduardo Schmidt Passos, The Catholic University of
America
Reason, Revelation, and the Crisis of Islam
Robert M. Schaefer, University of West Georgia

DAILY SCHEDULE

X : 11437$CH01
08-10-16 01:27:39
Layout: 11437N : Odd

Page 417

417

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

A
A. C. Gatto, Malu ...........291 (45.38)
Aare, Lene ........... 255 (22.47), 323
(60.9)
Aaskoven, Lasse ...........324 (60.15)
Abbott, Jared .................268 (26.51)
Abbott, Jason P.............306 (51.47)
Abdel-Nour, Farid ..........397 (107.3)
Abdelal, Rawi.................275 (40.23)
Abdelzadeh, Ali ..... 280 (40.48), 343
(76.47)
Abdulai, Abdul-Gafaru...............261
(26.17)
Abdulkadir, Rahma ...... 400 (107.20)
Abedini, Vahid ...............325 (60.17)
Abel, Troy D................... 344 (76.49)
Abernathy, Claire........... 354 (83.31)
Abizadeh, Arash ............408 (109.8)
Ables, Micah .................. 367 (88.36)
Abott, Carolyn ...............277 (40.35)
Abou-samra, Reem........241 (17.37)
Abraham, Kavi J. ........... 256 (22.50)
Abrahms, Max................302 (51.25)
Abramowitz, Alan I. .........297 (49.1)
Abramson, Kara Miriam ............322
(59.7), 348 (82.1)
Abramson, Scott.... 263 (26.27), 350
(83.9)
Abramson, Yehonatan............... 327
(60.28)
Abulof, Uriel...................283 (40.62)
Acevedo, Emily..............301 (51.23)
Acharya, Avidit R...........387 (96.13)
Achen, Christopher H................226
(11.17), 242 (17.42), 305
(51.44), 369 (88.47)
Achtman, Amanda Nicole
Marilyn ..........................258 (23.3)
Achury, Susan Vivian ................339
(76.23), 381 (92.41)
Ackelsberg, Martha A................ 355
(83.37)
Ackerly, Brooke A......... 249 (22.12),
272 (40.6), 408 (109.4)
Acolatse, Charles Kwame .........387
(96.12)
Acorn, Elizabeth ............303 (51.33)
Acosta, Benjamin ......... 393 (96.49),
413 (109.34)
Acree, Brice ........... 237 (17.11), 267
(26.45), 273 (40.12)
Adam, Erin.....................319 (56.58)
Adams, James ....... 280 (40.47), 326
(60.21), 381 (92.43)
Adams, Karen Ruth ...... 289 (45.26),
353 (83.25)
Adams, Melinda J......... 359 (83.57),
380 (92.37)
Adamson, Fiona B.........371 (88.57)
Adida, Claire Leslie ...... 226 (11.20),
388 (96.18)
Adiguzel, Fatih Serkant .............316
(56.43)
Adler, Scott ....................378 (92.29)
Affigne, Tony ......... 254 (22.40), 332
(61.4)
Afsahi, Afsoun.................272 (40.5)
Agupusi, Patricia C. ...... 372 (88.58)
Ahler, Douglas ......... 248 (22.8), 392
(96.44)
Ahlquist, John Stephen.............351
(83.14)
Ahmadov, Anar ...... 244 (17.51), 260
(26.12)
Ahmed, Amel F. ..... 382 (92.50), 409
(109.14)
Ahmed, Faisal Z..... 251 (22.21), 352
(83.20)
Ahn, Natalie ...................237 (17.11)

418

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : 4001

Page 418

Ahuja, Amit .................... 288 (45.17)


Ainsworth, Scott H. ...... 241 (17.33),
253 (22.35)
Akbulut, Isil.................... 290 (45.30)
akcinaroglu, seden .......228 (11.28),
412 (109.32)
Akiyama, Hiromi ............312 (56.20)
Aklin, Michael ................262 (26.21)
Akoto, William ............. 401 (107.25)
Akturk, Sener.................249 (22.10)
Akuoko, Mathias Kwadwo.........387
(96.12)
Alagappa, Muthiah.........289 (45.27)
Alakoc, Burcu Pinar ...... 254 (22.39)
Alarian, Hannah M. ........ 245 (17.55)
Alarian, Hannah Marie...............262
(26.20)
Albert, Karen .................269 (26.55)
Albert, Zachary ..............356 (83.41)
Albertson, Bethany.........336 (76.7),
386 (96.10)
Albertus, Michael.......... 260 (26.10),
398 (107.12)
Albright, Elizabeth Ann .............232
(11.48), 281 (40.51), 330
(60.48)
Alcaniz, Isabella....... 249 (22.9), 356
(83.42)
Aldrich, Andrea Stephanie ........329
(60.43)
Aldrich, Daniel P. ... 406 (108.2), 415
(109.47)
Aldrich, John H...... 305 (51.43), 330
(60.46), 343 (76.43)
Aleman, Eduardo..... 363 (88.9), 390
(96.32)
Alexander, Amy C......... 332 (60.57),
342 (76.40)
Alexander, Brian ...... 373 (91.3), 385
(95.4)
Alexander, Gerard ...........383 (93.2)
Alexander-Davey, Ethan ............397
(107.1)
Alexander-Floyd, Nikol G. .........234
(12.4), 271 (38.2), 285 (44.5)
Alexandroff, Alan S. ...... 389 (96.26)
Alexiadou, Despina ...... 250 (22.19),
401 (107.24)
Alfaro, Laura.................. 251 (22.21)
Algara, Carlos................231 (11.45)
Aligica, Paul Dragos......325 (60.20)
Aliotta, Jilda M...............287 (45.13)
Alkon, Meir.......................234 (13.1)
Allam, Nermin ................342 (76.40)
Allan, Bentley B............. 232 (11.53)
Allee, Todd L..................352 (83.21)
Allen, Amy .......................336 (76.5)
Allen, Barbara................266 (26.42)
Allen, Brooke Thomas...............387
(96.16)
Allen, Geoff.................. 404 (107.44)
Allen, Peter ....................279 (40.41)
Allen, Susan H....... 251 (22.23), 290
(45.30)
Allen, Trevor J ............... 377 (92.20)
Allendoerfer, Michelle
Giacobbe............. 282 (40.57), 295
(45.58)
Alles, Santiago ...... 254 (22.42), 316
(56.43), 380 (92.41)
Allison, Michael E......... 250 (22.17),
301 (51.24), 332 (61.5)
Almendares, Nicholas ...241 (17.33)
Alphonso, Gwendoline M. .........375
(92.10)
Alt, James E. .................345 (76.57)
Alt, Robert .......................395 (97.5)
Altamirano, Melina.........351 (83.14)
Altamirano Rayo, Giorleny........258
(23.5)

Altema McNeely, Natasha..........305


(51.39), 342 (76.42), 392
(96.38)
Alter, Karen J........... 258 (24.3), 313
(56.24), 368 (88.39)
Althaus, Scott L....... 296 (46.1), 357
(83.45), 378 (92.27)
Altier, MaryBeth E....... 402 (107.34),
403 (107.34)
Alunan, Susan Catherine ..........357
(83.47), 393 (96.48)
Alvarez, Linda..................246 (18.4)
Alvarez, R. Michael........ 387 (96.15)
Alvarez Villa, Daphne .... 376 (92.14)
Alves, Jorge Antonio.................399
(107.16)
Amadae, Sonja M. ........ 239 (17.26),
362 (88.6)
Amat, Consuelo........... 403 (107.35)
Amat, Francesc .............311 (56.14)
Amberg-Blyskal, Patricia........... 379
(92.35)
Amengual, Matthew...... 250 (22.15),
274 (40.14), 351 (83.15)
Ametewee, Lynette ........387 (96.12)
Amirkhanyan, Anna A. ..............245
(17.53)
Amn, Erik ............. 280 (40.48), 343
(76.47)
Amoureux, Jack L. ........407 (109.1)
Amri, Puspa D ...............276 (40.25)
Amundson, Erik............. 371 (88.57)
Ananyev, Maxim .... 288 (45.20), 362
(88.7)
Anastasopoulos, Lefteris
Jason ..... 237 (17.11), 253 (22.34),
267 (26.45), 379 (92.35), 392
(96.40)
Andersen, Rasmus
Fonnesbaek ................294 (45.53)
Anderson, Karen M. .... 411 (109.25)
Anderson, Leslie E. .........236 (17.5)
Anderson, Mary R........ 409 (109.11)
Anderson, Noel............ 412 (109.30)
Anderson, Ryan T ...........285 (43.3)
Anderson, Sarah........ 221 (3.2), 231
(11.46), 330 (60.48)
Anderson, Sean Christopher ....238
(17.19)
Andr, Audrey ....... 242 (17.39), 302
(51.27), 341 (76.32)
Andreas, Peter....... 288 (45.21), 312
(56.22)
Andreopoulos, George J...........244
(17.48), 331 (60.54)
Andres, Richard.............227 (11.27)
Andrews, Sarah .............237 (17.13)
Anfinson, Kellan ............232 (11.50)
Ang, Yuen Yuen ..... 325 (60.17), 387
(96.14), 399 (107.16)
Ang Collan Granillo, Milena ......274
(40.17)
Angell, Kim ......................286 (45.6)
Angevine, Sara ...... 233 (11.57), 244
(17.52), 265 (26.37), 390
(96.29)
Anker, Elisabeth Robin ............. 308
(55.1), 336 (76.4), 385 (96.3)
Annesley, Claire............. 230 (11.41)
Anoll, Allison Penelope.............260
(26.9)
Ansell, Ben William ...... 227 (11.24),
249 (22.13)
Anson, Ian G..................391 (96.36)
Anstead, Nick ........ 267 (26.48), 416
(109.48)
Antenangeli, Leonardo....299 (51.9)
Anthony, Joseph ... 266 (26.41), 391
(96.34)
Anton, Michael.................308 (52.3)

Antony, Alex .................. 228 (11.32)


Anzia, Sarah F........ 283 (40.63), 368
(88.41)
Apostolides, Katerina.... 355 (83.37)
Apostolidis, Paul C........397 (107.4)
Appel, Hilary .................. 325 (60.20)
Aragon, Fernando Martin ..........364
(88.20)
Arakaki, Robert K. ......... 356 (83.39)
Arana Araya, Ignacio.....288 (45.19)
Arat, Zehra F. Kabasakal ...........244
(17.50), 254 (22.39), 271 (38.2)
Arcand, Jean-Louis .......225 (11.14)
Arceneaux, Kevin .... 323 (60.9), 357
(83.45), 374 (92.6)
Archer, Emerald........... 402 (107.31)
Ardoin, Phillip J.............281 (40.50)
Arel, Dominique............. 312 (56.19)
Arel-Bundock, Vincent ..............401
(107.27)
Arellano, Adrian........... 413 (109.33)
Ares, Macarena...... 243 (17.43), 389
(96.24)
Arfi, Badredine ..............225 (11.14)
Argente, David...............299 (51.12)
Argyle, Lisa......................323 (60.9)
Ari, Baris........................263 (26.28)
Arias, Eric Braian ..........251 (22.21)
Ariotti, Margaret H. ........ 346 (76.59)
Arkes, Hadley .......... 359 (84.1), 395
(97.5)
Arkilic, Ayca.....................360 (84.7)
Arlen, Gordon R. .............259 (26.3)
Armesto, Alejandra........ 291 (45.38)
Armstrong, Frdrick ......298 (51.6)
Armstrong, J. Scott .........347 (77.7)
Arneil, Barbara ................309 (56.2)
Arnn, Larry P....................383 (93.2)
Arnold, Caroline E. ........325 (60.16)
Arnold, Gwen.................314 (56.34)
Arnold, Jeffrey B. ......... 228 (11.32),
263 (26.28)
Arnold, Kathleen R. ...... 244 (17.50),
361 (86.3)
Aroca, Maria ..................379 (92.35)
Aron, Hadas............. 257 (23.1), 268
(26.50)
Aronson, Jacob ..... 302 (51.24), 353
(83.28), 390 (96.30)
Aroosi, Jamie.................330 (60.49)
Arora, Maneesh .............383 (92.54)
Arraya, Lucy Margarita....270 (27.5)
Arretche, Marta..............265 (26.34)
Arrington, Celeste ......... 291 (45.36)
Arrington, Nancy Bays ..............413
(109.37)
Arriola, Leonardo R...... 226 (11.20),
261 (26.18), 321 (58.1), 338
(76.14), 371 (88.58)
Arseneau, D. Therese.... 369 (88.45)
Arsneault, Shelly R..........373 (90.1)
Art, David..... 284 (43.1), 331 (60.55)
Artes, Joaquin ............. 414 (109.41)
Arugay, Aries A. ............232 (11.51)
Arva, Bryan Joseph.......302 (51.25)
Arves, Stephen ..............295 (45.58)
Arzheimer, Kai .................361 (86.2)
Asaf, Zain.......................315 (56.36)
Asal, Victor .....221 (2.8), 247 (21.2),
368 (88.42), 402 (107.33)
Ascencio Bonfil, Sergio
Jesus ...... 250 (22.18), 317 (56.44)
Ascher, Ivan Andre.........248 (22.3),
362 (88.6)
Ash, Konstantin..... 233 (11.56), 375
(92.13)
Ashford, Emma..............263 (26.25)
Aslam, Ali ...... 235 (17.4), 335 (74.3)
Aslam, Ghazia........ 226 (11.21), 365
(88.21)

B
Ba, Alice D. .................... 289 (45.27)
Babar, Zahra R...............344 (76.53)
Babes, Adina ...................360 (84.8)
Baccini, Leonardo ...... 398 (107.11),
411 (109.26)
Bachner, Jennifer ..........338 (76.13)
Backer, David.................252 (22.30)
Badescu, Gabriel .............360 (84.8)
Baer, Denise L. ............ 414 (109.42)
Baer, Judith A................369 (88.42)
Baerg, Nicole Rae.... 363 (88.9), 398
(107.10)
Bagchi, Nivedita ............294 (45.51)
Bagg, Samuel Ely ............260 (26.7)
Bagozzi, Benjamin E. .... 237 (17.11)
Bahamonde, Hector.........236 (17.7)
Bailey, Jeremy D........... 290 (45.33),
372 (89.1)
Bailey, Michael A. .......... 324 (60.12)
Baily, Alan I......................346 (77.3)
Baird, Karen L. ...... 304 (51.38), 355
(83.37), 391 (96.38)
Baker, Andy ........... 239 (17.22), 351
(83.14), 388 (96.19)
Bakkalbasioglu, Esra.....388 (96.17)
Bakke, Kristin Marie ..... 240 (17.29),
277 (40.32)
Bakker, Bert ........... 242 (17.41), 317
(56.48)
Bakker, Ryan ......... 337 (76.12), 381
(92.43)
Balcells, Laia .................389 (96.24)
Baldassarri, Delia ..........393 (96.44)
Baldez, Lisa .....................247 (20.3)
Baldwin, Eric A...... 267 (26.46), 319
(56.58)
Baldwin, Katharine A.................311
(56.13), 381 (92.44), 410
(109.22)
Baldwin-Philippi, Jessica ..........343
(76.48), 393 (96.47)
Balfour, Lawrie ........ 309 (56.3), 336
(76.5)
Balkin, Jack M. ................359 (84.1)
Ball, Carlos .... 270 (27.3), 298 (51.5)
Ballard-Rosa, Cameron .............224
(11.11), 337 (76.9)
Balleck, Barry J. ............375 (92.12)

Ballingall, Robert A .........322 (60.2)


Baloch, Bilal ................ 406 (107.53)
Balogun, Emmanuel ...... 296 (45.60)
Balot, Ryan ......................247 (22.1)
Baltrusaitis, Daniel ........364 (88.15)
Balzer, Harley D. ............339 (76.20)
Ban, Pamela...................363 (88.13)
Banack, Clark ................358 (83.53)
Banda, Kevin K.............. 255 (22.45)
Bandoch, Joshua M. .....318 (56.51)
Banducci, Susan A........231 (11.47)
Banerjee, Sayan ............ 363 (88.10)
Bansak, Kirk ..................310 (56.11)
Barabas, Jason...... 269 (26.56), 272
(40.8)
Barbeau, Aimee ...............386 (96.6)
Barber, Benjamin..... 298 (51.7), 409
(109.13)
Barber, Michael..............278 (40.39)
Barber, Sotirios A. ...........285 (43.3)
Barbera, Pablo...............318 (56.49)
Barbour, Charles .............385 (96.5)
Barclay, Scott ................307 (51.50)
Bardall, Gabrielle...........250 (22.17)
Bargsted, Matias............319 (56.55)
Bargu, Banu............. 336 (76.4), 397
(107.5)
Barkanov, Boris ...............347 (77.8)
Barker, David C...... 282 (40.62), 336
(76.7), 386 (96.10)
Barker, Fiona C..............369 (88.45)
Barnes, Andrew S.........325 (60.20),
352 (83.19)
Barnes, Carolyn.............391 (96.37)
Barnes, Jeb.................... 230 (11.38)
Barnes, Matthew............243 (17.46)
Barnes, Nicholas ...........249 (22.14)
Barnes, Tiffany D.......... 254 (22.42),
293 (45.47), 387 (96.15)
Barnhart, Joslyn N. .......366 (88.31)
Barone, Michael....... 332 (61.2), 372
(89.4)
Barratt, Bethany ............382 (92.51)
Barreto, Matt A. ............. 388 (96.18)
Barrett, David M...............296 (46.4)
Barrett, Kathleen Regina...........258
(23.5)
Barrett, Richard A.........330 (60.49),
407 (108.6)
Barrilleaux, Charles J................ 292
(45.39)
Barrington, Lowell W.......307 (52.1)
Bartch, Catherine ..........253 (22.33)
Bartels, Brandon L. .......355 (83.34)
Bartels, Larry M. ...... 259 (25.1), 296
(45.61), 369 (88.47)
Barter, Shane J........ 258 (23.6), 300
(51.14), 315 (56.36)
Barth, Jay ...................... 379 (92.35)
Barthel, Michael............. 357 (83.46)
Bartlett, Robert V. ..........344 (76.49)
Bartman, Jos Midas ...... 250 (22.17)
Barton, Dona-Gene........ 295 (45.55)
Barvosa, Edwina..............246 (18.4)
Bas, Muhammet..... 251 (22.25), 290
(45.31)
Basdas, Umur ..................349 (83.1)
Basedau, Matthias ........ 314 (56.31),
402 (107.33)
Basinger, Scott J ........... 243 (17.43)
Bass, Leeann ......... 264 (26.29), 413
(109.37)
Bassi, Anna ............. 248 (22.7), 415
(109.43)
Bastiaens, Ida ........ 251 (22.22), 352
(83.20)
Basu, Chitralekha ......... 293 (45.47),
316 (56.44)
Basu, Pounami ..............290 (45.29)
Batchis, Wayne..............278 (40.37)
Bateman, David Alexander........236
(17.9)
Bateson, Regina A........ 261 (26.13),
393 (96.49)
Batista, Mariana.............241 (17.35)
Batista Pereira, Frederico .........410
(109.17)
Battistoni, Richard M.....350 (83.11)
Batto, Nathan F. .............327 (60.31)
Baturo, Alexander ........ 377 (92.19),
416 (109.50)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 419

Bauer, Kelly ...................351 (83.15)


Bauer, Nichole ......... 224 (11.8), 292
(45.41), 404 (107.41)
Bauerle Danzman, Sarah...........352
(83.20)
Baum, Matthew A. ........ 252 (22.26),
301 (51.20), 361 (86.1)
Baumgartner, Frank R. .....222 (5.1),
309 (55.2), 378 (92.29), 403
(107.38)
Bausch, Andrew W. .......327 (60.29)
Bawah, Ayaga..................383 (93.3)
Bayer, Resat .......... 228 (11.31), 290
(45.30)
Baykal, Ozgen Gokce .... 388 (96.19)
Baykan, Toygar Sinan ... 376 (92.15)
Baylor, Christopher ...... 231 (11.44),
293 (45.45)
Bayyenat, Abolghasem .............290
(45.29)
Bchtiger, Andre..............349 (83.4)
Beach, Derek ............. 221 (2.1), 416
(109.53)
Beail, Linda....................393 (96.48)
Bean, Nathan Andrew ...282 (40.57)
Bearce, David H.............365 (88.25)
Beard, Lisa ......................259 (26.4)
Beard, Virginia Parish .....296 (46.1)
Beardsley, Kyle...... 302 (51.26), 353
(83.24)
Beaulieu, Emily................299 (51.9)
Beauvais, Edana...... 273 (40.8), 305
(51.41), 349 (83.4)
Beazer, Quintin H. ... 236 (17.8), 275
(40.22), 300 (51.17), 363 (88.9)
Beber, Bernd.......... 233 (11.56), 239
(17.25), 378 (92.24)
Bech, Emily Cochran.......337 (76.8)
Becher, Michael ....... 248 (22.7), 287
(45.16)
Bechtel, Michael M. .......317 (56.45)
Beck, Nathaniel .............364 (88.14)
Becker, Bastian ...............299 (51.8)
Becker, Jeffrey A. ............323 (60.5)
Becker Kane, Jenna ......368 (88.40)
Beckley, Michael..............321 (58.3)
Beckmann, Matthew N. ............. 390
(96.33)
Beckwith, Karen .... 230 (11.41), 247
(20.3), 279 (40.42), 360 (84.3)
Bedi, Sonu ..... 298 (51.5), 348 (81.1)
Bednar, Jenna..................332 (61.1)
Bednarczuk, Michael .......347 (79.1)
Beer, Caroline C. ........... 254 (22.42)
Beesley, Celeste ............316 (56.40)
Bego, Ingrid ...................227 (11.25)
Behl, Natasha ................355 (83.37)
Behnke, Nathalie .............332 (61.1)
Beienburg, Sean ............241 (17.34)
Beigang, Steffen ............230 (11.40)
Beim, Deborah...............253 (22.35)
Beiser, Janina ................252 (22.30)
Bejan, Teresa M. .... 319 (56.57), 361
(88.1)
Beland, Daniel ....... 269 (26.54), 413
(109.36)
Belanger, Eric ................371 (88.54)
Belasco, Chris A............ 372 (88.58)
Belco, Michelle Helene..............278
(40.35)
Belden, Cory.................. 325 (60.21)
Beleli, Ozsel...................277 (40.34)
Belin, Cierra........... 224 (11.10), 310
(56.8), 417 (109.55)
Bell, Andrew .................. 340 (76.28)
Bell, Anthony M. ............239 (17.27)
Bell, Curtis................... 402 (107.30)
Bell, Mark S. .......... 263 (26.24), 412
(109.30)
Bell, Patrick M. ..............312 (56.19)
Bellhouse, Mary L..........297 (50.14)
Bello-Pardo, Emily D. ... 240 (17.32),
249 (22.14)
Belt, Todd L. .................. 391 (96.33)
Belton, Kristy A. ............394 (96.53)
Beltran, Cristina....... 271 (40.1), 397
(107.4)
Ben Shitrit, Lihi ............. 329 (60.42)
Ben-Porath, Sigal R.........336 (76.6)
Benabdallah, Lina..........228 (11.30)
Bendor, Jonathan ............336 (76.7)

Benesch, Christine ...... 403 (107.36)


Benet, William J.............351 (83.16)
Benhabib, Seyla....... 248 (22.4), 384
(94.1)
Benjamin, Andrea..........355 (83.37)
Benjamin, Dave O.......... 331 (60.54)
Bennett, Andrew........ 222 (6.6), 235
(15.2), 261 (26.13), 350 (83.10),
416 (109.53)
Bennett, Jane...................336 (76.4)
Bennett, Nolan.................271 (40.1)
Bennett, Zachary .............346 (77.2)
Bennion, Elizabeth A........222 (6.3),
247 (21.3), 350 (83.11)
Benoit, Cyril...................264 (26.32)
Benoit, Kenneth R. ....... 266 (26.42),
285 (44.1), 375 (92.11)
Bensel, Richard F. ......... 293 (45.45)
Benson, Brett.................269 (26.55)
Benson, David C............294 (45.50)
Benstead, Lindsay J..... 238 (17.15),
411 (109.22)
Benton, Allyson L......... 331 (60.53),
374 (92.7)
Beramendi, Pablo ......... 249 (22.13),
409 (109.13)
Berardo, Ramiro ........ 221 (3.2), 294
(45.49)
Berejikian, Jeffrey D. .....240 (17.27)
Berens, Sarah Andrea .....310 (56.8)
Berenschot, Ward..........238 (17.16)
Berenson, Marc P. ........ 275 (40.22),
287 (45.14), 331 (60.53), 400
(107.22)
Berezin, Mabel ............. 399 (107.15)
Bergbauer, Harald ...........296 (46.3)
Berger, Ronit ...................310 (56.7)
Berger, William J ... 282 (40.62), 383
(92.55)
Bergh, Johannes ... 345 (76.58), 392
(96.42)
Bergman, Elin ..................350 (83.8)
Bergquist, Sarah Parrish...........243
(17.44)
Berinsky, Adam J. ... 247 (20.4), 260
(26.9)
Berkemeier, Molly ..........228 (11.32)
Berkenpas, Joshua R. ............... 394
(96.54)
Berkey, Brian ...................236 (17.6)
Berkowitz, Jeremy Matthew ...... 389
(96.27)
Berlin, Mark S. ............... 253 (22.36)
Berliner, Daniel ..............300 (51.15)
Berman, Chantal............305 (51.44)
Berman, Sheri................294 (45.54)
Bermeo, Nancy ...... 364 (88.18), 382
(92.50)
Bernabel, Rodolpho .....343 (76.45),
400 (107.21)
Bernardi, Luca ...............243 (17.44)
Berndt, Eric.................. 415 (109.47)
Bernhard, Michael ........ 344 (76.52),
412 (109.28)
Bernhard, Rachel Velzquez .....224
(11.8)
Bernhard, William T. ......251 (22.21)
Bernhardt, Dan ................362 (88.7)
Berning, Carl Clemens ..............361
(86.2), 377 (92.20)
Bernstein, Steven F. .......258 (24.3),
284 (42.1), 382 (92.47)
Berry, Aberdeen...............285 (45.4)
Berry, Jeffrey M. ...... 235 (16.1), 292
(45.40)
Bertelli, Anthony Michael..........240
(17.31), 264 (26.34), 277
(40.34), 293 (45.47)
Bertoli, Andrew..............276 (40.29)
Bertsou, Eri E ........ 312 (56.21), 329
(60.45), 415 (109.44)
Besco, Randy ................358 (83.53)
Best, Jacqueline ............275 (40.23)
Betz, Steven...................304 (51.36)
Betz, Timm............. 326 (60.24), 389
(96.25)
Beuck, Erik Charles.......263 (26.27)
Beyer, Jessica L. ...........393 (96.47)
Beyer, Marcia Neille.......280 (40.50)
Bhalotra, Sonia..............288 (45.17)
Bhandari, Abhit .............346 (76.59)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

419

Index of Participants

Aspinall, Edward ... 237 (17.14), 294


(45.54), 364 (88.17)
Assouline, philippe........ 352 (83.23)
Atchison, Amy L..............222 (6.10)
Atkinson, Mary Layton ..............229
(11.34), 357 (83.45), 413
(109.35)
Atkison, Larissa M...........247 (22.1)
Audette, Andre Pierre....267 (26.47)
Auerbach, Adam Michael ..........311
(56.13), 329 (60.43), 351
(83.14)
Auerbach, Kiran.............358 (83.49)
Augspurger, Jennifer.....243 (17.47)
Aultman, B Lee..............319 (56.58)
Autesserre, Severine .....353 (83.24)
Avant, Deborah..............389 (96.26)
Avanza, Martina .............257 (22.55)
Avdan, Nazli........... 277 (40.32), 368
(88.42)
Avdeyeva, Olga A. .........365 (88.22)
Avellaneda, Claudia N. ..............291
(45.38), 314 (56.33)
Avey, Paul C. .................262 (26.23)
Avgousti, Andreas..........322 (60.2),
407 (108.6)
Avramenko, Richard........246 (18.5)
Avritzer, Leonardo ...........372 (89.2)
Aydin, Aysegul....... 327 (60.29), 340
(76.31), 390 (96.31)
Aydogan, Abdullah....... 267 (26.46),
314 (56.32)
Aylward, Ashley............. 392 (96.38)
Aylward, Erin .................244 (17.52)
Ayoub, Phillip M ............ 288 (45.21)
Ayyilmaz, Nurullah ........327 (60.28)
Azari, Julia Rezazadeh ..............327
(60.32), 343 (76.43), 379
(92.30), 392 (96.41)

Bhattacharya, Srobana..............403
(107.34)
Bhattacharya, Sudip........359 (84.2)
Bhatti, Yosef .................. 293 (45.46)
Bhavnani, Rikhil R........ 324 (60.10),
356 (83.40)
Bias, Thomas K. ............264 (26.32)
Bibby, Andrew .................246 (18.5)
Bickford, Susan .............407 (108.6)
Bidjerano, Morris D. ...... 351 (83.16)
Biebricher, Thomas .........395 (97.6)
Biglaiser, Glen ....... 225 (11.11), 339
(76.23)
Bilev, Gavril K.............. 399 (107.16)
Billard, Thomas J ..........331 (60.56)
Bils, Peter ........................386 (96.8)
Binder, Sarah .................286 (45.10)
Binette, Aja Jacqueline ............. 393
(96.46)
Binev, Binio Slavov ..... 406 (107.53)
Birch, Sarah...................237 (17.11)
Bird, Annie.....................345 (76.54)
Birkhead, Nathaniel A ...304 (51.36)
Birkland, Thomas A...... 231 (11.48),
253 (22.33), 278 (40.38)
Birney, Mayling ............ 400 (107.19)
Bisbee, James Hodgdon ...........284
(42.1)
Bischof, Daniel ..............243 (17.44)
Bishirjian, Richard J......417 (110.3)
Bittner, Amanda........... 409 (109.15)
Bjarnegard, Elin............. 279 (40.42)
Blair, Graeme ......... 273 (40.11), 350
(83.10)
Blair, Robert...................290 (45.31)
Blair, Robert A. ..............226 (11.20)
Blais, Andr ...................407 (108.4)
Blake, Daniel J.................363 (88.9)
Blake, David Haven .......318 (56.51)
Blake, William Dawes .......222 (6.1),
391 (96.36)
Blanchard, Eric M. .........295 (45.56)
Blanchard, Philippe .......244 (17.51)
Bland, Gary.................... 275 (40.20)
Blank, Meredith ..... 276 (40.28), 326
(60.25)
Blanken, Leo J...............261 (26.15)
Blarel, Nicolas ...............313 (56.28)
Blass, Abby ...................391 (96.35)
Blatter, Joachim K. ........ 244 (17.51)
Blattman, Christopher ...............282
(40.60)
Blau, Adrian...................398 (107.7)
Bleich, Erik J. ................383 (92.54)
Blings, Steffen ....... 273 (40.13), 360
(84.7), 392 (96.41)
Bliss, Daniel E. ..............342 (76.39)
Bloch Rubin, Ruth .........231 (11.44)
Block, Carissa Tudor.....275 (40.22)
Block, Douglas ..............275 (40.19)
Blofield, Merike...... 311 (56.16), 376
(92.18)
Bloom, Mia M......... 329 (60.39), 389
(96.27)
Blum, Rachel ......... 359 (83.54), 381
(92.42), 392 (96.41)
Boas, Taylor C. ...... 324 (60.12), 400
(107.21)
Boatright, Robert G. ........372 (89.3)
Bob, Clifford .................. 340 (76.28)
Boczek, Macon W. ...........372 (89.5)
Bode, Leticia.......... 267 (26.46), 294
(45.50), 331 (60.56), 416
(109.48)
Bodea, Cristina...... 227 (11.26), 299
(51.8), 376 (92.16)
Bodea, Roxana ..............381 (92.46)
Bodnaruk Jazayeri, Karen.........278
(40.36)
Boehmelt, Tobias Friedrich
Karl......... 228 (11.31), 280 (40.47),
381 (92.43)
Boehmke, Frederick J. ..............292
(45.42), 328 (60.37)
Boersner, Adriana .........263 (26.26)
Boerzel, Tanja A. ..... 348 (81.3), 366
(88.27)
Bohlken, Anjali Thomas ............339
(76.19)
Bohman, James...............260 (26.6)
Boix, Carles ...................311 (56.14)

420

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 420

Bokemper, Scott ............264 (26.32)


Boleslavsky, Raphael ......323 (60.8)
Bolton, Alexander......... 278 (40.39),
347 (79.1), 348 (79.1)
Bond, Kanisha ......... 247 (20.3), 392
(96.41)
Bond, Robert ......... 267 (26.45), 330
(60.47), 358 (83.54)
Bonica, Adam ........ 283 (40.63), 399
(107.13)
Bonilla, Tabitha..............253 (22.34)
Bonneau, Chris W..........391 (96.36)
Bonnette, Lakeyta Monique ......241
(17.37)
Bonotti, Matteo ..............316 (56.42)
Boone, Catherine.......... 260 (26.10),
390 (96.30)
Booth, John A. ..............274 (40.16)
Borchert, Jens ...............282 (40.62)
Borges, Fabian A.............332 (61.5)
Boris, Elizabeth T ............321 (59.2)
Borisova, Ekaterina .......345 (76.58)
Bormann, Nils-Christian............412
(109.32)
Born, Vivienne ...............307 (51.53)
Bornhorst, Alyssa ...........346 (77.2)
Boryczka, Jocelyn M. .... 319 (56.58)
Bose, Anuja ...................408 (109.6)
Bose, Meena ..................263 (26.26)
Bosia, Michael J. ... 244 (17.52), 281
(40.54)
Bosniak, Linda.................272 (40.6)
Boston, Joshua ..... 345 (76.57), 403
(107.39)
Botting, Eileen Hunt ........309 (56.2)
Bouchat, Sarah...... 337 (76.12), 400
(107.19)
Boucoyannis, Deborah A. .........259
(26.1), 324 (60.11)
Boudreau, Cheryl .... 224 (11.9), 404
(107.45)
Bougher, Lori...................384 (94.2)
Boulianne, Shelley........ 393 (96.47),
415 (109.48)
Bouton, Laurent...............349 (83.6)
Bove, Vincenzo...... 240 (17.29), 353
(83.24)
Bowers, Melanie Marie ..............278
(40.40), 379 (92.32), 391
(96.34)
Bowler, Shaun ....... 369 (88.45), 392
(96.42)
Bowman, Ann O'M........ 306 (51.46),
315 (56.34), 341 (76.37)
Bowman, Joshua J.........332 (61.3),
395 (97.4)
Bowman, Megan Eisenman.......387
(96.12), 410 (109.17)
Bowyer, Benjamin T.......357 (83.44)
Box-Steffensmeier, Janet M. .....247
(21.1), 284 (43.2), 383 (92.53)
Boyd, Jonathan Ross......348 (79.1)
Boydstun, Amber Ellen .............318
(56.49)
Boyea, Brent D. ............. 278 (40.39)
Boykin, Scott .................255 (22.46)
Boylan, Jennifer C........ 299 (51.12),
338 (76.17)
Boyle, Michael J. ........... 313 (56.25)
Boynton, George Robert ...........370
(88.51)
Bttkjr, Louise Thorn .............255
(22.44)
Braaten, Daniel Bruce ...............252
(22.28), 331 (60.54)
Bracewell, Lorna Norman .........232
(11.54)
Bracic, Ana ............ 295 (45.58), 388
(96.18)
Brader, Ted ............ 317 (56.47), 337
(76.8)
Bradford, Neil ................320 (56.63)
Bradizza, Luigi.................346 (77.2)
Brady, David W. ............. 303 (51.31)
Brady, Henry E......... 235 (15.3), 400
(107.22)
Brady, Michael C. ..........255 (22.43)
Braithwaite, Alex ...........390 (96.30)
Braithwaite, Jessica Maves.......240
(17.28)

Braman, Eileen ...... 303 (51.32), 355


(83.34)
Brambor, Thomas......... 287 (45.14),
312 (56.18), 374 (92.7), 387
(96.11)
Brams, Steven J. .......221 (2.6), 374
(92.8), 386 (96.8)
Brancati, Dawn ...... 326 (60.25), 341
(76.37)
Branch, Jordan..............313 (56.25)
Brandly, Christy............. 377 (92.19)
Brandt, Caroline ............228 (11.28)
Brandt, Patrick T............237 (17.11)
Branham, Alex ............. 409 (109.15)
Braniff, Maire Catherine ............246
(18.6)
Branton, Regina.............292 (45.42)
Branton, Regina P........ 409 (109.15)
Brasfield, James M........319 (56.59)
Brathwaite, Kirstin J. Hasler .....412
(109.32)
Brathwaite, Robert Thuan .........392
(96.40)
Braun, Joseph ...............295 (45.58)
Braun, Robert ................249 (22.10)
Brautigam, Deborah ..... 238 (17.18),
251 (22.22), 289 (45.24)
Braver, Joshua ..............311 (56.12)
Brazys, Samuel...... 226 (11.22), 363
(88.9)
Breen, Michael.................246 (18.6)
Breen, Sheryl Demorest ............332
(61.4)
Brehm, John ....................224 (11.8)
Breiner, Peter D. ...... 309 (56.6), 336
(76.6), 385 (96.2)
Bremer, Bjoern Kristen .............301
(51.18)
Brennan, Kathleen P. J.............. 298
(51.4)
Breton, Charles .............307 (51.52)
Breunig, Christian .........368 (88.37)
Breuning, Marijke ..........329 (60.39)
Brewer, Paul R...............331 (60.56)
Breznau, Nate ...... 405 (107.47), 413
(109.36)
Breznitz, Dan ......... 227 (11.24), 300
(51.16)
Bricker, Benjamin ..........278 (40.36)
Bridges, Amy B. .... 297 (50.17), 315
(56.38), 409 (109.14)
Brierley, Sarah ...............237 (17.13)
Briffault, Richard ...............222 (6.1)
Brigden, Noelle K. ........ 288 (45.21),
312 (56.22)
Briggs, Ryan C. ............. 257 (22.58)
Bright, Chelsie Lynn Moore ......381
(92.42)
Brink, Paul A....................296 (46.1)
Brinks, Daniel M. ... 391 (96.35), 399
(107.16)
Brinton, Aspen Elizabeth ..........248
(22.5)
Broache, Michael Patrick ..........331
(60.54)
Brock, Clare...................315 (56.34)
Brockway, Mark .............241 (17.37)
Broms, Rasmus .............287 (45.14)
Bromund, Ted R. .............372 (89.4)
Broniecki, Philipp Christian ......326
(60.22), 337 (76.11)
Bronner, Laura............... 280 (40.48)
Bronner, Stephen Eric...............268
(26.49)
Broockman, David .........269 (26.56)
Brooke, Steven ...... 294 (45.53), 311
(56.15), 400 (107.18)
Brookes, Marissa..... 346 (77.6), 417
(109.54)
Brookhart, Jennifer L. ... 225 (11.14)
Brooks, John Edward....379 (92.35)
Brooks, Risa A. ..... 326 (60.25), 350
(83.12)
Brooks, Sarah M........... 251 (22.21),
350 (83.8), 411 (109.26)
Brouard, Sylvain............407 (108.4)
Brough, Christopher B. .............315
(56.35)
Brown, Adam R. ............379 (92.35)
Brown, Colin M................360 (84.7)
Brown, David S..............387 (96.12)

Brown, Heath ......... 257 (22.57), 308


(54.3), 355 (83.38)
Brown, Lawrence D. ...... 345 (76.56)
Brown, Mitchell...... 231 (11.48), 247
(21.2), 264 (26.34)
Brown, Nadia E.......... 221 (3.3), 241
(17.36), 285 (44.5), 308 (55.1),
335 (75.1), 373 (91.2), 385
(95.4), 414 (109.39)
Brown, Rachel ............. 417 (109.55)
Brown, Wendy .................362 (88.3)
Browne, Katrina............. 378 (92.28)
Browning, Robert X. ..........221 (3.8)
Broz, J. Lawrence......... 227 (11.26),
286 (45.10)
Bruehwiler Haeusermann, Claudia
Franziska ............ 330 (60.49), 382
(92.49)
Brule, Rachel E.............. 288 (45.17)
Brunel, Claire.................281 (40.51)
Bruno, Jonathan..............336 (76.3)
Brusoe, Peter W.............287 (45.13)
Brutger, Ryan.................239 (17.23)
Bruyneel, Kevin M. ........ 397 (107.4)
Bryant, Kenneth.............367 (88.35)
Brysk, Alison ............... 416 (109.52)
Bucci, Laura ..................342 (76.38)
Buchman, Jeremy .........291 (45.37)
Buckinx, Barbara........... 371 (88.57)
Buckles, Grant T. ... 274 (40.18), 405
(107.49)
Buckley, David T. ... 292 (45.43), 404
(107.43)
Buckley, Noah.............. 410 (109.17)
Bucur, Cristina....... 314 (56.32), 403
(107.36)
Bucy, Erik P......................320 (57.1)
Bueno, Natalia Salgado.............311
(56.13)
Bueno de Mesquita, Ethan........323
(60.8), 408 (109.9)
Bull, Martin J ........... 233 (12.2), 346
(77.4)
Bullock, Graham............382 (92.47)
Bullock, Jessie ............ 400 (107.19)
Bullock, John............... 405 (107.45)
Bullock, Justin B ........... 315 (56.34)
Bulman, David Janoff......234 (13.1)
Bulutgil, H. Zeynep........260 (26.11)
Bunce, Valerie................274 (40.15)
Bunea, Adriana..............354 (83.33)
Buntaine, Mark ...... 324 (60.10), 393
(96.46)
Bunte, Jonas ......... 224 (11.11), 374
(92.7)
Burden, Barry C..... 231 (11.45), 264
(26.34)
Burdman, Javier ..............385 (96.1)
Burgarelli, Rodrigo ........ 390 (96.32)
Burge, Camille Danielle.............241
(17.36), 362 (88.8)
Burgess, Katrina............359 (83.55)
Burgess, Susan R...........246 (18.3),
257 (22.56)
Burgoon, Brian ...... 239 (17.22), 281
(40.55)
Burke, John Francis...... 241 (17.37)
Burkhalter, Stephanie.... 343 (76.48)
Burnett, Craig M. ... 328 (60.37), 345
(76.58), 379 (92.35)
Burnett, Guy Fred............372 (89.4)
Burns, Kevin J.................283 (41.1)
Burns, Peter F................355 (83.36)
Burns, Sean ...................268 (26.51)
Burns, Timothy W...........269 (27.1),
372 (89.7)
Busacca, Jeremy David.............301
(51.23)
Busatto, Cezar .................383 (93.3)
Busby, Ethan C................248 (22.8)
Busby, Joshua....... 251 (22.24), 344
(76.51)
Busch, Marc L. ...... 239 (17.21), 389
(96.25)
Busemeyer, Marius R. ...391 (96.34)
Bush, Sarah S........ 324 (60.10), 347
(78.1), 405 (107.50)
Bushouse, Brenda K. .... 240 (17.32)
Bussell, Jennifer L. ..... 410 (109.18)
Bustamante Kuschel,
Gonzalo.........................259 (26.2)

C
Cabrera, Luis ...................272 (40.6)
Cai, Meina ......................245 (17.54)
Cain, Bruce E......... 229 (11.35), 395
(97.7)
Cairns, Christopher .......339 (76.20)
Calasanti, Anna ..... 266 (26.40), 358
(83.52)
Caldeira, Gregory A.......229 (11.37)
Calderon-Gongora, Gisela.........331
(60.53)
Calfano, Brian R. ... 241 (17.37), 304
(51.39)
Caliendo, Stephen Maynard......279
(40.44), 393 (96.45)
Callaghan, Karen J. .......315 (56.35)
Callaghan, Timothy Herbert ......245
(17.53)
Callahan, William A. ........298 (51.4)
Callaway, Rhonda L.......282 (40.57)
Callison, William..............362 (88.6)
Calloni, Marina.................309 (56.2)
Caluwaerts, Didier ........ 305 (51.41),
409 (109.11)
Calvo, Ernesto F. ..... 249 (22.9), 356
(83.42)
Cameron, David R. ...... 400 (107.23)
Cammett, Melani.... 233 (11.55), 286
(45.8), 406 (107.53), 410
(109.22)
Campbell, Andrea Louise..........303
(51.30)
Campbell, James E..........297 (49.1)
Campbell, Joel R. ......... 256 (22.49),
260 (26.12), 318 (56.51), 393
(96.46)
Campbell, Joseph E. .... 268 (26.53),
342 (76.38)
Campbell, Peter P. .........378 (92.25)
Campbell, Rosie ............293 (45.47)
Campbell, Susanna .......353 (83.28)
Campi, Ashleigh ..............235 (17.3)
Canbolat, Sercan .............310 (56.7)
Cane, Lucy.......................322 (60.3)
Canetti, Daphna............. 371 (88.57)
Canevaro, Mirko ..............236 (17.5)
Cann, Damon M. ............ 355 (83.34)
Cann, Heather W............344 (76.49)
Cantey, Seth ..................301 (51.23)
Cantoni, Enrico..............242 (17.42)
Cantor, Douglas M.........391 (96.37)
Cantor, Paul A. ................384 (93.5)
Cantu, Francisco ... 292 (45.44), 299
(51.9), 331 (60.52), 381 (92.41)
Cao, Hao ........................229 (11.33)
Cao, Xun ..........................234 (13.1)
Capistrano, Andrew Robert ...... 296
(46.5)
Capoccia, Giovanni .........236 (17.9)
Caponio, Tiziana..............346 (77.4)
Cappella, Rosella.......... 228 (11.32),
301 (51.21), 327 (60.30)
Caputi, Mary Andrea .....315 (56.39)
Caraccioli, Mauro J. ...... 281 (40.54)
Carbone, Maurizio ...........233 (12.2)
Careja, Romana .............282 (40.61)
Carens, Joseph H. ..........236 (17.6),
248 (22.4)
Carey, John M................356 (83.40)
Carey, Sabine C. ..............285 (44.1)

Carey, Tony E. ....... 229 (11.36), 241


(17.37), 386 (96.9)
Cargile, Ivy A.M. ............392 (96.38)
Carkoglu, Ali..................327 (60.28)
Carlin, Ryan ............. 335 (74.1), 394
(96.50)
Carlisle, Juliet........ 243 (17.46), 306
(51.46)
Carlitz, Ruth...................250 (22.15)
Carlotti, Benedetta.........326 (60.22)
Carnegie, Allison ... 252 (22.26), 276
(40.26), 366 (88.30), 412
(109.30)
Carneiro, Cristiane ....... 239 (17.21),
344 (76.53)
Carnes, Matthew E. .......388 (96.19)
Carnes, Nicholas ... 233 (11.58), 386
(96.9)
Carney, Richard .............289 (45.24)
Caro, Jason .....................322 (60.1)
Carpenter, Daniel P........354 (83.30)
Carpenter, Josh ..... 280 (40.48), 343
(76.46)
Carr, Matthew............... 415 (109.43)
Carrabregu, Gent.............385 (96.1)
Carranza Ko, Nusta Pitushca....299
(51.10)
Carreras Timoneda, Joan..........226
(11.18), 256 (22.50)
Carrese, Paul O. .... 256 (22.52), 284
(43.3), 346 (77.2), 383 (93.1)
Carrigan, Christopher
Michael........................291 (45.34)
Carroll, Kristen ................348 (79.1)
Carroll, Peter .................359 (83.57)
Carroll, Ross..................316 (56.39)
Carroll, Royce A. ........... 305 (51.43)
Carroll, Susan J..... 265 (26.36), 279
(40.43)
Carroll Jones, Celia.......304 (51.35)
Carrubba, Cliff ...............368 (88.39)
Carson, Andrea ..... 266 (26.43), 370
(88.51)
Carson, Austin......... 271 (38.1), 366
(88.30), 412 (109.30)
Carson, Jamie L. ...........277 (40.33)
Carstensen, Martin B.....320 (56.63)
Carter, David B. ............. 263 (26.27)
Carter, Jeff ................... 412 (109.28)
Carter, Lief H....................246 (18.3)
Carter, Niambi M.......... 404 (107.42)
Carter, Timothy A. .........290 (45.31)
Caruson, Kiki .................264 (26.30)
CARVALHO, NELSON
ROJAS ..........................374 (92.7)
Carver, Terrell ................316 (56.39)
Carvin, Stephanie ..........313 (56.25)
Casal Bertoa, Fernando ............301
(51.18)
Casas, Andreu ...............268 (26.48)
Casey, Adam..................318 (56.54)
Casey, Colleen ...............267 (26.47)
Casper, Gretchen G...... 376 (92.16),
416 (109.50)
Cassatella, Andrea .........260 (26.8),
329 (60.41)
Castagner, Marc-Olivier............. 298
(51.4)
Castaneda, Nestor..........298 (51.7),
364 (88.20)
Castellano, Isaac ... 368 (88.40), 381
(92.42)
Castillo, Jasen J. ........... 263 (26.24)
Castle, Matthew .............366 (88.30)
Casullo, Maria Esperanza .........376
(92.15)
Catalinac, Amy Louise ..............249
(22.13), 296 (46.5), 375 (92.11),
390 (96.29)
Caughell, Leslie .............370 (88.49)
Caughey, Devin...... 240 (17.32), 337
(76.11)
Cavaille, Charlotte ........ 365 (88.24),
405 (107.47)
Cavanna, Thomas Patrick .........263
(26.24)
Cavari, Amnon....... 367 (88.36), 393
(96.44)
Caverley, Jonathan D. ............... 240
(17.28), 301 (51.21), 366
(88.29), 393 (96.45)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 421

Ceaser, James W. .... 296 (46.2), 332


(61.2), 346 (77.1)
Cebul, Matthew...... 282 (40.58), 352
(83.23)
Cederman, Lars-Erik .... 252 (22.30),
314 (56.30)
Ceka, Besir .................... 319 (56.55)
Celis, Karen I.L. ..... 316 (56.40), 380
(92.38)
Cerny, Philip G.................395 (97.6)
Cha, Taesuh...................290 (45.29)
Chadefaux, Thomas ......288 (45.20)
Chadwick, Andrew........ 317 (56.48),
393 (96.47), 416 (109.48)
Chakrabarti, Poulomi.....311 (56.17)
Chakravarty, Anu.......... 269 (26.58),
281 (40.56), 371 (88.58), 406
(107.51)
Challender, Chloe ..........290 (45.32)
Chambers, Simone ..........260 (26.6)
Chambers-Ju, Christopher........ 376
(92.18), 409 (109.12)
Chan, Stephanie ............316 (56.43)
Chandra, Kanchan........ 250 (22.18),
282 (40.58), 338 (76.15)
Chang, Chi ................... 399 (107.14)
Chang, Chia-Chien ........228 (11.32)
Chang, Kuei-Min ............356 (83.39)
Chang, Yu-tzung ..............395 (97.2)
Chang Liao, Nien-Chung...........417
(110.1)
Chapman, Emilee ..........408 (109.8)
Chapman, Geoffrey A................228
(11.29)
Chapman, Hannah........ 306 (51.47),
377 (92.19)
Chapman, Terrence .......251 (22.23)
Charbit, Denis................370 (88.52)
Charles, Guy-Uriel ...........233 (12.3)
Charlton, Meaghan ........289 (45.22)
Charman, Andrew........ 406 (107.52)
Charnysh, Volha .... 310 (56.10), 387
(96.13)
Chase, Kerry A. ........... 401 (107.25)
Chatfield, Sara N. ..........240 (17.32)
Chatterjee, Abhishek .... 226 (11.19),
287 (45.14)
Chattopadhyay, Jacqueline
M. .... 245 (17.56), 328 (60.34), 342
(76.38), 394 (96.52)
Chauchard, Simon.........339 (76.19)
Chaudhry, Suparna........ 377 (92.22)
Chaudoin, Stephen....... 251 (22.23),
411 (109.26)
Chausow, Lara............... 329 (60.44)
Chaves, Elisabeth K. .....230 (11.39)
Checkel, Jeffrey T. ..... 222 (6.6), 261
(26.13), 366 (88.27)
Cheeseman, Nic.............238 (17.16)
Cheibub, Jose Antonio ............. 314
(56.32), 390 (96.32)
Chen, Cheng.................. 376 (92.17)
Chen, Chih-Jou Jay.........234 (13.1)
Chen, Dean ....................277 (40.30)
Chen, Frederick R..........367 (88.33)
Chen, Jia................ 352 (83.21), 401
(107.28)
Chen, Jie..........................395 (97.2)
Chen, Jowei ........... 302 (51.28), 347
(79.1)
Chen, Ling ............. 312 (56.18), 363
(88.10)
Chen, Meian...................318 (56.50)
Chen, Ping-Kuei.............417 (110.1)
Chen, Rou-lan................417 (110.1)
Chen, Yen-Hsin............ 411 (109.24)
Chen, Zhouhan ..............267 (26.46)
Cheney, Amanda ......... 410 (109.21)
Cheng, Chao-yo..... 387 (96.11), 416
(109.50)
Cheng, Su-Feng...............384 (93.4)
Cheng, Tony .................. 314 (56.33)
Chenoweth, Erica ..........240 (17.28)
Cherniss, Joshua L. ........361 (88.1)
Chernoff, Fred ...............295 (45.56)
Cherry, Kevin ......... 382 (92.49), 407
(109.1)
Chevannes, Derefe Kimarley.....408
(109.6)
Chhibber, Pradeep.........338 (76.19)
Chien, Yi-Chun............... 307 (51.53)

Childs, Sarah ......... 290 (45.32), 316


(56.40), 413 (109.38)
Chilin, Tania.....................360 (84.8)
Chinn, Stuart L ..............230 (11.39)
Chiou, Fang-Yi ............. 403 (107.37)
Chiozza, Giacomo ........ 227 (11.26),
339 (76.25)
Chirawurah, Dennis.........383 (93.3)
Chiu, Ming-Ping (Eric) ...............276
(40.25)
Chiu, Yvonne ...................362 (88.5)
Cho, Il Hyun................... 256 (22.49)
Choi, Donghyun Danny .............226
(11.20), 261 (26.18), 321 (58.1)
Choi, Eunbong............... 277 (40.30)
Choi, Naomi ...................408 (109.5)
Choi, Shinhye .......... 375 (92.9), 398
(107.8)
Chong, Chinbo ........ 359 (84.2), 380
(92.39)
Chong, Dennis....... 357 (83.44), 370
(88.50)
Chong, Ja Ian ........ 389 (96.28), 410
(109.21)
Chou, Winston............... 337 (76.12)
Chouhoud, Youssef .......294 (45.53)
Choup, Anne Marie...... 404 (107.43)
Chow, Wilfred Ming ..... 413 (109.33)
Christensen, Dag Arne ..............345
(76.58)
Christensen, Emily ..........235 (17.2)
Christensen, Thomas J. ............378
(92.26)
Christenson, Dino P........284 (43.2),
324 (60.12), 403 (107.37)
Christia, Fotini ............... 305 (51.44)
Christiani, Leah .............280 (40.50)
Christov, Theodore......... 298 (51.2),
362 (88.4)
Chu, Jonathan ....... 252 (22.26), 289
(45.25)
Chudy, Jennifer ............. 254 (22.40)
Chung, Eun Bin ........... 409 (109.11)
Chupp, Jesse Allen .........308 (52.6)
Church, Jeffrey........ 349 (83.1), 385
(96.1)
Chwieroth, Jeffrey M. .... 276 (40.25)
Cidam, Cigdem ................235 (17.4)
Cil, Deniz.... 353 (83.28), 390 (96.30)
Cinar, Alev .......................323 (60.5)
Cingranelli, David L...... 256 (22.53),
268 (26.51), 358 (83.51)
Ciocan, Dumitru.............256 (22.53)
Ciorciari, John D. ..........339 (76.25)
Cirone, Alexandra............350 (83.9)
Citrin, Jack .................... 245 (17.55)
Cizmar, Anne .................302 (51.28)
Claassen, Christopher...............337
(76.11)
Claassen, Ryan L. ......... 254 (22.41)
Claes, Ellen....................350 (83.11)
Clancy, Kelly.................. 226 (11.16)
Clark, April K. ........ 243 (17.46), 306
(51.46)
Clark, Jennifer Hayes ................278
(40.35), 305 (51.42)
Clark, Tom......................253 (22.35)
Clarke, Killian ........ 358 (83.52), 375
(92.13)
Clarke, Michelle Tolman ............285
(45.1)
Clawson, Rosalee A. .......247 (21.1)
Clay, K. Chad ......... 268 (26.52), 384
(95.2)
Clayton, Amanda ... 300 (51.15), 414
(109.38)
Clayton, Cornell W.........303 (51.32)
Clemons, Randy S.........343 (76.47)
Clendenen, Rebecca J ..............355
(83.35)
Cleveland, Clayton J. ... 226 (11.21),
378 (92.25)
Clifford, Scott ..................386 (96.9)
Cline, Andrew R...............335 (75.2)
Clinger, James C. ......... 277 (40.35),
328 (60.33)
Clinton, Joshua D........ 399 (107.13)
Clough, Emily R..... 226 (11.19), 323
(60.6)
Clouser McCann, Pamela ..........277
(40.34), 328 (60.36)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

421

Index of Participants

Bustikova, Lenka..... 350 (83.8), 400


(107.22)
Buthe, Tim ............... 235 (15.2), 352
(83.21), 364 (88.16), 401
(107.26)
Butler, Bennett............... 230 (11.42)
Butler, Christopher K. ............... 398
(107.11)
Butt, Ahsan Ishaq......... 261 (26.15),
377 (92.23)
Buttorff, Gail ............ 323 (60.8), 408
(109.9)
Buzas, Zoltan I............. 401 (107.28)
Buzzetti, Eric ...................269 (27.1)
Bnte, Marco .................237 (17.14)
Btler, Monika.............. 403 (107.36)
Byrne, William F...............373 (92.1)

Cloward, Karisa Tritz .....377 (92.22)


Coakley, John ................315 (56.36)
Coan, Travis........... 231 (11.47), 398
(107.9)
Cobb, Michael D. ........... 243 (17.43)
Cochran, Joseph ........... 406 (108.1)
Cocoru, Arina ..................248 (22.6)
Coe, Andrew J. ...... 251 (22.25), 412
(109.30)
Coffe, Hilde Roza.......... 329 (60.43),
369 (88.45)
Cogburn, Derrick L....... 256 (22.50),
281 (40.52)
Coggins, Bridget ... 232 (11.53), 314
(56.29), 412 (109.32)
Cohen, Elizabeth F.........282 (40.61)
Cohen, Jeffrey E............ 367 (88.36)
Cohen, Martin ..................258 (24.1)
Cohen, Michael D. .........340 (76.26)
Cohen de Lara, Emma...............407
(109.1)
Colaresi, Michael P. ...... 231 (11.46),
314 (56.30)
Colbern, Allan........ 245 (17.56), 337
(76.10)
Coleman, John J. ..........237 (17.12)
Coles, Romand ........ 298 (51.3), 348
(80.1)
Colgan, Jeff ........... 301 (51.21), 412
(109.30)
Collens, Jack D..............292 (45.41)
Collingwood, Loren .......279 (40.44)
Collins, Gregory ..............346 (77.2)
Collins, Jonathan ..........265 (26.35)
Collins, Kevin .......... 307 (52.2), 324
(60.12)
Collins, Susan D..............384 (93.7)
Collins, Todd A. ..... 241 (17.33), 413
(109.37)
Collord, Michaela........... 300 (51.15)
Colopy, Andrew ............. 358 (83.50)
Colton, Timothy J. ...........307 (52.1)
Coman, Emanuel ... 302 (51.27), 410
(109.17)
Comfort, Louise K. ....... 231 (11.48),
253 (22.33), 406 (108.2)
Commissiong, Anand
Bertrand ........................298 (51.2)
Compton, John W..........231 (11.43)
Compton, Mallory E.......314 (56.33)
Comstock, Audrey Lynn............289
(45.25)
Condon, Meghan ... 304 (51.37), 391
(96.34)
Condra, Luke N...... 228 (11.33), 353
(83.24)
Conger, Kimberly H. .......296 (46.1),
381 (92.42)
Conlan, Tim .....................270 (27.4)
Conley-Zilkic, Bridget K ............306
(51.48)
Connelly, Megan ............315 (56.36)
Connolly, Jennifer M ... 416 (109.48)
Connolly, William E. ........260 (26.5)
Connors, Michael K.......376 (92.17)
Conover, Pamela Johnston.......280
(40.50)
Conrad, Courtenay R.....295 (45.58)
Conrad, Justin ....... 290 (45.28), 302
(51.25), 402 (107.33)
Conran, James ..............262 (26.19)
Conroy-Krutz, Jeffrey K. ........... 405
(107.48)
Conti, Greg ......................223 (11.4)
Conway, Bethany Anne .............344
(76.48)
Cook, Corey.......................221 (2.4)
Cook, David B................406 (108.3)
Cook, Linda J. ............... 300 (51.17)
Cook, Scott .................... 273 (40.11)
Coole, Diana H.................336 (76.4)
Cooper, Barry .......... 360 (84.6), 384
(93.5)
Cooper, Betsy L.............279 (40.45)
Cooper, Carol B .............417 (110.2)
Cooper, Jasper Jack.....233 (11.56),
350 (83.10)
Cooper, Julie E. ...............385 (96.5)
Cooper, Kody Wayne.......247 (18.7)
Cooper, Robert A......... 403 (107.37)
Cooper, Scott B. ............ 389 (96.23)

422

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 422

Cooperman, Rosalyn.... 231 (11.44),


415 (109.43)
Cope, Kevin ...................289 (45.25)
Copelovitch, Mark ........ 251 (22.21),
276 (40.26)
Coppedge, Michael J.................416
(109.51)
Coppock, Alexander.......224 (11.9),
323 (60.9), 350 (83.10), 371
(88.55), 393 (96.45)
Corby, Jennifer ................259 (26.1)
Cordelli, Chiara................236 (17.6)
Cordova, Abby B. .......... 250 (22.17)
Corduneanu-Huci, Cristina........288
(45.18), 350 (83.8), 400
(107.18)
Corkin, Lucy Jane .........238 (17.18)
Corlett, William ................374 (92.4)
Cormack, Lindsey ........ 267 (26.45),
279 (40.41)
Cormack-Patton, Sarah J. .........310
(56.9)
Cornell, Agnes...............331 (60.53)
Cornell, Drucilla............. 408 (109.6)
Cornut, Jeremie .............295 (45.56)
Corral, Alvaro ..................246 (18.4)
Corral, Alvaro Jose .......279 (40.45)
Corrales, Javier ...............271 (38.2)
Corrigan, Caitlin Coulton ..........367
(88.37)
Corstange, Daniel..........238 (17.15)
Cortez, David ...................246 (18.4)
Costa, Kevin ............ 258 (23.4), 270
(27.5), 321 (57.4), 384 (93.6)
Costa, Mia......................265 (26.37)
Costello, Rory.............. 414 (109.41)
Cote, Isabelle ...................308 (54.1)
Cotta, Benedetta.......... 406 (107.52)
Cottrol, Robert J..............257 (23.2)
Coulter, Michael L..........273 (40.13)
Courtney, Michael............246 (18.6)
Cowell-Meyers, Kimberly B.......279
(40.42), 342 (76.40)
Cox, Daniel A.................279 (40.45)
Coyle, Dennis J. ..............296 (46.3)
Crabtree, Charles David ............256
(22.48), 361 (86.1)
Craig, Alison.......... 225 (11.14), 358
(83.54)
Craig, Leon Harold .........332 (61.3),
384 (93.5)
Craig, Stephen C. .......... 242 (17.41)
Craiutu, Aurelian ..... 361 (88.1), 383
(93.1)
Cramer, Jane Kellett.... 412 (109.29)
Cramer, Katherine J ........348 (80.1)
Crandall, Emily ..............394 (96.54)
Craw, Michael C.............278 (40.40)
Crawford, Kerry Frances........... 402
(107.31)
Crawford, Nyron N........ 254 (22.40),
309 (55.2)
Crawford, Timothy.........252 (22.27)
Crepaz, Markus M. L......238 (17.19)
Creppell, Ingrid................271 (38.3)
Crespin, Michael.... 315 (56.37), 359
(83.54)
Crespo, Ricardo........... 404 (107.43)
Criado, Henar.................389 (96.24)
Crigler, Ann N. ......... 320 (57.1), 370
(88.51)
Crisman-Cox, Casey..... 263 (26.28),
299 (51.9)
Crisp, Brian F.................293 (45.44)
Crock, Jonathan ............319 (56.56)
Crockett, David A. ........ 226 (11.16),
290 (45.33)
Croco, Sarah E. ............. 301 (51.20)
Croissant, Aurel S. ........ 256 (22.53)
Croke, Kevin ..................233 (11.55)
Cronin, Tom E..................346 (77.1)
Cronkhite, Amanda Beth...........370
(88.50)
Cross, Karie E ...............254 (22.39)
Crosson, Jesse M......... 231 (11.44),
329 (60.44)
Crosston, Matthew ..........347 (77.8)
Crow, Deserai Anderson ........... 232
(11.48), 243 (17.46), 330
(60.48)

Crowder-Meyer, Melody.............368
(88.41)
Crowley, Stephen ..........352 (83.19)
Cruz, Cesi .............. 250 (22.18), 387
(96.14)
Cuevas-Molina, Ivelisse.............322
(59.5)
Culhane, Leah................230 (11.41)
Culpepper, Pepper D. ... 283 (40.63),
286 (45.10)
Culver, Adam R..............359 (83.57)
Cumella, Giuseppe ........407 (109.1)
Cunha, Raphael ..... 251 (22.21), 310
(56.9)
Cunningham, David E. ..............252
(22.30), 354 (83.29)
Cunningham, Fiona
Stephanie.............. 271 (38.1), 327
(60.27)
Cunningham, Kathleen
Gallagher ............ 240 (17.28), 250
(22.16), 367 (88.34)
Curato, Nicole................305 (51.41)
Curry, Todd A. ....... 241 (17.33), 291
(45.37)
Cury, Emily ......................360 (84.5)
Cutts, David John......... 242 (17.42),
279 (40.41), 360 (84.3)
Cuzan, Alfred G. ...... 297 (49.1), 347
(77.7)
Cyr, Jennifer Marie ...... 417 (109.54)

D
d'Urso-Jadidi, Amanda
Sahar.......................................257
(22.57)
da Cruz, Nuno Ferreira..............342
(76.39)
Dafe, Florence ....... 262 (26.21), 374
(92.7)
Dafoe, Allan ........... 276 (40.29), 326
(60.26), 352 (83.23), 366
(88.31)
Dagefrde, Mirjam ........ 231 (11.46),
341 (76.32)
Daggett, Cara.................417 (110.4)
Dahl, Adam J. ..................224 (11.6)
Dahl, Marianne............... 229 (11.33)
Dahlberg, Stefan............293 (45.48)
Dahlstrom, Carl ..... 238 (17.16), 253
(22.32)
Dahlum, Sirianne ...........268 (26.51)
Dai, Xinyuan ..................289 (45.25)
Dai, Yaoyao............ 256 (22.48), 410
(109.17)
Daifallah, Yasmeen .......242 (17.38),
380 (92.40)
Daku, Mark.....................317 (56.49)
Daley, Dorothy ....... 330 (60.48), 344
(76.49)
Dallas, Mark Peter .........300 (51.16)
Daly, Jack ...................... 301 (51.18)
Daly, Sarah Zukerman ............... 338
(76.14), 393 (96.49)
Damonte, Alessia ........ 406 (107.52)
Dancey, Logan............... 280 (40.48)
Dancy, Geoff .......... 268 (26.52), 281
(40.56), 413 (109.33)
Dancygier, Rafaela.........359 (83.56)
Dandoy, Rgis ...............240 (17.30)
Dang, Trung ...................262 (26.22)
Daniel, Anthony............. 337 (76.10)
Daniel, J. Furman ..........382 (92.49)
Daniel, William Thomas.............302
(51.27)
Dantchev, Stefan ......... 399 (107.14)
Dardanelli, Paolo .............332 (61.1)
Darnton, Christopher.... 239 (17.27),
294 (45.52)
Darr, Joshua P. ...... 231 (11.47), 317
(56.48), 393 (96.44)
Dasgupta, Aditya ..... 350 (83.8), 387
(96.13)
Dasgupta, Sandipto........374 (92.4),
399 (107.12)
Dassonneville, Ruth .......347 (77.7),
392 (96.43), 415 (109.45)
Datta, Prithviraj........ 248 (22.6), 348
(81.1)

Datz, Giselle................. 410 (109.20)


Dauber, Noah ...................308 (52.6)
Dauzat, Braden ..............368 (88.39)
Davenport, Christian ... 406 (107.51)
Davenport, Lauren D. .... 342 (76.42)
Davidson, Michael R .... 256 (22.49),
364 (88.16)
Davidson-Schmich, Louise
K................ 360 (84.7), 380 (92.37)
Davies, David Oliver........269 (27.1)
Davies, Emmerich ........ 300 (51.13),
341 (76.34)
Davis, Brandon Rudolph...........316
(56.41)
Davis, Carrie ....................321 (59.1)
Davis, Christina ..... 289 (45.24), 352
(83.22), 377 (92.21)
Davis, G. Doug ................347 (77.8)
Davis, Jason S....... 239 (17.21), 310
(56.9)
Davis, Justine .......... 321 (58.1), 371
(88.58)
Davis, Michael Curtis .... 232 (11.51)
Davis, Nicholas..............393 (96.44)
Davis, Nicholas R. ........ 406 (108.2),
416 (109.50)
Davis, Thomas M........... 297 (50.15)
Dawes, Christopher T. ...............243
(17.42), 307 (51.52)
Dawuni, Josephine J. ................413
(109.37)
Day, Joel K..................... 240 (17.28)
Day, Shane D. ................318 (56.50)
de Benedictis-Kessner,
Justin ...... 355 (83.36), 380 (92.36)
De Bruijne, Kars ............340 (76.30)
de Figueiredo, John .......347 (79.1),
348 (79.1)
De Francesco, Fabrizio ............. 354
(83.33)
de Graauw, Els ........ 223 (10.2), 247
(20.1)
De Jaegere, Josephine..............303
(51.34)
De Juan, Alexander .......225 (11.12)
de Kadt, Daniel Nicolas
Jacques ........................247 (20.4)
De la Calle, Luis ............302 (51.25)
De Miguel, Carolina .........335 (74.2)
de Rooij, Eline A............280 (40.48)
de Sa e Silva, Fabio ........372 (89.2)
de Vreese, Claes H. .......317 (56.48)
Dean, Adam ........... 239 (17.22), 313
(56.23), 352 (83.21)
Deardorff, Michelle D.................230
(11.39), 350 (83.11)
DeBoom, Meredith J......238 (17.18)
DeBrabander, Firmin .......285 (45.2)
Debre, Maria Josepha ...376 (92.16)
Debrix, Francois ..............374 (92.4)
Debs, Alexandre ............251 (22.25)
DeCanio, Samuel ........... 293 (45.45)
Dedmon, Michael.............310 (56.7)
Deeg, Richard E.............388 (96.21)
Defina, Robert.............. 406 (107.52)
Dege, Carmen ..................248 (22.4)
Deichert, Maggie............388 (96.18)
Dekeyser, Elizabeth .......305 (51.44)
Del Tedesco Lins, Maria
Antonieta .................. 410 (109.20)
Delaney, Danielle ........... 230 (11.38)
Delehanty, Casey...............221 (2.8)
DeLeo, Rob A. ............... 406 (108.2)
Delhey, Jan ....................280 (40.49)
deLisle, Jacques............364 (88.16)
Dell, Kent Patrick......... 399 (107.14)
Dell'Aera, Anthony D..... 319 (56.59)
Della Sala, Vincent ..........233 (12.2)
Dellepiane, Sebastian.... 381 (92.45)
Delli Carpini, Michael X. ............256
(22.54)
Dellmuth, Lisa Maria .....262 (26.22)
Deloffre, Maryam Zarnegar .......394
(96.50)
DeLuca, Kenneth ...........281 (40.53)
DeMenno, Mercy............291 (45.34)
Demirkaya, Betul ...........327 (60.31)
DeMuth, Christopher .......320 (57.2)
Deneen, Patrick J. ...........296 (46.2)
Denison, Benjamin .......301 (51.22),
367 (88.33), 416 (109.51)

Doig, Jameson W. ........ 303 (51.34),


319 (56.58)
Dolan, Dana Archer .......253 (22.33)
Dolan, Lindsay............... 366 (88.30)
Dolez, Bernard...............407 (108.4)
Dolgert, Stefan P..............298 (51.3)
Domanski, Robert J.......294 (45.50)
Domaradzki, Spasimir .....308 (52.4)
Dometrius, Nelson C. .... 278 (40.39)
Dominguez, Casey Byrne..........231
(11.44)
Dominguez, Jaime.........380 (92.39)
Dominguez, Jorge I. ..... 287 (45.15),
370 (88.53)
Donaghy, Maureen M.........222 (4.1)
Donahue, Thomas J. .......335 (76.1)
Doner, Richard F........... 300 (51.16),
325 (60.16), 388 (96.21)
Donnay, Karsten .... 252 (22.30), 288
(45.20), 353 (83.28)
Donnelly, Christopher P.............231
(11.45), 254 (22.43), 277
(40.33), 293 (45.47), 331
(60.57), 343 (76.46)
Donnelly, Michael J. ...... 365 (88.24)
Donno, Daniela ...... 268 (26.52), 347
(78.1)
Donovan, Todd ...... 266 (26.41), 330
(60.45)
Dornschneider, Stephanie.........399
(107.14)
Dorobantu, Sinziana...... 274 (40.14)
Dose, Nicolai .................230 (11.40)
doshi, Rushabh ...............284 (42.1)
Dougherty, Richard J. .....360 (84.4)
Douglass, Rex ...............251 (22.25)
Dovi, Suzanne..................336 (76.3)
Dow, David............. 261 (26.18), 388
(96.17)
Dow, Douglas C. ...... 223 (11.5), 407
(109.2)
Dowdle, Andrew J. ........ 280 (40.46)
Dowling, Conor M......... 369 (88.46),
408 (109.10)
Downes, Alexander B................352
(83.23)
Downs, Donald A...........278 (40.37)
Dowsett, Julie Elizabeth............248
(22.9), 318 (56.52), 323 (60.5)
Dring, Holger ....... 242 (17.40), 383
(92.52)
Dragu, Tiberiu C. ... 302 (51.24), 323
(60.8), 398 (107.8)
Dreher, Axel ...................262 (26.22)
Dresden, Jennifer Raymond .....344
(76.52)
Dressel, Bjoern................284 (43.2)
Drezner, Daniel W. .....223 (9.3), 326
(60.23)
Driessen, Michael ......... 292 (45.43),
316 (56.42)
Driscoll, Amanda ........... 278 (40.36)
Driscoll, Barry................227 (11.22)
Driscoll, Jesse ...............312 (56.19)
Druckman, James N. ........222 (6.4),
301 (51.20), 330 (60.46)
Drutman, Lee ........... 233 (12.3), 283
(41.5), 378 (92.29)
Du, Ruoxi ... 314 (56.31), 341 (76.31)
Duarte, Guilherme Jardim .........390
(96.32)
Dubin, Kenneth A. .........254 (22.38)
Duch, Raymond......... 223 (9.2), 387
(96.11)
Duell, Dominik ......... 236 (17.8), 293
(45.46), 343 (76.45)
Duff, Alexander................322 (60.1)
Dufresne, Yannick ........ 266 (26.43),
382 (92.48)
Duhaime, Erik P............. 242 (17.42)
Dulani, Boniface Madalitso .......411
(109.22)
Dumm, Thomas L. ... 322 (59.6), 349
(83.3)
Dunaway, Johanna ....... 293 (45.44),
306 (51.45), 357 (83.45), 393
(96.44)
Dunford, Eric .................252 (22.30)
Dunleavy, Patrick John ............. 355
(83.33)
Dunn, Joshua M. .............270 (27.4)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 423

Dunning, Thad ....... 226 (11.17), 286


(45.8), 338 (76.19)
Dupuy, Kendra E ........... 377 (92.22)
Duque, Marina ....... 232 (11.53), 377
(92.23)
Duran-Martinez, Angelica..........353
(83.27)
Durbin, Brent ............... 412 (109.31)
Durden, T. Elizabeth ......245 (17.56)
Dutkiewicz, Jan .............358 (83.52)
Duval, Dominic ............ 414 (109.41)
Duval, Robert D. ............264 (26.32)
Dwyre, Diana ........... 233 (12.3), 343
(76.44)
Dye, Thomas R. ..... 355 (83.35), 367
(88.37)
Dyer, Megan Kathleen .....223 (11.2)
Dynes, Adam Michael................371
(88.55), 408 (109.10)
Dyson, Stephen B............310 (56.7)
Dzutsati, Valery..............261 (26.15)

E
Eady, Gregory........ 266 (26.43), 307
(51.52)
Ealy, Steven .....................246 (18.2)
Early, Bryan Robert .......263 (26.25)
Eason, Mackenzie............375 (92.9)
Eastman, John C. ............395 (97.5)
Eaton, Charles .................297 (49.2)
Eaton, Kent .................... 341 (76.37)
Eberhardt, Lindsay ..........307 (52.3)
Ebin, Chelsea R R .........249 (22.10)
Eccleston, Richard George .......332
(61.1)
Echeverri-Gent, John ....338 (76.15)
Echeverria, Raquel ........264 (26.32)
Eckelman, Andrea Kathryn .......342
(76.38)
Eckerd, Adam ................330 (60.48)
Eckhouse, Laurel..... 235 (15.1), 355
(83.36)
Edelman, Lauren B........379 (92.34)
Edelson, Chris ...............264 (26.30)
Edelson, Jack ................330 (60.45)
Edelstein, David M........ 262 (26.23),
340 (76.29), 402 (107.29)
Eder, Christina............... 319 (56.55)
Edgell, Amanda Brooke ............344
(76.52)
Edmonds, Kevin ..............321 (57.5)
Edmondson, Henry........ 256 (22.52)
Edwards, Barry Clayton ............315
(56.37)
Edwards, Jason ...............349 (83.2)
Edwards, Scott ..............257 (22.54)
Efthymiou, Dimitrios E. .............224
(11.6), 408 (109.5)
Egan, Patrick ......... 311 (56.17), 339
(76.23), 365 (88.21), 387
(96.11), 409 (109.13)
Egan, Patrick J. ..... 266 (26.42), 297
(50.13)
Eger, Maureen A. .............361 (86.2)
Eggers, Andrew C. ....... 317 (56.45),
365 (88.24), 405 (107.46)
Ehrenberg, John............268 (26.49)
Ehret, Soenke ................245 (17.54)
Eichner, Maxine ...............386 (96.7)
Eichorst, Jason Alan .....293 (45.44)
Eidelman, Gabriel ..........342 (76.39)
Eidlin, Fred .............. 347 (77.8), 394
(96.54)
Eikenberry, Angela M. .....373 (90.1)
Einstein, Katherine Levine ........304
(51.35), 380 (92.36)
Eisenberg, Elizabeth C ..............328
(60.34)
Eisenstadt, Todd A. ...... 310 (56.12),
351 (83.15)
Eizenga, Daniel..............346 (76.59)
Ejdemyr, Simon .............342 (76.38)
Ekins, Emily McClintock ........... 307
(52.2), 356 (83.43), 371 (88.55)
Ekmektsioglou, Eleni
Georgia ..................... 412 (109.29)
el-Wakil, Alice ..................248 (22.6)
Elazar, Yiftah....................309 (56.1)
Elbahtimy, Hassan.........228 (11.29)

Elder, Laurel ..................304 (51.37)


Elff, Martin .....................368 (88.37)
Elfstrom, Manfred........ 411 (109.24)
Elgar, Richard ................316 (56.40)
Elgie, Robert................ 416 (109.50)
Elias, Barbara ................366 (88.29)
Elkink, Johan A. ............377 (92.19)
Elkins, Zachary..............345 (76.55)
Elkus, Adam ..................313 (56.25)
Ellett, Rachel L ..............379 (92.33)
Elliott, Heather A. .......... 254 (22.38)
Ellis, Elisabeth H. .... 248 (22.5), 286
(45.5)
Elman, Colin .....221 (2.5), 223 (9.2),
350 (83.10)
Elsig, Manfred................352 (83.21)
Elul, Gabrielle ................303 (51.31)
Embry, Charles R..... 346 (77.3), 384
(93.5)
Emery, Jennifer Kelkres ............243
(17.47), 304 (51.37)
Emmons, Cassandra .....394 (96.51)
Enders, Adam M. ........... 267 (26.44)
Endres, Kyle ..................245 (17.54)
Engelhardt, Andrew M...............388
(96.18)
Engelmann, Stephen .......224 (11.5)
Englehart, Neil A. ..........287 (45.13)
Engler, Alex Corey.........338 (76.13)
Englert, Gianna................259 (26.3)
English, Patrick ...............283 (41.2)
Engster, Dan ....................309 (56.5)
Engstrom, Erik J............277 (40.33)
Enns, Peter ............ 296 (45.61), 337
(76.11)
Enos, Ryan D......... 293 (45.46), 386
(96.10)
Enright, Theresa ................222 (4.1)
Ensley, Michael J...........231 (11.45)
Epp, Charles R....... 379 (92.34), 403
(107.40)
Epperly, Brad .................278 (40.36)
Epstein, Ben .......... 294 (45.50), 416
(109.48)
Erickson, Jennifer L. .... 275 (40.23),
301 (51.21), 330 (60.51), 344
(76.51)
Erikson, Robert S. ... 297 (49.1), 317
(56.46)
Erisen, Cengiz ......... 236 (17.7), 336
(76.7), 398 (107.9)
Erisen, Elif .......................336 (76.7)
Erler, H. Abbie ............... 394 (96.52)
Erlich, Aaron S. ............. 319 (56.60)
Erlingsson, Gissur.........299 (51.10)
Ertan, Gunes.................. 406 (108.2)
Esaiasson, Peter............242 (17.39)
Esarey, Justin E..... 287 (45.13), 299
(51.10), 338 (76.13), 387
(96.15)
Eschenauer, Tanja ......... 256 (22.53)
Escobar-Lemmon, Maria C........254
(22.42), 291 (45.38), 413
(109.37)
Escolar, Marcelo ...... 249 (22.9), 356
(83.42)
Esen, Berk .....................382 (92.50)
Esolen, Anthony ..............372 (89.5)
Esquith, Stephen L..........362 (88.3)
Esteban, Rhoanne ...........359 (84.2)
Esterling, Kevin M. ......... 273 (40.8),
329 (60.44)
Estevez-Abe, Margarita ...346 (77.4)
Etinson, Adam ...............319 (56.56)
Eubank, Nick .................282 (40.59)
Euben, Roxanne L. .........271 (38.3),
384 (94.1)
Evans, Allison D. ........... 365 (88.22)
Evans, Elizabeth J. ........ 279 (40.42)
Evans, Jillian .................328 (60.37)
Evans, Jocelyn ................361 (86.2)
Evans, Laura E. ....... 258 (23.5), 286
(45.11)
Evans, Leigh.................. 245 (17.53)
Ewing, Connor.................348 (81.1)
Ezrow, Lawrence ... 280 (40.47), 326
(60.21), 381 (92.43)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

423

Index of Participants

Denninghoff, Mark Edward .......249


(22.10)
Denny, Elaine...................286 (45.7)
Deo, Nandini ....................323 (60.6)
Depauw, Sam ......... 242 (17.39), 327
(60.31), 341 (76.32)
Deppen, Raymond W.....228 (11.30)
Derderyan, Svetoslav Misak......400
(107.20)
Dermont, Clau................256 (22.49)
DeSart, Jay A...................347 (77.7)
Desch, Michael ..............239 (17.26)
Deschamps-Laporte,
Laurence .....................311 (56.15)
DeScioli, Peter ...............264 (26.32)
Desierto, Desiree ...........324 (60.10)
Desmarais, Bruce ......... 356 (83.41),
363 (88.13)
Desposato, Scott W. .... 411 (109.24)
Dettman, Sebastian .......364 (88.18)
Deudney, Daniel............. 281 (40.55)
Dewan, Torun................. 398 (107.8)
Dhillon, Jaskiran............397 (107.4)
Dhima, Kostanca ...........241 (17.36)
Di Lonardo, Livio........ 402 (107.30),
408 (109.9)
Diamantides, Marinos......386 (96.5)
Diamond, Deborah...........322 (59.7)
Dias, Elsa.........................285 (44.4)
Diaz Rioseco, Diego ...... 351 (83.15)
Diaz-Cayeros, Alberto ...254 (22.38)
DiCaprio, Alisa.................384 (93.6)
Dickerson, Bradley Thomas......243
(17.43)
Dickson, Bruce J. .... 234 (13.1), 306
(51.49)
Dickson, Eric .................379 (92.32)
Dienstag, Joshua Foa ...............370
(88.52), 382 (92.49)
Diermeier, Daniel .............349 (83.6)
Dietrich, Bryce...............316 (56.41)
Dietrich, Nicholas ..........390 (96.30)
Dietz, Mary G. ..................373 (92.2)
Digeser, Paige.......... 223 (11.5), 397
(107.3)
DiGiuseppe, Matthew R.............225
(11.11), 251 (22.21)
Dillet, Benoit ....................374 (92.3)
Dilling, Matthias............. 369 (88.46)
Dillon, Nara ....................365 (88.23)
Dillon Savage, Jesse .................417
(109.54)
DiLorenzo, Matthew...... 224 (11.10),
401 (107.28)
Dilworth, Richardson.....315 (56.38)
Dimitrov, Martin ..... 331 (60.55), 339
(76.20), 371 (88.53)
Dinan, John .....222 (6.1), 270 (27.4)
Dinas, Elias............ 276 (40.26), 293
(45.46), 370 (88.48), 392
(96.42), 415 (109.44)
Dincecco, Mark........ 236 (17.8), 387
(96.14), 410 (109.19)
Dinesen, Peter Thisted ..............245
(17.55), 260 (26.9), 303 (51.30),
365 (88.24)
Ding, Iza...........................234 (13.1)
Ding, Sheng ........... 276 (40.30), 327
(60.28)
Dion, Douglas ..................323 (60.8)
Dionne, Kim Yi.................285 (44.3)
DiSarro, Joseph...............270 (27.5)
Disch, Lisa J............ 223 (11.4), 298
(51.3), 407 (109.3)
Ditonto, Tessa M..............236 (17.7)
Dittmar, Kelly ......... 265 (26.36), 280
(40.50), 380 (92.38)
Dixon, Jennifer M. ........ 268 (26.50),
306 (51.48), 344 (76.51)
Dizard, Jacob.................351 (83.12)
Djerf-Pierre, Monika.......279 (40.41)
Djupe, Paul A......... 254 (22.41), 343
(76.47)
Dodd, Lawrence C. ........ 327 (60.31)
Dodeigne, Jeremy .........341 (76.32)
Dodge, Jennifer ...............283 (41.3)
Dodsworth, Susan.........364 (88.18)
Doering, Jan ..................278 (40.40)
Doherty, Brendan J. ...... 390 (96.33)
Doherty, David ....... 354 (83.31), 369
(88.46), 409 (109.11)

F
Fabbrini, Sergio....... 233 (12.2), 238
(17.20), 326 (60.22)
Facchini, Giovanni.........365 (88.25)
Faguet, Jean-Paul......... 291 (45.38),
299 (51.11), 387 (96.12)
Fahey, Bridget K. ...........231 (11.48)
Fahey, Kevin .................. 304 (51.36)
Fahmy, Dalia Fikry.........268 (26.49)
Failer, Judith Lynn...........286 (45.4)
Fairfield, Tasha A....... 222 (6.6), 261
(26.13), 383 (92.52), 406
(107.52)
Falleti, Tulia G........ 300 (51.13), 352
(83.18)
Fan, Xiaochen................398 (107.8)
Fang, Albert ........... 269 (26.56), 307
(51.52), 413 (109.35)
Fang, Li............................395 (97.2)
Fang, Ryan Yuhao ........ 224 (11.10),
242 (17.41)
Fang, Songying ........... 411 (109.27)
Faradj, Hisseine K .........380 (92.40)
Farhart, Christina ......... 255 (22.45),
267 (26.44), 370 (88.49)
Faricy, Christopher G. .....259 (25.1)
Fariss, Christopher J.................268
(26.52), 287 (45.12), 301
(51.21), 352 (83.20)
Farmer, Rick D.................384 (93.6)
Farnsworth, Stephen J. .............231
(11.47), 278 (40.39), 370
(88.50)
Farrar-Myers, Victoria A. ........... 382
(92.48)
Farrell, David M. ........ 222 (6.1), 246
(18.6), 266 (26.41), 305 (51.41)
Farrell, Henry ......... 233 (11.58), 285
(44.3), 339 (76.24)
Farris, Emily .......... 230 (11.42), 279
(40.44)
Faruk, Rahfin .................371 (88.57)
Fattor, Eric Michael ...... 318 (56.52),
394 (96.50)
Faude, Benjamin..............258 (24.3)
Fazal, Tanisha........ 344 (76.51), 367
(88.34)
Feather, Ginger Reeves.............342
(76.40), 413 (109.38)
Federici, Michael P. .........246 (18.2)
Federico, Christopher M. ..........350
(83.7)
Feeney, Sharon Mary.....273 (40.13)
Feenstra, Taylor Nicole ...273 (40.8)
Feierherd, German..........310 (56.8),
388 (96.17)
Feinstein, Scott G........ 398 (107.10)
Feiock, Richard C. .........264 (26.31)
Feit, Mario........................272 (40.2)
Feldman, Eric A. ............291 (45.36)
Feldman, Stanley..... 248 (22.8), 356
(83.43), 374 (92.6), 386 (96.9)
Feldman, Vincent.............322 (59.6)
Felicetti, Andrea ............305 (51.41)
Felker, Greg B................300 (51.16)
FENG, TIYI .....................365 (88.26)
Feng, Yilang...................251 (22.22)
Fenna, Alan............ 264 (26.34), 332
(61.1)
Fennell, Vera Leigh..........395 (97.2)
Fenner, Sofia .................338 (76.17)
Feola, Michael..................285 (45.3)
Ferguson, Grant .......... 409 (109.11)
Ferguson, Kathy E..........285 (45.4),
323 (60.4)
Ferguson, Kennan..........322 (60.3),
374 (92.5)
Ferguson, Mark J. ....... 414 (109.41)
Ferguson, Michaele L.....309 (56.2),
386 (96.7)
Fernndez Milmanda, Mara
Beln ...........................300 (51.13)
Fernandes, Jorge Miguel ..........240
(17.30), 341 (76.32)
Fernandez, Sergio ........ 302 (51.29),
368 (88.38)
Fernandez Duque, Mauricio ......337
(76.9)

424

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 424

Fernandez-Albertos, Jose .........275


(40.24)
Fernandez-Vazquez, Pablo ........ 324
(60.14)
Ferrn, Mnica.......... 236 (17.7), 372
(89.6)
Ferrari, Chiara................281 (40.53)
Ferrari, Diogo......... 265 (26.34), 299
(51.9)
Ferrerosa-Young, Carolina ........279
(40.44), 354 (83.30), 379
(92.31)
Ferrin, Monica................280 (40.50)
Ferwerda, Jeremy..........365 (88.24)
Fettweis, Christopher J. ............289
(45.26)
Fiala, Nathan....................286 (45.9)
Fidalgo, Amanda ........... 358 (83.50)
Field, Bonnie N. ...............258 (23.4)
Fieldhouse, Edward A. ..............242
(17.42), 293 (45.46), 324
(60.12), 360 (84.3)
Figueiredo, Alessandro
Farage ....................... 400 (107.21)
Figueroa, Ana Magdalena .........344
(76.53)
Figueroa, Lucila............. 265 (26.38)
Filer, Christine R............344 (76.48)
Filindra, Alexandra ....... 257 (22.57),
305 (51.39), 391 (96.34)
Filippov, Mikhail G.........256 (22.53)
Filler, Nicole.....................359 (84.2)
Filomeno, Felipe A ........ 245 (17.56)
Finan, Frederico ..............286 (45.8)
Findley, Michael............. 390 (96.30)
Fine, Janice R.............. 416 (109.49)
Finger, Leslie ............... 409 (109.12)
Finkel, Evgeny ....... 244 (17.49), 260
(26.10), 310 (56.10)
Finkel, Jodi S.................303 (51.33)
Finkel, Steven E..... 372 (88.58), 405
(107.50)
Finley, Katelyn ...............389 (96.23)
Finn, John E. ................. 241 (17.34)
Finnemore, Martha .... 223 (9.3), 344
(76.51), 389 (96.26)
Finseraas, Henning .......365 (88.24)
Fioretos, Karl Orfeo.........258 (24.3)
Fiorina, Morris Paul...... 369 (88.47),
404 (107.45)
Fischel, Joseph ..... 257 (22.56), 270
(27.3), 297 (50.14)
Fischer, Sarah.............. 414 (109.38)
Fish, Steve.....................314 (56.32)
Fisher, Angelina...............284 (42.1)
Fisher, Justin T. ....... 247 (20.2), 360
(84.3)
Fisher, Louis....................296 (46.4)
Fisher, Sarah ......... 263 (26.27), 412
(109.31)
Fisher Onar, Nora ........ 402 (107.32)
Fishkin, James S. ......... 357 (83.46),
383 (93.3)
Fishkin, Joseph ...............395 (97.7)
Fishman, Robert M. ........258 (23.4),
399 (107.15)
Fisk, Kerstin ..................378 (92.28)
Fitch, Kimberly ................322 (59.7)
FitzGerald, Clare............253 (22.33)
Fitzgerald, Jennifer....... 280 (40.48),
343 (76.47)
Fjelde, Hanne......... 277 (40.32), 413
(109.33)
Fjelstul, Joshua Camden ..........368
(88.39)
Flavin, Patrick................292 (45.39)
Flavin, Rebecca McCumbers .... 241
(17.34), 318 (56.51)
Flinders, Matthew ..........305 (51.41)
Flom, Hernan ...................235 (15.1)
Florence, Joseph........... 338 (76.17)
Flores, Alejandro ...........393 (96.45)
Flores, Andrew R.......... 307 (51.50),
331 (60.56)
Flynn, D.J............... 302 (51.26), 370
(88.49)
Flynn, Lindsay B. ..........379 (92.31)
Flynn, Michael E. ........... 240 (17.29)
Fogg Davis, Heath ..........259 (25.3),
297 (50.13), 355 (83.37)
Foley, Kevin .....................234 (13.1)

Foley, Lauren .................379 (92.31)


Fong, Christian...... 237 (17.10), 405
(107.46)
Fonseca Galvis, Angela
Maria ........................... 287 (45.15)
Fontana, Benedetto .........235 (17.1)
Foos, Florian ......... 331 (60.57), 343
(76.46)
Ford, Robert .................. 245 (17.55)
Fordham, Benjamin O. ..............301
(51.21), 390 (96.31)
Fording, Richard C. ...... 245 (17.53),
413 (109.36)
Forest, Benjamin ........... 230 (11.42)
Forestal, Jennifer .... 248 (22.6), 315
(56.39)
Forester, Summer..........369 (88.42)
Forlenza, Rosario ........ 404 (107.43)
Forman, Fonna ................272 (40.6)
Forman, Michael ............344 (76.50)
Forrat, Natalia ........ 273 (40.10), 300
(51.17)
Fortin-Rittberger, Jessica..........305
(51.43), 370 (88.48)
Fortna, Page .......... 351 (83.13), 367
(88.34), 402 (107.33)
Fortunato, David.... 250 (22.19), 280
(40.47)
Foss, Jerome C. .... 393 (96.48), 397
(107.1)
Fossati, Diego.......... 258 (23.6), 364
(88.18)
Foucault, Martial...... 348 (81.2), 407
(108.4)
Fowler, Matthew.............356 (83.43)
Fox, Justin.....................371 (88.55)
Foyle, Douglas C. .......... 367 (88.32)
Fraga, Bernard L. ........ 414 (109.39)
Fraga, Luis Ricardo........234 (12.4),
247 (21.1), 395 (97.7)
Fraile, Marta............. 236 (17.7), 280
(40.50), 305 (51.43), 372 (89.6)
Fraistat, Shawn..............245 (17.57)
Franceschet, Antonio .... 244 (17.48)
Franceschet, Susan...... 230 (11.41),
266 (26.40)
Francis, Megan Ming .... 264 (26.33),
297 (50.17), 363 (88.11)
Franck, Matthew J. ..........372 (89.1)
Franco, Lucas.............. 416 (109.49)
Franco Vivanco, Edgar..............310
(56.10)
Frank, Jill ..... 247 (22.1), 407 (108.6)
Frank, Peter M. ................283 (41.3)
Frank, Richard W...........344 (76.53)
Franklin, Mark N. ........... 377 (92.20)
Franklin Fowler, Erika ...............343
(76.44), 372 (89.3), 393 (96.45)
Franko, William W..........342 (76.38)
Frantz, Erica ................ 405 (107.49)
Frantzich, Stephen E. ....381 (92.46)
Franz, Berkeley A ..........345 (76.56)
Franz, Michael G..............332 (61.3)
Franzese, Robert J. .......273 (40.11)
Fraser, Cary ...................357 (83.47)
Frasure-Yokley, Lorrie ....223 (10.2),
265 (26.38)
Fraussen, Bert ...............229 (11.36)
Fredette, Jennifer ......... 324 (60.13),
348 (81.2)
Freeder, Sean.................343 (76.45)
Freedman, Guy ..............393 (96.44)
Freeland, Valerie............244 (17.48)
Freelon, Deen G.............232 (11.49)
Freeman, John R. .......... 237 (17.11)
Freeze, Kent E. ..............226 (11.19)
Freeze, Melanie S. .........330 (60.47)
Freidenvall, Lenita.........279 (40.42)
Fresh, Adriane ....... 249 (22.13), 350
(83.9)
Fridkin, Kim L. ............... 393 (96.45)
Fridy, Kevin S. ....... 332 (60.58), 409
(109.11)
Fried, Amy ............. 243 (17.43), 355
(83.37)
Frieden, Jeffry A............ 227 (11.26)
Friedman, Jeffrey ..........394 (96.54)
Friedman, Jeffrey A....... 366 (88.30)
Friedman, Sally............ 413 (109.37)
Friend, John M. ...............321 (57.4)
Frierdich, Matthew D .......248 (22.5)

Friesen, Amanda ...........386 (96.10)


Friman, H. Richard ........ 312 (56.22)
Fritz, Paul.......................301 (51.22)
Frohnen, Bruce P...........407 (108.5)
Frost, Catherine...............309 (56.4)
Frost, Daniel .................. 305 (51.40)
Frost, Jonas Martin .......297 (50.15)
Frost, Samantha ..............336 (76.4)
Fruge', Anne Christine ..............332
(60.58)
Frye, Timothy........... 273 (40.9), 345
(76.58), 409 (109.12)
Frymer, Paul .......... 260 (26.10), 308
(54.2), 379 (92.34)
Fuchs, Andreas ..... 224 (11.11), 225
(11.11), 262 (26.22), 289
(45.24)
Fucilla, Louis .................314 (56.33)
Fuhrmann, Matthew...... 228 (11.32),
276 (40.29), 313 (56.27), 412
(109.30)
Fujii, Lee Ann ..................321 (57.5)
Fuller, Douglas B.......... 325 (60.16),
388 (96.21)
Fullmer, Elliott B............391 (96.36)
Fung, Archon........... 273 (40.8), 310
(56.12), 349 (83.4), 368 (88.38)
Funk, Kendall......... 254 (22.42), 307
(51.52)
Funk, Kevin.................... 281 (40.54)
Funke, Peter Nikolaus ............... 375
(92.13)
Furnas, Alexander Charles .......378
(92.29)
Furstenberg, Kai..............321 (57.4)

G
Gabel, Matthew..............368 (88.39)
Gadarian, Shana Kushner .........277
(40.35), 368 (88.41), 398
(107.9)
Gadjanova, Elena ............321 (58.1)
Gaikwad, Nikhar ............312 (56.23)
Gailmard, Sean ................349 (83.6)
Gaines, Brian J...... 354 (83.30), 367
(88.35)
Gainous, Jason ..... 306 (51.47), 382
(92.48)
Gains, Francesca.......... 230 (11.41),
302 (51.29), 354 (83.33)
Gais, Amy ......................397 (107.1)
Galemba, Rebecca.........312 (56.22)
Gallagher, Janice Kreinick ........404
(107.40)
Gallagher, Mary E. ... 234 (13.1), 273
(40.10)
Gallagher, Megan..... 285 (45.4), 362
(88.4)
Gallarotti, Giulio M. .........395 (97.6)
Gallego, Jorge ...............228 (11.31)
Gallop, Max Blau ........... 327 (60.30)
Galvin, Daniel .............. 409 (109.12)
Gamm, Gerald........ 304 (51.36), 354
(83.30), 367 (88.35), 415
(109.43)
Gamso, Jonas................301 (51.19)
Gandhi, Jennifer .... 274 (40.18), 405
(107.49)
Gandrud, Christopher ...............275
(40.25), 276 (40.25)
Ganguly, Sumit ...... 275 (40.21), 313
(56.28)
Gans-Morse, Jordan Luc...........379
(92.33)
Gao, Qin.........................325 (60.17)
Garand, James C.............246 (18.4)
Garay, Candelaria ......... 300 (51.13),
311 (56.13)
Garbiras Diaz, Natalia....340 (76.25)
Garca-Castaon, Marcela......... 380
(92.39)
Garcia, Jennifer ........... 413 (109.35)
Garcia, John Armando ..............279
(40.43), 322 (59.5)
Garcia Albacete, Gema M.......... 236
(17.7), 280 (40.50), 372 (89.6)
Garcia Bedolla, Lisa .......234 (12.4),
271 (38.2), 308 (54.2), 322
(59.5), 392 (96.39)

Gibbons, Rebecca Davis...........327


(60.27)
Gibilisco, Michael ..........408 (109.9)
Gibson, Alan Ray ............394 (97.1)
Gibson, Rachel K. .........324 (60.12)
Gichohi, Matthew.......... 226 (11.20),
257 (22.58), 261 (26.18)
Gidengil, Elisabeth L. ....266 (26.43)
Gidron, Noam ................386 (96.10)
Giersch, Jason ...... 291 (45.35), 375
(92.12)
Gilardi, Fabrizio ..... 256 (22.53), 304
(51.35), 331 (60.57)
Gilens, Martin ........ 296 (45.61), 330
(60.46)
Giles, Kathleen ................383 (93.3)
Gill, Emily R................... 257 (22.56)
Gill, Jeff .........................225 (11.15)
Gill, Nathan ......................308 (52.3)
Gillespie, Andra ....... 348 (82.1), 404
(107.42)
Gillespie, Michael Allen.............384
(94.1), 406 (108.3)
Gilli, Andrea...................366 (88.29)
Gilli, Mauro ....................366 (88.29)
Gilligan, Michael James ............290
(45.31)
Gillion, Daniel Q. ... 342 (76.42), 369
(88.43)
Gilljam, Mikael ...............262 (26.19)
Gilson, Lisa......................373 (92.1)
Gimpel, James G. ........ 415 (109.44)
Gineste, Christian..........378 (92.28)
Gingerich, Daniel W...... 237 (17.13),
324 (60.14), 381 (92.44)
Gingrich, Jane R............303 (51.30)
Ginsberg, Benjamin........297 (49.2),
338 (76.13)
Ginsberg, Beth ...... 232 (11.54), 269
(26.57), 316 (56.41), 369
(88.46)
Giovannini, Arianna.......312 (56.21)
Giraudy, Agustina......... 331 (60.53),
358 (83.49)
Giraudy, Eugenia ... 273 (40.12), 363
(88.13)
Girdwood, John............. 319 (56.57)
Girod, Desha.................. 351 (83.17)
Gisselquist, Rachel M. ..............358
(83.50)
Giuliano, Elise ...............261 (26.15)
Giurcanu, Magda ........... 339 (76.22)
Givel, Michael Steven.... 406 (108.1)
Givens, John Wagner ....325 (60.18)
Givens, Terri E......... 234 (12.4), 235
(16.1), 247 (21.1)
Glas, Aarie ..... 321 (57.5), 372 (89.6)
Glaser, Charles L........... 251 (22.25)
Glass, James M. ...... 322 (60.1), 335
(76.1), 362 (88.4)
Glassman, Matthew .......252 (22.31)
Glatzer, Miguel............. 401 (107.23)
Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede ........252
(22.30), 403 (107.35)
Glezos, Simon ......... 272 (40.2), 374
(92.3)
Glick, David ........... 304 (51.35), 324
(60.12), 380 (92.36)
Glynn, Adam................ 413 (109.37)
Go, Min Hee .....................359 (84.2)
Goddard, Stacie E. ........ 378 (92.26)
Godrej, Farah.................256 (22.51)
Godwin, Samantha ..........286 (45.4)
Goebel, Christian.......... 232 (11.51),
376 (92.17)
Goelzhauser, Greg....... 403 (107.39)
Goemans, Henk Erich ...276 (40.29)
Goenaga Orrego, Agustin
Alonso...........................373 (90.3)
Goertz, Gary .......... 239 (17.23), 416
(109.54)
Goet, Niels .....................290 (45.32)
Gofie, Solomon Mebrie ............. 320
(56.62)
Goforth, Chelsea A........304 (51.37)
Gohdes, Anita R. ..... 361 (86.1), 402
(107.31)
Gokcek, Gigi .................. 260 (26.12)
Golden, Jane ...................322 (59.6)
Golden, Marissa Martino ...........291
(45.35), 308 (55.1), 328 (60.33)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 425

Golder, Matt ........... 370 (88.48), 392


(96.43), 405 (107.46)
Goldman, Emily O. ..........271 (38.1)
Goldman, Frances L........249 (22.9)
Goldman, Harvey S. ........385 (96.2)
Goldman, Matthew........ 249 (22.10),
294 (45.53), 310 (56.10), 338
(76.17)
Goldman, Samuel .... 361 (88.1), 373
(90.4)
Goldman, Seth K. .......... 292 (45.41)
Goldstein, Avery ............251 (22.25)
Goldstein, Judith Lynn..............276
(40.26)
Goldstein, Rebecca .......355 (83.36)
Goldzimer, Aaron Marc ............. 369
(88.46)
Golemboski, David ..........259 (26.2)
Golesorkhi, Lara-Zuzan............. 307
(51.53)
Golub, Jonathan ............319 (56.54)
Gomes, Bjorn Wee ..........298 (51.1)
Gomez, Eric ...................277 (40.30)
Gomez, Raul ....................372 (89.6)
Gomez-Mera, Laura .......352 (83.21)
Gonzales, Alfonso ...........361 (86.3)
Gonzales, Marti Hope ......350 (83.7)
Gonzalez, Frank John ...330 (60.45)
Gonzalez, Yanilda Maria ............235
(15.1)
Gonzalez Bertomeu, Juan F. .....399
(107.12)
Gonzalez Juenke, Eric...............369
(88.43), 392 (96.39)
Gonzalez Ocantos, Ezequiel
Alejo......... 253 (22.36), 284 (43.2),
350 (83.8)
Gooch, Andrew..............343 (76.45)
Good, Kristin R..................222 (4.1)
Goodhart, Lucy M......... 262 (26.21),
299 (51.8)
Goodliffe, Gabriel ............320 (57.1)
Goodman, Sara Wallace ............245
(17.55), 360 (84.7), 383 (92.54)
Goodwin, Matthew Thomas
James............................361 (86.2)
Goodyear-Grant, Elizabeth........ 409
(109.15)
Goplerud, Max ...............375 (92.11)
Gora, Joel Mark ...............233 (12.3)
Gordon, David Jeremy ....284 (42.1)
Gordon, Jane A. ............408 (109.6)
Gordon, Oakley Benedict..........326
(60.21)
Gordon, Sanford C. ...... 278 (40.38),
379 (92.32)
Goren, Lilly J. ........ 292 (45.41), 393
(96.48)
Goren, Paul............ 356 (83.43), 363
(88.8), 386 (96.9)
Goss, Kristin............ 373 (90.1), 413
(109.36)
Gottfried, Jeffrey A........357 (83.46)
Gottlieb, Jessica............226 (11.20)
Gottschalk, Marie ..........363 (88.11)
Gould, Carol C....... 319 (56.56), 395
(97.6)
Gould, Erica R ............. 401 (107.28)
Gourevitch, Alexander H...........397
(107.2)
Gowa, Joanne................276 (40.26)
Goyer, Michel............... 401 (107.23)
Grmping, Max ................299 (51.9)
Graber, Mark A......... 246 (18.3), 253
(22.37), 297 (50.17)
Graca, Luis Felipe Guedes........390
(96.32)
Gracey, Kellen J. ... 254 (22.41), 266
(26.41), 279 (40.45)
Graeber, John ................257 (22.57)
Graefe, Andreas....... 297 (49.1), 347
(77.7)
Graham, Benjamin A.T. ............. 352
(83.20), 401 (107.25)
Graham, Erin R...... 251 (22.23), 401
(107.28)
Graham, Todd ................370 (88.51)
Grahame, Alyssa Maraj .............227
(11.25), 382 (92.52), 383
(92.52)

Grand, Peter .......... 317 (56.46), 377


(92.20)
Grant, Aubrey Leigh......394 (96.53)
Grant, John W..................269 (27.1)
Grant, Judith.............. 222 (6.9), 344
(76.50)
Grant, Keneshia N. ........ 286 (45.11)
Grant, Ronnie ................353 (83.26)
Grattan, Laura..................335 (74.3)
Grauer, Ryan D. ..... 327 (60.30), 378
(92.27)
Gray, Julia.............. 366 (88.28), 377
(92.21)
Gray, Maggie.................. 292 (45.39)
Gray, Sean W.D........ 248 (22.6), 286
(45.6)
Gray, Stuart......................248 (22.2)
Gray, Virginia H. ...... 223 (10.2), 414
(109.43)
Green, Brendan R......... 263 (26.24),
340 (76.29)
Green, Donald P....... 224 (11.9), 245
(17.54), 307 (52.2), 350 (83.10),
364 (88.14), 405 (107.48)
Green, Jane ........... 243 (17.44), 324
(60.12), 405 (107.46)
Green, Jeffrey E...............260 (26.7)
Green, Jessica........... 223 (9.3), 288
(45.21), 297 (49.3)
Green, Matthew N. ........ 252 (22.31),
283 (41.4)
Green Saraisky, Nancy ....284 (42.1)
Greenaway, James .........257 (23.3),
417 (110.3)
Greene, Amanda..............349 (83.5)
Greene, Kenneth F........ 331 (60.52),
356 (83.42), 416 (109.50)
Greene, Kevin T............. 290 (45.28)
Greene, Samuel A......... 352 (83.19),
375 (92.13)
Greene, Samuel R..........364 (88.15)
Greene, Steven ..............304 (51.37)
Greene, Zachary David..............317
(56.44)
Greenhill, Brian D. ......... 377 (92.21)
Greenlee, Jill S. ...............308 (55.1)
Greenwald, Diana ..........227 (11.23)
Greer, Christina M. ......... 285 (44.5),
373 (90.4)
Greer, Scott L. ....... 254 (22.38), 360
(84.3)
Gregory, Christina ........ 305 (51.40),
404 (107.43)
Greig, J. Michael.... 301 (51.24), 354
(83.29)
Greitens, Sheena Chestnut .......331
(60.55)
Greve, Andrew Q. ........ 402 (107.32)
Greve, Michael S. ............359 (84.1)
Grewal, Sharan ...... 311 (56.15), 364
(88.19)
Griggs, Frank.................393 (96.46)
Grigoryan, Arman............347 (78.1)
Grimes, Marcia ..............331 (60.53)
Grimmer, Justin..... 273 (40.12), 321
(58.2), 350 (83.10), 363 (88.13),
375 (92.11)
grindlife, stonegarden ...............354
(83.31)
Grittersova, Jana ...........289 (45.23)
Groeling, Tim ......... 231 (11.47), 301
(51.20), 370 (88.50)
Groenendyk, Eric......... 404 (107.41)
Groenhout, Ruth E. .........309 (56.5)
Grofman, Bernard N. .....330 (60.45)
Grogan, Colleen M.........245 (17.53)
Grondin, David ................298 (51.4)
Gronich, Lori Helene .... 239 (17.27),
353 (83.25)
Gronke, Paul....................322 (59.2)
Groshek, Jacob ........... 416 (109.48)
Gross, Justin H...... 343 (76.47), 383
(92.53)
Gross, Kimberly A. ........ 306 (51.45)
Gross, Perry ....................249 (22.9)
Grossman, Guy ..... 237 (17.13), 383
(93.3)
Grossman, Shelby ........ 233 (11.55),
273 (40.9)
Grotz, Florian............... 400 (107.22)
Grove, Jairus V. ...............298 (51.3)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

425

Index of Participants

Garcia Iommi, Lucrecia ............. 253


(22.36)
Garcia Ponce, Omar ..... 249 (22.14),
338 (76.18)
Garcia-Rios, Sergio I .... 355 (83.38),
414 (109.39)
Gardner, Paul J..............230 (11.38)
Garlick, Alex ..................368 (88.40)
Garnett, Holly Ann.........255 (22.45)
Garofano, John F ..........289 (45.27)
Garriga, Ana Carolina................262
(26.21), 376 (92.16)
Garrison, Justin D ...........308 (52.5)
Garrison, Justin David ....395 (97.4)
Garritzmann, Julian Leonce......297
(49.2), 391 (96.34)
Garry, John ......................246 (18.6)
Garsten, Bryan ................383 (93.1)
Gartner, Scott Sigmund.............367
(88.33)
Gartzke, Erik .......... 227 (11.27), 271
(38.1), 327 (60.30), 366 (88.29),
390 (96.31)
Gash, Alison .................. 375 (92.10)
Gaskins, Keesha..............321 (59.2)
Gates, Andrew DiMaggio ..........362
(88.5)
Gates, Scott ........... 252 (22.30), 398
(107.11)
Gauck, Jennifer .............268 (26.53)
Gauri, Varun...................233 (11.55)
Gause, LaGina ....... 354 (83.31), 413
(109.35)
Gauvin, Jean-Philippe ...358 (83.53)
Gava, Roy .............. 300 (51.18), 301
(51.18)
Gavin, Francis J. ...........239 (17.26)
Gavin, Michael ...............289 (45.23)
Gay, Claudine ..................258 (24.2)
Gaylord, Sylvia ..............341 (76.33)
Geddert, Jeremy Seth .....258 (23.3)
Geddes, Barbara.... 244 (17.49), 331
(60.55)
Geese, Lucas ......... 240 (17.30), 283
(41.2)
Gehlbach, Scott..... 244 (17.49), 260
(26.10)
Gehring, Kai...................225 (11.11)
Geiser, Carolyn..............274 (40.13)
Gelbman, Shamira M. .... 225 (11.16)
Gelineau, Francois ........266 (26.43)
Gellman, Mneesha .........227 (11.23)
Gelman, Andrew ............282 (40.59)
Gelman, David A............253 (22.35)
Gelpi, Christopher F. .....301 (51.20)
Gengler, Justin ..............238 (17.15)
Gent, Stephen E. ........... 228 (11.28)
Gentry, Bobbi................. 225 (11.16)
Gentry, John A...............344 (76.51)
George, Eric Thomas .... 229 (11.38)
George, Julie ...................307 (52.1)
Georgiev, Vihar ..............326 (60.22)
Geras, Matthew James..............359
(83.54)
Gerber, Alan...................343 (76.45)
Gerber, Elisabeth R. ..... 229 (11.35),
260 (26.9), 368 (88.41)
Gerber, Theodore P........377 (92.19)
German, Zachary .............395 (97.4)
Gerring, John......... 358 (83.50), 399
(107.17)
Gershon, Sarah Allen .......221 (3.3),
241 (17.37), 308 (55.1)
Gertz, Geoffrey ..............339 (76.23)
Gerzhoy, Gene ....... 327 (60.27), 412
(109.30)
Gest, Justin ........... 269 (26.57), 284
(43.1), 348 (81.2), 383 (92.54)
Getachew, Adom ........... 329 (60.40)
Getmansky, Anna ..........302 (51.26)
Geus, Roosmarijn Adrienne......343
(76.45)
Ghanem, As'ad ................257 (23.1)
Ghias, Shoaib ................328 (60.35)
Ghodoosi, Farshad........ 328 (60.35)
Gholz, Charles Eugene ............. 353
(83.25), 378 (92.25), 412
(109.29)
Gibbons, Michael T.........362 (88.2),
398 (107.7)

Gruber, Lloyd...................299 (51.8)


Grumbach, Jake M ........283 (40.63)
Grynaviski, Eric .............377 (92.23)
Grynaviski, Jeffrey D..... 343 (76.43)
Grzymala-Busse, Anna M..........364
(88.19), 373 (90.3)
Guan, Yichen .................356 (83.39)
Guardado, Jenny ... 225 (11.12), 376
(92.14)
Guarrieri, Thomas .........367 (88.35)
Gubler, Joshua Ronald ............. 337
(76.8), 374 (92.6)
Guenther, Scott .............229 (11.34)
Gueorguiev, Dimitar D....234 (13.1),
287 (45.15)
Guerrero, Alexander A. ............. 408
(109.8)
Guerrero, Mario .............357 (83.46)
Guess, Andrew ........ 323 (60.9), 363
(88.13)
Guiler, Kimberly............. 305 (51.44)
Guimaraes Pinheiro, Lucas.......235
(17.3)
Guisinger, Alexandra.... 326 (60.24),
401 (107.26)
Gulati, Jeff .....................382 (92.48)
Gulzar, Saad Ahmad......237 (17.13)
Gumuscu, Sebnem ...... 402 (107.32)
Gunderson, Anna M ...... 328 (60.37)
Gundogdu, Ayten ......... 244 (17.50),
248 (22.4), 272 (40.4)
Gunitsky, Seva....... 288 (45.20), 347
(78.1)
Gunn, Paul M. D. ...........394 (96.54)
Guo, Gang .....................388 (96.22)
Gupta, Surupa ...............313 (56.28)
Guraieb, Marlene ..... 272 (40.7), 386
(96.8)
Guriev, Sergei ................371 (88.53)
Gursoy, Yaprak ...... 299 (51.12), 338
(76.17)
Guru Rajan, Divya ...........310 (56.8)
Gusmano, Michael K. .....233 (12.1),
319 (56.59)
Gustafson, Daniel..........228 (11.28)
Gustafson, Kaaryn.............222 (9.1)
Gustafson, Lowell ...........308 (52.5)
Gustafsson, Maria-Therese .......351
(83.15)
Guthrie, Samantha.........278 (40.39)
Gutierrez Rivera, Lirio del
Carmen .......................288 (45.19)
Gutmann, Amy.................260 (26.6)
Gutner, Tamar .............. 401 (107.25)
Guzman, Sebastian G................358
(83.51)

H
Ha, Eunyoung ........ 226 (11.18), 311
(56.17), 400 (107.18)
Haas, Mark L.................. 256 (22.52)
Haas, Michael ................394 (96.50)
Haase, Thomas W..........406 (108.2)
Habchi, Daniel ...............339 (76.21)
Habel, Philip .......... 267 (26.45), 357
(83.45)
Habib, Khalil ....................308 (52.3)
Hacek, Miro.... 283 (41.6), 284 (41.6)
Hacker, Jacob S..... 233 (11.58), 259
(25.1)
Hackett, Ursula ..............278 (40.38)
Hackey, Robert B...........269 (26.54)
Hadden, Jennifer ..... 297 (49.3), 383
(92.53)
Haeder, Simon F. ........... 302 (51.28)
Haege, Frank Michael.... 359 (83.54)
Haenschen, Katherine ...............382
(92.48)
Hafer, Catherine...............224 (11.7)
Haffert, Lukas ................287 (45.14)
Hafner-Burton, Emilie Marie......251
(22.22), 313 (56.24), 411
(109.26)
Hagan, Joe Dickerson .....310 (56.7)
Hagel, Nina .... 235 (17.3), 271 (40.1)
Hagen, Michael ............ 415 (109.46)
Hager, Lisa............. 265 (26.37), 341
(76.36), 373 (91.3)
Hagopian, Frances ...... 410 (109.18)

426

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 426

Haider, Mellie .................267 (26.47)


Haider-Markel, Donald P. ...........270
(27.3), 331 (60.56), 349 (83.7)
Haines, Kyle.....................332 (61.4)
Haines, Pavielle .............230 (11.42)
Hainmueller, Jens......... 273 (40.11),
337 (76.12), 359 (83.56)
Hajnal, Zoltan L. ..............321 (59.1)
Haklai, Oded .......... 244 (17.48), 257
(23.1)
Hale, Henry E......... 261 (26.14), 307
(52.1), 358 (83.49)
Hale, Kathleen ....... 231 (11.48), 264
(26.34), 315 (56.36)
Hale, Thomas N. .... 339 (76.24), 366
(88.28)
Halikiopoulou, Daphne..............250
(22.20)
Hall, Andrew B...............368 (88.41)
Hall, Lauren K.......... 284 (43.3), 307
(51.51), 318 (56.51)
Hall, Matthew E.K. ........ 303 (51.32),
408 (109.10)
Hall, Melinda Gann ...... 403 (107.39)
Hall, Peter A........... 261 (26.13), 348
(81.3)
Hall, Steven R. ............... 365 (88.21)
Hall, Thad E. .................. 316 (56.41)
Hallenbrook, Christopher R. .....223
(11.2)
Halpin, Darren R. ........... 229 (11.36)
Halupka, Max .................267 (26.48)
Hamann, Kerstin...... 235 (16.1), 258
(23.4), 287 (45.13), 299 (51.10)
Hamayotsu, Kikue .........265 (26.39)
Hameduddin, Taha.........368 (88.38)
Hamel, Brian T. ..............369 (88.46)
Hamilton, Mark David .... 364 (88.15)
Hamlin, Rebecca.... 229 (11.37), 241
(17.34)
Hamm, Keith E...............379 (92.35)
Hammond, Jesse........... 269 (26.55)
Han, Enze.......................314 (56.29)
Han, Fuguo ......................383 (93.3)
Han, Hahrie C. ....... 268 (26.48), 403
(107.38)
Han, Kyung Joon...........325 (60.21)
Han, Rongbin................. 325 (60.18)
Hanagan, Nora....... 243 (17.46), 259
(26.3), 309 (56.6)
Hancock, Ralph C............283 (41.1)
Handberg, Roger B........378 (92.25)
Handlin, Samuel ............299 (51.12)
Hangartner, Dominik .... 359 (83.56),
381 (92.41)
Hankinson, Michael .......265 (26.35)
Hankla, Charles R..........325 (60.17)
Hanley, Ryan Patrick ......309 (56.1),
361 (88.1), 385 (96.1)
Hanna, Alex .....................320 (57.1)
Hannah, Adam ...............368 (88.37)
Hanniman, Kyle .............241 (17.35)
Hansen, Eric ................ 414 (109.43)
Hansen, Kasper M. ....... 242 (17.42),
293 (45.46)
Hansen, Kristina Jessen ........... 323
(60.9)
Hansen, Martin Ejnar.... 290 (45.32),
341 (76.32)
Hansen, Vibeke Wien ..............263
(26.28)
Hanson, Elizabeth (Betty) C. .....281
(40.52)
Hanson, Jonathan ... 310 (56.9), 373
(90.3)
Hanson, Margaret ..........379 (92.33)
Hanson, Russell L. ..........373 (92.1)
Hansson, Eva Louise .... 237 (17.14)
Harada, Masataka ..........356 (83.40)
Harbers, Imke ........ 244 (17.51), 335
(74.2)
Harbridge, Laurel.......... 231 (11.45),
277 (40.33), 354 (83.31)
Harcourt, Bernard E. .......248 (22.3)
Harder, William ..............278 (40.39)
Harding, Robin ..............250 (22.18)
Hardt, Heidi............ 378 (92.25), 412
(109.29)
Hardy-Fanta, Carol ........279 (40.43)
Harell, Allison ................386 (96.10)

Harfst, Philipp........ 317 (56.45), 370


(88.48)
Harish, S P.....................376 (92.14)
Harker, Jennifer .............344 (76.48)
Harper, Takiyah..............295 (45.60)
Harpham, John ..............397 (107.1)
Harrelson-Stephens, Julie.........282
(40.57)
Harrington, Jaira J.........376 (92.18)
Harris, Adam................ 411 (109.22)
Harris, Allison P........... 413 (109.37)
Harris, Christopher Paul ........... 394
(96.54)
Harris, Clodagh ..... 266 (26.41), 305
(51.41)
Harris, Colin.....................273 (40.9)
Harris, Douglas B. .........243 (17.43)
Harris, Fredrick C. ...........348 (82.1)
Harris, Joseph ....... 233 (11.55), 364
(88.18)
Harris, Kirk Andrew.......257 (22.58)
Harris, Samantha........... 278 (40.37)
Harris, Sean D ...............371 (88.54)
Harris-Perry, Melissa .......308 (54.2)
Harrison, Brian F. ......... 241 (17.37),
357 (83.46)
Harrison, Kathryn ......... 344 (76.49),
415 (109.47)
Harsch, Michael F. .........368 (88.39)
Hart, Roderick P..... 327 (60.32), 357
(83.46)
Hartlyn, Jonathan ..........358 (83.49)
Hartman, Alexandra..... 399 (107.12)
Hartman, Matthew Harrison ...... 362
(88.2)
Hartman, Ray Thomas...............411
(109.27)
Hartnett, Allison Spencer..........311
(56.17)
Hartshorn, Ian M..............346 (77.6)
Hartzell, Caroline A. ...... 354 (83.29)
Harvie, Jeanette Yih ........360 (84.2)
Hasell, Ariel ...................370 (88.51)
Hasen, Richard L.............233 (12.3)
Hashim, S. Mohsin ........ 388 (96.20)
Haskins, Ron .....................222 (9.1)
Haslam, Paul Alexander ............274
(40.14)
Hasmath, Reza...............365 (88.23)
Hassan, Mai Omer ...........321 (58.1)
Hassan, Mazen ...... 238 (17.15), 294
(45.53)
Hassanpour, Navid .......232 (11.49),
300 (51.15), 388 (96.17)
Hassel, Anke.................. 287 (45.16)
Hassell, Hans J.G. ........ 241 (17.37),
279 (40.44), 293 (45.46), 408
(109.10)
Hassner, Ron E........ 309 (55.2), 329
(60.42)
Hastedt, Glenn P. ..... 296 (46.4), 390
(96.29)
Hasunuma, Linda Choi..............322
(59.3), 357 (83.47)
Hatch, Michael ...............245 (17.53)
Hatcher, Laura J. ........... 297 (50.14)
Hatemi, Pete ....................349 (83.7)
Hattam, Victoria .............297 (50.14)
Haussman, Melissa ...... 232 (11.54),
304 (51.38), 331 (60.56), 358
(83.53)
Hawke, Stephanie ..........379 (92.31)
Hawkesworth, Mary ...... 297 (50.14),
323 (60.4), 379 (92.34), 396
(106.1)
Haworth, Peter Daniel .....395 (97.4)
Hayes, Danny ........ 231 (11.47), 357
(83.45)
Hayes, Matthew J. .........316 (56.41)
Haynes, Chris S........... 414 (109.39)
Haynes, Kyle.......... 289 (45.26), 353
(83.26), 378 (92.27)
Hays, Jude C. ........ 250 (22.19), 273
(40.11), 326 (60.21)
Hayward, Clarissa Rile ....336 (76.5)
Hayward, Janine ............369 (88.45)
Hazelton, Jacqueline L. .............340
(76.29)
Hazelton, Morgan L. W. .............303
(51.32), 341 (76.36)
Hazlett, Chad .................306 (51.48)

Healy, Andrew..................286 (45.9)


Heaney, Michael T.......... 231 (11.44)
Heard, Kathryn A.......... 329 (60.41),
414 (109.40)
Heath, Oliver.......... 293 (45.47), 415
(109.44)
Heberle, Renee ................323 (60.4)
Hedberg, Masha..... 263 (26.25), 352
(83.19)
Hedding, Kylah ..............344 (76.48)
Hedges, Chris L...............362 (88.3)
Hedlund, Ronald D. .......379 (92.35)
Heersink, Boris...... 255 (22.43), 343
(76.43)
Heginbotham, Eric......... 340 (76.27)
Hegre, Haavard............ 412 (109.28)
Hegre, Hvard........ 314 (56.30), 347
(78.1)
Heidelberg, Roy L..........330 (60.48)
Heidt-Forsythe, Erin .....304 (51.38),
391 (96.38)
Heilke, Thomas W...........257 (23.3),
406 (108.3)
Heine, Klaus ..................303 (51.31)
Heinz, Dominic ..............230 (11.40)
Heith, Diane J. ............... 327 (60.32)
Helbling, Marc........ 233 (11.57), 264
(26.32)
Heldman, Caroline..... 221 (2.4), 244
(17.47)
Helfer, Ariel ......................372 (89.7)
Helfer, Laurence R........ 313 (56.24),
368 (88.39)
Heller, Maiko Isabelle .... 250 (22.19)
Heller, William B. ........... 317 (56.44)
Hellmuth, Dorle...... 238 (17.19), 301
(51.23)
Hellwig, Timothy.... 381 (92.45), 392
(96.42), 415 (109.45)
Helmke, Gretchen......... 324 (60.10),
350 (83.9)
Helmy, Khaled................242 (17.38)
Henary, Sara ..................294 (45.51)
Henceroth, Nathan........ 275 (40.24),
302 (51.27)
Henderson, John A. ..... 369 (88.46),
399 (107.13)
Hendlin, Yogi Hale ..........248 (22.5),
292 (45.40), 417 (110.4)
Hendrix, Burke......... 298 (51.6), 336
(76.6), 407 (109.2)
Hendry, David J. .... 255 (22.47), 302
(51.26), 350 (83.7)
Henig, Jeffrey R...............259 (25.2)
Henin, Thibaud ..............382 (92.47)
Henisz, Witold J.............276 (40.26)
Henke, Marina Elisabeth ........... 251
(22.23), 289 (45.28), 340
(76.28), 377 (92.24)
Henne, Peter Shane...... 329 (60.42),
389 (96.27)
Hennessey, Thomas ........246 (18.6)
Henning, C. Randall ..... 227 (11.26),
339 (76.24)
Hennings, Valerie M. .....226 (11.16)
Henripin, Olivier.............277 (40.31)
Henry, Daniel ...................385 (96.2)
Henry, Michael D. ............296 (46.3)
Henshaw, Alexis L......... 249 (22.12)
Hermann, John R. ......... 226 (11.16)
Hermann, Margaret G. .....310 (56.7)
Hernndez, Enrique...... 243 (17.43),
389 (96.24)
Hernndez Norzagaray,
Ernesto .......................292 (45.38)
Hernandez Company, Jose
Antonio .......................299 (51.12)
Herold, Aaron L ...............385 (96.2)
Herold, Carly Tess ...........372 (89.7)
Herrera, Veronica....... 222 (4.1), 275
(40.20), 292 (45.40), 383
(92.52)
Herreros, Francisco.......389 (96.24)
Herrick, Drew ......... 330 (60.51), 412
(109.29)
Herrigel, Gary ................300 (51.16)
Herrington, Richard.......273 (40.11)
Herrnson, Paul S. ..........231 (11.45)
Herron, Erik S. ...................222 (6.9)
Herron, Paul E. ..............297 (50.17)
Hersh, Eitan D. ..............319 (56.59)

Hoffmann, Matthew J. .....284 (42.1)


Hofmann, Tobias ... 252 (22.28), 276
(40.27), 401 (107.28)
Hofnung, Tamar ............. 394 (96.54)
Hogan, John W. ..... 273 (40.13), 354
(83.33)
Holahan, Robert A. ........330 (60.48)
Holbein, John ........ 293 (45.46), 307
(51.52)
Holbrook, Thomas M. ......246 (18.4)
Holian, David B..............380 (92.36)
Holland, Alisha Caroline ........... 247
(20.4), 300 (51.13), 351 (83.14),
375 (92.8)
Holland, Emily ....... 268 (26.50), 352
(83.19)
Hollander, Ethan J. ..........308 (55.2)
Hollar, Julie............ 307 (51.50), 319
(56.58)
Hollenbach, Florian Max
Benjamin............. 311 (56.17), 363
(88.10), 399 (107.17)
Holley, Jared....................223 (11.2)
Hollibaugh, Gary E. ..... 408 (109.10)
Hollifield, James F. ....... 307 (51.53),
371 (88.57), 394 (96.53)
Holloway, Carson L. .......372 (89.1),
394 (97.1)
Hollyer, James R. .........244 (17.49),
284 (42.1), 362 (88.7)
Holman, Craig B. ....... 222 (6.1), 384
(93.6)
Holmes, Carolyn Ethel ..............320
(56.62)
Holmes, Jennifer Smith.............344
(76.53)
Holmes, Lisa M...... 265 (26.36), 303
(51.32), 341 (76.36)
Holmes, Stephen Taylor ............271
(38.3)
Holmgren, Mikael.......... 253 (22.32),
277 (40.34)
Holmlund, Marcus .........359 (83.57)
Holmsten, Stephanie S..............329
(60.43)
Holom, Brittany .............389 (96.23)
Holston, Ryan Robert......308 (52.5)
Holt, Stephen ......... 303 (51.29), 347
(79.1)
Holtermann, Helge.........263 (26.28)
Holtz-Bacha, Christina ...320 (57.1),
382 (92.46)
Holzhacker, Ronald L. ...244 (17.52)
Homola, Jonathan ........ 295 (45.57),
359 (83.56)
Hondo, Amy Hisaye.........336 (76.5)
Hong, Ji Yeon (Jean) .......234 (13.1)
Hong, Mi Hwa ................289 (45.25)
Hong, Seung-Hun ..........229 (11.36)
Honig, Bonnie.......... 260 (26.5), 397
(107.4)
Honig, Dan .......................284 (42.1)
Honig, Lauren ................351 (83.16)
Hood, M. V. ............ 304 (51.39), 316
(56.41)
Hooghe, Liesbet ...... 247 (20.2), 341
(76.37), 348 (81.3), 366 (88.27)
Hooghe, Marc ........ 317 (56.47), 415
(109.45)
Hooker, Juliet.................329 (60.40)
Hopf, Ted .......................232 (11.53)
Hopkins, Daniel J. ........ 280 (40.46),
356 (83.43), 365 (88.24), 404
(107.42)
Hopkins, David A.......... 279 (40.46),
356 (83.41)
Hopper, Jennifer ............327 (60.32)
Horak, Martin George ........222 (4.1)
Horgan, John G. .......... 403 (107.34)
Horiuchi, Yusaku ... 290 (45.32), 356
(83.40), 363 (88.9)
Horn, Alexander........... 405 (107.47)
Horowitz, Donald L........265 (26.39)
Horowitz, Jeremy........... 226 (11.20)
Horowitz, Michael ......... 240 (17.28),
276 (40.29), 313 (56.25)
Horz, Carlo Matthias......224 (11.10)
Hosek, Adrienne .... 324 (60.12), 405
(107.47)
Hossainzadeh, Nura Alia...........380
(92.40)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 427

Hou, Yilin .......................229 (11.35)


Hou, Yue ........ 234 (13.1), 273 (40.9)
Hough, Dan......................360 (84.7)
Houle, Christian..... 226 (11.18), 299
(51.8), 324 (60.15), 405
(107.49)
Houle, David Hubert ...... 281 (40.51)
Hovi, Jon........................263 (26.28)
Howard, Alison ..............327 (60.32)
Howard, Grace Elizabeth...........304
(51.38)
Howard, Lise Morje .......353 (83.24)
Howard, Marc Morje ...... 344 (76.52)
Howard, Nicholas ............373 (91.3)
Howat, Adam ...................248 (22.8)
Howell, William G. .........379 (92.30)
Hoye, J. Matthew .............259 (26.2)
Hsieh, John Fuh-sheng .............346
(77.5), 417 (110.1)
Hsu, Yu-Min ...................226 (11.18)
Hsueh, Lily YW ..............393 (96.46)
Hsueh, Roselyn ....... 320 (57.3), 339
(76.20), 364 (88.16), 410
(109.20)
Htun, Mala.............. 266 (26.40), 271
(38.2), 316 (56.40)
Hu, Xiaobo .......................320 (57.3)
Huang, Chi .......................384 (93.4)
Huang, Grace.................268 (26.50)
Huang, Haifeng........ 234 (13.1), 362
(88.7)
Huang, Reyko ........ 364 (88.19), 413
(109.34)
Huang, Weihao ..............340 (76.27)
Huang, Xian ........... 273 (40.10), 325
(60.17), 388 (96.22)
Hubbard-Mattix, Laci .....232 (11.54)
Huber, Evelyne ..............262 (26.19)
Huber, Gregory ...... 243 (17.44), 343
(76.45), 364 (88.14), 379
(92.32)
Huber, Laura .................. 228 (11.29)
Hubert, Ryan....................272 (40.7)
Hubler, James Noel .......407 (109.2)
Huckle, Kiku .......... 269 (26.57), 380
(92.39)
Hudak, John ..............221 (2.4), 253
(22.32)
Huddleston, R. Joseph..............314
(56.29)
Huddy, Leonie.......... 224 (11.8), 317
(56.47), 369 (88.47), 374 (92.6)
Hudson, David ...............245 (17.54)
Hudson, Jennifer M ........374 (92.4),
385 (96.2)
Hudson, William E. ....... 273 (40.13),
375 (92.12)
Huet-Vaughn, Emiliano
Raphael.......................238 (17.19)
Hug, Simon ............ 252 (22.30), 327
(60.29)
Hughes, Adam Gregory.............267
(26.45)
Hughes, David ...............241 (17.35)
Hughes, David A............328 (60.37)
Hughes, Glenn......... 269 (27.2), 384
(93.5), 417 (110.2)
Hughes, James..............244 (17.51)
Hughes, Llewelyn .........344 (76.49),
415 (109.47)
Hughes, Melanie M. ...... 329 (60.43),
414 (109.38)
Hughes, Niall ...................386 (96.8)
Hughes, Sara ......... 281 (40.51), 292
(45.40), 391 (96.37)
Hughes, Tyler................. 314 (56.34)
Huhe, Narisong................395 (97.2)
Hui, Iris ..... 229 (11.35), 314 (56.34),
355 (83.35)
Hui, Victoria Tin-bor ... 402 (107.29),
410 (109.21)
Hulme, David .................261 (26.17)
Hult, Karen M......... 291 (45.34), 302
(51.28)
Hultman, Lisa......... 240 (17.29), 252
(22.30), 277 (40.32)
Humes, Brian D. ..............259 (25.2)
Hummel, Calla ....... 376 (92.18), 412
(109.28)
Hummel, Sarah ..............376 (92.16)

Humphreys, Macartan ...............331


(60.57), 350 (83.10)
Hundman, Eric....... 269 (26.55), 412
(109.27)
Hunt, Jennifer S.............251 (22.24)
Hunt, Stacey Leigh ........ 342 (76.39)
Hunziker, Philipp ... 237 (17.11), 314
(56.30)
Huo, Jingjing .................262 (26.19)
Hur, Hyunkang............... 314 (56.33)
Hurst, William ........ 306 (51.49), 321
(57.3)
Hutchings, Vincent L......308 (54.2),
342 (76.42), 369 (88.47)
Hutchins, Rachel ........... 250 (22.20)
Hutchinson, Annabelle....337 (76.9)
Hutchinson, Darren Lenard.......341
(76.35)
Hutchison, Marc L. ........ 317 (56.47)
Huth, Paul K. ......... 263 (26.27), 302
(51.24), 390 (96.30)
Hutton Ferris, Daniel .......309 (56.6)
Hyde, Susan D......... 299 (51.9), 347
(78.1)

I
Ibenskas, Raimondas ....354 (83.33)
Ichino, Nahomi ...... 226 (11.20), 387
(96.12)
Idris, Muhammed Y.........373 (91.2),
392 (96.40)
Idris, Murad.............. 259 (26.4), 392
(96.40)
Ifkovits, David................280 (40.48)
Ignazi, Piero.....................233 (12.2)
Iida, Fumio .......................336 (76.6)
Iida, Rentaro ..................275 (40.19)
Ikenberry, G. John ........ 281 (40.55),
321 (58.3), 389 (96.26)
Ikuta, Jennie Choi ... 272 (40.3), 384
(95.2)
Iliev, Iliyan .............. 264 (26.32), 329
(60.44)
Imai, Kosuke.......... 225 (11.13), 287
(45.15), 310 (56.11), 337
(76.12), 356 (83.40)
Imbroscio, David ...........328 (60.38)
Imerman, Dane K........... 281 (40.55)
Imig, Doug .....................240 (17.32)
Incio, Magna ................341 (76.33)
Ince, Onur Ulas..............397 (107.5)
Incio, Jose .....................300 (51.13)
Ingham, Sean...................374 (92.8)
Inglehart, Ronald Charles ......... 323
(60.9)
Inglehart, Ronald Franklin.........284
(43.1)
Ingold, Karin ..................315 (56.34)
Ingram, Callum ...... 278 (40.40), 374
(92.4)
Ingram, James D. ......... 244 (17.50),
349 (83.2)
Ingram, Matthew C. ...... 229 (11.37),
244 (17.51), 284 (43.2), 352
(83.18)
Invernizzi Accetti, Carlo ............316
(56.42)
Iqbal, Zaryab.......... 340 (76.31), 378
(92.28)
Ireland, Patrick R........... 359 (83.55)
Isaac, Jeffrey C........ 269 (27.2), 271
(38.3), 288 (45.21), 348 (80.1)
Isaacs, Matthew .............329 (60.42)
Ishiyama, John ...... 295 (45.57), 338
(76.14), 393 (96.49), 412
(109.32)
Isiksel, Turkuler ...............260 (26.7)
Islas, Tania.....................330 (60.49)
Israel-Trummel, Mackenzie
Leigh ......... 260 (26.9), 342 (76.41)
Issever Ekinci, Esra.......381 (92.41)
Ito, Gaku ........................351 (83.13)
Itzkowitz Shifrinson, Joshua.....262
(26.23), 313 (56.27)
Ivanov, Ivan Dinev ......... 313 (56.26)
Iversen, Torben............ 409 (109.13)
Iyengar, Shanto ..... 293 (45.48), 357
(83.46)
Izbicki, Thomas M ...........308 (52.6)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

427

Index of Participants

Hershey, Marjorie R.........258 (24.1)


Hertel, Shareen................385 (95.5)
Hertel-Fernandez, Alexander
Warren................. 283 (40.63), 409
(109.12)
Hertzberg, Benjamin R. ............. 272
(40.5)
Herzog, Christian........... 230 (11.40)
Herzog, Stephen ............251 (22.25)
Hetherington, Marc J.................319
(56.55), 335 (74.1), 384 (94.2)
Heuberger, Simon.......... 255 (22.47)
Heuwieser, Raphael...... 290 (45.32),
403 (107.36)
Hevron, Parker Read .....230 (11.38)
Heywood, Paul M...........295 (45.54)
Hiaeshutter-Rice, Daniel............317
(56.49)
Hibbing, John R...............350 (83.7)
Hibbing, Matthew V........280 (40.47)
Hicken, Allen D...... 274 (40.16), 335
(74.2)
Hickey, Dennis ...............417 (110.1)
Hickey, Sam ...................261 (26.17)
Hicks, Heather ...............241 (17.36)
Hicks, Raymond .... 227 (11.26), 276
(40.26)
Hicks, Timothy............... 318 (56.49)
Hicks, William D. ........... 391 (96.36)
Hidalgo, F. Daniel ......... 320 (56.60),
323 (60.10)
Higashi, Brenden........... 355 (83.34)
Higashijima, Masaaki.... 277 (40.31),
376 (92.16)
Higgins, Alison ..............315 (56.35)
Higgins, Danielle M. ..... 279 (40.41),
350 (83.12)
Hilbink, Lisa...................352 (83.18)
Hildebrandt, Timothy.....331 (60.56)
Hill, Daniel .....................268 (26.52)
Hill, Kathy Wagner.........338 (76.13)
Hill, Lisa...........................259 (26.1)
Hill, Seth J. ............ 243 (17.44), 404
(107.45)
Hillebrecht, Courtney ... 295 (45.55),
416 (109.52)
Hillygus, Sunshine ...... 409 (109.16)
Hinkkainen, Kaisa H. .....351 (83.13)
Hinojosa, Magda.... 254 (22.42), 380
(92.38)
Hinterleitner, Markus .......346 (77.4)
Hintz, Lisel S..................369 (88.44)
Hinze, Annika M......... 221 (2.7), 417
(109.54)
Hiroi, Taeko.................... 390 (96.32)
Hirsch, Alexander Keller ........... 224
(11.6), 373 (92.2), 397 (107.5)
Hirsch, H. N. .................. 278 (40.37)
Hirsch, Roni.....................285 (45.3)
Hirschl, Ran ...................254 (22.37)
Hirschmann, Nancy J. .... 223 (11.5),
247 (20.3), 297 (50.14), 309
(56.2), 396 (106.1)
Hiskey, Jonathan T. .......388 (96.20)
Hite-Rubin, Nancy ....... 410 (109.18)
Hitt, Matthew P....... 370 (88.50), 393
(96.44)
Hiwatari, Nobuhiro.........312 (56.20)
Hjorth, Frederik ....... 260 (26.9), 303
(51.30)
Hoard, Season ...............316 (56.40)
Hobbs, William ...... 225 (11.15), 361
(86.1)
Hobolt, Sara B ............... 381 (92.43)
Hochschild, Jennifer L. .............270
(29.1), 363 (88.11)
Hodges, Eric .................. 387 (96.16)
Hodges, Heather Elina ..............306
(51.46), 330 (60.48), 370
(88.51)
Hodges, Melissa ............241 (17.36)
Hodgetts, Matthew.........393 (96.46)
Hoekstra, Valerie J. ..... 413 (109.37)
Hoepers, Bruno ........... 400 (107.21)
Hoerner, Julian ...... 381 (92.43), 415
(109.45)
Hofer, Katharina Eva ... 403 (107.36)
Hoff, Samuel B. ............. 290 (45.33)
Hoffman, Donna R. ........327 (60.32)
Hoffman, Karen S. .........367 (88.36)
Hoffman, Lindsay ..........331 (60.56)

J
Jablonski, Ryan Steele..............261
(26.18), 295 (45.60), 324
(60.10), 371 (88.55)
Jackman, Molly................321 (58.2)
Jackman, Simon D. .......337 (76.12)
Jackson, Jason .............300 (51.14)
Jackson, Marlette ..........332 (60.58)
Jackson, Steven F. ........ 228 (11.30)
Jackson-Elmoore, Cynthia ........399
(107.14)
Jacob, Rafael .................345 (76.58)
Jacobs, Alan M........ 235 (15.2), 318
(56.49)
Jacobs, Lawrence R. .... 245 (17.53),
259 (25.1), 286 (45.10), 303
(51.30), 330 (60.46)
Jacobson, Robin D....... 245 (17.56),
254 (22.40)
Jacoby, William G......223 (9.2), 386
(96.9), 409 (109.16)
Jacquet, Vincent............305 (51.41)
Jadoon, Amira ...............327 (60.29)
Jaffrey, Sana.......... 250 (22.16), 331
(60.53)
Jagmohan, Desmond ......271 (40.1)
Jahanbani, Nakissa Puneh........389
(96.27)
Jakli, Laura ....................325 (60.20)
Jakubow, Alexander J. ..............411
(109.25)
Jalalzai, Farida...............380 (92.37)
Jamal, Amaney ...... 232 (11.49), 238
(17.15), 364 (88.19)
Jamal, Manal A. ..... 342 (76.40), 365
(88.21), 375 (92.13)
James, Michael R. ... 298 (51.6), 336
(76.6)
James, Oliver......... 253 (22.34), 347
(79.1)
James, Osamudia..........341 (76.35)
James, Patrick ...............295 (45.56)
Jang, Hye Ryeon ........... 351 (83.17)
Jang, Jinhyeok ................384 (93.4)
Jankowski, Richard .......383 (92.55)
Janowsky, Alisha........... 299 (51.10)
Janusz, Andrew .............345 (76.58)
Janz, Nicole .......................223 (9.2)
JARDIN, Antoine..............348 (81.2)
Jardina, Ashley E. .........254 (22.40)
Jarman, Holly......... 307 (51.51), 360
(84.3)
Jaros, Kyle Alan ...... 234 (13.1), 288
(45.19)
Jaskoski, Maiah ..... 227 (11.22), 290
(45.28), 350 (83.12)
Jasny, Lorien .................225 (11.14)
Javed, Jeffrey Arshad .....234 (13.1)
Javeline, Debra................297 (49.3)
Jayaratne, Toby .............394 (96.52)
Jefferis, Jennifer............364 (88.15)
Jefferson, Hakeem Jerome .......286
(45.7), 342 (76.42), 363 (88.8)
Jelen, Ted G........... 261 (26.19), 279
(40.41)
Jenco, Leigh K. ....... 248 (22.2), 271
(38.3), 285 (44.1)
Jenkins, Clinton Maddox ..........293
(45.48)
Jenkins, Jeffery A......... 297 (50.17),
343 (76.43), 354 (83.30)
Jenne, Erin K. .............. 402 (107.29)
Jennings, Jay T..............355 (83.36)
Jennings, Will ........ 243 (17.44), 305
(51.41), 405 (107.46)
Jensen, Amalie Sofie.....345 (76.57)
Jensen, Benjamin M...... 313 (56.26)
Jensen, Carsten..... 262 (26.19), 405
(107.47)
Jensen, Christian B...... 255 (22.45),
392 (96.43)
Jensen, Jennifer M. ........221 (2.10),
278 (40.38)
Jensen, Michael J......... 268 (26.48),
306 (51.47)
Jensen, Nathan M...........284 (42.1),
366 (88.26), 376 (92.17), 401
(107.27)

428

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 428

Jensen, Peter Sandholt .............255


(22.44)
Jensenius, Francesca R............ 238
(17.17), 287 (45.17), 316
(56.40), 338 (76.19), 380
(92.38)
Jenssen, Anders Todal..............392
(96.42)
Jentleson, Bruce W. ..... 228 (11.30),
301 (51.22), 378 (92.24)
Jeong, Howon................228 (11.29)
Jeong, Keunsoo ............353 (83.27)
Jerit, Jennifer.................357 (83.44)
Jermanova, Tereza ........281 (40.56)
Jervis, Robert ........ 239 (17.26), 271
(38.1), 313 (56.27), 366 (88.30),
378 (92.26), 402 (107.29)
Jessee, Stephen .... 337 (76.12), 409
(109.15)
Jha, Saumitra.................387 (96.13)
Ji, Myeonggeun ...............395 (97.3)
Jiang, Junyan .......... 234 (13.1), 388
(96.22), 400 (107.17), 410
(109.17)
Jiang, Siyun...................356 (83.39)
Jiao, Yang ......................238 (17.18)
Jie, Dalei ........................277 (40.30)
Jilke, Sebastian R..........253 (22.34)
Jimenez-Bacardi, Arturo ...........253
(22.36)
Jividen, Jason R..............283 (41.1)
Jo, Hyeran ... 284 (42.1), 367 (88.34)
Joh, Elizabeth ..................248 (22.3)
Johannessen, Peter G...............365
(88.20)
John, Peter Charles...... 242 (17.42),
290 (45.32)
John, Sarah ...................329 (60.43)
Johns, Leslie .................276 (40.27)
Johnson, Ann M .......... 413 (109.37)
Johnson, April A. .......... 355 (83.34)
Johnson, Ben .............. 399 (107.13)
Johnson, Carolina .........278 (40.40)
Johnson, Douglas M .... 253 (22.35),
304 (51.36)
Johnson, Erica J. ..........300 (51.17)
Johnson, Gbemende .....291 (45.34)
Johnson, Genevieve Fuji ..........236
(17.5), 272 (40.6)
Johnson, Janet E. ........ 342 (76.40),
365 (88.22), 376 (92.19)
Johnson, Joshua.......... 292 (45.42),
355 (83.34), 386 (96.9)
Johnson, Kimberley S. ....235 (15.2)
Johnson, Kimberly Elizabeth ....345
(76.56)
Johnson, Liz ..............221 (2.9), 406
(108.1)
Johnson, Loch K. ............296 (46.4)
Johnson, Mark L..............247 (21.2)
Johnson, Martin.............357 (83.45)
Johnson, Paul Lorenzo .............277
(40.32)
Johnson, Rene J......... 241 (17.35),
278 (40.39)
Johnson, Richard ..........230 (11.42)
Johnson, Shane.............245 (17.54)
Johnson, Tana ....... 339 (76.24), 410
(109.20)
Johnson, Tim......... 302 (51.28), 347
(79.1)
Johnson, Timothy R. .....315 (56.35)
Johnston, Alastair Iain ..............366
(88.31)
Johnston, Alison L. .........258 (23.4)
Johnston, Christopher David....355
(83.34), 386 (96.9)
Johnston, David ..............285 (45.1)
Johnston, Jocelyn M. ................245
(17.53), 303 (51.29)
Johnston, Noel Pereyra.............352
(83.20), 366 (88.26)
Johnston, Richard........ 266 (26.43),
280 (40.46), 369 (88.45)
Johnston, Steven ............309 (56.3)
Johnston, Travis.... 254 (22.43), 379
(92.32), 384 (95.2)
Jolliff Scott, Brandy ...... 252 (22.28)
Jolly, Seth .............. 250 (22.20), 381
(92.43)

Joly, Jeroen Karl ... 242 (17.39), 305


(51.44)
Jones, Benjamin Taylor.............406
(108.3)
Jones, Benjamin Thomas .........354
(83.29)
Jones, Bradford S. ....... 356 (83.38),
404 (107.42)
Jones, Bryan D.......... 222 (5.1), 378
(92.29)
Jones, Calvert W. ..........319 (56.57)
Jones, David K. ..... 245 (17.53), 345
(76.56)
Jones, David R. ............. 231 (11.45)
Jones, Edith H .................246 (18.1)
Jones, Erik............. 227 (11.24), 262
(26.19), 312 (56.21)
Jones, Eryn M................339 (76.22)
Jones, Jennifer..............316 (56.39)
Jones, Jennifer Jean .......224 (11.8)
Jones, Jessica L............394 (96.53)
Jones, Mark P. ............... 254 (22.42)
Jones, Phil.....................331 (60.56)
Jones, Randall J..............347 (77.7)
Jones, Robert P............. 279 (40.45)
Jones-Correa, Michael A...........234
(12.4)
Jordan, Jason..................337 (76.9)
Jordan, Richard Pell......353 (83.27)
Jordan-Zachery, Julia S. ........... 404
(107.41)
Joseph, Michael Frederick ........ 326
(60.26)
Joshi, Madhav ...............354 (83.29)
Joshi, Shareen...............351 (83.14)
Jost, Tyler Carl ..............389 (96.28)
Joyce, Adam.................. 378 (92.25)
Joyce, Philip G. ...............297 (50.5)
Judd, Gleason ......... 248 (22.7), 398
(107.8)
Juelich, Courtney ..........266 (26.41)
Jung, Dong-Joon........... 365 (88.22)
Jung, Heon Joo ...............395 (97.3)
Jung, Ungki ...................287 (45.14)
Jung, Yoo-Sun ............... 239 (17.21)
Jungherr, Andreas.........370 (88.51)
Junisbai, Barbara J. ...... 325 (60.19)
Junn, Jane Y. ......... 237 (17.12), 279
(40.43), 335 (75.1)
Jurado, Ignacio...... 276 (40.26), 335
(74.2), 392 (96.42)
Jurdjevic, Mark ................223 (11.1)
Jurkevics, Anna....... 236 (17.4), 248
(22.4)
Jusko, Karen Long ....... 305 (51.43),
311 (56.14), 381 (92.43)
Just, Marion R. ..............370 (88.51)
Justesen, Mogens K..... 255 (22.44),
370 (88.48)
Justwan, Florian .... 263 (26.27), 327
(60.28), 367 (88.33)

K
Kaasik, Joshua ..............378 (92.28)
Kabir, Muhammad .........353 (83.26)
Kadir, Suzaina................237 (17.14)
Kage, Rieko ........... 291 (45.36), 363
(88.9)
Kagotani, Koji ..................296 (46.5)
Kahl, Sigrun........... 262 (26.19), 399
(107.15)
Kahler, Miles .............. 223 (9.3), 275
(40.23), 352 (83.22), 389
(96.26), 401 (107.25)
Kahraman, Filiz..............358 (83.51)
Kailitz, Steffen ............. 400 (107.18)
Kaiser, Andr ...................332 (61.1)
Kalaf-Hughes, Nicole.... 291 (45.34),
359 (83.54)
Kalandrakis, Tasos ..........248 (22.7)
Kalkan, Kerem Ozan...... 369 (88.44)
Kalla, Joshua L..............269 (26.56)
Kalmanovitz, Pablo........ 295 (45.55)
Kalmoe, Nathan P. ... 224 (11.9), 248
(22.8)
Kamahara, Yuta .............356 (83.40)
Kamin, Julia...................330 (60.47)
Kammermann, Lorenz ...............315
(56.34)

Kamola, Isaac ........ 243 (17.47), 281


(40.54), 320 (56.62), 323 (60.5)
Kamrava, Mehran ........ 412 (109.31)
Kane, Catherine .............392 (96.41)
Kane, John............. 255 (22.46), 269
(26.56)
Kaneti, Marina..................336 (76.2)
Kang, Alice ............ 257 (22.58), 413
(109.37)
Kang, Eunju ........... 291 (45.35), 342
(76.38)
Kang, Susan Lee ... 237 (17.14), 281
(40.54)
Kang, Taewoo ........ 242 (17.41), 266
(26.42)
Kanthak, Kristin..... 292 (45.41), 404
(107.41)
Kao, Kristen........... 238 (17.15), 411
(109.22)
Kaoutzanis, Christodoulos........377
(92.21)
Kapiszewski, Diana ... 221 (2.5), 345
(76.55), 350 (83.10), 376
(92.18), 406 (107.53), 409
(109.16)
Kaplan, Cynthia S........ 400 (107.22)
Kaplan, Morgan L. ....... 412 (109.32)
Kaplan, Noah J. ............. 391 (96.34)
Kaplan, Oliver .............. 403 (107.35)
Kaplan, Stephen B.........289 (45.24)
Kaplow, Jeffrey............ 401 (107.28)
Kapstein, Ethan B.......... 260 (26.10)
Kapur, Devesh ....... 261 (26.16), 287
(45.17)
Kapust, Daniel J. .............235 (17.1)
Karagiannis, Emmanuel ............312
(56.19)
Karam, Jeffrey G. ..........268 (26.50)
Karcher, Sebastian ............221 (2.5)
Karl, Kristyn L. ...... 317 (56.47), 337
(76.8)
Karol, David ........... 231 (11.44), 258
(24.1), 293 (45.45), 356 (83.41)
Karolak, Magdalena.......306 (51.47)
Karp, Jeffrey A. .............369 (88.45)
Karpf, David A. ...... 267 (26.48), 393
(96.47), 415 (109.48)
Karpowitz, Christopher F...........260
(26.9), 293 (45.48), 330 (60.46),
349 (83.4), 374 (92.6)
Karreth, Johannes .........354 (83.29)
Kasara, Kimuli ...............250 (22.18)
Kashwan, Prakash.........393 (96.46)
Kasparek, Stefanie Ines ............289
(45.28)
Kassop, Nancy ........ 308 (54.3), 354
(83.32), 385 (95.4)
Kastellec, John P. ......... 241 (17.33),
341 (76.36)
Kasuya, Yuko.................356 (83.40)
Katada, Saori N...... 227 (11.26), 301
(51.19)
Katagiri, Azusa ..............277 (40.31)
Katagiri, Nori .................340 (76.26)
Katchanovski, Ivan ....... 312 (56.19),
347 (77.8), 382 (92.50)
Kateb, George..................309 (56.3)
Kates, Sean.................... 339 (76.22)
Kato, Kenneth................297 (50.14)
Katsanidou, Alexia ........319 (56.55)
Katsumata, Hiroto ...........363 (88.9)
Katz, Gabriel .......... 231 (11.47), 266
(26.42), 370 (88.49)
Katz, Jonathan N. ......... 286 (45.12),
395 (97.7)
Katzenstein, Mary Fainsod........363
(88.11)
Katzenstein, Peter J. ........221 (3.6),
288 (45.21), 348 (81.3), 366
(88.27)
Katznelson, Ira......... 258 (24.2), 271
(38.3)
Kaufman, Aaron Russell ........... 293
(45.46)
Kaufman, Alexander........385 (96.1)
Kaufman, Robert R....... 226 (11.17),
311 (56.16)
Kaufman, Zachary Daniel..........306
(51.48), 330 (60.51), 345
(76.54), 375 (92.9)

Keum, Tae-Yeoun.............362 (88.2)


Kevins, Anthony .......... 405 (107.47)
Khan, Muqtedar ..... 242 (17.38), 380
(92.40)
Khan, Sarah ........... 316 (56.40), 331
(60.57), 404 (107.44)
Khan, Yasir ....................237 (17.13)
Khan, Zara .....................380 (92.40)
Khanna, Kabir........ 225 (11.13), 336
(76.7)
Khemani, Stuti .................286 (45.8)
Khoury, Nadim.................298 (51.6)
Kibbe, Jennifer ................296 (46.4)
Kidd, Quentin.................304 (51.39)
Kidder, Katherine......... 402 (107.31)
Kidder, Paul E..................346 (77.3)
Kidder, Paulette W. ..........346 (77.3)
Kienker, John B. ..............383 (93.2)
Kiewiet de Jonge, Chad ............350
(83.8)
Kijima, Rie .......................284 (42.1)
Kilgour, D. Marc.................221 (2.6)
Kilibarda, Anja ...............266 (26.43)
Kim, DJ ..........................318 (56.53)
Kim, Eun Kyung ............257 (22.58)
Kim, Eunji ......................243 (17.45)
Kim, Hye Sung...............310 (56.11)
Kim, Hyunwoo .................299 (51.8)
Kim, In Song.......... 312 (56.23), 401
(107.27), 415 (109.47)
Kim, Jae Yeon................357 (83.47)
Kim, Jin Woo ............... 415 (109.46)
Kim, Jooeun ..................327 (60.27)
Kim, Junhyup ................252 (22.28)
Kim, Mikyoung.................395 (97.3)
Kim, Min Jung ............. 411 (109.23)
Kim, Nam Kyu.............. 402 (107.30)
Kim, Patricia M. ............. 389 (96.28)
Kim, Soo Yeon....... 289 (45.24), 366
(88.27), 401 (107.25)
Kim, Sun Young.............303 (51.29)
Kim, Sung Eun ..............326 (60.24)
Kimball, David C........... 266 (26.41),
317 (56.47)
Kincaid, John...................332 (61.1)
Kinderman, Daniel Phillip .........401
(107.24)
King, Aaron Scott..........277 (40.33)
King, David ....................264 (26.32)
King, Desmond...... 264 (26.33), 286
(45.10), 297 (50.17), 414
(109.39)
King, Gary.............. 243 (17.45), 273
(40.12), 287 (45.15), 410
(109.16)
King, James D. ..............391 (96.33)
King, Loren ....................328 (60.38)
King-Meadows, Tyson D............247
(21.1), 373 (91.3), 404 (107.42)
Kingsley, David Edward ............335
(75.2)
Kingston, Rebecca ........407 (109.2)
Kingstone, Peter R. .......325 (60.16)
Kinne, Brandon J. ........ 269 (26.55),
377 (92.21)
Kinney, Edith .................232 (11.52)
Kirby, David Richard ......307 (52.2),
371 (88.55), 405 (107.48)
kirisci, mustafa ..............354 (83.29)
Kirkland, Justin ..... 305 (51.42), 391
(96.36), 403 (107.36)
Kirkland, Patricia ........... 380 (92.36)
Kirkpatrick, Jennet .........373 (92.1),
397 (107.2)
Kirsch, Robert E. ........... 318 (56.52)
Kirshner, Alexander........349 (83.5),
408 (109.8)
Kiryukhin, Denys .............347 (77.8)
Kiss, Simon ...................371 (88.54)
Kitaevich, Evgenia Jane............312
(56.19)
Kitch, John ......................246 (18.5)
Kitschelt, Herbert ......... 238 (17.16),
274 (40.17), 294 (45.54)
Kittilson, Miki Caul ....... 254 (22.42),
316 (56.40), 413 (109.37)
Klar, Samara ...222 (6.4), 236 (17.7),
335 (75.1), 357 (83.46), 405
(107.45)
Klarner, Carl E. ..............391 (96.36)
Klasnja, Marko...............324 (60.14)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 429

Klaus, Kathleen ..... 250 (22.17), 308


(54.1)
Klaver, Joe.....................255 (22.44)
Kleider, Hanna ...............275 (40.24)
Klein, Graig R. ............... 228 (11.31)
Kleinberg, Katja B. ........ 390 (96.31)
Kleinberg, Mona S. ..........236 (17.7)
Kleine, Mareike O. .........339 (76.24)
Kleinerman, Benjamin A. ..........360
(84.4)
Klemmensen, Robert.... 266 (26.42),
343 (76.46), 409 (109.11)
Kline, Reuben ................255 (22.47)
Klingler, Jonathan David...........408
(109.10)
Klitgaard, Michael Baggesen ....401
(107.24)
Klocek, Jason A. ......... 413 (109.34)
Klofstad, Casey A...........236 (17.7),
349 (83.7)
Klosko, George................349 (83.5)
Klotz, Audie ...................295 (45.56)
Kluegel, Alan .................291 (45.37)
Klver, Heike ......... 329 (60.45), 381
(92.43)
Knauer, Nancy J. .............270 (27.3)
Knight, Amber .................308 (55.1)
Knight, Jack.....................285 (45.2)
Knott, Eleanor................358 (83.52)
Knott, Stephen F..............372 (89.1)
Knox, Dean ............ 305 (51.44), 375
(92.11)
Knuppe, Austin..............282 (40.59)
Knutsen, Carl Henrik .... 344 (76.52),
358 (83.50)
Ko, Jiyoung ...................366 (88.31)
Kobayashi, Tetsuro ..... 415 (109.46)
Koc Michalska, Karolina ........... 320
(57.1), 382 (92.48)
Kocak, Korhan...............375 (92.13)
Koch, Bettina ........... 235 (17.1), 308
(52.6)
Koch, Jeffrey W. ............243 (17.44)
Kochanek, Joseph.........330 (60.51)
Kochin, Michael S..........370 (88.52)
Koebele, Elizabeth........ 294 (45.49),
330 (60.48)
Koeker, Philipp ..............255 (22.44)
Koelble, Thomas Albert.............324
(60.15)
Koenig, Mark ...................383 (93.3)
Koesel, Karrie J. ............318 (56.54)
Koganzon, Rita ................223 (11.2)
Koger, Gregory ...... 252 (22.31), 383
(92.53)
Kohen, Ari...................... 350 (83.11)
Kohli, Atul.............. 261 (26.17), 275
(40.21), 338 (76.15)
Kohn, Margaret..............328 (60.38)
Koinova, Maria V........... 244 (17.51),
359 (83.55)
Koivu, Kendra L.......... 416 (109.54),
417 (109.54)
Koker, Neveser ................298 (51.2)
Kolbe, Melanie ...............307 (51.53)
Kolev, Kiril ............. 238 (17.16), 399
(107.16)
Koliev, Faradj...................284 (42.1)
Kollars, Nina A...........221 (2.8), 326
(60.25)
Kollman, Kenneth W.......332 (61.1),
335 (74.2)
Kolodny, Robin A. ........ 343 (76.44),
372 (89.3), 414 (109.43)
Konaev, Rita ................ 412 (109.32)
konak unal, saadet ...... 414 (109.38)
Konar, Ellen .....................375 (92.8)
Konisky, David....... 294 (45.49), 297
(49.3), 330 (60.48), 344 (76.49),
415 (109.47)
Konitzer, Tobias Benjamin ........293
(45.48)
Konstantinidis, Nikitas ..............276
(40.26), 392 (96.42), 408
(109.9)
Konstantinidou, Angeliki...........283
(41.2)
Koontz, Tomas............... 294 (45.49)
Kopec, Anna .................. 358 (83.53)
Koppell, Jonathan GS ....235 (16.1),
410 (109.20)

Koremenos, Barbara .....352 (83.22)


Koren, Ore ... 276 (40.28), 323 (60.8)
Korobkov, Andrei ............346 (77.4)
Korolev, Alexander ........239 (17.24)
Kosar, Kevin R...............378 (92.29)
Koski, Chris ...................264 (26.31)
Kosmidis, Spyros ......... 255 (22.44),
415 (109.44)
Kostadinova, Petia A.................414
(109.41)
Kostadinova, Tatiana.....275 (40.22)
Koter, Dominika............. 332 (60.58)
Kotsovilis, Spyridon...... 268 (26.51)
Kotz, David Michael.........362 (88.6)
Kotze, Hendrik J. ........... 338 (76.16)
Koubi, Vally.................... 228 (11.31)
Kousser, Thad ....... 267 (26.46), 354
(83.30), 367 (88.35)
Kovac, Igor ....................313 (56.26)
Kovalyova, Natalia V......378 (92.27)
Ko, Michael.......... 314 (56.32), 327
(60.31)
Knig, Thomas ................285 (44.1)
Krain, Matthew............... 295 (45.58)
Krainin, Colin...................224 (11.7)
Kraitzman, Alon Peretz ............. 231
(11.46), 381 (92.45)
Krajewska, Magdalena ..............240
(17.32)
Kramer, Mark ...................308 (52.4)
Kramon, Eric J....... 226 (11.20), 250
(22.18)
Krasner, Stephen D. ..... 288 (45.21),
339 (76.25), 352 (83.22)
Krasno, Jonathan S.......245 (17.54)
Kraus, Jeffrey F. .... 225 (11.16), 315
(56.37)
Kraus, Neil ............. 265 (26.35), 341
(76.34)
Krause, George A. ........ 302 (51.28),
328 (60.36), 347 (79.1)
Krause, Krystin L.............332 (61.5)
Krause, Peter .................250 (22.16)
Krause, Sharon R. ... 272 (40.4), 309
(56.3), 386 (96.6)
Kravets, Nadiya ...............307 (52.1)
Kraynak, Robert P.......... 417 (110.2)
Krcmaric, Daniel ............378 (92.27)
Krebs, Ronald R. .............347 (78.1)
Krebs, Timothy B...........380 (92.36)
Krehbiel, Jay.................. 278 (40.36)
Kreiss, Daniel ........ 344 (76.48), 393
(96.47)
Kreitzer, Rebecca J. ..... 230 (11.42),
369 (88.43)
Kreppel, Amie ........ 326 (60.22), 339
(76.21)
Kreps, Sarah E. .............295 (45.55)
Kreuzer, Marcus........... 406 (107.52)
Krewel, Mona .................266 (26.42)
Krewson, Christopher ...229 (11.37)
Krimmel, Katherine....... 231 (11.44),
337 (76.11)
Kriner, Douglas L. ........ 379 (92.30),
403 (107.37)
Krishna, Anirudh ...........275 (40.21)
Krishnan, Nisha .............251 (22.24)
Krishnan, Sarat..............263 (26.26)
Kristol, William ........ 332 (61.2), 346
(77.1)
Kroeger, Alex ......... 269 (26.58), 402
(107.30)
Kroeger, Mary ................368 (88.40)
Kroenig, Matthew ......... 313 (56.27),
327 (60.27)
Krom, Michael P ..............246 (18.7)
Kromer, Mileah Kay .......392 (96.38)
Kronick, Dorothy ... 225 (11.13), 299
(51.9)
Kropko, Jonathan..........287 (45.12)
Krosnick, Jon A............. 231 (11.46)
Krueger, Jule .................314 (56.30)
Krupicka, Benjamin T. ...379 (92.32)
Krupnikov, Yanna ...... 222 (6.4), 224
(11.8), 255 (22.47), 393 (96.45),
405 (107.45)
Kruszewska, Dominika
Roksana .............. 227 (11.25), 320
(56.60)
Kselman, Daniel Max.....274 (40.17)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

429

Index of Participants

Kaufman-Osborn, Timothy V..... 348


(80.1)
Kaufmann, David .......222 (4.1), 315
(56.38), 346 (77.4)
Kaufmann, Eric P. .... 308 (54.1), 361
(86.2)
Kauneckis, Derek ......... 281 (40.51),
304 (51.35), 314 (56.34), 342
(76.39)
Kavakli, Kerim Can....... 277 (40.31),
347 (78.1)
Kavanagh, Matthew .......303 (51.33)
Kawar, Leila ...................344 (76.53)
Kaylor, Charles ..............344 (76.49)
Kayser, Mark Andreas ...............318
(56.49)
Kppner, Konstantin .....287 (45.16)
Kearney, Patrick ............251 (22.22)
Keck, Thomas M........... 291 (45.37),
303 (51.33), 322 (59.3)
Keefer, Philip ............... 410 (109.18)
Keele, Luke ............ 237 (17.10), 364
(88.14)
Keels, Eric .....................252 (22.29)
Kehler, Jessica Lyne .....315 (56.35)
Keiser, Lael R. ....... 302 (51.29), 328
(60.33)
Keith, Linda Camp.........344 (76.53)
Kelanic, Rosemary ........251 (22.24)
Kelemen, R. Daniel ....... 229 (11.37),
238 (17.20), 247 (20.2), 368
(88.39)
Keller, Franziska Barbara..........234
(13.1), 295 (45.57)
Keller, James R .............291 (45.37)
Kelley, Judith ............. 223 (9.3), 284
(42.1), 344 (76.51), 377 (92.22)
Kellner, Alan Joseph ......223 (11.2),
385 (96.1)
Kellogg, Anita R ............390 (96.31)
Kellogg, Paul .................256 (22.51)
Kellstedt, Paul M. ......... 317 (56.49),
384 (94.2)
Kelly, Christine A...........330 (60.50)
Kelly, Jarrod ....................224 (11.9)
Kelly, Nathan J...............296 (45.61)
Kelly, Ruthie ..................393 (96.48)
Kelly, Thomas ................328 (60.34)
Kelmendi, Pellumb ........338 (76.14)
Kelts, Steven ...................285 (45.3)
Kelz, Rosine Judith .......407 (109.3)
Kemahlioglu, Ozge ........388 (96.19)
Kemmerling, Achim........310 (56.8),
401 (107.24)
Kendhammer, Brandon .............257
(22.58), 348 (81.2)
Kenkel, Brenton............. 340 (76.30)
Kennard, Amanda..........389 (96.25)
Kennedy, Brendan .........355 (83.36)
Kennedy, Chris James ..............237
(17.10)
Kennedy, John James...............411
(109.24)
Kennedy, Rosanne T........272 (40.2)
Kennedy, Ryan P............ 287 (45.15)
Kenney, Patrick..............393 (96.45)
Kenny, Meryl ............ 247 (20.3), 279
(40.42), 380 (92.38)
Kenski, Kate M. ..... 344 (76.48), 415
(109.46)
Kenwick, Michael.......... 287 (45.12),
326 (60.25)
Kerevel, Yann......... 300 (51.15), 364
(88.20)
Kern, Andreas................262 (26.21)
Kern, Holger Lutz .......... 256 (22.48)
Kernell, Georgia..... 299 (51.12), 356
(83.41)
Kerner, Andrew............ 401 (107.27)
Kerr, Jaclyn............ 288 (45.20), 339
(76.20)
Kerr, Nicholas ................331 (60.52)
Kertzer, Joshua D. ........ 252 (22.26),
295 (45.58), 352 (83.23), 366
(88.31)
Kesler, Charles R.............383 (93.2)
Kessler-Mata, Kouslaa ..............292
(45.42)
Ketchley, Neil.................311 (56.15)
Keton, Joshua Frank .....319 (56.56)
Kettl, Donald F. ..............269 (26.54)

Ksiazkiewicz, Aleksander..........357
(83.44), 386 (96.10)
Kubik, Blint Gyrgy .....327 (60.31)
Kubik, Jan.............. 297 (50.14), 399
(107.15)
Kubinec, Robert.............287 (45.12)
Kubo, Hiroki........... 229 (11.34), 305
(51.43), 312 (56.20)
Kubota, Yuichi ............. 400 (107.20)
Kuehl, Colin ........... 306 (51.46), 393
(96.46)
Kuehn, David .................256 (22.53)
Kuenkler, Mirjam.... 328 (60.35), 364
(88.19)
Kuhn, Patrick Michael .....347 (78.1)
Kuhner, Timothy ............278 (40.37)
Kuhonta, Erik Martinez..............364
(88.18)
Kujala, Jordan ...............277 (40.33)
Kukathas, Chandran........386 (96.6)
Kukovic, Simona .............283 (41.6)
Kulkarni, Parashar.........324 (60.11)
Kumar, Anup.................. 317 (56.48)
Kumar, Martha Joynt .......308 (54.3)
Kumar, Shivaji ............. 412 (109.31)
Kumar, Tanu .................. 250 (22.15)
Kundmueller, Michelle M...........309
(55.2), 384 (93.7)
Kuo, Alexander..............275 (40.24)
Kuo, Jason............. 326 (60.24), 352
(83.20)
Kuo, Joanna Didi..... 236 (17.9), 410
(109.18)
Kureshi, Yasser ..... 350 (83.12), 391
(96.35)
Kurizaki, Shuhei ...... 296 (46.5), 326
(60.26)
Kurth, James R.............. 325 (60.16)
Kurtz, Marcus J. .... 324 (60.15), 345
(76.55)
Kuru, Ozan.....................357 (83.44)
Kurzer, Paulette ........... 411 (109.25)
Kushnir, Ostap.................308 (52.4)
Kustov, Alexander .........233 (11.57)
Kuz, Michal Maciej...........308 (52.4)
Kwak, Laura Jean..........230 (11.42)
Kwek, Dorothy H. B. .......248 (22.2),
272 (40.3)
Kweon, Yesola ....... 227 (11.24), 310
(56.8)
Kydd, Andrew ........ 352 (83.23), 389
(96.28)
Kyle, Brett J................... 393 (96.49)
Kyle, Jordan ..................227 (11.22)

L
L'Esperance, Audrey .................404
(107.40)
La Noue, George R........375 (92.12)
La Porte, Todd M. ..........361 (87.13)
La Raja, Raymond J. ......233 (12.3),
296 (45.61), 356 (83.41)
Lachapelle, Erick ... 243 (17.46), 306
(51.46), 371 (88.54)
Ladd, Jeremy Martin .....300 (51.15)
Ladd, Jonathan M......... 243 (17.45),
255 (22.46)
Lafer, Gordon...................346 (77.6)
Lafleur, Jean-Michel ......371 (88.56)
Lagerkvist, Johan ..........237 (17.14)
Lahav, Gallya ......... 282 (40.61), 395
(97.6)
Lai, Brian ............... 366 (88.32), 403
(107.34)
Lai, Christina Jun-Yao...............239
(17.24), 263 (26.25)
Lai, James S. ...................322 (59.4)
Laible, Janet M. ............. 254 (22.38)
Laird, Chryl ............ 343 (76.42), 404
(107.42)
Laitin, David D. ........ 308 (54.1), 364
(88.19)
Lajevardi, Nazita ............279 (40.45)
Lake, David A. ......... 235 (16.1), 321
(58.3), 340 (76.25), 377 (92.23)
Lall, Ranjit........................284 (42.1)
Lamb, Charles M. ......... 240 (17.32),
342 (76.41)
Lamb, Michael .................223 (11.3)

430

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 430

Lambe, Jennifer L..........331 (60.56)


Lambert, Priscilla A..... 404 (107.40)
Lamothe, Meeyoung...... 264 (26.31)
Lamothe, Scott ..............264 (26.31)
Lancaster, Thomas D. ...230 (11.40)
Landa, Dimitri .......... 236 (17.8), 248
(22.7), 278 (40.38), 386 (96.8)
Landauer, Matthew .........247 (22.1),
336 (76.3)
Landemore, Helene E. ............... 282
(40.62), 311 (56.12), 383
(92.55), 408 (109.8)
Landis, Steven Tyler..... 251 (22.24),
314 (56.31)
Landry, Pierre F. .... 225 (11.15), 234
(13.1)
Lange, Peter ....................235 (15.3)
Langehennig, Stefani Rene.......378
(92.29)
Langohr, Vickie..............288 (45.18)
Langston, Joy...... 400 (107.19), 414
(109.41)
Lankina, Tomila .............377 (92.19)
Lanoszka, Alexander .... 251 (22.25),
313 (56.27)
LaPira, Timothy M. ........ 378 (92.29)
LaPorte, Jody Marie ...... 325 (60.19)
Lappie, John.................. 316 (56.41)
Lapuente, Victor ............331 (60.53)
Larocque, Florence .......227 (11.22)
Larreguy, Horacio Alejandro .....282
(40.60), 345 (76.57), 381
(92.44)
Larsen, Martin Vins ... 303 (51.30),
409 (109.13)
Larson, Deborah Welch.............366
(88.31), 378 (92.26), 402
(107.32)
Larson, Jennifer M. .......282 (40.59)
Larsson, Olof .................313 (56.24)
Lasala-Blanco, Narayani ...........369
(88.44)
Lassen, David Dreyer ................266
(26.42), 345 (76.57)
Latimer, Trevor ................272 (40.1)
Latura, Audrey...............303 (51.30)
Lau, Richard R.................236 (17.7)
Lauderdale, Benjamin E ............253
(22.35), 285 (44.1)
Laugesen, Miriam J. ...... 307 (51.51)
Laughlin, Benjamin .......378 (92.28)
Laurent, Annie ...............407 (108.4)
Laustsen, Lasse .... 255 (22.47), 337
(76.8), 350 (83.7), 405 (107.48)
Lavariega Monforti, Jessica
L. ......... 223 (10.2), 308 (55.1), 356
(83.38), 385 (95.4)
Lavelle, Kathryn C. ....... 275 (40.25),
401 (107.26)
Lavi, Liron.................... 405 (107.46)
Lavin, Chad............ 232 (11.50), 285
(45.3), 374 (92.5)
Lavine, Howard................350 (83.7)
Law, Anna O. ......... 245 (17.56), 286
(45.11)
Lawhon, Lydia A............232 (11.48)
Lawler, Peter Augustine ............383
(93.2)
Lawless, Jennifer L. ..... 231 (11.47),
265 (26.36)
Lawrence, Christopher N. .........260
(26.12)
Lawrence, Duncan.........359 (83.56)
Lawrence, Frank .......... 399 (107.14)
Lawrence, Jennifer ....... 232 (11.50),
417 (110.4)
Lawrence, Regina G. .....344 (76.48)
Laws, Serena .................240 (17.31)
Lawton, Sally F..............315 (56.38)
Lax, Jeffrey R. ....... 243 (17.44), 337
(76.11)
Lay, J. Celeste ....... 265 (26.35), 293
(45.48)
Lazareno, Berny ............290 (45.28)
Lazarev, Egor.................379 (92.33)
Lazarus, Jeffrey .............265 (26.36)
Lazer, David ........... 287 (45.15), 345
(76.57), 383 (92.53)
Lazzaro, Joseph .......... 403 (107.36)
Le, Anh ............................284 (42.1)
Le Bihan, Patrick .............248 (22.7)

Le Gall, Cal Angus ........407 (108.4)


Le Veness, Frank P. .........270 (27.5)
Leal, David L............ 246 (18.4), 265
(26.38), 355 (83.38), 369
(88.44), 373 (90.4)
LeBas, Adrienne ...... 247 (20.4), 359
(83.57)
LeBlanc, John Randolph...........361
(86.3)
Leblang, David....... 251 (22.21), 365
(88.25)
Lebo, Matthew ....... 286 (45.12), 347
(77.7), 384 (94.2)
Lebovic, James H. ....... 402 (107.31)
Lebovitz, Adam................348 (81.1)
Lebron, Liz.......................246 (18.4)
Lecea, Marisha ..............338 (76.16)
Lechner, Lisa ............... 401 (107.26)
Lechterman, Theodore M. .........323
(60.6)
Lecours, Andr................332 (61.1)
Lecoutre, Francois Denis..........246
(18.2)
Lee, Alexander....... 238 (17.17), 387
(96.13)
Lee, Carrie A................ 412 (109.29)
Lee, Charles T..................374 (92.5)
Lee, Chia-yi.................... 352 (83.20)
Lee, Daewoo .................. 314 (56.33)
Lee, Daniel............. 255 (22.43), 392
(96.43)
Lee, Dong-Wook ............229 (11.35)
Lee, Frances E...............379 (92.30)
Lee, Gyeo Reh ............... 240 (17.31)
Lee, Hae Won ................281 (40.56)
Lee, Hongseok............... 302 (51.29)
Lee, Hsuan-Wei..............282 (40.59)
Lee, Ji-Young............... 412 (109.29)
Lee, Melissa M....... 252 (22.26), 284
(42.1), 339 (76.25)
Lee, Shinkyu....................336 (76.1)
Lee, Shinwoo .................328 (60.33)
Lee, Sojeong.................. 314 (56.31)
Lee, Su-Hyun .................363 (88.10)
Lee, Suhjin.......................272 (40.7)
Lee, Szu-hsien ...............228 (11.30)
Lee, Taeku..... 273 (40.8), 322 (59.4),
368 (88.38), 395 (97.7)
Lee, Terence C....... 256 (22.53), 400
(107.20)
Lee, Yeon Ju.................. 244 (17.51)
Lee, Yoon Jin......... 327 (60.30), 390
(96.29)
Lee, Yoonkyung..... 364 (88.17), 395
(97.3)
Lee, YuJung Julia..........288 (45.18)
Lee, Yunsoo...................314 (56.33)
Leeb, Claudia.................397 (107.3)
Leebaw, Bronwyn Anne ............309
(56.2), 345 (76.54)
Leeds, Brett Ashley........235 (16.1),
276 (40.29), 327 (60.30)
Leemann, Lucas ...... 236 (17.9), 311
(56.14), 337 (76.11)
Leeper, Thomas J. ........ 255 (22.45),
293 (45.46), 404 (107.45)
Lefler, Vanessa ..............367 (88.33)
Legewie, Joscha............296 (45.61)
Legro, Jeffrey W. ........... 281 (40.55)
Lehoucq, Fabrice........... 274 (40.16)
Lehrer, Roni ........... 280 (40.47), 381
(92.43)
Lehtinen, Sarah .............375 (92.13)
Lei, Yu-Hsiang .................363 (88.9)
Leib, Julia .................... 413 (109.33)
Leiby, Michele................295 (45.58)
Leidhold, Wolfgang ........296 (46.3),
372 (89.5)
Leighley, Jan E. ............. 229 (11.36)
Leitch, David Gideon.....257 (22.56)
Lektzian, David J. .......... 225 (11.11)
Lelkes, Yphtach ..... 306 (51.45), 330
(60.47), 335 (74.1), 416
(109.48)
Lemi, Danielle ................269 (26.57)
Lemieux, Anthony .........329 (60.39)
LeMoine, Rebecca ... 384 (93.7), 407
(108.6)
Lenard, Patti Tamara .....371 (88.56)
Lenihan, Ashley............. 282 (40.62)

Lenowitz, Jeffrey A....... 303 (51.34),


322 (60.3)
Lenz, Gabriel ......... 231 (11.46), 343
(76.45)
Lenz, Hartmut ........ 239 (17.23), 378
(92.27)
Leon, Sandra ......... 264 (26.34), 335
(74.2)
Leonard, Meghan E. ..... 265 (26.36),
413 (109.37)
Leonard Boyle, Emma...............390
(96.30), 403 (107.34)
Lepore, Jason J............. 261 (26.15)
Lerman, Amy E.............. 303 (51.30)
Lerner, Joshua Yoshio ..............305
(51.43), 363 (88.13)
Lesch, Charles H. T. ........298 (51.1)
Lesch, Matthew S .......... 253 (22.34)
Leshem, Oded Adomi......257 (23.1)
Leslie, Patrick ........ 290 (45.32), 403
(107.36)
Lessard-Phillips, Laurence .......245
(17.55)
Lessing, Benjamin......... 353 (83.27)
Lester, Quinn ...................323 (60.5)
LeSure, Ainsley Nicole..............336
(76.5), 408 (109.6)
Letsa, Natalie Wenzell ............... 269
(26.58)
Leung, Alvin ..................357 (83.48)
LeVan, Carl ............ 269 (26.58), 310
(56.12), 406 (107.51)
Levan, Carrie .................380 (92.39)
Levendusky, Matthew S. ........... 224
(11.9), 335 (74.1)
Leventoglu, Bahar ...........224 (11.7)
Levick, Laura .................380 (92.41)
Levin, Dov H. ................. 390 (96.29)
Levine, Adam Seth ....... 255 (22.47),
286 (45.7), 392 (96.43)
Levine, Alan........... 318 (56.51), 383
(93.1)
Levinson, Chad .............263 (26.26)
Levinson, Nanette S. .... 256 (22.50),
281 (40.52)
Levinson, Sanford ..... 222 (6.1), 246
(18.3), 253 (22.37), 395 (97.5)
Levitsky, Steven .... 226 (11.17), 306
(51.49), 413 (109.34)
Levitt, Barry S................ 319 (56.55)
Levitt, Justin..................391 (96.36)
Levshin, Anatoly............330 (60.51)
Levy, Jack S........... 262 (26.23), 402
(107.32)
Levy, Jacob T........... 285 (45.1), 386
(96.6)
Levy, Meyer....................279 (40.45)
Levy, Morris E........ 245 (17.55), 255
(22.47), 357 (83.44)
Levy, Naomi .....................308 (55.1)
Levy Paluck, Betsy........ 307 (51.52)
Lewallen, Jonathan .......378 (92.29)
Lewis, Andrew R. ......... 254 (22.41),
343 (76.47)
Lewis, Daniel C...... 297 (50.13), 331
(60.56)
Lewis, David E....... 253 (22.32), 308
(54.3), 347 (79.1), 399 (107.13)
Lewis, Gregory B.............348 (79.1)
Lewis, Janet I.................282 (40.59)
Lewis, Jeffrey B..... 364 (88.14), 399
(107.13)
Lewis, Jonathan Robert ............275
(40.19)
Lewis, Neil .....................342 (76.42)
Lewis, Orion A...............274 (40.15)
Lewis, Verlan .................293 (45.45)
Lewis-Beck, Michael S. ............. 236
(17.5), 275 (40.24), 297 (49.1),
347 (77.7), 407 (108.4), 415
(109.45)
Ley, Aaron J.................404 (107.40)
Ley Gutierrez, Sandra
Jessica........................359 (83.55)
Li, Christopher......... 349 (83.6), 398
(107.8)
LI, LI .................................395 (97.2)
Li, Quan .... 342 (76.38), 365 (88.26),
390 (96.31), 401 (107.27)
Li, Wei ............................408 (109.4)

Liu, Shan-Jan Sarah......279 (40.41)


Liu, Shelley Xuan ......... 252 (22.29),
314 (56.33)
Liu, Tzu-Ping .................326 (60.21)
Liu, Yanjun.....................243 (17.43)
Livingston, Alexander ...397 (107.2)
Livingston, Steven L. .... 257 (22.54)
Livny, Avital ...................261 (26.14)
Lizotte, Mary Kate .........304 (51.37)
Ljungkvist, Kristin .........292 (45.40)
Lloren, Anouk ................296 (45.61)
Lloyd, Gabriella Elizabeth .........240
(17.29)
Lloyd, Gordon..................283 (41.5)
Lloyd, Moya ... 323 (60.4), 349 (83.2)
Lluch, Jaime Gerardo....338 (76.16)
Lo, Adeline............. 273 (40.11), 314
(56.30), 399 (107.14)
Lobell, Steven E. ........... 252 (22.27)
Lockwood, Erin ..... 262 (26.21), 275
(40.23)
Lodge, Martin.................328 (60.33)
Loewen, Peter John ..... 242 (17.39),
253 (22.34), 266 (26.43), 371
(88.55), 408 (109.10)
Loeza, Richard............... 239 (17.23)
Lofton, Michelle Lynn.... 229 (11.35)
Lomazoff, Eric ...............241 (17.34)
Lombardini, John T. .......272 (40.3),
322 (60.3)
London, Jennifer Anne ...285 (45.1)
Long, Austin .......... 263 (26.24), 313
(56.27)
Long, James D...............353 (83.24)
Longo, Matthew....... 223 (11.3), 371
(88.56)
Lopez, Andrea M. ......... 228 (11.29),
290 (45.28)
Lopez, Mark Hugo ...........247 (20.1)
Lopez, Ramon Edgardo.............260
(26.8), 322 (60.2)
Lopez-Guerra, Claudio ..............408
(109.8)
Lopez-Murcia, Julian Daniel......291
(45.38)
Lordan, Thomas E. ........417 (110.3)
Lorentz, Kevin Gerald ...303 (51.32)
Lorentzen, Peter L. .........234 (13.1),
274 (40.15), 362 (88.7)
Lorenz, Geoffrey M........329 (60.44)
Lori, Noora Anwar ... 360 (84.5), 399
(107.16)
Lotito, Nicholas John ....294 (45.53)
Loubser, Reinet ............. 338 (76.16)
Loustau-Williams, Frances........226
(11.18), 388 (96.20)
Love, Gregory..................335 (74.1)
Love, Nancy Sue ... 268 (26.49), 272
(40.2)
Lovell, Alexander........... 324 (60.12)
Lovell, Darrell ................293 (45.48)
Lovin, Nathan .............. 415 (109.44)
Lowande, Kenneth........ 263 (26.29),
367 (88.36)
Lowe, Will .............. 273 (40.12), 375
(92.11), 402 (107.29)
Lowenstein, Daniel H. .....283 (41.5)
Lown, Patrick...................374 (92.6)
Lowndes, Joseph E...... 268 (26.49),
297 (50.14), 329 (60.40), 376
(92.15)
Lowndes, Vivien .... 230 (11.41), 264
(26.31), 314 (56.33)
Lowry, Robert C..... 291 (45.35), 303
(51.31)
Loxton, James ....... 370 (88.53), 371
(88.53)
Loyle, Cyanne E. ... 252 (22.30), 406
(107.51)
Lpez-Cariboni, Santiago..........388
(96.19)
Lu, Fengming............... 398 (107.10)
Lu, Jie ............................267 (26.46)
Lu, Xi................................234 (13.1)
Lu, Xiaobo .......................234 (13.1)
Lu, Yeh-Chung.................346 (77.5)
Lubell, Mark N. ..............294 (45.49)
Lublin, David I. ................335 (74.2)
Lucardi, Adrian............ 398 (107.10)
Lucas, Christopher........ 375 (92.11)
Lucas, Jennifer C. .........391 (96.38)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 431

Luczyk, Sarah ................243 (17.47)


Ludwig, Paul W........ 322 (60.2), 382
(92.49), 407 (109.1)
Luehrmann, Anna......... 331 (60.52),
344 (76.52), 406 (107.50)
Lugg, Andrew David......352 (83.21)
Lugo Vivas, Diego Andres ........332
(61.5)
Luhman, Meghan Moquin..........371
(88.56)
Luke, Timothy W...... 257 (23.2), 344
(76.50), 417 (110.4)
Lukk, Johanna McHale ..............344
(76.48)
Luna, Juan Pablo ......... 274 (40.16),
388 (96.19), 400 (107.17)
Luo, Kevin Wei ..............312 (56.18)
Luo, Ting........................ 339 (76.20)
Lup, Oana ........................360 (84.8)
Lupia, Arthur ....222 (6.4), 223 (9.2),
320 (56.60), 350 (83.10), 368
(88.38), 410 (109.16)
Lupu, Noam ........... 226 (11.18), 296
(45.61), 324 (60.14), 356
(83.42)
Lupu, Yonatan ....... 268 (26.52), 276
(40.28), 302 (51.24), 367
(88.34), 416 (109.52)
Lusk, Adam.................... 273 (40.13)
Luskin, Robert C. .... 273 (40.8), 357
(83.46)
Lussier, Danielle Nicole.............275
(40.22), 369 (88.44)
Lust, Aleksander ... 250 (22.20), 261
(26.19), 389 (96.23)
Lust, Ellen M.......... 238 (17.15), 274
(40.18), 286 (45.8), 373 (90.3),
411 (109.22)
Lustick, Ian S...................257 (23.1)
Luttig, Matt............... 224 (11.9), 255
(22.46)
Lutz, Mark J. ............ 269 (27.1), 322
(60.2)
Luxon, Nancy...................362 (88.4)
Ly, Minh V ........................362 (88.5)
Lyall, Jason......................361 (86.1)
Lykens, Kristine............. 387 (96.12)
Lynch, Christopher..........308 (52.3)
Lynch, Julia ........... 269 (26.54), 297
(49.2)
Lynch, Marc ........... 232 (11.49), 285
(44.3)
Lyons, Jeffrey........ 345 (76.57), 368
(88.41)
Lyons, Terrence............. 338 (76.14)

M
Ma, Xiao ..... 234 (13.1), 411 (109.24)
Maarek, Philippe J. ..........320 (57.1)
Maas, Willem.......... 288 (45.22), 371
(88.56)
Maass, Richard W..........357 (83.48)
Maboudi, Tofigh.............310 (56.12)
MacDonald, Andrew ..... 325 (60.18),
365 (88.23)
Macdonald, Bradley J................344
(76.50)
Macdonald, Geoffrey ... 404 (107.44)
MacDonald, Jason A. .... 253 (22.32)
Macdonald, Julia M. ... 402 (107.31),
412 (109.30)
MacDonald, Paul K. ...... 252 (22.27),
377 (92.23)
Macedo, Stephen..... 285 (43.3), 298
(51.5)
MacGilvray, Eric...............386 (96.6)
Maciel, Natalia Regina Avila......293
(45.44)
MacInnis, Bo..................231 (11.46)
Mackay, Fiona S. ........... 230 (11.41)
MacKenzie, Michael Kenneth ....409
(109.11)
MacKenzie, Scott A. ........224 (11.9)
Mackinnon, Emma Stone ..........244
(17.50), 385 (96.3)
MacLean, Lee........... 298 (51.1), 355
(83.37)
MacMullen, Ian R. ............260 (26.8)

MacWilliams, Matthew C. ..........317


(56.47)
Madonna, Anthony ........ 378 (92.29)
Madrid, Raul ..................355 (83.35)
Maeda, Ko......................312 (56.20)
Maestas, Cherie .............280 (40.49)
Magaloni, Beatriz.......... 353 (83.27),
410 (109.18)
Magazinnik, Asya ..........304 (51.36)
Magen, Amichai .............366 (88.27)
Magen, Amichai A. ...... 406 (107.50)
Maggi, Eva-Maria ... 313 (56.26), 416
(109.51)
Magleby, Daniel Blyth................241
(17.35), 265 (26.34)
Magleby, David B...........343 (76.44)
Magni, Gabriele ...............286 (45.7)
Magni-Berton, Raul........ 407 (108.4)
Magnusson, Bruce A.....295 (45.60)
Magnusson, Warren ........236 (17.4)
Magyar, Zsuzsanna Blanka .......242
(17.40)
Mah, Anne-Laure ......... 269 (26.58)
Mahdavi, Paasha ... 295 (45.57), 351
(83.17), 415 (109.47)
Maheo, Valerie-Anne .... 358 (83.53),
371 (88.54), 386 (96.10)
Maher, Amanda M............223 (11.1)
Mahlbacher, Jessica ......377 (92.19)
Mahoney, Anna M. .........265 (26.37)
Mahoney, Daniel J. ......... 246 (18.5),
360 (84.6)
Mahoney, James.... 261 (26.13), 398
(107.12)
Mainwaring, David...........321 (58.2)
Maione, Angela........ 235 (17.2), 393
(96.48)
Majic, Samantha Ann ... 232 (11.52),
243 (17.47), 297 (50.14), 368
(88.42), 379 (92.31)
Major, Mark ....................370 (88.50)
Makarin, Alexey .............364 (88.20)
Makgetla, Itumeleng ......320 (56.62)
Mako, Shamiran...............360 (84.5)
Makse, Todd ..................315 (56.37)
Makszin, Kristin .............312 (56.21)
Malbin, Michael J.............372 (89.3)
Malekzadeh, Shervin ... 400 (107.18)
Malesky, Edmund J. .......234 (13.1),
284 (42.1), 366 (88.26), 376
(92.17)
Malhotra, Neil............. 223 (9.2), 286
(45.9), 335 (74.1), 405 (107.46)
Malik, Aditi.....................351 (83.16)
Malik, Mashail Aman .....351 (83.12)
Malik, Rabia ...................250 (22.18)
Malin, Martin .................. 326 (60.27)
Mallinson, Daniel J ....... 304 (51.35),
328 (60.34)
Malloy, Tamar........... 298 (51.6), 381
(92.42)
Malnight, Joshua P. .......233 (11.57)
Maloy, J.S.........................235 (17.1)
Maltby, Elizabeth A........265 (26.38)
Maltseva, Elena .............300 (51.17)
Mamudu, Hadii M...........307 (51.51)
Mancillas, Linda Kay .... 241 (17.36),
287 (45.13), 368 (88.42)
Mandic, Danilo............... 261 (26.15)
Manekin, Devorah S. .....338 (76.18)
Maness, Ryan C............. 313 (56.26)
Manger, Mark S..............289 (45.23)
Mangonnet, Jorge G......300 (51.13)
Manick, Christopher .......236 (17.5),
383 (92.55)
Mann, Christopher B .... 237 (17.10),
306 (51.45)
Mann, Thomas E............233 (11.58)
Mannes, Aaron ..............294 (45.50)
Mannies, Whitney ............298 (51.1)
Manning, Carrie .............338 (76.14)
Mannino, Massimo ........317 (56.45)
Mansbridge, Jane .... 236 (17.5), 260
(26.6), 385 (95.5)
Mansfield, Edward D. ... 276 (40.26),
352 (83.21)
Mantilla Casas, Giovanni F........367
(88.34)
Manzi, Lucia...................391 (96.35)
Maranto, Robert..... 305 (51.40), 348
(79.1)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

431

Index of Participants

Li, Xiaojun................ 234 (13.1), 410


(109.20)
Liao, Da-Chi .....................383 (93.4)
Liao, Hsiao-chuan .........277 (40.30)
Liberman, Peter John....367 (88.32)
Lichbach, Mark I. ........... 302 (51.24)
Licht, Amanda A............263 (26.25)
Lichter, S. Robert ......... 278 (40.39),
370 (88.50)
Liebell, Susan P. ...... 259 (26.2), 285
(45.2), 374 (92.5)
Lieber, Keir ............ 227 (11.27), 262
(26.24)
Lieber, Robert J. ............ 301 (51.23)
Lieberman, Robert C. ... 237 (17.12),
264 (26.33), 286 (45.10)
Lien, Pei-te............... 223 (10.2), 279
(40.43), 322 (59.4), 360 (84.2),
385 (95.4)
Lienesch, Michael.... 298 (51.2), 385
(96.4)
Lienesch, Rachel ........... 279 (40.45)
Lierl, Malte ............. 269 (26.58), 359
(83.57)
Lieske, Joel A. ....... 304 (51.39), 391
(96.36)
Liff, Adam P. .................. 340 (76.26)
Lilleker, Darren ........ 320 (57.1), 382
(92.48)
Lillvis, Denise ..................347 (79.1)
Lim, Claire Seulgie ........ 275 (40.19)
Lim, Elvin T. ...................290 (45.33)
Lim, Kah-yew ...................384 (93.4)
Lim, Sijeong........... 239 (17.22), 382
(92.47)
Lima de Moraes, Camila............324
(60.10)
Lima De Oliveira, Renato ..........250
(22.15), 400 (107.21)
Lin, Dalton .....................389 (96.28)
Lin, Erin ... 290 (45.31), 411 (109.23)
Lin, Nick..... 317 (56.46), 381 (92.45)
Lin, Winston .................. 350 (83.10)
Lind, Jennifer M....... 321 (58.3), 340
(76.26)
Lindberg, Helen .............257 (22.56)
Lindberg, Staffan I........ 274 (40.18),
332 (60.58), 344 (76.52), 358
(83.50)
Linde, Jonas .................. 293 (45.48)
Linden-Retek, Paul ..........248 (22.4)
Linder, Fridolin Jakob ...363 (88.13)
Lindgren, Karl-Oskar .....243 (17.42)
Lindner, Miriam................374 (92.6)
Lindsay, Jon R....... 227 (11.27), 271
(38.1), 313 (56.26)
Lindsey, David ....... 340 (76.30), 412
(109.29)
Lindsey, Summer E. ..... 288 (45.18),
331 (60.57), 351 (83.13)
Lindvall, Johannes .......227 (11.24),
373 (90.3)
Linebarger, Christopher ............302
(51.24)
Linke, Andrew Martin .... 390 (96.30)
Linn, Suzanna........ 273 (40.11), 318
(56.49)
Linos, Katerina ..............253 (22.36)
Linton, Allen Louis ...... 413 (109.37)
Liou, Yu-Ming.................351 (83.17)
Lipscomb, Michael ....... 232 (11.50),
332 (61.4)
Lipscy, Phillip Y. ..............284 (42.1)
Lipsitz, Keena .......... 236 (17.7), 323
(60.9)
Lipson, Charles H..........256 (22.52)
Lipson, Daniel N. .............332 (61.4)
Little, Andrew ........ 244 (17.49), 255
(22.48), 405 (107.49)
Littlepage, Kelley G. ...... 368 (88.39)
Litvin, Boris .....................298 (51.1)
Liu, Amy H. .............. 360 (84.8), 389
(96.23)
Liu, Christopher.............289 (45.26)
Liu, Chuyu .......................234 (13.1)
Liu, Frank.........................372 (89.6)
Liu, Glory M. .................. 246 (17.57)
Liu, Guoli .........................321 (57.3)
Liu, Hanzhang..................234 (13.1)
Liu, Jun..........................294 (45.50)
Liu, Lizhi ...................... 410 (109.19)

Marasco, Robyn....... 336 (76.4), 408


(109.6)
Marbach, Moritz..... 225 (11.13), 320
(56.61)
Marcesse, Thibaud ........325 (60.17)
March, Andrew F...... 298 (51.5), 408
(109.4)
Marchesi, Bridget E.......295 (45.55)
Marcus, George E............348 (81.2)
Marcusa, Michael........... 392 (96.40)
Mares, Isabela.......... 236 (17.9), 381
(92.44), 387 (96.13), 410
(109.19)
Margalit, Yotam...... 282 (40.59), 365
(88.25), 405 (107.46)
Margolis, Michele ......... 254 (22.41),
324 (60.12)
Margulies, Max Zeldes ..............366
(88.29)
Margulies, William .........244 (17.51)
Marien, Sofie.................. 280 (40.49)
Marietta, Morgan.... 282 (40.62), 336
(76.7)
Marin, Mara ......................224 (11.6)
Marini, John.....................320 (57.2)
Marinov, Nikolay V. ....... 268 (26.52),
347 (78.1), 402 (107.30)
Mariotti, Shannon ............272 (40.3)
Mark, Alyx......................315 (56.35)
Mark, D. Clifton................259 (26.2)
Markovits, Elizabeth .......247 (22.1),
272 (40.3)
Markowitz, Jonathan .... 251 (22.24),
301 (51.21)
Markowitz, Lawrence P..............325
(60.19)
Marks, Gary ........... 238 (17.20), 247
(20.2), 341 (76.37), 348 (81.3)
Marks, Monica ...............292 (45.43)
Markstedt, Elias .............304 (51.38)
Markus, Stanislav .... 299 (51.7), 363
(88.9)
Marlowe, Melanie M.......264 (26.30)
Marple, Timothy E. ........ 326 (60.23)
Marquardt, Kyle L. .........344 (76.52)
Marques, Israel ...... 245 (17.54), 273
(40.10)
Marquez, Benjamin....... 286 (45.11),
414 (109.39)
Marquez, Xavier ....... 322 (60.2), 385
(96.2)
Marschall, Melissa J. .... 267 (26.46),
316 (56.41)
Marsh, Michael ................246 (18.6)
Marshall, Brandon ...........248 (22.8)
Marshall, John ....... 324 (60.10), 345
(76.57), 381 (92.44)
Marsicano, Christopher R. ........414
(109.43)
Marso, Lori.....235 (17.2), 349 (83.3)
Martel, James R...............385 (96.5)
Martherus, James Lucien..........374
(92.6)
Martin, Cathie Jo ......... 399 (107.15)
Martin, Deirdre Quinn......296 (46.5)
Martin, Felix E..................258 (23.4)
Martin, Janet M...... 265 (26.36), 327
(60.32)
Martin, Jerry L. ........ 372 (89.5), 417
(110.3)
Martin, Lanny W.............250 (22.19)
Martin, Lucy E. S. ......... 249 (22.13),
286 (45.9)
Martin, Shane........... 246 (18.6), 314
(56.32), 403 (107.36)
Martin, Siobhan .............294 (45.52)
Martin, Susan B. ............ 228 (11.29)
Martin-Shields, Charles
Patrick.........................290 (45.30)
Martinelli, Cesar...............236 (17.8)
Martinez, Melissa...........282 (40.57)
Martinez, Michael D. ..... 231 (11.46),
293 (45.48)
Martinez Machain, Carla............240
(17.29)
Martinez-Ebers, Valerie J. .........241
(17.37), 304 (51.39)
Martorano Miller, Nancy ............379
(92.35)
Martorelli, Paul ..............257 (22.56)
Marx, Benjamin..............282 (40.60)

432

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 432

Marzouki, Meryem .........256 (22.50)


Masaki, Takaaki ...............284 (42.1)
Masket, Seth E....... 305 (51.42), 343
(76.43)
Mason, Lilliana Hall ...... 255 (22.46),
335 (74.1)
Masood, Ali Shiraz ........ 341 (76.36)
Masoud, Tarek E. .......... 238 (17.15),
311 (56.15), 364 (88.19), 392
(96.40)
Massey, Joshua .............367 (88.32)
Massoc, Elsa C..............312 (56.21)
Masthay, Theodore J. ................263
(26.29), 302 (51.27), 354
(83.30)
Mastro, Oriana Skylar................239
(17.24), 389 (96.28)
Mastrorocco, Nicola ......370 (88.48)
Matakos, Konstantinos .............370
(88.48), 408 (109.9)
Matanock, Aila M. .... 284 (42.1), 340
(76.25), 371 (88.58), 393
(96.49)
Mate, Manoj ...................303 (51.34)
Mathew, Jaby .................408 (109.4)
Matland, Richard E. ...... 345 (76.58),
365 (88.22)
Matovski, Aleksandar .... 274 (40.15)
Matsa, Katerina Eva ......357 (83.46)
Matsunaga, Miku ...........290 (45.30)
Matsuo, Akitaka .............280 (40.48)
Mattes, Kyle ............. 236 (17.7), 398
(107.9)
Mattes, Michaela............276 (40.29)
Matthews, Scott..... 242 (17.41), 318
(56.49), 371 (88.54)
Matthijs, Matthias M. .... 238 (17.20),
300 (51.18), 320 (56.63)
Mattiacci, Eleonora........353 (83.26)
Mattingly, Daniel ...... 234 (13.1), 273
(40.9)
Matto, Elizabeth C. .........247 (21.3),
299 (51.10), 350 (83.11), 388
(96.16)
Matush, Kelly .................340 (76.25)
Matyasovsky, Matthew G...........264
(26.32)
Maurer, John H. ...............372 (89.4)
Maurer, Peter ...................320 (57.1)
Maurissen, Lies .............375 (92.12)
Mauslein, Jacob A. ........ 290 (45.30)
Maxey, Sarah .................273 (40.13)
Maxwell, Lida E................298 (51.3)
Maxwell, Rahsaan......... 245 (17.55),
262 (26.20), 359 (83.56)
Maydom, Barry ............ 416 (109.51)
Mayer, Jeremy ...............269 (26.57)
Mayer, Russell ...............350 (83.11)
Mayer, William G............390 (96.33)
Mayerfeld, Jamie .............323 (60.7)
Maynard, Katie C ........... 306 (51.46)
Maynor, John W...............323 (60.7)
Mayville, Luke Gabriel............... 245
(17.57)
MAZOUZ, Sarah............. 257 (22.55)
Mazur, Kevin .................. 282 (40.58)
Mazzuca, Sebastin...... 226 (11.17),
358 (83.49)
McAllister, Ted ............... 407 (108.5)
McAuley, Jim ...................360 (84.3)
McBrayer, Markie........... 342 (76.38)
McBride, James .............242 (17.42)
McBride, Megan K .........406 (108.3)
McCabe, Katherine .........224 (11.9),
319 (56.58)
McCall, Andrew James..............379
(92.32)
McCann, James A..........320 (56.61)
McCann, Michael W. ..... 229 (11.38),
348 (80.1), 379 (92.34)
McCarthy, Daniel .............308 (52.5)
McCartney, Alison Rios
Millett ............................247 (21.3)
McCarty, Nolan ........ 258 (24.2), 283
(40.63)
McCaskey, Kelly .......... 401 (107.27)
McCauley, John F. ........ 261 (26.14),
372 (88.58)
McClain, Paula D. .... 348 (80.1), 373
(91.2)
McClellan, Fletcher........ 225 (11.16)

McClelland, Benjamin
Patrick....................... 404 (107.44)
McClendon, Gwyneth ... 226 (11.20),
282 (40.60)
McClintock, Cynthia .....274 (40.16),
284 (43.1), 332 (61.5)
McClure, Cameron.........242 (17.40)
McClurg, Scott D. .......... 345 (76.57)
McCollester, Maria.........314 (56.34)
McConnaughy, Corrine M..........237
(17.10), 254 (22.40)
McCormack, Daniel .........347 (78.1)
McCormick, John P. .......223 (11.1),
384 (94.1)
McCoy, Jennifer............. 394 (96.50)
McCoy, Matthew Stephen..........397
(107.6)
McCrary, Lorraine Krall ............. 294
(45.51)
McCubbins, Mathew D. ............. 229
(11.35)
McDaniel, Jason A.........266 (26.41)
McDermott, Rose........... 378 (92.26)
McDonagh, Eileen .........375 (92.10)
McDonald, Michael D.....255 (22.45)
McDonald, Patrick J. .....318 (56.53)
McDowell, Daniel ...........225 (11.11)
McElwain, Kenneth Mori ........... 291
(45.36)
McGann, Anthony J.......381 (92.45)
McGlinchey, Eric............325 (60.19)
McGlynn, Adam ............. 356 (83.38)
McGrath, Erin Colleen ...............252
(22.30)
McGrath, Robert J. ........ 315 (56.37)
McGravey, Kevin J.........230 (11.39)
McGraw, Bryan T. .......... 316 (56.42)
McGraw, Sean..................246 (18.6)
McGregor, Shannon C...............344
(76.48)
McGroary, Victoria....... 403 (107.35)
McGuire, James W.........233 (11.55)
McGuire, Steven ...... 246 (18.2), 308
(52.5), 360 (84.6)
McHugh, John William ....309 (56.1)
McHugh, Mary A. ... 350 (83.11), 393
(96.48)
McIlwain, Charlton D. ....393 (96.45)
McIntyre, Michael A........259 (26.3),
336 (76.1)
McIver, John P. ................347 (77.7)
McIvor, David W....... 272 (40.2), 335
(74.3), 362 (88.2), 397 (107.6)
McKallagat, Christopher............394
(96.50)
McKean, Benjamin..........259 (26.3),
282 (40.57), 336 (76.5)
McKee, Seth C. ...... 242 (17.41), 391
(96.36)
McKeown, Timothy J.....294 (45.52)
McKie, Kristin ........ 227 (11.23), 299
(51.11)
McKinlay, Patrick F. ...... 226 (11.16),
324 (60.13)
McKinley, Maggie ..........354 (83.30)
McKinney, Claire C. ........309 (56.5),
386 (96.7)
McKitrick, Sean ...............221 (2.10)
McLauchlin, Theodore D. ..........350
(83.12)
McLaughlin, Joseph Paul..........222
(5.1)
McLean, Elena V. ... 228 (11.31), 262
(26.22), 290 (45.31)
McLellan, Rachael ........ 257 (22.58),
310 (56.10), 389 (96.24)
McLendon, Michael L. .....373 (92.1)
McMahon, Adam M........264 (26.30)
McMahon, Blake ............301 (51.21)
McMann, Kelly M. ......... 274 (40.18),
406 (107.50)
McManus, Roseanne .....352 (83.23)
McMenamin, Iain..............246 (18.6)
McNamara, Kathleen R..............238
(17.20), 247 (20.2)
McNeney, Denver James
Walton .........................392 (96.42)
McNerney, John...............332 (61.3)
McNevin, Anne ..............295 (45.59)
McNish, Robert Lee.........223 (11.2)
McNulty, Stephanie........ 311 (56.16)

McPartland, Thomas J. ............. 257


(23.3), 417 (110.3)
McPherson, Ella.............257 (22.54)
McQueen, Alison ..... 223 (11.1), 285
(45.1), 406 (108.3)
McTighe-Musil, Caryn......247 (21.3)
Mead, Lawrence M.............222 (9.1)
Mealy, Kimberly A...........259 (25.3),
373 (91.2)
Mearsheimer, John J. ................289
(45.27), 389 (96.26)
Mebane, Walter R. ........ 255 (22.44),
299 (51.9)
Mecham, Quinn ..... 311 (56.15), 400
(107.20)
Meckling, Jonas........... 415 (109.47)
Meckstroth, Christopher ...........385
(96.1)
Medearis, John N. ...........286 (45.5)
Medeiros, Mike ...... 230 (11.42), 371
(88.54)
Medie, Peace A................271 (38.2)
Medina Vidal, D. Xavier .............279
(40.44)
Mediratta, Rahul Shah...............312
(56.22)
Medvic, Stephen K. .......393 (96.45)
Medzihorsky, Juraj ...... 402 (107.29)
Meffert, Michael F. ........ 317 (56.45),
398 (107.9)
Meguid, Bonnie M......... 325 (60.21),
392 (96.43)
Mehta, Rupal.................. 327 (60.27)
Mehta, Uday Singh ..........362 (88.3)
Mehta, Varad..................281 (40.53)
Meiburg, A. Stanley .......361 (87.13)
Meierding, Emily............251 (22.24)
Meirowitz, Adam H. .........386 (96.8)
Mejia, Armando Xavier ..............342
(76.39)
Melchiorre, Luke............320 (56.62)
Mele, Valentina ..............240 (17.31)
Melendez, Carlos .............350 (83.8)
Melin, Molly M........ 228 (11.32), 367
(88.33)
Mellon, Jonathan ... 265 (26.38), 317
(56.48)
Melo, Daniela ...................258 (23.4)
Menaldo, Victor..............351 (83.17)
Menchaca, Marcos.........293 (45.45)
Menchik, Jeremy ...........292 (45.43)
Mendelberg, Tali .... 230 (11.42), 286
(45.7), 297 (49.2), 369 (88.47)
Mendelsohn, Barak........ 275 (40.23)
Mendenhall, Elizabeth Ann .......281
(40.55)
Mendez, Jose Luis...........348 (82.2)
Mendoza-Botelho, Martin ..........226
(11.21)
Meng, Anne.............. 362 (88.7), 413
(109.34)
Meng, Tianguang.............234 (13.1)
Menga, Ferdinando G......336 (76.2)
Menninga, Elizabeth J. ..............354
(83.29), 413 (109.33)
Mentzer, Aaron Tyler ..... 264 (26.32)
Menzel, Annie ................397 (107.4)
Merkley, Eric .......... 318 (56.49), 330
(60.47)
Merola, Vittorio ........ 299 (51.8), 310
(56.9), 337 (76.9)
Merolla, Jennifer L........ 317 (56.47),
398 (107.9), 409 (109.15)
Merrell, Brandon............239 (17.25)
Merrill, Samuel............... 330 (60.45)
Merseth, Julie Lee ... 322 (59.4), 342
(76.42)
Mershon, Carol A. ......... 316 (56.44)
Mescoli, Elsa .................371 (88.56)
Meseguer, Covadonga............... 262
(26.21), 359 (83.55)
Meserole, Christopher...............329
(60.42)
Meserve, Stephen August .........405
(107.50)
Metroka, Brandon Thomas........291
(45.37)
Metternich, Nils W. ........ 263 (26.28)
Mettler, Suzanne ...... 259 (25.1), 303
(51.30), 348 (80.1)

Min, Eric.........................340 (76.30)


Minami, Daisuke ............239 (17.23)
Minhas, Shahryar ........ 401 (107.26)
Minkoff, Scott Louis ......368 (88.41)
Minnite, Lorraine C..........321 (59.1)
Minozzi, William..... 282 (40.59), 345
(76.57)
Minter, Shannon Price...............297
(50.13)
Mintz, Micah Samuel .....255 (22.43)
Mirabella, Roseanne M. .............373
(90.1)
Mirilovic, Nikola .............314 (56.29)
Miroff, Bruce..................264 (26.30)
Mironova, Vera....... 233 (11.56), 302
(51.24)
Mishra, Sangay K. ... 359 (84.2), 383
(92.54)
Miskell, Sean .................341 (76.34)
Mitchell, Austin Michael ............401
(107.27)
Mitchell, Charles L........ 256 (22.50),
287 (45.13)
Mitchell, Colleen ..............322 (60.1)
Mitchell, Jocelyn Sage ..............388
(96.16)
Mitchell, Joshua L. ........ 280 (40.46)
Mitchell, Matthew I...........308 (54.1)
Mitchell, Neil J. ..............277 (40.32)
Mitchell, Sara McLaughlin.........313
(56.24), 387 (96.15)
Mitnick, Barry M. ........... 367 (88.37)
Mitrovich, Gregory....... 402 (107.29)
Mittiga, Ross....................332 (61.4)
Mo, Cecilia Hyunjung ....253 (22.34)
Mobley, Kayce ............. 412 (109.31)
Mockabee, Stephen T. ...............254
(22.41), 306 (51.46)
Moe, Terry M. ......... 229 (11.35), 283
(40.63), 379 (92.30)
Moehler, Devra Coren................405
(107.48)
Moffett-Bateau, Alexandra.........285
(44.5)
Moffitt, Benjamin ........... 376 (92.15)
Moghadam, Valentine M. ...........271
(38.2)
Mohan, Paula .................292 (45.42)
Mohanty, Pete ........ 233 (11.57), 237
(17.10), 273 (40.8)
Mokhtari, Shadi .............358 (83.51)
Molchanov, Stan ..............296 (46.3)
Molnr, Csaba................327 (60.31)
Moncada, Eduardo ...... 399 (107.16)
Moncrief, Gary F. ........... 304 (51.36)
Money, Jeannette ......... 307 (51.53),
325 (60.21), 344 (76.53)
Monogan, James Edward..........409
(109.16)
Monroe, Kristen Renwick..........338
(76.15)
Monshipouri, Mahmood ............394
(96.50)
Monson, Quin .......... 374 (92.6), 386
(96.10)
Montagnes, Brendan Pablo.......236
(17.8), 248 (22.7)
Montecinos, Veronica.... 266 (26.40)
Monteiro, Nuno P. ......... 251 (22.25),
321 (58.3), 352 (83.23)
Monten, Jonathan.......... 389 (96.27)
Montero, Sergio............. 225 (11.13)
Montgomery, Evan B. ................227
(11.27), 340 (76.27), 357
(83.48)
Montgomery, Jacob M. ..............269
(26.56), 282 (40.59)
Montgomery, Max ..........288 (45.18)
Montpetit, Eric ...............371 (88.54)
Mookherjee, Dilip........... 265 (26.34)
Moon, Alexander ........... 408 (109.5)
Moon-Chen, Hyunsook..............225
(11.13), 289 (45.23), 395 (97.3)
Moore, Alfred ...................309 (56.6)
Moore, Eric ....................245 (17.54)
Moore, Matthew J. ...........248 (22.2)
Moore, Ryan T........ 225 (11.15), 338
(76.13), 410 (109.16)
Moore, Steven................293 (45.46)
Moore, Wayne D. ........... 241 (17.34)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 433

Moraguez, Ashley......... 264 (26.29),


403 (107.37)
Moral, Mert.....................255 (22.45)
Morales, Laura....... 240 (17.30), 283
(41.2), 301 (51.18)
Moravcsik, Andrew........394 (96.51)
Morefield, Jeanne ............224 (11.6)
Morency-Laflamme, Julien ........350
(83.12)
Moreton, Bethany Ellen.............362
(88.6)
Morgan, Carolyn ............262 (26.20)
Morgan, Jana ......... 254 (22.42), 296
(45.61)
Morgan, Kimberly J. .......235 (15.2),
284 (43.1), 373 (90.2)
Morgan, Patrick M. ........ 239 (17.26)
Morgan, Richard Kenneth .........351
(83.13)
Morgan-Collins, Mona ...............293
(45.47), 311 (56.14)
Morgan-Jones, Edward .............250
(22.19)
Morgenstern, Scott..........335 (74.2)
Moriarty, J. Thomas.......378 (92.25)
Morin-Chass, Alexandre..........409
(109.15)
Morone, James A...........286 (45.10)
Morrell, Michael E............260 (26.6)
Morris, Irwin L. ..............304 (51.39)
Morris, Joseph...................221 (2.4)
Morris, Lyle Johann.......289 (45.27)
Morrisroe, Darby............354 (83.32)
Morrow, James D...........326 (60.26)
Morse, Benjamin............302 (51.26)
Morse, Julia C.......... 284 (42.1), 366
(88.28)
Morse, Yonatan L.............321 (58.1)
Moruzzi, Norma Claire.....224 (11.5)
Mos, Martijn ...................244 (17.52)
Moscovich, Lorena ........303 (51.29)
Moscrop, David RH .........349 (83.4)
Moseley, Mason Wallace ...........388
(96.20)
Moser, Robert G. ........... 329 (60.43)
Mosher, Michael A. ..........361 (86.3)
Mosier, Samantha......... 292 (45.40),
367 (88.37)
Mosimann, Nadja........... 287 (45.16)
Moskal, Patsy ................299 (51.10)
Moskowitz, Rachel L. .... 379 (92.31)
Mosley, Layna........ 224 (11.11), 251
(22.21), 312 (56.23), 411
(109.26)
Mossberger, Karen ...... 415 (109.48)
Mostov, Julie............ 361 (86.3), 395
(97.6)
Motta, Matthew P. ..........357 (83.44)
Motyl, Matt .....................305 (51.39)
Moulton, Taylor..............242 (17.42)
Mouritzen, Poul Erik........384 (95.3)
Moury, Catherine ......... 414 (109.41)
Mouro Permoser, Julia ............346
(77.4)
Moustafa, Tamir ............. 292 (45.43)
Moyn, Samuel ..................223 (11.4)
Mucciaroni, Gary .............270 (27.3)
Muchlinski, David Alan ............. 237
(17.11)
Muck, William J. ............324 (60.13)
Mudliar, Pranietha .........294 (45.49)
Mueller, Lisa .......... 345 (76.59), 384
(95.2)
Mugge, Liza ........... 249 (22.12), 414
(109.38)
Muirhead, Russell..........316 (56.42)
Mukherjee, Bumba...........323 (60.8)
Mukherjee, Shivaji ........ 225 (11.12),
399 (107.12)
Mullen, Rani D. ...... 275 (40.21), 313
(56.28)
Muller, James W. .............372 (89.4)
Mullinix, Kevin J. ........... 370 (88.50)
Mulroy, Quinn W. ... 277 (40.35), 286
(45.11)
Mummolo, Jonathan...... 273 (40.11)
Munck, Gerardo L......... 226 (11.17),
358 (83.49)
Munger, Kevin................266 (26.42)
Mungiu-Pippidi, Alina ....294 (45.54)
Munoz, Avram..................363 (88.8)

Munoz, Jordi.................. 311 (56.14)


Munoz, Phillip .......... 283 (41.1), 359
(84.1)
Muntean, Aurelian Daniel..........360
(84.8)
Murdie, Amanda Marie ..............295
(45.58), 309 (55.2), 377 (92.22)
Muriaas, Ragnhild Louise .........241
(17.36), 411 (109.22)
Murib, Zein............. 297 (50.13), 319
(56.58)
Murillo, Maria Victoria ............... 300
(51.13), 311 (56.13), 356
(83.42)
Murphy, Andrew R.........397 (107.1)
Murphy, Craig N.............281 (40.55)
Murphy, Gary ...................246 (18.6)
Murphy, Justin............... 318 (56.52)
Murray, Michelle ............289 (45.26)
Murtazashvili, Jennifer Brick .... 325
(60.19)
Musgrave, Paul...... 294 (45.52), 313
(56.29), 351 (83.17), 382
(92.49)
Musso, Juliet Ann ........ 278 (40.40),
328 (60.33)
Muste, Christopher P..... 255 (22.46)
Mutlu-Eren, Hande......... 408 (109.9)
Mutz, Diana C. ............... 243 (17.45)
Muzorewa, Wilson .........351 (83.16)
Myers, C. Daniel ...... 273 (40.8), 336
(76.7), 357 (83.46), 371 (88.55)
Myers, Ella .......................235 (17.3)
Myers, William ............. 409 (109.11)
Myint, Tun ...... 258 (23.6), 374 (92.5)
Mylonas, Harris ..... 282 (40.58), 312
(56.21)

N
Nachlis, Herschel ......... 319 (56.59),
363 (88.12)
Nackenoff, Carol............375 (92.10)
Nacol, Emily............. 285 (45.1), 322
(59.3)
Nagel, Jack H.................369 (88.45)
Nagler, Jonathan ... 266 (26.42), 318
(56.49)
Nagy, Eugen L. ................296 (46.3)
Nahm, Jonas M...... 300 (51.16), 325
(60.18)
Nai, Alessandro .................221 (3.5)
Nair, Gautam.......... 239 (17.22), 337
(76.9)
Nakata, Hiroyuki ............365 (88.25)
Nakazawa, Yoshiaki.........384 (93.7)
Nalepa, Monika ...... 274 (40.17), 364
(88.19)
Nall, Clayton M. ............. 342 (76.38)
Nam, Illan............... 227 (11.23), 364
(88.18)
Nam, Taehyun..................395 (97.3)
Nanamaker, Bethany .....304 (51.35)
Nance, Jason .................341 (76.35)
Nance, Mark........... 301 (51.18), 312
(56.22)
Naoi, Megumi.................326 (60.24)
naran, amarzaya ..............383 (93.3)
Naranch, Laurie E...........235 (17.2),
349 (83.3)
Narang, Neil ........... 295 (45.55), 313
(56.26), 353 (83.28)
Narang, Vipin .................313 (56.28)
Narizny, Kevin........ 301 (51.21), 347
(78.1)
Nascimento da Silva, Thiago ....311
(56.17), 322 (59.5), 400
(107.21)
Naseemullah, Adnan .... 225 (11.12),
325 (60.16)
Naseer, Shaheen............303 (51.31)
Nath, Anusha ........... 236 (17.8), 265
(26.34)
Nathan, Noah ......... 226 (11.20), 247
(20.4)
Nathan, Richard P.......... 245 (17.53)
Nau, Henry R. ................256 (22.52)
Naujoks, Daniel .............394 (96.53)
Naurin, Daniel ........ 313 (56.24), 332
(60.57)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

433

Index of Participants

Metz, Tamara............ 298 (51.5), 386


(96.7)
Metzger, Megan MacDuffee .......306
(51.47), 415 (109.46)
Metzger, Shawna K....... 263 (26.27),
302 (51.27)
Meyer, Brett .....................350 (83.9)
Meyer-Gutbrod, Joshua.............278
(40.38)
Mezey, Michael L. .......... 354 (83.32)
Mezey, Susan......... 230 (11.39), 331
(60.56)
Mhire, Jeremy J. .... 294 (45.51), 346
(77.3)
Michalski, Tomasz .........382 (92.48)
Michel, Katherine E .......314 (56.32)
Michelitch, Kristin Grace...........237
(17.13)
Michelson, Ethan......... 411 (109.24)
Michelson, Melissa R. ...............241
(17.37), 357 (83.46)
Michener, Jamila D. ........335 (75.1),
369 (88.43)
Mickey, Robert............... 355 (83.35)
Micozzi, Juan Pablo ...... 390 (96.32)
Middlemass, Keesha M. ............355
(83.36)
Middleton, Joel A. .........237 (17.10)
Midlarsky, Elizabeth R. ..............358
(83.48)
Midlarsky, Manus I........ 327 (60.29),
358 (83.48)
Mignozzetti, Umberto .....224 (11.7),
400 (107.21)
Mihic, Sophia ........... 223 (11.5), 247
(22.2)
Mikhaylov, Slava.......... 406 (107.51)
Mikulaschek, Christoph.............251
(22.23)
Mildenberger, Matto.......344 (76.49)
Miler, Kristina............... 413 (109.35)
Miles, Matthew R ..... 349 (83.7), 367
(88.36), 408 (109.10)
Milewicz, Karolina M......276 (40.27)
Milicic, Nikola .............. 398 (107.10)
Milkis, Sidney M. ........... 378 (92.30)
Millar, Katharine M.........254 (22.39)
Miller, Banks P. ..............344 (76.53)
Miller, Benjamin..... 228 (11.29), 262
(26.23), 289 (45.26), 318
(56.53), 407 (109.1)
Miller, Char Roone..........285 (45.3),
385 (96.4)
Miller, David ...................408 (109.7)
Miller, Hugh T...................283 (41.3)
Miller, Joanne .......... 235 (16.1), 267
(26.44), 350 (83.7), 384 (94.2)
Miller, Joshua I. ....... 362 (88.3), 373
(92.2)
Miller, Joshua Preston ....362 (88.2)
Miller, Kathryn ...............318 (56.52)
Miller, Lisa L. ......... 256 (22.51), 369
(88.43)
Miller, Luis .....................389 (96.24)
Miller, Melissa K. ........... 287 (45.13)
Miller, Michael G. ........... 369 (88.46)
Miller, Michael K. ... 244 (17.49), 274
(40.18)
Miller, Michael L.............382 (92.46)
Miller, Nicholas ...... 327 (60.27), 412
(109.30)
Miller, Patrick R. .... 297 (50.13), 331
(60.56)
Miller, Peter............ 316 (56.43), 415
(109.45)
Miller, Raymond............. 369 (88.45)
Miller, Sarah Clark ...........309 (56.5)
Miller, Susan Marie ....... 229 (11.35),
291 (45.34), 304 (51.35), 328
(60.33)
Miller, Ted H. ............ 259 (26.2), 397
(107.1)
Mills, Russell W. .... 291 (45.34), 359
(83.54)
Milne, Duane D. ..... 264 (26.31), 384
(93.6)
Milner, Helen V....... 351 (83.14), 401
(107.27)
Milyo, Jeffrey ......... 243 (17.43), 343
(76.44)
Min, Brian ......................338 (76.19)

Naurin, Elin ............ 304 (51.38), 332


(60.57), 414 (109.41)
Navarre, Rachel ........... 417 (109.55)
Navot, Doron ...................257 (23.1)
Naylor, Sharain Sasheir.............323
(60.4)
Nazneen, Sohela............261 (26.17)
Neafie, Jessica Elizabeth ..........382
(92.47)
Neblo, Michael ....... 345 (76.57), 398
(107.7)
Nedelsky, Jennifer ...........309 (56.5)
Nederman, Cary J.... 235 (17.1), 308
(52.6)
Negretto, Gabriel L. .......310 (56.12)
Neiheisel, Jacob R........ 230 (11.43),
254 (22.41), 343 (76.47)
Nelles, Jen .....................342 (76.39)
Nelson, Candice J. ............221 (2.4)
Nelson, Chad ......... 318 (56.53), 340
(76.29)
Nelson, Elizabeth........... 288 (45.20)
Nelson, John S. ............. 370 (88.51)
Nelson, Matthew J. ....... 266 (26.39),
356 (83.39)
Nelson, Michael J. ........ 355 (83.34),
403 (107.39)
Nelson, Stephen Craig ..............239
(17.22), 275 (40.23), 288
(45.21)
Nelson-Nunez, Jami ......311 (56.13)
Nemeth, Stephen C. ..... 302 (51.25),
403 (107.34)
Nemoto, Kuniaki .... 312 (56.20), 375
(92.11)
Ness, Immanuel ........... 416 (109.49)
Neumayer, Eric ............ 402 (107.34)
Neuner, Fabian Guy...... 255 (22.47),
279 (40.44), 363 (88.8)
Neureiter, Michael......... 262 (26.20),
372 (88.58)
Newell, Michael..............289 (45.25)
Newman, Abraham .........258 (24.3),
275 (40.25), 339 (76.24)
Newman, Katja............. 406 (107.53)
Newman, Olivia..............383 (92.55)
Newman, Peter J .............298 (51.1)
Nexon, Daniel H...............258 (24.3)
Neyazi, Taberez A. .........317 (56.48)
Nguyen, Mai............. 258 (23.6), 310
(56.10), 411 (109.23)
Nguyen, Sinh .................310 (56.11)
Nichanian, Daniel ............272 (40.4)
Nicholas, Phil.................240 (17.32)
Nichols, Curt.................. 290 (45.33)
Nichols, David K..............360 (84.4)
Nichols, Jill .................... 290 (45.33)
Nichols, Robert..............397 (107.5)
Nicholson, Michael D. ... 320 (56.61)
Nicholson, Mike............. 245 (17.53)
Nichter, Simeon C......... 255 (22.44),
274 (40.17), 409 (109.12)
Nickel, Patricia M.............373 (90.1)
Nickerson, David W. ...... 269 (26.56)
Nielsen, Richard .... 239 (17.21), 361
(86.1)
Nielson, Daniel L. .......... 324 (60.10)
Niemeyer, Simon J. .......305 (51.41)
Niemi, William L.............344 (76.50)
Nieto-Matiz, Camilo .......252 (22.29)
Nili, Shmuel .....................362 (88.5)
Nincic, Miroslav .............252 (22.29)
Nir, Lilach....... 272 (40.8), 374 (92.6)
Nishikawa, Misa.............365 (88.21)
Niven, David .......... 332 (60.57), 348
(82.1)
Nivette, Amy ..................224 (11.10)
Nobles, Melissa ...............235 (15.3)
Noel, Hans ............... 258 (24.1), 293
(45.45), 305 (51.42), 359
(83.54), 414 (109.42)
Noergaard, Asbjoern Sonne .....409
(109.11)
Nogueira, Thiago Rodrigues So
Marcos ........................239 (17.21)
Noh, Yuree ............. 331 (60.52), 416
(109.50)
Nolette, Paul Brian ....... 303 (51.34),
375 (92.9)
Noll, Ray ........................307 (51.50)
Nolte, Andrew J. ............ 364 (88.15)

434

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 434

Nomikos, William G. ......353 (83.24)


Noonan, Michael P...........322 (59.7)
Nooruddin, Irfan .... 238 (17.17), 301
(51.19)
Nordkvelle, Jonas..........314 (56.30)
Nordyke, Shane .............387 (96.15)
Norman, Kelsey P. ........ 275 (40.20),
295 (45.59)
Norman, Susan Virginia ............365
(88.21)
Norpoth, Helmut ...... 297 (49.1), 415
(109.44)
Norris, Andrew ..............407 (109.3)
Norris, Mikel ..................265 (26.36)
Norris, Pippa Pippa ... 221 (3.1, 3.4),
284 (43.1), 331 (60.52), 405
(107.50)
Norris, William J. ... 340 (76.27), 353
(83.25)
Norton, Anne ......... 338 (76.15), 362
(88.3), 408 (109.6)
Norton, Augustus Richard ........360
(84.5)
Novaes, Lucas ...............252 (22.29)
Novak, Alison N..... 253 (22.33), 265
(26.35), 317 (56.48), 391
(96.34)
Novkov, Julie L. ..... 257 (22.56), 375
(92.10)
Nowlin, Matthew .... 232 (11.48), 267
(26.47)
Nownes, Anthony J. ......229 (11.36)
Nteta, Tatishe Mavovosi ............265
(26.38)
Nuamah, Sally................341 (76.34)
Nugent, Elizabeth R.......305 (51.44)
Nunez-Donoso, Rodrigo
Felipe ..........................339 (76.23)
Nunnally, Shayla C. ..... 404 (107.42)
Nwankwor, Chiedo.........380 (92.37)
Nygrd, Hvard Mokleiv ............398
(107.11)
Nyhan, Brendan..... 232 (11.49), 306
(51.45), 370 (88.49)
Nyhuis, Dominic ............243 (17.43)

O
O' Brien, Diana Z. ......... 266 (26.40),
293 (45.47), 342 (76.40), 380
(92.37)
O' Dwyer, Conor ............365 (88.22)
O'Brien, Cheryl ...... 249 (22.12), 368
(88.42)
O'Brien, Erin E.................321 (59.1)
O'Brien, Matthew .............246 (18.7)
O'Brien, Patrick R..........291 (45.33)
O'Donnell, Olivia..............283 (41.4)
O'Donovan, Kristin ........304 (51.36)
O'Keeffe, Zachary ..........342 (76.38)
O'Loughlin, Ben............. 317 (56.48)
O'Malley, Eoin ..................246 (18.6)
O'Mealia, Thomas ..........314 (56.31)
O'Neil, Andrew...............340 (76.26)
O'Neill, Barry ........... 349 (83.6), 366
(88.31)
O'Regan, Cyril .................360 (84.6)
O'Rourke, Lindsey.........377 (92.23)
Oatley, Thomas..............326 (60.23)
Obayashi, Kazuhiro .......275 (40.19)
Oberman, Kieran John ..............408
(109.7)
Obert, Jonathan............. 387 (96.14)
Obydenkova, Anastassia V. ...... 300
(51.18)
Ocampo, Angela Ximena...........322
(59.5), 342 (76.42)
Ocepek, Anthony........... 377 (92.20)
Och, Malliga...................380 (92.37)
Ochoa Espejo, Paulina ..............235
(17.4), 408 (109.4)
Ochs, Holona LeAnne ... 307 (51.51)
Odalen, Jorgen ..............299 (51.10)
Odziemkowska, Kate .....274 (40.14)
Oestreich, Joel E. ......... 289 (45.25),
331 (60.54)
Ofosu, George ...............282 (40.60)
Oganesyan, Rafael ........275 (40.24)
Ogden, Benjamin..... 248 (22.7), 349
(83.6)

Ognyanova, Katherine...............345
(76.57)
Ogutcu-Fu, Sema Hande ...........228
(11.28)
Oh, Namkyung...............406 (108.2)
OH, Seunghee................277 (40.30)
Ohberg, Patrik ...............242 (17.39)
Ohtsuki, Kazuto............. 331 (60.52)
Oi, Jean C. ................... 410 (109.20)
Ojeda, Christopher .........349 (83.7),
392 (96.42)
Okma, Kieke G.H .............233 (12.1)
Okoye, Chika ...................249 (22.9)
Okpotor, Faith I..............372 (88.58)
Oktay, Sibel......................310 (56.7)
Olds, Christopher ..........367 (88.36)
Olivella, Santiago ......... 267 (26.44),
293 (45.44), 337 (76.11), 380
(92.41)
Oliver, Rebecca J. .........254 (22.38)
Oliver, Sarah .......... 292 (45.41), 331
(60.57)
Oliver, Steven Matthew ...234 (13.1)
Oliveros, Virginia........... 356 (83.42)
Olmeda, Juan Cruz........291 (45.38)
Olney, Charles E..............259 (26.4)
Olsen, Asmus Leth....... 314 (56.33),
409 (109.13)
Olson, Laura Katz......... 243 (17.47),
264 (26.32)
Olson, Laura R. ............. 305 (51.40)
Omer, Atalia ...................292 (45.43)
On, Stephen Siu Kay .......298 (51.6)
Ondercin, Heather L. .... 280 (40.50),
304 (51.37), 404 (107.41)
Ondetti, Gabriel ...............332 (61.5)
Ono, Yoshikuni ...... 269 (26.56), 296
(46.5), 312 (56.20), 406 (108.2)
Onorato, Massimiliano G. .........387
(96.14), 410 (109.19)
Onuch, Olga.....................307 (52.1)
Opp, Susan ............ 292 (45.40), 361
(87.13)
Oren, Ido .... 297 (50.14), 396 (106.1)
Orenstein, Mitchell A.... 325 (60.20),
365 (88.23)
Orlie, Melissa A. ..............223 (11.3)
Ornston, Darius .............325 (60.16)
Orozco Mendoza, Elva
Fabiola ..........................236 (17.4)
Orr, Marion................. 222 (4.1), 414
(109.39)
Orr, Raymond ..................258 (23.5)
Orriols, Lluis.......... 264 (26.34), 389
(96.24)
Ortmann, Stephan .........256 (22.53)
Orttung, Robert W. ........288 (45.20)
Orwin, Alexander Israel.............370
(88.52)
Orwin, Clifford .................372 (89.7)
Osborn, Tracy ................315 (56.37)
Oser, Jennifer ................229 (11.36)
Osgood, Iain .................. 251 (22.22)
Oskar, Glenda ................242 (17.41)
Oskarsson, Sven ...........243 (17.42)
Oskooii, Kassra AR .......388 (96.18)
Osmundsen, Mathias.......350 (83.7)
Osorio, Javier ................314 (56.30)
Ospina Pedraza, Ana Maria.......272
(40.4)
Ostergaard-Nielsen, Eva ...........282
(40.61)
Ostermann, Susan L .....288 (45.17)
Ostfeld, Mara Cecilia .....356 (83.43)
Ostiguy, Pierre...............376 (92.15)
Ostrander, Ian ................378 (92.29)
Ostwald, Kai ............ 258 (23.6), 287
(45.15)
Otobe, Nobutaka..............322 (60.3)
Ouyang, Yu ............ 341 (76.33), 403
(107.37)
Overby, L. Marvin ......... 354 (83.30),
367 (88.35)
Owen, David ............ 323 (60.7), 336
(76.2), 407 (109.3)
Owen, Erica ........... 307 (51.52), 401
(107.27)
Owen, John M........ 256 (22.52), 268
(26.50), 347 (78.1)
Owens, Mark E. ...............373 (91.3)

Owens, Michael Leo ..... 316 (56.41),


321 (59.1)
Owsiak, Andrew.............313 (56.24)
Oxley, Zoe M. ................. 304 (51.37)
zdemir, Yonca..............356 (83.39)

P
Pace, Christopher E. ... 412 (109.32)
Pachirat, Timothy ......... 257 (22.55),
297 (50.14), 358 (83.52), 396
(106.1)
Pachon, Monica..... 254 (22.42), 291
(45.38)
Paczynska, Agnieszka...............353
(83.28)
Padgett, John F.............. 387 (96.14)
Page, Benjamin I. ..........330 (60.46)
Page, Douglas ...............244 (17.52)
Paget, Daniel .................359 (83.57)
Paglayan, Agustina S ................399
(107.17)
Pahnke, Anthony R. ...... 226 (11.18)
Pahwa, Sumita...............311 (56.15)
Paik, Seung Joon ..........327 (60.29)
Paik, Sung Wook ........... 303 (51.34)
Paine, Jack .................... 351 (83.17)
Palanza, Valeria .............390 (96.32)
Palkki, David.......... 228 (11.29), 263
(26.26)
Paller, Jeffrey W...............247 (20.4)
Palmer, Carl L. ....... 243 (17.45), 343
(76.47)
Palmer, Maxwell B. ....... 277 (40.35),
315 (56.37), 380 (92.36)
Palmer-Rubin, Brian ...... 311 (56.13)
Palous, Martin.......... 269 (27.2), 308
(52.4)
Pamphilis, Niccole M.....254 (22.38)
Pamuk, Zeynep..............397 (107.6)
Pan, Hsin-Hsin.................395 (97.2)
Pan, Jennifer ........... 234 (13.1), 365
(88.23)
Panagia, Davide....... 298 (51.3), 385
(96.3)
Panagopoulos, Costas ..............245
(17.54), 332 (60.57)
Pandya, Sonal S. ... 339 (76.23), 401
(107.27)
Pangle, Lorraine ..............372 (89.7)
Panizza, Francisco ........376 (92.15)
Pant, Saurabh ................408 (109.9)
Pantoja, Adrian D. ......... 241 (17.37)
Paolino, Philip ...............367 (88.32)
Papillon, Martin .............341 (76.37)
Pappin, Gladden J. ..........246 (18.7)
Parasher, Tejas ..............408 (109.4)
Pardelli, Giuliana ........... 241 (17.35)
Pardo, Sharon................274 (40.13)
Parent, Jonathan ... 230 (11.43), 379
(92.35)
Parinandi, Srinivas ....... 241 (17.35),
328 (60.37)
Paris, Celia .................. 405 (107.48)
Park, Baekkwan .............392 (96.40)
Park, Barum...................393 (96.44)
Park, Bora Clara ..............299 (51.7)
Park, Gene .....................227 (11.26)
Park, Geon Woo ..............395 (97.3)
Park, Jong Hee ...... 225 (11.14), 286
(45.12)
Park, June........................395 (97.2)
Park, K-Sue....................397 (107.5)
Park, Seo-Hyun..............340 (76.27)
Park, Sung Ho ............. 401 (107.24)
Park, Sungwoo ................322 (60.2)
Park, Sunhee .................302 (51.26)
Park, Taeyong........ 231 (11.45), 399
(107.14)
Parker, Christopher S................229
(11.36)
Parker, Sara .....................285 (44.4)
Parker, Suzanne L. ........ 319 (56.55)
Parkinson, Sarah E.........235 (15.2),
385 (95.5)
Parks, Bradley C........... 262 (26.22),
284 (42.1), 374 (92.7)
Parris, Girma Elyot Alifeyo .......249
(22.10)

Petersen, Michael Bang ............255


(22.47), 323 (60.9), 343 (76.47),
350 (83.7), 374 (92.6)
Peterson, Andrew......... 329 (60.44),
375 (92.11)
Peterson, Brenton .........261 (26.18)
Peterson, David A. M.....243 (17.44)
Peterson, Erik ........ 243 (17.45), 405
(107.48)
Peterson, Rolfe Daus .... 343 (76.47)
Peterson, Scot M. .......... 254 (22.37)
Peterson, Steven A..........321 (57.4)
Peterson, Timothy M. ... 390 (96.31),
401 (107.25)
Petricevic, Vanja ............302 (51.26)
Petropoulos, Sotirios .... 232 (11.52)
Petropulos, William .........372 (89.5)
Petrova, Margarita H......244 (17.48)
Petrova, Maria..................362 (88.7)
Petry, Francois ............ 414 (109.41)
Pettigrew, Stephen ........343 (76.46)
Pettyjohn, Stacie ...........227 (11.27)
Pevehouse, Jon C. W. ......223 (9.3),
320 (57.1), 347 (78.1)
Pfaff, Steven ..................256 (22.48)
Pfiffner, James P............302 (51.28)
Phan, Ngoc ....................355 (83.38)
Phelan, William..............368 (88.39)
Philips, Andrew Q .........287 (45.12)
Philips, Menaka .............316 (56.39)
Phillips, Christian Dyogi ........... 230
(11.42)
Phillips, John L..............319 (56.56)
Phillips, Jonathan......... 233 (11.55),
410 (109.18)
Phillips, Joseph............. 392 (96.41)
Phillips, Justin....... 243 (17.44), 337
(76.11), 415 (109.43)
Phillips, Michelle Christine .......326
(60.21)
Phillips, Ryan........... 286 (45.6), 335
(76.1)
Phulwani, Vijay ................259 (26.4)
Piana, Daniela..................284 (43.2)
Piattoni, Simona ..............233 (12.2)
Piazza, James A. ........... 302 (51.25)
Pickerill, Mitch ....... 303 (51.32), 315
(56.35)
Pickering, Paula M.........324 (60.10)
Pierskalla, Jan Henryk ..............225
(11.12)
Pierson, Paul ......... 233 (11.58), 283
(40.63)
Pilet, Jean-Benoit ..........240 (17.30)
Pinckney, Jonathan ...... 240 (17.28),
402 (107.33)
Pincock, Heather .............285 (45.2)
Pinderhughes, Dianne M...........234
(12.4), 247 (21.1), 279 (40.43)
Pineda, Erin ...................397 (107.2)
Pinto, Pablo Martin....... 339 (76.23),
401 (107.27)
Piombo, Jessica ............331 (60.53)
Piotrowska, Barbara Maria........317
(56.46)
Piotrowski, Suzanne...... 328 (60.33)
Pique, Ricardo ...............364 (88.20)
Pisapia, Michael Callaghan .......240
(17.32)
Pischedda, Costantino ..............229
(11.33)
Piscopo, Jennifer M. .... 266 (26.40),
380 (92.38), 413 (109.38)
Piston, Spencer ..... 230 (11.42), 254
(22.40)
Pitney, John J................390 (96.33)
Piven, Frances Fox............222 (9.1)
Pizzi, Elise .....................226 (11.21)
Planinc, Zdravko..............269 (27.2)
Plapinger, Samuel .........341 (76.31)
Platas Izama, Melina Raquel .....282
(40.60)
Platt, Matthew B. ... 342 (76.41), 413
(109.35)
Plattner, Marc F..............294 (45.54)
Plencner, Joshua........... 318 (56.52)
Ploof, Rebecca Aili .........298 (51.1),
374 (92.3)
Plotica, Luke Philip .........259 (26.3)
Pluemper, Thomas....... 402 (107.34)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 435

Poast, Paul............. 326 (60.26), 377


(92.21)
Poe, Andrew ............ 259 (26.2), 272
(40.3), 374 (92.4)
Poertner, Mathias ..........364 (88.20)
Pogrebinschi, Thamy .....236 (17.5),
372 (89.2)
Pole, Antoinette...............321 (58.2)
Polet, Jeffrey ........... 246 (18.2), 395
(97.4)
Polga-Hecimovich, John ........... 303
(51.29), 341 (76.33)
Polk, Jonathan............... 381 (92.43)
Pollert, Isaac.................. 355 (83.35)
Polo, Sara .................... 403 (107.34)
Polverari, Laura .............312 (56.21)
Pomante, Michael J. ...... 342 (76.38)
Ponce, Aldo Fernando ..............353
(83.27)
Pond, Amy ............. 326 (60.24), 401
(107.27)
Ponder, Daniel E............367 (88.36)
Pons, Vincent ........ 242 (17.42), 317
(56.45), 407 (108.4)
Pontuso, James............. 260 (26.12)
Pontusson, Jonas ........ 226 (11.18),
287 (45.16), 348 (81.3)
Pool, Heather N. ...... 224 (11.6), 324
(60.13)
Poon, Martha ...................248 (22.3)
Pop-Eleches, Grigore ......236 (17.9)
Pope, Jeremy Clayne ... 293 (45.48),
405 (107.45)
Popescu, Marina...... 360 (84.8), 381
(92.46)
Popovic, Milos ............. 402 (107.29)
Porisky, Alesha Nicole
Towers ........................365 (88.21)
Porter, Ethan.......... 345 (76.57), 370
(88.49)
Portney, Kent E...... 292 (45.40), 306
(51.46)
Portteus, Kevin................320 (57.2)
Portz, John ............ 291 (45.35), 341
(76.34)
Posner, Daniel N...... 247 (20.4), 261
(26.14), 282 (40.60), 286 (45.8)
Posner, Paul L. ...... 269 (26.54), 297
(50.5), 328 (60.36), 361 (87.13)
Pospieszna, Paulina .... 405 (107.50)
Post, Abby .....................239 (17.25)
Post, Alison E................ 250 (22.15)
Postell, Joseph................246 (18.1)
Postnikov, Evgeny.........251 (22.22)
Pottenger, John R............260 (26.8)
Potter, Joshua D.... 242 (17.39), 293
(45.44)
Potter, Philip B. K. ........ 240 (17.28),
252 (22.26), 301 (51.20), 366
(88.28)
Potter, Rachel Augustine ..........291
(45.34)
Potthoff, Richard F. .........386 (96.8)
Poupko, Eliezer S. ...........286 (45.6)
Powell, Eleanor Neff......354 (83.31)
Powell, Emilia Justyna ..............367
(88.34)
Powell, G. Bingham...... 242 (17.39),
250 (22.19), 317 (56.46)
Powell, Jonathan M. .... 402 (107.30)
Powell, Lynda W. ... 229 (11.34), 277
(40.33), 369 (88.46)
Powers, Matthew ........... 257 (22.54)
Powers, Ryan M..... 251 (22.22), 326
(60.24), 402 (107.32)
Poyker, Michael ....... 249 (22.9), 324
(60.11)
Pozas-Loyo, Andrea ........284 (43.2)
Poznansky, Michael.......366 (88.30)
Prakash, Aseem .... 318 (56.50), 377
(92.22)
Praprotnik, Katrin ........ 414 (109.41)
Prasad, Mahendra ...........386 (96.8)
Prasad, Neeraj Vimal .....363 (88.10)
Prather, Lauren...... 239 (17.22), 252
(22.26), 319 (56.60), 347 (78.1)
Prather, Michael B. ........ 353 (83.28)
Prato, Carlo......................349 (83.6)
Pratt, Tyler ............. 366 (88.28), 377
(92.21)

Preece, Jessica Robinson.........224


(11.8)
Press, Daryl G. ..............262 (26.24)
Press-Barnathan, Galia .............290
(45.29), 330 (60.49)
Pribble, Jennifer ............311 (56.16)
Price, Chris ....................353 (83.24)
Price, J. Ricky................307 (51.50)
Price, Jessica J. .... 227 (11.23), 295
(45.55)
Price, Melanye Tarea .......285 (44.5)
Price, Richard S............. 291 (45.37)
Prillaman, Soledad Artiz............288
(45.18)
Primo, David M. ............. 343 (76.44)
Pringle, Lisa...................367 (88.35)
Pripusich, Jim M............275 (40.24)
Pritchett, Danielle N. .....297 (50.14)
Pritchett, Lant ................387 (96.11)
Proctor, Andrew Thomas ..........307
(51.50), 398 (107.9)
Proksch, Sven-Oliver.....375 (92.11)
Promisel, Michael ............385 (96.2)
Prorok, Alyssa ....... 331 (60.54), 340
(76.31), 341 (76.31)
Protevi, John ...................298 (51.4)
Prud'homme, Joseph ......270 (27.5)
Prysby, Charles L. ....... 405 (107.47)
Pu, Xiaoyu ................... 402 (107.32)
Pudal, Romain ...............257 (22.55)
Pugh, Jeffrey Daniel...... 233 (11.57)
Pula, Besnik...................275 (40.22)
Purcell, Brendan...... 360 (84.6), 417
(110.3)
Purser, Carolin Maney...............339
(76.22)
Putnam, Robert D. ...........373 (90.4)
Putnam, Tonya L. .......... 276 (40.27)

Q
Quatrini, Allison.............369 (88.44)
Quek, Kai .......................366 (88.31)
Queralt, Didac........ 225 (11.12), 410
(109.19)
Quinlan, Stephen Patrick ..........305
(51.43), 415 (109.45)
Quinn, Dennis P.............289 (45.23)
Quinn, Jason Michael....354 (83.29)
Quirk, James M..............375 (92.12)

R
Rabinowitz, Beth ........... 226 (11.21)
Rabinowitz, Laura............372 (89.7)
Rabinowitz, Or ............... 252 (22.25)
Raczka, Laurel .................322 (59.6)
Radcliff, Benjamin .........267 (26.47)
Rader, Kelly T.................337 (76.11)
Radezky, Eric .................268 (26.53)
Radin, Beryl A. ..............361 (87.13)
Radzinsky, Brian............239 (17.23)
Raess, Damian...............251 (22.22)
Rafanelli, Lucia M. ...........236 (17.4)
Raffler, Pia ............. 237 (17.13), 282
(40.60)
Rahe, Paul A............ 308 (52.3), 383
(93.1)
Rahman, Fatima Z. ...... 414 (109.40)
Rahman, K Sabeel ..........348 (81.1),
368 (88.38)
Rahman, Smita A...........281 (40.53)
Rahn, Wendy M. ...... 284 (43.1), 337
(76.10), 403 (107.38)
Rain, Cherry.....................223 (10.2)
Raisi, Alireza.................. 242 (17.38)
Rajan, V.G. Julie ............329 (60.39)
Rakner, Lise............. 321 (58.1), 411
(109.22)
Ramachandran, Rajesh .............238
(17.17)
Ramakrishnan, Karthick............245
(17.56), 247 (20.1), 322 (59.4),
414 (109.39)
Ramesh, Hari ...................298 (51.2)
Ramey, Adam............... 408 (109.10)
Ramgotra, Manjeet K.....407 (109.2)
Ramirez, Margarita Maria ..........381
(92.41), 390 (96.32)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

435

Index of Participants

Parry, Janine A. ..... 368 (88.40), 379


(92.35)
Parson, Sean ............. 222 (6.2), 318
(56.52), 417 (110.4)
Parsons, Bryan M. .........264 (26.31)
Partheym?ller, Julia...... 266 (26.42),
287 (45.12)
Pasek, Josh ........... 267 (26.45), 306
(51.46), 317 (56.49), 357
(83.44), 363 (88.8), 382 (92.48)
Pasquale, Frank...............248 (22.3)
Pastorella, Giulia ...........312 (56.21)
Patashnik, Eric M...........394 (96.52)
Pathak, Rahul ..................348 (79.1)
Patterson, Andrew C .....387 (96.11)
Patterson, James M.........332 (61.3)
Patton, Dana .................. 245 (17.53)
Patty, John W......... 269 (26.55), 272
(40.7), 374 (92.8)
Paul, Ruxandra ...... 282 (40.61), 338
(76.16), 360 (84.8)
Pauley, Matthew A. ..........270 (27.5)
Pavan, Sara....................320 (56.61)
Pavao, Nara ................... 324 (60.14)
Pavlovska-Hilaiel, Sabina
Gueorguieva ...............312 (56.19)
Pavone, Tommaso ........ 229 (11.37),
324 (60.11)
Paxton, Nathan A. ...........373 (91.3)
Paxton, Pamela............ 414 (109.38)
Payson, Julia .................368 (88.41)
Peacock, Anthony ...........257 (23.2)
Peake, Jeffrey S.............264 (26.30)
Pears, Emily................. 409 (109.14)
Pearson, Kathryn........... 263 (26.29)
Pearson, Margaret M. ... 364 (88.16),
388 (96.21)
Pearson-Merkowitz, Shanna......257
(22.57)
Pechenina, Anna ...........273 (40.11)
Pechenkina, Anna O......327 (60.29)
Peck, Justin ........... 291 (45.33), 354
(83.30)
Pecorella, Robert F. .........270 (27.5)
Pedahzur, Ami ...............302 (51.25)
Peffley, Mark .................. 317 (56.47)
Pegram, Thomas Innes ............. 253
(22.36)
Pelc, Krzysztof J........... 366 (88.30),
389 (96.25)
Pelletier, Alexandre .......266 (26.39)
Pellicer, Miquel ............ 411 (109.22)
Pemberton, Sarah X. .....256 (22.51)
Pemstein, Daniel.... 337 (76.12), 405
(107.50)
Penfold-Brown, Duncan ............288
(45.20)
Pengl, Yannick Immanuel..........376
(92.14)
Penn, Elizabeth Maggie.............269
(26.55), 374 (92.8), 386 (96.8)
Pepinsky, Thomas ........ 274 (40.15),
320 (56.60), 338 (76.17)
Perera, Isabel Maria.........346 (77.6)
Peress, Michael .............318 (56.49)
Peretti, Terri ...................291 (45.37)
Perez, Cristian .................236 (17.6)
Perez, Efren Osvaldo.... 304 (51.39),
322 (59.5), 373 (90.4), 388
(96.18), 404 (107.42)
Perez, Lauren.................339 (76.21)
Perez-Linan, Anibal ...... 274 (40.16),
358 (83.50), 405 (107.50)
Peritz, Lauren ................366 (88.28)
Perkoski, Evan....... 240 (17.28), 366
(88.30), 413 (109.34)
Perlman, Rebecca .........276 (40.26)
Perlmutter, Ted ..............256 (22.50)
Perreau, Bruno ................270 (27.3)
Perrin, Michael............... 299 (51.10)
Perry, Elizabeth J...........306 (51.49)
Persily, Nathaniel..... 258 (24.2), 343
(76.44), 395 (97.7)
Persson, Mikael .............262 (26.19)
Peruzzotti, Enrique ..........372 (89.2)
Pestritto, Ronald J...........246 (18.1)
Peterka, Timothy ...........300 (51.15)
Peters, B. Guy .................348 (82.2)
Peters, Margaret E......... 388 (96.18)

Ramirez, Ricardo ... 241 (17.37), 247


(20.1)
Ramirez, Shawn L..........239 (17.23)
Ramiro, Luis ....................283 (41.2)
Ramjug, Patrick .............267 (26.46)
Ramos, Kristen..............393 (96.49)
Ramsay, Kristopher W...............224
(11.7), 269 (26.55), 272 (40.7),
340 (76.30)
Raney, David....................257 (23.2)
Ranganath, Aditya........ 313 (56.23),
352 (83.20)
Rao, Neomi ......................283 (41.5)
Raphael, Chad .................349 (83.4)
Raquiza, Antoinette .......376 (92.17)
Rasch, Bjorn Erik ..........314 (56.32)
Rashed, Dina I. ..............299 (51.11)
Rasmussen, Magnus Bergli ......262
(26.19), 287 (45.16)
Rasmussen, Stig Hebbelstrup
Rye ............................ 409 (109.11)
Ratcliff, Shaun ...............266 (26.43)
Ratigan, Kerry................273 (40.10)
Ratliff, Lauren ........ 282 (40.59), 345
(76.57)
Raudla, Ringa ..................258 (23.4)
Rausch, John David ...... 343 (76.46)
Rausch, Mary S. ............343 (76.46)
Ravanilla, Nico......... 236 (17.8), 411
(109.23)
Ravi, Aparna ................ 401 (107.27)
Ravishankar, Anita ..........235 (15.1)
Ray, Aaron D..................344 (76.49)
Ray, John Logan ........... 263 (26.29)
Ray, Subhasish..............300 (51.14)
Raychaudhuri, Tanika.....286 (45.7),
404 (107.42)
Raymond, Christopher D. .........316
(56.43), 414 (109.41)
Raymond, Leigh S. ....... 267 (26.47),
344 (76.49)
Rayside, David.................270 (27.3)
Razo, Armando..............295 (45.57)
Read, Benjamin L. ..... 222 (6.5), 268
(26.53)
Read, James H. ...............394 (97.1)
Reardon, Lawrence C......321 (57.3)
Reardon, Robert ............262 (26.23)
Reardon, Robert J. ........ 262 (26.23)
Rebrovick, Tripp ..............374 (92.5)
Recchia, Stefano ...........378 (92.24)
Redlawsk, David P. .........248 (22.8),
305 (51.39), 330 (60.45), 336
(76.7), 398 (107.9)
Reed, Adolph L...... 328 (60.38), 363
(88.11)
Reed, Douglas S............ 341 (76.34)
Reed, Sara J. ...................233 (12.1)
Reed, William L..............340 (76.30)
Reenock, Christopher M. ..........256
(22.49), 294 (45.49), 391
(96.35)
Reese, Laura A. .................222 (4.1)
Reese, Michael J. ......... 301 (51.22),
318 (56.53), 340 (76.28), 412
(109.28)
Reeves, Andree E. .........368 (88.40)
Reeves, Andrew..... 225 (11.15), 253
(22.32)
Regan, Priscilla M...........322 (59.7),
338 (76.13)
Rehm, Philipp .......... 337 (76.9), 409
(109.13)
Reich, Rob .......................323 (60.6)
Reichert, Matthew J.......268 (26.51)
Reid, Rebecca Ann........ 291 (45.37)
Reidy, Theresa .................246 (18.6)
Reifler, Jason A. ............306 (51.45)
Reiling, Carrie................254 (22.39)
Reimann, Kim D.............318 (56.50)
Reiner, Jason Toby........397 (107.6)
Reinhardt, Mark ....... 349 (83.3), 385
(96.3)
Reinke, Raphael.............276 (40.25)
Reisenbichler, Alexander ..........411
(109.25)
Reiser, Marion................329 (60.43)
Reiter, Dan .....................378 (92.26)
Remmel, Megan Lee.... 408 (109.10)
Remmer, Karen L.......... 287 (45.15),
416 (109.50)

436

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 436

Renckens, Stefan ..........393 (96.46)


Renn, Duu ......................289 (45.25)
Renno, Lucio R...... 341 (76.33), 390
(96.32)
Rennwald, Line..............287 (45.16)
Renshon, Jonathan ...... 352 (83.23),
366 (88.31), 402 (107.32)
Rensmann, Lars Peter.....298 (51.2)
Renteln, Alison Dundes ............303
(51.34), 382 (92.51)
Renwick, Alan........ 305 (51.41), 369
(88.45)
Reny, Marie-Eve............. 306 (51.49)
Reny, Tyler Thomas...... 269 (26.57),
279 (40.44)
Repnikova, Maria.......... 325 (60.18),
339 (76.20)
Resch, Tobias ................354 (83.30)
Restad, Hilde Eliassen ..............263
(26.26)
Reuchamps, Min............305 (51.41)
Reuning, Kevin ..............287 (45.12)
Reus, Iris........................230 (11.40)
Reus-Smit, Christian .... 288 (45.21),
416 (109.52)
Reuter, Ora John ... 275 (40.22), 409
(109.12)
Rexford, Nathan.............293 (45.44)
Reyes-Housholder, Catherine ...266
(26.40)
Reyes-Reardon, Liana
Eustacia ......................290 (45.28)
Reyna, Zach Low.............374 (92.3)
Reynolds, Molly..... 252 (22.31), 297
(50.5)
Reza, Syed Shimail..........286 (45.6)
RezaeeDaryakenari,
SeyedBabak................251 (22.24)
Rezende, Flvio da Cunha ........239
(17.21)
Rhodes, Jesse H. ..........296 (45.61)
Rhodes, Samuel Callahan .........242
(17.41)
Rhodes-Purdy, Matthew ............381
(92.45)
Ricart-Huguet, Joan ..... 233 (11.56),
260 (26.11), 307 (51.52), 310
(56.10), 376 (92.14)
Riccardella, Gina Marie ............. 239
(17.23)
Rice, Doug .....................229 (11.37)
Richards, Erin E. .............285 (44.4)
Richardson, L. Song .....341 (76.35)
Richardson, Mark D..... 399 (107.13)
Richey, Greg .................. 276 (40.25)
Richey, Sean.................. 267 (26.44)
Richman, Jesse T. .........280 (40.46)
Rickard, Stephanie J. ... 276 (40.26),
310 (56.9)
Riddlesperger, James W. ..........391
(96.33)
Ridout, Travis N..... 343 (76.44), 372
(89.3)
Riedl, Matthias......... 235 (17.1), 406
(108.3)
Riedl, Rachel Beatty.......247 (20.4),
321 (58.1)
Riera, Pedro........... 380 (92.41), 389
(96.24)
Riess, Andrew .................259 (25.2)
Rigger, Shelley ........ 346 (77.5), 417
(110.1)
Rigterink, Anouk S ........ 389 (96.27)
Ringe, Nils ............. 302 (51.27), 359
(83.54)
Ringenberg, Thomas ......373 (91.3),
387 (96.16)
Riofrancos, Thea Nadja.............320
(56.63)
Rios-Figueroa, Julio .......284 (43.2),
352 (83.18), 391 (96.35)
Rippere, Paulina S........ 242 (17.41),
322 (59.3)
Ripsman, Norrin M. .......252 (22.27)
Risse, Thomas......... 348 (81.3), 366
(88.27)
Ristic, Damjan .................284 (41.6)
Ritchie, Melinda............. 263 (26.29)
Ritter, Emily Hencken................237
(17.11), 268 (26.52), 295
(45.58)

Rivera, Michael ...... 315 (56.37), 355


(83.35)
Robbins, Michael........... 238 (17.15)
Roberts, Amanda Grace............232
(11.54)
Roberts, Jason M. .........277 (40.33)
Roberts, Jordan...............284 (42.1)
Roberts, Joseph W. .........247 (21.2)
Roberts, Kenneth M. .... 226 (11.17),
351 (83.15)
Roberts, Margaret E .......234 (13.1),
361 (86.1), 387 (96.15)
Roberts, Matthew M.C. ..............226
(11.16)
Roberts, Neil....................335 (74.3)
Roberts, Tyson ........ 298 (51.7), 351
(83.16)
Roberts, William Clare ..............397
(107.5)
Robertson, David B. ...... 292 (45.39)
Robin, Corey............ 271 (40.1), 362
(88.3)
Robinson, Amanda Lea.............247
(20.4), 261 (26.14), 388 (96.18)
Robinson, James A. ...... 387 (96.13)
Robinson, Scott...............346 (77.3)
Robison, Joshua ........... 255 (22.45)
Robles, Gustavo Adolfo ............353
(83.27)
Roblin, Stephen............. 295 (45.55)
Rocco, Philip B...... 269 (26.54), 409
(109.14)
Rocha, Rene R....... 355 (83.38), 369
(88.43)
Rockhill, Gabriel ..............272 (40.2)
Rodan, Garry .................237 (17.14)
Rodden, Jonathan ... 260 (26.9), 311
(56.14)
Rodine-Hardy, Kirsten L. ...........401
(107.25)
Rodon, Toni ........... 311 (56.14), 343
(76.45), 415 (109.45)
Rodrigues Vieira, Vinicius G..... 252
(22.28)
Rodriguez Aquino, Jose............404
(107.43)
Roed, Espen Geelmuyden.........256
(22.48)
Roeder, Philip G. ... 261 (26.15), 307
(52.1)
Roessler, Philip .............376 (92.14)
Rogers, James R. ........ 403 (107.39)
Rogers, Joel E. ............ 416 (109.49)
Rogers, Jonathan David............245
(17.54)
Rogers, Melvin Lee.........223 (11.3),
329 (60.40)
Rogers, Michael T. ..........247 (21.3),
350 (83.11)
Rogers, Steven ..............304 (51.36)
Rogerson, Kenneth S. ...............256
(22.50), 281 (40.52), 370
(88.51)
Rogol, Natalie C.............354 (83.32)
Rogowski, Jon C. ........ 399 (107.17)
Rogowski, Ronald L. ... 398 (107.11)
Rohlfing, Ingo ............ 222 (6.7), 285
(44.1), 319 (56.57), 383 (92.52),
394 (96.51), 406 (107.52)
Rohrschneider, Robert ..............329
(60.45), 405 (107.46)
Rojecki, Andrew ............254 (22.40)
Romano, Michael K. ...... 241 (17.33)
Romeri-Lewis, Natalie Wright ...316
(56.40)
Romero, Vidal ................312 (56.18)
Romney, David Alexander.........350
(83.10)
Ron, James....................377 (92.22)
Roof, Tracy ....................363 (88.12)
Rooney, Bryan ............. 412 (109.28)
Roosevelt, Megan..........365 (88.25)
Roost, Laura .................. 254 (22.39)
Root, Hilton L. ............... 318 (56.53)
Rosado-Buenfil, Welmar
Eduardo ......................355 (83.35)
Rosas, Guillermo........... 293 (45.44)
Rose, Deondra...............240 (17.32)
Rose, Julie L............ 236 (17.6), 259
(26.3), 323 (60.7)
Rose, Justin.....................223 (11.3)

Rose, Roger P................282 (40.57)


Rose, Shanna ................269 (26.54)
Roseman, Ira .................398 (107.9)
Rosen, Stephen .............378 (92.26)
Rosenberg, Andrew S ... 282 (40.59)
Rosenblatt, Adam R. .....382 (92.51)
Rosenbloom, David H. ..............328
(60.33)
Rosenbluth, Frances McCall .....258
(24.2), 390 (96.29)
Rosendorff, B. Peter..... 244 (17.49),
284 (42.1)
Rosenfeld, Bryn..... 337 (76.12), 389
(96.23)
Rosenfeld, Jake .............287 (45.16)
Rosenfeld, Sam ........... 414 (109.42)
Rosensweig, Jason ........223 (11.2),
259 (26.1)
Rosenthal, Howard ........283 (40.63)
Rosenzweig, Leah R......233 (11.55)
Rosenzweig, Steven ......226 (11.20)
Rosmarin, Joshua ......... 324 (60.12)
Ross, Joseph V...... 265 (26.36), 403
(107.39)
Ross, Justine G.M. ........ 255 (22.43)
Ross, Robert E ................283 (41.1)
Rossum, Ralph A. ...........359 (84.1)
Rostboll, Christian F......397 (107.6)
Rothenberg, Lawrence S...........248
(22.7), 302 (51.28), 386 (96.8)
Rothmayr Allison, Christine......404
(107.40)
Rothschild, Amanda Joan.........294
(45.52), 306 (51.48)
Rothschild, Jacob Edward ........248
(22.8)
Rothstein, Bo......... 227 (11.22), 364
(88.17)
Rottinghaus, Brandon ............... 263
(26.29), 330 (60.46), 367
(88.36)
Rottweiler, Bettina ...........360 (84.3)
Rouhi, Mahsa.................340 (76.29)
Roundtree, Jacob ..........383 (92.55)
Roush, Carolyn E. ...........335 (74.1)
Rousseliere, Genevieve.............223
(11.2), 285 (45.3), 309 (56.1)
Rovner, Joshua ..... 262 (26.24), 271
(38.1), 313 (56.27), 366 (88.30)
Rowlands, Lauren Marie ........... 328
(60.34)
Royed, Terry J. ........ 360 (84.3), 414
(109.41)
Royo, Sebastian ..............258 (23.4)
Rozell, Mark J. .................283 (41.4)
Rozenas, Arturas.......... 244 (17.49),
274 (40.18), 347 (78.1), 405
(107.49)
Rozic, Peter .....................284 (41.6)
Rubado, Meghan E ........355 (83.36)
Rubenson, Daniel ......... 307 (51.52),
317 (56.45)
Rubenstein, Jennifer C..............323
(60.6)
Rubin, Aviad ....................257 (23.1)
Rubin, Lawrence P........ 228 (11.29),
256 (22.52)
Rubin, Michael A. .......... 351 (83.13)
Rubinson, Eyal ..............239 (17.22)
Ruble, Blair A. ...................222 (4.1)
Rudalevige, Andrew C...............375
(92.9), 403 (107.37)
Rudolph, Christopher....251 (22.23)
Rudolph, Thomas J. ........384 (94.2)
Rudra, Nita............. 351 (83.14), 411
(109.26)
Rueda, David ........... 337 (76.9), 376
(92.18)
Rueda, Miguel R. ... 250 (22.18), 274
(40.17)
Ruediger, Marco Aurelio ........... 390
(96.32)
Ruggeri, Andrea .... 240 (17.29), 353
(83.24)
Ruibal, Alba M. ..............342 (76.40)
Ruiz-Guarin, Nelson
Alejandro ....................381 (92.41)
Runfola, Daniel ................374 (92.7)
Runhardt, Rosa Willemijn .........416
(109.53)

S
Saalfeld, Thomas........... 240 (17.30)
Saavedra Cisneros, Angel.........265
(26.38), 305 (51.39), 386 (96.9)
Sabate, Oriol.................. 301 (51.18)
Sabl, Andrew ......... 245 (17.57), 386
(96.6)
Sacramone-Lutz, Gabriella........371
(88.55)
Sadanandan, Anoop...... 261 (26.14)
Sadin, Meredith L. .........303 (51.30)
Sadiq, Kamal ........... 223 (10.2), 295
(45.59), 338 (76.15), 371
(88.57)
Saffer, Adam J. ..............344 (76.48)
Saffon, Maria Paula ..... 399 (107.12)
Sagar, Rahul ....................336 (76.3)
Sagarzazu, Inaki ............341 (76.33)
Sager, Fritz.....................315 (56.38)
Saglam, Gulcan .............327 (60.28)
SAGNIER, PIERRE-YVES ..........354
(83.33)
Saideman, Stephen M. ..............327
(60.28), 377 (92.24)
Saiegh, Sebastian M........363 (88.9)
Sainz, Jaime ..................353 (83.27)
Sakstrup, Casper........... 340 (76.30)
Sakuwa, Kentaro ...........327 (60.30)
Sala, Gemma ......... 315 (56.36), 389
(96.24)
Salamone, Michael ........355 (83.34)
Salcedo Monroy, Dario Jos .....387
(96.11)
Saleh, Layla ...................367 (88.32)
Saliba, Ilyas ...................319 (56.54)
Salkever, Stephen G...... 407 (108.6,
109.1)
Salter, Mark B. ............... 297 (50.14)
Samford, Steven ............312 (56.18)
Sampaio, Anna ..............297 (50.14)
Samuels, David J.......... 287 (45.15),
320 (56.60), 356 (83.42)
San-Akca, Belgin ... 290 (45.29), 327
(60.28)
Sanaei, Ali......................340 (76.28)
Sanbonmatsu, Kira........ 265 (26.36)
Sances, Michael.............343 (76.45)
Sanchez, Gabriel .............373 (91.2)
Sanchez, Thania .... 268 (26.52), 416
(109.52)
Sanchez de la Sierra, Raul........235
(15.1), 410 (109.16)
Sanchez Urribarri, Raul
Alberto ..... 229 (11.37), 284 (43.2),
379 (92.33)
Sanchez-Talanquer, Mariano .....300
(51.14)
Sanchez-Youngman,
Shannon...................... 358 (83.52)
Sanders, Arthur ..... 387 (96.16), 415
(109.46)
Sanders, Bailey .............265 (26.37)

Sanders, Heywood ........315 (56.38)


Sanders, Lynn M..............383 (93.3)
Sandholtz, Wayne.......... 253 (22.36)
Sandoz, Ellis....................372 (89.5)
Sands, Melissa ...... 225 (11.15), 260
(26.9), 293 (45.46)
Sanger, Catherine......... 301 (51.22),
313 (56.29)
Sanhueza Petrarca,
Constanza .....................283 (41.2)
Sanovich, Sergey ..........288 (45.20)
Santoro, Lauren Marie...............265
(26.37)
Santos, Gustavo A. .......417 (110.3)
Santoso, Lie Philip ...... 415 (109.44)
Santuah, Niagia ...............383 (93.3)
Santucci, Jack ...............266 (26.41)
Sapiro, Virginia................235 (15.3)
Sarbahi, Anoop K. ........ 238 (17.17),
276 (40.28)
Sarbaugh-Thompson,
Marjorie............... 304 (51.36), 391
(96.36)
Sardell, Alice .................345 (76.56)
Sardo, Michael Christopher ......397
(107.3)
Sari, Dora Katalin ..........251 (22.22)
Sarigil, Zeki.................... 369 (88.44)
Sartori, Anne E. ............. 326 (60.26)
Sasaki, Fumiko ..............317 (56.48)
Sasso, James ................303 (51.32)
Sasmaz, Aytug ....... 233 (11.55), 268
(26.51)
Satkunanandan, Shalini
Pradeepa............... 385 (96.4), 397
(107.3)
Saunders, Elizabeth Nathan......276
(40.29), 301 (51.20), 347 (78.1)
Saunders, Kyle L. ......... 267 (26.44),
392 (96.44)
Saunders-Hastings, Emma........245
(17.57), 323 (60.6)
Savel, Megan ...................224 (11.8)
Savic, Bojan...................357 (83.47)
Savun, Burcu ......... 338 (76.18), 378
(92.28)
Saward, Michael ............398 (107.7)
Sawatzky, Nathan ............384 (93.7)
Saxonhouse, Arlene W. .............315
(56.39), 384 (93.7)
Saylor, Ryan .......... 295 (45.54), 337
(76.10), 383 (92.52)
Scacco, Alexandra.........338 (76.18)
Scacco, Joshua M. ............221 (3.8)
Scarrow, Susan ....... 247 (20.2), 317
(56.44), 360 (84.3)
Scerri, Andy...................232 (11.50)
Schaap, Andrew ...... 272 (40.4), 336
(76.2), 349 (83.2)
Schaefer, David L. ...........346 (77.2)
Schaefer, Donald D.A. ............... 281
(40.53), 294 (45.49), 318
(56.50), 409 (109.14)
Schaefer, Robert M....... 330 (60.49),
417 (110.2)
Schaffer, Frederic C. .... 297 (50.14),
345 (76.55)
Schaffer, Joseph B. .......245 (17.54)
Schaffer, Lena M............228 (11.31)
Schaffner, Brian F. ..........233 (12.3),
265 (26.37), 296 (45.61)
Scheinerman, Naomi .......285 (45.4)
Schenk, Caress Rene .... 300 (51.17)
Scheppele, Kim Lane ... 238 (17.20),
254 (22.37)
Scherer, Matthew..... 309 (56.4), 385
(96.5)
Scherlen, Renee Gannon ..........281
(40.50)
Scheve, Kenneth F..........299 (51.8),
365 (88.25)
Schibber, Constanza F...............345
(76.57), 399 (107.13)
Schickler, Eric........ 280 (40.46), 369
(88.47)
Schiff, Eleanor ...............277 (40.34)
Schilde, Kaija E. ............301 (51.21)
Schildkraut, Deborah......247 (20.1),
373 (90.4)
Schilling, Emily...... 225 (11.15), 315
(56.37)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 437

Schimmelfennig, Frank .............344


(76.51)
Schipani, Andres ......... 400 (107.18)
Schiumerini, Luis ......... 323 (60.10),
356 (83.42)
Schlager, Edella C. ...... 413 (109.36)
Schleiter, Petra ...... 250 (22.19), 370
(88.48)
Schlozman, Daniel.........343 (76.43)
Schlozman, Kay Lehman ..........259
(25.1), 283 (40.63), 330 (60.46)
Schmidt, Ronald J .........297 (50.14)
Schmidt, Vivien A. ........ 230 (11.41),
320 (56.63), 400 (107.23)
Schmidt Passos, Eduardo.........417
(110.2)
Schmitt, Carina...... 325 (60.17), 363
(88.12)
Schmitt, Gary James .......360 (84.4)
Schmitt-Beck, Rudiger ..............405
(107.46)
Schmotz, Alexander ..... 319 (56.54),
416 (109.51)
Schneebacher, Jakob ................398
(107.11)
Schneer, Benjamin ....... 243 (17.45),
277 (40.35), 354 (83.30)
Schneider, Anne L. ...... 413 (109.36)
Schneider, Ben Ross.....388 (96.21)
Schneider, Carsten Q. ......222 (6.7),
383 (92.52)
Schneider, Christina J. ..............411
(109.26)
Schneider, Gerald........ 403 (107.35)
Schneider, Jacquelyn .....271 (38.1),
402 (107.31)
Schneider, Mark Allan ... 339 (76.19)
Schneider, Saundra K. ..............253
(22.34), 278 (40.38), 341
(76.34), 379 (92.35)
Schnell, Frauke..............315 (56.35)
Schnose, Viktoryia ....... 242 (17.40),
250 (22.20), 359 (83.56)
Scholl, Brian .................. 354 (83.31)
Schonhardt-Bailey, Cheryl M. ...227
(11.26)
Schoolman, Morton .........309 (56.3)
Schorpp, Susanne.........278 (40.36)
Schotten, C. Heike.........281 (40.54)
Schram, Sanford F..... 222 (9.1), 292
(45.39)
Schrank, Andrew ........... 387 (96.14)
Schraufnagel, Scot ....... 327 (60.31),
342 (76.38)
Schroeder, Theresa ...... 228 (11.32),
249 (22.12)
Schub, Robert................366 (88.30)
Schubiger, Livia Isabella ...........252
(22.30)
Schuessler, John.......... 262 (26.23),
378 (92.26)
Schulenberg, Shawn Richard ...319
(56.58)
Schuler, Paul J. ............. 287 (45.15)
Schulze-Cleven, Tobias ............. 230
(11.40), 297 (49.2), 363 (88.12),
401 (107.24), 416 (109.49)
Schupmann, Benjamin A. .........335
(76.1)
Schutte, Sebastian ....... 351 (83.13),
402 (107.34)
Schwam-Baird, Michael............. 245
(17.54)
Schwartz, Cassilde ........245 (17.54)
Schwartz, Elizabeth .......281 (40.51)
Schwartz, Herman Mark ............326
(60.23)
Schwartz, Jonathan P................232
(11.50)
Schwartz, Joseph M. .......348 (80.1)
Schwartz-Shea, Peregrine.........222
(6.8), 297 (50.14), 338 (76.15),
396 (106.1)
Schwartzberg, Melissa A...........260
(26.7), 286 (45.5)
Schwarz, Julia .................384 (95.2)
Schwarz, Susanne .........331 (60.57)
Schwarze, Michelle A. ....259 (26.1),
309 (56.1)
Schwedler, Jillian M. .....318 (56.54)

Schwindt-Bayer, Leslie A. .........254


(22.42), 279 (40.41)
Sclar, Jason Aries ......... 283 (40.63)
Scobell, Andrew Charles...........289
(45.27)
Scoggins, Suzanne E. ... 325 (60.18)
Scola, Becki...................292 (45.39)
Scott, Jamil Shatema .... 241 (17.36)
Scott, John T....................309 (56.1)
Scribner, Druscilla L..... 391 (96.35),
404 (107.40)
Scudder, Molly.................272 (40.5)
Scully, Mark A................327 (60.32)
Searing, Donald D. ..........386 (96.9)
Searles, Kathleen ......... 357 (83.45),
370 (88.50)
Seat, Karen K...................386 (96.7)
Seawright, Jason....... 221 (2.2), 345
(76.55)
Seay, Laura .............. 285 (44.3), 371
(88.58)
Sebk, Mikls ................327 (60.31)
Sebold, Karen Denice....280 (40.46)
Sechser, Todd S. ........... 352 (83.23)
Seddone, Antonella .......312 (56.21)
Seeberg, Merete Bech ...............331
(60.52), 416 (109.50)
Seery, John E. .................298 (51.4)
Segal, Jeffrey A. ..............235 (16.1)
Segal Diascro, Jennifer.....222 (6.9)
Segura, Gary M.............. 392 (96.42)
Seib, Drew .....................345 (76.57)
Seim, Brigitte ......... 324 (60.14), 337
(76.12), 371 (88.55)
Sekhon, Jasjeet Singh ..............269
(26.56)
Seki, Katsunori ..............381 (92.45)
Selden, Zachary A. ........ 252 (22.28)
Self, Darin ......................274 (40.16)
Seligson, Mitchell A. .... 274 (40.16),
405 (107.50)
Selin, Jennifer................354 (83.32)
Selinger, Jeff................ 409 (109.14)
Selinger, William..............223 (11.4)
Sellers, Jefferey M........ 278 (40.40),
416 (109.49)
Selman, Deniz........ 316 (56.43), 349
(83.6)
Selway, Joel Sawat........ 266 (26.39)
Semat, Joshua...............277 (40.34)
Semet, Amy ............. 286 (45.9), 303
(51.31)
Semetko, Holli A............ 317 (56.48)
Sempertegui, Andrea
Elizabeth .......................258 (23.5)
Sen, Kunal ............. 261 (26.17), 387
(96.11)
Sen, Paromita ................342 (76.40)
Sen, Rumela ..................252 (22.29)
Sentementes, Amy ........280 (40.50)
Settle, Jaime E......... 273 (40.8), 330
(60.47), 349 (83.7)
Setzer, Frederick Harris.............328
(60.35)
Sexton, Renard J........... 233 (11.56)
Seybert, Lucia A. ... 275 (40.23), 288
(45.21)
Seybolt, Taylor B. .......... 306 (51.48)
Sezgin, Yuksel ...............328 (60.35)
Shadlen, Kenneth ..........388 (96.17)
Shadmehr, Mehdi..... 323 (60.8), 362
(88.7)
Shafer, Byron E. .......... 414 (109.42)
Shafer, Matthew T. C...... 398 (107.7)
Shaffer, Robert ...... 237 (17.10), 363
(88.13)
Shafranek, Richard M......248 (22.8)
Shah, Aqil ......................232 (11.51)
Shah, Dhavan Vinod........320 (57.1)
Shahshahani, Sepehr .....272 (40.7),
304 (51.36)
Shain, Barry Alan ..........407 (108.5)
Shair-Rosenfield, Sarah ............341
(76.33)
Shalaby, Marwa...... 238 (17.15), 314
(56.32)
Shambaugh, George E. .............375
(92.12)
Shami, Mahvish ..... 224 (11.10), 299
(51.11), 350 (83.8)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

437

Index of Participants

Ruparelia, Sanjay ......... 275 (40.21),


364 (88.18)
Rury, Abigail A ..............241 (17.33)
Rusch, Lara ...................391 (96.37)
Rush, Mark E. ................291 (45.37)
Rushing, Sara L....... 235 (17.3), 386
(96.7)
Russell, Carrie Archie ...354 (83.32)
Russett, Bruce M.......... 366 (88.29),
378 (92.27)
Russon-Gilman, Hollie ..............368
(88.38)
Rustad, Siri Aas........... 398 (107.11)
Rutherford, Amanda N. ............. 316
(56.41)
Rutherford, James H. ......321 (57.4)
Rutland, Peter.......... 307 (52.1), 395
(97.6)
Rutledge, Jennifer .........363 (88.12)
Ryan, John Barry .........278 (40.38),
405 (107.45)
Ryan, Josh.....................315 (56.37)
Ryan, Robert C. ............. 367 (88.37)
Ryan, Timothy J. ..... 362 (88.8), 386
(96.9), 404 (107.45)
Ryu, Jeheung.................389 (96.25)

Shamir, Michal ....... 317 (56.47), 405


(107.46)
Shanks, Torrey ................349 (83.3)
Shanks-Booth, Delphia..............253
(22.34)
Shanley, Mary L. (Molly)............330
(60.50)
Shannon, Eric William...............291
(45.35)
Shapiro, Aaron B...........369 (88.46)
Shapiro, Ian .....................286 (45.5)
Shapiro, Kam ...................309 (56.4)
Shapiro, Matthew A. ........395 (97.3)
Shapiro, Michael J...........374 (92.4)
Sharpe, Michael Orlando...........238
(17.19), 371 (88.56)
Sharpless, Ike ..................374 (92.3)
Shaver, Andrew C.... 286 (45.7), 353
(83.24)
Shaw, Todd C.................293 (45.46)
Shay, Cammy...................285 (44.4)
Shea, Patrick E. ..... 225 (11.11), 251
(22.21), 301 (51.21)
Shea, Sarah .....................372 (89.5)
Sheafer, Tamir................357 (83.45)
Sheahan, Luke Charles ............. 395
(97.4)
Sheen, Greg Chih-Hsin ............. 340
(76.27)
Sheffer, Lior ...................371 (88.55)
Shehaj, Albana ...... 275 (40.22), 312
(56.19)
Sheingate, Adam ........... 286 (45.10)
Shelef, Nadav G...............257 (23.1)
Sheline, Annelle Rodriguez.......406
(107.53)
Shell, Susan.....................362 (88.1)
Shen-Bayh, Fiona .... 375 (92.9), 391
(96.35)
Sheppard, Jill.................320 (56.61)
Sherrill, Kenneth............307 (51.50)
Shesterinina, Anastasia ............302
(51.24)
Shevchenko, Alexei..... 402 (107.32)
Shi, Weiyi..... 234 (13.1), 289 (45.24)
Shiau, Ellen.................... 278 (40.40)
Shih, Victor C. ......... 234 (13.1), 306
(51.49)
Shin, Adrian J.......... 310 (56.9), 365
(88.25), 401 (107.26)
Shin, Geiguen ................315 (56.37)
Shin, Ki-Young...............279 (40.42)
Shin, Mi Jeong...............253 (22.34)
Shineman, Victoria Anne ..........255
(22.45), 269 (26.56), 345
(76.58)
Shino, Enrijeta ...............280 (40.48)
Shipan, Charles R......... 304 (51.35),
328 (60.36)
Shiraito, Yuki ......... 310 (56.11), 399
(107.14)
Shoag, Daniel ................379 (92.31)
Shockley, Bethany.........238 (17.15)
Shockley, Gordon E.........283 (41.3)
Shogan, Colleen J. ........ 252 (22.31)
Shor, Boris............. 283 (40.63), 356
(83.41), 367 (88.35)
Shortland, Neil David ................403
(107.34)
Shortle, Allyson....... 337 (76.8), 386
(96.10)
Shoub, Kelsey ....... 267 (26.45), 280
(40.50)
Showden, Carisa R........232 (11.52)
Shugart, Matthew S. ......325 (60.21)
Shulman, George M........235 (17.3),
385 (96.3)
Shultziner, Doron...........376 (92.16)
Shum, Matthew..............225 (11.13)
Shushan, Debra .............263 (26.26)
Shvetsova, Olga V. ........ 316 (56.44)
Siavelis, Peter M............ 242 (17.39)
Siavoshi, Sussan......... 414 (109.40)
Siddiki, Saba.................. 264 (26.31)
Sides, John M........ 229 (11.34), 258
(24.1), 285 (44.3)
Sidhu, Dario...................311 (56.17)
Sidman, Andrew H.........229 (11.34)
Sidney, Mara ......................222 (4.1)
Siedschlag, Alexander ..............277
(40.31)

438

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 438

Siegel, Alexandra Arons ........... 232


(11.49)
Sierra, Christine Marie ..............279
(40.43)
Sierra, Jazmin................289 (45.24)
Sievert, Joel...................277 (40.33)
SIGDEL, ANIL ................377 (92.24)
Sigman, Rachel ....... 321 (58.1), 358
(83.50)
Signe, Landry ................345 (76.59)
Signorino, Curtis S....... 225 (11.13),
269 (26.55)
Sikk, Allan......................255 (22.44)
Sikkink, Kathryn .... 257 (22.54), 320
(56.63), 373 (90.2)
Sil, Rudra .......................295 (45.56)
Silber Mohamed, Heather..........241
(17.36), 279 (40.44), 304
(51.38)
Silove, Nina.................... 340 (76.29)
Silva, Andrea ............... 404 (107.42)
Silva, Guilherme A.........260 (26.12)
Silver, Daniel.................. 278 (40.40)
Silvera, Ginger....... 229 (11.36), 355
(83.35)
Silverman, Daniel ..........290 (45.31)
Sima-Eichler, Peter ........389 (96.25)
Simmons, Beth A. ........ 262 (26.22),
284 (42.1), 352 (83.22)
Simmons, Erica S. .........388 (96.18)
Simmons, Randy T. .......267 (26.47)
Simon, Joshua.................336 (76.3)
Simon, Miranda Soledad ...........245
(17.54)
Simon, Pablo .................389 (96.24)
Simonovits, Gabor........ 243 (17.45),
286 (45.9)
Simons, Jon.....................309 (56.4)
Simpser, Alberto..............236 (17.8)
Simpson, Andrea Y..........285 (44.4)
Simpson, Hannah ............375 (92.9)
Simpson, James Turner ............227
(11.27)
Simpson, Sidney .............322 (60.1)
Sin, Gisela ............... 322 (59.5), 341
(76.33), 354 (83.30), 390
(96.32)
Sinclair-Chapman, Valeria.........234
(12.4), 285 (44.5), 413 (109.35)
Singer, Abraham A. ........362 (88.6),
398 (107.7)
Singh, Ila...................... 400 (107.20)
Singh, J.P............... 281 (40.52), 401
(107.25)
Singh, Lisa................... 402 (107.33)
Singh, Prerna......... 233 (11.55), 238
(17.17), 300 (51.13), 338
(76.15)
Sinha, Aseema....... 261 (26.16), 388
(96.21)
Sinmazdemir, Tolga .......302 (51.26)
Sinnott, Richard.............242 (17.42)
Sinpeng, Aim .................371 (88.53)
Sinyai, Clayton ...... 328 (60.34), 346
(77.6)
Sipole, Savannah........... 278 (40.35)
Sippl, Kristin.................. 320 (56.63)
Sircar, Althea Rani...........323 (60.5)
Sircar, Neelanjan ... 255 (22.44), 339
(76.19)
Sirgo, Henry B. ...... 367 (88.35), 384
(93.6)
Sirin, Cigdem V................374 (92.6)
Siroky, David S. ............. 314 (56.29)
Sisk, William ....................283 (41.3)
Siu, Alice..........................383 (93.3)
Sjoberg, Laura E.... 254 (22.39), 281
(40.54), 377 (92.23)
Skaaning, Svend-Erik .......221 (3.1),
358 (83.50)
Skage, Ingvild Aagedal ...321 (58.1)
Skelley, Geoffrey Vaden ............283
(41.4)
Skidmore, Max J..............335 (75.2)
Skidmore-Hess, Daniel....349 (83.1)
Skinner, Daniel ..............345 (76.56)
Skinner, Kiron Kanina ...327 (60.29)
Skinner, Richard McGrath .........231
(11.44), 283 (41.4), 358 (83.54),
369 (88.46), 414 (109.43)
Skitka, Linda J...............367 (88.32)

Skocpol, Theda...... 233 (11.58), 259


(25.1), 283 (40.63), 321 (59.1)
Skogstad, Grace .... 341 (76.37), 348
(82.2)
Skorge, Oyvind..............293 (45.47)
Skowronek, Stephen .....379 (92.30)
Slapin, Jonathan B. ...... 314 (56.32),
403 (107.36)
Slaski, Alexander...........352 (83.20)
Slater, Dan ............. 306 (51.49), 364
(88.19)
Slavin, Kevin....................375 (92.8)
Slobodchikoff, Michael O. .........347
(77.8), 381 (92.45)
Slothuus, Rune...... 242 (17.41), 404
(107.45)
Slough, Tara L ....... 365 (88.25), 398
(107.8)
Smallpage, Steven Michael .......267
(26.44)
Smidt, Corwin D. ........... 231 (11.46)
Smidt, Hannah ....... 240 (17.29), 277
(40.32)
Smith, Adam ....................374 (92.5)
Smith, Amy Erica Erica .............345
(76.57), 381 (92.45)
Smith, Benjamin ............351 (83.17)
Smith, Bob .....................231 (11.48)
Smith, Bradley C .............224 (11.7)
Smith, Candis Watts.......335 (74.3),
369 (88.43), 388 (96.18)
Smith, Charles ...............319 (56.58)
Smith, Charles E............229 (11.37)
Smith, Craig Damian .....295 (45.59)
Smith, Daniel A...... 280 (40.48), 321
(59.1), 391 (96.36)
Smith, Daniel M. ...... 246 (18.6), 249
(22.13), 311 (56.14), 356
(83.40)
Smith, Douglas ................395 (97.7)
Smith, Eric R. A. N. .......306 (51.46)
Smith, Gavin .................. 406 (108.2)
Smith, Graham............... 305 (51.41)
Smith, Heidi Jane M. .....241 (17.35)
Smith, James M. ................221 (2.7)
Smith, Jeffrey Ryan.........384 (93.6)
Smith, Kelly Branham ...278 (40.35)
Smith, Kevin B.................350 (83.7)
Smith, Kimberly K. ..........223 (11.3)
Smith, Lindsey............... 342 (76.41)
Smith, Michelle ................259 (26.4)
Smith, Nicholas Rush....249 (22.14)
Smith, Nicholas Timothy ...........406
(107.51)
Smith, Rogers M........... 278 (40.37),
297 (49.2), 346 (77.1)
Smith, Steven B...............362 (88.1)
Smith, Steven Rathgeb ............. 321
(59.2), 373 (90.1), 384 (95.3)
Smith, Steven S. ............354 (83.30)
Smith, Todd Graham .....251 (22.24)
Smith, Troy E. ..................270 (27.4)
Smooth, Wendy G. ........ 279 (40.43)
Smucker, Sierra .............328 (60.37)
Snegovaya, Maria ..........325 (60.20)
Snell, R.J..........................296 (46.3)
Snell, Steven Andrew .... 254 (22.41)
Snidal, Duncan ...... 253 (22.36), 262
(26.22), 377 (92.21)
Snider, J.H. ........................222 (6.1)
Snider, Keren LG ........... 371 (88.57)
Sniderman, Paul M. .......245 (17.55)
Snyder, Jack L....... 352 (83.23), 378
(92.26)
Snyder, Richard O. ........ 341 (76.37)
Sobel, Richard ...............366 (88.32)
Sobolev, Anton ..............288 (45.20)
Sobolewska, Maria ....... 245 (17.55),
283 (41.2)
Soderborg, Seth Nathan............258
(23.6)
Soedirgo, Jessica............321 (57.5)
Soenderskov, Kim
Mannemar ............. 260 (26.9), 303
(51.30)
Sohn, Yunkyu ................225 (11.14)
Soifer, Hillel David ........ 353 (83.27),
400 (107.17)
Sokhey, Anand Edward .............345
(76.57)
Sokoloff, William W. ......243 (17.47)

Sokolski, Henry .............313 (56.27)


Solrzano, Rafael Ramirez........357
(83.47)
Solevid, Maria ................279 (40.41)
Solingen, Etel L. ............ 251 (22.25)
Solinger, Dorothy J. ...... 365 (88.23)
Solomon-Schwartz, Chana
M. ................................260 (26.12)
Solstad, Sondre............. 310 (56.10)
Solt, Frederick ...............249 (22.11)
Somer-Topcu, Zeynep ...280 (40.47)
Sommerer, Thomas .........284 (42.1)
Son, Byunghwan ... 262 (26.21), 395
(97.3)
Son, Kyong-Min...............362 (88.4)
Song, Hyunjin ................345 (76.57)
Song, Sarah ...................408 (109.7)
Song, Wonjun .............. 416 (109.51)
Soni, Suparna .............. 406 (107.51)
Sood, Gaurav......... 267 (26.45), 363
(88.13), 416 (109.48)
SoRelle, Mallory..... 253 (22.34), 337
(76.10), 381 (92.42)
Soroka, George .............312 (56.19)
Soroka, Stuart N. ... 317 (56.49), 375
(92.11)
Southern, Rosalynd Victoria .....324
(60.12)
Southwick, Natalie....... 403 (107.35)
Sderstrm, Johanna.... 268 (26.53)
Spada, Paolo .................305 (51.41)
Spaiser, Viktoria ............288 (45.20)
Spalding, Matthew...........320 (57.2)
Spaniel, William ...............224 (11.7)
Sparacino, Anthony Paul ..........343
(76.43)
Sparks, Aaron C .... 268 (26.48), 306
(51.46)
Sparks, Holloway..... 285 (45.2), 336
(76.2), 349 (83.2)
Sparrow, Bartholomew H. .........237
(17.12), 353 (83.26)
Spector, Regine A.......... 325 (60.19)
Spektorowski, Alberto...............370
(88.52)
Spence, Lester Kenyatta ........... 328
(60.38), 363 (88.11)
Spengeman, Sarah Elizabeth ....232
(11.54), 248 (22.5), 273 (40.13),
371 (88.57)
Sperling, Valerie ............365 (88.22)
Spicer, Zachary..............342 (76.39)
Spilker, Gabriele S.........228 (11.31)
Spinner-Halev, Jeff ..........236 (17.6)
Spirling, Arthur..............375 (92.11)
Spitzer, Robert J............354 (83.32)
Spoon, Jae-Jae...... 381 (92.43), 392
(96.43)
Sprinkle, Robert Hunt......321 (57.4)
Squintani, Francesco .... 398 (107.8)
Srigley, Ron ... 246 (18.5), 258 (23.3)
St. Marie, Joseph J........353 (83.26)
Staats, Joseph L........... 229 (11.37),
339 (76.23)
Stadelmann-Steffen, Isabelle ....256
(22.49)
Stafford, Eoghan ........... 256 (22.48)
Stahl, William.................281 (40.53)
Stanczyk, Lucas ..............236 (17.6)
Staniland, Paul ...... 250 (22.16), 275
(40.21), 313 (56.28), 393
(96.49), 413 (109.34)
Stankovic, Tatjana .........263 (26.28)
Stanley, Stephanie......... 392 (96.41)
Stanton, Jessica ............367 (88.34)
Stanton, Samuel S.........353 (83.26)
Starr, Harvey.................. 378 (92.28)
Stasavage, David.......... 251 (22.21),
299 (51.8), 387 (96.13), 410
(109.19)
Staszak, Sarah...............230 (11.38)
Staton, Jeffrey ....... 278 (40.36), 344
(76.52), 391 (96.35), 413
(109.37)
Staudinger, Alison K. ......235 (17.2)
Stavro, Elaine ..................272 (40.2)
Stears, Marc.....................286 (45.5)
Stecula, Dominik Andrzej..........330
(60.47)
Steele, Carie ................ 405 (107.50)

Strickler, Jeremy............363 (88.12)


Stroh, Alexander..............284 (43.2)
Strolovitch, Dara Z. ........235 (16.1),
259 (25.3), 307 (51.50), 335
(75.1), 403 (107.38)
Strom, Elizabeth Ann ........222 (4.1)
Strom, Kaare Wallace .... 240 (17.30)
Strong, Tracy ........... 384 (94.1), 407
(109.3)
Stroschein, Sherrill........ 300 (51.14)
Strother, Logan..............303 (51.33)
Stroud, Dan......................335 (75.2)
Stroup, Sarah S. ............377 (92.22)
Struever, Georg .............318 (56.54)
Studlar, Donley T. ..........307 (51.51)
Stukal, Denis .................288 (45.20)
Su, Fubing .....................388 (96.22)
Suarez, Sandra L. .......... 324 (60.11)
Subotic, Jelena...... 394 (96.50), 416
(109.52)
Subramanian, Devika ....267 (26.46)
Sudduth, Jun Koga ..... 402 (107.30)
Sudulich, Laura .............370 (88.49)
Sugiyama, Natasha Borges.......275
(40.20), 311 (56.16)
Suhay, Elizabeth .... 394 (96.52), 398
(107.9)
Suiter, Jane............ 266 (26.41), 305
(51.41)
Sulc, Julie L.....................322 (59.7)
Sullivan, Denis J..............360 (84.5)
Sullivan, Eileen P ........ 404 (107.43)
Sullivan, Mary Elizabeth............308
(52.6)
Sullivan, Terry..................308 (54.3)
Sum, Paul E. ....................360 (84.8)
Summers, Mary .............292 (45.39)
Sun, Fanglu ................. 411 (109.27)
Sun, Inkyoung ...............256 (22.49)
Sun, Jessica ..................314 (56.31)
Sun, Taiyi ... 226 (11.19), 275 (40.20)
Sun, Xin .........................261 (26.18)
Super, Elizabeth....... 235 (16.1), 259
(25.2)
Superti, Chiara....... 273 (40.12), 287
(45.15), 399 (107.14)
Surak, Sarah .......... 232 (11.50), 417
(110.4)
Suryanarayan, Pavithra .............387
(96.13)
Sussman, Glen ..............292 (45.40)
Suzuki, Kohei.................227 (11.24)
Svara, James H................384 (95.3)
Svolik, Milan .......... 244 (17.49), 274
(40.18), 331 (60.55)
Swaine, Lucas ......... 260 (26.7), 309
(56.6)
Swamy, Arun R. ........... 399 (107.17)
Swanson, Jeffrey Vincent .........233
(12.1), 292 (45.39)
Swanstrom, Todd...........379 (92.36)
Swedlow, Brendon.........393 (96.44)
Swedlund, Haley J........ 295 (45.60),
398 (107.11)
Sweet, Rachel ........ 250 (22.16), 312
(56.22)
Sweeten, Matthew James..........302
(51.28), 399 (107.13)
Sweitzer, Matthew.......... 267 (26.45)
Swers, Michele L. ..........252 (22.31)
Switzer, David ........ 240 (17.31), 267
(26.47)
Sy-Sahande, Sanata ......332 (60.58)
Sylvan, David......... 225 (11.14), 390
(96.29)
Sylvester, Steven M....... 381 (92.42)
Syse, Henrik ............ 258 (23.3), 269
(27.2)
Syunyaev, Georgiy ........345 (76.58)
Szakonyi, David ........... 409 (109.12)
Szentkirlyi, Lev ............299 (51.10)
Szwarcberg Daby, Mariela.........274
(40.17)
Szymanski, Ann-Marie E. ..........375
(92.10)

T
Tabaar, Mohammad
Ayatollahi .................... 364 (88.19)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 439

Tabares, Tressa E. ...........285 (44.4)


Tacoma, Thomas .............283 (41.1)
Tadlock, Barry L. ........... 331 (60.56)
Tagma, Halit M....... 250 (22.17), 289
(45.22)
Tahk, Alexander M.........225 (11.14)
Tait, Victoria Elizabeth...............230
(11.40), 254 (22.39)
Tajima, Yuhki ......... 250 (22.16), 265
(26.39)
Takagi, Yuki ...................232 (11.51)
Takahashi, Yuriko ..........261 (26.18)
Taliaferro, Jeffrey W. .....252 (22.27)
Taliaferro, Karen ............329 (60.41)
Tallberg, Jonas ...... 262 (26.22), 284
(42.1)
Talley, Anna ................. 404 (107.41)
Tama, Jordan ......... 264 (26.30), 390
(96.29)
Tamas, Bernard .............242 (17.40)
Tampio, Nicholas.............322 (60.3)
Tan, Bann Seng ............. 406 (108.2)
Tan, Yeling .....................389 (96.25)
Tanash, Rima .................267 (26.46)
Tanasoca, Ana .................248 (22.5)
Tang, Min .........................395 (97.2)
Tang, Phoebe Mengxiao............411
(109.24)
Tans, Ryan .......................258 (23.6)
Tansey, Oisin ......... 319 (56.54), 416
(109.51)
Tao, Jing ...................... 412 (109.27)
Tao, Ran.........................388 (96.22)
Tao, Yu ...........................274 (40.19)
Taraktas, Basak .............295 (45.57)
Tarnopolsky, Christina Helen ....247
(22.1)
Tarrow, Sidney............... 341 (76.37)
Tatarczyk, Dawid ...........394 (96.51)
Tatum, Dillon..................244 (17.48)
Tavares, Antonio F...........258 (23.4)
Tavits, Margit ......... 280 (40.47), 359
(83.56), 370 (88.48)
Taylor, James Benjamin ............241
(17.37)
Taylor, Jami K................331 (60.56)
Taylor, Kirstine S. ............260 (26.8)
Taylor, Liza.....................408 (109.5)
Taylor, Natalie ........ 294 (45.51), 393
(96.48)
Taylor, Timothy W......... 231 (11.45),
312 (56.23)
Taylor, Whitney ..............303 (51.33)
Taylor, Zack ...................278 (40.40)
Taylor-Robinson, Michelle M..... 266
(26.40), 274 (40.16)
Tchintian, Carolina ........293 (45.47)
Tedin, Kent L. ................293 (45.48)
Teele, Dawn L. ......... 236 (17.9), 237
(17.9), 293 (45.47), 311 (56.14)
Teets, Jessica C. ... 274 (40.15), 365
(88.23)
Teitel, Ruti G. ......... 345 (76.54), 370
(88.52)
Teles, Steven M. ............233 (11.58)
Tellez, Juan Fernando ...............252
(22.29), 284 (42.1)
Temin, David....................224 (11.6)
Templeman, Kharis Ali ....383 (93.4)
Temporo, Mickael N.....382 (92.48)
Tenove, Chris...................272 (40.6)
Teo, Terence .................. 268 (26.51)
Teodoro, Manny P......... 240 (17.31),
267 (26.47), 348 (79.1)
Teorell, Jan ............ 358 (83.50), 373
(90.3), 412 (109.28)
Terman, Jessica............. 264 (26.31)
Terry, Brandon M. ..........397 (107.2)
Tertytchnaya, Katerina ..............365
(88.22), 377 (92.19), 389
(96.23)
Terwiel, Anna M. ..............362 (88.4)
Tesler, Michael....... 324 (60.12), 337
(76.8), 356 (83.43), 363 (88.8)
Tessler, Mark..................238 (17.15)
Testa, Paul Franz ...........343 (76.46)
Thachil, Tariq ........... 247 (20.4), 300
(51.13), 311 (56.13), 351
(83.14)
Thal, Adam.......................286 (45.7)
Thaler, Kai Massey ........ 338 (76.14)

Thauer, Christian Rudolf ...........227


(11.24), 319 (56.57)
Thayer, Bradley A. ...........321 (57.4)
Theodoridis, Alexander
George ........................255 (22.46)
Theriault, Sean M. ........ 229 (11.34),
265 (26.36), 378 (92.29)
THEVIOT, Anas ...............320 (57.1)
Theys, Sarina...................395 (97.6)
Thiem, Yannik ..................309 (56.4)
Thies, Cameron G......... 251 (22.24),
313 (56.29), 314 (56.29), 401
(107.25)
Thill, Jean-Claude..........390 (96.30)
Thomann, Eva..................346 (77.4)
Thomas, Deborah Ann ....321 (57.5)
Thomas, Gwynn.............266 (26.40)
Thomas, Herschel F.......378 (92.29)
Thomas, Jakana .... 240 (17.28), 402
(107.31)
Thomas, Jason ...... 229 (11.35), 356
(83.41)
Thomas, Lahoma.............321 (57.5)
Thomas, Matthew O. .....355 (83.36)
Thomassen, Bjorn ....... 404 (107.43)
Thompson, Debra......... 286 (45.11),
342 (76.41)
Thompson, Dennis F. ......260 (26.6)
Thompson, Frank J. ...... 269 (26.54)
Thompson, Melanie Lauren ......321
(58.1)
Thoms, Oskar N.T. .........281 (40.56)
Thomsen, Danielle........ 265 (26.37),
277 (40.33)
Thomson, Henry .......... 398 (107.11)
Thomson, Robert......... 414 (109.41)
Thormann, Vita ..............314 (56.31)
Thornton, Ashley........... 390 (96.29)
Thornton, Eleanor Nicole ..........321
(57.5)
Thorson, Emily ........ 236 (17.7), 306
(51.45), 336 (76.7)
Thorvaldsdottir, Svanhildur ...... 262
(26.22)
Threadcraft, Shatema ......323 (60.4)
Thrower, Sharece ......... 278 (40.39),
403 (107.37)
Thuesen, Frederik .........365 (88.24)
Thunberg, Michael......... 253 (22.35)
Thurber, Ches ........ 228 (11.33), 403
(107.35)
Thurston, Chloe............. 264 (26.33)
Thyne, Clayton L ......... 402 (107.30)
Tice, Joanna .......... 230 (11.43), 385
(96.4)
Tichenor, Daniel..... 245 (17.56), 247
(20.1)
Tidrick, Charlee ...............309 (56.6)
Tierney, Michael J......... 262 (26.22),
289 (45.24)
Tillman, Erik R. ...... 317 (56.46), 330
(60.45)
Ting, Michael M. ............398 (107.8)
Tingley, Dustin Halliday ............350
(83.10)
Tir, Jaroslav ...................354 (83.29)
Tiscornia, Lucia ........... 416 (109.51)
Tkach, Benjamin............263 (26.25)
Tkacik, Michael P. ..........353 (83.25)
Tobey, William................313 (56.27)
Tobin, Jennifer L ... 239 (17.21), 389
(96.25), 411 (109.26)
Tobin, Sarah ....................360 (84.5)
Tockman, Jason ..............258 (23.5)
Toender, Lars........... 298 (51.4), 336
(76.2), 385 (96.4)
Toff, Benjamin ...............357 (83.44)
Toft, Monica Duffy ...........308 (54.1)
Toka, Gabor A........ 316 (56.43), 381
(92.46)
Tokdemir, Efe............... 412 (109.32)
Tolbert, Caroline J. ....... 266 (26.41),
305 (51.39), 330 (60.45), 415
(109.48)
Toloudis, Nicholas........ 227 (11.25),
265 (26.35)
Tom, Caitlin......................298 (51.6)
Tombari, Stephanie .......267 (26.47)
Tomz, Michael R. ... 239 (17.25), 252
(22.26)
Tong, Zhichao..................362 (88.5)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

439

Index of Participants

Stegmaier, Mary....... 296 (49.1), 392


(96.42)
Stegmueller, Daniel .......287 (45.16)
Steigerwalt, Amy L. .......265 (26.36)
Stein, Arthur A...............239 (17.25)
Stein, Michael K.............318 (56.52)
Stein, Rachel M..............252 (22.26)
Steinbach, Won .............239 (17.25)
Steinberg, David A. ...... 239 (17.22),
289 (45.23)
Steinberg, Jessica........ 274 (40.14),
353 (83.24), 373 (90.3)
Steinhardt, H. Christoph ...........280
(40.49)
Steinmetz, Alicia............329 (60.41)
Steinmetz, John............. 318 (56.51)
Steinwand, Martin C. .... 301 (51.19),
353 (83.28), 412 (109.32)
Stenberg, Matthew.........325 (60.20)
Stephan, Mark C. ........... 344 (76.49)
Stephen, Matthew D. .......258 (24.3)
Stephens, John D. ........ 262 (26.19),
348 (81.3)
Stepp, Kyla ....................303 (51.32)
Sterett, Susan M. ....... 222 (6.9), 249
(22.12)
Stern, Rachel .................379 (92.33)
Stevens, Daniel...... 231 (11.47), 266
(26.42)
Stevens, Jacqueline ......363 (88.11)
Stevenson, Randolph T. ............280
(40.47)
Stewart, Brandon Michael .........350
(83.10)
Stewart, Iain Graham.......223 (11.4)
Stewart, Jessica Lynn ...380 (92.39)
Stewart, Megan A. .........302 (51.26)
Stid, Daniel D...................321 (59.2)
Stier, Sebastian .............381 (92.46)
Stiles, Robyn ......... 306 (51.45), 392
(96.43)
Stilz, Anna ... 349 (83.5), 408 (109.7)
Stinson, Andrew ................221 (3.7)
Stocking, Galen .............357 (83.46)
Stockmann, Daniela ......339 (76.20)
Stockton, Hans J. .......... 417 (110.1)
Stoddard, Edward.......... 319 (56.54)
Stoeckel, Florian.... 275 (40.24), 339
(76.22)
Stohler, Stephan .......... 404 (107.40)
Stoker, Gerry .................305 (51.41)
Stoker, Laura ........... 224 (11.8), 244
(17.51), 303 (51.30)
Stokes, Leah................ 415 (109.47)
Stokes, Susan C. ... 274 (40.17), 369
(88.47)
Stolberg, Alan G. .............270 (27.5)
Stolle, Dietlind ....... 304 (51.38), 386
(96.10)
Stone, Clarence N..............222 (4.1)
Stone, Peter C. ..............408 (109.8)
Stone, Randall W. ..........262 (26.22)
Stoner, James R. ..... 284 (43.3), 308
(52.4), 332 (61.3), 346 (77.1)
Storey, Jenna Silber ........349 (83.1)
Stow, Simon A. ................260 (26.8)
Stoyan, Alissandra T. .... 341 (76.33)
Strach, Patricia ...... 277 (40.35), 403
(107.38)
Strachan, J. Cherie.... 222 (6.3), 247
(21.2), 299 (51.10), 350 (83.11),
381 (92.42)
Strand, Jonathan R. ........322 (59.3)
Strandow, Daniel ........... 390 (96.30)
Strandquist, Jon ............273 (40.12)
Strange, Austin Michael ............289
(45.24), 389 (96.28)
Stratmann, Thomas .......330 (60.48)
Straus, Jacob R. .... 252 (22.31), 322
(59.7)
Straus, Ryane McAuliffe............291
(45.35)
Straus, Scott.......... 277 (40.32), 306
(51.48)
Strausz, Michael ..............296 (46.5)
Strayhorn, Joshua A. .... 253 (22.35)
Stren, Richard....................222 (4.1)
Strezhnev, Anton ... 273 (40.12), 363
(88.13)
Strickland, James Manning.......329
(60.44)

Tonge, Jonathan..............360 (84.3)


Topham, Megan ............. 267 (26.47)
Topper, Keith ........... 362 (88.4), 397
(107.1)
Torcal, Mariano ...... 249 (22.11), 319
(56.55)
Toronto, Nathan............. 366 (88.29)
Torres, Michelle ..... 269 (26.56), 282
(40.59), 310 (56.11)
Toska, Silvana A.......... 412 (109.28)
Totten, Robbie J. ... 301 (51.23), 394
(96.53)
Touchton, Michael ........ 275 (40.20),
311 (56.16), 376 (92.18)
Toukan, Mark .................228 (11.28)
Towner, Terri L....... 241 (17.36), 306
(51.47)
Toyoda, Maria ................289 (45.23)
Toyoda, Shin.................. 277 (40.31)
Traber, Rebecca............. 243 (17.47)
Trager, Robert F. .... 276 (40.29), 326
(60.26), 352 (83.23)
Traugott, Michael W.......357 (83.44)
Traunmuller, Richard .... 233 (11.57),
337 (76.11)
Travaglianti, Manuela ....371 (88.58)
Traynor, Kristen............. 255 (22.47)
Treier, Shawn .................338 (76.12)
Treisman, Daniel S. ...... 237 (17.13),
371 (88.53)
Trepanier, Lee ..................246 (18.5)
Trevisan, Filippo ............268 (26.48)
Triadafilopoulos, Triadafilos .....257
(22.57), 371 (88.54), 417
(109.55)
Tricaud, Clmence........ 317 (56.45),
407 (108.4)
Tripp, Aili Mari ......... 247 (20.3), 320
(56.62)
Trivedi, Priyamvada..... 406 (107.51)
Trochev, Alexei ..............379 (92.33)
Troeger, Vera Eva ........ 410 (109.16)
Tromborg, Mathias ....... 242 (17.39),
250 (22.19)
Tronto, Joan C.................362 (88.3)
Trott, Verity Anne .......... 370 (88.51)
Troumbley, Rex Lansing ...........298
(51.4)
Trounstine, Jessica Luce ..........368
(88.41)
Trubowitz, Peter.............281 (40.55)
Truex, Rory ......................234 (13.1)
Trunkos, Judit................240 (17.27)
Tsai, Chi-ting....................346 (77.5)
Tsai, Kellee S. ........ 261 (26.16), 410
(109.20)
Tsai, Lily L. .............. 234 (13.1), 282
(40.60)
Tsai, Tsung-han ........... 409 (109.15)
Tsai, Yu-tai .....................228 (11.30)
Tsebelis, George............299 (51.11)
Tseng, Huan-Kai ............282 (40.59)
Tsourapas, Gerasimos ..............282
(40.61), 318 (56.54), 359
(83.55)
Tsubura, Machiko ..........300 (51.15)
Tsui, Hsiao-Chien ............384 (93.4)
Tucker, Joshua A.......... 266 (26.42),
288 (45.20), 324 (60.14)
Tucker, Justin Abbott ....381 (92.42)
Tucker, Patrick....... 231 (11.45), 343
(76.46), 358 (83.54)
Tucker, Todd .................. 313 (56.24)
Tudor, Maya Jessica..... 238 (17.17),
275 (40.21), 387 (96.14)
Tufis, Claudiu Daniel .......360 (84.8)
Tukiainen, Janne ........... 381 (92.41)
Tulis, Jeffrey K.................346 (77.1)
Tully, David G. ............... 232 (11.51)
Tumaneng, Laurie.......... 261 (26.18)
Tung, Hans Hanpu........ 232 (11.51),
288 (45.19), 299 (51.11), 351
(83.16)
Tungohan, Ethel ............357 (83.47)
Tunkis, Peter Jan......... 400 (107.22)
Turkoglu, Oguzhan ........ 340 (76.31)
Turner, Brandon...............309 (56.1)
Turner, Ian R. ...................272 (40.7)
Turner, Jack ............. 309 (56.3), 373
(92.1)
Turner, Lowell .............. 416 (109.49)

440

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 440

Turner, Robin L...... 297 (50.14), 321


(57.5), 372 (89.6)
Tushnet, Mark ................407 (108.5)
Tussing, James................349 (83.1)
Tuxhorn, Kim-Lee ............299 (51.7)
Twist, Kimberly ..............250 (22.20)
Twomey, Christopher P..............276
(40.30), 340 (76.27)
Tynan, Caroline...... 331 (60.56), 388
(96.20), 398 (107.11)
Tyner, Andrew................267 (26.45)
Tyson, Scott............. 323 (60.8), 362
(88.7), 402 (107.30), 408
(109.9)
Tyson, Vanessa C. .........269 (26.57)

U
Uba, Katrin.....................227 (11.25)
Ubeda, Paloma ..............389 (96.24)
Udani, Adriano............... 317 (56.47)
Ugur, Etga...................... 242 (17.38)
Ugur Cinar, Meral ............323 (60.5)
Uhlmann, Michael M. ......283 (41.5),
320 (57.2)
Ulbricht, Lena ................230 (11.40)
Umphres, William P. ........260 (26.8)
Unver, Akin ....................314 (56.29)
Urbinati, Nadia...............316 (56.42)
Uribe, Alicia ...................341 (76.36)
Urpelainen, Johannes ....297 (49.3),
377 (92.21), 415 (109.47)
Uscinski, Joseph E....... 267 (26.44),
280 (40.49)
Uskup, Dilara Kadriye ...............254
(22.41), 279 (40.45)
Uslaner, Eric M. ..... 294 (45.54), 324
(60.11)
Utych, Stephen Michael ............337
(76.8)
Uzonyi, Gary .................. 277 (40.32)

V
Vabulas, Felicity .... 276 (40.27), 377
(92.22)
Vaccari, Cristian .... 317 (56.48), 382
(92.48)
Vail, Mark I. .................. 411 (109.25)
Vakilifathi, Mona ............304 (51.35)
Vala, Carsten .................238 (17.18)
Valdez, Ines......................362 (88.5)
Valdez, Juan ..................241 (17.37)
Valdivielso del Real, Rocio .......401
(107.23)
Valelly, Rick ........... 297 (50.17), 343
(76.43)
Valentino, Nicholas A. ...............279
(40.44), 317 (56.47), 337 (76.8),
374 (92.6), 398 (107.9)
Valenzuela, Ali A........... 261 (26.14),
279 (40.44), 322 (59.5)
Valeriano, Brandon........ 313 (56.26)
Valiquette Moreau, Nina ............247
(22.1), 322 (60.2)
Vallejo, Sebastian ..........226 (11.18)
Valles, Derek William.....227 (11.26)
Valls, Andrew...................336 (76.6)
Van Coppenolle, Brenda ...........350
(83.9)
van de Walle, Nicolas ................261
(26.17), 376 (92.14)
van de Wardt, Marc ........283 (41.2),
392 (96.43)
van den Bosch, Marie Alienor
N..................................324 (60.15)
van der Eijk, Cees .........242 (17.41)
van der Linden, Clifton..............266
(26.43), 307 (51.52)
van der Veen, A. Maurits........... 301
(51.19), 339 (76.21), 383
(92.54)
van der Ven, Hamish ......258 (24.3),
382 (92.47)
van der Vort, Eric ........ 404 (107.40)
van Eeden, Pepijn .........319 (56.57)
Van Erve, Wouter...........391 (96.37)
Van Ham, Carolien........ 274 (40.18),
406 (107.50)
Van Hauwaert, Steven .....283 (41.2)

van Heerden, Sjoerdje


Charlotte .....................278 (40.40)
Van Hook, Matthew..........372 (89.1)
van Raemdonck, Dirk C ............305
(51.40)
van Stolk, Chris............. 328 (60.33)
van Thomme, Jack ..........320 (57.1)
Van Vechten, Renee B. ..............225
(11.16), 321 (58.2)
Van Weelden, Richard ....248 (22.7),
349 (83.6)
Vance, Kevin....................283 (41.1)
Vande Kerckhove, Corentin ......382
(92.48)
Vandenbroek, L. Matthew..........279
(40.44)
Vander Wielen, Ryan J. .............357
(83.45)
Vanderheiden, Steven J. ........... 297
(49.3), 332 (61.4)
Vanderhill, Rachel .........294 (45.53)
Vannette, David L ......... 231 (11.46),
405 (107.47)
Varshney, Ashutosh ..... 261 (26.16),
275 (40.21), 338 (76.15)
Vasilopoulos, Pavlos .......348 (81.2)
Vassallo, Francesca ..... 249 (22.11),
262 (26.20)
Vasselai, Fabricio ............335 (74.2)
Vassiliadis, Ioannis Loukas ...... 250
(22.19)
Vatansever, Adnan........ 352 (83.19),
376 (92.19), 409 (109.13)
Vatter, Miguel...................385 (96.5)
Vaughan, Shannon K.......373 (90.1)
Vaughn, Justin S. ...... 221 (2.4), 277
(40.34), 327 (60.32)
Vavreck, Lynn ................337 (76.12)
Vaynman, Jane ..............326 (60.27)
Veale, Daniel J. ..............290 (45.31)
Velasco Rivera, Carlos ..............249
(22.13), 287 (45.15), 350 (83.9)
Velasquez, Mauricio ......387 (96.12)
Velasquez, Simon ..........351 (83.15)
Velez, Yamil............ 225 (11.15), 380
(92.39)
Vera, Sofia B.................. 255 (22.44)
Vera-Larrucea, Constanza.........346
(77.4)
Vercellotti, Timothy .........360 (84.3)
Verge, Tnia........... 279 (40.41), 380
(92.38)
Verma, Rahul .................288 (45.17)
Vernby, Kare .................. 359 (83.56)
Verovsek, Peter J. ...........248 (22.4)
Vertika, Vertika.................323 (60.7)
vesan, patrik ....................233 (12.2)
Vese, Dan..................... 398 (107.11)
Vetter, Lisa Pace..............259 (26.3)
Veuger, Stan Antonius ..............379
(92.31)
Victor, Jennifer Nicoll................225
(11.14), 258 (24.1), 383 (92.53)
Viehoff, Daniel .................349 (83.5)
Vieux, Andrea ................343 (76.47)
Vilceanu, Marilena Olguta .........253
(22.33)
Villalobos, Jose D............374 (92.6)
Vimo, Jackie ..................245 (17.56)
Vines, Emma.................. 267 (26.48)
Vinjamuri, Leslie.... 344 (76.54), 416
(109.52)
Vinson, C. Danielle ........ 267 (26.46)
Vintila, Daniela.................283 (41.2)
Vinuela, Lorena..............315 (56.36)
Visconti, Giancarlo ..........236 (17.9)
Vitalis, Robert ................297 (50.14)
Vivyan, Nick...................317 (56.45)
Voegeli, William ...............332 (61.2)
Voeten, Erik ........... 313 (56.24), 411
(109.26)
Vogel, Ronald K.................222 (4.1)
Vogt, Manuel.......... 229 (11.33), 300
(51.14)
Volden, Craig ......... 303 (51.31), 328
(60.36), 354 (83.31)
vom Hau, Matthias....... 398 (107.12)
von Blumenthal, Julia ...230 (11.40)
von Borzyskowski, Inken ..........276
(40.27), 354 (83.29)

Von Hagen-Jamar, Alexander....276


(40.28), 373 (90.3)
von Heyking, John F.......246 (18.5),
360 (84.6)
von Hlatky, Stefanie ...... 378 (92.25)
von Hoffman, Alexander ........... 315
(56.38)
von Soest, Christian......318 (56.54)
von Stein, Jana...... 268 (26.52), 276
(40.27)
von Wahl, Angelika........232 (11.54)
Voorheis, John ..............283 (40.63)
Voss, Michael Joel.........244 (17.52)
Vowles, Jack.......... 369 (88.45), 415
(109.45)
Vreeland, James Raymond .......244
(17.49), 284 (42.1)
Vu, Tuong..................... 410 (109.21)
Vucetic, Srdjan ..............232 (11.53)

W
Wada, Junichiro............. 356 (83.40)
Waddan, Alex.................269 (26.54)
Waggoner, Philip ........... 263 (26.29)
Wagner, Kevin................306 (51.47)
Wagner, Markus............. 317 (56.45)
Wagner, Michael W. ...... 231 (11.47),
357 (83.45)
Wagner, Regina ..... 392 (96.38), 414
(109.42)
Wahedi, Laila ............... 402 (107.33)
Wahl, Rachel Lee..... 272 (40.5), 358
(83.51)
Wahman, Michael ......... 382 (92.50),
405 (107.49)
Wainfan, Kathryn ........... 280 (40.46)
Waisbord, Silvio ............256 (22.54)
Waite, Brandon ..............287 (45.13)
Walcott, Charles E. ..........308 (54.3)
Waldman, Suzanne..........283 (41.3)
Waldner, David....... 345 (76.55), 416
(109.53)
Waldron, Jeremy..............286 (45.5)
Walgrave, Stefaan......... 242 (17.39),
305 (51.44)
Walhof, Darren............... 382 (92.51)
Waligore, Timothy P.........385 (96.1)
Walker, Bryan Matthew....296 (46.5)
Walker, Edward T. ......... 368 (88.38),
403 (107.38)
Walker, Hannah...... 243 (17.47), 316
(56.41), 355 (83.36), 380
(92.39)
Walker, Lee D.............222 (6.9), 278
(40.36)
Walker, Stephen G. .........310 (56.7),
353 (83.26)
Wallace, Adryan...............322 (59.3)
Wallace, Jennifer ........... 318 (56.50)
Wallace, Jeremy L. .........234 (13.1),
338 (76.17)
Wallace, Sherri L. .... 234 (12.4), 373
(91.2)
Wallach, Dan.................. 267 (26.46)
Wallach, John R...............373 (92.2)
Wallman Lundasen, Susanne....305
(51.40)
Wallner, James Ian ........ 253 (22.31)
Wallsten, Kevin Jay .......370 (88.51)
Wals, Sergio C. ..............295 (45.55)
Walsdorff, Anna............. 301 (51.19)
Walsh, David J.................360 (84.6)
Walsh, Denise Marie........234 (12.4)
Walsh, James Igoe ....... 290 (45.28),
390 (96.30)
Walsh, Shannon Drysdale .........369
(88.42)
Walt, Stephen M....... 321 (58.3), 389
(96.26)
Walter, Andrew ...... 276 (40.25), 339
(76.24)
Walter, Annemarie Sophie.........242
(17.41)
Walter, Barbara F. ..........351 (83.13)
Walter, Dror.................... 243 (17.45)
Walter, Stefanie...... 276 (40.26), 392
(96.42)
Walters, Meir R. ..... 344 (76.52), 351
(83.17), 384 (95.2)

Weber, Till .............. 301 (51.18), 400


(107.22)
Wedeen, Lisa ......... 257 (22.55), 282
(40.58), 331 (60.55), 385 (95.5)
Wedeman, Andrew ........376 (92.17)
Weeks, Ana Catalano ... 279 (40.42),
316 (56.40)
Weeks, Jessica L. P...... 239 (17.25),
252 (22.26)
Wegner, Eva................. 411 (109.22)
Wei, Chi-hung ................239 (17.24)
Wei, Yingjie ......................234 (13.1)
Weidmann, Nils B. ........ 255 (22.48),
256 (22.48), 263 (26.28), 361
(86.1)
Weinberg, Joe........ 287 (45.12), 339
(76.23), 374 (92.7)
Weiner, Greg............ 394 (97.1), 407
(108.5)
Weingast, Barry R. ........ 328 (60.36)
Weinstein, David P...........224 (11.5)
Weinthal, Erika S. .......... 274 (40.14)
Weintraub, Michael........ 228 (11.28)
Weir, Margaret ....... 264 (26.31), 286
(45.10)
Weirich, Sarah ...............281 (40.56)
Weisberg, Herbert F.......317 (56.46)
Weisiger, Alex........ 366 (88.29), 378
(92.27), 412 (109.28)
Weiss, Jessica Chen ......234 (13.1),
326 (60.26), 366 (88.31)
Weiss, Meredith L......221 (2.3), 232
(11.51), 237 (17.14), 281
(40.54), 376 (92.17)
Weiss, Penny A. ..............235 (17.2)
Weissert, Carol S....... 222 (6.1), 278
(40.38), 341 (76.37)
Weissert, William G. ........233 (12.1)
Weitz-Shapiro, Rebecca ............249
(22.15), 323 (60.10), 324
(60.10)
Weitzel, Michelle Day .... 295 (45.59)
Weldon, S. Laurel ......... 230 (11.41),
271 (38.2)
Weldzius, Ryan..............289 (45.23)
Wellhausen, Rachel...... 224 (11.11),
339 (76.23), 365 (88.26)
Wells, Bonny..................357 (83.47)
Wells, Chris ............. 320 (57.1), 393
(96.47)
Wellstead, Adam............231 (11.48)
Wen, Tusi .......................224 (11.10)
Wen, Yao...................... 412 (109.31)
Weng, Lu-Chung Dennis ...........383
(93.4), 409 (109.11)
Wengle, Susanne A. ...... 377 (92.19)
Wenman, Mark .................349 (83.2)
Werner, Hannah ............. 280 (40.49)
Werner, Timothy ...... 299 (51.7), 329
(60.44)
Wertz, Kalie.................... 292 (45.39)
Weschle, Simon............. 280 (40.47)
West, Cornel ............ 260 (26.5), 362
(88.3)
West, Emily Anne ............363 (88.8)
West, Karleen ................351 (83.15)
West, Thomas G. .............296 (46.2)
Westerwinter, Oliver ..... 269 (26.55),
352 (83.22)
Westlake, Daniel ............257 (22.57)
Westwood, Sean.... 231 (11.46), 335
(74.1)
Weyl, Eric Glen ................374 (92.8)
Weyland, Kurt ........ 237 (17.12), 318
(56.54), 347 (78.1)
Weymouth, Stephen ..... 289 (45.23),
365 (88.26)
Whang, Taehee ...... 228 (11.31), 326
(60.26)
Wharton, Jonathan L.....380 (92.36)
Wheeler, Darren A. ....... 287 (45.13),
340 (76.28)
Wheeler, Mark ................232 (11.52)
Whitaker, Beth Elise ...... 290 (45.28)
White, Adam ....................360 (84.4)
White, Ariel Rebecca .... 243 (17.45),
369 (88.43), 380 (92.39)
White, Avery Fox .............362 (88.5)
White, Benjamin ............316 (56.40)
White, Gregory W. .........295 (45.59)

KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Odd

Page 441

White, Ismail K. ..... 254 (22.40), 404


(107.42)
White, Joseph..................297 (50.5)
White, Julie A. .................309 (56.5)
White, Peter ...................326 (60.25)
White, Stephen K.............272 (40.5)
White, Steven.................387 (96.13)
Whitefield, Stephen ...... 294 (45.53),
329 (60.45)
Whitesell, Anne .............392 (96.38)
Whitfield, Gregory .........398 (107.7)
Whitlark, Rachel Elizabeth ........327
(60.27)
Whitman-Cobb, Wendy..............264
(26.31), 367 (88.37)
Whitney, David N. ............346 (77.3)
Whitt, Sam .....................302 (51.24)
Whitten, Guy D. ............. 287 (45.12)
Whitten-Woodring, Jenifer ........394
(96.50)
Whyte, Christopher .......301 (51.23)
Wibbels, Erik M...... 351 (83.14), 387
(96.12)
Wibben, Annick T.R. ......249 (22.12)
Wichowsky, Amber....... 391 (96.34),
405 (107.47)
Wickham-Jones, Mark ...............414
(109.42)
Widner, Jennifer ............261 (26.17)
Wiebelhaus-Brahm, Eric............413
(109.33)
Wiedemann, Andreas ................409
(109.13)
Wiedemann, Gregor ......273 (40.12)
Wiegand, Krista E......... 263 (26.27),
367 (88.33)
Wiener, Antje ...................272 (40.6)
Wiesehomeier, Nina.......279 (40.41)
Wig, Tore........................ 268 (26.51)
Wilbur, Scott ....................363 (88.9)
Wildavsky, Ben ................297 (49.2)
Wilder, Matt......................348 (82.2)
Wilf, Meredith......... 262 (26.21), 276
(40.25)
Wilfahrt, Martha .............346 (76.59)
Wilk, Adam.....................245 (17.53)
Wilk, Eric M............ 240 (17.32), 342
(76.41)
Wilke, Joy ......................292 (45.41)
Wilkinson, Betina Cutaia ...........246
(18.4), 279 (40.44)
Wilkinson, Steven I....... 338 (76.19),
376 (92.14), 387 (96.13)
Willett, Thomas D. .........276 (40.25)
Williams, Christine B.....382 (92.48)
Williams, David Lay...... 246 (17.57),
309 (56.1)
Williams, Jake Ryland ...............237
(17.11)
Williams, Juliet A.............323 (60.4)
Williams, Martin J. .........387 (96.12)
Williams, Melissa S. ...... 407 (109.4)
Williams, Michelle Hale ............. 289
(45.22)
Williams, Princess Hope ........... 380
(92.39)
Williams, Rina Verma ... 288 (45.18),
414 (109.40)
Williams, Robert Lucas ............. 342
(76.38)
Williams, Ryan P. ..... 296 (46.2), 360
(84.4)
Williams, Tarah ................363 (88.8)
Williamson, Ryan Dane ............. 315
(56.37)
Williamson, Scott ..........351 (83.12)
Williamson, Vanessa .....391 (96.34)
Willmann, Johanna..........224 (11.8)
Willoughby-Herard, Tiffany J. ...285
(44.5), 335 (75.1)
Wilson, Bruce M. ........... 299 (51.10)
Wilson, Carter A. ........... 392 (96.40)
Wilson, David C. ..............385 (95.4)
Wilson, Elspeth...... 304 (51.38), 375
(92.10)
Wilson, James L. .............323 (60.7)
Wilson, Maya .................377 (92.22)
Wilson, Meghan ............. 391 (96.37)
Wilson, Michael .............290 (45.28)
Wilson, Steven............... 302 (51.27)

Wilson Sokhey, Sarah ............... 245


(17.54), 273 (40.10)
Wimmer, Andreas ..........225 (11.12)
Windett, Jason H. ......... 255 (22.45),
303 (51.32), 391 (96.36)
Windsor, Leah Cathryn..............329
(60.39)
Winecoff, William Kindred......... 326
(60.23)
Wineinger, Catherine N. ............265
(26.37)
Wingrove, Elizabeth R. ....323 (60.4)
Winkler, Christian ..........291 (45.36)
Winkler, Stephen ........... 332 (60.58)
Winstead, William ............322 (60.1)
Winter, Nicholas .... 267 (26.45), 279
(40.41), 304 (51.37)
Winter, Yves.....................223 (11.1)
Winters, Kathleen ..........315 (56.35)
Winters, Kristi................279 (40.41)
Winters, Matthew S. ..... 249 (22.15),
311 (56.13), 324 (60.14)
Winters, Richard F. ........278 (40.39)
Wintersieck, Amanda ....304 (51.37)
Wise, Carol ....................261 (26.16)
Wise, Tess.... 286 (45.7), 310 (56.11)
Wiseman, Alan E. ......... 303 (51.31),
354 (83.31)
Witmer, Richard C. ........ 292 (45.42)
Wittenberg, Jason ......... 249 (22.14)
Wlezien, Christopher .... 280 (40.47),
347 (77.7), 413 (109.36)
Wobig, Jacob P............ 406 (107.51)
Woessner, Matthew .......315 (56.35)
Wojcik, Stefan J..... 287 (45.15), 341
(76.33)
Wolak, Jennifer........ 386 (96.9), 398
(107.9)
Wolbrecht, Christina.......247 (20.3),
258 (24.1), 305 (51.42)
Woldense, Josef .... 295 (45.57), 338
(76.14)
Wolf, Sonja ....................379 (92.32)
Wolfe, Christopher J. ......246 (18.7)
Wolfe, Joel D. .............. 400 (107.23)
Wolfe, Wojtek M.............353 (83.25)
Wolford, Scott........ 276 (40.28), 340
(76.30)
Wolfsfeld, Gadi ..............357 (83.45)
Woliver, Laura R. ... 304 (51.38), 404
(107.41)
Wolton, Stephane .... 349 (83.6), 398
(107.8)
Wong, Cara .............. 260 (26.9), 297
(50.13)
Wong, Janelle ........ 231 (11.43), 308
(54.2), 322 (59.4), 359 (84.2)
Wong, Joseph........ 306 (51.49), 311
(56.16)
Wong, Wendy ................377 (92.22)
Woo, Yu Jin ...................257 (22.57)
Wood, Abby K. ..............343 (76.44)
Wood, Andrew R. .......... 299 (51.10)
Wood, Elisabeth Jean ...............261
(26.13), 338 (76.18), 385 (95.5)
Wood, Reed M. ............ 402 (107.31)
Wood, Thomas ..............370 (88.49)
Wooden, Amanda ..........325 (60.19)
Woodly, Deva...................272 (40.4)
Woods, Jackson ............306 (51.47)
Woods, Logan ...............255 (22.44)
Woodward, Jennifer ..... 324 (60.13),
413 (109.37)
Woodward-Burns, Robinson.....241
(17.34)
Woon, Jonathan .... 280 (40.49), 336
(76.7)
Workman, Samuel ......... 368 (88.37)
Worsnop, Alec ...............276 (40.28)
Worsnop, Catherine Z. ..............251
(22.23)
Worthington, Alton Boyd
Hale .............................355 (83.35)
Wouters, Ruud............... 243 (17.44)
Wozniakowski, Tomasz P. .........339
(76.21)
Wright, Austin.......... 236 (17.8), 290
(45.31), 353 (83.24)
Wright, Brendan J ......... 369 (88.44)
Wright, Brendan Joseph ...........305
(51.40), 329 (60.41)

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

441

Index of Participants

Walthall, Barbara .............285 (44.1)


Walti, Sonja......................332 (61.1)
Walton, Grant W ............ 364 (88.17)
Walton, Marcus..............275 (40.19)
Walzer, Michael................384 (94.1)
Wamble, Julian ...... 343 (76.42), 404
(107.42)
Wampler, Brian ..............275 (40.20)
Wang, Austin Horng-En.............317
(56.46)
Wang, Bella.................... 263 (26.27)
Wang, Chin-shou .............384 (93.4)
Wang, Ching-Hsing..... 400 (107.19),
409 (109.11)
Wang, Dapeng .................395 (97.2)
Wang, Dustin Kuan-Hsiung.......346
(77.5)
Wang, Erik H....................234 (13.1)
Wang, Gang ................. 411 (109.24)
Wang, T.Y. ........................384 (93.4)
Wang, Vibeke ......... 241 (17.36), 411
(109.22)
Wang, Vincent Wei-cheng .........417
(110.1)
Wang, Yi-ting ......... 238 (17.16), 314
(56.32)
Wang, Yiran ................. 409 (109.15)
Wang, Yuan-kang.......... 239 (17.24),
340 (76.27)
Wang, Yuhua............ 234 (13.1), 379
(92.33), 410 (109.19)
Wang, Zhiyuan (Sebastian) .......358
(83.51)
Wangnerud, Lena ..........279 (40.41)
Warber, Adam L. .... 390 (96.33), 403
(107.37)
Ward, Dalston G .... 242 (17.40), 359
(83.56)
Ward, Hugh............ 280 (40.47), 381
(92.43)
Ward, Ian..........................260 (26.5)
Ward, Steven ............... 402 (107.32)
Warnement, Megan Kathryn......367
(88.37)
Warner, Carolyn M. ........329 (60.42)
Warner, Zach.................. 296 (45.61)
Warren, Camber............. 256 (22.48)
Warren, Mark E. ....... 248 (22.6), 272
(40.5), 349 (83.4)
Warren, Shana ....... 359 (83.57), 364
(88.20)
Warren, Stuart D. ........... 254 (22.41)
Warrick, Catherine....... 414 (109.40)
Warshaw, Christopher............... 337
(76.11)
Wasby, Stephen L......... 253 (22.35),
341 (76.36)
Wasow, Omar...................321 (58.2)
Watanabe, Kohei............389 (96.23)
Watanabe, Paul Y.............322 (59.4)
Watanabe, Yasutora.......225 (11.13)
Waterbury, Myra A. ........359 (83.55)
Waterman, Richard W................403
(107.37)
Wathen, Alexander ........294 (45.50)
Watkins, David............... 397 (107.6)
Watson, Bradley C.S. ......395 (97.5)
Wavreille, Marie-Catherine ........379
(92.35)
Way, Lucan A......... 306 (51.49), 318
(56.54), 416 (109.51)
Waylen, Georgina .........230 (11.41),
316 (56.40)
Wayne, Carly Nicole ..... 317 (56.47),
337 (76.8)
Weare, Christopher .......328 (60.33)
Weaver, Catherine ...........284 (42.1)
Weaver, Christopher L...............267
(26.47)
Weaver, Kent....................384 (95.3)
Weaver, Michael...............237 (17.9)
Weaver, R. Kent ...............270 (27.4)
Weaver, Timothy............328 (60.38)
Weaver, Vesla Mae..........235 (15.1),
320 (56.61), 335 (75.1), 373
(91.2)
Webb, Clayton McLaughlin .......287
(45.12)
Webb Farley, Kathryn E.............373
(90.1)
Webb Williams, Nora .....268 (26.48)

Wright, Gerald C. .......... 292 (45.39),


305 (51.42)
Wright, Joseph ...... 274 (40.15), 366
(88.26)
Wright, Matthew..... 245 (17.55), 255
(22.47)
Wright, Scott.................. 370 (88.51)
Wright, Wendy ....... 256 (22.51), 330
(60.50)
Wronski, Julie.......... 248 (22.8), 337
(76.8), 374 (92.6)
Wu, Ahra ........................327 (60.30)
Wu, Cathy Xuanxuan.....277 (40.31)
Wu, Chung-li....................384 (93.4)
Wu, Fengshi...................388 (96.20)
Wu, Irene S. ........... 281 (40.52), 384
(93.6)
Wu, Jason Yuyan.............234 (13.1)
Wu, Wen-Chin..................395 (97.2)
Wucherpfennig, Julian ..............314
(56.30), 340 (76.31)
Wueest, Bruno R. ......... 256 (22.53),
304 (51.35)
Wuest, Reto ........... 337 (76.11), 403
(107.36)
Wuethrich, Simon ..........352 (83.21)
Wulfgramm, Melike...... 401 (107.24)
Wurster, Stefan ............ 400 (107.18)

X
Xenos, Nicholas....... 362 (88.3), 373
(92.2)
Xi, Tianyang .....................234 (13.1)
Xu, Xu ..............................286 (45.9)
Xu, Yan......................... 410 (109.17)
Xu, Yiqing .... 234 (13.1), 273 (40.11)
Xydias, Christina ... 329 (60.43), 414
(109.38)

Y
Yackee, Jason D. ........... 302 (51.28)
Yackee, Susan Webb.....302 (51.28)
Yadon, Nicole.................342 (76.42)
Yalof, David A. ............... 354 (83.32)
Yamada, Masahiro .........269 (26.56)
Yamagishi, Hikaru .........390 (96.29)
Yamin, Priscilla..............375 (92.10)
Yang, Dali L. .......... 364 (88.16), 388
(96.22)
Yang, Feng.....................387 (96.11)
Yang, Florence............... 268 (26.50)
YANG, SHIMING............. 288 (45.19)
Yang, Sijia ......................243 (17.45)
Yang, Xiangfeng ............290 (45.29)
Yang, Xiao...................... 237 (17.11)
Yang, Yujeong..................234 (13.1)
Yanguas, Pablo..............261 (26.17)
Yanow, Dvora............. 222 (6.8), 257
(22.55), 297 (50.14), 379
(92.34), 396 (106.1)
Yao, Ying..........................258 (23.6)
Yarbrough, Jean M. .........372 (89.1)
Yarhi-Milo, Keren ... 239 (17.25), 252
(22.26), 352 (83.23), 366
(88.31)
Yarish, Jasmine Noelle....298 (51.2)
Yashar, Deborah .... 226 (11.17), 235
(15.1), 258 (24.2), 282 (40.58),
385 (95.5)
Yasuda, John ......... 325 (60.18), 364
(88.16)
Yasui, Kiyotaka..............277 (40.31)
Yates, Jeff ......................355 (83.34)
Yaver, Miranda ....... 241 (17.33), 253
(22.32), 304 (51.35), 399
(107.13)
Yaylaci, Sule ..................280 (40.49)
Ye, Fangjin.....................352 (83.21)
Ye, Xiaoyang................ 398 (107.10)
Yeganeh, Sara Shahmirzadi ......224
(11.8)
Yeh, Yao-Yuan.............. 411 (109.27)
Yen, Wei-Ting...................310 (56.8)
Yeo, Andrew ....................258 (24.3)
Yet, Kam-hon (Steven) ..............415
(109.46)
Yetim, Muserref .............314 (56.31)
Yi, Hongtao ....................391 (96.37)

442

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

X : 11437$CHIX
08-10-16 02:34:48
Layout: 11437P : Even

Page 442

Yi, Qinghua .................. 400 (107.19)


Yildirim, A.Kadir .... 242 (17.38), 364
(88.19)
Yildiz, Alper....................382 (92.50)
Yim, Jaeyeon .................268 (26.50)
Ying, Jingcai ....................246 (18.2)
Yoder, Brandon..............239 (17.24)
Yoesle, Orion A..............242 (17.41)
Yokotsuka, Shino ..........290 (45.29)
Yom, Sean L................. 410 (109.21)
Yong, Caleb ...................408 (109.7)
Yonk, Ryan M.................267 (26.47)
Yoo, John.........................246 (18.1)
Yoon, Chamna ...............225 (11.13)
Yordanova, Nikoleta ......381 (92.45)
York, Erin .......................398 (107.8)
Yoshinaka, Antoine .......279 (40.46)
You, Hye Young ..... 263 (26.29), 355
(83.36)
You, Jong-sung ..... 229 (11.36), 295
(45.54), 364 (88.17), 395 (97.3)
Youatt, Rafi .................... 417 (110.4)
Youm, Jisun...................264 (26.31)
Young, Dannagal G. .......320 (57.1),
331 (60.56), 344 (76.48)
Young, Joseph K. ..........390 (96.30)
Young, Katherine........... 344 (76.50)
Young, Kevin .................326 (60.23)
Young, Laura D..............299 (51.10)
Young, Lauren E............381 (92.44)
Yu, Junbo.......................365 (88.23)
Yu, Peng...........................248 (22.2)
Yu, Tinghua......................323 (60.8)
Yuan, Meng .................... 315 (56.38)
Yucel, Emekcan ...............349 (83.6)
Yue, Chunying .................395 (97.2)
Yuen, Amy ............. 251 (22.23), 290
(45.30)
Yuldashev, Farhod........ 226 (11.18),
301 (51.19)
Yumatle, Carla ...............408 (109.5)
Yurman, Rebecca ..........245 (17.53)

Z
Zvecz, Gergo................382 (92.46)
Zackin, Emily ......... 254 (22.37), 264
(26.33)
Zakaras, Alex .................245 (17.57)
Zaks, Sherry ................ 416 (109.53)
Zalewski, Matthew ....... 403 (107.39)
Zaller, John R. .................258 (24.1)
Zankina, Emilia ..............242 (17.40)
Zarazaga, Rodrigo Esteban.......356
(83.42)
Zarit, Matthew ................303 (51.31)
Zechmeister, Elizabeth J. ..........398
(107.9)
Zeckhauser, Richard ......374 (92.8),
392 (96.40)
Zeemering, Eric .............294 (45.49)
Zehavi, Amos.................227 (11.24)
Zeira, Yael .............. 320 (56.60), 338
(76.18), 403 (107.35)
Zeitz, Alexandra Olivia ..............401
(107.26)
Zeitzoff, Thomas.... 232 (11.49), 302
(51.26)
Zelizer, Adam ......... 243 (17.44), 405
(107.48)
Zeng, Ka.........................252 (22.28)
Zeng, Qingjie (Eddie).....299 (51.12)
Zetterberg, Par............. 414 (109.38)
Zevnik, Andreja ....... 259 (26.4), 287
(45.13)
Zhan, Jing Vivian.......... 275 (40.20),
364 (88.17)
Zhang, Baobao ..............264 (26.32)
Zhang, Chunman ... 228 (11.30), 274
(40.19)
Zhang, Jiakun ................390 (96.31)
Zhang, Ketian ................340 (76.26)
Zhang, Tongtong ........... 267 (26.46)
Zhang, Wu......................288 (45.19)
Zhang, Yang................. 415 (109.48)
Zhang, Youlang..............267 (26.47)
Zhang, Youyi....................258 (23.6)
Zhao, Shuang ................368 (88.40)
Zhao, Tan .......................351 (83.16)
Zherebtsov, Mikhail .......300 (51.17)

Zhirnov, Andrei ..............316 (56.44)


Zhong, Yang ....................320 (57.3)
Zhou, Jack .....................243 (17.46)
Zhu, Boliang ............ 234 (13.1), 366
(88.26), 401 (107.27)
Zhu, Feng............... 289 (45.27), 389
(96.28)
Zhu, Jiangnan................364 (88.17)
Zhu, Zhiqun .....................320 (57.3)
Zhukov, Yuri M.................361 (86.1)
Ziblatt, Daniel F........ 373 (90.3), 387
(96.13)
Ziegfeld, Adam W. ........ 238 (17.17),
329 (60.43)
Ziegler, J. Nicholas....... 227 (11.24),
337 (76.10)
Ziegler Rogers, Melissa.............249
(22.13), 400 (107.18)
Zilis, Michael.................. 291 (45.37)
Ziller, Conrad .................264 (26.32)
Zingher, Joshua N. ........280 (40.46)
Zippory, Elad................ 405 (107.47)
Zirakzadeh, Cyrus Ernesto........226
(11.19), 281 (40.53)
Zittel, Thomas................290 (45.32)
Zittoun, Philippe ..............348 (82.2)
Zivi, Karen ... 244 (17.50), 272 (40.4)
Zizumbo-Colunga, Daniel..........249
(22.14), 398 (107.9)
Zorn, Christopher ..........229 (11.37)
Zou, Yue.........................277 (40.31)
Zucco, Cesar .................388 (96.19)
Zuckerman, Ian R. ... 336 (76.1), 385
(96.4)
Zuckert, Catherine H. ......223 (11.1)
Zuckert, Michael P. .........296 (46.2),
394 (97.1)
Zuckerwise, Lena K........285 (45.4),
335 (74.3)
Zudenkova, Galina...........362 (88.7)
Zwald, Zachary ..............240 (17.27)

14th Annual

APSA Teaching & Learning Conference


The 21st Century Classroom: Creating an Engaging Environment for All Students

Long Beach, California | February 1012, 2017


Visit www.apsanet.org/tlc for more information!

Statistics your way


Intuitive.

Powerful.

Complete.

Easy-to-learn, predictable

Thousands of built-in

Not sold in modules;

Point-and-click menu access

Extensive data management

Comprehensive

command syntax
for any feature

statistical tools

features for survival,


longitudinal, imputed, timeseries, and multilevel data,
and much more

everything in one package


documentation with
examples

Free technical support

Programmable, so you

can add your own custom


features

From causal inference and panel data to


time series, SEM, and Bayesian analysis,
Stata has you covered.
Learn more online:

stata.com/apsa16
Visit us at booth #200.
Stata is a registered trademark of StataCorp LP, 4905 Lakeway Drive, College Station, TX 77845, USA.

Вам также может понравиться