OCTOBER 2015 PATRICIA ANN HURLEY Office Address: College of Liberal Arts Texas A&M University 4223 TAMU College Station, Texas 77843-4223 Voice: (979) 845-8541 or 845-5141 FAX: (979) 845-5164 pat-hurley@tamu.edu Citizenship: USA Administrative Appointments: August 2008 Associate Dean, College of Liberal Arts, Texas A&M University (Interim, August 2008 through May 2009) 2001-2008 Head, Department of Political Science, Texas A&M University (Interim Head, July 2001 through May 2003) 1991-1997 Graduate Advisor, Department of Political Science, Texas A&M University 1984-1985 Program Director, Institute for Policy Analysis, Rice University Teaching Appointments: 1994-present Professor of Political Science, Texas A&M University 1987-1994 Associate Professor of Political Science, Texas A&M University 1986-1987 Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Texas A&M University 1985-1986 Lecturer in Political Science, Rice University 1984 & 1985 Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Rice University 1980-1985 Lecturer in Political Science, University of Houston 1976-1980 Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Houston 1974 & 1975 Teaching Assistant for Political Science, Rice University Academic History: Ph.D. Political Science, Rice University, 1976 M.A. Political Science, Rice University, 1975 B.A. Political Science, Tulane University, 1972 Honors and Awards: Southwestern Social Science Association Distinguished Service Award, 2010 Pi Sigma Alpha Award for the Best Paper presented at the 1989 Southwestern Political Science Association University of Houston Mortar Board Senior Honor Society Top Prof Teaching Award, 1980 Texas A&M University Honors Program, Curriculum Development Grant, 1990. College of Liberal Arts, Texas A&M University, Summer Research Award, 1989
Hurley, p. 2 College of Liberal Arts, Texas A&M University Summer Seed Money Grant, 1987 Ford Foundation Summer Research Grant, 1973 Rice University Graduate Fellowship, 1972-1976 Tulane University Scholarship, 1968-1972 Professional Offices: Executive Council, Midwest Political Science Association, 2007-2010 President, Southwestern Social Science Association, 2002-2003 President-Elect, Southwestern Social Science Association, 2001-2002 Vice President, Southwestern Social Science Association, 2000-2001 Executive Committee and Council, Southwestern Social Science Association, 2003-2005 President, Southwestern Political Science Association, 1996-97 President-Elect, Southwestern Political Science Association, 1995-96 Vice-President and Program Chair, Southwestern Political Science Association, 1988-89 Agent of the corporation, Southwestern Political Science Association, 1997-present Executive Council, Legislative Studies Section, American Political Science Association, 1993-1995 Executive Council, Elections, Public Opinion and Voting Behavior Section, American Political Science Association, 2000-2002 PUBLICATIONS Book Representation in Congress: A Unified Theory (Cambridge University Press, 2015), with K. Q. Hill and S. Jordan. Peer Reviewed Articles: Beyond the Demand-Input Model: A Theory of Representational Linkages, Journal of Politics 65 (May 2003): 304-326, with K. Q. Hill. Symbolic Speeches in the U.S. Senate and their Representational Implications, Journal of Politics, 64 (February 2002): 219-231, with K. Q. Hill. The Effects of Party Advantage on the Partisan Distinctiveness of New Members in the U.S. House of Representatives, Legislative Studies Quarterly 25 (February 2000): 53-73, with B. Kerr. Dyadic Representation Reappraised, American Journal of Political Science 43 (January, 1999): 109-37, with K. Q. Hill. First Term Members in the 103rd and 104th Houses: Their Effect on Partisanship and Policy, Social Science Quarterly 78 (December, 1997): 992-1000, with B. Kerr Partisan Representation, Realignment, and the Senate in the 1980s, Journal of Politics 53 (February, 1991): 3-33. Partisan Voting Patterns in the U.S. Senate: 1877-1986, Legislative Studies Quarterly 14 (May, 1989): 225-250, with R. K. Wilson. Reprinted in The Changing World of the U.S. Senate, ed. John Hibbing (Berkeley IGS Press, 1990),
Hurley, p. 3 Reprinted in The Congress of the United States, 1789-1989, ed. J. Silbey (New York: Carlton Publishing, Inc., 1991). Party Dealignment and Policy Representation in the House of Representatives: Comparing Opinion- Policy Congruence in the 1950s and 1970s, Congress and the Presidency 16 (Spring, 1989): 37-55. Partisan Representation and the Failure of Realignment in the 1980s, American Journal of Political Science 33 (February, 1989): 240-261. Reprinted in Eric Uslaner, ed. American Political Parties: A Reader (Itasca, IL: Peacock, 1993). Uniform State Law Adoptions in the American States: An Explanatory Analysis, Publius 18 (Winter, 1988): 117-126, with K.Q. Hill. Strategic Campaigning and Voter Shifts: A Panel Analysis of Houston's 1985 Mayoral Race, Social Science Quarterly 68 (March, 1987): 34-50, with R.K. Wilson. Estimating Congressional District Attributes with National Election Study Data: A Reliability Assessment, Political Methodology 10 (4, 1984): 447-463, with K.Q. Hill. Electoral Change and Policy Consequences: Representation in the 97th Congress, American Politics Quarterly 12 (April, 1984): 177-94. Nonvoters in Voters Clothing: The Impact of Voting Behavior Misreporting on Voting Behavior Research, Social Science Quarterly 65 (March, 1984): 199-206, with K.Q. Hill. The Legislative Veto: A Policy Analysis, Congress and the Presidency 10 (Spring, 1983): 1-24, with J. Cooper. Predicting Policy Change in the House: A Longitudinal Analysis, British Journal of Political Science 12 (July, 1982): 375-84. Collective Representation Reappraised, Legislative Studies Quarterly 7 (February, 1982): 119-36. Convergent and Discriminant Validity Tests for the Fitzgibbon-Johnson Political Scales, Quality and Quantity 15 (1981): 433-43, with K.Q. Hill. The Prospects for Issue Voting in Contemporary Congressional Elections: An Assessment of Citizen Awareness and Representation, American Politics Quarterly 8 (October, 1980): 425-48, with K.Q. Hill. Reprinted in Norman R. Luttbeg, ed. Public Opinion and Public Policy: Models of Policy Linkage (3rd ed., Itasca, Illinois: Peacock, 1981). Freedom of the Press in Latin America: A Thirty Year Survey, Latin American Research Review 15 (2, 1980): 212-18, with K.Q. Hill. Mass Participation, Electoral Competitiveness, and Issue Attitude Agreement between Congressmen and Their Constituents, British Journal of Political Science 9 (October, 1979): 507-11, with K.Q. Hill. The Decline of Party in the U.S. House of Representatives, 1887-1968, Legislative Studies Quarterly 4 (August, 1979): 381-407, with D.W. Brady and J. Cooper. Reprinted in Congress: Structure and Policy, ed. M. McCubbins and T. Sullivan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987). Reprinted in The Congress of the United States, 1789-1989, ed. J. Silbey (New York: Carlton Publishing, 1991).
Hurley, p. 4 Assessing the Potential for Significant Legislative Output in the U.S. House of Representatives, Western Political Quarterly 32 (March, 1979): 45-58. The Representation of Criminal Events in Two Houston Dailies, Journalism Quarterly 54 (Winter, 1977-78): 756-60, with G.E. Antunes. Measuring Legislative Potential for Policy Change, Legislative Studies Quarterly 2 (November, 1977): 385-98, with D.W. Brady and J. Cooper. Other Articles: David Mayhew s The Electoral Connection After 25 Years, PS: Political Science and Politics 34 (June 2001): 259-261. The Prospects for Contemporary Partisan Realignment, PS 18 (Winter, 1985): 63-68, with D.W. Brady. Book Chapters: In Search of Representation Theory, in Jan E. Leighley, ed., The Oxford Handbook of American Elections and Political Behavior. (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2010), with K.Q. Hill. The Decline and Rise of Congressional Parties in the Twentieth Century, in Sunil Ahuja and Robert Dewhirst, eds., The United States Congress: A Century of Change (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2003). "Electoral Realignments" in Joel H. Silbey, editor-in-chief, Encyclopedia of the American Legislative System, Volume I (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1994). Parties and Coalitions in Congress, in Christopher J. Deering, ed., Congressional Politics (Chicago: Dorsey, 1989). The Electoral Basis of Party Voting: Patterns and Trends in the U.S. House of Representatives, 1887-1969, in Louis Maisel and Joseph Cooper, eds., The Impact of the Electoral Process (Beverly Hills: Sage, 1977), with J. Cooper and D.W. Brady. Book Reviews and Notes: Richard F. Fenno, Jr., Congress at the Grassroots, Journal of Politics 63 (November 2001): 1320-1322. Melissa Williams, Voice, Trust, and Memory: Marginalized Groups and the Failings of Liberal Representation, Journal of Politics 61 (November, 1999): 1201-1203. John Zaller, The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion, Journal of Politics 56 (June, 1994): 528-31. Martha Liebler Gibson, Weapons of Influence, The Legislative Veto, American Foreign Policy, and the Irony of Reform, American Political Science Review 87 (June, 1993): 490-91. James Stimson, Public Opinion in America, Political Studies 40 (December, 1992): 790. Byron Schaffer, ed., The End of Realignment? Journal of Politics 54 (November, 1992): 1183-1186. L. Sandy Maisel, ed. The Parties Respond: Changes in the American Political System, Political Studies 39 (December, 1991): 763.
Hurley, p. 5 Paul S. Herrnson, Party Campaigning in the 1980s, Journal of Politics 51 (November, 1989): 1008-1010. John F. Hoadley, The Origins of American Political Parties 1789-1803, American Political Science Review 81(June, 1987): 635-636. John Lofton, The Press as Guardian of the First Amendment, Social Science Quarterly 62 (June, 1981): 383-84. Conference Papers: The Representational Behavior of Switched-Seat Members of Congress: A Revisionist Characterization from General Theory, 2013 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, with K.Q. Hill and S. Jordan. Elite Use of Political Symbols: An Exploratory Study of U.S. Senators, 2001 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, California, with K.Q. Hill. Beyond the Demand-Input Model: A Theory of Representational Linkages, 2001 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, with K. Q. Hill. Symbolic Representation in the U.S. Senate, 1999 Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Savannah, Georgia, with K. Q. Hill and Stephen Hanna. Partisan Representation Under Republican Rule: A Comparison of the 104th to the 103rd House, 1998 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Boston, Massachusetts. The Dyadic Representation of General Ideological Preferences in the U.S. Congress, 1997 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., with K. Q. Hill. Dyadic Representation in the U.S. Congress: Multiple Tests of a Complex Causal Model, 1996 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, California, with K. Q. Hill. The Impact of Legislative Turnover on Partisanship in the U.S. House of Representatives, 1996 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, with Brinck Kerr. First Term Members in the 103rd Congress: Their Effect on Partisanship and Policy, 1995 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, with Brinck Kerr. Lower Class Mobilization and the Policy Responsiveness of US Senators, 1994 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, with K.Q. Hill and J.E. Leighley. Connecting Public Preferences to Public Policy Making: The Role of the Congressional Parties in the 1960s, 1990 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, California. The Senate, Representation, and Recruitment to the Presidency, (revised version), 1989 Conference on Electing the Senate, co-sponsored by University of Houston and Rice University, Houston, Texas. The Senate, Representation, and Recruitment to the Presidency, 1989 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Atlanta, Georgia. Partisan and Collective Representation in the 1950s and 1970s, 1989 Annual Meeting of the Southwestern Political Science Association, Little Rock, Arkansas. Partisan Voting Patterns in the U.S. Senate: 1877-1986, 1988 Hendricks Symposium on
Hurley, p. 6 the U.S. Senate, Lincoln, Nebraska, October, 1988, with R. K. Wilson. Partisan Representation, Realignment, and the Senate in the 1980s, 1988 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois. The Representational Consequences of the Incumbency Advantage in the House, 1987 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois. Partisan Representation in the First Reagan Term, 1986 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C. Strategic Campaigning and Voter Shifts: A Panel Analysis of Houston's 1985 Mayoral Race, 1986 Annual Meeting of the Southwestern Political Science Association, San Antonio, Texas, with R.K. Wilson. Small Sample Estimates of Geographic District Political Attributes, 1983 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, with K.Q. Hill. Electoral Change and Policy Consequences: Representation in the 97th Congress, 1982 Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Atlanta, Georgia. The Local Press on Local Government: Limits to Citizen Awareness, 1981 Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association, Newark, New Jersey. Voters, Nonvoters, and Liars, 1981 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Cincinnati, Ohio, with K.Q. Hill. Dyadic and Collective Representation in 1978, 1980 Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Atlanta, Georgia. Representational Linkages with Congress: Constituency Preferences, Perceptions, and Congressional Decision Making, 1979 Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Gatlinburg, Tennessee, with K.Q. Hill. Media Usage Patterns in the Mass Public: Potential Effects of Daily News Coverage, 1979 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois. Media Usage Patterns in the Mass Public: Their Implications for Agenda Setting, 1979 Annual Meeting of the Southwestern Political Science Association, Ft. Worth, Texas. Some of the News That s Fit to Print: The Representation of Criminal Events in the Metropolitan Press, 1977 Society for the Study of Social Problems meeting, Chicago, Illinois, with G.E. Antunes. Measuring Legislative Potential for Policy Change, 1976 Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Atlanta, Georgia, with D.W. Brady and J. Cooper. Determinants of Significant Congressional Outputs, 1976 Annual Meeting of the Southwestern Political Science Association, Dallas, Texas. Conference Program Development: Program Chair, Thematic and Interdisciplinary Panels, 2002 Annual Meeting of the Southwestern Social Science Association. Section Chair, Congress and Legislative Politics, 2001 Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association. Section Chair, Legislative Politics, 1994 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Section Chair, Legislative Politics, 1992 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Vice-President and Program Chair for the Southwestern Political Science Association, 1988-89.
Hurley, p. 7 Section Chair, State and Local Politics, 1988 Annual Meeting of the Southwestern Political Science Association. Other Conference Activities: Panel Chair or Discussant on numerous panels covering the topics of public opinion, elections, and Congress at annual meetings of the American Political Science Association, Midwest Political Science Association, and Southwestern Political Science Association. Invited Research Presentations: Studying Representation: A Theory and an Agenda, Oxford University, March 9, 2006. Partisan Representation in the 103rd and 104th Houses: Elements of a Responsible Party System, Rice University, November 9, 1998. Political Parties, Representation, and Accountability, Alpha Kappa Delta/Pi Sigma Alpha lecture at Sam Houston State University, April 3, 1998 Editorial Boards: American Journal of Political Science, 2002-2005; 2014 -- present Social Science Quarterly, 1999 - present. Journal of Politics, 1993 1997; 2009-2014 Legislative Studies Quarterly, 1992-1994. American Review of Politics (formerly MidSouth Journal of Political Science) 1990-2013 Faculty Advisory Committee for Texas A&M University Press, 2000-2015. Reviewing: National Science Foundation American Journal of Political Science American Political Science Review American Politics Research British Journal of Political Science Congress and the Presidency Journal of Politics Legislative Studies Quarterly Political Research Quarterly Polity Political Methodology Publius Social Science Quarterly various commercial presses Member, Committee of Visitors for Political Science, National Science Foundation, 1997. Member, Advisory Panel for Political Science, National Science Foundation, 1993-1994.
Hurley, p. 8 Other Professional Service: Member, Converse Award Committee of the Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior Section of the American Political Science Association, 2010 Emerging Scholar Award Committee of the Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior Section of the American Political Science Association, 2008 Chair, Richard Fenno Award Committee of the Legislative Studies Section of the American Political Science Association, to select the best book on congressional politics, 2004 E.E. Schattschneider Award Committee of the American Political Science Association, 1993-1994 (to select the best dissertation in the field of American Politics). External Program Review team for: Department of Political Science, University of Iowa (committee chair) 2007 Department of Political Science, Michigan State University (2013) External reviewer for cases of tenure and/or promotion: Brigham Young University (2004) CUNY - Baruch College (2002) SUNY- Stony Brook (2007) University of Missouri (2001) University of Oklahoma (1999) University of Arkansas (1998) University of Oregon (1997) University of California-Riverside (1995) University of Texas at Dallas (1993) University of North Texas (1993, 2007). Participant, Conference on the 1994 Congressional Elections. Sponsored by Greenberg Research, Washington D.C., June 20, 1994. Selected Department of Political Science, Texas A&M University Service: Committees Department Head Search Committee, 1991 Head's Advisory Committee, 1988, 1988-1989, Summer 1990 Graduate Committee, 1987-1991; Chair, 1991-1997 Chair, Advisory Committees John Kerr, (PhD 1993) W. R. Mack (PhD 1999) Tami Swenson (MA 1999) Member, Advisory Committees Lydia Andrade (PhD. 1993) Rachel Gibson (Ph.D., 1996) Angela Hinton-Andersson (Ph.D. 1995) Glen Krutz (PhD 1999) Kelly Tzoumis (PhD 1992) John Impson (History, PhD 1994) John Tindell (MA, 1994, Speech Communication) Kristi Campbell, James Cottrill, Christopher Diaz (PhD 2001) Stephen Hanna, Carl Klarner (PhD 2001)
Hurley, p. 9 Abby Lorenz (MA, 2002) Emily Bonneau (M.A. 2005) Jill Nicholson-Crotty (Ph.D. 2005) Nathan Ilderton (Ph.D. 2009) Mark Ramirez (Ph.D. 2009) Soren Jordan (Ph.D. 2013) Selected Other Texas A&M University Service: Chair, College of Liberal Arts Graduate Instruction Committee, 2008-2015 Member, Faculty Senate Committee on Honorary Degrees, 2005-2008 Chair, College of Liberal Arts Ad Hoc Committee on Differential Tuition, 2006 Member, College of Liberal Arts International Programs Advisory Committee, 2005-2006 Chair, College of Liberal Arts International Programs Advisory Committee, 2004-2005 Co-Chair, College of Liberal Arts Ad Hoc Committee on Merit-Related Topics, 2002-2003 Member, Minority Merit Graduate Fellowship Selection Committee, Spring 1995 At-Large Faculty Representative to the Graduate Council, September 1994 - August 1997 Member, Steering Committee of the Liberal Arts Council, 1992-93 Member, College of Liberal Arts Graduate Instruction Committee, Fall 1991-Summer 1997, Presiding Officer, 1995-96 Search Committee for Head, Department of Sociology, 1990-91 Research and Teaching Fields: Legislative Behavior Public Opinion and Voting Behavior Political Parties Courses Taught: Campaigns and Elections Mass Media and Politics Elections and the Political Process Political Crisis and Reform Graduate Core Course on American Institutions Political Behavior Graduate Research Seminar on Congress Political Parties Graduate Seminar on Parties & Electoral Process Public Opinion Graduate Research Seminar on Representation The Presidency Introductory American Government Representation Introduction to State and Local Government Other Activities: Board of Directors, CAN-DO-IT, 1981-1987. A nonprofit, community service organization in Houston, Texas, that unites private donations with professional services for emotionally disturbed children. Secretary, 1982-83; Vice-President, 1983-84 and 1984-85; President, 1985-86. Statistical Consultant, Institute for Computer Services and Applications, Rice University, January 1980- August 1980. Duties included teaching and advising on the use of statistical software, on the design and implementation of social science research, and on data analysis.
Hurley, p. 10 Research Assistant to Professor Chad Gordon, Department of Sociology, Rice University, 1973-74. This research involved the development and administration of a General Inquirer content analysis program package intended to analyze individual self-conception inventories. Data Analyst, Data Analysis Services, Inc., 1973-1976. Work for this private company included coding of data, supervision of coders, preparation of data for analysis, and data analysis on a variety of survey research studies. Professional Memberships: American Political Science Association Legislative Studies Section Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior Section Midwest Political Science Association Southern Political Science Association