Graduate Seminar in the Legislative Process POL SCI 926 University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Fall 2010

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Graduate Seminar in the Legislative Process POL SCI 926 University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Fall 2010"

Transcription

1 Graduate Seminar in the Legislative Process POL SCI 926 University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Fall 2010 Michael Tofias Seminars Wednesday 4:30 7pm B64 Bolton Hall Office hours Monday 2 4pm 636 Bolton Hall Syllabus This course is a graduate level survey of literature on the US Congress. Congress has almost certainly received more attention from political scientists than any other single institution. In many ways, the contemporary study of Congress has become a laboratory (or perhaps a playground?) for the most advanced theoretical and methodological approaches in the discipline. This is a literature that is inherently quantitative and has become bound up in rational choice theory and formal models in political science. Familiarity with advanced concepts and tools is more or less a prerequisite to engage this rich literature. There will only be occasional lecturing. The best way to understand the difficult concepts in the congressional literature is by careful reading, writing summaries, and replication of findings. Seminars will be led and conducted by student discussants. All students will be responsible for the weekly readings, but discussants will be required to circulate summaries of the material including a critique of the the topic area. Discussants will lead class by presenting the articles and the key findings and then start the discussion with an assessment of strengths and weaknesses. At the end of the semester each student should feel well-prepared for questions about the US Congress that might appear on a prelim exam. Course Website Texts Reccomended for Purchase Arnold, R. Douglas The Logic of Congressional Action. Yale University Press. Cox, Gary and Mathew McCubbins Setting the Agenda. Cambridge University Press. Jacobson, Gary The Politics of Congressional Elections (7th ed.). Longman. Krehbiel, Keith Pivotal Politics: A Theory of U.S. Lawmaking. University of Chicago Press. Mayhew, David W Congress: The Electoral Connection. New Haven: Yale University Press. Poole, Keith T. and Howard Rosenthal Ideology and Congress. Transaction Publishers. Shepsle, Kenneth A Analyzing Politics (2nd ed.). Norton. Additional Suggestions Aldrich, John Why Parties? University of Chicago Press. Cox and McCubbins Legislative Leviathan 2nd Ed. Cambridge University Press. Fenno, Richard Home Style. HarperCollins. Fiorina, Morris Congress. Yale University Press. 1

2 Krehbiel, Keith Information and Legislative Organization. University of Michigan Press. Kingdon, John L Congressmens Voting Decisions. University of Michigan Press. Price, David E The Congressional Experience. Boulder: Westview Press. Rohde, David Parties and Leaders in the Post Reform House. University of Chicago Press. Grading & Expectations Seminar Papers 25% Each student will serve as a discussant five times. The schedule will be coordinated by a lottery and draft at the first meeting. The seminar papers should assess the state of the literature. Discussants will likely need to seek out additional references, at least glancing at the also recommended readings as a jumping off point to present a well-rounded evaluation. Discussants will then lead the presentation of material in-class. It is important for all of the discussants scheduled for a weekly session to coordinate and compose a somewhat coherent order to the seminar. An overhead and/or laptop with projector can be made available. Seminar papers from each discussant are due Mondays at 10:45am ed as PDF files. Papers will be distributed by discussants to the class as hard copies at the beginning of the seminar. Do not distribute PDF files to the rest of the class until after the weekly seminar meeting. Discussants are especially encouraged to drop by the Monday office hours after submitting their papers in order to discuss the upcoming seminar. Seminar Participation 15% The best grades will be given to students who are the most active participants and come to class every week fully prepared to take part in the discussion. Research Paper 30% An original research paper related to an element of the course. You must use data. Sophistication and expectations will be based on each individual student s standing in the graduate program. Research findings will also be featured during a short conference style presentation in class. Short proposals will be required. Additional details will be discussed during the semester. Exam 30% The final exam will be comprehensive and resemble a prelim exam question or three. Following the UWM Final Exam Schedule, the final exam will be December 22nd. Schedule & Readings 1 An Introduction First Meeting, no readings. Recommended Davidson, Roger H., Walter J. Oleszek and Frances E. Lee Congress and Its Members. Washington, DC: CQ Press. 2

3 Stewart, Charles III Analyzing Congress. W. W. Norton & Company. Fiorina, Morris P Congress: Keystone of the Washington Establishment. New Haven: Yale University Press. Price, David E The Congressional Experience. Boulder: Westview Press. 2 Theoretical Foundations Shepsle, Kenneth A Analyzing Politics (2nd ed.). Norton. Chapters 1 7. Mayhew, David W Congress: The Electoral Connection. New Haven: Yale University Press. Aldrich, John Rational Choice Theory and the Study of American Politics. In Dodd and Jillson, eds., The Dynamics of American Politics: Approaches and Interpretations. Boulder: Westview Press. Cox, Gary On the Effects of Legislative Rules. Legislative Studies Quarterly 25: Hinich, Melvin J. and Michael C. Munger Analytical Politics. New York: Cambridge University Press. Gamm, Gerald and John Huber Legislatures as Political Institutions: Beyond the Contemporary Congress, in Political Science: State of the Discipline. New York: W.W. Norton. Fenno, Richard F Home Style: House Members in Their Districts. HaperCollins. Krehbiel, Keith Spatial Models of Legislative Choice. Legislative Studies Quarterly 13: Shepsle, Kenneth A Studying Institutions: Some Lessons from the Rational Choice Approach. Journal of Theoretical Politics 1: Legislative Organization and Majorities Shepsle, Kenneth and Barry Weingast Positive Theories of Congressional Institutions. Legislative Studies Quarterly 19: Weingast, Barry and William J. Marshall The Industrial Organization of Congress. Journal of Political Economy 96(1): Krehbiel, Keith Information and Legislative Organization. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Chapters 1 3. Evans, Diana Policy and Pork: The Use of Pork Barrel Projects to Build Policy Coalitions in the House of Representatives. American Journal of Political Science 38: Schickler, Eric and Andrew Rich Controlling the Floor: Parties as Procedural Coalitions in the House. American Journal of Political Science 41: Read debate also. Gimpel, James G., Frances E. Lee, and Rebecca U. Thorpe The Distributive Politics of 3

4 the Federal Stimulus: The Geography of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of Paper prepared for presentation at the 2010 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, DC, September 2-5. Aldrich, John H., Calvin C, Jillson, and Rick K. Wilson Why Congress? What the Failure of the Confederation Congress and the Survival of the Federal Congress Tell Us About the New Institutionalism in Brady, David W. and Mathew D. McCubbins. Party, Process, and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the History of Congress. Stanford University Press. Cox, Gary W. and Mathew D. McCubbins Bonding, Structure, and the Stability of Political Parties: Party Government in the House. Legislative Studies Quarterly 19: Gilligan, Thomas W. and Keith Krehbiel Collective Decisionmaking and Standing Committees: An Informational Rationale for Restrictive Amendment Procedures. Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization 3: Krehbiel, Keith The Party Effect from A to Z and Beyond. The Journal of Politics 61(3): Krehbiel, Kieth Where s the Party? British Journal of Political Science 23: Lee, Frances E Representation and Public Policy: The Consequences of Senate Apportionment for the Geographic Distribution of Federal Funds. The Journal of Politics 60: Lee, Frances E Senate Representation and Coalition Building in Distributive Politics. American Political Science Review 94: Legislative Organization and Party Aldrich, John H. and David W. Rohde The Consequences of Party Organization in the House: The Role of the Majority and Minority Parties in Conditional Party Government. In Polarized Politics: Congress and the President in a Partisan Era, eds. Jon Bond and Richard Fleisher. Washington, DC: CQ Press. Cox, Gary and Mathew McCubbins Setting the Agenda. New York City: Cambridge University Press. Krehbiel, Keith Paradoxes of Parties in Congress. Legislative Studies Quarterly 24: Aldrich, John H Why Parties?: The Origin and Transformation of Political Parties in America. University of Chicago Press. Aldrich, John H. and David W. Rohde The Transition to Republican Rule in the House: Implications for Theories of Congressional Politics. Political Science Quarterly 112(4): Aldrich, John H. and David W. Rohde The Logic of Conditional Party Government. In Congress Reconsidered, 7th edition, eds. Lawrence C. Dodd and Bruce I. Oppenheimer. Washington, DC: CQ Press. Binder, Sarah A., Eric D. Lawrence, and Forrest Maltzman Uncovering the Hidden Effect 4

5 of Party. Journal of Politics 61: Cox, Gary W. and Mathew D. McCubbins Legislative Leviathan: Party Government in the House Second Edition. Cambridge University Press. Pearson, Kathryn and Eric Schickler The Transition to Democratic Leadership in a Polarized House. in Congress Reconsidered, edited by Lawrence C. Dodd and Bruce I. Oppenheimer. Smith, Steven S Positive Theories of Congressional Parties. Legislative Studies Quarterly 25: Smith, Steven S Party Influence in Congress. Cambridge University Press. Schickler, Eric Institutional Change in the House of Representatives, : A Test of Partisan and Ideological Power Balance Models. American Political Science Review 94: Schickler, Eric Disjointed pluralism: Institutional Innovation and Development of the U.S. Congress. Princeton University Press. Wright, Gerald C. and Brian F. Schafner The Influence of Party: Evidence from State Legislatures. American Political Science Review 96: Cox, Gary W., Thad Kousser, and Mathew D. McCubbins Party Power or Preferences? Quasi-Experimental Evidence from American State Legislatures. The Journal of Politics 72(3): The Committee System Fenno, Richard The House Appropriations Committee as a Political System: The Problem of Integration. American Political Science Review 56: Polsby, Nelson The Institutionalization of the U.S. House of Representatives. American Political Science Review 62(1): Smith, Steven S The Central Concepts in Fennos Committee Studies. Legislative Studies Quarterly 11:5-18. Hall, Richard L. and Bernard Grofman The Committee Assignment Process and the Conditional Nature of Committee Bias. American Political Science Review 84(4): King, David C The Nature of Congressional Committee Jurisdictions, American Political Science Review 88(1): Aldrich, John H. and David W. Rohde The Republican Revolution and the House Appropriations Committee. The Journal of Politics 62:1 33. Adler, E. Scott and John S. Lapinski Demand-Side Theory and Congressional Committee Composition: A Constituency Characteristics Approach. American Journal of Political Science 41(3): Katz, Johnathan and Brian Sala Careerism, Committee Assignments, and the Electoral Connection. American Political Science Review 90:

6 Adler, E. Scott Constituency Characteristics and the Guardian Model of Appropriations Subcomittees American Journal of Political Science 44: Gamm, Gerald and Kenneth Shepsle Emergence of Legislative Institutions: Standing Committees in the House and Senate, Legislative Studies Quarterly 14(1): Shepsle, Kenneth A. and Barry R. Weingast Institutional Arrangements and Equilibrium in Multidimensional Voting Models. American Journal of Political Science 23: Shepsle, Kenneth A. and Barry R. Weingast The Institutional Foundations of Committee Power. American Political Science Review 81(1): Stewart, Charles III and Tim Groseclose The Value of Committee Seats in the House, American Journal of Political Science 42(2): Krehbiel, Keith. Kenneth A. Shepsle and Barry R. Weingast Why are Congressional Committees Powerful? American Political Science Review 81(3): Collie, Melissa P Universalism and the Parties in the U.S. House of Representatives, American Journal of Political Science 32(4): Polsby, Nelson W., Miriam Gallaher, and Barry Spencer Rundquist The Growth of the Seniority System in the U. S. House of Representatives. American Political Science Review 63 (3): Binder, Sarah A The Partisan Basis of Procedural Choice: Allocating Parliamentary Rights in the House, American Political Science Review 90:8-20. Jenkins, Jeffery A Property Rights and the Emergence of Standing Committee Dominance in the Nineteenth-Century House. Legislative Studies Quarterly 23: Jenkins and Stewart Order from Chaos: The Transformation of the Committee System in the House, in Brady, David W. and Mathew D. McCubbins Party, Process, and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the History of Congress. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. 6 Casting Roll Call Votes Arnold, Douglas The Logic of Congressional Action. New Haven: Yale University Press. Chapters 1 6. Wilkerson, John Killer Amendments in Congress. American Political Science Review 93: Lapinski, Daniel The Effect of Messages Communicated by Members of Congress: The Impact of Publicizing Votes. Legislative Studies Quarterly 26: Masket Seth, E It Takes an Outsider: Extralegislative Organization and Partisanship in the California Assembly, American Journal of Political Science 51(3): Stratmann, Thomas Congressional Voting Over Legislative Careers: Shifting Positions and Changing Constraints. American Political Science Review 94: Margolies, Marjorie Democrats: Vote your conscience on health care. Washington Post. 6

7 Thursday, March 18, 2010; A19. Clausen, Aage How Congressmen Decide. St. Martin s Press. Kingdon, John L Congressmens Voting Decisions. University of Michigan Press. Hall, Richard L Participation in Congress. New Haven: Yale University Press. Rothenberg, Lawrence S. and Mitchell S. Sanders Severing the Electoral Connection: Shirking in the Contemporary Congress. American Journal of Political Science 44: Carson, Jamie L. et al Shirking in the Contemporary Congress: A Reappraisal. Political Analysis 12: Ansolabehere, Stephen. and Phillip E. Jones Constituents Responses to Congressional Roll-Call Voting. American Journal of Political Science 54(3): Fowler, James H Connecting the Congress: A Study of Cosponsorship Networks. Political Analysis 14: Poole, Keith T Changing minds? Not in Congress! Public Choice 131(3-4): Nokken, Timothy P. and Keith T. Poole Congressional Party Defection in American History. Legislative Studies Quarterly 29(4): Measuring Roll Call Votes Poole, Keith T. and Howard Rosenthal Ideology and Congress. Transaction Publishers. Snyder, James M., Jr. and Tim Groseclose Estimating Party Influence in Congressional Roll-Call Voting. American Journal of Political Science 44: Krehbiel, Keith Party Discipline and Measures of Partisanship. American Journal of Political Science. 44: McCarty, Nolan, Keith T. Poole, and Howard Rosenthal The Hunt for Party Discipline in Congress. American Political Science Review 95: Burden, Barry C., Gregory A. Caldeira and Tim Groseclose Measuring the Ideologies of U. S. Senators: The Song Remains the Same. Legislative Studies Quarterly 25: Groseclose, Tim., Steven D. Levitt and James M. Snyder, Jr Comparing Interest Group Scores across Time and Chambers: Adjusted ADA Scores for the U.S. Congress. American Political Science Review 93(1): Aldrich, John H., David W. Rohde and Michael W. Tofias One D is Not Enough: Measuring Conditional Party Government in in Party, Process, and Political Change in Congress Volume 2: Further New Perspectives on the History of Congress. David W. Brady and Mathew D. McCubbins, editors Poole, Keith and Howard Rosenthal A Spatial Model for Legislative Roll Call Analysis. 7

8 American Journal of Political Science 29(2): Jackson, John and John Kingdon Ideology, Interest Group Scores, and Legislative Votes. American Journal of Political Science 36 (3): Clinton, Joshua. Simon Jackman and Douglas Rivers The Statistical Analysis of Roll Call Data. American Political Science Review 98(2): Lebo, Matthew J., Adam J. McGlynn, and Gregory Koger Strategic Party Government: Party Influence in Congress, (3): Shor, Boris, Christopher Berry, and Nolan McCarty A Bridge to Somewhere: Mapping State and Congressional Ideology On a Cross-institutional Common Space. Legislative Studies Quarterly 35(3): Elections with Candidates and Voters Jacobson, Gary C The Politics of Congressional Elections (7th ed.). New York: Longman. Fenno, Richard J U.S. House Members in Their Constituencies: An Exploration. American Political Science Review 71(3): Ansolabehere, Stephen., James Snyder, and Charles Stewart Candidate Positioning in U.S. House Elections. American Journal of Political Science 45(1): Desposato, Scott W. and John R. Petrocik The Variable Incumbency Advantage: New Voters, Redistricting, and the Personal Vote. American Journal of Political Science 47: Jacobson, Gary C. and Samuel Kernell Strategy and Choice in Congressional Elections. New Haven: Yale University Press. Jacobson, Gary C Strategic Politicians and the Dynamics of U.S. House Elections. American Political Science Review. Woon, Jonathan. and Jeremy C. Pope Made in Congress? Testing the Electoral Implications of Party Ideological Brand Names. The Journal of Politics 70(3): Mayhew, David R Congressional Election: The Case of the Vanishing Marginals. Polity 6(3): Fiorina, Morris P The Case of the Vanishing Marginals: The Bureaucracy Did It. American Political Science Review 71(1): Jacobson, Gary C The Marginals Never Vanished: Incumbency and Competition in Elections to the United States House of Representatives, American Journal of Political Science Ansolabehere, Stephen., David Brady and Morris Fiorina The Vanishing Marginals and Electoral Responsiveness. British Journal of Political Science 22(1): Stone, Walter J. and L. Sandy Maisel The Not-So-Simple Calculus of Winning Potential U.S. House Candidates Nominations and General Election Chances. The Journal of Politics 8

9 Carson, Jamie L., Erik Engstrom and Jason Roberts Candidate Quality, the Personal Vote, and the Incumbency Advantage in Congress. American Political Science Review 101: Ensley, Michael J., Michael W. Tofias, and Scott de Marchi District Complexity as an Advantage in Congressional Elections. American Journal of Political Science Districting & Money Cox, Gary and Jonathan Katz Elbridge Gerry s Salamander: The Electoral Consequences of the Reapportionment Revolution. Cambridge University Press. Carson, Jamie L., Erik J. Engstrom, and Jason M. Roberts Redistricting, Candidate Entry, and the Politics of Nineteenth Century U.S. House Elections. American Journal of Political Science 50(2): Cox, Gary W. and Eric Magar How Much is Majority Status in the U.S. Congress Worth? American Political Science Review 93: Hall, Richard L. and Wayman, Frank W. Buying Time: Moneyed Interests and the Mobilization of Bias in Congressional Committees. American Political Science Review 84:3 (September, 1990): Grier, Kevin B. and Michael C. Munger Comparing Interest Group PAC Contributions to House and Senate Incumbents, The Journal of Politics 55: Cann, Damon M Sharing the Wealth: Member Contributions and the Exchange Theory of Party Inuence in the U.S. House of Representatives. Albany: SUNY Press. Cameron, Charles M., David Epstein and Sharyn O Halloran Do Majority-Minority Districts Maximize Substantive Black Representation in Congress? American Political Science Review 90(4): Engstrom, Erik J Stacking the States, Stacking the House: Partisan Consequences of Congressional Redistricting in the 19th Century. American Political Science Review 100(3): Lublin, David Racial Redistricting and African-American Representation: A Critique of Do Majority-Minority Districts Maximize Substantive Black Representation in Congress? American Political Science Review 93(1): Epstein, David and Sharyn OHalloran A Social Science Approach to Race, Redistricting, and Representation. American Political Science Review 93(1): McCarty, Nolan., Keith T. Poole and Howard Rosenthal Does Gerrymandering Cause Polarization?. American Political Science Review 53(3): Stratmann, Thomas Some Talk: Money in Politics. A (Partial) Review of the Literature. Public Choice 124: Green, Donald P. and Jonathan S. Krasno Salvation for the Spendthrift Incumbent: 9

10 Reestimating the Effects of Campaign Spending in House Elections. American Journal of Political Science 32(4): Jacobson, Gary C The Effects of Campaign Spending in House Elections: New Evidence for Old Arguments. American Journal of Political Science 34(2): Careers & Leaders Hibbing, John R Contours of the Modern Congressional Career. American Political Science Review 85(2): Carson, Jamie Strategy, Selection, and Candidate Competition in U.S. House and Senate Elections. The Journal of Politics 67:1-28. Maestas, Caherie D., Sarah Fulton, L. Sandy Maisel, and Walter J. Stone When to Risk It? Institutions, Ambitions, and the Decision to Run for the House. American Political Science Review 100(2): Fox, Richard L. and Jennifer Lawless If Only Theyd Ask: Gender, Recruitment, and Political Ambition. The Journal of Politics 72(2): Cooper, Joseph and David W. Brady Institutional context and leadership style: The House from Cannon to Rayburn. American Political Science Review 75: Herrick, Rebekah and David L. Nixon Is There Life after Congress? Patterns and Determinants of Post-Congressional Careers. Legislative Studies Quarterly 21: Heberlig, Eric, Marc Hetherington, and Bruce Larson The Price of Leadership: Campaign Money and the Polarization of Congressional Parties. The Journal of Politics 68(4): Jessee, Stephen and Neil Malhotra Are Congressional Leaders Middlepersons or Extremists? Yes. Legislative Studies Quarterly 35(3): Rohde, David W Parties and Leaders in the Post Reform House. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Rosenthal, Cindy Simon. and Ronald M. Peters, Jr Who is Nancy Pelosi? PS: Political Science & Politics 41(1): Schlesinger, Joseph Ambition and Politics: Political Careers in the United States. Rand McNally. Hibbing, John Congressional Careers: Contours of Life in the U.S. House of Representatives. Chapel Hill: UNC Press. Hall, Richard L. and Robert P. van Houweling Avarice and Ambition in Congress: Representatives Decisions to Run or Retire from the U.S. House, American Political Science Review 89(1): Sinclair, Barbara The Emergence of Strong Leadership in the 1980 s House of Representatives. The Journal of Politics 54(3):

11 Sinclair, Barbara Legislators, Leaders, and Lawmaking: The U.S. House of Representatives in the Postreform Era. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. Lawrence, Eric, Forrest Maltzman, and Paul Wahlbeck The Politics of Speaker Cannons Committee Assignments. American Journal of Political Science 45(3): Strahan, Randall Leadership and Institutional Change in the Nineteenth Century House. in Brady, David W. and Mathew D. McCubbins. Party, Process, and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the History of Congress. Stanford University Press. Garrison Nelson Partisan patterns of House Leadership Change, American Political Science Review. 71: Krehbiel, Keith, and Alan Wiseman Joseph G. Cannon: Majoritarian from Illinois. Legislative Studies Quarterly 26(3): Kanthak, Kristin Representatives Contributions and Leadership Races in the U.S. House of Crystal Elephants and Committee Chairs: Campaign. American Politics Research 35: Representation & Responsiveness Miller, Warren E. and Donald Stokes Constituency Influence in Congress. American Political Science Review 57(1): Erikson, Robert C Constituency Opinion and Congressional Behavior: A Reexamination of the Miller-Stokes Representation Data. American Journal of Political Science 22(3): Brandice Canes-Wrone, David W. Brady, and John F. Cogan Out of Step, Out of Office: Electoral Accountability and House Members Voting. American Political Science Review 96(2): Griffin, John Electoral Competition and Democratic Responsiveness: A Defense of the Marginality Hypothesis. The Journal of Politics 68(4): Griffin, John D. and Newman, Brian The Unequal Representation of Latinos and Whites. The Journal of Politics 69: Tate, Katherine The Political Representation of Blacks in Congress: Does Race Matter? Legislative Studies Quarterly 26: Gailmard, Sean. and Jeffery A. Jenkins Agency Problems, the 17th Amendment, and Representation in the Senate. American Journal of Political Science 53(2): Goff, Brian L. and Kevin B. Grier On the (mis)measurement of legislator ideology and shirking. Public Choice 76(1-2):5-20. Butler, Daniel M. and David W. Nickerson Can Learning Constituency Opinion Affect how Legislators Vote? Results from a Field Experiment. Paper prepared for presentation at the 2010 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, DC, September 2-5. Eulau et al The Role of the Representative: Some Empirical Observations on the Theory 11

12 of Edmund Burke. American Political Science Review. 53(3) Achen, Christopher H Measuring Representation. American Journal of Political Science 22(3): Ansolabehere, Stephen. David Brady and Morris Fiorina The Vanishing Marginals and Electoral Responsiveness. British Journal of Political Science 22(1):21-38 Denzau, Arthur T. and Michael C. Munger Legislators and Interest-Groups: How Unorganized Interests Get Represented. American Political Science Review Griffin, John Senate Apportionment as a Source of Political Inequality. Legislative Studies Quarterly 31: Huddy, Leonine and Nayda Terkildsen Gender Stereotypes and the Perception of Male and Female Candidates. American Journal of Political Science Matland, Richard E Women s Representation in National Legislatures: Developed and Developing Countries. Legislative Studies Quarterly pp Carol M. Swain Black Faces, Black Interests: The Representation of African Americans in Congress. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Jane Mansbridge Should Blacks Represent Blacks and Women Represent Women? A Contingent Yes. Journal of Politics 61: Bishin, Benjamin G Constituency Influence in Congress: Does Subconstituency Matter? Legislative Studies Quarterly 25: Fowler, James Dynamic Responsivenes in the US Senate. American Journal of Political Science 49: Lawmaking, the Senate, and Bicameralism Krehbiel, Keith Pivotal Politics: A Theory of U.S. Lawmaking. University of Chicago Press. McCubbins, Mathew D. and Thomas Schwartz Congressional Oversight Overlooked: Police Patrols versus Fire Alarms. American Journal of Political Science. Gamm and Smith Policy Leadership and the Development of the Modern Senate in Brady, David W. and Mathew D. McCubbins. Party, Process, and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the History of Congress. Stanford University Press. Mayhew, David Supermajority Rule in the U.S. Senate PS Binder, Sarah A Minority Rights, Majority Rule: Partisanship and the Development of Congress. Cambridge University Press. Binder, Sarah A., and Forrest Maltzman Senatorial Delay in Confirming Federal Judges, American Journal of Political Science 46: Bernhard, William and Brian Sala The Remaking of an American Senate: The 17th 12

13 Amendment and Ideological Responsiveness. The Journal of Politics 68: Schickler, Eric and Gregory Wawro Wheres The Pivot? Obstruction and Lawmaking in the Pre-Cloture Senate American Journal of Political Science 48(4): Schiller, Wendy J Senators as Political Entrepreneurs: Using Bill Sponsorship to Shape Legislative Agendas. American Journal of Political Science 39: Terry M. Moe An Assessment of the Positive Theory of Congressional Dominance. Legislative Studies Quarterly 12(4): Sarah Binder The Dynamics of Legislative Gridlock, American Political Science Review 93(3) Segal, Jeffrey A Separation-of-Powers Games in the Positive Theory of Congress and Courts. American Political Science Review 91(1): See also the correction 92(4): Cameron, Charles M Veto Bargaining: Presidents and the Politics of Negative Power. Cambridge University Press. McCubbins, Mathew D. Roger G. Noll and Barry R. Weingast Administrative Procedures as Instruments of Political Control. Journal of Law, Economics & Organization 3(2): Mayhew, David Divided We Govern: Party Control, Lawmaking and Investigations, Second Edition. New Haven: Yale University Press. Broz, J. Lawrence Congressional Politics of International Financial Rescues. American Journal of Political Science 49(3): Berry, Christopher R., Barry C. Burden, and William G. Howell After Enactment: The Lives and Deaths of Federal Programs. American Journal of Political Science 54(1): Bartels, Larry M Constituency Opinion and Congressional Policy Making: The Reagan Defense Build Up. American Political Science Review 85(2): Kiewiet, D. Roderick and Mathew McCubbins The Logic of Delegation: Congressional Parties and the Appropriations Process. University of Chicago Press. Hausegger, Lori. and Lawrence Baum Inviting Congressional Action: A Study of Supreme Court Motivations in Statutory Interpretation American Journal of Political Science 43(1): Peterson, David A. M., Lawrence J. Grossback, James A. Stimson, and Amy Gangl Congressional Response to Mandate Elections. American Journal of Political Science 47(3): Binder, Sarah A., and Steven S. Smith Political Goals and Procedural Choice in the Senate. Journal of Politics Gronke, Paul The Electorate, the Campaign, and the Office: A Unified Approach to Senate and House Elections. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Koger, Gregory Filibustering: A Political History of Obstruction in the House and Senate. University of Chicago Press. 13

14 13 Research Presentations Polsby, Nelson W. and Eric Schickler Landmarks in the Study of Congress since Annual Review of Political Science 5: University Policies & Resources More information about university policies relating to academic issues can be found online: UWM has a writing center. Take advantage of it: Syllabus Version: September 8,

Temple University Department of Political Science. Political Science 8103: Legislative Behavior. Spring 2012 Semester

Temple University Department of Political Science. Political Science 8103: Legislative Behavior. Spring 2012 Semester Temple University Department of Political Science Political Science 8103: Legislative Behavior Spring 2012 Semester Instructor Ryan J. Vander Wielen, Ph.D. Office: 457 Gladfelter Hall Office Phone: 215.204.1466

More information

Political Science Congress: Representation, Roll-Call Voting, and Elections. Fall :00 11:50 M 212 Scott Hall

Political Science Congress: Representation, Roll-Call Voting, and Elections. Fall :00 11:50 M 212 Scott Hall Political Science 490-0 Congress: Representation, Roll-Call Voting, and Elections Fall 2003 9:00 11:50 M 212 Scott Hall Professor Jeffery A. Jenkins E-mail: j-jenkins3@northwestern.edu Office: 210 Scott

More information

AMERICAN POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS

AMERICAN POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS Political Science 251 Thad Kousser Fall Quarter 2015 SSB 369 Mondays, noon-2:50pm tkousser@ucsd.edu AMERICAN POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS This course is designed to help prepare graduate students to pass the

More information

COURSE SYLLABUS PSC 663: LEGISLATIVE POLITICS

COURSE SYLLABUS PSC 663: LEGISLATIVE POLITICS COURSE SYLLABUS PSC 663: LEGISLATIVE POLITICS Spring 2007 Prof. Charles J. Finocchiaro Tuesdays 9:00-11:50am Office: 422 Park Hall 520 Park Hall Phone: 645-2251 ext. 422 University at Buffalo E-mail: finocchi@buffalo.edu

More information

THE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS (Political Science 345 L32) Jon C. Rogowski office: Seigle 281 Fall 2013 phone: office hours: Thu, 10am-12pm

THE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS (Political Science 345 L32) Jon C. Rogowski office: Seigle 281 Fall 2013 phone: office hours: Thu, 10am-12pm THE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS (Political Science 345 L32) Jon C. Rogowski office: Seigle 281 Fall 2013 phone: 314.935.5807 Tue/Thu 1:00-2:30 e-mail: jrogowski@wustl.edu Seigle 106 office hours: Thu, 10am-12pm

More information

POLS G9208 Legislatures in Historical and Comparative Perspective

POLS G9208 Legislatures in Historical and Comparative Perspective POLS G9208 Legislatures in Historical and Comparative Perspective Fall 2006 Prof. Gregory Wawro 212-854-8540 741 International Affairs Bldg. gjw10@columbia.edu Office Hours: TBA and by appt. http://www.columbia.edu/

More information

Graduate Seminar in American Politics Fall 2006 Wednesday 3:00-5:00 Room E Adam J. Berinsky E

Graduate Seminar in American Politics Fall 2006 Wednesday 3:00-5:00 Room E Adam J. Berinsky E 17.200 Graduate Seminar in American Politics Fall 2006 Wednesday 3:00-5:00 Room E51-393 Adam J. Berinsky E53-459 253-8190 e-mail: berinsky@mit.edu Purpose and Requirements This seminar is designed to acquaint

More information

POL SCI 926 Graduate Seminar in Legislative Process. Spring :00pm 6:40pm Thursday Bolton Hall 657

POL SCI 926 Graduate Seminar in Legislative Process. Spring :00pm 6:40pm Thursday Bolton Hall 657 POL SCI 926 Graduate Seminar in Legislative Process Spring 2018 4:00pm 6:40pm Thursday Bolton Hall 657 Professor Hong Min Park hmpark1@uwm.edu Bolton Hall 666 Course Description This course is a graduate

More information

Syllabus. PLS 824: Research Seminar on Congress Spring A S. Kedzie ( ) Required Readings

Syllabus. PLS 824: Research Seminar on Congress Spring A S. Kedzie ( ) Required Readings Syllabus PLS 824: Research Seminar on Congress D. Rohde Spring 2004 324A S. Kedzie (355-7655) Mondays, 104 BH (3:00-5:50) rohde@msu.edu Required Readings The following books are required, and should be

More information

POLI SCI 426: United States Congress. Syllabus, Spring 2017

POLI SCI 426: United States Congress. Syllabus, Spring 2017 Prof. Eleanor Powell Email: eleanor.powell@wisc.edu Syllabus, Spring 2017 Office Location: 216 North Hall Office Hours: Monday 10-12, Must sign-up online to reserve a spot (UW Scheduling Assistant) Lecture:

More information

the american congress reader

the american congress reader the american congress reader The American Congress Reader provides a supplement to the popular and newly updated American Congress undergraduate textbook. Designed by the authors of the textbook, the Reader

More information

Syllabus for POS 592: American Political Institutions

Syllabus for POS 592: American Political Institutions Syllabus for POS 592: American Political Institutions Dr. Mark D. Ramirez School of Politics and Global Studies Arizona State University Office location: Coor Hall 6761 Cell phone: 480-965-2835 E-mail:

More information

GOVERNMENT 2358: CONGRESS AND LEGISLATIVE POLITICS

GOVERNMENT 2358: CONGRESS AND LEGISLATIVE POLITICS GOVERNMENT 2358: CONGRESS AND LEGISLATIVE POLITICS Harvard University Barry C. Burden Spring Semester 2000 burden@fas.harvard.edu Tuesdays 2-4pm Littauer Center 228 North Yard Littauer Center M-17 North

More information

American Political Parties Political Science 219 Spring 2009

American Political Parties Political Science 219 Spring 2009 American Political Parties Political Science 219 Spring 2009 Professor Sarah Binder Class: Tuesdays 3:30-5:20pm 467 Monroe Office hours: Th 2-4 pm phone: 994-2167 or by appointment email: binder@gwu.edu

More information

POS5277: Electoral Politics Spring 2011 Tuesday: 11:45am-2:15pm

POS5277: Electoral Politics Spring 2011 Tuesday: 11:45am-2:15pm POS5277: Electoral Politics Spring 2011 Tuesday: 11:45am-2:15pm Professor John Barry Ryan Office: 558 Bellamy Building Phone: 850-644-7324 E-Mail: jryan2@fsu.edu Office Hours: Tuesdays and Thursdays 2:30pm-3:30pm

More information

Political Science 820 Proseminar in American Politics. Spring 2002 Tuesday 12:40-3: North Kedzie Hall

Political Science 820 Proseminar in American Politics. Spring 2002 Tuesday 12:40-3: North Kedzie Hall Political Science 820 Proseminar in American Politics Spring 2002 Tuesday 12:40-3:30 134 North Kedzie Hall Professor Jeffery A. Jenkins Office: 319 South Kedzie Hall jenki107@msu.edu This course provides

More information

American Political Parties Political Science 8219 Spring Monroe Office hours: Wed 2-4 pm

American Political Parties Political Science 8219 Spring Monroe Office hours: Wed 2-4 pm American Political Parties Political Science 8219 Spring 2011 Professor Sarah Binder Class: Mondays 3:30-5:20pm 467 Monroe Office hours: Wed 2-4 pm phone: 202-994-2167 or by appointment email: binder@gwu.edu

More information

POLITICAL SCIENCE 260B. Proseminar in American Political Institutions Spring 2003

POLITICAL SCIENCE 260B. Proseminar in American Political Institutions Spring 2003 POLITICAL SCIENCE 260B Proseminar in American Political Institutions Spring 2003 Instructor: Scott C. James Office: 3343 Bunche Hall Telephone: 825-4442 (office); 825-4331 (message) E-mail: scjames@ucla.edu

More information

Political Science 8110 RESEARCH ON ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Fall 2010 (21463) Baldwin 304B. T 3:30-6:15 p.m. Dr. Jamie L. Carson Office:

Political Science 8110 RESEARCH ON ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Fall 2010 (21463) Baldwin 304B. T 3:30-6:15 p.m. Dr. Jamie L. Carson Office: Political Science 8110 RESEARCH ON ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Fall 2010 (21463) Baldwin 302 T 3:30-6:15 p.m. Dr. Jamie L. Carson Office: 542-2889 Baldwin 304B Email: carson@uga.edu Office Hours: Th 3:30-4:30 and

More information

COURSE SYLLABUS PSC 761: AMERICAN POLITICAL FRONTIERS

COURSE SYLLABUS PSC 761: AMERICAN POLITICAL FRONTIERS COURSE SYLLABUS PSC 761: AMERICAN POLITICAL FRONTIERS Spring 2006 Prof. Charles J. Finocchiaro Tuesdays 4:00-6:50 Office: 422 Park Hall 502 Park Hall Phone: 645-2251 ext. 422 University at Buffalo E-mail:

More information

Ambition and Party Loyalty in the U.S. Senate 1

Ambition and Party Loyalty in the U.S. Senate 1 Ambition and Party Loyalty in the U.S. Senate 1 Sarah A. Treul Department of Political Science University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN 55455 streul@umn.edu April 3, 2007 1 Paper originally prepared for

More information

American Political Process Political Science 8210 Fall Monroe; Office hours: Fridays 10am- 12 pm

American Political Process Political Science 8210 Fall Monroe; Office hours: Fridays 10am- 12 pm American Political Process Political Science 8210 Fall 2013 Professor Sarah Binder Class: Thursdays 6:10-8 pm 467 Monroe; 202-994- 2167 Office hours: Fridays 10am- 12 pm binder@gwu.edu or by appointment

More information

A Delayed Return to Historical Norms: Congressional Party Polarization after the Second World War

A Delayed Return to Historical Norms: Congressional Party Polarization after the Second World War B.J.Pol.S. 36, 000-000 Copyright 2006 Cambridge University Press doi:10.1017/s0000000000000000 Printed in the United Kingdom A Delayed Return to Historical Norms: Congressional Party Polarization after

More information

Political Science 304: Congressional Politics (Spring 2015 Rutgers University)

Political Science 304: Congressional Politics (Spring 2015 Rutgers University) *** PRELIMINARY SYLABUS AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE*** Professor Sophia J. Wallace E-mail: sj.wallace@rutgers.edu Course Website: https://sakai.rutgers.edu/portal Political Science 304: Congressional Politics

More information

Political Science 254 American Political Development Fall 2011

Political Science 254 American Political Development Fall 2011 Political Science 254 American Political Development Fall 2011 Over the years the phrase, American Political Development, has come to connote a genre of research that addresses a particular set of issues.

More information

POL SCI Congressional Politics. Fall 2018 Mon & Wed 11:00AM 12:15PM Location TBA

POL SCI Congressional Politics. Fall 2018 Mon & Wed 11:00AM 12:15PM Location TBA POL SCI 426-001 Congressional Politics Fall 2018 Mon & Wed 11:00AM 12:15PM Location TBA Professor Hong Min Park Email: hmpark1@uwm.edu Office: Bolton 666 Office hours: Mon & Wed 10:00AM 10:50AM Course

More information

GOVT 604 (DRAFT SYLLABUS) SEMINAR ON CONGRESS AND LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR Fall Office Hours: Tues 3:00-6:00 pm in the Johnson Center

GOVT 604 (DRAFT SYLLABUS) SEMINAR ON CONGRESS AND LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR Fall Office Hours: Tues 3:00-6:00 pm in the Johnson Center GOVT 604 (DRAFT SYLLABUS) SEMINAR ON CONGRESS AND LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR Fall 2017 Dr. Joshua Semat Location: Robinson B 122 Office Hours: Tues 3:00-6:00 pm in the Johnson Center and by appointment email:

More information

American Voters and Elections

American Voters and Elections American Voters and Elections Instructor Information: Taeyong Park Department of Political Science, Washington University in St. Louis Email: t.park@wustl.edu 1. COURSE DESCRIPTION This course will provide

More information

The American Legislature PLS Fall 2008

The American Legislature PLS Fall 2008 The American Legislature PLS 307 001 Fall 2008 Dr. Jungkun Seo Office: Leutze Hall 272 Department of Public and International Affairs Office Phone: (910) 962-2287 University of North Carolina at Wilmington

More information

The Policymaking Process (CAS PO331) Boston University Spring Last revised: January 14, 2014

The Policymaking Process (CAS PO331) Boston University Spring Last revised: January 14, 2014 The Policymaking Process (CAS PO331) Boston University Spring 2014 Last revised: January 14, 2014 Professor: Katherine Krimmel Email: kkrimmel@bu.edu Office location: 232 Bay State Road, PLS 210 Office

More information

Course Syllabus PLSC 315: Legislative Politics Fall 2017 CRN: Class Time: M, F 1:00 2:15 PM Class Location: Fraser Hall 103

Course Syllabus PLSC 315: Legislative Politics Fall 2017 CRN: Class Time: M, F 1:00 2:15 PM Class Location: Fraser Hall 103 Course Syllabus PLSC 315: Legislative Politics Fall 2017 CRN: 12910 Class Time: M, F 1:00 2:15 PM Class Location: Fraser Hall 103 Professor: Kenneth Miller millerk@geneseo.edu Office: Fraser Hall 105 E

More information

PLS 492 Congress and the Presidency Fall 2009

PLS 492 Congress and the Presidency Fall 2009 PLS 492 Congress and the Presidency Fall 2009 Dr. Jungkun Seo Office: Leutze Hall 272 Department of Public and International Affairs Office Phone: (910) 962-2287 University of North Carolina at Wilmington

More information

Political Science 8110 RESEARCH ON ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Fall 2014 (81816) Baldwin 304B. Th 3:30-6:15 p.m. Dr. Jamie L. Carson Office:

Political Science 8110 RESEARCH ON ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Fall 2014 (81816) Baldwin 304B. Th 3:30-6:15 p.m. Dr. Jamie L. Carson Office: Political Science 8110 RESEARCH ON ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Fall 2014 (81816) Baldwin 302 Th 3:30-6:15 p.m. Dr. Jamie L. Carson Office: 542-2889 Baldwin 304B Email: carson@uga.edu Office Hours: T 3:30-4:30 and

More information

PS 121 Analyzing Congress Winter Prof. Alexander V. Hirsch Baxter 323 OH Tuesday 1-3

PS 121 Analyzing Congress Winter Prof. Alexander V. Hirsch Baxter 323 OH Tuesday 1-3 PS 121 Analyzing Congress Winter 2016 Prof. Alexander V. Hirsch Baxter 323 OH Tuesday 1-3 This class will introduce you to the study of the US Congress, with a focus on thinking analytically about the

More information

Political Science 8110 RESEARCH ON ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Fall 2016 (30070) Journalism 241 T 3:30 6:15 p.m. Dr. Jamie L. Carson Office:

Political Science 8110 RESEARCH ON ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Fall 2016 (30070) Journalism 241 T 3:30 6:15 p.m. Dr. Jamie L. Carson Office: Political Science 8110 RESEARCH ON ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Fall 2016 (30070) Journalism 241 T 3:30 6:15 p.m. Dr. Jamie L. Carson Office: 542-2889 Baldwin 304B Email: carson@uga.edu Office Hours: Th 3:30-4:30

More information

GOVT 307: Legislative Behavior

GOVT 307: Legislative Behavior GOVT 307: Legislative Behavior Robert J. McGrath, PhD Fall 2017 George Mason University Schar School of Policy and Government E-mail: rmcgrat2@gmu.edu Web: blackboard.gmu.edu Office Hours: MW 1:15-2:45

More information

Strategic Partisanship: Party Priorities, Agenda Control and the Decline of Bipartisan Cooperation in the House

Strategic Partisanship: Party Priorities, Agenda Control and the Decline of Bipartisan Cooperation in the House Strategic Partisanship: Party Priorities, Agenda Control and the Decline of Bipartisan Cooperation in the House Laurel Harbridge Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science Faculty Fellow, Institute

More information

Parties as Procedural Coalitions in Congress: An Examination of Differing Career Tracks

Parties as Procedural Coalitions in Congress: An Examination of Differing Career Tracks Parties as Procedural Coalitions in Congress: An Examination of Differing Career Tracks Jeffery A. Jenkins Northwestern University j-jenkins3@northwestern.edu Michael H. Crespin Michigan State University

More information

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Department of Politics. Politics 541 Spring 2005

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Department of Politics. Politics 541 Spring 2005 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Department of Politics Politics 541 Spring 2005 The American Political System R. Douglas Arnold This seminar is designed to introduce students to the scholarly study of American politics.

More information

Introduction to American Politics POLI 1. Professor Trounstine Fall 2009

Introduction to American Politics POLI 1. Professor Trounstine Fall 2009 Introduction to American Politics POLI 1 Professor Trounstine Fall 2009 Office: Classroom Building 352 Office Hours: Wednesdays 9-11am Office Hours Sign Up: www.mysignup.com/trounstine Course Website:

More information

PLS 492 (306) Congress and the Presidency Fall 2010

PLS 492 (306) Congress and the Presidency Fall 2010 PLS 492 (306) Congress and the Presidency Fall 2010 Dr. Jungkun Seo Office: Leutze Hall 272 Department of Public and International Affairs Office Phone: (910) 962-2287 University of North Carolina at Wilmington

More information

Supporting Information for Competing Gridlock Models and Status Quo Policies

Supporting Information for Competing Gridlock Models and Status Quo Policies for Competing Gridlock Models and Status Quo Policies Jonathan Woon University of Pittsburgh Ian P. Cook University of Pittsburgh January 15, 2015 Extended Discussion of Competing Models Spatial models

More information

The U.S. Congress Syllabus

The U.S. Congress Syllabus The U.S. Congress Syllabus Northeastern University POLS 3300/7251, Fall 2016 Th 5:00pm - 8:00pm 220 Behrakis Health Sciences Center Professor: Nick Beauchamp Email: n.beauchamp@northeastern.edu Office:

More information

PADM-GP Policy Formation and Policy Analysis. Fall 2018

PADM-GP Policy Formation and Policy Analysis. Fall 2018 PADM-GP.2411 Policy Formation and Policy Analysis Instructor Information Fall 2018 Instructor: Mona Vakilifathi Email: mvakilif@nyu.edu Office Hours: T 4-6pm [Puck Building 3094] Grader: Renee McKain E-mail:

More information

Jason Matthew Roberts Curriculum Vitae November 2010

Jason Matthew Roberts Curriculum Vitae November 2010 Jason Matthew Roberts Curriculum Vitae November 2010 Department of Political Science University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Phone: 919-962-8286 361 Hamilton Hall Fax: 919-962-0432 CB 3265 jroberts@unc.edu

More information

American Political Parties Political Science 4140 & 5140 Spring Steven Rogers Classroom: McGannon Hall 121

American Political Parties Political Science 4140 & 5140 Spring Steven Rogers Classroom: McGannon Hall 121 American Political Parties Political Science 4140 & 5140 Spring 2017 Steven Rogers Classroom: McGannon Hall 121 Office: McGannon Hall 125 Class time: Monday. 7:00 9:30pm Email: smrogers@slu.edu Office

More information

Professor of Government Frank J. Reagan 09 Chair in Policy Studies

Professor of Government Frank J. Reagan 09 Chair in Policy Studies September 2009 Linda L. Fowler Professor of Government Frank J. Reagan 09 Chair in Policy Studies Email: linda.fowler@dartmouth.edu Office: Home: Dartmouth College 5 Webster Terrace 6108 Silsby Hall Hanover,

More information

PROBLEMS OF THE PRESIDENCY University of South Carolina

PROBLEMS OF THE PRESIDENCY University of South Carolina PROBLEMS OF THE PRESIDENCY University of South Carolina POLI 764 Spring, 2005 Office Hours: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 9:30 11:00 a.m. and by appointment Professor Brad T. Gomez Office: Gambrell 345

More information

Syllabus PPAI 2000 Institutions and Policymaking Overview Course Requirements Short Memos

Syllabus PPAI 2000 Institutions and Policymaking Overview Course Requirements Short Memos Syllabus PPAI 2000 Institutions and Policymaking Thursday 4:00-6:20 Evan Schnidman evan.schnidman@gmail.com Office Hours: Thursday 2:00-4:00 or by appointment Overview This course is about how institutions

More information

Feel like a more informed citizen of the United States and of the world

Feel like a more informed citizen of the United States and of the world GOVT 151: American Government & Politics Fall 2013 Mondays & Wednesdays, 8:30-9:50am or 1:10-2:30pm Dr. Brian Harrison, Ph.D. bfharrison@wesleyan.edu Office/Office Hours: PAC 331, Tuesdays 10:00am-1:00pm

More information

Leaving Office: The U.S. Senator s Representation, Ideological Adoption, and Strategic Retirement

Leaving Office: The U.S. Senator s Representation, Ideological Adoption, and Strategic Retirement International Journal of Social Science Studies Vol. 5, No. 10; October 2017 ISSN 2324-8033 E-ISSN 2324-8041 Published by Redfame Publishing URL: http://ijsss.redfame.com Leaving Office: The U.S. Senator

More information

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Department of Politics. Politics 541 Spring 2006

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Department of Politics. Politics 541 Spring 2006 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Department of Politics Politics 541 Spring 2006 The American Political System R. Douglas Arnold This seminar is designed to introduce students to the scholarly study of American politics.

More information

The Logic to Senate Committee Assignments: Committees and Electoral Vulnerability with Cross Pressured Senators

The Logic to Senate Committee Assignments: Committees and Electoral Vulnerability with Cross Pressured Senators The Logic to Senate Committee Assignments: Committees and Electoral Vulnerability with Cross Pressured Senators Neilan S. Chaturvedi Assistant Professor of Political Science California State Polytechnic

More information

Legislative Process POLS 4600, Fall 2016 MWF 10 :10-11:00

Legislative Process POLS 4600, Fall 2016 MWF 10 :10-11:00 Legislative Process POLS 4600, Fall 2016 MWF 10 :10-11:00 Instructor: Ryan D. Williamson Room: Baldwin 322 email: ryandw10@uga.edu Office: BofA 404 Website: ryandwilliamson.com Office hours: MWF 11:10-12:10

More information

SPECIAL TOPICS: CONGRESSIONAL PROCESS AND PROCEDURE

SPECIAL TOPICS: CONGRESSIONAL PROCESS AND PROCEDURE SPECIAL TOPICS: CONGRESSIONAL PROCESS AND PROCEDURE Political Science 4790H Fall 2018 TR 2:00-3:15 Baldwin Hall 104 Instructor: Anthony Madonna Email: ajmadonn@uga.edu Website: https://www.tonymadonna.com/pols-4790h/

More information

FRANCES E. LEE Curriculum Vitae. Professor, Government & Politics, University of Maryland, 2010-present.

FRANCES E. LEE Curriculum Vitae. Professor, Government & Politics, University of Maryland, 2010-present. FRANCES E. LEE Curriculum Vitae Department of Government and Politics 3140 Tydings Hall University of Maryland College Park, MD 20742 (301) 405-4339 FLee1@umd.edu EMPLOYMENT Professor, Government & Politics,

More information

core seminar in American politics

core seminar in American politics core seminar in American politics PSCI 7011.001 FALL 2011 MONDAY 3:35-6:05 PM JENNIFER WOLAK 131C KETCHUM wolakj@colorado.edu OFFICE HOURS: Mondays, 1-3 p.m. This course concerns the study of the scintillating

More information

Guidelines for Comprehensive Exams in American Politics Department of Political Science The Pennsylvania State University September 2003

Guidelines for Comprehensive Exams in American Politics Department of Political Science The Pennsylvania State University September 2003 Guidelines for Comprehensive Exams in American Politics Department of Political Science The Pennsylvania State University September 2003 The American Politics comprehensive exam consists of two parts.

More information

The Declining Value of Moderation in US House Elections. Henry A. Kim University of California, Santa Barbara

The Declining Value of Moderation in US House Elections. Henry A. Kim University of California, Santa Barbara The Declining Value of Moderation in US House Elections Henry A. Kim University of California, Santa Barbara h27kim@gmail.com Brad L. LeVeck University of California, Merced 1 bleveck@ucmerced.edu Prepared

More information

The Senator s Strategic Use of Time in Representation

The Senator s Strategic Use of Time in Representation Journal of Power, Politics & Governance June 2017, Vol. 5, No. 1, pp. 29-45 ISSN: 2372-4919 (Print), 2372-4927 (Online) Copyright The Author(s). All Rights Reserved. Published by American Research Institute

More information

POL SCI Party Politics in America. Fall 2018 Online Course

POL SCI Party Politics in America. Fall 2018 Online Course POL SCI 421-001 Party Politics in America Fall 2018 Online Course Professor Hong Min Park Email: hmpark1@uwm.edu Office: Bolton 666 Office hours: Mon & Wed 10:00 10:50 AM Course Description This course

More information

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO. PPA 210: Political Environment of Policy Making Spring 2001

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO. PPA 210: Political Environment of Policy Making Spring 2001 CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO PPA 210: Political Environment of Policy Making Spring 2001 Professor David De Luz, M.P.P.A. 3029 Tahoe Hall (916) 278-6557 (Office) (916) 344-8605 (Home) david.deluz@cgu.edu

More information

Representing the Advantaged: How Politicians Reinforce Inequality. Forthcoming July Cambridge University Press.

Representing the Advantaged: How Politicians Reinforce Inequality. Forthcoming July Cambridge University Press. Daniel M. Butler Department of Political Science 77 Prospect St., Rm. C124 New Haven, CT 06520 203.432.6292 daniel.butler@yale.edu http://www.danielmarkbutler.com Professional Experience Washington University

More information

Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service,

Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, 1789-2017 Matthew Eric Glassman Analyst on the Congress Amber Hope Wilhelm Graphics Specialist January 3, 2017 Congressional Research

More information

Power and Politics in America POL-UA 300 Spring 2017 Professor Christopher Dawes

Power and Politics in America POL-UA 300 Spring 2017 Professor Christopher Dawes Power and Politics in America POL-UA 300 Spring 2017 Professor Christopher Dawes Course Description This course is an introduction to American political institutions and behavior. The course is made up

More information

Jason Matthew Roberts Curriculum Vitae January 2010

Jason Matthew Roberts Curriculum Vitae January 2010 Jason Matthew Roberts Curriculum Vitae January 2010 Department of Political Science University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Phone: 919-962-8286 361 Hamilton Hall Fax: 919-962-0432 CB 3265 jroberts@unc.edu

More information

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Department of Politics. Politics 541 Fall 2006

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Department of Politics. Politics 541 Fall 2006 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Department of Politics Politics 541 Fall 2006 The American Political System R. Douglas Arnold This seminar is designed to introduce students to the scholarly study of American politics.

More information

GOVT 94RO Positive Theories of the Presidency and the Separation of Powers

GOVT 94RO Positive Theories of the Presidency and the Separation of Powers GOVT 94RO Positive Theories of the Presidency and the Separation of Powers Spring 2017 Instructor: Jon Rogowski Course time: Wednesdays, 4-6pm Email: rogowski@fas.harvard.edu Location: CGIS Knafel 107

More information

UC Davis UC Davis Previously Published Works

UC Davis UC Davis Previously Published Works UC Davis UC Davis Previously Published Works Title Constitutional design and 2014 senate election outcomes Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8kx5k8zk Journal Forum (Germany), 12(4) Authors Highton,

More information

Political Science 333: Elections, American Style Spring 2006

Political Science 333: Elections, American Style Spring 2006 Course Summary: Political Science 333: Elections, American Style Spring 2006 Professor Paul Gronke 434 Eliot Hall 503-517-7393 Office Hours: Thursday, 9-11 am or by appointment Readings and other resources:

More information

NOTE: The correct title of this course is: Party Polarization in American Politics (NOT Congress ) Party Polarization in American Politics

NOTE: The correct title of this course is: Party Polarization in American Politics (NOT Congress ) Party Polarization in American Politics NOTE: The correct title of this course is: Party Polarization in American Politics (NOT Congress ) Spring 2014, Tues. 4:15-6:15pm Course location: room TBD Party Polarization in American Politics Professor:

More information

Primaries and Candidates: Examining the Influence of Primary Electorates on Candidate Ideology

Primaries and Candidates: Examining the Influence of Primary Electorates on Candidate Ideology Primaries and Candidates: Examining the Influence of Primary Electorates on Candidate Ideology Lindsay Nielson Bucknell University Neil Visalvanich Durham University September 24, 2015 Abstract Primary

More information

HARVARD UNIVERSITY Department of Government American Politics Field Seminar Gov Fall 2012 Monday, 2 to 4 p.m.

HARVARD UNIVERSITY Department of Government American Politics Field Seminar Gov Fall 2012 Monday, 2 to 4 p.m. 9/4/12 11:30 a.m. HARVARD UNIVERSITY Department of Government American Politics Field Seminar Gov. 2305 Fall 2012 Monday, 2 to 4 p.m., Room 107, CGIS PLEASE NOTE READING ASSIGNMENT FOR FIRST CLASS Jennifer

More information

ERIC SCHICKLER (C.V. October 2011)

ERIC SCHICKLER (C.V. October 2011) ERIC SCHICKLER (C.V. October 2011) Department of Political Science University of California, Berkeley 210 Barrows Hall Berkeley, CA 94720-1950 (510) 643-2933 Eschickler@berkeley.edu EMPLOYMENT Jeffrey

More information

Challenger Quality and the Incumbency Advantage

Challenger Quality and the Incumbency Advantage Challenger Quality and the Incumbency Advantage Pamela Ban Department of Government Harvard University Elena Llaudet Department of Government Harvard University James M. Snyder, Jr. Department of Government

More information

Bawn CV July Kathleen Bawn. Associate Professor Department of Political Science phone: UCLA fax:

Bawn CV July Kathleen Bawn. Associate Professor Department of Political Science phone: UCLA fax: Bawn CV July 2007 Kathleen Bawn Associate Professor Department of Political Science phone: 310-968-3676 UCLA fax: 310-825-0778 Los Angeles CA 90095-1472 email: kbawn@polisci.ucla.edu Research Interests:

More information

VITA RICHARD FLEISHER

VITA RICHARD FLEISHER VITA RICHARD FLEISHER Personal Information Education Office Address: Department of Political Science Fordham University Bronx, New York 10458 Office Phone: (718) 817-3952 Office Fax: (718) 817-3972 e-mail:

More information

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO. PPA 210: Political Environment of Policy Making Spring 2002

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO. PPA 210: Political Environment of Policy Making Spring 2002 CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO PPA 210: Political Environment of Policy Making Spring 2002 Professor David De Luz, M.P.P.A., M.A. 3051 Tahoe Hall (916) 278-4667 (Office) (916) 419-8605 (Home)

More information

Institutions of Democracy

Institutions of Democracy Political Science 130: Institutions of Democracy Instructor: Course Description and Goals: This class will take students through the design, maintenance, and evolution of democratic institutions of all

More information

Campaigns and Elections (GOVT 215) Spring 2015

Campaigns and Elections (GOVT 215) Spring 2015 Campaigns and Elections (GOVT 215) Spring 2015 Professor Nick Goedert Contact: goedertn@lafayette.edu Meeting Times: 11:00-12:15 or 2:45-4:00 Tues/Thurs Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-4:00 Office: Kirby

More information

Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service,

Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, 1789-2013 Matthew Eric Glassman Analyst on the Congress Amber Hope Wilhelm Graphics Specialist January 3, 2013 CRS Report for Congress

More information

Proposed New Undergraduate Class: Minority Representation in American Politics. Course Description

Proposed New Undergraduate Class: Minority Representation in American Politics. Course Description Proposed New Undergraduate Class: Minority Representation in American Politics Course Description This course is an exploration of whether and how racial and ethnic minorities are able to organize effectively

More information

American Democracy and the Policymaking Process Prof. Steve Jackson Syllabus September 3, 2013

American Democracy and the Policymaking Process Prof. Steve Jackson Syllabus September 3, 2013 American Democracy and the Policymaking Process Prof. Steve Jackson Syllabus September 3, 2013 This is a course on the policy making processes in the United States Government. It will serve as a window

More information

Amy Tenhouse. Incumbency Surge: Examining the 1996 Margin of Victory for U.S. House Incumbents

Amy Tenhouse. Incumbency Surge: Examining the 1996 Margin of Victory for U.S. House Incumbents Amy Tenhouse Incumbency Surge: Examining the 1996 Margin of Victory for U.S. House Incumbents In 1996, the American public reelected 357 members to the United States House of Representatives; of those

More information

The Elasticity of Partisanship in Congress: An Analysis of Legislative Bipartisanship

The Elasticity of Partisanship in Congress: An Analysis of Legislative Bipartisanship The Elasticity of Partisanship in Congress: An Analysis of Legislative Bipartisanship Laurel Harbridge College Fellow, Department of Political Science Faculty Fellow, Institute for Policy Research Northwestern

More information

POLS G6210: Theories & Debates in American Politics Wednesdays, 1:30-3:20pm, Fall 2005 IAB 270b

POLS G6210: Theories & Debates in American Politics Wednesdays, 1:30-3:20pm, Fall 2005 IAB 270b POLS G6210: Theories & Debates in American Politics Wednesdays, 1:30-3:20pm, Fall 2005 IAB 270b Greg Wawro 741 IAB, gjw10@columbia.edu office hours: 3:30-5:30PM Tues. Jeffrey R. Lax 725 IAB, JRL2124@columbia.edu

More information

WWS 300 DEMOCRACY. Fall 2010, Tu-Th, 10-10:50

WWS 300 DEMOCRACY. Fall 2010, Tu-Th, 10-10:50 WWS 300 DEMOCRACY Fall 2010, Tu-Th, 10-10:50 Carles Boix, Politics and Woodrow Wilson School Nolan McCarty 433 Robertson Hall 424 Robertson Hall Ph: 258-1578 Ph: 258-5637 cboix@princeton.edu nmccarty@princeton.edu

More information

AMERICAN POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS (Political Science 520) FALL 2013 SYLLABUS

AMERICAN POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS (Political Science 520) FALL 2013 SYLLABUS AMERICAN POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS (Political Science 520) FALL 2013 SYLLABUS Instructor: Jon Rogowski Class meeting: Tuesday, 3pm-5pm Office: Seigle 281 Location: Lopata House 10 Phone: 314.935.5807 E-mail:

More information

Campaigns and Elections (GOVT 215) Spring 2015

Campaigns and Elections (GOVT 215) Spring 2015 Campaigns and Elections (GOVT 215) Spring 2015 Professor Nick Goedert Contact: goedertn@lafayette.edu Meeting Times: 11:00-12:15 or 2:45-4:00 Tues/Thurs Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-4:00 Office: Kirby

More information

POLA 210: American Government, Spring 2008

POLA 210: American Government, Spring 2008 POLA 210: American Government, Spring 2008 Section 2: MWF 8:00 8:50 a.m., 101 Norman Mayer Building Dr. Christopher Lawrence Office: 309 Norman Mayer Building Hours: MWF 1:00 2:00

More information

Formal Political Theory II: Applications

Formal Political Theory II: Applications Formal Political Theory II: Applications PS 526, Spring 2007, Thursday 3:30-6:00 p.m., Room: Lincoln 394 Instructor: Milan Svolik Email: msvolik@uiuc.edu Office hours: Tuesday 9 12 p.m. and by appointment,

More information

Vote Switchers and Party Influence in the U.S. House. Garry Young George Washington University

Vote Switchers and Party Influence in the U.S. House. Garry Young George Washington University Vote Switchers and Party Influence in the U.S. House Garry Young George Washington University YoungG@gwu.edu Vicky Wilkins University of Georgia vwilkins@uga.edu Thanks to Keith Dougherty, Valerie Heitshusen,

More information

Bipartisan Cosponsorship and District Partisanship: How Members of Congress Respond to Changing Constituencies

Bipartisan Cosponsorship and District Partisanship: How Members of Congress Respond to Changing Constituencies University of Colorado, Boulder CU Scholar Undergraduate Honors Theses Honors Program Spring 2015 Bipartisan Cosponsorship and District Partisanship: How Members of Congress Respond to Changing Constituencies

More information

David Mayhew (1974, 51) argues that politicians

David Mayhew (1974, 51) argues that politicians The Position-taking Value of Bill Sponsorship in Congress Political Research Quarterly Volume 63 Number 2 June 2010 387-397 2010 University of Utah 10.1177/1065912908330347 http://prq.sagepub.com hosted

More information

The Electoral Connection and Legislative Policy Proposals

The Electoral Connection and Legislative Policy Proposals The Electoral Connection and Legislative Policy Proposals Daniel M. Butler Joshua Revesz Yale University Department of Political Science November 29, 2012 Abstract Agenda setting and the introduction of

More information

A Test of Ideological Bias in House Subcommittees, J. MARK WRIGHTON University of New Hampshire

A Test of Ideological Bias in House Subcommittees, J. MARK WRIGHTON University of New Hampshire A Test of Ideological Bias in House Subcommittees, 1979 2000 J. MARK WRIGHTON University of New Hampshire GEOFFREY D. PETERSON University of Wisconsin Eau Claire Abstract Committees play a pivotal role

More information

Department of Political Science Kent State University 302 Bowman Hall P.O. Box 5190 Kent, OH

Department of Political Science Kent State University 302 Bowman Hall P.O. Box 5190 Kent, OH Michael J. Ensley Contact Information Department of Political Science Kent State University 302 Bowman Hall P.O. Box 5190 Kent, OH 44242-0001 PHONE 330-672-8933 FAX 330-672-3362 EMAIL mensley@kent.edu

More information

Publications. Brigham Young University BA, Political Science, August 2003 (with Honors) Minors: Russian Studies and Chemistry. Peer Reviewed Articles

Publications. Brigham Young University BA, Political Science, August 2003 (with Honors) Minors: Russian Studies and Chemistry. Peer Reviewed Articles Daniel M. Butler Department of Political Science 77 Prospect St., Rm. C124 New Haven, CT 06520 203.432.6292 daniel.butler@yale.edu http://www.danielmarkbutler.com Professional Experience Yale University

More information

PS 5030: Seminar in American Government & Politics Fall 2008 Thursdays 6:15pm-9:00pm Room 1132, Old Library Classroom

PS 5030: Seminar in American Government & Politics Fall 2008 Thursdays 6:15pm-9:00pm Room 1132, Old Library Classroom PS 5030: Seminar in American Government & Politics Fall 2008 Thursdays 6:15pm-9:00pm Room 1132, Old Library Classroom Professor: Todd Hartman Phone: (828) 262-6827 Office: 2059 Old Belk Library Classroom

More information

Political Science 873: American Political Parties

Political Science 873: American Political Parties Political Science 873: American Political Parties Barry C. Burden University of Wisconsin Spring Semester 2016 Tuesdays 3:30-5:30pm 7121 Helen C. White Hall Email: bcburden@wisc.edu Office hours: Mondays

More information