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DIVISION PANELS

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


T indicates a Theme Panel See Page 173 for Meetings and Receptions Details

THEME PANELS
T-1 THEME PANEL: IS MASS Sat 10:15 am INCARCERATION THE NEW JIM CROW? No Room Assigned Michelle Alexander, The Ohio State University Cathy J. Cohen, University of Chicago Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University Glenn C. Loury, Brown University THEME PANEL: RIGHTS AND Fri 8:00 am DISCOURSES IN THE PALESTINIAN-ISRAELI CONFLICT No Room Assigned Amaney Jamal, Princeton University Eva R. Bellin, Brandeis University Nathan Brown, George Washington University Karam Dana, Harvard University Naomi Chazan, Hebrew University Wendy Pearlman, Northwestern University PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS Sat 4:15 pm THEME PANEL: BORDERS, IMMIGRATION, AND THE STUDY OF US POLITICS No Room Assigned Jeffrey C. Isaac, Indiana University, Bloomington Edwina Barvosa, University of California, Santa Barbara Marc Morj Howard, Georgetown University Bryan D. Jones, University of Texas, Austin Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities THEME PANEL: BEYOND THE Sat 4:15 pm RIGHT TO FREE SPEECH: JEWISH ALTERNATIVES TO ZIONISM (FILM) No Room Assigned Nubar Hovsepian, Chapman University THEME PANEL: ORGANIZING Fri 4:15 pm THE POOR FOR RIGHTS: THE WORK OF FRANCES FOX PIVEN No Room Assigned Jeffrey C. Isaac, Indiana University, Bloomington Frances Fox Piven, CUNY, Graduate Center Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Jeffrey L. Stout, Princeton University Sanford F. Schram, Bryn Mawr College Lorraine C. Minnite, Project Vote

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THEME PANEL: THE POLITICAL ORIGINS OF HUMAN RIGHTS: ON SAMUEL MOYNS THE LAST UTOPIA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-25 THEME PANEL: THE ORIGIN OF THE MODERN NOTION OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-27 and 2-9 THEME PANEL: RUMORS OF THE RULE OF LAWS DEMISE, GREATLY EXAGGERATED? LAWYERS AND SCHOLARS TAKE ON THE GOVERNMENT, OVERTURN DONT-ASK-DONTTELL, AND FREE GUANTANOMO DETAINEES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-34 and 2-35 THEME PANEL: RIGHTS, DIVERSITY, AND DISABILITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-36 THEME PANEL: JUST SUPPLY CHAINS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-26 and 16-8 THEME PANEL: THEORY AND RESEARCH IN THE POLITICS OF CIVIL RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-20 THEME PANEL: LABOR RIGHTS AND LABOR HISTORY IN SEATTLE AND THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-21 and 42-3 THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON PROPERTY RIGHTS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-47

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THEME PANEL: NEGOTIATING PROPERTY AND CONSUMER RIGHTS IN MULTI-LEVEL SYSTEMS: PERSPECTIVES FROM EAST ASIA, LATIN AMERICA, AND EUROPE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-48 THEME PANEL: RIGHTS BASED APPROACHES TO DEVELOPMENT: HAVE THEY MADE A DIFFERENCE? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-29 and 17-6

Sat 2:00 pm

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THEME PANEL: MARRIAGE AS AMBITION AND COMPLICATION: EQUALITY AND THE POLITICS OF LGBTQ RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-6 and 47-1

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THEME PANEL: PARITY AND Thu 4:15 pm THE SHIFT FROM UNIVERSAL TO GROUP RIGHTS IN FRANCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-5 and French Politics Group, Panel 1 THEME PANEL: INTERNATIONAL POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-2 and 39-1 THEME PANEL: INTERNATIONAL LEGALIZATION AND THE RIGHTS REVOLUTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 17-22 and 26-12 THEME PANEL: MOVEMENTS AND MASSACRES: NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND CIVIL WAR VIOLENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-17 and 45-3 THEME PANEL: WHEN ARE LEGISLATURES A VENUE FOR DEFENDING RIGHTS? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-13 THEME PANEL: ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: FEDERALISM AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-23 and 28-6 THEME PANEL: STUART SCHEINGOLD AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-4 Fri 4:15 pm

THEME PANEL: Thu 2:00 pm MAJORITARIAN INSTITUTIONS AND MINORITY RIGHTS: DIRECT DEMOCRACY IN THE AMERICAN STATES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 29-6 and Center for the Study of Federalism, Panel 1 THEME PANEL: THE CHANGING FACE OF STATE POWER: POLICING AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS IN THE U.S. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 30-10 THEME PANEL: TRANSLATING INTERNATIONAL WOMENS RIGHTS NORMS INTO PRACTICE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored 31-3 and 45-5 THEME PANEL: IMMIGRANT RIGHTS, FELONS RIGHTS AND THE POLITICS OF INCLUSION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 32-3 Fri 8:00 am

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THEME PANEL: HANNA Thu 8:00 am PITKINS CONCEPT OF REPRESENTATION REVISITED: A NEW AGENDA FOR STUDYING REPRESENTATION RIGHTS? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 34-10 and IPSA Research Committee 1 (Concepts and Methods), Panel 1 THEME PANEL: ARE YOUR DATA PRIVATE? CYBER SECURITY IN A WIKILEAKS WORLD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 40-4 THEME PANEL: HOW CAN POLITICAL SCIENCE HELP US UNDERSTAND THE POLITICS OF DECARCERATION? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 42-10 Fri 10:15 am

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DIVISION PANELS

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THEME PANEL: TRANSNATIONAL LAW AND POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 43-7 THEME PANEL: AUTHORMEETS-CRITICS: KATHRYN SIKKINK ON THE JUSTICE CASCADE: HOW HUMAN RIGHTS PROSECUTIONS ARE CHANGING WORLD POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 45-10

Fri 2:00 pm

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Ian Shapiro, Yale University Larry M. Bartels, Vanderbilt University Victoria Kahn, University of California, Berkeley John P. McCormick, University of Chicago AMERICAN TRAGEDY: THE Thu 8:00 am POLITICAL THOUGHT OF HERMAN MELVILLE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 41-1 Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College Pathologies of Freedom in Melvilles America Jason Frank, Cornell University What Babo Saw: Benito Cereno and The World We Live In Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia Chasing the Whale: Political Theory and Moby Dick George M. Shulman, New York University Bartleby and Transcendentalism Shannon Mariotti, Southwestern University Susan Jane McWilliams, Pomona College ANCIENT HISTORY AS Thu 2:00 pm POLITICAL THEORY No Room Assigned Josiah Ober, Stanford University Melissa Lane, Princeton University Christina H. Tarnopolsky, McGill University Andrew Sabl, University of California, Los Angeles Bryan Garsten, Yale University IMPERIALISM/COLONIALISM Fri 4:15 pm AND POLITICAL THEORY: TAKING STOCK No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-1 Barbara Arneil, University of British Columbia James Tully, University of Victoria Barbara Arneil, University of British Columbia Jennifer Pitts, University of Chicago Karuna Mantena, Yale University Dale Turner, Dartmouth College Jeanne Morefield, Whitman College MACHIAVELLI AND Sun 8:00 am VIOLENCE No Room Assigned James R. Martel, San Francisco State University Violence and Images of the Non-Human in Machiavelli Banu Bargu, New School for Social Research Machiavelli and the Gracchi: Liberty, Violence, and the Rule of Law Michelle Tolman Clarke, Dartmouth College How Much is Enough? Michael Dillon, Professor, Lancaster University Machiavelli, Violence, and the Birth of Politics Willam D. Wittels, Duke University Violence and Bodies in Machiavellis Art of War Yves Winter, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Robyn Marasco, CUNY-Hunter College

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THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS Sat 10:15 am OF LGTB RIGHTS IN LATIN AMERICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 47-7 and Latin American Studies Association, Panel 2 THEME PANEL: ORGANIZING FOR RIGHTS IN AFRICA, ASIA, AND THE SOUTHWEST: FIELD EXPERIMENTS IN HETEROGENEOUS COMMUNITIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 51-7 Fri 8:00 am

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THEME PANEL: INDIGENOUS Sat 2:00 pm PEOPLES AND THE DISCOURSE OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Dale Turner, Dartmouth College Rights or Responsibilities?: The Discourse of Rights in Anishinaabe Treaty-Making Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark, University of Victoria Constituting Rights: Tribal Constitutions and the Rights of Non-Member Indians and Non-Indians David E. Wilkins, University of Minnesota The Coloniality of Indigenous Rights Glen S. Coulthard, University of British Columbia The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: A Rights Discourse that Complicates the International System Sheryl R. Lightfoot, University of British Columbia Dale Turner, Dartmouth College Raymond Orr, Princeton University

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POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY

Division Jason Frank, Cornell University Chair: Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia 1-1 ROUNDTABLE ON JOHN P. Sat 8:00 am MCCORMICKS MACHIAVELLIAN DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-1 Corey L. Brettschneider, Brown University

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RETHINKING THE BRITISH Sat 2:00 pm EMPIRE No Room Assigned Jennifer Pitts, University of Chicago Dreamworlds of Empire: Isopolitan Citizenship, Race, and Utopia, 1880-1914 Duncan Bell, University of Cambridge Images of India as Critiques of Modern Britain Mark Bevir, University of California, Berkeley Naturalizing Empire: Jan Smuts Holistic Vision of International Hierarchy Jeanne Morefield, Whitman College Edmund Burke and the Conservative Logic of Empire Daniel I. ONeill, University of Florida Anthony Pagden, University of California, Los Angeles CONTESTING THE PEOPLE Fri 10:15 am IN AMERICAN HISTORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-2 Laura A. Janara, University of British Columbia What to the Indian is the Fourth of July? - William Apess in Democratic Context Burke Hendrix, Franklin & Marshall College Who Decides when a (Native) People is No Longer a People? Judicial and Legislative Powers in Indian Affairs in the 19th Century Timothy P. Waligore, Frankfurt University From Politics to Paideia: Booker T. Washington and Political Education in the Rural South Desmond Jagmohan, Cornell University Black Power and the Victims of Americanism Joel Olson, Northern Arizona University Laura A. Janara, University of British Columbia GANDHIAN NONVIOLENCE: Thu 4:15 pm FREEDOM, RIGHTS, DEMOCRACY AND ANARCHY No Room Assigned Anthony Parel, University of Calgary The Partiality and Contingency of Rights in a Gandhian Politics Farah Godrej, University of California, Riverside Pacifist Freedom Dustin Howes, Louisiana State University Gandhis Hind Swaraj: A Critique of Received Wisdom on Freedom, Democratization and Rights Bidyut Chakrabarty, University of Delhi Democracy, Domination and the Role of Gandhian Nonviolent Conflict Cale Crammer, University of California, Riverside Ronald Terchek, University of Maryland, College Park Jakeet Singh, University of Toronto STATES OF WAR: Thu 10:15 am GENEALOGIES OF REALISM AND DEMOCRATIC VIOLENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-2 John T. Lombardini, III, College of William & Mary

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Athenian Exceptionalism and Democratic Power in Thucydides History and Beyond Christine M. Lee, University of Bristol Another Realism: Reason of State and Critical Political Education in Michel de Montaignes Essais Douglas Ian Thompson, Northwestern University Citizen Canine: Xenophon on the Submissive Rage of Dogs and Athenians Stefan Paul Dolgert, University of Toronto Military Leadership and Democratic Ideology in Xenophons Anabasis Timothy Rood, University of Oxford Rachel Templer, Goucher College THE LEGACY OF WILSON Fri 2:00 pm CAREY MCWILLIAMS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-3 Patrick J. Deneen, Georgetown University Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago Susan Jane McWilliams, Pomona College James A. Morone, Brown University Patrick J. Deneen, Georgetown University GENRE IN/AS POLITICAL Sun 10:15 am THEORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-4 Mary L. Bellhouse, Providence College Theorizing Politics in/as Genre: A Polemic Elizabeth R. Wingrove, University of Michigan The Trial Transcript as Political Theory: Penn-Mead in Anglo-American Political Thought Andrew R. Murphy, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Melodramatic Theater and Genres of Political Critique Elisabeth Anker, George Washington University Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania REMEMBERING RACIAL Sat 10:15 am VIOLENCE, RECOVERING DEMOCRATIC POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-1 Andrew Valls, Oregon State University The Right to Mourn: The Theo-Political Education of American Blacks after Martin Luther Kings Assassination Melissa Marie Matthes, U.S. Coast Guard Academy U.S. Race Politics and the Kings Two Bodies: The Paradox of Memorializing Change in American Culture and Institutions Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson College Remembering Massive Resistance to School Desegregation Mark Golub, Scripps College Drum Major Instinct: Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Ethics of Service. Justin Rose, University of Virginia Joel Olson, Northern Arizona University

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POLITICAL AESTHETICS AND Fri 8:00 am DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned Mark Reinhardt, Williams College The Politics of Beauty: Liberal Hegemony and the American Aesthetic Timothy J. Lukes, Santa Clara University Herder on Aesthetic Imagination as a Source of PostNational Democratic Solidarity: A Contribution to Habermass Constitutional Patriotism Mihaela Czobor-Lupp, Carleton College The New Aestheticism and Democratic Freedom Gregg D. Miller, University of Washington Keats as a political thinker: negative capability and dialogical ethics Lucas R. Perkins, Duke University Emily J. Beausoleil, University of British Columbia MENACES AND MISFITS Sat 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Michelle Tolman Clarke, Dartmouth College Rousseau, The Misfits Hero Jill L. Locke, Gustavus Adolphus College The Madness of Islamism: A Rethinking of the Cognitive Imaginary and Ethics of Lockean Secularism Pinar Kemerli, Cornell University Subversive Subjects: Citizenship, Sexuality, and National Identity Claire E. Rasmussen, University of Delaware Ella Myers, University of Utah THE MYTH OF THE FREE Thu 10:15 am MARKET No Room Assigned Shannon C. Stimson, University of California, Berkeley Producing the Present Through the Past: Adam Smith and the Inevitability of the Economy Jeremy Wolf, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Risks Refusal: Adam Smith on the Practices and Politics of Political Economy Emily Nacol, Vanderbilt University American Whig Party Justifications for Federal Government Involvement in the Economy William J. Nichols, Wayne State University Silently Lessening the Inequality of Property: Thomas Jefferson on the Governments Role in Reducing Economic Inequality Clement Fatovic, Florida International University Shannon C. Stimson, University of California, Berkeley VIOLENCE, ACTION, AND Thu 8:00 am WITHDRAWAL IN DEMOCRATIC ATHENS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 1 Susan Bickford, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Persuasion and Intransigence in Sophocles Ajax Larissa M. Atkison, University of Toronto

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Acting Against the Ruler: the Demos Prerogative in Plato and Thucydides Eric Hoyer, University of Pennsylvania Clytemnestras Contest: Women and the Violence of the Agon Jennifer M. Gagnon, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Political Inactivity in Democratic Athens Tomer Zeigerman, New School University J. Peter Euben, Duke University VISUALIZING POLITICS: Sat 2:00 pm RENDERING RIGHTS, MOBILIZING PUBLICS, IMAGING PAIN No Room Assigned Michael J. Shapiro, University of Hawaii Democratic Faith and Political Inquiry: A Pragmatist Approach to Visualizing Politics James D. Johnson, University of Rochester War as a Crime of Rape: Disavowal and the Visualization of Human Rights Sharon Sliwinski, University of Western Ontario Why We Shouldnt Worry about Poverty Pornography Jennifer C. Rubenstein, University of Virginia Painful Effects, Painful Affects, or: On the AestheticsPolitics Relation Mark Reinhardt, Williams College Michael J. Shapiro, University of Hawaii AMERICAN LIBERALISM: Sat 8:00 am CONSENSUS AND DISSENSUS No Room Assigned Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Varieties of American Individualism Alex Zakaras, University of Vermont Godless Patriots: Forming a Non-Theistic Conception of American Civil Religion Dylan Weller, Hobart and William Smith Colleges The Burdens of American Liberalism: Vocations of the Cold War Liberal in Louis Hartz and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. Gordon R. Arlen, University of Chicago Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill RIGHTS, VISIBILITY, AND Fri 4:15 pm POWER No Room Assigned Alisa Kessel, University of Puget Sound Rights to the City: Desire, Justice, and Inheritance Vicki Hsueh, Western Washington University The Hidden Politics of Religious Freedom and the Headscarf Affair Leila Ibrahim, Cornell University Might Makes Right: Rethinking Rights and the Power of the Powerless Dorothy Kwek, Johns Hopkins University Susan Bickford, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

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REVOLUTIONARY SUBJECTS Sat 10:15 am No Room Assigned Neil Roberts, Williams College Dialectical Ethics and the Black Radical Tradition: Hegelian Moments in C.L.R. James, Aim Csaire, and Frantz Fanon Andrew Douglas, Loyola University, New Orleans The Social Constitution: A study of social rights constitutionalization in revolutionary Portugal Filipe Carreira Da Silva, Universidade de Lisboa Mnica Brito Vieira, University of Lisbon The Ideology of the American Revolutions in Comparative Perspective Joshua Simon, Yale University The Inalienable Right to Constituent Power: The Berkshire Constitutionalists Explain Ratification Jeffrey Lenowitz, Columbia University Banu Bargu, New School for Social Research POLITICAL THEOLOGY Fri 2:00 pm No Room Assigned David Kyuman Kim Modern Secularism as Religious Conversion Matthew Scherer, Union College Is Democracy Relativist? Response to a New Form of Political Theology Carlo Invernizzi Accetti, Columbia University Sidetracking the Theologico-Political Problem: Hannah Arendts Critique of Political Technology Nathan Van Camp, University of Antwerp Mark Redhead, California State University, Fullerton KANT AND GLOBAL Thu 2:00 pm GOVERNANCE No Room Assigned Theodore Christov, Northwestern University Why Liberal Peace Theorists Should Stop Reading Kant (And Start Reading Hegel) Christopher David LaRoche, University of Toronto Was the League of Nations a Kantian Institution? Joseph Kochanek, Harvard University Marching Toward the Perpetual Peace: Kant and Humanitarian Intervention Scott Staring, Harvard University Theodore Christov, Northwestern University LIBERALISMS ILLIBERALISM Fri 8:00 am No Room Assigned Steven Johnston, University of South Florida The Self-Extinguishing Despot: Millian Democratization Yvonne Chiu Robert S. Taylor, University of California, Davis Not A Partnership in Pepper, Coffee, Calico or Tobacco: Edmund Burke and the Vicissitudes of Colonial Capitalism Onur Ulas Ince, Cornell University Montesquieu on Religion and Empire Andrea Radasanu, Northern Illinois University Exile in the Modern World: Expulsion and the Limits of Liberal Government Briana L. McGinnis, Georgetown University

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Douglas C. Dow, University of Texas, Dallas Char Roone Miller, George Mason University THEME PANEL: THE Sat 4:15 pm POLITICAL ORIGINS OF HUMAN RIGHTS: ON SAMUEL MOYNS THE LAST UTOPIA No Room Assigned Jason Frank, Cornell University Seyla Benhabib, Yale University Margaret E. Keck, Johns Hopkins University Pheng Cheah, University of California, Berkeley Samuel Moyn, Columbia University Antony Anghie, University of Utah UNIVERSALISMS EXCLUSIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-8 THEME PANEL: THE ORIGIN OF THE MODERN NOTION OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-9 THERE IS HOPE BUT NOT FOR US: MARXISM AND MESSIANISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-10 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JEFFREY STOUTS BLESSED ARE THE ORGANIZED: GRASSROOTS DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-11 PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES IN CRISIS AND THE VOCATION OF POLITICAL THEORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-12 THEORIZING THE POLITICS OF HUMAN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-22 THE RIGHT(S) APPROACH TO SUFFERING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-32 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON LEO STRAUSS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-34 Sat 10:15 am

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DIVISION PANELS

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THEME PANEL: RUMORS OF THE RULE OF LAWS DEMISE, GREATLY EXAGGERATED? LAWYERS AND SCHOLARS TAKE ON THE GOVERNMENT, OVERTURN DONT-ASK-DONTTELL, AND FREE GUANTANOMO DETAINEES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-35 PROBLEMS OF POLITICAL EDUCATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-42 JUDGMENT AND (IN)SECURITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-15 POLITICISING THE RIGHT TO POLITICAL COMMUNITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-16 DOSTOEVSKY AND THE PROBLEM OF WESTERN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 41-3

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THE VOICE AND LANGUAGE Sat 8:00 am OF RADICAL DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned Mary L. Bellhouse, Providence College Jacques Derrida and the Politics of Language Andrea Cassatella, University of Toronto Maturity and Democratic Presence Philip A. Michelbach, West Virginia University Stirner and the Sublime Kathy E. Ferguson, University of Hawaii Alisa Kessel, University of Puget Sound POLITICS WITHOUT HUMANS Thu 2:00 pm No Room Assigned Roger Berkowitz, Bard College Biology, New Materialism, Ontology: Thinking About Biology as a Resource for Political Theory Samantha Frost, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign The Invention of the Human: Species, Political Rights, and Modern Biopolitics Allaine Cerwonka, Central European University Contesting Singularity: Kurtzweil and Arendt on the Merger of Man and Machine Laura Ephraim, Bard College Animals in War: Commemoration, Patriotism, Death Steven Johnston, University of South Florida Roger Berkowitz, Bard College UNIVERSALISMS Sat 10:15 am EXCLUSIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-26 Burke Hendrix, Franklin & Marshall College Childrens Human Rights: The Problem of Motivating Political Responsibility for Children in Poor Countries Stephen L. Esquith, Michigan State University The State, Statelessness, and the Case for Cosmopolitanism Kathleen R. Arnold, DePaul University Grounding Cosmopolitics: Arendt, Adorno, and Global Political Theory from the Margins Lars Peter Rensmann, University of Michigan Who Matters and Why? Critical Reflections on the Rights Paradigm Michael Feola, Williams College Burke Hendrix, Franklin & Marshall College THEME PANEL: THE ORIGIN Sun 8:00 am OF THE MODERN NOTION OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-27 Michael Allen Gillespie, Duke University Timothy Fuller, Colorado College Kirstie M. McClure, University of California, Los Angeles Tracy B. Strong, University of California, San Diego Cary J. Nederman, Texas A&M University Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago

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SOCRATES ON JUSTICE, EROS, Sat 2:00 pm AND THE GODS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 3

FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY

Division Joshua Foa Dienstag, University of California, Los Chair: Angeles Lori Marso, Union College 2-1 IMPERIALISM/COLONIALISM AND POLITICAL THEORY: TAKING STOCK No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-4 STATES OF WAR: GENEALOGIES OF REALISM AND DEMOCRATIC VIOLENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-9 THE LEGACY OF WILSON CAREY MCWILLIAMS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-10 GENRE IN/AS POLITICAL THEORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-11 Fri 4:15 pm

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THERE IS HOPE BUT NOT Fri 10:15 am FOR US: MARXISM AND MESSIANISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-28 Melissa Marie Matthes, U.S. Coast Guard Academy Miguel Vatter, Universidad Diego Portales Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley Cornel West, Princeton University Bruno Bosteels, Cornell University Melinda Cooper, University of Sydney AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Sat 4:15 pm JEFFREY STOUTS BLESSED ARE THE ORGANIZED: GRASSROOTS DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-29 Ian Ward, University of Maryland Isis I. Leslie, Texas Tech University Stephen K. White, University of Virginia Romand Coles, Northern Arizona University David Kyuman Kim Jeffrey L. Stout, Princeton University PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES IN Sat 2:00 pm CRISIS AND THE VOCATION OF POLITICAL THEORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-30 Ivan Andr Ascher, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Craig Calhoun, New York University Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley Morgan Adamson, University of Minnesota David R. Howarth, University of Essex Ivan Andr Ascher, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Robert L. Meister, University of California, Santa Cruz DISCOURSES THAT HOLD US Fri 8:00 am CAPTIVE No Room Assigned Torrey J. Shanks, University at Albany, SUNY Sex Is as Sex Does Paisley Currah, CUNY-Brooklyn College Discourses of September 11: Intellectuals and the Limits of Exceptionalism Lena K. Zuckerwise, Mount Holyoke College The Paradoxes of Rights: On Democracy and the Free Speech Principle Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine Rights in an Age of Science: Emerging Contours of the Liberal Security State Jinee Lokaneeta, Drew University Torrey J. Shanks, University at Albany, SUNY Nancy S. Love, Appalachian State University NEW SLAVERIES Thu 8:00 am No Room Assigned Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University Alien Bodies: Migration and Stigmatized Health Status Elizabeth Ben-Ishai, Albion College

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Theorizing Contemporary Practices of Slavery Jane A. Gordon, Temple University The Current Crisis: Women Workers, Virtualization, and Primitive Accumulation Nancy Hartsock, professor emeritus, University of Washington Asma Abbas, Simons Rock College of Bard 21ST CENTURY FEMINIST Fri 10:15 am QUESTIONS No Room Assigned Martha A. Ackelsberg, Smith College The Subject in Question: The Evolution of Womanin Feminist Theory Susan Hekman, University of Texas, Arlington Mapping the Dual Legacy of Deconstructive Feminism Liza Taylor, UCLA Do You Trust the New Girl: Peggy Olson, The Better Version of Don Draper in Mad Men Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University Human Rights, Genocidal Rape, and Philosophy: The New York Case Against Karadzic Natalie Nenadic, University of Kentucky Martha A. Ackelsberg, Smith College SECRECY, TRANSPARENCY, Thu 4:15 pm TRUTH AND POLITICS No Room Assigned Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College Non-Governmental Politics and the Ethics of Witnessing Michal Givoni, UC Berkeley The Right to Transparency: Public Ideal or Contemporary Nightmare? Sandrine Jeanne-Antide Baume, University of Lausanne Veridiction and Juridiction: Michel Foucault on the Relation between Telling Truth and Rendering Justice Bernard E. Harcourt, University of Chicago Guillermina Sofia Seri, Union College EAST AND WEST DEBATE Fri 8:00 am FOUNDATIONS No Room Assigned Diego A. Von Vacano, Texas A&M University Charles Taylor and Richard Rorty: Do We Need Transcendental Authority? William M. Curtis, University of Portland International Relations Theory and Nonwestern Political Thought: The State of Nature in Islamic, Indic and Chinese Traditions Jon D. Carlson, University of California, Merced Dual Devotions: Modernity and Destiny in Ali Shariatis Political Thought Eric Goodfield, American University in Cairo Murad Idris, University of Pennsylvania COLD WAR POLITICAL Fri 4:15 pm THEORY No Room Assigned Michael T. Gibbons, University of South Florida On the Origins of Totalitarianism: Hannah Arendt as New York Intellectual Benli M. Shechter, University of Maryland

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FROM DECISIONISM TO RATIONAL CHOICE: THE CONCEPT OF DECISION BETWEEN LAW AND SCIENCE Nicolas Guilhot, CNRS Cold War Political Theory: Existentialism, The Beats and Ralph Ellison Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Eastern Michigan University Dissolving the Demos: A Genealogy of Postwar Democracy Kyong-Min Son, Cornell University Marc Stears, University of Oxford DEMOCRATIC MOODS Sun 10:15 am No Room Assigned Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Eastern Michigan University The Fickle People: In Favor of Democratic Impatience Mario Feit, Georgia State University Pragmatism, Religion, and Pluralism: Retrieving the Political in William James Michael T. Gibbons, University of South Florida The Fortitude of the Uncertain: Political Courage in Humes Account of the Public Sphere Marc Hanvelt, Carleton University A Lonely Courage Alexander Livingston, Johns Hopkins University Diana M. Judd, William Paterson University SCHMITTS FRIENDS AND Thu 2:00 pm ENEMIES No Room Assigned Jinee Lokaneeta, Drew University An Enemy for All Seasons: Carl Schmitt and the Limits of Anti-Liberal Formalism Christopher A. McKoy, University of California, Santa Barbara Seeing Like a Non-State: Rastafari, Schmitt, and the Agency of The Movement Neil Roberts, Williams College Carl Schmitt and the Utopian Function of the Enemy in the Thought of the Frankfurt School William Winstead, George Washington University Kam Shapiro, Illinois State University THERE IS NO Sat 2:00 pm ALTERNATIVE: RIGHTS AND RESISTANCE IN NEOLIBERAL TIME No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-3 Brian Bernhardt, University of Colorado, Boulder Jodi Dean, Hobart & William Smith Colleges Paul A. Passavant, Hobart & William Smith Colleges Paul C. Apostolidis, Whitman College Michaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado, Boulder Garnet Kindervater, University of Minnesota THEORIZING THE POLITICS OF HUMAN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-31 Fri 2:00 pm

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Laurie E. Naranch, Siena College Agonism and Abjection: Hannah Arendt, Giorgio Agamben and the Right to Have Rights Andrew Schaap, University of Exeter Foucault and the Politics of Human Rights Ben Golder, University of New South Wales Making Rights Claims, Practicing Politics Karen Zivi, University of Richmond Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and the Politics of Human Dignity Jeffrey Flynn, Fordham University Duncan Ivison, University of Sydney ENGAGING EMANCIPATORY Sat 8:00 am SOCIAL SCIENCE AND SOCIAL THEORY: A CRITICAL ROUNDTABLE ON ERIK OLIN WRIGHTS ENVISIONING REAL UTOPIAS. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 42-1 Thad Williamson, University of Richmond Aristotle, Marx, Rawls, Wright: On the Possibility and Necessity of an Emancipatory Political Science Thad Williamson, University of Richmond Scaling up Utopias. The Real Challenges of Envisioning a Post-Capitalist Era Craig Borowiak, Haverford College The Socialist Moment: William Thompson and Erik Olin Wright Mark J. Kaswan, Rutgers University-New Brunswick From Political Stalemate to System Change: The Strange Contours of the Next Era of Progressive Politics Gar Alperovitz, University of Maryland Erik Olin Wright, University of Wisconsin, Madison DISABILITY IN POLITICAL Sat 4:15 pm THEORY: RIGHTS FOR ANOTHER OTHER No Room Assigned Kristin Bumiller, Amherst College Idiots, Imbeciles, Morons in Liberal Society Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago Disability: A Question of Justice? A Question of Rights? Or a Question of Freedom? Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania The Meanings of Disability/Illness in Political Theory Barbara Arneil, University of British Columbia Cognitive Disability: Developing a Transformative Methodology Stacy A. Clifford, Vanderbilt University Kristin Bumiller, Amherst College THE VALIDITY OF HUMAN Sun 8:00 am RIGHTS: CONFLICT, JUDGMENT AND POLITICAL CONTEXTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-4 Claudio Corradetti, University of Rome

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Reconsidering (International) Realism on Rights William E. Scheuerman, Indiana University Social Injustice and the Pragmatics of Universal Justification Albena Azmanova, University of Kent Is there a Human Right to Democracy? Seyla Benhabib, Yale University A Critical Theory of Human Rights Rainer Forst, Goethe University Rights in Progress: The Politics of Rights and the Democracy-Building Processes in comparative perspective Lorella Cedroni, University of Rome La Sapienza Jeffrey Flynn, Fordham University Ruti G. Teitel, New York Law School SENSES OF RIGHTS Sat 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Davide Panagia, Trent University Davide Panagia, Trent University Saba Mahmood, University of California, Berkeley Jill E. Stauffer, Haverford College Rei Terada, University of California, Irvine FORCES OF BECOMING: Fri 10:15 am COMEDY, FRAGILITY, PERSISTENCY No Room Assigned Lars Toender, Northwestern University Whitehead, Nietzsche and the Powers of Becoming William E. Connolly, Johns Hopkins University The Strange Systematicity of Michel Serres Jane Bennett, Johns Hopkins University Becoming-comedy: Spinoza, Deleuze, and the Politics of Hilaritas Lars Toender, Northwestern University Aletta Norval, University of Essex HERBERT MARCUSE AND Thu 4:15 pm ONE-DIMENSIONAL POLITICS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 42-2 William L. Niemi, Western State College of Colorado Douglas Kellner, University of California, Los Angeles Bradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University Nichole Marie Shippen, Ohio University Clayton Pierce, University of Utah Michael Forman, University of Washington, Tacoma THEORIZING LATINO Fri 4:15 pm POLITICS: A ROUNDTABLE ON RECENT WORK BY CRISTINA BELTRN No Room Assigned Jack Turner, University of Washington Michael A. Jones-Correa, Princeton University Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley Elizabeth R. Wingrove, University of Michigan

Romand Coles, Northern Arizona University Cristina Beltran, Haverford College 2-30 Room: Chair: Papers: AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Sat 10:15 am RAINER FORST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-5 David Owen, University of Southampton Constructing Political Discourse: On Rainer Forsts Politico-Linguistic Turn Kevin Olson, University of California, Irvine Proceduralism and the Construction of Global Justice Simon L. Caney, University of Oxford The Boundary Problem: A Discourse-Theoretical Solution Eva Erman, Uppsala University Rainer Forst, Goethe University THEME PANEL: THE BLUES Fri 4:15 pm AND HUMAN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-6 and T-9 Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College The Blues Subject: Counter-Memory, Genre, and Space Michael J. Shapiro, University of Hawaii The Blues as Tragi-Comic Democracy Cornel West, Princeton University Race and the Democratic Aesthetic: Whitman Meets Billie Holiday Melvin L. Rogers, University of Virginia Dissidence as Blues, Blues as Minor Literature Isis I. Leslie, Texas Tech University Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College THE RIGHT(S) APPROACH TO Sat 8:00 am SUFFERING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-32 Karen Zivi, University of Richmond Adam Smith on Death, Justice and Happiness Fonna Forman-Barzilai, University of California, San Diego Critique Between Science and Politics Douglas William Hanes, McGill University Violence and Rights Theory William Clare Roberts, McGill University Incest, Autogeny, and Autochthony in Platos Republic and Nietzsches Birth of Tragedy Christina H. Tarnopolsky, McGill University John E. Seery, Pomona College Diego Hernan Rossello, Northwestern University POSITIVE RIGHTS AND Thu 10:15 am BEYOND: THE COMPLEXITIES OF STATE SPENDING AND HUMAN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-7 Anna Marie Smith, Cornell University Justice, Work, and the Ghetto Tommie Shelby, Harvard University

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Non-Profit Status and the Freedoms of Speech and Association Corey L. Brettschneider, Brown University The Dual State Nancy L. Rosenblum, Harvard University Reading Thurgood Marshall as a Democratic Theorist: Race, School Finance, and the Courts Anna Marie Smith, Cornell University Steven Shiffrin, Cornell University NEW PERSPECTIVES ON LEO Sun 10:15 am STRAUSS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-33 Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame Disagreement? Leo Strauss and Jacques Rancire on Politics and Philosophy Jacob Schiff, University of Toronto Whose Socrates? Which Kierkegaard? On Philosophy and Revelation in the Strauss-Voegelin Correspondence Peter Brickey LeQuire, University of Chicago A Cabal we Deserve: Leo Strauss, the Straussians, and Public Intellectual Culture Benjamin Aldes Wurgaft, New School for Social Research Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame THEME PANEL: RUMORS OF Fri 8:00 am THE RULE OF LAWS DEMISE, GREATLY EXAGGERATED? LAWYERS AND SCHOLARS TAKE ON THE GOVERNMENT, OVERTURN DONT-ASK-DONTTELL, AND FREE GUANTANOMO DETAINEES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-34 Jacqueline Stevens, Northwestern University Tracy B. Strong, University of California, San Diego Paul A. Passavant, Hobart & William Smith Colleges Adam Thurschwell, Georgetown University Sunita Patel, Center for Constitutional Rights Jacqueline Stevens, Northwestern University THE UNKNOWN OF Sat 10:15 am JUDGMENT No Room Assigned Steven Johnston, University of South Florida The Phenomenology of Justice: Games of Chance and the Appearance of Fate Jennifer L. Culbert, Johns Hopkins University Bad Examples, Feminist Politics and Risky Judgments Laurie E. Naranch, Siena College Embodied Imagination and the Call for Responsiveness: Locke and Montaigne on Monsters Torrey J. Shanks, University at Albany, SUNY The Art of Judgment Roger Berkowitz, Bard College Morton Schoolman, SUNY, Albany Steven Johnston, University of South Florida

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BEYOND ANIMAL RIGHTS: Thu 8:00 am CAPABILITIES, JUSTICE, AND THE NON-HUMAN No Room Assigned Rafi Youatt, New School University Defending the Other Species Capability: Why Meaningful Relationships with Non-Human Species is Justifiable as a Political Goal in Liberal Democratic Societies Breena Holland, Lehigh University Larissa Walker, Lehigh University Beyond Animal Rights: Inter-species Confilcts of Interest and the Problem of Moral Remainders Karen Emmerman Mazner, University of Washington Rethinking Ecological Justice: Capabilities and Critics David Schlosberg, University of Sydney Kimberly K. Smith, Carleton College CRITICAL THEORY, FEMINISM Sat 2:00 pm AND THE CHALLENGE TO RIGHTS No Room Assigned Albena Azmanova, University of Kent Slavery as a Challenge to Human Rights: A Loytardian Perspective Bettina G. Bergo, Universit de Montral Rethinking Agambens State of Exception: The Sacred Woman Claudia Leeb, Roanoke College Scrutiny: How Constitutional Law Legitimates Sexism Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth College Re-enacting the Enlightenments Rights: Foucault, UN Peacekeeping, Human Rights and the Unintended Consequences of Reforming Punishment Institutions in Haiti Laura Zanotti, Virginia Tech Oppressive Social Relations as Responses to Human Vulnerability Mara Marin, University of Chicago Albena Azmanova, University of Kent REALISM IN POLITICAL Thu 2:00 pm THEORY: POSTCOLONIAL REALISMS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-8 Karuna Mantena, Yale University Realism, Utopia, and Colonial Enlightenment Antonio Y. Vazquez Arroyo, University of Minnesota Affect and Escalation: Rethinking Gandhis Critique of Violence Karuna Mantena, Yale University Dialectical Realism: The Critique of Ontology in Fanon and Dussel George Ciccariello-Maher, Drexel University Empire as a Question of Freedom Robert Nichols, University of Alberta Corey Robin, Brooklyn College/CUNY Graduate Center

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RIGHTS AND WRONGS IN Fri 10:15 am HOBBES No Room Assigned Amy T. Linch, Pennsylvania State University From Lear to Leviathan: On States of Nature and Social Contracts in Shakespeares Politics Alex Schulman, Harvard University Interrupting Sovereignty: Hobbes between Savagery and Civility Theodore Christov, Northwestern University The Question of Power in Hobbess Doctrine of Right Sandra Field, Princeton University Having Rights and Being Right: Thomas Hobbes on the Nature of Rights Mary Berk, University of Washington Amy T. Linch, Pennsylvania State University DEMOCRACY, Thu 10:15 am PERFECTIONISM AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned David R. Howarth, University of Essex The Democratic Demand Aletta Norval, University of Essex Emersonian Perfectionism and the Practice of Rights David Owen, University of Southampton A Sympathetic Reading of Emersons Politics William Berger, University of Michigan Verity Smith PROBLEMS OF POLITICAL Fri 2:00 pm EDUCATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-35 Dana R. Villa, University of Notre Dame The Peoples Prince John P. McCormick, University of Chicago Political Education and Public Reason Stephen Macedo, Princeton University Liberal Lessons: Political Education in Tocqueville and Mill Dana R. Villa, University of Notre Dame Patchen Markell, University of Chicago LIBERAL RIGHTS AND Thu 4:15 pm OBLIGATIONS: ANNA STILZS LIBERAL LOYALTY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-9 Thomas Christiano, University of Arizona Anna Stilz, Princeton University Michael Blake Eric Beerbohm, Harvard University Thomas Christiano, University of Arizona Daniel Viehoff, University of Sheffield DEMOCRACY AND Thu 8:00 am REPRESENTATION: FRIENDS OR ENEMIES IN THEORY AND POLITICS? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-10 John R. Wallach, CUNY-Hunter College

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Jennifer C. Rubenstein, University of Virginia Andrew Sabl, University of California, Los Angeles Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan STRUCTURES OF OPPRESSION Fri 4:15 pm AND THE DISCOURSE OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-11 Jacqueline Stevens, Northwestern University Nancy Hartsock, professor emeritus, University of Washington Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University Mara Marin, University of Chicago Claudia Leeb, Roanoke College Ainsley Nicole LeSure, University of Chicago THE FACT OF INEQUALITY Thu 2:00 pm No Room Assigned Benjamin F. Berger, Swarthmore College Plebian Rights: An Example for Our Time Jeffrey E. Green, University of Pennsylvania Nietzsche, Cognition, and the Order of Rank John S. Holzwarth, Lewis & Clark College What Equality Would Actually Look Like: Lessons from Anarchist Spain on Equality, Temporality and the Art of the Possible James R. Martel, San Francisco State University Jodi Dean, Hobart & William Smith Colleges AMERICAN HUMAN RIGHTS Sat 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Barbara Buckinx, University of Frankfurt Slavery, Independence and the Republic: Two Faces of the Liberty of the Moderns Alexander H. Gourevitch, Harvard University Of Rights and Revolutions: Liberty and Equality in the Political Thought of Gouverneur Morris J. Jackson Barlow, Juniata College Situating Human Rights in American Political Thought Michael A. Mosher, University of Tulsa Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill FOUNDATIONS OF HUMAN Sat 8:00 am RIGHTS (I) No Room Assigned Mark Redhead, California State University, Fullerton In Defense of Groundless Claims: Hannah Arendt and A Right to Have Rights Ayten Gundogdu, Barnard College-Columbia University Judith Shklar on Rights: Separating Philosophy and History Kamila Stullerova, Aberystwyth University Grounding Rights in a Postmodern World: A Burkean Alternative to the Modern Consensus William F. Byrne, St. Johns University The Legitimacy of Rights Beyond the Nation State: Habermass Contradictory Cosmopolitanism Beltran Undurraga, UCLA

2-45

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Mark Redhead, California State University, Fullerton Anthony J. McGann, University of California, Irvine FOUNDATIONS OF HUMAN Sat 10:15 am RIGHTS (II) No Room Assigned William F. Byrne, St. Johns University How Global Can Global Public Reason Be? Thinking Through the Secular Problematics of Global Human Rights Discourse Mark Redhead, California State University, Fullerton Human Rights: Towards a Reflexive Foundation? Giulia Oskian, Sciences Po What are Human Rights? Towards a Non-subjective Ontology of Human Rights Anthony J. McGann, University of California, Irvine Ayten Gundogdu, Barnard College-Columbia University Kamila Stullerova, Aberystwyth University FREEDOM TO MOVE Sun 8:00 am No Room Assigned Elisabeth H. Ellis, Texas A&M University Automobility and Freedom John M. Meyer, Humboldt State University Movement and Mob: The Democratic Revolution and its Discontents Rebekah Sterling, University of California, Los Angeles Fashion, Tradition, and Democracy Joshua I. Miller, Lafayette College Elisabeth H. Ellis, Texas A&M University HEGEL AND THE POLITICS OF Thu 8:00 am RIGHTS No Room Assigned Maria G. Kowalski Hegel, Social Membership, and The Right to Have Rights Andrew Buchwalter, University of North Florida The Movements of International Law in Hegels Phenomenology William E. Conklin, University of Windsor Hegel on Rights: Taking Duties Seriously Maria G. Kowalski Hegel on the General Will and the Fury of Destruction Andrew Norris, University of California, Santa Barbara Peter J. Steinberger, Reed College TECHNIQUES FOR BECOMING Fri 10:15 am A SUBJECT OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Kam Shapiro, Illinois State University Rights to Become? Kam Shapiro, Illinois State University Race, Rights, and the Origins of U.S. Political Science Jessica Blatt, Marymount Manhattan College

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Politics, 2,000,000 BCE Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Alan B. Wood, Northern Arizona University FOUCAULTS CHALLENGE TO Thu 4:15 pm RIGHTS DISCOURSE No Room Assigned Claudia Leeb, Roanoke College Foucault and the Politics of Rights Thomas Biebricher, Goethe University Frankfurt Social Structure and Political Agency: From Practices of the Self to Practices of the Self/other Harvey S. Goldman, University of California, San Diego Matthew Scherer, Union College REACTIONARY POLITICS: Fri 2:00 pm SPEED, TIME, AFFECT, NARRATIVE No Room Assigned Morton Schoolman, SUNY, Albany We do not yet know how fast the body can go: Spinoza, Speed and Reactionary Politics Simon Glezos, University of Regina The Butchers Wife and Other Stories of Love, Terror, and Time Asma Abbas, Simons Rock College of Bard Fundamentalist Futures: Sayyid Qutb and the temporality of Jahiliyyah Smita A. Rahman, DePauw University Community and the Desire for Present-ness Mabel Wong, National University of Singapore Morton Schoolman, SUNY, Albany SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY: Sun 10:15 am EMOTIONS AND EXPERIENCE IN POLITICAL THOUGHT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-12 George E. Marcus, Williams College Empiricism in Political Thought Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State University Empathy, Sympathy, Hume and Smith Michael E. Morrell, University of Connecticut Moral Sentimentalism: Empirical, Conceptual and Normative Michael L. Frazer, Harvard University George E. Marcus, Williams College THE PHILOSOPHER ROLE: Sat 2:00 pm CASTING POLITICAL THEORY IN OUR FILM DREAMSCAPES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 41-2 Peter Josephson, Saint Anselm College Why Hollywood Hates Business: Immanuel Kants Role in Avatar James Pontuso, Hampden-Sydney College Mars Attacks!: Burton, Tocqueville, and the SelfOrganizing Power of the American People Paul A. Cantor, University of Virginia

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Its the End of the World as We Know It: Thoreaus Individualism in Post-Apocalyptic Film Christie L. Maloyed, University of Texas, Pan American Civilization in a Cyclical World: Nature, Cataclysm, and Story-telling in Plato and Mad Max Daniel Betti, Wittenberg University Joseph H. Lane, Jr., Emory & Henry College Peter Josephson, Saint Anselm College THE REALITIES OF POLITICS AND THE NATURE OF POLITICAL THEORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-14 FOOD FOR THOUGHT: EATING, CONSUMPTION, AND THE POLITICAL IMAGINARY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 42-7 Fri 10:15 am

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AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: RAINER FORST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-30 THEME PANEL: THE BLUES AND HUMAN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-31 and T-9 POSITIVE RIGHTS AND BEYOND: THE COMPLEXITIES OF STATE SPENDING AND HUMAN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-33 REALISM IN POLITICAL THEORY: POSTCOLONIAL REALISMS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-39 LIBERAL RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS: ANNA STILZS LIBERAL LOYALTY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-43 DEMOCRACY AND REPRESENTATION: FRIENDS OR ENEMIES IN THEORY AND POLITICS? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-44 STRUCTURES OF OPPRESSION AND THE DISCOURSE OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-45 SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY: EMOTIONS AND EXPERIENCE IN POLITICAL THOUGHT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-55

Sat 10:15 am

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NOMOS: FEDERALISM AND Sat 8:00 am SUBSIDIARITY: THE CITY AND SUBSIDIARITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by American Society for Political & Legal Philosophy, Panel 3 Fri 6:00 pm

Thu 4:15 pm

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FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY PLENARY SESSION: ARJUN APPADURAI, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Room: No Room Assigned

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NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY


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Division Sharon R. Krause, Brown University Chair: Marc Stears, University of Oxford 3-1 ROUNDTABLE ON JOHN P. MCCORMICKS MACHIAVELLIAN DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-1 CONTESTING THE PEOPLE IN AMERICAN HISTORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-7 THERE IS NO ALTERNATIVE: RIGHTS AND RESISTANCE IN NEOLIBERAL TIME No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-21 THE VALIDITY OF HUMAN RIGHTS: CONFLICT, JUDGMENT AND POLITICAL CONTEXTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-25 Sat 8:00 am

Fri 4:15 pm

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IS POWER ZERO-SUM? Thu 8:00 am No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee #36 (Power), Panel 1 Clarissa R. Hayward, Washington University Turning Power Debates into Positive Sum Games Keith Dowding, Australian National University Power and Political Economy in a Globalizing World: Divisibility, Diffusion and Displacement Philip G. Cerny Is Power Zero-Sum or Variable-Sum? Old Arguments and New Beginnings James H. Read, College of Saint Benedict Reflections on Positive-Sum Power in International Politics Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Harvard University

14

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Is Power Over Zero-Sum? Mark Haugaard, National University of Ireland, Galway Carol C. Gould, CUNY Graduate Center THE REALITIES OF POLITICS Fri 10:15 am AND THE NATURE OF POLITICAL THEORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-57 Turkuler Isiksel, European University Institute Realistic Global Universalism Casiano A.W. Hacker-Cordn, Trinity College Adaptive Political Theory Ian Shapiro, Yale University Aspects of Political Conflict Peter J. Steinberger, Reed College Glyn Morgan, Syracuse University Turkuler Isiksel, European University Institute JUDGMENT AND Fri 8:00 am (IN)SECURITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-36 Sharon R. Krause, Brown University A Public Taste for Truth: Zolas Aesthetic Appeals to the People during the Dreyfus Affair Lida E. Maxwell, Trinity College Normal Emergencies and Sovereign Decisions: The Role of Necessity Analogies in Legal Argument Leonard C. Feldman, CUNY-Hunter College A Political Theory of Constitutional Security Judgment Mariah Zeisberg, University of Michigan Alison McQueen POLITICISING THE RIGHT TO Sat 10:15 am POLITICAL COMMUNITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-37 Anna Stilz, Princeton University What is The Right to Have Rights? Kant, Arendt and Civil Status James Bohman, Saint Louis University What is a Right to Have Rights? Hauke Brunkhorst, University of Flensburg Arendts Right to Have Rights as Natural Right: A Contribution to a Bio-Politics of Rights Miguel Vatter, Universidad Diego Portales The Right to Political Community: From State of Nature to the Nature of Statelessness Sofia Nasstrom, Stockholm University Anna Stilz, Princeton University RACE IN A POST-CIVIL Thu 4:15 pm RIGHTS AMERICA No Room Assigned Christopher Lebron, University of Virginia Glenn C. Loury, Brown University Ian Haney Lopez, University of California-Berkeley Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University Clarissa R. Hayward, Washington University George M. Shulman, New York University

3-18 Room: Chair: Papers: Part:

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REALISM AND RIGHTS Sat 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Peter D. Breiner, SUNY, Albany Hans Morgenthau and the Apocalyptic Imaginary Alison McQueen John N. Medearis, University of California, Riverside Mathew Innell Humphrey, University of Nottingham Melissa Lane, Princeton University RIGHTS, ASYLUM, AND Fri 2:00 pm REFUGEES No Room Assigned Chad Flanders, Saint Louis University Interpreting the Right of Return Megan Bradley, Saint Paul University Political Rights, Republican Freedom, and Temporary Workers Alex Sager, Portland State University Can Exit Right Really Save Internal Minorities? Fumio Iida, Kobe University The Persona of Personhood: Asylum Courts and the Performance of Legal Subjectivity Douglas C. Dow, University of Texas, Dallas Mathew Innell Humphrey, University of Nottingham POLITICAL OBLIGATION AND Sat 2:00 pm LEGITIMACY No Room Assigned Robert S. Taylor, University of California, Davis Defense of a Fairness Theory of Obligation George Klosko, University of Virginia Historical Normativity and the Basis of Rights Paul R. Patton, University of New South Wales Liberal Neutrality: A Reinterpretation and Defense Alan Patten, Princeton University Democracys Spectre: The Paradox of Politics and Populist Tension Alex McCown, New School for Social Research Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College MODES OF DEMOCRATIC Sat 8:00 am CITIZENSHIP No Room Assigned Benjamin F. Berger, Swarthmore College Of Virtues and Values: Sympathy, Empathy, and Agonistic Respect in Recent Democratic Theory Robert W. Glover, James Madison University Playing It Safe? Constitutional Patriotism versus Wild and Anarchic Moments of Democracy Cigdem Cidam, Missouri State University Benjamin F. Berger, Swarthmore College NORMATIVE POLITICAL Thu 2:00 pm ECONOMY No Room Assigned Laurent Dobuzinskis, Simon Fraser University Needing Rights: An Essay on Granting Rights to the Needy in U.S. Welfare Politics Glenn Mackin, Eastman School of Music

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Cosmopolitanism Triumphant? The Deceptive Universals of Global Economic Governance Turkuler Isiksel, European University Institute Charitable Giving and the Fulfilment of Rights Kieran John Oberman, Stanford University Exploitation in International Commerce Sarah Goff, Princeton University Laurent Dobuzinskis, Simon Fraser University COSMOPOLITAN RIGHTS AND Thu 4:15 pm CITIZENSHIP No Room Assigned Carol C. Gould, CUNY Graduate Center Defending Liberal Cosmopolitanism Bettina Scholz, Stonehill College Islamic Cosmopolitanism in a Globalized World Ermin Sinanovic, US Naval Academy Rights and the Politics of Re-Founding Angelica Maria Bernal, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Barbara Buckinx, University of Frankfurt RIGHTS IN CROSS-CULTURAL Sun 8:00 am PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Omar Dahbour, Hunter College, City University of New York Is Confucianism Anti-Democratic? Doh C. Shin, University of Missouri To Become a Citizen in a Confucian Society Sungmoon Kim, City University of Hong Kong The Orient: Exteriority and the Other Jennifer Paige Forshee, University of Florida Islamic Normative Sources of Rights for Foreigners/ Immigrants/Newcomers Juliette Tolay, University of Delaware Omar Dahbour, Hunter College, City University of New York RIGHTS AND CULTURE Fri 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Robert W. Glover, James Madison University Against the Right to Self-Determination: Indigenous Governance and International Law Kyla Reid, University of Sydney From Indigenous Rights to Ecosovereignty: Toward a 21st-Century Concept of Self-Determination Omar Dahbour, Hunter College, City University of New York Participatory Democracy and the Inclusion of Social and Cultural Minorities Thamy Pogrebinschi, State University of Rio de Janeiro Robert W. Glover, James Madison University BIOLOGY AND RIGHTS Thu 2:00 pm No Room Assigned James M. Glass, University of Maryland, College Park Darwin and the Declaration Stephen Adam Seagrave, Pepperdine University

Disc: 3-27

Thomistic Natural Law as Darwinian Natural Right: A Reply to Critics Larry Arnhart, Northern Illinois University Origins of the Sense of Right Paul Clements, Western Michigan University James M. Glass, University of Maryland, College Park INTEGRATING NORMATIVE Fri 10:15 am THEORY AND EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS No Room Assigned Mika LaVaque-Manty, University of Michigan Political Theory as Political Science: Rejecting the Mid-Century Gerrymander James D. Johnson, University of Rochester The Importance of Causal Analysis for Political Philosophy David Wiens, University of Michigan Dogmatic Political Theory: Why Hobbes Had No Normative Theory About Representation Andrew Rehfeld, Washington University, St. Louis Problem-Driven Political Theory: A Case Study from Environmental Politics Elisabeth H. Ellis, Texas A&M University Michael L. Frazer, Harvard University SKEPTICISM, LIBERALISM, Sun 10:15 am AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Claudia Schaler, St. Francis Xavier University (Why) Was Isaiah Berlin Not a Rights Theorist?: Liberalism, Pluralism, and the Politics of Rights Joshua L. Cherniss, Harvard University The Rights of Innocence: Judith Shklar and American Liberal Thought Shefali Misra, St. Michaels College Skeptical Eyes from the West and the East: Montesquieu, Liang Qichao and the Politics of Rights Jinmin Lee, Brandeis University Self-mastery or Self-annihilation: Rousseau and the Politics of Rights Claudia Schaler, St. Francis Xavier University Nabokovs Aesthetic Liberalism: Individual Rights Against the Tyranny of General Ideas Timothy Wyman McCarty, Brandeis University Claudia Schaler, St. Francis Xavier University NEW PERSPECTIVES ON Fri 2:00 pm HABERMAS: REASON, VIRTUES, AND POSTCONVENTIONAL MORALITY No Room Assigned Stephen K. White, University of Virginia Habermas, Normative Validity, and the Status of Ethical Claims James E. Bourke, Duke University Universally Accessible Language Simone Chambers, University of Toronto Pressing the Subject: Intersubjectivity in Habermas and Melanie Klein David Wallace McIvor, Kettering Foundation

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 3-24 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 3-28

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Disc: 3-25 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 3-29

Disc: 3-26 Room: Chair: Papers:

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16

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 3-30 Room: Chair: Papers:

The Virtue of Deliberation: Sophrosyne & Epistemic Democracy Michael Neblo, Ohio State University J. Donald Moon, Wesleyan University DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY Sat 10:15 am BEYOND THE WEST No Room Assigned Sungmoon Kim, City University of Hong Kong Problem-Driven Political Theory and Intercultural Comparison Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia Melissa S. Williams, University of Toronto Deliberative Cultures Jensen Sass, Yale University John S. Dryzek, Australian National University Confucian Resources for Experimentation in Deliberative Democracy Sor-hoon Tan, National University of Singapore Political Culture and Deliberative Democracy: The Case of China Baogang He, Deakin University Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University RIGHTS AND VIRTUES IN Fri 8:00 am DEMOCRATIC THEORY No Room Assigned Melissa S. Williams, University of Toronto Aristotle on Virtuous Laughter John T. Lombardini, III, College of William & Mary Virtue, Ritual and Sacrifice: Democratic Lessons from the Anthropology of Religion Ian Ward, University of Maryland Procrastination and Democracy Eric Beerbohm, Harvard University Citizens or Stateless? Rethinking Refugeehood Megan Bradley, Saint Paul University Stephen Macedo, Princeton University RIGHTS AND POLITICAL Thu 4:15 pm JUSTIFICATION No Room Assigned Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth College Kenneth Baynes, Syracuse University Simone Chambers, University of Toronto Duncan Ivison, University of Sydney DILEMMAS IN CIVIC Sat 8:00 am EDUCATION: PATRIOTISM & IDENTITY, CONTROVERSY & CONSENSUS No Room Assigned Amy Gutmann, University of Pennsylvania Citizenship as Shared Fate Sigal R. Ben-Porath, University of Pennsylvania Doing Without Love: Taking, Not Making, the Best of Patriotism Ian R. MacMullen, Washington University in St. Louis The Ethics of Teacher Disclosure: A Pragmatic Approach Paula McAvoy, Illinois State University Diana Hess, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Disc: 3-34 Room: Chair: Part:

Can We Stand United? Civic Education in Divided Societies Yael Tamir, Tel Aviv University Eamonn Callan, Stanford University FEMINIST PERSPECTIVES ON Thu 2:00 pm FREEDOM AND RIGHTS No Room Assigned Sharon R. Krause, Brown University Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania Elisabeth Anker, George Washington University Cristina Beltran, Haverford College Jennifer Nedelsky, University of Toronto CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON Thu 8:00 am RIGHTS No Room Assigned Lars Peter Rensmann, University of Michigan Rights as Politics or Policing Jens Frederiksen, Fisk University The Problem with Rights: Toward a Theory of Meeting Needs Natalie Susan Gaines, University College London Who Needs Rights? Justice and the Precariousness of Social Order in the Political Realism of Raymond Geuss and Bernard Williams Benjamin McKean, University of Chicago Claudia Leeb, Roanoke College THEME PANEL: RIGHTS, Sat 2:00 pm DIVERSITY, AND DISABILITY No Room Assigned Liz Pellicano, Institute of Education, London Lynn M. Sanders, University of Virginia Dennis Lang, University of Washington Ari Neeman, Autistic Self Advocacy Network MARKETS, STATES, RIGHTS AND FAMILIES: POLITICS OF CARE IN A GLOBAL AGE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-8 SEX, GENDER, AND THE TEA PARTY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-9 Fri 4:15 pm

3-35 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 3-31 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 3-36 Room: Chair: Part:

3-37

Disc: 3-32 Room: Chair: Part:

Room: 3-38 Room: 3-39

Sun 10:15 am

3-33

Room:

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NOMOS: FEDERALISM AND Sun 8:00 am SUBSIDIARITY: AGAINST DUAL FEDERALISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by American Society for Political & Legal Philosophy, Panel 1 NOMOS: FEDERALISM AND Sat 2:00 pm SUBSIDIARITY: THE CONSTITUTION AND FEDERALISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by American Society for Political & Legal Philosophy, Panel 2

3-40

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17

FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY

Division Dimitri Landa, New York University Chair: 4-1 Room: Papers: STRATEGIC COMMUNICATION Thu 8:00 am AND LEADERSHIP No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-1 Communication, Judgement, and Message: A Theory of Leadership with Constraints to Information Transmission and Cognition Torun Dewan, London School of Economics David P Myatt, Oxford University Incentives in Debate and Argumentative Competence Catherine Hafer, New York University Dimitri Landa, New York University Strategic Communication in Electoral Campaigns with Promises and Signals Doru Cojoc, Stanford University Political Rulers, Administrators, and the Efficacy of Law Tiberiu C. Dragu, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Mattias K. Polborn, University of Illinois Richard Van Weelden, University of Chicago Kenneth W. Shotts, Stanford University ELECTORAL COMPETITION Fri 10:15 am AND VOTING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-2 Justin Fox, Yale University Scott Ashworth, University of Chicago Policy-Seeking Parties under Plurality versus PR: Does Proportionality Increase Incentives for Party Polarization? James Adams, University of California, Davis Samuel Merrill, III, Wilkes University Vote for Now, or for the Future? A Model of Instrumental Voting with Short-Run and Long-Run Concerns David P Myatt, Oxford University Reputation and Issue Salience in Repeated Elections with Specialized Candidates Salvatore Nunnari, California Institute of Technology Justin Fox, Yale University FORMAL MODELS AND Thu 10:15 am EXPERIMENTS: THE NEW FRONTIERS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 51-1 Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley The Communicative Environment: A Laboratory Experiment on the Effects of Competition and Preference Uncertainty William Minozzi, Ohio State University Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh Experiments on Institutional Choice and Accountability in Government Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh

Disc: 4-4 Room: Chair: Papers:

Conflicting Interests in a Multi-Receiver Signaling Game: An Experimental Study Kenneth C. Williams, Michigan State University Daniel J. Lee, Michigan State University Formal Behavioralism Daniel Diermeier, Northwestern University Rafael Hortala-Vallve, London School of Economics Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley FORMAL MODELS OF Sat 8:00 am LEGISLATIVE POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-1 William Minozzi, Ohio State University Partisan and Bipartisan Policymaking in Legislatures Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University Keith Krehbiel, Stanford University Why Do Moderate Senators Support the Filibuster? Alexander Victor Hirsch, Stanford University A Formal Theory of Legislative Effectiveness in Policymaking Craig Volden, University of Virginia Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University Matthew P. Hitt The Influence of Pork on the Dynamics of Continuing Policies Seok-ju Cho, Yale University Equilibrium Behavior in Minority Governments: The Rationality of Incentive Compatible Self-enforcing Coalitions Anna Bassi, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Erik Snowberg, Caltech EXPERIMENTATION, Fri 4:15 pm LEARNING, AND EXPERTISE No Room Assigned David P Myatt, Oxford University Incentives to Experiment in Federal Systems Steven Callander, Stanford University Learning and Experimentation with Biased Legislators Alexander Victor Hirsch, Stanford University Choosing Records Matias Iaryczower, California Institute of Technology Andrea Mattozzi, California Institute of Technology Portfolio Allocation and Policy Assignment with Biased Experts Rafael Hortala-Vallve, London School of Economics Torun Dewan, London School of Economics Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester MODELS OF ELECTIONS Thu 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Torun Dewan, London School of Economics Challengers, Democratic Contestation, and Electoral Accountability Kenneth W. Shotts, Stanford University Scott Ashworth, University of Chicago Moderate Voters, Polarized Parties Richard Van Weelden, University of Chicago The Personality of Politicians Erik Snowberg, Caltech

Disc: 4-2 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 4-5 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 4-3

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 4-6 Room: Chair: Papers:

18

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 4-7 Room: Chair:

Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago Sanford C. Gordon, New York University BUREAUCRACY, LAW, AND Sat 10:15 am THE RULE OF LAW No Room Assigned Matias Iaryczower, California Institute of Technology Tiberiu C. Dragu, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Learning from Empirical Studies of Agency Rulemaking. Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester State-Contingent Legislation and Accretion of Executive Power Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley John W. Patty, Washington University Judicial Review and the Protection of Minorities Justin Fox, Yale University Rational Expectations and Electoral Fraud Andrew Little, New York University Dimitri Landa, New York University Matias Iaryczower, California Institute of Technology MODELS OF DOMESTIC Sat 4:15 pm INSURGENCY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-1 Scott Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin, Madison Factions and Negotiation Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago Collective Action with Uncertain Payoffs: Coordination, Public Signals and Punishment Dilemmas Mehdi Shadmehr, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Dan Bernhardt, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Opening the Black Box of the Coup dEtat: A Model of Communication, Coordination, and Overthrow Brenton Kenkel, University of Rochester Whose Life is Worth More? The Effect of Government Composition on Insurgents Targets Anna Getmansky, New York University Borders, Treason, and the Formation of the State Jeremy Kedziora Catherine Hafer, New York University Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University ELECTORAL SYSTEMS AND Sun 8:00 am COLLECTIVE CHOICE RULES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-3 John W. Patty, Washington University Overstating: A Tale of Two Cities Matias Nuez, CNRS-Cergy Jean-Francois Laslier, Ecole Polytechnique Narrowing the Field in Elections Steven J. Brams, New York University Marc Kilgour, Wilfrid Laurier University

Disc: 4-10 Room: 4-11

Competitive Equilibrium in Markets for Votes Aniol Llorente-Saguer, Max Planck Institute Alessandra Casella, Columbia University Thomas Palfrey, Princeton University Seok-ju Cho, Yale University STRATEGIC MODELS OF AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-55 NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE BARGAINING THEORY OF WAR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-24 Thu 2:00 pm

Papers:

Sat 2:00 pm

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POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Division Pete Hatemi, University of Iowa Chair: 5-1 Room: Chair: Papers: EMOTION AND POLITICAL Thu 2:00 pm ENGAGEMENT No Room Assigned David P. Redlawsk, Rutgers University The Emotional Voter: An Experimental Study of the Moderating Effect of Emotions on Vote Choice Sara Binzer Hobolt, Oxford University Zsolt Kiss, University of Oxford Emotion Regulation and the Endorsement of Democratic Practices: Searching for a New Track for Intervention Eran Halperin, Interdisciplinary Center Ruthie Pliskin, Tel Aviv University Varda Liberman James Gross, Stanford University A New Measure of Emotional Engagement with Politics Jaime E. Settle, University of California, San Diego James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego When Endocrinology and Democracy Collide: Emotions, Cortisol and Voting at National Elections Israel S. Waismel-Manor, University of Haifa Gal Ifergane, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Hagit Cohen, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Eric Plutzer, Pennsylvania State University US VS. THEM: CAUSES AND Sun 10:15 am CONSEQUENCES OF POLITICAL OUT-GROUPS No Room Assigned Martin Johnson, University of California, Riverside The Consequences of Political Vilification Michael W. Wagner, University of Nebraska Dona-Gene Mitchell, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Preventing Inadvertent Stereotyping in the Racial Gap Literature Thomas Craemer, University of Connecticut

Disc:

4-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-2

Disc: 4-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Papers:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

19

Disc: 5-3

Defining Us and Them: Qualitative Differences in How We Reconstruct Being American and Being an Immigrant Shawn W. Rosenberg, University of California, Irvine Johanna Solomon, University of California, Irvine Genetic Similarity, Ethnocentrism, and Political Attitudes Byron DAndra Orey, Jackson State University Daphna Canetti, University of Haifa IGNORANCE, INFORMATION Thu 4:15 pm AND ATTENTION: WHAT DO WE KNOW, AND WHY DO WE KNOW IT? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 37-1 Sara Binzer Hobolt, Oxford University Information, Motivation, and the Paradigms of Political Sophistication Evan Parker-Stephen, Texas A&M University The Attentive Citizen W. Russell Neuman, University of Michigan Michael B. MacKuen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill George E. Marcus, Williams College Less Ignorant than We Thought? The Measurement of Political Knowledge, Inference, and Misinformation Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin Gaurav Sood, Stanford University Gene by Environment Interactions of Political Knowledge and Socioeconomic Status Levente Littvay, Central European University Sebastian Adrian Popa, Central European University Opening the Partisan Mind? Self-affirmation and Factual Misperceptions About Politics Brendan Nyhan, University of Michigan Jason A. Reifler, Georgia State University Jennifer Wolak, University of Colorado POLITICAL CONSTRAINT AND Sat 8:00 am OPINION CHANGE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 37-2 Casey A. Klofstad, University of Miami The Genetic Basis of Political Awareness and Ideological Constraint Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University Martin Johnson, University of California, Riverside Do People Know When Their Opinions Change? Dean P. Lacy, Dartmouth College Stable Risk Preferences Dont Exist: experimental evidence and implications William E. English, Duke University The Awful Truth: Learning What One Doesnt Want to Know Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin Gaurav Sood, Stanford University David T. Smith, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

5-5

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-6

ITS NOT WHAT YOU HEAR, Sat 2:00 pm BUT WHAT YOU SEE THAT MATTERS No Room Assigned Bradley Verhulst, Virginia Commonwealth University Its Not What You Say, Its the Way that You Say It: Nonverbal Cues and Persuasion Delia Dumitrescu, Universite de Montreal Elisabeth L. Gidengil, McGill University Dietlind Stolle, McGill University Stuart N. Soroka, McGill University Winning Faces: Predicting Winning Candidates with Biologically Inspired Artificial Vision System Darren Schreiber, University of California, San Diego An Examination of Obesity, Gender, and Ethnicity in Candidate Evaluation Using Subjective and Objective Physiological Methods Beth Miller, University of Missouri, Kansas City Jennifer Lundgren, University of Missouri, Kansas City Diane Filion, University of Missouri-Kansas City Carrie D. Spresser, University of Missouri-Kansas City Lauren Thompson, University of Missouri-Kansas City Predicting a Preference for Light Complexion: A Comparison of Implicit and Explicit Racial Attitudes Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University Solomon Messing, Stanford University Kyu S. Hahn, Stanford University Thomas Craemer, University of Connecticut SOCIAL NETWORKS: Fri 8:00 am INFORMATION, PREJUDICE, ANGER AND ATTITUDES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 50-1 Darren Schreiber, University of California, San Diego Networking Egalitarianism: Social Network Influences on the Stability and Political Impact of Prejudice Lindsey C. Levitan, Stony Brook University, SUNY Introducing New Variables into the Measurement of Social Network Effects Elif Erisen, Cal Poly State University Assessing the Effects of Emotion-Laden Messages in a Social Network David P. Redlawsk, Rutgers University Doug Pierce, Rutgers University William W. Cohen, Carnegie Mellon University Tae Yano, Carnegie Mellon University Ramnath Balasubramanyan, Carnegie Mellon University Measuring Political Discussion in a Network of 100 Million Facebook Users Jaime E. Settle, University of California, San Diego James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego Robert Bond, University of California, San Diego Darren Schreiber, University of California, San Diego Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-4 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

Disc:

20

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

5-7

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-8

ARE THE INSANE RUNNING Thu 8:00 am THE ASYLUM? LEADER TRAITS AND LEADERSHIP STYLES No Room Assigned Levente Littvay, Central European University Leadership and Persuasion David Lazer, Northeastern University Kevin M. Esterling, University of California, Riverside Michael Neblo, Ohio State University Politics as an Occupation: Character Traits and Institutions Donald D. Searing, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Jo Silvester, City University London The Elusive Style of Sarah Palin and What it Means Roderick P. Hart, University of Texas, Austin Madmen in Authority: Pathological Fear in US Foreign Policy Christopher J. Fettweis, Tulane University A. Burcu Bayram, Ohio State University NEUROTIC LIBERALS, Fri 2:00 pm PSYCHOTIC CONSERVATIVES, MORAL INTUITIONS, AND IMAGINED IDEOLOGIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 37-3 Michael W. Wagner, University of Nebraska Personality, Politics, and Partnership Martin Kroh Imagining Politics: Imagination and Heuristics in Public Opinion Formation Michael Bang Petersen, University of Aarhus Lene Aaroe, University of Aarhus Intuitive Politics: How Moral Intuitions Shape and Constrain Political Attitudes Bradley Jones, University of Wisconisn, Madison The Transmission of Political Attitudes and Personality Traits across Generations Bradley Verhulst, Virginia Commonwealth University Pete Hatemi, University of Sydney C. Daniel Myers, Princeton University MUGGLES TRUST JON Thu 4:15 pm STEWART: COMEDIC NEWS, FICTION AND POLITICAL BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 38-1 Beth Miller, University of Missouri, Kansas City Selective Exposure and Comedic News Natalie Jomini Stroud, University of Texas, Austin Ashley Muddiman, University of Texas at Austin Harry Potter and the Millennials: The Boy-Who-Lived and the Politics of a Muggle Generation Anthony Gierzynski, University of Vermont The Effects of Fictional versus Non-Fictional Labels on Empathy and Help for People in Need Xiaoxia Cao, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

Disc: 5-10

In Jon Stewart We Trust? The Impact of Partisanship and Expected Electoral Outcomes in the 2010 Midterm Election on Social and Political Trust Elizabeth Roodhouse, University of Pennsylvania Eric William Groenendyk, University of Michigan THE EFFECTS OF MEDIA Sat 10:15 am EXPOSURE ON EMOTION, COGNITION AND PHYSIOLOGY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 38-2 Michael L. Spezio, California Institute of Technology Appraising Political Emotions: Appraisals, Emotions, and Behavior in Response to Threatening News Eric William Groenendyk, University of Michigan Ted Brader, University of Michigan Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan The Conditional Nature of Agenda-Setting: Toward a Physiological Understanding of Individual Differences in Susceptibility for Media Effects Michael W. Gruszczynski, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Cortisol Response to Presidential Election Result News Erin Strauts, University of Connecticut Hart Blanton, University of Connecticut Complexity of Media, Complexity of Thought. Testing the Mediated Relation Between Media Complexity and Cognitive Complexity Shira Dvir-Gvirsman, Hebrew University Need for Cognition and Selective Exposure: A Test of Moderation of the Partisanship-Ideological News Consumption Relationship Natalie Jomini Stroud, University of Texas, Austin Kate M. Kenski, University of Arizona Douglas Oxley, Texas A&M University POLITICAL DONATIONS: WHO Sun 8:00 am GIVES A BUCK? No Room Assigned Adam Seth Levine, Vanderbilt University Who Gives? Where, When, How, and Why Television Advertising Stimulates Campaign Contributions Kevin Collins, Princeton University The Interactive Effects of Personality and Electoral Context on Political Donations Amanda Frost-Keller, University of Iowa Altruism and Political Preferences in the United States Martin Gilens, Princeton University Social Norms and the Conditional Impact of Threat Appeals on Actions for the Public Good Toby Bolsen, Georgia State University Andrew J.W. Civettini, Knox College WELFARE ATTITUDES: Fri 10:15 am CONTEXT AND CULTURE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-4 Hyeok Yong Kwon, Korea University Equity, Equality, or Need? A Multilevel Analysis of Preferences for Principles of Redistributive Justice in 25 European Welfare States Tim Reeskens, Tilburg University

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-11 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-9

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-12 Room: Chair: Papers:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

21

Disc: 5-13

Ideology All the Way Down? The Impact of the Great Recession on Individuals Welfare Policy Preferences Yotam M. Margalit, Columbia University Cultural Issue Salience and Redistribution Preferences: Experimental Evidence Jose Fernandez-Albertos, CSIC - Spanish National Research Council Genetic and Environmental Effects on Welfare Attitudes. An Experimental Study. Sara Binzer Hobolt, Oxford University Redistribution Preferences and Welfare State support: the Role of Dualism in the Labor Market Dulce Manzano, Juan March Institute Xiaobo Lu, Texas A&M University MOTIVATING PARTICIPATION: Sat 4:15 pm GUILT, HOPE, DISGUST, ANXIETY AND GREED No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-1 Anand E. Sokhey, University of Colorado, Boulder Reaping Dividends From a Personal Investment in Politics: The Link Between Campaign Activism, Election Outcomes, and Political Efficacy Timothy Vercellotti, Western New England College What about Hope? Examining Multiple Studies Employing Hope Scales to Explore Political Participation Andrew J.W. Civettini, Knox College Genes, Anxiety, and Turnout: A Field Experiment Chris T. Dawes, University of California, San Diego Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University Peter John Loewen, University of Toronto Disentangling Aversion: Experimentally Testing the Impact of Disgust and Anger on Political Participation L. Matthew Vandenbroek, University of Texas, Austin Patrick R. Miller, Duke University WHO PARTICIPATES? Fri 4:15 pm IDENTITY, OPPORTUNITY, DISPOSITION AND MOBILIZATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-2 Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern Denmark The Politics of Participation Carl Lucas Palmer, University of Notre Dame John D. Griffin, University of Notre Dame Explaining Political Attitudes and Behaviors: SES and/ or Genes Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern Denmark I Want It All and I Want It Now: Temporal Discounting and Political Participation Levente Littvay, Central European University A Call to Arms: How Fighting Words Mobilize Political Participation Nathan P. Kalmoe, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Jaime E. Settle, University of California, San Diego

5-15 Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-16

THE ORIGINS AND IMPORT Thu 10:15 am OF TRUST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 37-4 Sven Oskarsson, Uppsala University Migration Based Ethnic Diversity, Interethnic Tolerance and Generalized Trust: A Multilevel Analysis of 3000 Schools in 23 Countries Andrej Kokkonen, University of Gothenburg The Heritability of Political Trust in Dissimilar Democracies Peter Thisted Dinesen, University of Southern Denmark Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern Denmark Pete Hatemi, University of Sydney Asbjoern Sonne Noergaard, University of Southern Denmark Media, Economic Performance and Trust in Government: 1964-2010 Dmitriy V. Poznyak, University of Cincinnati Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati Trust, Sacrifice, and Public Support for Health Care Reform Thomas J. Rudolph, University of Illinois Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University Suzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State University HOW PEOPLE THINK AND Fri 4:15 pm DELIBERATE ABOUT POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 51-2 Christopher B. Mann, University of Miami Deliberation and Interruption: Further Results from the Deliberative Justice Project Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University Lee Shaker, Princeton University Attracting Authoritarians: Examining the Effect of Authoritarianism on Assessments of Beauty Beth Miller, University of Missouri, Kansas City Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University David A. M. Peterson, Iowa State University Candidate Repositioning: How Voters Respond when Incumbent Politicians Change Positions on Issues Robert Van Houweling, University of California, Berkeley Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University Coordination Incentives Can Explain Diverse and Simplistic Partisan Worldviews: An Experimental Test Brad LeVeck, University of California, San Diego Informational Inequality and Empowerment in Small Deliberative Groups: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment at the OBOE Townhalls Kevin M. Esterling, University of California, Riverside Archon Fung, Harvard University Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley Neil Malhotra, University of Pennsylvania

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-14

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

Disc:

22

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

5-17 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-18 Room: Chair: Papers:

POLARIZATION, TOLERANCE, Sun 8:00 am COMPROMISE AND CULTURE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 37-5 Christopher W. Larimer, University of Northern Iowa Public Support for Majority Rule versus Compromise Jennifer Wolak, University of Colorado Civility in a Partisan Era: Party Identification as Social Identity Patrick R. Miller, Duke University Pamela Johnston Conover, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Is There a Culture War? Heterogeneous Value Choices and American Public Opinion William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University The Fragmenting American Polity? The Dynamics of Opinion Polarization in Social Groups Christopher Muste, University of Montana Tolerance Matters: The Effects of Restricting Liberty and Protecting Rights on Political Attitudes and Behavior Steven E. Finkel, University of Pittsburgh Aaron J. Abbarno, University of Pittsburgh David Hill, Stetson University RACE, IMMIGRATION AND Sat 2:00 pm PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 37-6 Byron DAndra Orey, Jackson State University Political Tolerance: Disentangling Age, Period, Cohort Effects April K. Clark, Purdue University, Calumet A Tale of Two Cues: The Impact of Subliminal versus Implicit Appeals on Racialized Issue Opinions Carl Lucas Palmer, University of Notre Dame Rights for Whites?: Racial Resentment and Perceptions of Discrimination in Contemporary Britain Benjamin T. Bowyer, Santa Clara University Conditional Welcome: Citizenship, Race and Public Opinion on Immigration Natalie Masuoka, Tufts University Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California Richard M. Skinner THE ROOTS AND Fri 2:00 pm REPERCUSSIONS OF POLITICAL VIOLENCE No Room Assigned Allan C. Stam, University of Michigan Humanity during Wars, Genocide, and Other Political Upheavals Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine Support At Any Distance? Gauging the Role of Distance on Support for Building a Mosque Near Ground Zero Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts, Amherst When Is Terrorism Terrifying? Ted Brader, University of Michigan Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan

Disc: 5-20

Can Political Efficacy Protect Citizens Psychological Well-Being in Situations of Political Violence? Evidence from a Natural Experiment on War and Terrorism. Daphna Canetti, University of Haifa Doron Navot Iris Lavi, University of Haifa Dana Vashdi, University of Haifa Stevan Hobfoll, Rush University Medical Center Anthony C. Lopez, Brown University NEW FRONTIERS: Thu 2:00 pm NEUROPOLICY, CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT, EVOLUTION AND EMOTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 46-1 Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University How Will Neuroscience Affect the Law?: The Influence of Issue Framing on Support for Neurolaw and Neuropolicy Francis X. Shen, Vanderbilt University Law School How Emotional Reactions Alter Survey Responses Peter Foley, California Institute of Technology R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of Technology Ralph Adolphs, California Institute of Technology The Risk Contract of War: Offense and Defense in the Adapted Mind Anthony C. Lopez, Brown University Elizabeth Suhay, Lafayette College THE IMPACT OF GENDER ON THE SUPPORT FOR ELECTORAL CANDIDATES AND PUBLIC POLICIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-13 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: MAN IS BY NATURE A POLITICAL ANIMAL: EVOLUTION, BIOLOGY, AND POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 46-11 Fri 10:15 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 5-21

Room: 5-22

Thu 4:15 pm

Room:

Disc: 5-19

POLITICAL ECONOMY

Division Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University Chair: 6-1 Room: 6-2 Room: 6-3 Room: STRATEGIC COMMUNICATION AND LEADERSHIP No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 4-1 ELECTORAL COMPETITION AND VOTING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 4-2 ELECTORAL SYSTEMS AND COLLECTIVE CHOICE RULES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 4-9 Thu 8:00 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Fri 10:15 am

Sun 8:00 am

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

23

6-4 Room: 6-5

WELFARE ATTITUDES: CONTEXT AND CULTURE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-12

Fri 10:15 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 6-6 Room: Chair: Papers:

POLITICAL REGIMES AND Thu 10:15 am THEIR EFFECTS ON THE ECONOMY No Room Assigned David S. Brown, University of Colorado Navigating Minefields: Budgetary Implementation in Democracies and Autocracies Cristina Corduneanu-Huci, Duke University Taxing with Dictators and Democrats: Regime Effects on State Capacity in Argentinas Provinces Melissa Ziegler Rogers, University of California, San Diego Policy Volatility and Elite Choices over Political Regimes Michael Albertus, Stanford University The Politics of Infrastructure Investment in China and the U.S.: The Influence of Regime Type on Patterns of Development, 1960-2008 Meredith A. Levine, Yale University Yi Kang, Yale University David S. Brown, University of Colorado David S. Brown, University of Colorado THE POLITICS OF AID AND Thu 2:00 pm DISASTER ASSISTANCE No Room Assigned Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh An application of natural disasters data for a quasiexperiment to measure the political consequences of fiscal management. Adam Terrence Packer, Australian National University Playing with Dice: Political Economy of Natural Disasters in the United States, 1988-2008 Jaime Sainz, University of California-Santa Barbara Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa Barbara Does Aid Buy Votes? How Electoral Strategies Shape the Distribution of Foreign Aid Ryan Steele Jablonski, University of California, San Diego The Political Economy of Disaster Relief in Southeast Asia Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor James Atkinson, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Desha M. Girod, Georgetown University THE POLITICS OF Sat 4:15 pm EXPROPRIATION No Room Assigned Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San Diego A Model of the Political Economy of Expropriation Alejandro Quiroz-Flores, New York University

Disc:

Does Constitutional Entrenchment Lead to Credible Property Rights Reforms? James Douglas Melton, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies Svitlana Chernykh, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Expropriation and Institutional Constraints Under Autocracy Michael Albertus, Stanford University Victor Menaldo, University of Washington, Seattle Rule of Law as a Bottom-Up Process: Firms, Stakeholders, and Predators in Weak States Stanislav Markus, University of Chicago Firms, States, and the Politics of Compensation for Expropriation Noel Pereyra Johnston, Washington University in St. Louis Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San Diego Jonathan Hanson, Syracuse University EMPIRICAL APPROACHES TO Sat 10:15 am CORRUPTION No Room Assigned Jonathan Krieckhaus, University of Missouri, Columbia Wheres Waldo? Searching for the Hidden Variable of Corruption Jennifer Pan, Harvard University Chiara Superti, Harvard University Identifying the Impact of Aid Windfalls on Group Rent-Seeking Laura B. Paler, Columbia University Corruption Predictability in Authoritarian Regimes Eric C.C. Chang, Michigan State University The Resource Curse: Assessing the Role of State Ownership of Oil Industry on Political Corruption Amalia Mena-Mora, University of Houston Veronica Caro, University of Houston Political Corruption: A Model of Self-Reform and a Test Using 19th Century British Data Mircea Popa, Harvard University Victor Menaldo, University of Washington, Seattle Jonathan Krieckhaus, University of Missouri, Columbia INSTITUTIONAL Thu 4:15 pm DETERMINANTS OF REDISTRIBUTIONAL EXPENDITURES No Room Assigned Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh Strategic Partisanship and Left-Wing Policy Efficiency Timothy Hicks, Trinity College, Dublin Electoral Marginality, Party Cohesion, and Deficit Spending Kenneth Mori McElwain, University of Michigan Electoral Incentives and Economic Policy across Political Regimes Vincenzo Galasso, Universita Bocconi Salvatore Nunnari, California Institute of Technology

6-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

6-9

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 6-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

24

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 6-10

Comparative Democratic Budgeteering: An Empirical Model of Policymakers Context-Conditional Incentives and Capacities for Electoral and Partisan Policy-Manipulation Robert J. Franzese, Jr., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor A Model of the Form of Government, Economic Inequality and Redistributive Responsiveness Michael Becher, Princeton University Christian Breunig, University of Toronto Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh ELECTIONS AND THE Fri 8:00 am DISTRIBUTION OF GOODS IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD No Room Assigned Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University The Political Economy of Elections, Health Spending and Mortality in India Stephen August Meserve, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Urban Bias and Democracy: The Causal Effect of Elections on Rural Public Goods Provision Jan Henryk Pierskalla, Duke University Animating the Machine: What makes clientelism efficient? Edwin Camp, Yale University The Territoriality of Public Health Governance in Mexico Justin Levitt, University of Calfornia, San Diego Kristen Parks, University of Calfornia at San Diego Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University The Politics of Booms and Busts: Fiscal Policy over the Business Cycle in Developing Countries Martin Ardanaz, Columbia University Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University Jason P. Sorens, University at Buffalo, SUNY STRATEGIES OF THE STATE Fri 2:00 pm AND INTEREST GROUPS IN THE FACE OF REGULATION No Room Assigned Sarah Wilson Sokhey, University of Colorado, Boulder Regulatory Design After Privatization: Subnational Cases from Brazil Adam J. Cohon, University of California, Berkeley Interest Group Strategies in Bicameral Political Systems Sebastian Koehler, University of Mannheim A Political Theory of Regulatory Complexity Vikram Maheshri, University of California, Berkeley Exit, Voice and Loyalty in the Pension Fund Industry Andrew Kerner, University of Michigan Discipline and Punish: Bureaucratic Reform and Statebacked Organization of Business Masha Hedberg, Harvard University Sarah Wilson Sokhey, University of Colorado, Boulder Brian Kelleher Richter, University of Western Ontario

6-12

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 6-13 Room: Chair: Papers:

SOCIAL IDENTITY, Fri 4:15 pm PATRONAGE, AND REDISTRIBUTION No Room Assigned David A. Siegel, Florida State University Identity Politics, Redistribution and Democratic Stability Tolga Sinmazdemir, New York University Patronage Politics over Social Networks Neelanjan Sircar, Columbia University Identity and Incentives in Representation Dimitri Landa, New York University Dominik Duell, New York University Ethnic Monopsonies: Why Sunni Votes are Cheap in Lebanon but Dear in Yemen Daniel Corstange, University of Maryland, College Park A Formal Approach to Russian Regional Identity Steven Wilson, University of Wisconsin-Madison David A. Siegel, Florida State University Amy H. Liu, University of Colorado, Boulder CLIENTELISM AND CITIZEN Sat 2:00 pm ACCESS TO PUBLIC SERVICES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-1 Philip Keefer, The World Bank Local Governance Structures, Civic Engagement and the Distribution of Public Goods Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University Mass Media, Clientelism and Citizen Access to Malaria Nets Philip Keefer, The World Bank Stuti Khemani, The World Bank Estimating the Effects of Quotas Across India using Satellite Imagery Brian K. Min, University of Michigan Political Cash Transfers? Redistribution, Elections, and Bolsa Familia in Brazil Simeon C. Nichter, Stanford University Claudio Ferraz, PUC-Rio The Geography of Governance: Evidence from Satellites and Citizen Surveys Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University Michael D. Ward, Duke University David S. Brown, University of Colorado POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC Thu 2:00 pm EFFECTS OF DECENTRALIZATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 28-1 Craig Volden, University of Virginia Rethinking the Political Economy of Decentralization Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, Georgia State University Raul Ponce-Rodriguez, Autonomous University of Cuidad Juarez Eunice Heredia-Ortiz, DAI Fiscal Federal Institutions and Subnational Credit Markets Kyle Hanniman, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Disc: 6-11

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 6-14

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

25

Disc: 6-15

A Formal Model of Municipal Mergers in Japan: How Did the Fiscal Interventions by the Central Government Impact the Decisions of Municipalities? Kyohei Yamada, Yale University Kenta Niki, Waseda University The Political Economy of Mexicos Drug Violence: Theory and Evidence Stephen J. Weymouth, Georgetown University William Terry, University of California, San Diego On a Highway to Where? The Political Economy of the Distribution of Public Infrastructure in Developing Federal Democracies Lucas I. Gonzalez, University of Notre Dame Marcelo C. Leiras, Universidad de San Andres John Kincaid, Lafayette College Craig Volden, University of Virginia HISTORICAL AND Sun 10:15 am CONTEMPORARY DETERMINANTS OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Luz Marina Arias, Juan March Institute The Colonial Foundations of Contemporary Wealth Matthew D. Fails, Oakland University Jonathan Krieckhaus, University of Missouri, Columbia Institutional Access and Failure: Colonial Legal Systems and Persistent Institutional Inadequacy in Developing Countries Catherine S.M. Duggan, Harvard Business School Men Before Women and Boys Before Girls: An Institutional Analysis of Child Development in Rural Africa Kim Yi Dionne, Texas A&M University John Doces, Bucknell University Matthew Harber, Texas A&M University Saving Sudan Yet Starving Uganda: Foreign Aid, Agricultural Productivity, and Economic Growth John Doces, Bucknell University Diversity and Development: The Interaction of Political Institutions with Social Context Jonathan Hanson, Syracuse University Luz Marina Arias, Juan March Institute Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University DETERMINANTS OF Sat 8:00 am COLLECTIVE ACTION No Room Assigned Alexander Kuo, Juan March Institute Collective Action, Clientelism and Connectivity Mahvish Shami, University of Copenhagen A Theory of Leadership Selection in Small Groups With Evidence from Ugandan Farmer Organizations Guy Grossman, Columbia University William Walker Hanlon, Columbia University Imperfect Institutional Change: Peasant Disturbances Before and After Russias Emancipation Reform of 1861 Tricia Olsen, University of Wisconsin, Madison Scott Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin, Madison Evgeny Finkel, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Disc: 6-17 Room: Chair: Papers:

The Birth of Institutions - How Competitive Pressures Can Solve the Collective Action Problem Hans Christian Siller, Yale University Demand Driven State Building in Fragile States: Intercommunal Cooperation for the Provision of Public Goods in Rural Afghanistan Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili, University of Pittsburgh Alexander Kuo, Juan March Institute Jan Henryk Pierskalla, Duke University FIRMS IN COMPETITION AND Thu 4:15 pm CONFLICT No Room Assigned Brian Kelleher Richter, University of Western Ontario The Politics of Conflict Resolution Choice Among Private Firms in China: An Analysis of Survey Data Yuen Yuen Ang, Columbia University Nan Jia, University of Southern California Firm Strategies and Employer Coordination: Theory and Historical Evidence from Industrial Conflict Alexander Kuo, Juan March Institute Firms in Competition and Conflict Brian Kelleher Richter, University of Western Ontario Do Workers Always Want Labor Protection?: The Effect of Social Security Financing Scheme on the Labor-Employer Relationship Sijeong Lim, University of Washington Andrew Kerner, University of Michigan ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF Sat 10:15 am ETHNICITY No Room Assigned Clark C. Gibson, University of California, San Diego Gender and Generosity: Problems in Islamic Integration into France Claire Leslie Adida, University of California, San Diego David D. Laitin, Stanford University Marie-Anne Valfort, University of Paris I Sorbonne Linguistic Standardization and Economic Growth Amy H. Liu, University of Colorado, Boulder Elise Pizzi, University of Colorado, Boluder Resources, Ethnicity, and Commitment: Central Government Policies Toward Mineral-Rich Ethnoregions Jason P. Sorens, University at Buffalo, SUNY Ethnicity and Fiscal Decentralization in Latin America Karleen Jones West, West Virginia University Clark C. Gibson, University of California, San Diego THE POLITICS OF TAX REGIME CHANGE: EASTERN EUROPE AND LATIN AMERICA IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-1 Gerald M. Easter, Boston College Sun 8:00 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 6-18 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 6-16 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 6-19

Room: Chair:

26

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Papers:

Disc: 6-20

Policy Diffusion Pathways: Explaining the Spread of the Flat Tax and Pension Privatization Hilary Appel, Claremont McKenna College Mitchell A. Orenstein, Johns Hopkins University State-building in an Age of Crisis: Tax Regimes and Emerging Elites in Central America Aaron Schneider, Tulane University The Resource Curse and Taxation in Latin America: A Paradox of Plenty or a Contingent Blessing? Matthew A. Johnson, University of Texas, Austin Kevin Morrison, Cornell University Gustavo A. Flores-Macias, Cornell University HISTORICAL APPROACHES TO THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE STATE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-9 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF OIL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-58 CLIENTELISM AND VOTE BUYING IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-16 OIL, RESOURCE CURSE, RENTS AND DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-24 THE POLITICS OF FDI AND MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-4 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF FINANCIAL CRISES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-6 THEME PANEL: JUST SUPPLY CHAINS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-8 SCOPE AND HETEROGENEITY IN LOCAL AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE. REVISITING KEOHANE AND OSTROM, LOCAL COMMONS AND GLOBAL INTERDEPENDENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-28 Fri 8:00 am

POLITICS AND HISTORY

Division Richard M. Valelly, Swarthmore College Chair: Vesla Mae Weaver, University of Virginia 7-1 REMEMBERING RACIAL VIOLENCE, RECOVERING DEMOCRATIC POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-12 Sat 10:15 am

Room: 7-2

Room: Chair: Part:

Room: 6-21 Room: 6-22

Thu 8:00 am

POLITICAL BEHAVIOR AND Sat 2:00 pm HISTORICAL INSTITUTIONALISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-3 Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University John H. Aldrich, Duke University Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley Theda Skocpol, Harvard University Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS IN Thu 8:00 am EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY LAW AND POLITICAL SCIENCE: DAVID RABBANS LAWS HISTORY: AMERICAN LEGAL THOUGHT AND THE TRANSATLANTIC TURN TO HISTORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-1 Ken I. Kersch, Boston College Keith E. Whittington, Princeton University Carol Nackenoff, Swarthmore College Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland David Rabban, University of Texas, Austin PUBLIC POLICY AND THE Fri 2:00 pm CONTOURS OF AMERICAN POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-1 Ann-Marie E. Szymanski, University of Oklahoma Developing Policy Effects: Health Care Reform and Changing American Politics Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University The Policy State Karen Orren, University of California, Los Angeles Stephen Skowronek, Yale University Rights v. Analysis: Framing Policy Discourse Richard A. Harris, Rutgers University, Camden Infrastructure Projects and State Building: Patterns of Development in the U.S., 1840-Present Meredith A. Levine, Yale University Ann-Marie E. Szymanski, University of Oklahoma LAW AND THE RIGHTS Thu 10:15 am REVOLUTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-1 Stephen G. Bragaw, Sweet Briar College

Thu 8:00 am

7-3

Room: 6-23 Room: 6-24

Fri 2:00 pm

Room: Thu 10:15 am Chair: Part:

Room: 6-25 Room: 6-26 Room: 6-27

Thu 2:00 pm

7-4

Room: Sat 2:00 pm Chair: Papers: Fri 2:00 pm

Room:

Disc: 7-5 Room: Chair:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

27

Papers:

Disc: 7-6

Enforcing Rights Protections: The Regulatory Power of Private Litigation and the American Bureaucracy Quinn W. Mulroy, Columbia University The Role of the American Bar Association in the Rights Revolution Marko Radenovic, Princeton University The Rule of Law, the Interstate Commerce Commission, and the Genesis of a Judicialized Administrative State Hiroshi Okayama, Keio University Defunding the Left: Constraining Legal Aid in the U.S. Sarah Staszak, The City College of New York Interpreting Civil Rights: Early Racial Discrimination Claims Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 Jennifer Woodward, SUNY, University at Albany Stephen G. Bragaw, Sweet Briar College BRINGING TRANSITIONAL Thu 2:00 pm JUSTICE IN: THE U.S. AND TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE MODELS No Room Assigned Robert Mickey, University of Michigan Transitional Justice in the Aftermath of the Democratization of Authoritarian Enclaves in the U.S. South Robert Mickey, University of Michigan Richard M. Valelly, Swarthmore College Transitional Justice in the U.S. South in Comparative Perspective Melissa Nobles, Massachusetts Institute of Technology The Failure of Reconstruction and Its Consequences for Transitional Justice After the Civil War Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin The Police and American Political Development Daniel Kryder, Brandeis University Public Support for State-Sponsored Apologies and Reparations James M. Glaser, Tufts University Timothy J. Ryan, University of Michigan Onur Bakiner, Yale University THE POLITICS OF THE TEA Sat 4:15 pm PARTY MOVEMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 37-7 Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon Racial Libertarians: The Antistatist Politics of the Tea Party Movement Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon The Hypocrisy of the Tea Party: Big Government for Us, Small Government for Them Christopher S. Parker, University of Washington Bitter Tea: Partisanship, Ideology, and Racial Resentment in the Tea Party Movement Alan I. Abramowitz, Emory University The Tea Parties Now Rick Perlstein, The Village Voice Mark Q. Sawyer, University of California, Los Angeles

7-8

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 7-9

COLONIAL LEGACIES IN Thu 4:15 pm SOUTH ASIA: GOVERNANCE, DEMOCRACY, AND DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-2 Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University Stuck with Reservations: The Path Dependent History of Political Quotas in India Francesca R. Jensenius, University of California, Berkeley The Institutional Origins of Patronage and Corruption in Modern India Paul D. Kenny, Yale University The Historical Inheritance of Democracy in India Maya Jessica Tudor, University of Oxford Breaking Good: Lessons on Overcoming Colonial Legacies of Underdevelopment through a Comparative Historical Analysis of Two Indian States Prerna Singh, Harvard University Paul R. Brass, University of Washington, Seattle AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: Fri 10:15 am DESMOND KING AND ROGERS SMITHS STILL A HOUSE DIVIDED: RACE AND POLITICS IN OBAMAS AMERICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 32-1 Kimberley S. Johnson, Barnard College-Columbia University Nolan McCarty, Princeton University Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, University at Albany Vanessa Tyson, Dickinson College Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania Robert C. Lieberman, Columbia University URBAN POLITICS & Fri 4:15 pm POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 30-1 Progressive Era Reform, the Great Depression, and the Postwar Divergence in American and Canadian Metropolitan Political Development Zack Taylor, University of Toronto The Cities on the Hill: Urban Politics in National Institutions Thomas K. Ogorzalek, Columbia University Ideas, Coalition Building, and Political Development in the City: Urban policy and politics in the U.S. and the UK, 1976-2000 Timothy Weaver, University of Pennsylvania The New Rarefaction of Power: Politics in the Changing American City Robert K. Whelan, University of Texas, Dallas Clarence N. Stone, George Washington University McGee W. Young, Marquette University

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Part:

7-10 Room: Papers:

Disc: 7-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

Disc:

28

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

7-11 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

THE CIVIL RIGHTS STATE Sun 8:00 am No Room Assigned Kimberley S. Johnson, Barnard College-Columbia University The Civil Rights State: How the American State Develops Itself Desmond King, Oxford University Robert C. Lieberman, Columbia University Education and the Civil Rights State R. Shep Melnick, Boston College Is the Tea Party Wrong About Rights? Christopher S. Parker, University of Washington Civil Rights, the State, and Black Mass Incarceration Amy E. Lerman, Princeton University Kimberley S. Johnson, Barnard College-Columbia University Sidney M. Milkis, University of Virginia LAW AND LAWLESSNESS: THE Fri 8:00 am PRODUCTION OF STATE POWER IN COLONIAL AND EARLY REPUBLICAN AMERICA No Room Assigned Craig Bryan Yirush, UCLA Law at the Periphery: American Settler Expansion and the Confrontation with Indigenous and European Populations Paul Frymer, Princeton University Law and Disorder in Proprietary South Carolina Daragh J. Grant, University of Chicago The Origins of the Tutelary Empire: The British Colonial System and the Formation of American Imperial Structures and Policies, 1763-1789 Stefan Heumann, University of Northern Colorado Settlers and Immigrants in the Formation of American Law Aziz F. Rana, Cornell University Lines in the Sand: The Politics of Territorial Division in the American West, 1789-1912 Matthew Glassman, Congressional Research Service Christopher Lawrence Tomlins, University of California, Irvine AMERICAN POLITICS IN Sun 10:15 am COMPARATIVE-HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Matthew Holden, Jr., University of Illinois at Springfield On the Emergence of Financial Systems: Evidence from the United States and India Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Virginia The Not-So-Strange Careers of Jim Crow and Apartheid: Partisan Regimes, Social Movement Coalitions, and Racial Democratization in the United States and South Africa Shamira M. Gelbman, Illinois State University What Race Explains and What It Doesnt: The American Carceral State in Comparative Perspective Willie Gin, University of Pennsylvania

Disc: 7-14

Unifying Institutional Origins and Change: A Potential Approach to Comparative Analysis in the United States and Brazil Eduardo J. Gomez, Rutgers University, Camden National ID Cards as Governmental Responses to Crises in the United Kingdom and the United States Magdalena Krajewska, Brandeis University Alvin B. Tillery, Jr., Rutgers University Aristide R. Zolberg, New School University RACE, GENDER, AND Sat 8:00 am SEXUALITY IN INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Institute for Constitutional Studies, Panel 1 Kathleen S. Sullivan, Ohio University Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, University at Albany Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University Carol Nackenoff, Swarthmore College Marek D. Steedman, University of Southern Mississippi Priscilla Yamin, University of Oregon RACE RELATIONS AND THE Sat 10:15 am US PRESIDENCY: HISTORICAL AND CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES No Room Assigned Hanes Walton, Jr., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Paul Frymer, Princeton University Presidential Leadership in the African-American Mind: How the Black Media Rate US Presidents, 1916 to 2010 Alvin B. Tillery, Jr., Rutgers University Hanes Walton, Jr., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Symbolic Candidacies and the Significance of Alternative Parties: A Historic Analysis of African Americans Seeking Executive Office, 1872-2008 Christina M. Greer, Fordham University The Time of the Black Elephant Has Come: Black Republicans and Presidential Politics, 1976 1981 Leah M. Wright, Wesleyan University Woodrow Wilsons Civil Rights Megan Ming Francis, Indiana University Niambi M. Carter, Purdue University Paul Frymer, Princeton University IMMIGRANTS & RIGHTS Thu 8:00 am No Room Assigned The Right to Not Have Rights, The Production of Legal Violence Against Migrants in the United States Albert Ponce, UCLA A New Deal for the Alien: The Inclusion of NonCitizens in the Early American Welfare State Cybelle Fox, University of California, Berkeley Ethnic Minority and Immigrant Organizations, Trade Unions, and Political Advocacy for Undocumented Immigrants in the United Kingdom, 1970s-Present Jennifer F. Lieb, College of the Holy Cross

Room:

Chair: Part:

7-12

Room: Chair: Papers:

7-15

Room: Chair:

Papers:

Disc: 7-13

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 7-16 Room: Papers:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

29

Degrees of Opportunity: The Politics of Undocumented Immigrants and In-State Tuition at State Universities Matthew Gritter, Oberlin College 7-17 Room: Chair: Papers: INSTITUTIONALIZING RIGHTS Fri 2:00 pm No Room Assigned Michael J. Faber, Duke University Are Constitutional Rights Inherently Conservative?: Expanding Our Theories Of Rights Emergence Through The Study Of Nineteenth-Century, StateLevel Reform Movements Emily Zackin, CUNY-Hunter College Local Organizing and National Advocacy Catherine Paden, Simmons College Trajectories of Democratic Exclusion and Inclusion in the United States: Coalitional Politics, Suffrage, and Institutional Orderings of Citizenship David Alexander Bateman, University of Pennsylvania The Politics of Legitimacy: Child Labor Law During the British Industrial Revolution Emily R. Clough, Harvard University Catherine Paden, Simmons College PRESIDENCY, POLITICAL Fri 4:15 pm DEVELOPMENT, AND RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 23-1 Melvin C. Laracey, University of Texas, San Antonio President, Congress, and Reform Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University The Rise (and Fall?) of Rights Themes in Presidential Rhetoric Jesse H. Rhodes, University of Massachusetts, Amherst The Nixon Administration and the Origins of the Modern Presidency Scott Spitzer, California State University, Fullerton Executive Power and the Development of the American State Elvin T. Lim, Wesleyan University Understanding Executive Power: FDR, Executive Authority, and the Development of the American State Mary E. Stuckey, Georgia State University Bruce Miroff, SUNY, Albany Kevin J. McMahon, Trinity College PARTIES AND POLITICAL Sat 2:00 pm DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester Party Legacies and Adaptive Capacities: Democrats in the Rust Belt Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University Matthew Glassman, Congressional Research Service Public Opinion, Ideology, and Representation in the U.S. South, 1930s-1950s Devin Michael Caughey, University of California, Berkeley Shadow Parties and the Pursuit of Rights Emily Jane Charnock, University of Virginia

Flash Grassroots Movements of the American Right: The Tea Party and its Antecedents Nicol C. Rae, Florida International University Making Parties Safe for Democracy: State Capacity and the Rise of Legitimate Party Opposition, 17931828 Jeffrey S Selinger, Bowdoin College 7-20 THEME PANEL: THEORY AND Fri 10:15 am RESEARCH IN THE POLITICS OF CIVIL RIGHTS No Room Assigned Richard M. Valelly, Swarthmore College By Accommodation or Capitulation: Alternative Models for How Labor Movements Gained Their Rights Gary Mucciaroni, Temple University The Politics of Rights: Civil Rights, Feminist, and Gay Rights Outcomes in Comparative Perspective Joseph E. Luders, Yeshiva University The Interactive Effects of Rights-claims: Sexuality Politics from a Developmental Perspective Stephen M. Engel, Marquette University Negro Morale, the Japanese-American Internment, and U.S. Government Opinion Studies during World War II Amy Fried, University of Maine Richard M. Valelly, Swarthmore College THEME PANEL: LABOR Thu 10:15 am RIGHTS AND LABOR HISTORY IN SEATTLE AND THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 42-3 David J. Olson, University of Washington Jobs and Work in Turbulent Times: Reflections on the Boeing Experience Edward S. Greenberg, University of ColoradoBoulder The Lenin Problem: Leadership, Organizational Cultures, and Beliefs John Stephen Ahlquist, Florida State University Margaret Levi, University of Washington, Seattle Union Residence Patterns and Preference Diffusion Amanda Clayton, University of Washington, Seattle Ebb and Flow: The Rank and File Movement in The Alaska Cannery Workers Union, International Longshore Warehouse Union (ILWU), Local 37 Ligaya Domingo, University of Washington Worker Struggles and the Intergenerational Construction of Rights Claims: Filipino Labor Activism in Two Eras George I. Lovell, University of Washington Michael W. McCann, University of Washington CHANGE AND BACKLASH: ASSESSING OBAMAS PRESIDENCY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-14 Thu 10:15 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 7-18 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 7-21

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 7-19 Room: Chair: Papers:

7-22

Room:

30

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

7-23

Room: 7-24 Room:

RACE AND GENDER IN 19TH (AND EARLY 20TH) CENTURY CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-4 PARTY CHANGE ON RIGHTS ISSUES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-7

Sun 10:15 am

Papers:

Thu 10:15 am

POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Disc:

Division Christopher Zorn, Pennsylvania State University Chair: 8-1 Room: Chair: Papers: WORDS, WORDS, WORDS Thu 8:00 am No Room Assigned Kenneth R. Benoit, London School of Economics and Political Science Estimating Policy Liberalism Jennifer Sykes, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Persuading Voters With Lots of Words: Predicting the Effects of TV Ads Using One-at-a-time Regression and Automated Text Analysis Nicholas Beauchamp, New York University Measuring the Extent to which Lawmakers Go Public with their Voting Record: An Application of Labeled Latent Dirichlet Allocation Alex Acs, Princeton University Whats in a Name? Using Text to Estimate Ethnic Composition Jonathan Andrew Harris, Harvard University Quantifying Constitutional Moments: An Empirical Evaluation of Ackermans Theory of Constitutional Change Brandon Michael Stewart, Harvard University Daniel Taylor Young, Yale University Kenneth R. Benoit, London School of Economics and Political Science BAYESIAN APPROACHES: Thu 10:15 am ADVANCES No Room Assigned Not in Rivers but in Drops - Approximate Bayesian Computation with Simultaneous Selection of Sufficient Statistics Iliya Atanasov, Rice University Incentive-Based Elicitation of Bayesian Priors from Experts Stephen R. Haptonstahl, University of California, Davis Simulating Quantities of Interest for Small Data Samples: Which Method Provides Best Results Kirill Kalinin, University of Michigan A Bayesian Dynamic Factor-Residual Model for Spatial Dependence in Longitudinal Data Xun Pang, Princeton University BAYESIAN APPROACHES: APPLICATIONS No Room Assigned Justin E. Esarey, Emory University Thu 2:00 pm Disc: 8-4 Room: Chair: Papers:

A Bayesian View of Party Systems Kentaro Fukumoto, Gakushuin University Estimating Policy Positions from the Survey of Politicians: A Case Study of Japan Kosuke Imai, Princeton University Shigeo Hirano, Columbia University Masaki Taniguchi, University of Tokyo Democracy, Partisanship, and Social Spending in Latin America: A Bayesian Hierarchical Analysis Tsung-han Tsai, Washington University in St. Louis Disentangling Contextual and Individual Change Using Bayesian Cross-classified Hierarchical Generalized Additive Models: Religious Voting in the United States, 1972-2008. Daniel Stegmueller, University of Mannheim Justin E. Esarey, Emory University SKEPTICISM Thu 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Burt L. Monroe, Pennsylvania State University Truth is in the Limit, Sometimes: Matching , Regression, and Causality Vera Eva Troeger, University of Essex Thomas Pluemper, University of Essex What to Do and Not to Do with Anchoring Vignettes in Cross-Cultural Data Analysis Yu-Sung Su, Tsinghua University Jie Lu, American University Tianjian Shi, Duke University The Misuse of Cronbachs Alpha in Political Science Christopher D. DeSante, Duke University Misspecification and the Propensity Score: When to Leave Out Relevant Pre-Treatment Variables Kevin A. Clarke, University of Rochester Brenton Kenkel, University of Rochester Miguel R. Rueda, University of Rochester Burt L. Monroe, Pennsylvania State University TSCS DATA AND DYNAMICS Fri 8:00 am No Room Assigned David Darmofal, University of South Carolina Drawing Accurate Inferences About the Differences Between Cases in Time-Series Cross-Section Data Jonathan Kropko, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Causal Inference in Time-Series Cross-Sectional Data Matthew Blackwell, Harvard University Capturing Campaign Effects with hetdyn: A Tool for Estimating Models of Heterogeneous Dynamics Bryce Corrigan, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor How Can We Model the Dynamic Process within Potential Outcomes Framework?: Modeling Dynamic Processes with Dynamic Treatment Regime Byung-Jae Lee, University of Texas, Austin Public Opinion and Policy Change: A Multilevel Interactive Relationship Michael Malecki, Columbia University Justin Phillips, Columbia University Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University David Darmofal, University of South Carolina

Disc: 8-5 Room: Chair: Papers:

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8-3 Room: Chair:

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31

8-6 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 8-7 Room: Papers:

JUDICIAL POLITICS Fri 2:00 pm No Room Assigned Christopher Zorn, Pennsylvania State University Policy, Precedent and Preferences Ian Sulam, University of Rochester Do Campaign Contributions Reduce the Quality of Elected Justices? Matias Iaryczower, California Institute of Technology Matthew Shum, California Institute of Technology Garrett Darl Lewis, California Institute of Technology Using Random Assignment to Estimate Judicial Bias Daniel Christopher Mattingly, University of California, Berkeley Laurel Eckhouse, University of California, Berkeley Estimating and Comparing the Ideal Points of Departing Justices and Their Successors Jonghoon Eun, University of Texas, Austin Christopher Zorn, Pennsylvania State University Andrew D. Martin, Washington University MEASUREMENT Sat 10:15 am No Room Assigned Party System Compactness: Measurement Strategies and Performance Jay K. Dow, University of Missouri Robin E. Best, University of Missouri, Columbia Nonparametric Identification of the Item Response Model Michael Peress, University of Rochester Political Ideology in the Electorate Over Time Shawn Treier, University of Minnesota Sunshine Hillygus, Duke University The Policy Legacy of the 111th Congress Jesse T. Richman, Old Dominion University Michael Peress, University of Rochester SURVEY RESEARCH Fri 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Let Them Guess: The Sensitivity of Political Information Effects to Variations of Question Format Paul Thomas Weith, Central European University Estimation of Bias Due to Poststratification Weight in the ANES Samples by Using the Number of Required Calls to Complete the Survey Michio Umeda, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Michael Malecki, Columbia University EXPERIMENTS, QUASI- AND Sat 8:00 am OTHERWISE No Room Assigned Responsibility Attribution Experiments: Insights for the Study of Vote Choice Raymond M. Duch, University of Oxford Extending Regression Discontinuity Designs to Larger Populations of Interest Erin Hartman, University of California, Berkeley Political Boundaries as Regression Discontinuities Luke Keele, Ohio State University Rocio Titiunik, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Measuring Compliance with Experimental Treatments: Understanding and Ability Brigitte Zimmerman, University of California, San Diego Daniel Enemark, University of Calfornia, San Diego 8-10 Room: Chair: Papers: INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Sun 8:00 am No Room Assigned Philip A. Schrodt, Pennsylvania State University An Analysis of Tail-Dependence Between War Duration and Leader Tenure Alejandro Quiroz-Flores, New York University One Step at a Time: Does Gradualism Build Coordination? Maoliang Ye, Harvard University A Solution to the Selection Problem in Models of Government Survival Daina Chiba, Rice University Lanny W. Martin, Rice University Randolph T. Stevenson, Rice University Computing the Distance between Nations with Positional Similarity Peter M. Li Philip A. Schrodt, Pennsylvania State University POLITICAL BEHAVIOR Fri 10:15 am No Room Assigned Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University The Intersection of Genetic and Contextual Determinants of Political Behavior Christopher R. Weber, Louisiana State University Erin Cassese, West Virginia University Martin Johnson, University of California, Riverside Ashley E. Kirzinger, Louisiana State University Americans Willingness to Pay for Climate Policy Bo MacInnis, Stanford University Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University The Effect of Beliefs on Human Behavior: Strategies for Nonparametric Identification Malte Lierl, Yale University Measuring Changes in Voter Turnout and Mobilization Patterns: The 2004 and 2008 U.S. Presidential Elections Morgan Llewellyn, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies Lucca Suzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State University FOUR INTERESTING PAPERS Sun 10:15 am No Room Assigned Jeff Gill, Washington University Political Participation is More than Just Resources: A New Approach to the Study of Civic Engagement Ines Levin, California Institute of Technology Mixed-Membership Models as an Alternative to Fuzzy-Set QCA Justin H. Gross, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Testing Theories of Shapes in Multiple Dimensions Jonathan Wand, Stanford University Population, Norms and Hierarchy: A Social Network Analysis of Institutional Development Christopher Paik, Princeton University Jeff Gill, Washington University

Disc: 8-11 Room: Chair: Papers:

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8-13

Room: 8-14 Room: 8-15

QUANTITATIVE METHODS AND THE STUDY OF CONFLICT PROCESSES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-29 MULTIMETHOD RESEARCH: FROM SLOGAN TO TOOLKIT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 46-14 METHODOLOGICAL INNOVATIONS IN THE STUDY OF NETWORKS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 50-9 METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN RANDOMIZED EXPERIMENTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 51-6

Sat 10:15 am

Fri 10:15 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Room: 8-16 Room:

Disc: Sat 4:15 pm 9-3

Engaging Students in the Classroom: How Can I Know What I Think Until I See What I Draw? John W. Hogan, Dublin Institute of Technology Paul F. Donnelly, Dublin Institute of Technology Engaging Students Creativity on Exams: Writing Political Science Poetry Natalie M. Jackson-Biffle, University of Oklahoma Elizabeth Erin Wheat, Western Michigan University A Different Path: Teaching in a Hybrid Doctoral Program. Joseph J. St. Marie, University of Southern Mississippi Quantum Civics: Politics for Everyone Miles Townes, George Washington University Sherri L. Wallace, University of Louisville Jeffrey F. Kraus, Wagner College ALTERNATIVE PEDAGOGICAL Fri 8:00 am APPROACHES TO TEACHING IN AND OUT OF THE CLASSROOM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 10-3 Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M UniversityCorpus Christi Engaging in Contemporary American Political Debates through Contemporary American Music Heather L. Hawn, University of South Carolina Lets Watch a Movie!: Using Film and Film Theory to teach Theories of International Politics from a Critical Perspective Lucrecia Garcia Iommi, University of Notre Dame Why Area Studies are So Last CenturyAnd Yet the Way Forward: Lessons from the Psat and Some Proposals for Their Future Development Nicolas Guilhot, CNRS Will J. Miller, Southeast Missouri State University ASSESSING EFFECTIVE TEACHING AND LEARNING STRATEGIES THROUGH EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 10-4 POLITICAL SCIENTISTS ROLE IN CIVIC EDUCATION: RESEARCHER, TEACHER, OR ADVOCATE? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 10-5 WHAT SHOULD THEY KNOW? PREPARING STUDENTS, FROM FRESHMAN YEAR THROUGH GRADUATE SCHOOL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 10-6 Sat 10:15 am

TEACHING AND LEARNING

Room: Chair: Papers:

Division Alice M. Jackson, Morgan State University Chair: 9-1 CIVIC EDUCATION: Thu 10:15 am ENGAGING STUDENTS, FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATORS IN CIVIC EDUCATION AND PARTICIPATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 10-1 Alice M. Jackson, Morgan State University Civic Education and Knowledge of Government and Politics Diana M. Owen, Georgetown University Suzanne Soule, Center for Civic Education Designing an Intellectually Challenging Political Science Internship Program Janet L. Donavan, University of Colorado, Boulder Assessing the Needs of Local-Governments in University-Community Partnerships Liliokanaio Peaslee, James Madison University Civic Engagement and International Relations Pedagogy: An Effective Combination? Alison Rios Millett McCartney, Towson University Mary A. McHugh, Merrimack College Mary A. McHugh, Merrimack College UNIQUE APPROACHES TO Thu 4:15 pm TEACHING POLITICAL SCIENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 10-2 Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M UniversityCorpus Christi Teaching Res Publica and Individual Rights in the First-Year Political Science Course Laurie Ann Buonanno, Buffalo State College Patrick McGovern

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 9-4

Room: 9-5

Sat 2:00 pm

Disc: 9-2

Room: 9-6

Sun 8:00 am

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10

POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION

Division J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University Chair: 10-1 CIVIC EDUCATION: ENGAGING STUDENTS, FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATORS IN CIVIC EDUCATION AND PARTICIPATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 9-1 UNIQUE APPROACHES TO TEACHING POLITICAL SCIENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 9-2 ALTERNATIVE PEDAGOGICAL APPROACHES TO TEACHING IN AND OUT OF THE CLASSROOM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 9-3 Thu 10:15 am

Room: 10-2

Disc: Fri 4:15 pm 10-6

The Effectiveness of Civics Education: Is being a Good Teacher Actually Good for Students? Jason Gainous, University of Louisville Allison M. Martens, University of Louisville Learning to Act: The Effect of Civic Education on Political Participation Jennifer Bachner, Harvard University A Pedagogy of Engagement: Political Science, Political Learning and Political Participation James Sloam, University of London, Royal Holloway J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University WHAT SHOULD THEY KNOW? Sun 8:00 am PREPARING STUDENTS, FROM FRESHMAN YEAR THROUGH GRADUATE SCHOOL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 9-6 Teaching as Learning: The Transformational Effect of Teaching on Graduate Instructors John Ishiyama, University of North Texas Developing Departmental TA Training: Lessons for the Pedagogical Development of Graduate Students Joseph Lampert, Northwestern University So Many Freshmen!: The Challenges and Goals of Introductory American Government Courses Will J. Miller, Southeast Missouri State University Jill Dawson, Georgia State University Information Skills in Political Science: Initiation, Cultivation, and Contextualization Bruce Pencek, Virginia Tech Craig Leonard Brians, Virginia Tech Should We Teach about the New Political Science, Perestroika or Other Fundamental Debates in Gateway Political Science Coursesand If So What Would We Teach? Robert W. Smith, Clemson University Charles C. Turner, California State University, Chico Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M UniversityCorpus Christi

Room: 10-3

Room: Fri 8:00 am Papers:

Room: 10-4

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 10-5

ASSESSING EFFECTIVE Sat 10:15 am TEACHING AND LEARNING STRATEGIES THROUGH EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 9-4 John C. Berg, Suffolk University Simulations and Student Understanding of the Budget Process Michael K. Baranowski, Northern Kentucky University Enhancing the Quality of Discussions in Undergraduate Online Courses Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida Bruce M. Wilson, University of Central Florida Philip H. Pollock, III, University of Central Florida Using Satire to Stimulate Critical Thinking in the Political Science Classroom Rebecca Glazier, University of Arkansas Little Rock Affective Outcomes of Teaching Introductory American Politics in Comparative Perspective: A Multi-Method Analysis Shamira M. Gelbman, Illinois State University Fletcher McClellan, Elizabethtown College Michelle D. Deardorff, Jackson State University POLITICAL SCIENTISTS ROLE Sat 2:00 pm IN CIVIC EDUCATION: RESEARCHER, TEACHER, OR ADVOCATE? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 9-5 Mark Ferguson, Western Michigan University Does Civic Education Have an Effect ? A Comparative Study of Civic Education Effects in 38 Countries Marc Hooghe, Catholic University Leuven

Disc:

11

COMPARATIVE POLITICS

Division Pepper D. Culpepper, European University Institute Chair: Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San Diego 11-1 THE POLITICS OF TAX REGIME CHANGE: EASTERN EUROPE AND LATIN AMERICA IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-19 Sun 8:00 am

Room: 11-2 Room: Chair: Papers:

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25 YEARS AFTER Sat 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-1 David Collier, University of California, Berkeley Democratic Theory After Transitions From Authoritarian Rule Gerardo L. Munck, University of Southern California

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Disc: 11-3 Room: Chair: Papers:

Asymmetrical Constraints on Regime Types? A Comparative Study Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University Michael Aagaard Seeberg, Aarhus University Jrgen Mller, University of Aarhus International Determinants of Democratization Jan Teorell, Lund University Guillermo A. ODonnell, University of Notre Dame Philippe C. Schmitter, Stanford University GLOBAL DATASETS: NEW AND Fri 10:15 am FORTHCOMING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 46-2 Gerardo L. Munck, University of Southern California Charting the Past: A Global Historical Database John Gerring, Boston University James Mahoney, Northwestern University Natalie Lam, Boston University Lessons from the Decoding of National Constitutions: The Comparative Constitutions Project Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin Tom Ginsburg, University of Chicago James Douglas Melton, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies National Elections Across Democracy and Autocracy: Which Elections Can be Lost? Susan Dayton Hyde, Yale University Nikolay V. Marinov, Yale University Measuring Cross-national Differences in Law-based Orders Peter F. Nardulli, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University PUBLIC OPINION IN A Thu 8:00 am DEVELOPING DEMOCRACY: EXPLORING THE FIRST-EVER ELECTORAL PANEL STUDY IN BRAZIL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-3 Cesar Zucco, Jr., Insituto Universitario de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro Scandals, Evangelicals and Vote Intentions: Volatility in the 2010 Brazilian Presidential Elections Lucio R. Renno, University of Brasilia Religion and the Vote in Brazils Presidential Election of 2010 Amy Erica Smith, University of Pittsburgh Inequality, Uncertainty and Redistribution Fabiana Machado, Inter-American Development Bank Political Engagement, Ideology and Partisanship: The Case of Brazils Workers Party David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota Cesar Zucco, Jr., Insituto Universitario de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder

11-5

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 11-6

A CLOSER LOOK AT Sat 2:00 pm COLONIALISM: THE LEGACIES OF DIFFERENT COLONIAL INSTITUTIONS IN AFRICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-4 Kimuli Kasara, Columbia University The Institutional Legacy of African Independence Movements Leonard Wantchekon, Princeton University Echoes of the 1947 Malagasy Uprising: The LongTerm Effects of Colonial Repression on Political Attitudes in Madagascar Omar Garcia Ponce, New York University Comparing British and French Colonial Legacies: A Discontinuity Analysis of Cameroon Alexander Lee, Stanford University Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford University Taxes, Institutions and Local Governance: Evidence from a Natural Experiment in Colonial Nigeria Daniel Berger, New York University NGOs, Development and Inequality: Historical Evidence from Christian Missions in Africa Katharine A. Baldwin, University of Florida Kimuli Kasara, Columbia University David Stasavage, New York University PREFERENCES FOR Thu 4:15 pm REDISTRIBUTION AND SOCIAL PROTECTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-1 Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University The Structure of Inequality and Demand for Redistribution Noam Lupu, Princeton University Jonas Pontusson, Princeton University Globalizations Broadening Bite: Economic Insecurity and Support for Government Interventions in Open Economies Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam Anne Wren, Trinity College Dublin Redistribution Preferences and Life-cycle Income Timo Idema, University of Oxford David Rueda, University of Oxford The Behavioral Foundations of Social Policy: An Experimental Approach Benjamin S. Barber, IV, Duke University Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University ELECTION FRAUD IN THE Fri 2:00 pm HISTORY OF ESTABLISHED DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Margaret Levi, University of Washington, Seattle The Extent of Fraud at Parliamentary Elections in 19th Century United Kingdom Christopher J Kam, University of British Columbia

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 11-4

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Disc: 11-7

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35

Disc: 11-8

The Causes of Election Fraud and the Voter Petitions: An Analysis of the United States from the Nineteenth to the Twentieth Centuries Joanna Didi Kuo, Harvard University Jan Teorell, Lund University Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University Varying the Un-Variable: Social Structure, Electoral Formulae, and Ballot-Rigging Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Kiril Kolev, Duke University What Killed Clientelism in the Advanced Demcracies? Susan C. Stokes, Yale University Nahomi Ichino, Harvard University REGIMES, PROTESTERS, AND Thu 2:00 pm INSURGENTS: NEW PERSPECTIVES No Room Assigned Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina, Greensboro The Political Gap Revisited Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San Diego Insurgencies in Hybrid Regimes: Regime Reversal Threats and the Escalation of Protest into Rebellion in Latin America Guillermo Trejo, Duke University Why is Overthrowing Governments So Hard? Central America in Comparative Perspective Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Mona M. Lyne, University of Missouri, Kansas City Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh HISTORICAL APPROACHES TO Fri 8:00 am THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE STATE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-20 Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick The Expropriating State in Historical Perspective: Regressive Taxation under Autocracies and the Threat of the State Ben William Ansell, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota The Political Economy of War Finance David Stasavage, New York University Kenneth F. Scheve, Yale University Massimiliano G. Onorato, Yale University The Historical Foundations of State Building Trajectories: Politics, Property Relations, and the Social Question in the Making of Latin American States Marcus J. Kurtz, Ohio State University The Political and Economic Effects of Regionalism on State Building Trajectories Hillel David Soifer, Temple University Continuity Amidst Upheaval? The Long Run Effects of Economic Inequality on Democracy and StateBuilding Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University Konstantin Daniel Kashin, Harvard University

Disc:

Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University COMPARING LEFTIST Sun 10:15 am INSURGENCIES IN LATIN AMERICA: IDEOLOGY, WARFARE, AND VIOLENCE AGAINST CIVILIANS No Room Assigned Meghan Foster Lynch, Yale University Ideological Differences and Organizational Dynamics in the Frente Farabundo Marti para la Liberacion Nacional (FMLN) of El Salvador Amelia Hoover Green, Yale University Insurgent Warfare and the Regulation of Lives: Shining Path of Peru (1980 - 1992) Felix Reategui, Pontificia Universidad Catlica del Per What Makes a Good Guerrilla? Francisco Aurelio Eduardo Gutierrez, Universidad Nacional, Bogota Explaining Variation in Leftist Insurgencies Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University Meghan Foster Lynch, Yale University BEYOND ETHNIC Fri 4:15 pm UNIDIMENSIONALITY: UNDERSTANDING THE INTERACTION OF MULTIPLE CLEAVAGES No Room Assigned Thad Dunning, Yale University Cross-cutting Cleavages and Public Goods: A Field Experiment in Chennai, India Thomas Bossuroy, University of Cape Town The Perils of the Periphery: Explaining African Ethnic Group Rebellion, 1980-2006 Luke N. Condra, University of California, San Diego The Effects of Ethnic Quotas in Multi-Dimensional Cleavage Space Thad Dunning, Yale University When are Ethnic and Economic Cleavages Reinforcing? John D. Huber, Columbia University Cross-cutting Cleavages and Party Nationalization Joel Selway, Brigham Young University Perceptions of Identity and the Politicization of Identity Frances Stewart, University of Oxford Arnim Langer, University of Leuven Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University REVOLUTIONARY PROCESSES Thu 10:15 am No Room Assigned Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University Revolutions as Negative Coalitions: Why Orange Is Really Just Red and Yellow Mark Beissinger, Princeton University Making History but Not as They Please: The Dynamics of Political Action at the Revolutionary Moment Navid Hassanpour, Yale University

11-10

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 11-11

Disc: 11-9

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Disc: 11-12 Room: Chair: Papers:

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Disc: 11-13

Controlling the Masses Ruth Kricheli, Stanford University Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University Rebel Mobilization and Tactical Choice Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University DEMOCRATIC Sat 8:00 am ACCOUNTABILITY, CLIENTELISM, AND DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-5 Staffan I. Lindberg, Gothenburg University On the Interface between Democratic Institutions and Accountability Profiles Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University Daniel Max Kselman, Juan March Institute Building a Theory of Business and Politics in Developing Countries: Citizen-Politician Linkages in Kenyas Informal Business Sector Levy C. Odera, University of Florida On Monitoring, Sanctioning, and the Effectiveness of Clientelistic Accountability Arturas Rozenas, Duke University Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University Violating the Secret Ballot: Fraud in the 2008 Ghanaian Election Karen E. Ferree, University of California, San Diego James D. Long, University of California, San Diego Self-Enforcing Clientelism Chappell Lawson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Clientelism is Good!: When Pressures from Below Creates Public Goods Staffan I. Lindberg, Gothenburg University James W. McGuire, Wesleyan University Simeon C. Nichter, Stanford University DEMOCRATIC Fri 10:15 am CONSOLIDATION IN HARD TIMES: A VIEW FROM THE AMERICASBAROMETER 2010 No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-6 Elizabeth Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University The Individual and Institutional Determinants of Electoral Accountability in four Latin American Federal Regimes Francois Gelineau, Universite Laval Institutions, Accountability, and Conditional Economic Voting in Latin America: A Hierarchical Analysis Juan Carlos Rodriguez-Raga, Universidad de los Andes/University of Pittsburgh Miguel Garcia-Sanchez, Universidad de los Andes Exploring the Lingering Authoritarian Attitudes in Latin America: the Effects of the Economic Crisis Dinorah Azpuru, Wichita State University Conditional Cash Transfers, Hard Times, and Democracy Amy Erica Smith, University of Pittsburgh Matthew L. Layton, Vanderbilt University

Disc: 11-15 Room: Chair: Papers:

Economic Crises, Insecurity, and Support for Democracy in Latin America Jose Miguel Cruz, Florida International University Personality and Political Attitudes in Latin America: The Psychology of Perceptions in Times of Crisis Jeffery Mondak, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Mitchell A. Seligson, Vanderbilt University Damarys Canache, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University NEW APPROACHES IN Sat 4:15 pm COALITION RESEARCH No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-2 Alexander Herzog, New York University The Allocation of Government Ministries in Parliamentary Democracies Lanny W. Martin, Rice University How the Portfolio Allocation of Governments Affects Public Policy Outcomes Alexander Herzog, New York University Coalitions, Time Horizons, and Policy Choices Hanna Back, University of Mannheim Johannes Lindvall, Lund University How Coalition Politics Conditions Political Interest and Knowledge Randolph T. Stevenson, Rice University Who Gets What?: Cabinet Post Allocation in Parliamentary Democracies Yoshikuni Ono, University of Michigan Kenichi Ariga, Harvard University Michael J. Laver, New York University Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh ISLAMIC POLITICS Sat 2:00 pm No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-7 Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University The Feudal Revolution and Europes Rise: Institutional Divergence in the Muslim and Christian Worlds before 1500 CE Lisa A. Blaydes, Stanford University Eric Chaney, Harvard University Out of Africa: Electoral Failure and the Future of Political Islam in West Africa Jaimie Bleck, Cornell University David S. Patel, Cornell University Islam, Ethnicity, and Global Identity Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University Political Fatwas Richard Nielsen, Harvard University Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University PARTICIPATORY GOVERNANCE: RESHAPING DEMOCRACY, ECONOMIC SECURITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-2 Thu 2:00 pm

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 11-16 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 11-14

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Disc: 11-17

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37

Papers:

Disc: 11-18

Participatory Governance in India, South Africa, and Brazil: Explaining Differences in Outcomes Patrick Heller, Brown University Participatory Governance and Democratic Representation Enrique Peruzzotti, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella Participatory Governance: Expanding the Boundaries of Representative Democracy and Addressing Social Justice Concerns Brian Wampler, Boise State University Toward Continuous Innovation in Democratic Governance Archon Fung, Harvard University John S. Dryzek, Australian National University Deborah L. Norden, Whittier College THE IMPACT OF Sun 8:00 am TRANSPARENCY ON GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: COMPARATIVE EVIDENCE FROM FIELD EXPERIMENTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 51-3 Edmund J. Malesky, University of California, San Diego Transparency & Legislative Behavior John M. Carey, Dartmouth College The Effect of Transparency on Legislative Voting: Report on an Experiment in the European Parliament Simon Hix, London School of Economics Sara Hagemann, London School of Economics Getting the Public to Grasp the Purse Strings: An Experiment in Taxation and Transparency Laura B. Paler, Columbia University Information Dissemination and Local Governments Electoral Returns, Evidence from a Field Experiment in Mexico Ana Lorena De La O Torres, Yale University Leonard Wantchekon, Princeton University Dean Karlan, Yale University Alberto Chong, Inter-American Development Bank Edmund J. Malesky, University of California, San Diego VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM Fri 2:00 pm AND INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE[PAIN POSTINDUSTRIAL POLITICAL ECONOMIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-2 Martin Seeleib-Kaiser, University of Oxford Corporate Governance: Anchor of Different Capitalisms or Motor of Convergence? Pepper D. Culpepper, European University Institute Labour Market Change and Occupational Diversity in Germany Paul Marx, IZA Werner Eichhorst, IZA

Disc: 11-20

The Dual Transformation of Social Protection and Human Capital: Comparing Britain and Germany Timo Fleckenstein, LSE Adam M. Saunders, University of Oxford Martin Seeleib-Kaiser, University of Oxford Varieties of Capitalism in Transition Kathleen Thelen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology David Rueda, University of Oxford HOW THE RULES OF THE Thu 8:00 am GAME SHAPE POLITICAL OUTCOMES No Room Assigned Margaret Emily Edwards, University of New Mexico Replacing and Amending Constitutions: The Logic of Constitutional Change in Latin America Gabriel L. Negretto, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas Are We All Playing the Same Game? The Economic Effects of Constitutions Depend on the Degree of Institutionalization Carlos Scartascini, Inter-American Development Bank Mariano Tommasi, Universidad de San Andrs Institutional Stickiness in Transitions to Democracy: The Government of India Act of 1935 and the Constitution of India Sunita A. Parikh, Washington University Alfred Darnell, Washington University Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University MANIPULATED ELECTIONS IN Sat 8:00 am AUTHORITARIAN AND HYBRID REGIMES No Room Assigned Kimmo Gronlund, Abo Akademi University Detecting Fraud in Mexican Local Elections Francisco Cantu, UCSD The Structural Determinants of Electoral Fraud in Semi-competitive Electoral Systems: Revisiting the Case of Imperial Germany Isabela Mares, Columbia University Boliang Zhu, Columbia University Elections as a Measure of Co-optation in Authoritarian Regimes Mona M. Lyne, University of Missouri, Kansas City The Mechanisms of Electoral Misconduct: The Long and Short-Term Effects of Tools of Manipulation Nasos Roussias, Juan March Institute Susan Dayton Hyde, Yale University Daniela Donno, University of Pittsburgh DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS Thu 4:15 pm AND SOCIAL WELFARE No Room Assigned William R. Keech, Duke University Making Democratic-Governance Work: The Consequences for Prosperity and Welfare Pippa Norris, Harvard University

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Disc: 11-21

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Disc: 11-19

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Disc: 11-22 Room: Chair: Papers:

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Disc: 11-23

What Democracy Does (and Doesnt) do for Basic Services: School Fees, School Quality, and African Elections David Stasavage, New York University Robin Harding, New York University Solving the Robin Hood Paradox: Inequality, the Median Voter, and Redistribution Jose Aleman, Fordham University Oscar Torres-Reyna, Princeton University Political Cycles and Social Spending: An Examination of Latin American Democracies, 1980-2008 Lorena G. Barberia, Fundao Getulio Vargas George F. Avelino William R. Keech, Duke University POLITICAL PARTICIPATION Thu 10:15 am AND POLICY OUTCOMES IN CONTEMPORARY BRAZIL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Brazilian Political Science Association, Panel 1 Olga Onuch, University of Oxford Incumbency Advantage in Brazilian Mayoral Elections Thomas Brambor, Stanford University Ricardo Ceneviva, Universidade de Sao Paulo Insecure Democracy: Risk, Vulnerability and Democratic Rights in Brazil Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University District Magnitude, Party System Instability, and Preelectoral Coalitions in Brazilian Municipalities Adam J. Cohon, University of California, Berkeley Capacity and Commitment: How Decentralization in Brazil Impacts Poverty and Inequality Sandra Chapman Osterkatz, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Mariela Szwarcberg, University of Chicago Barry Ames, University of Pittsburgh AUDITS AND GOVERNMENTAL Fri 2:00 pm ACCOUNTABILITY IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD No Room Assigned Alberto Simpser, University of Chicago Political and Institutional Checks on Corruption: Evidence from Latin American Audit Institutions Marcus Andre Melo, University of Pernambuco The Failure of Mexicos National Commission of Human Rights: Continued Impunity and the DeepRooted Unaccountability of the Mexican Senate Jodi S. Finkel, Loyola Marymount University Do Corruption and Government Performance Affect Tax Revenue? Evidence from Random Audits of Brazilian Municipalities Jeffrey F. Timmons, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico Francisco Garfias, ITAM Why do Authoritarian States Implement AntiCorruption Policies? James Richard Hollyer, New York University Leonard Wantchekon, Princeton University

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How Democracy and Inequality Affect Corruption: Evidence from a Cross-national and Comparative Historical Analysis of Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines Jong-sung You, University of California, San Diego Carlos Scartascini, Inter-American Development Bank Alberto Simpser, University of Chicago COMPARATIVE Fri 8:00 am PERSPECTIVES ON PORTFOLIO ALLOCATION AND COALITION GOVERNMENT No Room Assigned Kaare Strom, University of California, San Diego When and Why Ministers Matter? Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh Shane Thomas Killian, University of Pittsburgh Out of the Cabinet: What Drives Defections from the Government in Presidential Systems? Cecilia Martinez-Gallardo, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Pre-election Coalitions and Party System Development: Central European Variations G. Bingham Powell, Jr., University of Rochester Paulina Anna Marek, University of Rochester Credible Coalitions? Preelectoral Agreements and Postelectoral Governments in Presidential Systems Marisa Kellam, Texas A&M University All the Presidents Men? The Appointment of Female Cabinet Ministers Worldwide Mona Lena Krook, Columbia University Diana Z. OBrien, Washington University in St. Louis William M. Downs, Georgia State University Kaare Strom, University of California, San Diego DEMOCRACY AND POLITICAL Sat 10:15 am VIOLENCE IN CONTEMPORARY INDIA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-8 Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University Local History, Geography and the Success of Indias Maoist Rebels Jennifer L. Oetken, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Security Politics: Evidence from Language Violence in India Bethany Lacina, University of Rochester Political Partical and Maoist Violence in India Kanchan Chandra, New York University The Colonial Roots of Ethnic Violence in India Emmanuel Teitelbaum, George Washington University Ajay Verghese, George Washington University Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University PARTY SYSTEMS, CLIENTELISM AND CORRUPTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-9 Fri 10:15 am

11-25

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Philip Keefer, The World Bank Corruption and Theft of Electricity in an Indian State Miriam A. Golden, University of California, Los Angeles Brian K. Min, University of Michigan Party Systems and Corruption in Democracies around the World Petra Schleiter, University of Oxford Patronage Politics, Policy Congruence, and Party Systems Eric C.C. Chang, Michigan State University Helen Hyun-Young Lee, Michigan State University What Wins Votes? Why Some Politicians Opt Out of Clientelism Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University The Microfoundations of Clientelism: Lessons from the Argentine Case Mariela Szwarcberg, University of Chicago Philip Keefer, The World Bank CHANGING STATE-SOCIETY Sat 4:15 pm RELATIONS IN ARAB AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-10 Joel S. Migdal, University of Washington See How They Run! Legislative Campaigns in Jordan and Egypt Ellen M. Lust, Yale University Court Petitions and Street Protests: Enabling CitizenState Negotiations in Contemporary Egypt Mona El-Ghobashy, Barnard College-Columbia University Elite Factionalism, State in Society, and Competitive Authoritarianism in Kuwait Kjetil Selvik, University of Oslo Managing Religion in Syria: The Failure of the Weak State Strategy Thomas C.H. Pierret, Princeton University Elite Strategies of Control and Municipal Governments in Jordan Janine Clark, University of Guelph Joel S. Migdal, University of Washington REGIME STABILITY AND Fri 2:00 pm PROSPECTS FOR DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-3 Cristina Corduneanu-Huci, Duke University Bargaining Across Crises: Elite Cooperation in Most Likely versus Least Likely Cases of Democracy Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University Matthew Wilson, Pennsylvania State University The Dimensionality of Ethnic Identities and Democratic Stability Kanchan Chandra, New York University Institutionalization and Democratization in Left-Wing Authoritarian Regimes Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University Dulce Manzano, Juan March Institute Taking Back Reforms: Institutional Reversibility and the Pace of Democratization Aya Kachi, University of Illinois

11-30

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RHETORIC, RIGHTS, AND Thu 8:00 am WOMENS POLITICAL INCORPORATION IN THE AMERICAS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-1 Understanding Womens Substantive Representation: A Test of the Critical Mass Approach Tiffany D. Barnes, Rice University Bicameralism, Gender Quotas, and the Legislative Process: Evidence from Argentina, 1983-2007 Juan Pablo Micozzi, University of New Mexico Mala N. Htun, New School University Marina Lacalle, University of Houston Gender Equality and Womens Rights in Latin American Courts Alba Ruibal, European University Institute Antifeminism and the Abrogation of Womens Rights in the United States and Latin America Jennifer Marie Piscopo, University of California, San Diego The Rhetoric of Representation: Costa Rican Female Legislators and Representation in Parliamentary Debates Magda Hinojosa, Arizona State University Gina S. Woodall, Arizona State University ELECTORAL RULES, Sat 8:00 am PARTISANSHIP AND POLITICAL COMPETITION No Room Assigned Joel W. Johnson, Colorado State University, Pueblo Modeling Elections in Post-Communist Polities: Voter Perceptions, Political Leaders and Activists Maria E. Gallego Norman Schofield, Washington University Ugur Ozdemir, Washington University in St. Louis Margit Tavits, Washington University A Marginal Voter, General Equilibrium Theory of Politics Itai Sened, Washington University Carlos E. Costa, Washington University in Saint Louis Understanding Party System Polarization in Comparative Perspective: A New Measure and New Results Piero Stanig, London School of Economics National Party Strategies in Local Elections: A Theory and Some Evidence from the Israeli Case Hani Zubida, Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya David Nachmias, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya Maoz Rosenthal Lampedusa and the Third Wave? Analysing the Causes of Electoral Reforms in New Democracies Pedro Riera Sagrera, European University Institute Patricio D. Navia, New York University Joel W. Johnson, Colorado State University, Pueblo ELECTORAL POLITICS IN Fri 8:00 am LATIN AMERICA No Room Assigned James W. McGuire, Wesleyan University

11-31

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Voter Turnout in Latin America (1980-2010): A Multilevel Analysis Miguel Carreras, University of Pittsburgh Nestor Castaneda-Angarita, University of Pittsburgh Ignacio Arana, University of Pittsburgh Social Remittances in Colombia: The Electoral Impact. Luis F. Jimenez, University of Pittsburgh On the Emergence of Electoral Cleavages: Was There an Age Cleavage in the 2009 Presidential Election in Chile? Patricio D. Navia, New York University Martin Schuster, Universidad Diego Portales Electoral Competition Amid Violence: Evidence from Colombia Veronica Caro, University of Houston Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston Gregg B. Johnson, Valparaiso University NATURAL RESOURCES, Sun 10:15 am CROSS-CUTTING CLEAVAGES AND TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY No Room Assigned David S. Siroky, Arizona State University Natural Resource Distribution and the Multiple Forms of Civil War Massimo Morelli, Columbia University Dominic Rohner, University of Zurich Ethnicity and Cross-Cutting Cleavages: Experimental Evidence from Kyrgyzstan Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University Principles of Group Formation and Varieties of Violent Conflict David S. Siroky, Arizona State University Michael Hechter, Arizona State University Identity in Partition: New Survey Evidence from Sudan Alexandra L. Scacco, New York University Philip Roessler, University of Oxford Bernd Beber, New York University Christopher James Haid, University of Chicago Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili, University of Pittsburgh BANKING REGULATION IN Thu 2:00 pm COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-1 Comparative Analysis of Banking Systems: A Structure, Agency and Institution-based View Caner Bakir, Koc University The Consequences of Regulatory Independence: Evidence from Bank Capital Requirements Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich Fabio Servalli, University of Zurich Regulatory Lags and Vulnerability to Banking Crises Ana Carolina Garriga, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas (CIDE)

Disc: 11-35

Varieties of Financial Systems in Latin America: Politics, Crisis, and Commercial Banking DeNationalization in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico Sebastian Etchemendy, Torcuato Di Tella University Ignacio Puente, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella Does Foreign Ownership Matter? Assessing the Effects of Internationalized Bank Ownership in Europes Transition Economies Rachel Epstein, University of Denver Carol Wise, University of Southern California Julia Gray, University of Pittsburgh CONSUMERS, PRODUCERS Sat 2:00 pm AND THE POLITICS OF FOOD REGULATION No Room Assigned Jing Vivian Zhan, Chinese University of Hong Kong The Politics of Rights and Food Insecurity in Colombia Nazih Richani, Kean University Jane R. Gingrich, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities COMPARATIVE VIEWS ON Thu 10:15 am SOCIAL SECURITY AND WELFARE POLICIES No Room Assigned Duane H. Swank, Marquette University Social Security Rights and Global Economic Crisis: Policy Response in the Great Recession Lyle A. Scruggs, University of Connecticut Overcoming Methodological Nationalism in Comparative Welfare State Studies Scott L. Greer, University of Michigan Heather A. Elliott, University of Michigan Social Networks and Welfare Reform in East Asia and Latin America Illan Nam, Colgate University Creating Constituents? Social Policy and Changes in Mass in Public Opinion in Europe and the USA Jane R. Gingrich, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Electoral Support, Party Competition, and Welfare Policies Christine S. Lipsmeyer, Texas A&M University Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University Nita Rudra, University of Pittsburgh REGIONAL ISSUES, Thu 4:15 pm TERRITORIAL COALITIONS, AND NATIONAL POLITICS No Room Assigned William M. Downs, Georgia State University Party Systems and the Dynamics of Decentralization Ignacio Jurado, University of Oxford, Nuffield College Sandra Leon, Juan March Institute Regional Coalition Formation after Devolution: Effects of National Coalitions, Regional Issues and Party Competition in the Czech Republic and Poland Paulina Anna Marek, University of Rochester

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The Economic Determinants of Party System Territorialization Carolina G. De Miguel, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Decentralization and Support for Ethnic and Regional Parties in National Elections David I. Lublin, American University Scott Morgenstern, University of Pittsburgh Pedro Riera Sagrera, European University Institute POLITICS UNDER Sun 8:00 am AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES No Room Assigned Diqing Lou, Rider University Autocratic Survival, Coalition Formation, and the Incentives for Redistribution Roy Elis, Stanford University Risk and Reward: Measuring the Long-Term Benefits and Short-Term Risks of Authoritarian Elections Dimitar Gueorguiev, University of Calfornia, San Diego Paul J. Schuler, University of California, San Diego Of Tyrants and Generals: Control of the Military in Authoritarian Regimes David Kuehn, University of Heidelberg Diqing Lou, Rider University POLITICS AND PREFERENCES Fri 4:15 pm FOR REDISTRIBUTION No Room Assigned John D. Stephens, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Income Redistribution and Elections in Latin America Diego Sanches Correa, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign No Taxation Without Status Compensation? Rethinking Models of Preference Over Redistribution Gwyneth Calvert McClendon, Princeton University Social Heterogeneity and Support for Redistribution: The Role of Political Elites and Reference Groups Kent E. Freeze, Duke University John D. Stephens, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill MARKET REGULATION, Sat 4:15 pm LOBBYING, AND INTEREST GROUPS No Room Assigned Dinissa S. Duvanova, University at Buffalo, NY Fiscal Policy Responses to the Economic Crisis in the United Kingdom and the United States: A Comparative Assessment Edward Ashbee, Copenhagen Business School Rights of Workers Versus the Right to Work: The Battle of Ideas and the Politics of Labor Market Adjustment in Spain Kenneth A. Dubin, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Risk & Reward: Post-Communist Business Collective Action and the Logic of Vulnerability Masha Hedberg, Harvard University

Managing Regulation: A Firms Perspective David Coen, University College London Adrienne Hritier, European University Institute Nikoleta Yordanova, European University Institute 11-41 Room: HISTORICAL LEGACIES IN Thu 8:00 am CONTEMPORARY POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Association for the Study of Nationalities, Panel 1 Keith A. Darden, Yale University Origins of Ethnic Insurgencies in Post-Colonial Africa: The Effect of Pre-Colonial Centralization Subhasish Ray, University of Rochester Historical Legacies and Contemporary Political Behavior. The Case of Ukraine. Leonid V. Peisakhin, Yale University Leviathans vs. Empires: Constructing a Model for Understanding the Centralization of Authority in Early Modern Eastern Europe Nicholas C Wheeler, Brigham Young University Borders as a Natural Experiment: Assessing the Causal Effect of British Colonialism in Sub-Saharan Africa Scott Abramson, Princeton University Keith A. Darden, Yale University DO LEFT AND RIGHT STILL Fri 2:00 pm STRUCTURE POLITICS? No Room Assigned A. Maurits van der Veen, College of William & Mary The Glory of the Past and the Sadness of Nowadays: The Difficult Relationship between Social Democratic Parties and their Voters Johannes N. Blumenberg, University of Mannheim Manuela S. Kulick, GESIS Explaining Elite Polarization in Developing Democracies: Factionalism, Market Reforms, and the Two Lefts in Latin America Samuel Handlin, University of California, Berkeley Distributive Politics and Electoral Competition: Matching Voter Preferences and Party Positions Silja Haeusermann, University of Zurich Dominik Geering, University of Zurich The Left-Right Ideological Spectrum in Global Mass Opinion Drew Linzer, Emory University Robert Rohrschneider, University of Kansas DETERMINANTS OF RADICAL Fri 2:00 pm POLITICS No Room Assigned Bonnie M. Meguid, University of Rochester Less Substance and Participation, More Populism and Virtual Mobilisation: The Problem of Democratic Quality and Presidential Elections in Eastern Europe and Latin America Olga Onuch, University of Oxford When and Why Do Extremist Organizations Turn Violent? Yelena Biberman, Brown University

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Toward a Unified Theory of Moderation: Communist and Islamist Moderation in Perspective A.Kadir Yildirim, Princeton University Suveyda Karakaya, University of Tennessee Explaining the Electoral Emergence of Radical Parties: A Theory of Incompatible Coalitions and Bilateral Oppositions Lenka Bustikova-Siroky, Duke University Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin Bonnie M. Meguid, University of Rochester ELITE COMPETITION AND Sat 4:15 pm DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota The Electoral Consequences of Rural Inequality Isabela Mares, Columbia University Martin Ardanaz, Columbia University Causes of Electoral Competitiveness in PostCommunist Countries Studying the Micromechanisms Fredrik M. Sjoberg, Columbia University David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota STATE-SOCIETY RELATIONS Fri 8:00 am IN NON-DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Mona El-Ghobashy, Barnard College-Columbia University Are Nondemocratic Officials Disciplined by Grassroots Legal Knowledge? A Field Experiment in China Gregory Distelhorst, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Putins High-Modernism and its Limits - Assessing the Sources of State Incapacity in Russia S. Mohsin Hashim, Muhlenberg College Ensuring Compliance: Strategies for Popular Cooptation by the Party and State Security in Communist Europe and in Bathist Iraq Martin Dimitrov, Dartmouth College Joseph Sassoon, Georgetown University Mona El-Ghobashy, Barnard College-Columbia University MEASUREMENT ISSUES ON Fri 4:15 pm DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE No Room Assigned Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San Diego Measuring Effective Democracy Amy C. Alexander, University of California, Irvine Ronald Inglehart, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Christian Welzel, Leuphana University Measurement Error, Missing Values and Latent Structure in Governance Indicators Walter R. Mebane, Jr., University of Michigan Vincent Arel-Bundock, University of Michigan Incorporating Qualitative Data: A Bayesian Approach to the World Governance Indicators Katherine Schlosser Bersch, University of Texas, Austin Sandra Botero, University of Notre Dame Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San Diego

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THEME PANEL: Thu 2:00 pm COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON PROPERTY RIGHTS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE No Room Assigned Peter A. Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego Public Law and Private Power in the Age of Financialization John W. Cioffi, University of California, Riverside Quiet Politics and Business Power in the Advanced Countries Pepper D. Culpepper, European University Institute Manufacturing Possibilities: Creative Action and Industrial Recomposition Gary Herrigel, University of Chicago J. Nicholas Ziegler, University of California, Berkeley THEME PANEL: NEGOTIATING Sat 2:00 pm PROPERTY AND CONSUMER RIGHTS IN MULTI-LEVEL SYSTEMS: PERSPECTIVES FROM EAST ASIA, LATIN AMERICA, AND EUROPE No Room Assigned David Vogel, University of California, Berkeley Land Titles and Entrepreneurialism: Panel Evidence from Cambodia Edmund J. Malesky, University of California, San Diego Krislert Samphantharak, University of California, San Diego The Regulatory State Under Stress: Economic Shocks and Regulatory Bargaining in the Argentine Electricity and Water Sectors Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University Alison E. Post, University of California, Berkeley Revolution, the Predatory State and Economic Growth Victor C. Shih, Northwestern University Dong Zhang, Peking University Mingxing Liu, Peking University A Tale of Two Provinces: The Political Economy of Local Government Intervention in Jiangsu and Zhejiang Province Mingxing Liu, Peking University Dong Zhang, Peking University Qi Zhang, Northwestern University Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego POLITICAL ATTITUDES AND Sat 10:15 am INSTITUTIONS IN THE MUSLIM WORLD No Room Assigned Amaney Jamal, Princeton University Why No Democracy in the Arab Muslim-World? The Importance of Temple Financing and Tax Farming Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg

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Modernizers vs. Fundamentalists: How Religion, Politics and Economics Shape Attitudes in the Muslim World Juliana Menasce Horowitz, Pew Research Center Neha Sahgal, The Pew Research Center Between Movement and Party: A Comparative Study of Islamic Political Party Formation in Turkey, Morocco and Jordan Esen Kirdis, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Amaney Jamal, Princeton University PARTY COMPETITION AND Fri 4:15 pm CLIENTELISM AT THE GRASS ROOTS: ADAPTING TO ELECTORAL CHALLENGES AND CHANGE IN MODERNIZING CONTEXTS No Room Assigned Localist Politics as Variant of Clientelism: Preserving Party Dominance in Rapidly Changing Societies Sean McGraw, University of Notre Dame Varieties of Clientelism: Machine Politics During Elections Sebastian Mazzuca, University of California, Berkeley Simeon C. Nichter, Stanford University Vote-buying and asymmetric information: a model with applications to Argentina Rodrigo Zarazaga, University of California, Berkeley Incumbency, Citizen Aspirations and the Economy: A Theory of Economic Propaganda in Founding Party Systems Mark Y. Rosenberg, University of California, Berkeley Policies, Identities, and Personalities: Explaining Voting Preferences in Ugandas 2011 Election Robert Alfred Dowd, University of Notre Dame Steven Levitsky, Harvard University Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University BOOK SESSION: ERIK Sat 4:15 pm BLEICHS THE FREEDOM TO BE RACIST? HOW THE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE STRUGGLE TO PRESERVE FREEDOM AND COMBAT RACISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-3 Sarah Song, University of California, Berkeley John D. Skrentny, University of California, San Diego Paul Frymer, Princeton University Rachel A. Cichowski, University of Washington Erik J. Bleich, Middlebury College NEW APPROACHES TO PARTY Thu 2:00 pm POLITICS AND SOCIAL RIGHTS No Room Assigned Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University Party System Change, Political Competition, and Welfare State Reform in Sweden Karen M. Anderson, Radboud University Nijmegen

Disc: 11-53

Party Systems and Segmentation of Labor Market Policy in Europe Georg Picot, Heidelberg University Cartel Parties and Cartel Politics in Advanced Democracies: Explaining Why Partisan Elites Compete or Collude Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics Why Are States with PR More Redistributive? Assessing the Role of Electoral Behavior, Coalition Patterns, and Electoral Geography Philip Manow, University of Bremen Holger Dring, University of Bremen Silja Haeusermann, University of Zurich POLITICS AND POLICIES Sat 4:15 pm BEHIND IMPROVED SOCIAL RIGHTS IN LATIN AMERICA No Room Assigned J. Samuel Valenzuela, University of Notre Dame Neoliberal Reforms and the Turn to Basic Universalism Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill John D. Stephens, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Gendered Varieties of Health Sector Reform: A Crossnational Comparison of Latin American Health Care Systems Christina Ewig, University of Wisconsin, Madison Conditional Cash Transfers, Welfare Regimes and Technocracies in Latin America Juliana Martinez Franzoni, Universidad de Costa Rica Koen Voorend, University of Costa Rica Engendering Citizenship: Motherhood & Rights under Brazils Bolsa Famlia Natasha Borges Sugiyama, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Wendy Hunter, University of Texas, Austin J. Samuel Valenzuela, University of Notre Dame Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick THE COMPARATIVE STUDY Fri 2:00 pm OF STATE INSTITUTIONS AND STATENESS: CONCEPTUAL AND THEORETICAL ISSUES No Room Assigned Juan Pablo Luna, Universidad Catlica de Chile Economies of Scope and the Territorial State Hillel David Soifer, Temple University State Infrastructural Power as a Two-Way Street: Transformations of Nationalism in Peru Matthias vom Hau, University of Manchester Weak Stateness vs. Challenged States: An Explanatory Typology Maria Agustina Giraudy, PhD, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Juan Pablo Luna, Universidad Catlica de Chile The Insecurity of Security in Latin America: State Weakness, Nongovernmental Violence and the New Human Rights Crisis Afflicting the Region Andreas E. Feldmann, Universidad Catolica de Chile

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Property, Jurisdiction, and Citizenship Regimes: State Institutions and State Effects in Africa Catherine Boone, University of Texas, Austin Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Deborah J. Yashar, Princeton University STRATEGIC MODELS OF Thu 2:00 pm AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 4-10 Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles Why Do Bureaucrats Comply? Electoral Manipulation and Legitimacy under Weak Institutions Scott Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin, Madison Alberto Simpser, University of Chicago Taking to the Streets Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University Ruth Kricheli, Stanford University Yair Livne, Stanford University Controlled Burn: Strategically Limited Protest under Authoritarianism Peter L. Lorentzen, University of California, Berkeley The Regime Party as an Instrument of Authoritarian Co-optation and Control Milan Svolik, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Bruce J. Bueno de Mesquita, New York University and Stanford University Alexandre Debs, Yale University COMPARATIVE Thu 4:15 pm PERSPECTIVES ON IMMIGRATION No Room Assigned Marisa Abrajano, University of California, San Diego Institutions at a Crossroads: The Challenge of Integrating Muslim Immigrants in Western Societies Murat Bayar, University of Georgia Political Parties and Anti-Immigrant Prejudice: A Cross-National Comparative Approach, Europe 19802000 Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center Berlin Elmar Schlter, WZB Immigrants Rights Activism and Xenophobic Activism in Japan, the United States, and Sweden Apichai W. Shipper, University of California, Los Angeles Immigration, Immigration Welfare Policy and Welfare State in Twenty OECD Countries, 1970-2008 Ping Xu, Louisiana State University Marisa Abrajano, University of California, San Diego Sofia A. Perez, Boston University NEW APPROACHES TO THE Thu 10:15 am STUDY OF ETHNIC POLITICS No Room Assigned Daniel N. Posner, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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11-55 Room: Chair: Papers:

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Mixed Identity and Mixed Results: the Ethnic Identifiability of African Leaders Claire Leslie Adida, University of California, San Diego Explaining Ethnic Exclusion. A Global Analysis, 1945 to 2001 Andreas Wimmer, University of California, Los Angeles The Ethnicity-Policy Preferences Link in Sub-Saharan Africa Gwyneth Calvert McClendon, Princeton University Evan S. Lieberman, Princeton University The Political Economy of Business Groups in Developing Countries Shelby Grossman, Harvard University Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University Nathaniel Leff, Columbia University Daniel N. Posner, Massachusetts Institute of Technology POLITICAL ECONOMY OF OIL Thu 8:00 am No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-21 Rawi Abdelal, Harvard University Changing Oil Income, Persistent Authoritarianism Jeff Colgan, American University Firms, Oil Markets and Economic Liberalization Llewelyn Hughes, George Washington University Crude Ambitions: Why Some Emerging Country NOCs Internationalization Strategies Succeed Pauline Jones Luong, Brown University Jazmin Sierra, Brown University The Political Economy of State Enterprise: Pemex And Petrobras in Sub-Organizational Perspective Francisco Flores-Macias, Massachusetts Institute of Technology David G. Victor, University of California, San Diego SOVEREIGNTY IN THE Sat 10:15 am BALANCE: HOW STATES MAINTAIN STABILITY IN THE FACE OF INTERNAL DIVISIONS AND PARTISAN INTERVENTIONS. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-1 Henry E. Hale, George Washington University Regimes of Ethnicity: Comparing East, West, and the South Sener Akturk, Koc University Fighting the Enemy Within: States Versus Externally Leveraged Minorities Erin K. Jenne, Central European University Harris Mylonas, George Washington University External Support for Ethnic Groups as a Factor in Third-Party Nation-Building Harris Mylonas, George Washington University Keith A. Darden, Yale University Strategy Trumps Troop Levels: Explaining Successful Intervention in Liberia Alan J. Kuperman, University of Texas, Austin Michael Hechter, Arizona State University

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BY FORCE IF NECESSARY: Sun 10:15 am REPRESSION AND PURGES IN AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-11 Eva R. Bellin, Brandeis University State Power and Staying Power: Inherited Infrastructure and Durable Authoritarianism in Malaysia and Tunisia Dan Slater, University of Chicago Sofia Fenner, University of Chicago State Capacity and Authoritarian Responses to Contention: China and Indonesia in Comparative Perspective William Hurst, University of Texas, Austin The Young, the Tainted, and the Specialized: Powerless Elite and Political Stability in the Chinese Communist Regime Victor C. Shih, Northwestern University Repression in Fascist Italy: Why So Little? David Art, Tufts University Authoritarian Information Problems: Chinese Electricity and Economic Statistics Jeremy L. Wallace, Ohio State University Eva R. Bellin, Brandeis University Paul Gregory, University of Houston THE POLITICAL ECONOMY Fri 8:00 am OF TRANSPARENCY AND INFORMATION DISCLOSURE No Room Assigned Archon Fung, Harvard University Impact of the United Kingdoms 2000 Freedom of Information Act Ben Worthy, University College London Socializing the Right to Access Public Information in Latin America: An Assessment of New Laws Robert Gregory Michener Transparency 2.0: The Politics of the Right to Information Tom McClean, London School of Economics Transnational Advocacy Networks and the Effectiveness of Freedom of Information Laws Daniel Berliner, University of Washington, Seattle Adrienne Hritier, European University Institute THE REDISTRIBUTIONAL Sat 2:00 pm STRUGGLE IN POSTNEOLIBERAL LATIN AMERICA No Room Assigned Sara Niedzwiecki, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Effect of Organized Labor and Civil Society Groups on Pension and Health Reforms in Argentina and Brazil (1988-2008) Sara Niedzwiecki, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Sectorial versus National Corporatism inside Coordinated Types of Capitalism: The Case of Uruguay Juan Bogliaccini, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Disc: 11-63

Political Determinants of Social Spending in Latin America Cristian Perez, Washington University Deepening of Democracy: Evo Morales and Luiz Incio Lula da Silvas Administrations Santiago Anria, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Russell Bither-Terry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Democratic Attitudes and Mechanisms of Direct Democracy: The Cases of Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia. Alissandra T. Stoyan, University of North Carolina Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University TRENDS IN POLITICAL Fri 10:15 am PARTICIPATION IN WESTERN DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Pippa Norris, Harvard University Participatory Expansion in Europe but Not in the U.S.: A Latent Class Analysis Jennifer Oser Michael Shalev, Hebrew University Rejuvenating Politics? Youth, Citizenship and Politics in the United States and Europe James Sloam, University of London, Royal Holloway Contextual Determinants of Political Participation in Western Democracies Katerina Vrablikova, Masaryk University Pippa Norris, Harvard University GENDER, POLITICAL Sun 8:00 am ATTITUDES, AND LEADERSHIP No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-2 Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami Vox Populi or Vox Masculini? Populism and Women Cas Mudde, DePauw University Cristbal Rovira Kaltwasser, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB) The Womens Wave: Gendered Strategies in Electoral Politics Thomas Scherer, Princeton University Dinsha Farrokh Allen Mistree, Princeton University Feminist Socialization and Gender Gaps in Political Interest Melanee Thomas, McGill University Gender, Intersectionality, and the Executive Branch: When Do Female Leaders Promote Gender Equality Policies? Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami Gendering Desperate Times: Feminist Insights about Civilian Victimization Laura Sjoberg, University of Florida Rainbow Murray, University of London, Queen Mary

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 11-64 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 11-62

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

46

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

11-65

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 11-66

BRITISH POLITICAL Thu 4:15 pm DEVELOPMENT: THE RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF REFORM No Room Assigned Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University Vote Buying, the Secret Ballot, and Franchise Extension in Victorian Britain Arthur Spirling, Harvard University Andrew C. Eggers, Harvard University The Welfare State in the United Kingdom 1886-1914: A Study in Political Development Iain S. McLean, Oxford University David Soskice, Oxford University Lucy Barnes, University of Oxford Taking the Leap: Constituency-level and Rhetorical Determinants of MP Votes on Electoral Reform Andrew Reeves, Boston University Scott Moser, University of Texas at Austin The Extent of Fraud at Parliamentary Elections in 19th Century United Kingdom Christopher J Kam, University of British Columbia Gary W. Cox, Stanford University MOBILIZATION, VIOLENCE, Sat 4:15 pm AND DISPLACEMENT: EXAMINING INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP BEHAVIOR DURING CIVIL WARS No Room Assigned Laia Balcells, Institut dAnlisi Econmica, CSIC Demobilization, Defection, and Civil Wars Abbey Steele, Princeton University Sarah Zukerman Daly, Columbia University Violence and Displacement in Civil War. Evidence from the Spanish civil war (1936-1939) Laia Balcells, Institut dAnlisi Econmica, CSIC Civil Violence in Post-WWII Italy Francesca Grandi, Yale University Tribes and Collaboration with Foreign Troops: The Case of Anbar H. Zeynep Bulutgil, University of Chicago Luis De la Calle, Juan March Institute EXPLORING LINKS BETWEEN Sat 8:00 am SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND THE STATE No Room Assigned Brian Palmer-Rubin, University of California, Berkeley Designing Democracy: The Institutionalization of Participatory Policymaking in Latin America Lindsay Rose Mayka, University of California, Berkeley Good Maharaja, Bad Maharaja: Peasant Movements and Left Party Success in India Sreedevi Muppirisetty, Cornell University Distinct Paths toward Articulation with the State: Indigenous Organizations in Bolivia and Mexico Brian Palmer-Rubin, University of California, Berkeley

Disc: 11-68

The Next French Revolution?: Explaining State Response to Subsistence Protests Erica Simmons, University of Chicago From Protest to Presidential Palaces: Ecuadorian and Bolivian Movements and State Power Simon Esteban Velasquez, Cornell University Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University ACCOUNTABILITY OF LEGISLATORS, A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-12 WOMEN IN EXECUTIVE POWER AROUND THE WORLD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-20 SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND POLITICAL MOBILIZATION: NEW APPROACHES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-11 SUB-NATIONAL DEMOCRACY, AUTHORITARIANISM, AND HYBRID REGIMES: THEORETICAL APPROACHES AND CROSS-REGIONAL EVIDENCE. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-6 ROUNDTABLE ON BO ROTHSTEINS THE QUALITY OF GOVERNMENT. THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION, SOCIAL TRUST AND INEQUALITY IN INTERNATIONAL COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE (FORTHCOMING UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS) No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-19 FIELD RESEARCH: BOUNDARIES, BIASES AND EVOLVING PRACTICES IN ONTHE-GROUND DATA GATHERING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 46-15 THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE POLITICS OF STATE FEMINISM: INNOVATION IN COMPARATIVE RESEARCH TO A COMPARATIVE THEORY OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 46-16 Sat 4:15 pm

Room: 11-69 Room: 11-70

Sat 2:00 pm

Thu 10:15 am

Room: 11-71

Fri 10:15 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: 11-72

Thu 10:15 am

Disc: 11-67

Room: 11-73

Fri 2:00 pm

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: 11-74

Fri 4:15 pm

Room:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

47

11-75

Room:

POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE HOLOCAUST: NEW FINDINGS AND RESEARCH AGENDAS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1497431-2

Fri 10:15 am

12-9

Room: 12-10

PARTY SYSTEMS, CLIENTELISM AND CORRUPTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-27 CHANGING STATE-SOCIETY RELATIONS IN ARAB AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-28 BY FORCE IF NECESSARY: REPRESSION AND PURGES IN AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-60

Fri 10:15 am

12

COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Sat 4:15 pm

Division Amaney Jamal, Princeton University Chair: Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University 12-1 Room: 12-2 CLIENTELISM AND CITIZEN ACCESS TO PUBLIC SERVICES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-13 COLONIAL LEGACIES IN SOUTH ASIA: GOVERNANCE, DEMOCRACY, AND DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-8 PUBLIC OPINION IN A DEVELOPING DEMOCRACY: EXPLORING THE FIRST-EVER ELECTORAL PANEL STUDY IN BRAZIL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-4 A CLOSER LOOK AT COLONIALISM: THE LEGACIES OF DIFFERENT COLONIAL INSTITUTIONS IN AFRICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-5 DEMOCRATIC ACCOUNTABILITY, CLIENTELISM, AND DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-13 DEMOCRATIC CONSOLIDATION IN HARD TIMES: A VIEW FROM THE AMERICASBAROMETER 2010 No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-14 ISLAMIC POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-16 DEMOCRACY AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN CONTEMPORARY INDIA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-26 Sat 2:00 pm

Room: 12-11

Sun 10:15 am

Room: Thu 4:15 pm 12-12

Room: 12-3

Room: Chair: Thu 8:00 am Papers:

Room: 12-4

Sat 2:00 pm

Room: 12-5

Disc: Sat 8:00 am 12-13

ETHNIC Fri 2:00 pm FRACTIONALIZATION: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES No Room Assigned Eric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University of London Endogenous Ethnicity Elliott D. Green, London School of Economics The Continental Axis Theory Revisited David D. Laitin, Stanford University Amanda Robinson, Stanford University The Origins of Ethnolinguistic Diversity Stelios Michalopoulos, Tufts University Ethnic and State History as Determinants of Ethnic Fractionalization Eric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University of London The Slave Trade and Ethnic Stratification in Africa Warren Whatley, University of Michigan Michael Hechter, Arizona State University INSTITUTIONAL REFORM AND Fri 4:15 pm COUNTER-INTUITIVE DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH ASIA No Room Assigned Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University Development from Representation? A Study of Quotas for Lower Caste Groups in India Francesca R. Jensenius, University of California, Berkeley Diversity and Power: Caste and Institutions in Rural India Alexander Lee, Stanford University Institutional Reform or Retrenchment? Welfare Impacts of Gender-Equalizing Property Rights Legislation across Indian States Rachel Brule, Stanford University The Impact of Connectivity on Market Interlinkages; Evidence from Rural Punjab Mahvish Shami, University of Copenhagen The Child and the State in India: 20 Years Later Dinsha Farrokh Allen Mistree, Princeton University Amit Ahuja, University of California, Santa Barbara Megan E. Reif, University of Michigan

Room: 12-6

Fri 10:15 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: 12-7 Room: 12-8

Sat 2:00 pm

Sat 10:15 am

Room:

Disc:

48

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

12-14 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

INTERNAL SECURITY IN ASIA Thu 10:15 am No Room Assigned Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University Democracy, Identity, and Violence on Indias Insurgent Periphery Paul Staniland, University of Chicago Shades of Sovereignty: Variable State-Building and Insurgency in South and Central Asia Adnan A. Naseemullah, London School of Economics Intelligent Autocrats: State Structure & Internal Violence under Authoritarianism Sheena Chestnut, Harvard University Nonliterate Leviathans: On the Riotous Heterogeneity of Southeast Asian States Dan Slater, University of Chicago Diana Younghwa Kim, University of Chicago Countering Insurgency: Strategies of the Indian State Vasundhara Sirnate, University of California, Berkeley M. Taylor Fravel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University ETHNIC FRAGMENTATION Thu 2:00 pm AND CONFLICT No Room Assigned Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University The Emotional Logic of Ethnic Violence: Intergroup Anger and Participation in Ethnic Riots Christopher Claassen, Washington University in St. Louis Its Who You Know, Not Who You Are: Social Networks and Ethnic Violence Evidence from Rwanda Omar Shahabudin McDoom Understanding the Causes and Consequences of Kenyas Post-Election Violence Jonathan Andrew Harris, Harvard University Inter-Ethnic Associations, Out-Group Tensions and Inter-personal Transfers: An Experiment in Chennai, India Joel Selway, Brigham Young University Michael Davidson, Brigham Young University Authoritarian Leaders and Ethnic Minorities: The Political Logic of Chinas Center-Local Fiscal Transfers Jihyeon Jeong, University of California, San Diego Attempting Rebellion: The Dynamics of Rebel Group Formation and Viability Janet Lewis, Harvard University Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University CLIENTELISM AND VOTE Fri 8:00 am BUYING IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-22 Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University Voting for Candidates, not Parties: Evidence from a New Dataset on Candidate Characteristics in India Adam W. Ziegfeld, University of Oxford, Nuffield College

Disc: 12-17 Room: Chair: Papers:

By Hook or Crook: Why Voters Support Criminal Politicians in India Milan Vaishnav, Columbia University The Incentive and Effectiveness of Vote-Buying: from SNTV to FPTP Chin-en Wu, Academia Sinica Feng-yu Lee, National Taiwan University One for the Road: Voting for Public Services in Ghana Robin Harding, New York University Political Support in Nascent African Democracies: Challenging the Patronage Hypothesis Kris Inman, University of California, Davis Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University CONFLICT, CIVIL WAR AND Sun 8:00 am VIOLENCE No Room Assigned Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University Conflict, Illegality and Productivity Shocks: The Case of Coca Planting in Colombia Maria Cecilia Acevedo, Harvard University Rebels,Transition and the State in Sub-Saharan Africa: Organization, Structure, Capacity and Success? Cara Jones, University of Florida Drug Violence and Support for Civil Rights: Experimental Evidence from the War on Drugs in Mexico Javier Osorio, University of Notre Dame From Ballots to Bullets: Explaining Cross-National Variation in Electoral Violence throughout the Developing World Patrick Michael Kuhn, University of Rochester How Does Military Force Shape Post-War Politics? The Political Consequences of Union and Confederate Military Decisions in the American Civil War Rex Douglass, Princeton University Election Violence in Democratizing States Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California, Berkeley Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University INTERESTS, INSTITUTIONS Thu 8:00 am AND POLICIES IN MOTION: UNDERSTANDING INDIAS GROWTH STORY No Room Assigned Ronald J. Herring, Cornell University Webs and Threads of Change: Skills, Interests, and Policies in Indias Textile Sector Aseema Sinha, University of Wisconsin, Madison Planned Unplanning: The Politics of Institutional Change and the Birth of Indias Telecoms Regulator (1990-1998) Anil G. Jacob, United States-India Educational Foundation Institutional Change, Industrial Logics, and Internationalization: Growth of Auto and IT Sectors in India Anthony P. DCosta, Copenhagen Business School Well Beyond Market Failure: Market Variety and Development States in Indian Pharmaceuticals and Biotech Smita Srinivas, Columbia University

12-15 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 12-18

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 12-16

Room: Chair: Papers:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

49

Disc:

Innovation Policy in India: Ongoing Experiments and Emerging Challenges Rakesh Basant, Indian Institute of Management Ronald J. Herring, Cornell University Vinod K. Aggarwal, University of California, Berkeley RELIGION: POLITICS, Sat 8:00 am CONFLICT AND VIOLENCE No Room Assigned Daniel Corstange, University of Maryland, College Park Islamic State Interrupted: Contestation and Islamization in Contemporary Pakistan Karen Ellis, University of Chicago Is State Institutionalized Islam an Impediment to Democratization? A Longitudinal Study of Regime Types in the Muslim World Fatima Z. Rahman, University of California, Irvine The Failure of Democratic Consolidation in Pakistan: Explaining the Cyclical Pattern of Civilian and Military Rule Moeed Wasim Yusuf, Boston University Transforming Politics, Dynamic Religion: The Politicization of Religion in Sub-Saharan Africa Rachel Beatty Riedl Joining Jihad: The Role of Informal Social Networks in Islamist Militant Recruitment in Cairo, Egypt Khalid Medani, McGill University Faithful Citizens: Indian Muslims Support for Democracy Jane Menon, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Moderation of Religious Parties and the Duality of Rights Discourse Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois, Chicago Daniel Corstange, University of Maryland, College Park PUBLIC GOODS PROVISION Thu 4:15 pm AND REDISTRIBUTION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES No Room Assigned Contending Theories of Public Goods Provision: Evidence from Peru Glenn D. Wright, University of Colorado, Boulder Teachers, Protests, and Elections in Mexico: The Consequences for Educational Spending and the Decentralization of Social Polic. Marco Fernandez, Duke University Urban Bias and Welfare Spending in Developing Countries, 1972-2006. Jennifer Noveck, University of Washington Public Employment, Political Competition and Clientelism: Evidence from an Original Survey in Argentina Virginia Oliveros, Columbia University The Demand for Redistribution in Mexico: Social Context, Personal History and Some Anomalies Jeffrey F. Timmons, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico Aleister Montfort, ITAM Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University

12-21 Room: Chair: Papers:

12-19 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 12-22 Room: Chair: Papers:

LOCAL POLITICS ACROSS Sat 4:15 pm DEVELOPING SOCIETIES No Room Assigned Amaney Jamal, Princeton University Political Economics: Fayyad and the Politics of Economic Development Karam Dana, Harvard University Economic Liberalization, Sub-national Politics and Private Investment in India Kanta Murali, Princeton University Political Action in a Context of Escalating Violence: Community Participation in Mexico, 2008-2010 Reynaldo T Rojo Mendoza, University of Pittsburgh Subnational Politics and Foreign Direct Investment in Mexico Steven Samford, University of New Mexico Priscila Ortega Gomez, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo Does Tourism Matter? The Effects of Tourism and the State on the Political Choices of Indigenous Populations in Three Countries: Guatemala, Mexico and Australia Heather L. Hawn, University of South Carolina Amaney Jamal, Princeton University POST-CONFLICT Sun 10:15 am DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Thomas E. Flores, George Mason University Decolonization and Divergence in Civil-Military Relations: A Comparative Study of Rwanda and Burundi Kristen A. Harkness, Princeton University Opting Out of Clientelism? An Empirical Analysis of the Impact of Decentralization on Electoral Politics in Post-conflict Sierra Leone Marco Larizza, The World Bank Investigating Post-Conflict Violence at the Micro Level: Mapping and Accounting for Patterns Among Victims of Past Atrocities in Liberia David Backer, College of William & Mary Anupma L. Kulkarni, Stanford University From Protest to Presidential Palaces: Ecuadorian and Bolivian Movements and State Power Simon Esteban Velasquez, Cornell University Thomas E. Flores, George Mason University LEADER AND MILITARY Sat 10:15 am RELATIONS IN NONDEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University Leaders, Militaries, and War Termination Scott Wolford, University of Colorado, Boulder Causes and Consequences of Coup-Proofing Strategies Jun Koga, Emory University Regime Survival Strategies and the Onset of Civil War: A Coup-Proofing Paradox Jonathan M. Powell, University of Kentucky The Timing and Manner of Autocratic Exits Jeff Carter, Pennsylvania State University

Disc: 12-20

Room: Papers:

Disc: 12-23

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

50

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc:

Oligopoly of Violence: A New Model of Civilian Control of the Military Gonzalo Rivero, New York University Milan Svolik, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University OIL, RESOURCE CURSE, Fri 2:00 pm RENTS AND DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-23 Michael L. Ross, University of California, Los Angeles Declining Oil Revenues and Regime Stability in the Long-Term Joseph Florence, Cornell University Does Oil Promote Opacity? The Right to Information and the Resource Curse Ruth Carlitz, University of California, Los Angeles The Political Economy of Opposition in Authoritarian Regimes Ekrem Karakoc, Pennsylvania State University Client Leaders and Patrons: A Strategic Analysis of Foreign Support of Incumbent Leaders in Insurgencies Giacomo Chiozza, Vanderbilt University Why Do Some Oil Exporters Experience Civil War But Others Do Not? A Qualitative Comparative Analysis of Net Oil-Exporting Countries Matthias Basedau, German Institute of Global and Area Studies Thomas Richter, German Institute of Global and Area Studies (GIGA) Oil, Business, and the Politics of Reform in Saudi Arabia Nimah Mazaheri, University of Washington Michael L. Ross, University of California, Los Angeles GLOBALIZATON, TRADE, AID Sat 8:00 am AND DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University Financial Systems of Colonial States: The Case of India Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Virginia Globalization, Democratic Institutions and Inequality Su-Hyun Lee, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Trade and Human Development: An Empirical Inquiry Stephen Kosack, Harvard University Joan E. Cho, Harvard University Market Conditioning, Human Capital Formation and Economic Inequality in Latin American and the Caribbean Nathan Kelly, University of Tennessee Jana Morgan, University of Tennessee Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University PREFERENCES, Thu 2:00 pm PARTISANSHIP, AND ELECTORAL COMPETITION IN MEXICO AND BRAZIL No Room Assigned Sylvia Gaylord, Colorado School of Miines

Papers:

12-24 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 12-27 Room: Chair: Papers:

Divided Government and Lawmaking in the Brazilian Congress Lucio R. Renno, University of Brasilia Taeko Hiroi, University of Texas at El Paso Executive-Legislative Relations and Economic Performance at the Sub-National Level in Brazil Carlos Pereira, Michigan State University Marcus Andre Melo, University of Pernambuco Committee Leadership Selection without Seniority: The Mexican Case Joy Langston, CIDE Francisco Javier Aparicio, CIDE Ideology, Election Returns, and Campaign Finance Scott W. Desposato, University of California, San Diego Saul Cunow, University of California, San Diego The Cabinet Ghostwriter? The Effect of Partisanship and Informal Cabinet Rules on Executive Bills in Brazil and Mexico Sylvia Gaylord, Colorado School of Miines Scott Morgenstern, University of Pittsburgh TERRITORIAL CONFLICTS Fri 8:00 am AND FRAGMENTATION No Room Assigned David S. Patel, Cornell University Explaining Variation in the Outcomes of Territorial Partitions Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison Measuring State Capacity: Assessing and Testing the Options Jonathan Hanson, Syracuse University Rachel Sigman, Syracuse University A New Leaders Tradeoff bewteen Bureaucratic Efficiency and Legitimacy in Post-Colonial Coutries: The Case of the Government Formation and Colonial Legacy in the Political Competition. Sunkyoung Park, New York University A Checkpoint Effect? Evidence from a Natural Experiment on Travel Restrictions in the West Bank Matthew Longo, Yale University Daphna Canetti, University of Haifa Nancy Hite, Yale University David S. Patel, Cornell University THE DESIGN AND EFFECTS OF PREFERENTIAL TRADE AGREEMENTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-3 THEME PANEL: RIGHTS BASED APPROACHES TO DEVELOPMENT: HAVE THEY MADE A DIFFERENCE? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 17-6 IMPLEMENTING INTERNATIONAL RESPONSES TO VULNERABLE POPULATIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-21 Sat 10:15 am

Disc: 12-25 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 12-28

Room: 12-29

Sat 10:15 am

Disc: 12-26

Room: 12-30

Fri 8:00 am

Room: Chair:

Room:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

51

12-31 Room: 12-32

GOVERNANCE AND SECURITY IN AFRICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-23 JUDICIALIZED POLITICS OR POLITICIZED JUDICIARIES? THE FUNCTION OF JUDICIARIES IN SYRIA, TURKEY, IRAN AND PAKISTAN No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-5 WOMENS RIGHTS AND EMPOWERMENT IN THE MIDDLE EAST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-19 STATE-SOCIETY RELATIONS IN DEMOCRATIC RURAL LATIN AMERICA: THE SEARCH FOR NEW FORMS OF INTEREST REPRESENTATION AFTER THE DEMISE OF CORPORATISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-7 BUCKING THE TREND: THE PUZZLE OF ENDURING AUTHORITARIANISM IN THE ARAB WORLD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-8 COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF PUBLIC GOODS PROVISION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-9 THE IMPACT OF DECENTRALIZATION ON STATE-WIDE PARTIES IN NONWESTERN DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-10 (RE)STRUCTURING DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-11 FOREIGN AID AND CIVIL SOCIETY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-13 THE IMPACT OF COUNTERHEGEMONIC POWERS ON DEMOCRATIZATION AFTER THE COLD WAR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-15

Sat 4:15 pm

12-41

Room: Thu 8:00 am 12-42

INSTITUTIONS AND ELECTORAL STRATEGIES IN THE MIDDLE EAST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-21 HISTORY, CONFLICT AND DEMOCRACY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES TO CONTENTIOUS POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 46-18

Sat 8:00 am

Sat 4:15 pm

Room: 12-33

Room: Thu 4:15 pm 12-43 Room:

Room: 12-34

ACCOUNTABILITY AND Fri 10:15 am REDISTRIBUTION IN AFRICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by African Politics Group, Panel 1

Thu 4:15 pm

13

THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES

Division Lily Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chair: 13-1 WORKING TO EXPAND AND Sat 8:00 am PROTECT RIGHTS IN AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES: CHINA, RUSSIA, AND MARTIAL LAW TAIWAN No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-4 Elizabeth J. Perry, Harvard University Responsible to Whom? The Political Determinants of Corporate Social Responsibility in China Timothy Hildebrandt, University of Southern California Journalists and Lawyers Caught Between the Market and the State: Working to Expand and Protect Rights in China and Russia John Wagner Givens, University of Oxford Maria Repnikova, University of Oxford Making Two Nations: Media and Political Identity in Taiwan and China Ashley Esarey, Whitman College Grassroots Civil Society and the Chinese Local State May Farid, University of Oxford Rising Rights Consciousness: A Threat to or a Source of Chinas Stability? Peter L. Lorentzen, University of California, Berkeley Suzanne E. Scoggins, University of California, Berkeley Kevin J. OBrien, University of California, Berkeley William Hurst, University of Texas, Austin THE POLITICS OF Fri 2:00 pm REPRESENTATION IN COMMUNIST AND POSTCOMMUNIST REGIMES No Room Assigned Martin Dimitrov, Dartmouth College 89 Russias: The Role of Formal Institutions in Explaining Executive Contestation Gavril Bilev, Brown University

Room: 12-35

Thu 10:15 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: 12-36

Sun 8:00 am

Room: 12-37

Thu 8:00 am

Room: 12-38 Room: 12-39

Sun 10:15 am

Thu 8:00 am

Disc:

Room: 12-40

13-2 Sat 4:15 pm Room: Chair: Papers:

Room:

52

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 13-3 Room: Chair: Papers:

Between the People and the Peoples Republic: Issue Entrepreneurs, Censorship and Online Chinese Mass Opinion Jonathan Hassid, University of Technology, Sydney The Management of Political Opposition in Kazakhstan Jody Marie LaPorte, University of California, Berkeley Politics at the Boundary: Mixed Signals and the Chinese State Rachel Stern, Harvard University Kevin J. OBrien, University of California, Berkeley Keith A. Darden, Yale University ELECTORAL POLITICS IN Sat 4:15 pm POSTCOMMUNIST SYSTEMS No Room Assigned Tatiana P. Rizova, Christopher Newport University Throwing the Bums Out a Little Less Often: Partisanship and Incumbent Re-election Rates in New Democracies Joshua A. Tucker, New York University Marko Klasnja, New York University Vote Choice in Post-Soviet Presidential Elections: Personality Trait Ratings and Democratic Values in the Aftermath of the Colored Revolutions Vicki L. Hesli, University of Iowa Andriy Gorbachyk, Taras Shevchenko University Voting Behavior under Authoritarianism: Evidence from Azerbaijan Olena Nikolayenko, Fordham University The Effect of Party Systems on Electoral Reform in Post-Communist States, 1989-2010 Jack Bielasiak, Indiana University John Hulsey, James Madison University The Choice of Presidential Powers in the PostCommunist World Nicholas J. Spina, University of Missouri The Politics of Judicial Review: Courts and the Electoral Calculus Adriana Buliga-Stoian, Eastern Connecticut State University Wendy L. Martinek, National Science Foundation Tatiana P. Rizova, Christopher Newport University Olga Onuch, University of Oxford FRONTIERS OF POLITICAL Thu 2:00 pm PARTICIPATION IN CHINA No Room Assigned Mayling Birney, London School of Economics Amplifying Individual Grievances into Societal Causes: Transparency Reform and Accountability in China Gregory Distelhorst, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Squeezing the Same Old Stone: Evidence from Administrative Courts Explain Tax Reforms, Land Seizures and Protest in Rural China John Wagner Givens, University of Oxford Andrew MacDonald, UCLA Strength of the Weak: Migrant Communitys Impact on Institutional Change in China Yuting Li, University of Washington

Disc: 13-5

Rights, Regime Type, and Political Attitudes: An Experimental Study of U.S. and Chinese Voters Jennifer Wilking, University of California, Davis Guang Zhang A Tale of Two Protests: Policy-based and Interestbased Protests in Contemporary China Wu Zhang, University of Massachusetts, Boston Mayling Birney, London School of Economics PUBLIC OPINION IN Fri 10:15 am SOCIALIST AND POSTSOCIALIST SYSTEMS No Room Assigned Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University Public Opinion in the Collapse of the USSR: A Reassessment Twenty Years Later Using a New Rolling Cross-Section Data Set Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley Cynthia S. Kaplan, University of California, Santa Barbara Deinstitutionalization and the Authoritarian Citizen: The Politics of Uncertainty in Russia Samuel A. Greene, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Public Opinion and the Dynamics of Russias PostCommunist Political Development Aleksandar Matovski, Cornell University More Than Elections: Public Opinion, Institutional Bias, and Democratic Assessment in Poland and Ukraine Melanie Mierzejewski, University of Illinois, Chicago Attitudinal Root of Locus of Responsibility: Evidence from Mainland China Jiangnan Zhu, University of Nevada, Reno Tianjian Shi, Duke University Jie Lu, American University Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University THE POLITICAL ECONOMY Sun 8:00 am OF TRANSITIONAL SYSTEMS No Room Assigned Cynthia M. Horne, Western Washington University Making Bad Bureaucrats Better: Political Context and Regulatory Uncertainty in Russias Regions Quintin H. Beazer, Ohio State University Foreign Investment, Diaspora Investment, and Income Inequality in China Min Ye, Boston University Reform and Deadlock in Fighting Unemployment: The Development of Employment Policy in the Czech Republic and Poland Todor G. Enev, University of Pennsylvania Straightjackets or Smokescreens? IMF Programs & Economic Reforms in Transition Countries Byungwon Woo, Ohio State University Quintin H. Beazer, Ohio State University From Violence to Law: Protecting Property Rights in Russia Jordan Luc Gans-Morse, University of California, Berkeley Cynthia M. Horne, Western Washington University

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 13-6 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 13-4 Room: Chair: Papers:

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53

13-7 Room: Papers:

Disc: 13-8 Room: Papers:

CORRUPTION IN Thu 4:15 pm TRANSITIONAL CONTEXTS No Room Assigned Veto Players, State Capture, and Corruption Tanya Bagashka, University of Houston Corrupt Social Capital: Social Capital and Corruption in Transition Economies Iva Bozovic, University of Southern California Populism and Corruption in Eastern Europe: A Vicious Circle of Relationships Tatiana Kostadinova, Florida International University The Determinants of State Capture in Eastern Europe Patricia T. Young, Stanford University Natural Resources and the Quality of Political Institutions: Empirical Evidence from China Jing Vivian Zhan, Chinese University of Hong Kong Samuel A. Greene, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace THE EFFECTS OF AID AND Thu 4:15 pm DEMOCRACY PROMOTION No Room Assigned Supporting Political Pluralism in New Democracies: The Impact of Foreign Aid to Political Parties in the former Yugoslavia Marlene S. Spoerri, University of Amsterdam Democracy for Money: Impact of Western Financial Aid on Democratic Consolidation in Eastern Europe and Eurasia Evgeny E. Anikin, University of South Carolina Explaining the Impact of International Aid for Local Democratic Governance in the Western Balkans Paula M. Pickering, College of William & Mary Domestic and External Remedies to the Resource Curse: Promotion of Transparency in the Caspian Kerem Oge, Boston College From Recipients to Donors: How Young Democracies Become Democracy Promoters Tsveta Petrova, Cornell University Dinissa S. Duvanova, University at Buffalo, NY POLITICAL ATTITUDES AND Thu 8:00 am BEHAVIOR IN A DIVERSE CHINA No Room Assigned Robert Harmel, Texas A&M University, College Station Does Class Matter? Social Economic Status and Political Attitudes in China John James Kennedy, University of Kansas Dan Chen, University of Kansas Corruption and Government Satisfaction in China Robert Harmel, Texas A&M University, College Station Yao-Yuan Yeh, Texas A&M University The Rural/Urban Divide in China: Life Satisfaction and Political Support Wenfang Tang, University of Iowa Explaining Mass-Party and Intra-Party Cleavages in China Pierre F. Landry, University of Pitttsburgh

Disc: 13-10

Dennis Hickey, Missouri State University AUTHORITARIANISM IN THE Sun 10:15 am FORMER SOVIET UNION: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES No Room Assigned Barbara Junisbai, Pitzer College Dominant Party Institutions and Elite Advancement: Evidence from Russia Ora John Reuter, Columbia University Regime Trajectories in Post-Soviet States Scott B. Radnitz, University of Washington Jonathan Wheatley, Centre for Democracy, Aarau Mobilization or Resignation? The Role of Political Efficacy in Russias Authoritarian Reversal Danielle Nicole Lussier, University of California, Berkeley The Deep Impact of Economic Collapse on Mass Regime Preferences Robert Person, University of Notre Dame Fueling Apathy? Energy Dependence and European Reactions to the 2008 Georgian-Russian War Bryon J. Moraski, University of Florida Magda Giurcanu, University of Florida Thomas F. Remington, Emory University CHINAS NEW WELFARE POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-17 WOMENS RIGHTS AND REPRESENTATION IN A POSTSOVIET WORLD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-18 EXTERNAL ACTORS AND POLITICAL CHANGE: THE SUCCESSES AND THE LIMITS OF DEMOCRACY PROMOTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-18 Sat 2:00 pm

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Disc: 13-11 Room: 13-12

Fri 8:00 am

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Fri 4:15 pm

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Disc: 13-9

14

ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES

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Division Marc Morj Howard, Georgetown University Chair: 14-1 PREFERENCES FOR REDISTRIBUTION AND SOCIAL PROTECTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-6 VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM AND INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE[PAIN POSTINDUSTRIAL POLITICAL ECONOMIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-19 Thu 4:15 pm

Room: 14-2

Fri 2:00 pm

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DIVISION PANELS

14-3

Room: 14-4

BOOK SESSION: ERIK BLEICHS THE FREEDOM TO BE RACIST? HOW THE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE STRUGGLE TO PRESERVE FREEDOM AND COMBAT RACISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-51

Sat 4:15 pm

Disc: 14-6

Michael Minkenberg, New York University Christian Davenport, University of Notre Dame RENEGOTIATING AUSTERITY: Thu 8:00 am THE POLITICS OF INTERESTS AND CRISIS IN EUROPE AND LATIN AMERICA No Room Assigned G. Eduardo Silva, Tulane University Post-Washington Consensus Interest Intermediation Regimes in Radical South American Social Democracies: Bolivia, Ecuador, and Venezuela G. Eduardo Silva, Tulane University Conquer and Divide: Movements and Parties in Brazil Aaron Schneider, Tulane University Varieties of Liberalism: State-Society Relations under Austerity in France and Germany Mark I. Vail, Tulane University Fragmenting Corporatism? The Politics of Business Representation in Spain Sara Watson, Ohio State University Sebastian Etchemendy, Torcuato Di Tella University RIGHTS, INSTITUTIONS, AND Fri 10:15 am POLICY CHOICES: THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF IMMIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-2 James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University The Politics of Civic Integration: New Requirements for Citizenship and Settlement in Western Europe Sara Wallace Goodman, University of California, Irvine Institutions, Conflict Arenas, and Policy Choices: The Politics of Immigration in Germany and Switzerland Antje Ellermann, University of British Columbia Networks and Nation-States: The Impact of Policy Networks on Antidiscrimination Policy in Europe Terri E. Givens, University of Texas, Austin The Architecture of Cooperation in International Migration Jeannette Money, University of California, Davis Sarah P. Lockhart, University of California, Davis The Machinery of Immigration Control: Explaining Deportations Across Immigrant-Receiving Democracies Tom K. Wong, University of California, Riverside James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University CRISIS, CAPITALISM, AND Thu 2:00 pm THE WELFARE STATE No Room Assigned Alexandra Hennessy, Clarkson University Stimulus Politics and Stimulating Policy Histories: Taxation, Spending, and Partisanship in the European Union Nicholas Toloudis, Mount Holyoke College Discourses of Industry in Postwar Britain and Germany Gregory Charles Baldi, Western Illinois University

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Disc: 14-5

LABOR-MARKET Sat 8:00 am INSTITUTIONS AND THE PREFERENCES OF UNIONS AND EMPLOYERS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-1 Chris Howell, Oberlin College Trade Unions, Partisan Politics and Redistribution Jonas Pontusson, Princeton University Michael Becher, Princeton University How Does Labor Market Segmentation Affect Union Representation? Evidence from Western Europe Anke Hassel, Hertie School of Governance Unions, Bargaining Coverage and Minimum Wage Setting: The Relative Impact on Earnings Inequality from 1985 till 2005 Jelle Visser, University Amsterdam Florian Sniekers, University of Amsterdam Grooming the Institutional Landscape or Pushing for Deregulation? An Empirical Analysis of Party Donations by the 100 Largest German Companies in 1984-2005 Achim Goerres, University of Cologne Martin Hoepner, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies Chris Howell, Oberlin College LEGAL RESPONSES TO Sat 10:15 am EXTREMIST POLITICAL ACTORS IN LIBERAL DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University The Way Democracy Works: Political Prosecution of Politicians and Its Effects on Satisfaction with Democracy Joost van Spanje Claes H. de Vreese, University of Amsterdam Legal Responses to Fascist, Communist and Salafist/ Jihadi Threats to the United States Leonard B. Weinberg, Prof, University of Nevada, Reno The Illusion of the Defending Democracy Tradition Susanne Martin, University of Texas, Austin Arie Perliger, US Military Academy Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin To Ban or not to Ban? State Responses to Racist Associations in the United States, Belgium, and Germany Erik J. Bleich, Middlebury College Ban the Bans, but Guard the Threshold - Resolving Democracys Paradox of Tolerating the Intolerant William M. Downs, Georgia State University

Disc: 14-7

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Disc: 14-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

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55

Disc: 14-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

The Financial Crisis and the Evolution of Varieties of Capitalism: A Comparative Institutional Analysis of Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States Michel Goyer The Economic Crisis, Partisanship and the Welfare State Mariely Lopez-Santana, George Mason University Alexandra Hennessy, Clarkson University POLITICAL PARTY POSITIONS Sun 8:00 am No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-3 Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia Party Policy Investment: Risk and Returns in British Politics, 1971-2007 Anthony Michael Bertelli, University of Southern California Peter C. John, University of Manchester The Cross-national Comparability of Expert Placements of Party Positions: Evidence from a Survey Experiment Jonathan T. Polk, University of Georgia Erica Elizabeth Edwards, University of North Carolina Seth Kincaid Jolly, Syracuse University Resource Allocations and Law-making Activities in Parliamentary Democracies Yoshikuni Ono, University of Michigan Voters Perceptions of Party Positions in Western Europe Following Party Leadership Changes Zeynep Somer-Topcu, Vanderbilt University Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia THE COMPARATIVE Fri 8:00 am POLITICAL ECONOMY OF GENDER, PENSIONS, SCHOOLS, AND HEALTH No Room Assigned Robert Kent Weaver, Georgetown University The Comparative Political Economy of Gender Equality: Hours Regulation, Labor Productivity, and Noisy Signals of Productivity Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University Policy Harmonization in Europe: Diffusion versus Common Shocks in the Reform of Pension Systems Alexandra Hennessy, Clarkson University Martin Steinwand, SUNY, Stony Brook University Schools Policy and Politics in England and Sweden: A Comparative Political Economy Approach Timothy Hicks, Trinity College, Dublin The Strong State Reconsidered: Health Policy Reform in France and the United States Marc E. Smyrl, Universite de Montpellier 1 Robert Kent Weaver, Georgetown University POLITICAL ECONOMY AND Thu 10:15 am INSTITUTIONS: HISTORICAL AND COMPARATIVE APPROACHES No Room Assigned Christopher S. Allen, University of Georgia

Papers:

Disc: 14-12

The Rise and Decline of Social Citizenship Right in the Western World: Distributive Conflict and the Keynesian Welfare State, 1939 - 2005 Walter Korpi, Stockholm University Political Discourse, Policy Legacies, and the Puzzle of Divergent Outcomes: The Case of Workmens Compensation in Britain and France (1880-1897) Frieda Fuchs, Oberlin College The Production of Quality: Comparative Wine Politics in France and Italy Betsy Carter, University of California, Berkeley A Comparator for the EU? Regional Integration, Sequencing and the Invisible Institutions of Closer Economic Relations between Australia and New Zealand John Leslie, Victoria University Christopher S. Allen, University of Georgia Stephen Amberg, University of Texas, San Antonio IMMIGRATION AND Sat 2:00 pm DIVERSITY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Sofia A. Perez, Boston University Constituents at the Gate: European Political Parties and the Extension of Citizenship and Naturalization Rights Colin Brown, Harvard University Immigrants as Candidates: Their Priorities and their Effects on Voting Behavior. Alex Street, University of California, Berkeley The Electoral Participation of Naturalised Immigrants in Europe. What Makes Naturalised Voters Different Across Cities? Amparo Gonzlez-Ferrer, Spanish Research Council (CSIC) Racial Group Differences in Support for Citizenship Rights and Duties Hilde Roza Coff, Utrecht University Catherine Bolzendahl, University of California, Irvine The Rise of Indirect Affirmative Action: Converging Strategies for Promoting Diversity in Selective Institutions of Higher Education in the United States and France Daniel Sabbagh, Centre dEtudes et de Recherches Internationales Sara Wallace Goodman, University of California, Irvine BUSINESS AND LABOR IN THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF EUROPE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-7 THE EVOLUTION OF EU INSTITUTIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-8 Fri 2:00 pm

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Disc: 14-10

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Disc: 14-13

Disc: 14-11

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Sat 2:00 pm

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56

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DIVISION PANELS

14-15

Room: 14-16

SMALL STATES RECONSIDERED: RECONCILING FLEXIBILITY AND RIGIDITY IN ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-18 AUTHOR MEETS CRITIC: ROUNDTABLE ON SVEN STEINMOS THE EVOLUTION OF MODERN STATES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-5

Sat 8:00 am

Disc: Fri 10:15 am 15-6 Room: Papers:

From Parity to Intersectionality? Elonore Lpinard, Universit de Montral Has Parity Opened or Closed the Door for Ethnic Minority Representation? Khursheed Wadia, University of Warwick Dorothy E. McBride, Florida Atlantic University Karen Bird, McMaster University THE CHANGING FACE OF Thu 8:00 am EUROPEAN PARTY SYSTEMS No Room Assigned Multilevel Elections and Party Fortunes: The Impact of Decentralization in Western Europe Bonnie M. Meguid, University of Rochester Integration As Representation: Connecting Public Opinion and Party Positions on Europe Since 1952 Christopher J. Anderson, Cornell University Jason D. Hecht, Cornell University Party-System Stability and Change in Sixteen Countries, 1890-2010 Jennifer K. Smith, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Hardy Perennials: Parties which Buck the Live Fast, Die Young Norm in Central and Eastern Europe Tim John Haughton, University of Birmingham Kevin Deegan-Krause, Wayne State University Florence Faucher-King, Sciences Po Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, Madison BUSINESS AND LABOR IN THE Fri 2:00 pm POLITICAL ECONOMY OF EUROPE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-13 Christopher S. Allen, University of Georgia Unions against Governments: Explaining General Strikes in Western Europe, 1980-2006 Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida John E. Kelly, University of London, Birkbeck College Alison L. Johnston, London School of Economics Who Do European Corporation Lobby? The Domestic Institutional Determinants of Interest Group Activity in the European Union Sean D. Ehrlich, Florida State University Europe 2020 and Varieties of Capitalism: Complementary or Contradictory? Richard E. Deeg, Temple University Politically Contingent Capital: Shareholder Value and the Differentiated Position of Labor in France and Germany. Michel Goyer Gregory Charles Baldi, Western Illinois University Jane R. Gingrich, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities THE EVOLUTION OF EU Sat 2:00 pm INSTITUTIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-14 The Political Foundations of Judicial Independence in the European Union R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick

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EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY

Division Michael Bernhard, University of Florida Chair: 15-1 LABOR-MARKET INSTITUTIONS AND THE PREFERENCES OF UNIONS AND EMPLOYERS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-4 RIGHTS, INSTITUTIONS, AND POLICY CHOICES: THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF IMMIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-7 POLITICAL PARTY POSITIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-9 Sat 8:00 am

Room: 15-2

Fri 10:15 am

Disc: 15-7

Room: 15-3 Room: 15-4

Room: Sun 8:00 am Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Part:

JCMS ANNUAL REVIEW: Fri 4:15 pm STATE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION ROUNDTABLE No Room Assigned Tim John Haughton, University of Birmingham Nathaniel Copsey, University of Birmingham Vivien A. Schmidt, Boston University Andrew Moravcsik, Princeton University Simon Hix, London School of Economics Richard Gordon Whitman, University of Bath Loukas Tsoukalis, University of Athens THEME PANEL: PARITY AND Thu 4:15 pm THE SHIFT FROM UNIVERSAL TO GROUP RIGHTS IN FRANCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 1 Karen Celis, University College Ghent Facilitating Rights or Just Pretending? The Example of the Parity Law Aurlia Troupel, University of Montpellier Has Parity Encouraged the Advocacy of Womens Rights in Parliament? Rainbow Murray, University of London, Queen Mary

15-5

Disc:

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15-8 Room: Papers:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

57

Disc: 15-9

The Determinants of European Parliament Candidate Selection Stephen August Meserve, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Daniel Pemstein, Vanderbilt University NO QMV without Representation? Parliamentarization in the EU Christilla Roederer-Rynning, University of Southern Denmark Frank Schimmelfennig, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH) Diana Panke, University College Dublin Cesar Garcia Perez de Leon, Science Po THE POLITICAL ECONOMY Sat 10:15 am OF NEW EUROPEAN DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Carol Skalnik Leff, University of Illinois-UrbanaChampaign Historical Legacies, Transition Effects, and Opportunity Structures in the Remaking of Labor Relations in Post-Communist Europe Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania Democracy and the Market: Explaining Variations in Support across European Countries Claudiu Daniel Tufis, Research Institute for Quality of Life, Romanian Academy The Persistence of Inequality in New European Democracies. Ekrem Karakoc, Pennsylvania State University The Paradox of Rebuilding Markets and States: Winners, Losers and State-Directed Development in East Central Europe Nicholas C Wheeler, Brigham Young University Christopher Sorensen, Brigham Young University Aleksandra Sznajder Lee, University of Richmond Cynthia M. Horne, Western Washington University STATE, CIVIL SOCIETY, AND Thu 10:15 am IDENTITY IN EUROPE No Room Assigned Holley E. Hansen, University of Puget Sound States and National Minorities in the European Union Dietmar Schirmer, University of Florida The EP Elections as an Arena for Ethnic Minority Representation: Evidence from New EU Member States Maria Spirova, Leiden University Public Goods Provision: Evidence from Catholicism and Islam Ramazan Kilinc, Michigan State University Carolyn M. Warner, Arizona State University Adam Cohen, Arizona State University Reifying Ethnicity? Measuring National Identity in Europe John Coakley, University College Dublin, Belfield THE EUROPEAN RIGHT Sat 4:15 pm No Room Assigned William M. Downs, Georgia State University We Want More, We Want More Bystander Responses, Trickle-down Politics, and Xenophobic Mobilization Robert Braun, Cornell University Disc: 15-12 Room: Chair: Papers:

Ideology and the Rights of the Nation in Party Alignments on the EU: A Comparison of Conservative Parties in Britain, France and Poland Chris Flood, University of Surrey Rafal Soborski, Richmond. The American International University in London Left-Right Position, Authoritarianism, Euroskepticism and Support for the Extreme Right, East and West Florin Nicolae Fesnic, Babes-Bolyai University Romana Careja, University of Cologne Changing Demographics & Xenophobia: How Immigrant Population Change Affects Public Attitudes in the UK Seth Kincaid Jolly, Syracuse University William M. Downs, Georgia State University Christopher S. Allen, University of Georgia RESPONSES TO THE Fri 8:00 am FINANCIAL CRISIS IN EUROPE No Room Assigned Kevin Costa, Radio France Internationale Varieties of Welfare Capitalism, Varieties of Economic Adjustment: The Differential Response of Europes Social Systems to the Financial Crisis. Martin J. Rhodes, University of Denver Double Jeopardy: How the Left Loses from Asymmetric Partisan Accountability Mark Andreas Kayser, Hertie School of Governance From Sick Man to Miracle: Explaining the Robustness of the German Labor Market during the Financial Crisis Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University Alexander Reisenbichler, George Washington University Small States and Financial Globalization Jana Grittersova, University of California, Riverside Sofia A. Perez, Boston University Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron CITIZEN SUPPORT FOR THE Thu 2:00 pm EU No Room Assigned Christine Arnold, Universiteit Maastricht What Does the European Union Mean to Its Citizens? Implicit Triggers, Identity(ies) and Attitudes to the European Union Stratos Patrikios, University of Strathclyde James Mitchell, University of Strathclyde Euroskepticism, Party Conflict, and Voter Participation in European Parliament Elections Erik R. Tillman, DePaul University Support for the European Union in the Context of National Democratic Challenges Christine Arnold, Universiteit Maastricht Galina Zapryanova, University of Pittsburgh Michael Malecki, Columbia University THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS & Sun 10:15 am THE SECURITY OF STATES AND MIGRANTS IN EUROPE No Room Assigned Terri E. Givens, University of Texas, Austin

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 15-10 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 15-13 Room: Chair: Papers:

15-11 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 15-14

Room: Chair:

58

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DIVISION PANELS

Papers:

Disc: 15-15 Room: Chair: Papers:

Immigration Norms in a New Security World: The Effects of Framing Threat on Immigrant Incorporation Gallya Lahav, SUNY, Stony Brook Free Movement and Discrimination Willem Maas, York University Between Being Feared and Being Tolerated: Rromas Wicked Position in the European Union Cristina Dragomir, New School University The Implementation of a Global Migrants Rights Agenda: Evidence from a Qualitative Case Analysis Justin Gest, Harvard University Institutional Incorporation and Ethnic Mobilization in Cyprus and Turkey Huseyin Alptekin, University of Texas, Austin What Would Europeans Think About Immigration If They Stopped to Talk About It? Peter Mohanty, University of Texas, Austin Terri E. Givens, University of Texas, Austin RELIGION AND POLITICS IN Fri 4:15 pm EUROPE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 33-1 Alexandra Hennessy, Clarkson University Votes and Votive Candles: Modernization, Secularization, Vatican II, and the Decline of Religious Voting in Italy: 1953-1992 E. Spencer Wellhofer, University of Denver Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna Religion and Immigrant Political Action: A CrossNational Study of 23 European Democracies Aida Just, Bilkent University Ola Listhaug, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim Maria Elena Sandovici, Lamar University Marginalized But Not Powerless: The Opposition to the Ahmadiyya Mosque in Heinersdorf, Germany Catherine L. Corliss, Brown University Holley E. Hansen, University of Puget Sound GOVERNING EUROPES Thu 4:15 pm ECONOMIC AND MONETARY UNION: GERMAN AND FRENCH LESSONS FROM THE SOVEREIGN DEBT CRISIS No Room Assigned The EMU Sovereign Debt Crisis: The Power and Sustainability of German Economic Ideas Matthias Matthijs, American University-SIS Running on Only One Engine? European Integration in a Period of German Preference Volatility Abraham Newman, Georgetown University The Elusive Gouvernement Economique of the Euro Nicolas Jabko, Johns Hopkins University Germany and the Sovereign Debt Debate in Central and Eastern Europe Wade Jacoby, Brigham Young University

15-17

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Disc: 15-18

THE EUROPEAN UNION AS A Fri 2:00 pm GLOBAL ACTOR SINCE LISBON: IDEALS, INSTITUTIONS AND INTERESTS. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-1 John T.S. Keeler, University of Pittsburgh Principles and Values Underpinning EU Foreign and Security Policy in an Emerging Multi-Polar World Jolyon Howorth, Yale University The Limits of Path Dependence: Institutional Change and the Defense Policies of the European Union Anand Menon, University of Birmingham Europe as a Smart Power: The Impact of the European External Action Service Maia Keapuolani Davis Cross, University of Southern California Matching Ambition to Resources: The EU as a Global Actor in an Era of Financial Scarcity Zachary A. Selden, University of Florida John T.S. Keeler, University of Pittsburgh SMALL STATES Sat 8:00 am RECONSIDERED: RECONCILING FLEXIBILITY AND RIGIDITY IN ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-15 Green Growth in an Age of Austerity: The Red Queen Dilemma in Public Policy Robert Henry Cox, University of Oklahoma Small State Literature Revisited: Do Small Eurozone States Have an Advantage in Navigating the Crisis? Lessons from the Netherlands Paulette Kurzer, University of Arizona Small States and Big Bubbles: Asymmetric Adjustment in Northern Europe Darius Ornston, University of Georgia Dan Breznitz, Georgia Institute of Technology Opportunity and Threat: International Markets and the Small States of Central and Eastern Europe Wade Jacoby, Brigham Young University Dorothee Bohle, Central European University David Art, Tufts University Mark Huberty, University of California, Berkeley EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVES ON PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 37-23 Sat 4:15 pm

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Disc: 15-16

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Disc: 15-19 Room: 15-20

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FRENCH LEGISLATIVE Sat 2:00 pm POLITICS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Association Franaise de Science Politique Group, Panel 1

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

59

16

INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

Chair: Papers:

Division Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Chair: Hill 16-1 Room: 16-2 BANKING REGULATION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-34 Thu 2:00 pm

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 16-3

THEME PANEL: Fri 4:15 pm INTERNATIONAL POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 39-1 Kenneth Shadlen, London School of Economics TRIPS: Fifteen Years Later Susan K. Sell, George Washington University Changing Preferences, Collective Action and Mobilization in Indias Pharmaceutical Sector Aseema Sinha, University of Wisconsin, Madison Global Health Security, Vaccine Development and Intellectual Property Rights: Indonesia Challenges the World Health Organization Ann Marie Murphy, Seton Hall University Revisiting TRIPS Implementation: The Political Economy of Patent and Science-TechnologyInnovation Policy Kenneth Shadlen, London School of Economics Andrew Mertha, Cornell University THE DESIGN AND EFFECTS OF Sat 10:15 am PREFERENTIAL TRADE AGREEMENTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-28 B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University International Trade Institutions, Credible Commitments and Investment Flows into Developing Countries Helen V. Milner, Princeton University Tim Buthe, Duke University Political Appointments to Preferential Trade Agreements Julia Gray, University of Pittsburgh Commerce and Institutions: Trade, Scope, and the Design of Regional Economic Organizations Yoram Z. Haftel, University of Illinois, Chicago Evolution of PTAs: Technological Innovations and the Changing Logic of Trade Agreements Moonhawk Kim, University of Colorado at Boulder To Bind or Not to Bind? Explaining Flexibility Provisions in Preferential Trade Agreements Leonardo Baccini Manfred Elsig, University of Bern Karolina M. Milewicz, University of Bern Daniel Y. Kono, University of California, Davis B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University THE POLITICS OF FDI AND MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-24 Thu 10:15 am

Disc: 16-5

Pablo Martin Pinto, Columbia University Domestic Political Institutions and the Sectoral Composition of Inward Foreign Direct Investment in Developing Countries Boliang Zhu, Columbia University Democratic Institutions and Performance Requirements for Foreign Direct Investors Quan Li, Texas A&M University Government Policies to Compensate for Political Risk Nathan Jensen, Washington University, St. Louis Noel Pereyra Johnston, Washington University in St. Louis The Politics of Investment under Imperfect Capital Mobility Pablo Martin Pinto, Columbia University Santiago Miguel Pinto, West Virginia University The Democratic Advantage and Sectoral Foreign Direct Investment: The Importance of Strong Courts and the Rule of Law Joseph L. Staats, University of Minnesota, Duluth Glen Biglaiser, Texas Tech University Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia Quan Li, Texas A&M University GOVERNING BILATERALLY: Fri 8:00 am THE POLITICS OF BITS AND PTAS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Practicing Politics Working Group, Panel 1 Edmund J. Malesky, University of California, San Diego Curious Inconsistencies: An Examination of the Asymmetries Between Preferential Trade Agreements and Bilateral Investment Treaties Adam Chilton, Harvard University When a BIT Just Isnt Enough: Why We See Investment Chapters in PTAs Raymond Hicks, Princeton University Kristina Johnson, Princeton University Designing Commitment! The Politics of Dispute Settlement Mechanisms in Preferential Trade Agreements Tobias Hofmann, College of William & Mary Soo Yeon Kim, Transatlantic Academy The Impact of the Consulting Profession on Academic Research and Teaching: What this Means for Trade Policy Research Sarita D. Jackson, North Carolina A&T State University When the Claim Hits: Bounded Rationality in the International Investment Regime Lauge Skovgaard Poulsen, London School of Economics Edmund J. Malesky, University of California, San Diego THE POLITICAL ECONOMY Thu 2:00 pm OF FINANCIAL CRISES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-25 Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University

Room:

Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 16-6 Room:

Disc: 16-4

Chair:

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60

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Papers:

Disc: 16-7

Partisan Financial Cycles J. Lawrence Broz, University of California, San Diego Democracy and Financial Crisis Phillip Y. Lipscy, Stanford University The Comparative Politics of Too Big to Fail Kay Shimizu, Columbia University Financial Levees: Regulation, Market Structure, and Banking Crises Around the World Mark S. Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison Government Responses to Financial Crises: Identifying Patterns and Policy Origins Eunyoung Ha, Claremont Graduate University Myung-koo Kang, Claremont McKenna College Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University ECONOMIC STATECRAFT IN Fri 2:00 pm THE 21ST CENTURY: HOW CHINA DOES IT No Room Assigned David A. Baldwin, Princeton University China-DPRK Engagement: Evidence from a Firm-level Survey Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego Marcus Noland, Institute for International Economics Three Roads: Chinas Strategic Preferential Trade Policies Marc Lanteigne, University of St. Andrews Economic Statecraft with Chinese Characteristics: A Theoretical Framework William Norris, Princeton University Economic Involvement and Good Neighborhood Policy: Chinese Strategies in Central Asia Sebastien Peyrouse, Central Asia-Caucasus Institute The Role of Perceptions in Economic Statecraft Kay Shimizu, Columbia University Peter Goodings Swartz, Massachusetts Institute of Technology David A. Baldwin, Princeton University John Ravenhill, Australian National University THEME PANEL: JUST SUPPLY Sat 2:00 pm CHAINS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-26 Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Problems of Compliance with Labor Standards Richard Michael Locke, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Consumer Demand for Just Labor Standards: The Alta Gracia Program Michael J. Hiscox, Harvard University Jens Hainmueller, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Voluntary Programs, Business Cycles, and Environmental Performance: The Case ofISO 14001 Aseem Prakash, University of Washington, Seattle Matthew Potoski, Iowa State University

Creating Brand Responsibility: The Role and Power of Universities as Institutional Consumers Margaret Levi, University of Washington, Seattle Anne Regan Greenleaf, University of Washington Milli Lake, University of Washington, Seattle 16-9 Room: Chair: Papers: THE POLITICS OF LABOR Sat 4:15 pm RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 1 Eve S. Weinbaum, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Trade-offs among Worker Rights David L. Cingranelli, SUNY, Binghamton K. Chad Clay, SUNY, Binghamton University Colin Barry, Binghamton University The Limits of Voluntary Governance Programs: Auditing Labor Rights in the Global Apparel Industry Mark Anner, Pennsylvania State University Persuasion, Coercion and the Domestic Costs of Compliance: Evaluating the NAALC Resolutions against Mexico Kimberly A. Nolan Garcia, University of New Mexico Whats Next For Workers Rights? Assessing Labor Rights in an Age of Austerity Susan Lee Kang, CUNY, John Jay College When Right is Rite: The Political Economy of Labor Rights, Inflexicurity, and the Failure of Democracy Christopher M. Brown, Arcadia University Shareen Hertel, University of Connecticut Immanuel Ness, Brooklyn College / CUNY PUBLIC OPINION, FOREIGN Thu 4:15 pm POLICY AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS No Room Assigned Helen V. Milner, Princeton University Support for Multilateralism in the US: Public Attitudes toward Foreign Aid, Trade, Military Intervention. Helen V. Milner, Princeton University Dustin Halliday Tingley, Harvard University Racial Prejudice and Paternalism in Mass Support for Foreign Aid Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder Jennifer Fitzgerald, University of Colorado, Boulder A Critical Test: How Important are Industry Effects for Attitudes towards Trade and Immigration Jens Hainmueller, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Michael J. Hiscox, Harvard University Yotam M. Margalit, Columbia University Industry, Self-Interest, and Individual Preferences over Trade Policy Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University Does Compensating the Losers Increase Support for Trade? An Experimental Test of the Embedded Liberalism Thesis Sean D. Ehrlich, Florida State University Eddie Hearn, Florida State University Lisa L. Martin, University of Wisconsin, Madison Adam J. Berinsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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16-11

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THE POLITICAL ECONOMY Thu 8:00 am OF US FOREIGN RELATIONS LAW No Room Assigned Kal Raustiala, University of California, Los Angeles The Domestic Politics of the US Treaty II Ratification Process Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin, Madison Judith Kelley, Duke University Our Partisan Foreign Affairs Constitution Jide Nzelibe, Northwestern University The Political Economy of Extraterritoriality Paul B. Stephan, University of Virginia Extraterritorial Regulation and U.S. Bargaining Over International Trademark Protections Tonya L. Putnam, Columbia University Kal Raustiala, University of California, Los Angeles WHEN DO INTERNATIONAL Fri 4:15 pm INSTITUTIONS AFFECT STATE BEHAVIOR? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 17-1 Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Enforcement Power of IOs Robert L. Brown, Temple University Cooperation in Hard Times: Self-Restraint of Trade Protection Christina Davis, Princeton University Krzysztof J. Pelc, Princeton University Best Evidence: The Role of Information in Domestic Judicial Enforcement of International Human Rights Agreements Yonatan Lupu, University of California, San Diego Lead, Follow, Reform, or Spoil? China in Multilateral Governance Scott L. Kastner, University of Maryland Margaret M. Pearson, University of Maryland Chad Rector, George Washington University Against Compliance Lisa L. Martin, University of Wisconsin, Madison Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin, Madison Erik Voeten, Georgetown University INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL Sat 8:00 am ECONOMY OF MIGRATION No Room Assigned Kenneth F. Scheve, Yale University Attitudes towards Immigration: The Role of Immigrant Employment and Industry Growth in Changing Economic Times Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University Michael Donnelly, Princeton University Barriers to Entry: Occupational Licensing and Skilled Migration David Leblang, University of Virginia Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia Explaining the Link between Immigration Policy, Capital Policy, and Trade Policy: Evidence from a New Dataset Margaret E. Peters, Stanford University

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Democratization and International Labor Mobility David H. Bearce, University of Colorado, Boulder Jennifer Ann Laks Hutnick, Univeristy of Pittsburgh Politically Motivated Remittances and Subnational Elections in Mexico Angela OMahony, University of California, San Diego David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kenneth F. Scheve, Yale University INTERNATIONAL Sun 8:00 am ORGANIZATION: UNEXPECTED ROLES OF NONSTATE ACTORS No Room Assigned Wendy Wong, University of Toronto Norm Diffusion in IGO Networks: The Case of Womens Rights and Gay Rights Brian D. Greenhill, Dartmouth College Benjamin A. Valentino, Dartmouth College International Bureaucrats in Institutional Design Tana Johnson, Princeton University The Institutional Design of International NGOs: Intended and Unintended Consequences Sarah S. Stroup, Middlebury College Wendy Wong, University of Toronto Networks and New Norm Development R. Charli Carpenter, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Clifford A. Bob, Duquesne University Tim Buthe, Duke University POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Fri 10:15 am MULTILATERAL AID ORGANIZATIONS No Room Assigned Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Splitting the Check: Counterpart Commitments in World Bank Projects Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Jaclyn D Streitfeld-Hall, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Who Complies? The Determinants of Compliance with Aid Agreements Desha M. Girod, Georgetown University Jennifer Tobin, Georgetown University The Catalytic Effect of IMF Lending Terrence Chapman, University of Texas, Austin Songying Fang, Rice University Randall W. Stone, University of Rochester The Political Economy of Project Preparation: An Empirical Analysis of World Bank Projects Christopher Kilby, Villanova University Hedging Bets: Development Aid for Risky Projects Sarah Bermeo, Duke University Sarah Bermeo, Duke University Christopher Kilby, Villanova University

16-14

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16-13 Room: Chair: Papers:

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16-16 Room: Chair: Papers:

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EXCHANGE RATES AND Sun 10:15 am MONETARY POLITICS No Room Assigned Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Democracy and International Exchange Rate Commitments David H. Bearce, University of Colorado, Boulder Trade Flows, Trade Cooperation, and the Likelihood of Monetary Cooperation Scott B. Cooper, Brigham Young University The Pen is Mightier than the Sword: How Oral Intervention Trumps Actual Intervention in the Foreign Exchange (FX) Market. Adrian Shin, University of Michigan Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill THE DETERMINANTS OF Fri 2:00 pm FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT No Room Assigned Quan Li, Texas A&M University Variations in Foreign Direct Investment in Authoritarian Regimes Ida Bastiaens, University of Pittsburgh Risk Begins at Home: The Effects of Political Risk on Outward FDI from Developing Countries Quintin H. Beazer, Ohio State University Daniel J. Blake, Princeton University Competing for Capital: When and Why Do Governments Incentivize Foreign Direct Investment? Kristina Johnson, Princeton University South-South FDI: An Institutional Analysis Isik Ozel, Sabanci University Serdar Sayan, TOBB University of Economics and Technology Micro-Determinants of Foreign Investment: Evidence from the Telecom Sector Allison F. Kingsley, University of Vermont Tobias Hofmann, College of William & Mary Quan Li, Texas A&M University NEW RESEARCH ON PUBLIC Sat 2:00 pm OPINION AND TRADE No Room Assigned Scott R. Powell, Ohio State University A Comparative Analysis of Individual Preferences for Trade and Foreign Direct Investment Jason Ian McMann, Princeton University Labor Mobility, Individual Trade Preference, and Compensation Policy-- Evidence From the US Survey Data Qiang Zhou The Social Psychology of Support for International Trade Liberalization Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron Will J. Miller, Southeast Missouri State University Back to the Basics: How Measuring Non-Opinions Affects the Validity of Sociotropic Explanations of Foreign Trade Preferences Mark Nance, North Carolina State University Michael D. Cobb, North Carolina State University

Disc: 16-19

What We Dont Know (or Refuse to Say) about Gender and Trade Policy Preferences Katja B. Kleinberg, SUNY, Binghamton University Benjamin O. Fordham, SUNY, Binghamton Scott R. Powell, Ohio State University Benjamin O. Fordham, SUNY, Binghamton INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL Fri 10:15 am ECONOMY AND INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 45-1 Robert G. Blanton, University of Memphis International Trafficking in Human Beings: An Analysis of Policies and Outcomes Eric Neumayer, London School of Economics Axel Dreher, ETH Zurich Seo-Young Cho, University of Goettingen Womens Rights and Foreign Direct Investment: An Empirical Assessment Robert G. Blanton, University of Memphis Shannon Lindsey Blanton, University of Memphis Structural Adjustment Programs and Human Rights:The Counterintuitive Effect of Democracy Horace A. Bartilow, University of Kentucky Yanyu Ke, University of Kentucky Reevaluating the Relationship Between Human Rights and Globalization Autumn Lockwood Payton, European University Institute Byungwon Woo, Ohio State University A Survey of Public Opinion Research on Human Trafficking Yuliya V. Tverdova, University of California, Irvine Reed M. Wood, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Matthew E. Carnes, Georgetown University FOREIGN DIRECT Fri 8:00 am INVESTMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS No Room Assigned Nathan Jensen, Washington University, St. Louis Good for the Goose, Bad for the Flock? FDI in Developing Countries Nita Rudra, University of Pittsburgh Siddharth Joshi, Indian Institute of Management Types of Foreign Direct Investment and Industry Demands for Trade Protection Hak-Seon Lee, James Madison University Foreign Direct Investors, Nationality, and Government Breach of Contract Rachel Wellhausen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Factor Endowments, Labor Strength, and the Level of Outward FDI Jeong-Hyun Kim, Korea University Do Developing Countries Invest Up? The Environmental Effects of Foreign Direct Investment From Less Developed Countries Ka Zeng, University of Arkansas Joshua C. Eastin, University of Washington, Seattle Nathan Jensen, Washington University, St. Louis

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16-20

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63

16-21

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Disc: 16-22

SOVEREIGN DEBT, Sat 4:15 pm SOVEREIGN LENDING AND SOVEREIGN WEALTH FUNDS No Room Assigned Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University The Rise of Credit Default Swaps and the Changing Political Environment of Sovereign Debt Markets Gustavo Seignemartin de Carvalho, University of Toronto We Wont Be the First to Tap into Pensions: Pension Savings as Stave Levers for Sovereign Debt Financing and Local Investment Giselle Datz, Virginia Tech U.S. International Last-Resort Lending, 1976-2008: Explaining Selection and Outcomes Daniel McDowell, University of Virginia Varieties of State Capitalism: A Comparative Study of Russian and Chinese Overseas Expansion Strategies Xin Zhang, Reed College Are Sovereign Wealth Funds Politically Driven? An Analysis of the Domestic Motives of SWF Governance Di Wang, Texas A&M University Joseph L. Staats, University of Minnesota, Duluth Stephen B. Kaplan, Princeton University THE POLITICS OF Sat 8:00 am INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS No Room Assigned Mark S. Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison Assessing the World Banks Influence on the Good Governance Paradigm Gaoussou Diarra, CERDI, Universit dAuvergne Patrick Plane, CERDI, Universit dAuvergne International Negotiations and National Elections: The Case of IMF Labor Market Conditionality Stephanie J. Rickard, London School of Economics Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota Evaluating the Effect of IMF Conditionality Design: A Revisit to the Catalytic Effect of IMF Program Byungwon Woo, Ohio State University Does Saying No to Capital Inflows Mean Good Business? The Experience of Latin America and the Caribbean in Combating the Flow of Dirty Money Monica Arruda de Almeida, Georgetown University Maria Elisa Farias, Universidad Diego Portales What Explains IMF Policy Shifts In Regards to Low Income Countries? The 1982, 1999, and 2008 Cases. Mark R. Hibben, Syracuse University Mark S. Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison Ruth Ben-Artzi, Providence College RESPONSIBILITIES AND Thu 4:15 pm RIGHTS OF FIRMS AND GOVERNMENTS IN THE GLOBAL EONCOMY No Room Assigned Duane H. Swank, Marquette University

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Are Business-driven Voluntary Programs Becoming Multi-stakeholder Governed? Legitimation Politics in the Transnational Private Regulation of Social and Environmental Rights Luc Fransen, University of Amsterdam The Rise of Corporate Responsibility and MarketLiberalism across the OECD: 1977-2010 Daniel Phillip Kinderman, University of Delaware Doing Well by Doing Good? Understanding the Impact of Domestic Political Institutions on Multinational Corporations Environmental Responsibility Strategies Holger Meyer, University of Georgia Institutional Designs and Effectiveness of Global Standard Initiatives (GSI): An Empirical Evaluation Claude Meier, University of Zurich Allison F. Kingsley, University of Vermont Duane H. Swank, Marquette University NEW RESEARCH ON FOREIGN Thu 8:00 am AID No Room Assigned Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Frustrated Do-Gooders: Does a Poor NGO Environment Impede Foreign Aid Effectiveness? Darren G. Hawkins, Brigham Young University Nicholas Steven Jones, Brigham Young University Disease Control and Donor Priorities: The Political Economy of Development Aid for Health Carie Steele, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Donor Proliferation as Insurance against Aid Shocks Martin Steinwand, SUNY, Stony Brook University Explaining Donor Heterogeneity in Aid for Trade Samuel Brazys, Indiana University Jennifer Tobin, Georgetown University Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign THE POLITICAL ECONOMY Sat 2:00 pm OF RESOURCES AND COMMODITIES No Room Assigned Cameron G. Thies, University of Iowa The International Flypaper Effect: Nontax Revenue, Taxation, and Spending Around the World Kevin Morrison, Cornell University Feeding the Body Politic: Commodity Shocks and Government Survival David Leblang, University of Virginia William T. Bernhard, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Oil and Globalization Erik Voeten, Georgetown University Michael L. Ross, University of California, Los Angeles State Ownership and the Resource Curse: A CrossCountry Study of Nationalizations in the Oil Industry Paasha Mahdavi, University of California, Los Angeles Globalization, Natural Resources, and Separatist Wars Sandra N. Popiden, Bridgewater State College

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16-25

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16-23

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Disc: 16-26

Cameron G. Thies, University of Iowa Jeff Colgan, American University NETWORKS IN Sat 10:15 am INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 50-2 Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Diplomatic Networks and International Trade Daniel Maliniak, University of California, San Diego Michael Plouffe, University of California at San Diego Fiscal Stimulus and International Competition Joyce Lawrence, Massachusetts Institute of Technology A Networks Approach to the Determinants of Foreign Direct Investment Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Andrew Pennock, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Will Winecoff, University of North Carolina The Global Governance of the Illicit Economy: Networking of the United States in the Financial Action Taskforce Anja P. Jakobi, Peace Research Institute Frankfurt Karin Svedberg Helgesson, Stockholm School of Economics Do IOs Foster Horizontal Cooperation? A Network Analysis of the International Atomic Energy Agency Isabella Alcaniz, University of Pennsylvania Yonatan Lupu, University of California, San Diego TRADE AGREEMENTS: NEW Thu 2:00 pm LEGAL AND INSTITUTIONAL DIMENSIONS No Room Assigned Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania Policy Transparency and Compliance with Preferential Trade Agreements Stephanie J. Rickard, London School of Economics Daniel Y. Kono, University of California, Davis On The Use and Misuse of Audiences: Signalling Resolve at the World Trade Organization Krzysztof J. Pelc, Princeton University Leslie Johns, University of California, Los Angeles Can Preferential Trading Agreements Enable a Credible Commitment to Economic Reform? Leonardo Baccini Johannes Urpelainen, Columbia University Flexibility and the Effectiveness of Preferential Trade Agreements Soo Yeon Kim, Transatlantic Academy Political Trade Dependence and PTA Formation Mark S. Manger, London School of Economics Kenneth Shadlen, London School of Economics Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin, Madison

16-28

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SCOPE AND HETEROGENEITY Fri 2:00 pm IN LOCAL AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE. REVISITING KEOHANE AND OSTROM, LOCAL COMMONS AND GLOBAL INTERDEPENDENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-27 Elinor Ostrom, Indiana University, Bloomington Actor Heterogeneity in the Climate Regime: Private Authority for Public Purpose Jessica F. Green, Case Western Reserve University Local and Global Governance and the Challenge of Heterogeneity: Revisiting the Empirical, Normative and Policy Aspects Paul Dragos Aligica, George Mason University Local Action for the Global Climate Commons Liliana Botcheva-Andonova, Harvard University Explaining the Fragmentation of Global Institutions on Climate Change David G. Victor, University of California, San Diego Robert O. Keohane, Princeton University RETHINKING Fri 4:15 pm INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY AND INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION: NEW THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL DIRECTIONS No Room Assigned Henry Farrell, George Washington University Historical Institutionalism in the International Economy: Information Exchange in the Transatlantic Relationship Abraham Newman, Georgetown University Hegemonic Crises in Scale Free Networks Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Beyond the Standard Model? Mark Blyth, Brown University Investigating the Culture of Inequality Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University James A. Caporaso, University of Washington David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology TRADE, OUTSOURCING AND Sat 4:15 pm INVESTMENT, NOW AND THEN No Room Assigned Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University Interwar Trade Blocs: New Data and Conventional Wisdom Joanne Gowa, Princeton University Raymond Hicks, Princeton University Tariffs, Treaties and Delegation Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University Robert Gulotty, Stanford University Understanding American Attitudes Toward Outsourcing Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania Diana C. Mutz, University of Pennsylvania

Disc: 16-27

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Bilateral Investment Treaties and Foreign Direct Investment B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University The New Political Economy of Trade: Heterogeneous Firms and Politics Michael Plouffe, University of California at San Diego Christina Davis, Princeton University CHINA, THE U.S., AND FOREIGN ECONOMIC POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-23 ECONOMICS AND CONFLICT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-24 Thu 10:15 am

17-3 Room: Chair: Papers:

Thu 8:00 am

WORKERS RIGHTS IN AN Fri 4:15 pm INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 2

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INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION

Division Sonia Cardenas, Trinity College Chair: 17-1 WHEN DO INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AFFECT STATE BEHAVIOR? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-12 Fri 4:15 pm

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THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF Fri 10:15 am HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES No Room Assigned Jana von Stein, University of Michigan Why Hasnt the US Ratified the UN Womens Rights Convention? Lisa Baldez, Dartmouth College Veto Players, Domestic Politics, and Treaty Ratification: Explaining the Use of Reservations, Understandings, and Declarations on Human Rights Treaties Patrick Kearney, University of Wisconsin, Madison Ryan M. Powers, University of Wisconsin, Madison Autocracies, Torture, and the Efficacy of Human Rights Treaties Beatrice Manske, Pennsylvania State University What is the Domestic Collective Action Problem of International Human Rights Regimes? William Phelan, Trinity College, Dublin Federalism and Compliance with Human Rights Agreements Thania Sanchez, University of Iowa Tonya L. Putnam, Columbia University Jana von Stein, University of Michigan INFORMAL INTERNATIONAL Sat 2:00 pm INSTITUTIONS No Room Assigned Mareike O. Kleine, London School of Economics Duncan Snidal, University of Oxford Whats Left Out and Why? Informal Provisions in Formal International Law Barbara Koremenos, University of Michigan Informal Governance and Optimal Discretion in the European Union Mareike O. Kleine, London School of Economics Soft Law and the Global Climate Regime Alexander Thompson, Ohio State University Informal Intergovernmental Organizations (IIGOs) Felicity Vabulas, University of Chicago Duncan Snidal, University of Oxford Randall W. Stone, University of Rochester EXPLAINING Fri 4:15 pm TRANSNATIONAL ACTOR ACCESS TO INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS No Room Assigned Duncan Snidal, University of Oxford Explaining Formal Access of Transnational Actors to International Organizations Jonas Tallberg, Stockholm University Thomas Sommerer, Stockholm University Exploring Mechanisms of Change in the Transnational Design of International Organizations Theresa Squatrito, Stockholm University When and Why do Intergovernmental Organizations Grant Formal Access to NGOs? Felicity Vabulas, University of Chicago Why Do International Organizations Cooperate with Non-State Actors in Transnational Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs)? Andrea Liese, University of Potsdam

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DO INTERNATIONAL Sun 8:00 am INSTITUTIONS ADVANCE HUMAN RIGHTS? NEW EMPIRICAL LINKAGES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 45-2 Ann Marie Clark, Purdue University Taking Human Rights Seriously? Assessing the UNSCs Counterterrorist Policies and Practices. George J. Andreopoulos, CUNY, John Jay College and Graduate Center The Legalization and Bureaucratization of the UN Human Rights System: Progress or Peril? Courtney Hillebrecht, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Multilateral Governance and Human Rights: How Individual Petition at the UN Enhances Domestic Rights Protections Heather M. Smith, Lewis & Clark College Peace and Justice in Darfur: International Criminal Court Action and Violence against Civilians Michael Patrick Broache, Columbia University Truth Commissions: Reputation Formation and Lending in the Aftermath of Transitions Andrea Abel, Stanford University The Changing Position of the European Parliament on Immigration Esther Lopatin, Georgetown University Ann Marie Clark, Purdue University David Mednicoff, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

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Disc: 17-6

Judith Kelley, Duke University THEME PANEL: RIGHTS Sat 10:15 am BASED APPROACHES TO DEVELOPMENT: HAVE THEY MADE A DIFFERENCE? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-29 Varun Gauri, The World Bank Group The Politics of Rights Based Approaches to Development Siri Gloppen, University of Bergen Varun Gauri, The World Bank Group Taking Stock: A Review of Evidence on the Effectiveness and Impact of Rights-based Approaches to Development Uwe Gneiting, Freie Universitt Berlin Do Opposites Attract?: The Gap between Human Rights and Development Discourses Hans Peter Schmitz, Syracuse University Rights Based Approaches to Development: Justice and Legal Fiction in Africa Susanna D. Wing, Haverford College Michael Goodhart, University of Pittsburgh THEORIZING INTERNATIONAL Thu 2:00 pm LAW: THE STATE OF THE ART No Room Assigned Jeffrey L. Dunoff, Temple University Theorizing International Law: Two Constellations Jeffrey L. Dunoff, Temple University Mark A. Pollack, Temple University Liberal Theory and International Law Andrew Moravcsik, Princeton University Rational Choice, Rational Design, and International Law Barbara Koremenos, University of Michigan Regime Complexity and International Law Kal Raustiala, University of California, Los Angeles Legitimacy in International Law Daniel Bodansky, Arizona State University Jeffrey L. Dunoff, Temple University EVOLVING APPROACHES TO Fri 2:00 pm GLOBAL HEALTH No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 48-1 Beate Sissenich, Indiana University International Treaty Compliance Evidence from Public Health Jeffrey Drope, Marquette University Finding the Middle Ground: Multinational Enterprises and Social Movements for Global Health Margaret Hanson, Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College Can International Soft Law Effectively Protect Human Rights? Evidence from the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel and the Human Right to Health Jennifer Edge, McMaster University Steven J. Hoffman, McMaster University Delayed, Deferred, and Denied: Right to Antiretroviral Treatment You-Te Liao, Insitute of International Relations

Disc: 17-9

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Smoking, Drinking, and Dengue Fever: Programmatic Elites and the Rise of Some European Union Health Policies Scott L. Greer, University of Michigan Heather A. Elliott, University of Michigan Lorraine Frisina Doetter, University of Bremen Beate Sissenich, Indiana University PATHWAYS TO COMPLIANCE Thu 4:15 pm AND COOPERATION IN EUROPE No Room Assigned Jonas Tallberg, Stockholm University Non-compliance as Bargaining Failure. Strategic Interaction under Uncertainty and the Escalation of Infringement Proceedings Tobias Hofmann, College of William & Mary Solidarity and Collective Action in the European Union Edward A. Fogarty, Colgate University Identity, Strategy and Legal Compliance in the European Union: Effects of We-Ness on Infringements A. Burcu Bayram, Ohio State University European States and NGOs in Humanitarian Norm Making and Promotion Margarita H. Petrova, Barcelona Institute for International Studies (IBEI) The Benefits, Domestic Challenges and Opportunity Costs of Compliance in the EU Lucie Spanihelova, Montesquieu Institute Olga V. Shvetsova, Binghamton University, SUNY Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights: A Test Case for Enforcement and Managerial Theories of State Compliance Steven D. Roper, Eastern Illinois University Lilian A. Barria, Eastern Illinois University Jonas Tallberg, Stockholm University Leanne C. Powner VARIETIES OF Sat 4:15 pm MULTILATERALISM No Room Assigned Saori N. Katada, University of Southern California Regional Governance: The Evolution of a New Institutional Form Gary Goertz, University of Arizona Managing Allies: Explaining the Persistence of NATO in the Post-Cold War World Vaidya Gundlupet, University of Texas at San Antonio Why So Many Member Countries in Asia-Pacific IGOs?: Veto Players in International Politics Taisuke Fujita, Keio University Forum Shopping in International Security: Capability Aggregation or Screening? Kerim Can Kavakli, University of Rochester Saori N. Katada, University of Southern California SITUATING TALK: DISCOURSE Sun 10:15 am IN WORLD POLITICS No Room Assigned Diana Panke, University College Dublin

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67

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Disc: 17-12

Expressive Legal Theory and Norms Legitimating the Use of Force Tyler M. Curley, University of Southern California Constructing the Dialogue of Civilizations: Islamic Norm Entrepreneurs and Norm Promotion in Liberal International Society Turan Kayaoglu, University of Washington, Tacoma International Rule Between Empire and Leadership: How Great Britain Began to Argue Before Follower Audiences Matthias Staisch, University of Chicago Law as a Communicative Signal: International Legal Signaling, Economic Sanctions, and Human Rights Audrey Lynn Comstock, Cornell University Geoffrey Wallace, Cornell University CONTENDING SOCIAL Thu 10:15 am MECHANISMS IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS No Room Assigned Ruth Ben-Artzi, Providence College The Problem of Social Integration in International Relations Eric Grynaviski, George Washington University The Illiberal Trading State: Liberal Systemic Theory and the Mechanism of Socialization Quddus Z. Snyder, Lehigh University Socialization vs. Adaptation: Explaining Chinas Behavior towards Multilateral Institutions Kai He, Utah State University Huiyun Feng, Utah State University The Role of Reputation in Election of Non-permanent Members to the UN Security Council Yasemin Irepoglu, University of Pittsburgh Autumn Lockwood Payton, European University Institute GLOBALIZING TRANSITIONAL Sat 8:00 am JUSTICE No Room Assigned George J. Andreopoulos, CUNY, John Jay College and Graduate Center The Industry of Justice: The Transformation of Transitional Justice Advocacy Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University Human Rights Investigations on Trial: Human Rights Reports and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda Jonneke Koomen, Willamette University Carrie Booth Walling, University of Michigan Are Truth and Voice Enough? Why Some Truth Commissions Evolve into Restorative Justice Institutions Kathy L. Powers, University of New Mexico In Pursuit of Successful Transnational Legal Process--Japans Acknowledgement of War Crimes and the Internalization of the Norm on Non-Combatant Immunity Naoko Naoko Kumagai Gendered Justice and Post-Conflict Reconciliation in African Societies: Myth or Reality? Josephine J. Dawuni Carola Weil, University of Southern California

17-14 Room: Chair: Papers:

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POST-CONSTRUCTIVISM IN Thu 8:00 am INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS No Room Assigned Mlada Bukovansky, Smith College The Moral Limits (and Theoretical Possibilities) of Constructivist Theorizing J. Samuel Barkin, University of Florida Laura Sjoberg, University of Florida The Constitutions of International Organization: Towards a Theory of International Constitutional Moments John Oates, Ohio State University Do Old Habits Die Hard? Hegemonic Transitions and Norm Death in Global Politics. Vsevolod Gunitskiy, Columbia University Moral Discourse and Moral Cognition: The Cognitive Foundations of Civilian Immunity David Traven, Ohio State University Mlada Bukovansky, Smith College (RE)CONSTRUCTING Thu 10:15 am TRANSNATIONAL SPACES No Room Assigned Nicole Simonelli, Purdue University The Global City as a Space for Transnational Identity Politics: Nationalist, Religious and Liberal Internationalist Mobilizations in London Fiona B. Adamson, University of London, SOAS Maria V. Koinova Unbundling the Regime Complex: The Role of Private Authority Jessica F. Green, Case Western Reserve University Graeme Auld, Carleton University Starting From Scratch: Forging International Regimes in New Frontiers of Great Power Politics Catherine Sanger, University of Virginia Civil Society Participation and Public Confidence in International Organizations: An Empirical Assessment Lisa Maria Dellmuth, Stockholm University Jonas Tallberg, Stockholm University Peacebuilding and the Statehood-Sovereignty Paradox Naazneen Barma, Naval Postgraduate School Nicole Simonelli, Purdue University WHY STATES COOPERATE: Fri 8:00 am TOWARDS THEORETICAL SYNTHESIS No Room Assigned Joseph M. Grieco, Duke University When to Delegate? The United States, Legalized Dispute Settlement, and the World Trade Organization Andrew P. Cortell, Lewis & Clark College James W. Davis, Jr., University of St. Gallen Power Preponderance, Institutional Homogeneity, and the Likelihood of Regional Integration Gaspare M. Genna, University of Texas, El Paso International Security and the Politics of Interdependence Marina Elisabeth Henke, Princeton University Bilateral Aid Revisited: The Peer Review Mechanisms of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) Ruth Ben-Artzi, Providence College Joseph M. Grieco, Duke University

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17-17

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PRIVATE ACTORS, PUBLIC Sun 8:00 am GOVERNANCE, AND 21ST CENTURY INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS No Room Assigned David James Gartner, Arizona State University Kenneth W. Abbott, Arizona State University Sanjeev Khagram, University of Washington David James Gartner, Arizona State University WHO BELONGS? THE Thu 4:15 pm POLITICS OF JOINING INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS No Room Assigned Judith Kelley, Duke University Joining the Club: Accession to the GATT/WTO Christina Davis, Princeton University Meredith Wilf, Princeton University Demands Now or Disputes Later: WTO Accession Negotiations as a Substitute for Dispute Settlement Todd L. Allee, University of Maryland Jamie Scalera, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Modeling States Participation in Networks of Intergovernmental Organizations Brian D. Greenhill, Dartmouth College Testing Theories of Treaty Commitment: Ratification in the International Human Rights Regime Jana von Stein, University of Michigan Judith Kelley, Duke University COORDINATING RESPONSES TO MARITIME PIRACY: CHANGING NORMS AND CONFLICTING RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-14 NUCLEAR RIGHTS AND NONPROLIFERATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 19-8 INTERNATIONAL LAW AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-15 THEME PANEL: INTERNATIONAL LEGALIZATION AND THE RIGHTS REVOLUTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-12 Fri 2:00 pm

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INTERNATIONAL SECURITY

Division Fiona B. Adamson, University of London, SOAS Chair: Miroslav Nincic, University of California, Davis 18-1 SOVEREIGNTY IN THE BALANCE: HOW STATES MAINTAIN STABILITY IN THE FACE OF INTERNAL DIVISIONS AND PARTISAN INTERVENTIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-59 Sat 10:15 am

17-18

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Disc: Thu 2:00 pm 18-3 Room: Papers:

THE NORTH KOREAN Fri 8:00 am CHALLENGE No Room Assigned Nori Katagiri, Air War College Who Will be Winning the Power Game in Case of North Koreas Collapse? Sunny Lee, Institute for Korea-U.S. Political Development (IKUPD) Causes of North Korean Belligerence Dong Sun Lee, Korea University Dealing with Nuclear North Korea G. Jiyun Kim, New York University Guarding the Dear Leader: Continuing the Theoretical Debate on the Civil-Military Relations in North Korea Dongmin Lee, Nanyang Technological University War Games and Korea: United States and South Korea Joint Military Exercises and the North Korean Response Vito DOrazio, Pennsylvania State University An Eclectic Approach for Resolving North Korean Question: Bilateralism vs. Multilateralism Hyug Baeg Im, Korea University Ju Hee Lee, Korea University Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University IRANS NUCLEAR PROGRAM Fri 2:00 pm No Room Assigned What Would Iran Do with the bomb? Nuclear Coercion and Nuclear Learning Michael D. Cohen, University of British Columbia Are Other Regional States Likely Proliferators in Response to Iran? A Theoretical Framework and Evidence from the Ground Philipp Carroll Bleek, Monterey Institute of International Studies Busting Out: Iranians and the Nuclear NonProliferation Treaty Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron Will J. Miller, Southeast Missouri State University C. Christine Fair, Georgetown University Rogue Dilemma: China and International Cooperation on North Korea and Iran Joel R. Wuthnow, Columbia University Deterrence Theory in a Multi-Nuclear Power World: A Critical Review Rebecca Davis Gibbons, Georgetown University Justin V. Anderson, SAIC Susan B. Martin, Kings College London

Fri 10:15 am

Sat 2:00 pm

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GEOGRAPHY, ECOLOGY, AND Thu 4:15 pm INTERNATIONAL SECURITY No Room Assigned How to Protect the Global Commons from Hybrid Threats? An Analysis of International Collaboration Practices to Establish an Effective International Regime to Govern the Air, Sea, Space and Cyberspace Ccile Wendling, European University Institute Climate Change, Migration, and Conflict Vally Koubi, ETH Zurich Lena M. Schaffer, ETH Zrich Climate Change and Conflict: a New Agenda for Analysis Emily Meierding, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies Realism, Energy and International Conflict: Why the Struggle for Power is Still the Name of the Game Samuel Randolf Schubert, Webster University Johannes Pollak, Institut fr Hhere Studien Military Intervention in Environmental Affairs John Russell Dreyer, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology PREVENTIVE WAR, Sun 10:15 am COMMITMENT PROBLEMS, AND HISTORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 43-1 Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University The Fiscal Commitment Problem: Government Revenue and International Diplomacy, 1816-Present Patrick J. McDonald, University of Texas, Austin Terrence Chapman, University of Texas, Austin Trade Expectations and Japans Decisions for War in 1904 and 1941 Dale Copeland, University of Virginia The Role of Preventive Logic in Japans Decision for War against Russia in 1904 Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University Philip Streich, Pomona College Shifting Power and Regional Conflict: Explaining Persistent Regional War Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania U.S. Preventive War Thinking in the Nuclear Age A Reassessment Francis J. Gavin, Jr., University of Texas, Austin Mira Rapp-Hooper SOURCES OF POWER AND Sat 4:15 pm SECURITY No Room Assigned Spencer D. Bakich, Sweet Briar College Ten Dilemmas of Statecraft Etel L. Solingen, University of California, Irvine Weapon of the Weak? The Use of Non-State Actors in Inter-State Territorial Disputes David B. Carter, Princeton University Popular Culture, Soft Power and International Relations Galia Press-Barnathan, Hebrew University, Jerusalem Hegemony: Self-Sustaining or Self-Liquidating? Michael C. Beckley, Columbia University

Disc: 18-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

Dominant Democracies: The Domestic Sources of Global Hegemony Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University Meeting Violence with Violence: The Connection between Retributive Criminal Justice and Interstate Conflict Rachel M. Stein, Stanford University Robert Rauchhaus, University of California, Santa Barbara POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE Fri 4:15 pm TERRORIST THREAT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-2 Seung-Whan Choi, University of Illinois, Chicago Does U.S. Military Intervention Reduce or Increase Terrorism? Seung-Whan Choi, University of Illinois, Chicago Why Do Some Insurgencies Trigger Terrorist Attacks whereas Others Do Not? Luis De la Calle, Juan March Institute Ignacio Sanchez-Cuenca, Juan March Institute The Consequences of Negotiating with Terrorists Siobhan ONeil, University of California, Los Angeles Democracy and Vulnerability: An Exploitation Theory of Democracies by Terrorists Belgin San-Akca, Koc University Transnational Terrorism and Localized Grievances: Links between Al-Qaeda, Jemaah Islamiyah and Secessionist Groups in Southeast Asia Suranjan Weeraratne, The World Bank Ethnicity, Violence and the Enemy: A Study of Terrorism Christopher Paik, Princeton University Peter Schram, Stanford University Navin A. Bapat, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Deniz Aksoy, Pennsylvania State University CIVIL WAR AND Thu 8:00 am INTERNATIONAL SECURITY No Room Assigned Refugee Flows and Conflict Diffusion along Transnational Ethnic Linkages Seraina Ruegger, ETH Zurich Heidrun Bohnet, University of Geneva Beyond Greed and Grievance: The Causes of Civil Wars Marc Scarcelli, Ohio University Partition as a Solution to Ongoing Ethnic Civil War: Qualifying the Ethnic Security Dilemma Carter R. Johnson Unpacking the Process of Mass Killing: Motives, Means, and Opportunities Brandon M. Boylan, University of Pittsburgh Taylor B. Seybolt Tactical Innovation and the Use of Child Solders in Civil Wars Bryan Robert Early, SUNY, University at Albany Robert Tynes, SUNY, University at Albany Ricardian Rebellions: Does Trade Contribute to Civil War? Amanda St. Marie, University of Mississippi

18-5

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Disc: 18-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

Kevin E. Grisham, California State University, San Bernardino AFGHANISTAN, PAKISTAN, Thu 10:15 am AND THE WAR ON TERROR No Room Assigned Daniel S. Geller, Wayne State University Opium, Gun and Coin: A Blow-by-Blow Analysis of Fighting in Afghanistan Andrew Conway, New York University Abdul G. Noury, New York University Michael J. Gilligan, New York University When Drones Attack: Assessing the Impact of Leadership Targeting in Pakistan on the Conflict in Afghanistan Jacob Aronson, University of Maryland The Impact of Drone Strikes on Terrorism in Pakistan Patrick Johnston, Harvard University Anoop K. Sarbahi, University of California, Los Angeles Belgin San-Akca, Koc University THE DOMESTIC POLITICAL Fri 10:15 am ORIGINS OF INTERNATIONAL STRATEGY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 43-2 Randall Schweller, Ohio State University Explaining the Evolution of Chinas Military Strategy M. Taylor Fravel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Variants of Threat Inflation in U.S. Grand Strategy Benjamin H. Friedman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology The Tools of Strategy and the Politics of Rights Brendan R. Green, Massachusetts Institute of Technology The Least Miserable Option: The Political Economy of U.S. Nuclear Counterforce, 1949-1989 Austin Long, Columbia University War as an Engine of Liberalism? Israels Wars and its Democracy Ronald R. Krebs, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Randall Schweller, Ohio State University KASHMIR AND PALESTINE: Thu 2:00 pm IRRESOLVABLE CONFLICTS? No Room Assigned A Geopolitical Analysis of the Configuration of Israels Security Barrier John P. Vanzo, Bainbridge College International Conflicts and Geopolitics:In The Case of Kashmir between India and Pakistan Dennis Chiahon Chien, Center for Global Peace and Strategic Studies, NCHU Jui-Chi Yueh, NCHU Transitional Justice and Conflict Resolution: Using Symbolic Reparations in the Peace Negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians Michal Ben-Josef Hirsch, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University

18-12 Room: Chair: Papers:

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Disc: 18-13

HUMAN RIGHTS IN VIOLENT Sun 8:00 am CONFLICT No Room Assigned David Malet, Colorado State University, Pueblo Humanitarian Wars and the Evolution of International Security Maria Fanis, Ohio University Human Security and Sovereignty: Polar Opposites or Simply Nodes in a Network? Guilherme A Silva, Georgetown College Dimensions of Violence Against Civilians During Counterinsurgency Colin Nippert, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies The Internal Politics of External Threat: Domestic Human Rights Abuses during International Conflict Thorin Martin Wright, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Politics and the Problem of Evil Sarah Kenyon Lischer, Wake Forest University U.S. Foreign Policy and Habit: Individual vs. Group Rights as a Solution to Ethnic Conflict Lise Morj Howard, Georgetown University Seung-Whan Choi, University of Illinois, Chicago SELF-DETERMINATION AND Sat 2:00 pm INTERNATIONAL (IN)SECURITY No Room Assigned Seung-Whan Choi, University of Illinois, Chicago After the Recognition of Kosovo: Declining International Conflict Management Capability? Marta Vrbetic, Gallaudet University Nationalism, Realpolitik and Diaspora Politics Nikola Mirilovic, University of Central Florida Using Entropy to Explain International Systems Dis(order) Dumitru Minzarari, University of Michigan Unrecognized States: Self-Determination and Foreign Aggression Benjamin Graham, University of California, San Diego Benjamin Horne, University of California, San Diego Giacomo Chiozza, Vanderbilt University COORDINATING RESPONSES Fri 2:00 pm TO MARITIME PIRACY: CHANGING NORMS AND CONFLICTING RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 17-19 Michael J. Struett, North Carolina State University Sovereignty sans Territory: Piracy, International Norms and Challenges to Governance beyond the Waters Edge Jon D. Carlson, University of California, Merced Different Problem, Same Response: Legal Limitations on the Use of Force against Pirates on the High Seas Eric A. Heinze, University of Oklahoma Maritime Piracy and the Impunity Gap: Insufficient National Laws or a Lack of Political Will? Yvonne Dutton, University of Colorado, Boulder

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Disc: 18-11 Room: Papers:

Disc: 18-14

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Disc: 18-15

Maritime Piracy and Regime Complexes: Explaining Low Levels of Coordination Michael J. Struett, North Carolina State University Mark Nance, North Carolina State University Dead Men Tell No Tales: Piracy and the Right of SelfDefense Ritu Lauer, Peninsula College Eric A. Heinze, University of Oklahoma THINKING GLOBALLY, Thu 4:15 pm RESEARCHING LOCALLY: UNDERSTANDING LOCALLEVEL VIOLENCE IN CIVIL WARS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 43-3 Joel S. Migdal, University of Washington Violence and the Politics of Knowledge in the Kurdish Conflict in Turkey Ceren Belge, Concordia University A Plague of Initials: Understanding Fragmentation in Civil Wars Lee Seymour, Leiden University Kristin Marie Bakke, University College London Contesting Commitment Problems and Resource Determinism: An Organizational Approach to War Recurrence Sarah Zukerman Daly, Columbia University Operational Aims and Type of Warfare in Internal Conflict Jonah Schulhofer-Wohl, Yale University Benjamin Smith, University of Florida INTERNATIONAL HIERARCHY Sun 8:00 am AND DOMESTIC POLITICS No Room Assigned John M. Owen, IV, University of Virginia Governing Hierarchy: Indirect Rule in the American System David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego Of Empires and Citizens Amaney Jamal, Princeton University We Are All Georgians Now: State-Building, Social Ties and the Undermining of Authority in US-Georgia Patron-Client Relations Alexander Cooley, Barnard College-Columbia University Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown University The Domestic Origins of US Hierarchy in the Middle East Anne Mariel Peters, Wesleyan University Sean L. Yom, Temple University Stephen D. Krasner, Stanford University John M. Owen, IV, University of Virginia CLIMATE SECURITY 2.0 - NEW Sat 10:15 am DIRECTIONS FOR SCHOLARSHIP No Room Assigned Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin

Papers:

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Disc: 18-18

Of Climate Change and Crystal Balls: The Future Security Consequences of Climate Change in Africa Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin Todd Graham Smith, University of Texas at Austin Kaiba White, University of Texas, Austin Feed the World! The Production of Food Insecurity, Climate Change Vulnerability and Communal Conflict in East Africa Clionadh Raleigh, Trinity College Dublin Here but Not There: Explaining the Strength of the Rainfall-Non-State Conflict Nexus in Africa Cullen S. Hendrix, College of William & Mary Idean Salehyan, University of North Texas Natural Disasters and Social Destabilization in Indonesia Ole Magnus Theisen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology Rune Slettebak, Norweigan University of Science and Technology Thomas F. Homer-Dixon, University of Waterloo THE ROLE OF VALUES IN Thu 2:00 pm FOREIGN POLICY PREFERENCES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-2 Jason A. Reifler, Georgia State University Retributive Support for International Punishment and Torture Peter John Liberman, CUNY, Queens The Draft, Casualty Inequality, and Public Support for War Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University Values, Ideological Structure, and Public Opinion on Torture Jennifer Ramos, Loyola Marymount University Miroslav Nincic, University of California, Davis Personal Values, Political Sophistication, and Policy Preferences Paul N. Goren, University of Minnesota Jason A. Reifler, Georgia State University Thomas John Scotto, University of Essex Thomas John Scotto, University of Essex Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California A NEW COLD WAR? Thu 10:15 am UNDERSTANDING THE RECENT CHILL IN US-CHINA RELATIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Association of Chinese Political Studies, Panel 1 Avery Goldstein, University of Pennsylvania John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College Robert S. Ross, Boston College Jonathan Kirshner, Cornell University

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 18-16 Room: Chair: Papers:

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18-19

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Disc: 18-17

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72

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18-20

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Disc: 18-21

THE TIMES THEY ARE ASat 4:15 pm CHANGIN: THE INTERNATIONAL AND DOMESTIC CONSEQUENCES OF GREAT POWER SHIFTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 43-4 Dale Copeland, University of Virginia Do Old Habits Die Hard? Hegemonic Transitions and Norm Death in Global Politics Vsevolod Gunitskiy, Columbia University State Power, Social Identities, and the Pattern of US Territorial Expansion Richard Maass, University of Notre Dame Ordering Orderly Transitions: The Production of International Order at Moments of Great Power Shifts Kyle M. Lascurettes, University of Virginia Life on the Downward Slope: Explaining State Decisions to Exploit or Support Declining Great Powers Joshua Itzkowitz-Shifrinson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology A Place in the Sun: Status Consideration, Revisionism, and Rising Powers Foreign Policy Tudor Andrei Onea, Dartmouth College J. Andrew Grant, Queens University Dale Copeland, University of Virginia Dan Lindley, University of Notre Dame IMPLEMENTING Fri 8:00 am INTERNATIONAL RESPONSES TO VULNERABLE POPULATIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-30 Michael N. Barnett, George Washington University Putting Civilians First? Highly Capable Democracies and the Design of Peace Operations Andrea Everett, Princeton University Forgotten Conflicts: Need versus Political Priority in the Allocation of International Humanitarian Assistance Neil Narang, University of California, San Diego To Torture or to Kill? Human Rights Advocacy and State Repression Substitutability Jacqueline H.R. DeMeritt, University of North Texas Courtenay R. Conrad, University of California, Merced Who is a Refugee?: How International Institutions Adapt at Implementation Alexander Betts, Oxford University UNHCR and Refugee Rights Protection in Ecuador: The Effects of Non-State Institutional Innovation on Peacebuilding and Human Security Jeff Pugh, Providence College Wendy Wong, University of Toronto

18-22

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Disc: 18-23 Room: Chair: Papers:

NATIONALISM WITHIN AND Fri 4:15 pm WITHOUT: EXAMINING THE INTERFACE OF INTERNATIONAL AND IDENTITY POLITICS No Room Assigned Monica Duffy Toft, Harvard University Diagnosing Diasporas: Understanding the Conditions Fostering or Blocking Mobilization and their Impact on Foreign Policy Stephen M. Saideman, McGill University Erin K. Jenne, Central European University Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of Maryland The Viability of Unrecognized States: Post-War Development and Internal Legitimacy in Abkhazia Kristin Marie Bakke, University College London John V. OLoughlin, University of Colorado Michael D. Ward, Duke University Goodbye or See You Later? Explaining State Response to Ethno-Nationalist Independence Movements Ahsan Ishaq Butt, University of Chicago Does Ethnicity Matter? Conflict Resolution and Ethnic Pluralism Katja I. Favretto, University of Wisconsin, Madison Jennifer L. De Maio, California State University, Northridge Four Types of Diaspora Mobilization: Albanian Diaspora Activism for Kosovo Independence in the US and the UK Maria V. Koinova Austin Long, Columbia University GOVERNANCE AND SECURITY Sat 4:15 pm IN AFRICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-31 Samuel S. Stanton, Jr., Grove City College The Barrel of a Gun: The Connection Between Military Effectiveness, Civil-Military Relations, and Civil-Wars Naunihal Singh, University of Notre Dame Variation in the Quality of Post-Transition Governance: Findings from Africa Rachel M. Gisselquist, London School of Economics and Political Science The Transnational Dynamics of the Congo Wars: Governments, Rebels, and Delegation in Central Africa Henning Tamm, University of Oxford Negotiating Peace: Internal versus External Processes in South Africa and Burundi Jessica Piombo, Naval Postgraduate School Irregulars Fighting Like Regulars? A Case from West Africa Nori Katagiri, Air War College Irregular Regimes, First-Strike Capabilities, and Preemption: Revisiting the Conflict Trap Philip Roessler, University of Oxford Kevin E. Grisham, California State University, San Bernardino

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18-24

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NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE Sat 2:00 pm BARGAINING THEORY OF WAR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 4-11 James D. Fearon, Stanford University Different Sources of Uncertainty and Interstate War Muhammet Bas, Harvard University Costly Peace and War Andrew Coe, Harvard University Habit Formation and Bargaining Bahar Leventoglu, SUNY, Stony Brook University Credible Commitments and Retractable Offers in Crisis Bargaining Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University International Reputation with Dynamic Resolve Anne E. Sartori, Northwestern University James D. Fearon, Stanford University Robert Powell, University of California, Berkeley ETHICAL DILEMMAS AND Thu 4:15 pm SECURITY CHALLENGES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-2 Karen Ruth Adams, University of Montana Liberal Democracy and Nuclear Despotism: An Ethical Foreign Policy Dilemma Thomas E. Doyle, II, University of California, Irvine Cooperative Ethics in Modern Warfare Yvonne Chiu To Kill or Not to Kill: Deliberate Civilian Deaths in Armed Conflict Betcy Jose-Thota, University of Colorado, Denver Are Absolute Rights like Russian Dolls? National Security and Limits on State Power Tanusri Prasanna, Columbia University Evaluating the Risks, Costs, and Benefits of Homeland Security John Mueller, Ohio State University Mark G. Stewart, University of Newcastle Karen Ruth Adams, University of Montana HOW WARS END Fri 10:15 am No Room Assigned Fiona B. Adamson, University of London, SOAS Explaining Violence after Wars Michael J. Boyle, University of Saint Andrews The Causes of Peace and the Conditions of War: The War Termination Trinity and the Ending of Major Wars J. Thomas Moriarty, II, University of Virginia Recurrent Wars and The Problem of Unobservable Peace Efforts in Cease-Fire Shoko Kohama, University of Virginia Peacekeeping vs. Peace Enforcement: The United Nations and Civil War Termination Lise Morj Howard, Georgetown University Anjali Kaushlesh Dayal, Georgetown University The Negotiation Calculus: Why Parties to Intrastate Conflict Refuse to Talk Jeffrey Kaplow, University of California, San Diego

Initial Strategies and the Stability of War Aims: Evaluating the Roles of Endogenous and Exogenous Information in Conditioning War Termination Spencer D. Bakich, Sweet Briar College 18-27 POLITICS BY ALL MEANS: Sat 8:00 am STRATEGIC MIXES OF PEACEFUL AND VIOLENT COLLECTIVE ACTION IN CIVIL CONFLICTS No Room Assigned Interrelation of Violent and Non-Violent Resistance in Burma Linnea Beatty, George Washington University Shootings and Shamans: Local Civilian Authority Structures and Civil War Violence in Colombia Oliver Kaplan, Stanford University The Violent Death of Apartheid Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware Leaders, Messages, and Crowds: Mobilizing Collective Civilian Violence through Strategic Framing Irena L. Sargsyan, Georgetown University Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University Displacement within and across Civil Wars Abbey Steele, Princeton University Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University IR THEORY AND EAST ASIA: Sat 8:00 am NEW APPROACHES No Room Assigned Miles Kahler, University of California, San Diego The Strategic Gains of Oil Ownership Jennifer M. Lind, Dartmouth College Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College Red Light, Green Light: Autocratic Signaling and Nationalist Protest in China Jessica Chen Weiss, Yale University The Limits of Power: Military Capabilities and Political Influence in Chinas Rise M. Taylor Fravel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bargaining over Monitoring and Enforcement: The Case of the North Korean Nuclear Program Scott L. Kastner, University of Maryland Margaret M. Pearson, University of Maryland William L. Reed, University of Maryland A Paper Military: Japans Unwillingness and Inability to be a Great Military Power Tom Le, University of California, Irvine A Hard Case for Soft Power: Chinas Rise and Security in East Asia David W. Kearn, Jr., St. Johns University Miles Kahler, University of California, San Diego Michael Glosny, Naval Postgraduate School UNDERSTANDING THE FIGHT Thu 2:00 pm FOR JUSTICE: ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF CIVIL WARS No Room Assigned Catherine Goetze, University of Nottingham Jacob Andrew Mundy, Colgate University When Inequality Becomes Injustice Catherine Goetze, University of Nottingham

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Disc: 18-26 Room: Chair: Papers:

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Disc: 18-30

Civil Wars and the Politics of Naming Justice: Insights for Qualitative Analysis Jacob Andrew Mundy, Colgate University When The Facts Become a Text: Reinterpreting War with Serbian Paramilitaries Klaus Schlichte, University of Bremen, Germany Dreaming The Impossible: Return, Reintegration and Youth in The FDLR (Eastern Congo) Morten Boas, Fafo International Human Rights Norms as Weapons of War: The Kosovo Liberation Army, 1996-1999 Jennifer A. Mueller, CUNY-Graduate Center The Right to Destroy: The Constructive and Destructive Nature of Rights and Non-State Actors Kevin E. Grisham, California State University, San Bernardino Areej Qasqas, California State University, San Bernardino Susan L. Woodward, CUNY-Graduate Center NETWORKS OF Sun 10:15 am DEVELOPMENT AND PEACEBUILDING No Room Assigned Mette Eilstrup-Sangiovanni, Cambridge University A Network Approach to Peacebuilding and Development Oliver Westerwinter, European University Institute Mette Eilstrup-Sangiovanni, Cambridge University Network Strategies, Global Security Governance, and Human Security Annelies Z. Kamran, CUNY-Graduate Center On the Wing and Prayer: The ICTY and Transnational Networks in the Balkans Patrice McMahon, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Jennifer L. Miller, University of Arizona Organized Crime, Human Trafficking, and Border Control: Vicious or Virtuous Cycle? Nazli Avdan, University of Oxford Miles Kahler, University of California, San Diego START OR STOP AT THE WATERS EDGE? DOMESTIC POLITICS AND THE OBAMA FOREIGN POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-16 POLITICAL SCIENTISTS DOING FOREIGN POLICY: A ROUNDTABLE ON THE EXPERIENCES OF SCHOLARS AS POLICY-MAKERS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-22 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY AND GRAND STRATEGY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-24 Fri 10:15 am

18-34 Room: 18-35

THE CONSEQUENCES OF CONFLICT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-26 INTERNATIONAL INTERVENTIONS IN INTRASTATE CONFLICT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-8 BEGINNING, MIDDLE AND END: THE MANY PUZZLES OF MILITARY INTERVENTIONS AND OCCUPATIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-9 CONFLICT DYNAMICS AND OUTCOMES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-10 WHAT WENT BEFORE: ADDING HISTORICAL CONTEXT TO STUDIES OF PEACE AND CONFLICT IN IR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-11 THE TRANSNATIONAL DIMENSIONS OF TRANSNATIONAL TERRORISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-12 INTERVENTION AND PEACEKEEPING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-19 EXPLORING THE RATIONALIST EXPLANATIONS FOR WAR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-23 IKENBERRYS LIBERAL LEVIATHAN DEBATED No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 43-5 STATE-BUILDING OVER TIME No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 43-6 DIPLOMACY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 43-14

Thu 4:15 pm

Fri 4:15 pm

Room: 18-36

Sat 2:00 pm

Room: 18-37 Room: 18-38

Thu 8:00 am

Sat 10:15 am

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Disc: 18-31

Thu 4:15 pm

Room: 18-42 Room: Sat 2:00 pm 18-43 Room: 18-44 Fri 4:15 pm

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INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL

19-3

Division Chris C. Demchak, University of Arizona / US Naval Chair: War College 19-1 POWER TRANSITIONS: Fri 2:00 pm CHINAS RISE, THE SURVIVAL OF AN OPEN INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM, AND FUTURE U.S. HEGEMONY No Room Assigned John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago Taking Down Goliath: Military Competition under Economic Hegemony Nuno P. Monteiro, Yale University Stabilizing Powers: Nuclear Weapons, Unipolarity and Hegemony Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University Preserving the U.S. Led International Order as China Rises Thomas J. Wright, Chicago Council on Global Affairs Trade, Growth, Poverty, and Politics: Would a Rational Hegemon Still Prefer Openness? Lloyd Gruber, London School of Economics Structural Realism and Human Security Karen Ruth Adams, University of Montana Crisis Instability and US-China Relations: The Present (If Not Clear) Danger Avery Goldstein, University of Pennsylvania Optimists, Pessimists or Skeptics: Explaining Variations in Post-Cold War International and Regional Security Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College Robert Rauchhaus, University of California, Santa Barbara NEW SECURITY IN THE Sat 8:00 am GLOBALLY CRITICAL INDIAN OCEAN REGION: GREAT POWER POLITICS, REGIONAL RIVALRY, AND THE EMERGENCE OF A MARITIME SYSTEM No Room Assigned Timothy Hoyt, US Naval War College Pakistan and South Asia Under the Gaze of the Pakistan Army C. Christine Fair, Georgetown University China Information Operations and the Maelstrom of the Indian Ocean Toshi Yoshihara, U.S. Naval War College Indian Views of China, 2005-2010 Shashank Joshi, Harvard University Indian Naval Expansion: Catalysts and Constraints Walter Carl Ladwig, III, University of Oxford Sino-American Competition for Resources Christopher Pernin, RAND Corporation Harun Dogo, RAND Corporation Paul Staniland, University of Chicago Christopher Clary Room: Chair: Papers:

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Disc: 19-4

WEAPONS OF MASS Fri 10:15 am COERCION: DIPLOMATIC, CYBER, ECONOMIC, AND DEFENSE STRATEGIES AND HISTORY IN CONFRONTING NUCLEAR THREATS No Room Assigned Robert J. Art, Brandeis University The Coercive Limits of Nuclear Weapons Todd S. Sechser, University of Virginia Matthew Fuhrmann, Texas A&M University Reading the Return Address: Assessing the Danger of Anonymous Terrorist Attack Keir A. Lieber, Georgetown University Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College Coercive Nonproliferation: Israels Use of Coercive Diplomacy to Prevent the Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction Gregory Koblentz, George Mason University Rock, Paper, Scissors? Influencing Determined Proliferators Susan B. Martin, Kings College London Wyn Bowen, University of London, Kings College Following the Money: Nuclear Weapons, Factional Politics and Economic Cycles in the Iranian Political Economy Shahdad Naghshpour, University of Southern Mississippi From Auditor to Inspector? The International Atomic Energy Agency and the Governance of Catastrophic Risk Patrick S. Roberts, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University Robert J. Art, Brandeis University NEW CONFLICTS, INFO Fri 4:15 pm ASSYMETRY, WIKILEAKS, AND CYBER SECURITY: WEAPONS, CRIME, RIGHTS, AND STRATEGIES No Room Assigned Chris C. Demchak, University of Arizona / US Naval War College Cyber War and Meaning of Victory William C. Martel, Tufts University The Role of Intelligence in Fighting Insurgencies Jason Scheideman, Bates College The Origins of Security Cooperation: Arms Control and the Influence of Technological Change David W. Kearn, Jr., St. Johns University Reacting to New Security Risks: The Global Diffusion of Crime Policies Anja P. Jakobi, Peace Research Institute Frankfurt Rights and the Development of Security Resilience in the United States Kenneth J. Boutin, Deakin University Covert Organizations and the Asymmetric Arms Race: Comparative Case Study Toward Multi-Method Research Katya Drozdova, Seattle Pacific University

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19-2

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76

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

19-5

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Disc: 19-6

GLOBALIZATIONS SEMIThu 4:15 pm WARS: NEW FORMS OF INSURGENCY, COUNTERINSURGENCY, TERRORISM, TECHNOLOGY, AND TRANSFORMING MILITARIES No Room Assigned Jo L. Husbands, National Academy of Sciences From Militias to Militaries Kimberly Marten, Barnard College-Columbia University Putting the US War in Afghanistan in Perspective: The Strategy and Policy of US Long Wars and Counterinsurgency Richard A. Lacquement, Jr., U.S. Army Retribution Must Succeed Rebellion: The Colonial Origins of Counterinsurgency Failure Paul K. MacDonald, Williams College Afghan Lessons from the Soviet Archives: Research Informing Current Strategy Decisions Katya Drozdova, Seattle Pacific University Joe Felter, Combating Terrorism Center The Terrorist Dilemma: How Society Constrains (or Facilitates) the Targeting Choices of Terrorist Groups Risa A. Brooks, Northwestern University Regime Type and Counterinsurgency Operations: Are Democracies More Effective than Authoritarian Regimes at Winning the Hearts and Minds? Jack Porter, The Citadel Scott C. Buchanan, Office of the Secretary of Defense FIGHTS, RIGHTS, AND REThu 10:15 am ORDERING THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM?: STRATEGIC STUDIES FIELD AMIDST RISING NUCLEAR, TERROR, CYBER, AND GLOBAL ECONOMIC AND HUMAN SECURITY CHALLENGES No Room Assigned Thomas G. Mahnken, Naval War College Eliot A. Cohen, Johns Hopkins University Peter D. Feaver, Duke University Nazli Choucri, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Joe Maiolo, University of London, Kings College Audrey Kurth Cronin, U.S. National War College Timothy Hoyt, US Naval War College RISING POWERS AND THE Sat 10:15 am EMERGING INTERNATIONAL ORDER: AMBITIONS AND CAPABILITIES FOR SHAPING GLOBAL GOVERNANCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-3 T.V. Paul, McGill University Arturo Sotomayor, Naval Postgraduate School Russias Great Power Aspirations in World Politics Anne L. Clunan, Naval Postgraduate School

Disc: 19-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

Indias Uncertain Rise Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University Out of the Shadow of American Dominance: Chinese Debates on the Emergence of Multipolarity and the Implications for Chinese Foreign Policy Michael Glosny, Naval Postgraduate School Brazil and the Emerging Power Debate: A Conceptual Analysis Arturo Sotomayor, Naval Postgraduate School Strategic Cooperation in a Multipolar World Thomas J. Wright, Chicago Council on Global Affairs Stewart M. Patrick, Center for Global Development NUCLEAR RIGHTS AND Thu 2:00 pm NONPROLIFERATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 17-20 Robert L. Brown, Temple University Irans Nuclear Program: The Right to Nuclear Deterrence, or Illegal WMD? Hayat Alvi, Naval War College Eisenhowers Scientists: The Role of Policy Entrepreneurs in the Eisenhower Administration Julia Macdonald, George Washington University Challenges to IAEA Safeguards Joseph F. Pilat, Los Alamos National Laboratory Safeguarded Institutions: Contriving Symmetry through the International Atomic Energy Agency Chad Rector, George Washington University Designing Cooperation: The Role of Information Sharing Features in International Security Agreements Jane Vaynman, Harvard University Nathan E. Busch, Christopher Newport University

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20

FOREIGN POLICY

Division Brandon Christopher Prins, University of Tennessee Chair: 20-1 THE EUROPEAN UNION AS A GLOBAL ACTOR SINCE LISBON: IDEALS, INSTITUTIONS AND INTERESTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-17 THE ROLE OF VALUES IN FOREIGN POLICY PREFERENCES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-18 RISING POWERS AND THE EMERGING INTERNATIONAL ORDER: AMBITIONS AND CAPABILITIES FOR SHAPING GLOBAL GOVERNANCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 19-7 Fri 2:00 pm

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Thu 2:00 pm

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19-7

Sat 10:15 am

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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

77

20-4 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 20-5

INTELLIGENCE FAILURE IN Sat 8:00 am COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University French Intelligence Assessments of the Nazi Threat, 1933-1939 Norrin M. Ripsman, Concordia University Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University Reassessing the Intelligence Failure at Pearl Harbor Erik J. Dahl, Naval Postgraduate School Leaders, Intelligence, and Assessments of Intentions Keren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton University Fixing the Facts or Missing the Mark? Intelligence, Policy, and the War in Iraq Joshua Rovner, US Naval War College Amy Zegart, University of California, Los Angeles EXPLORING THE IMPOSITION Fri 10:15 am AND EFFECTS OF ECONOMIC SANCTIONS No Room Assigned Gary C. Hufbauer, Institute for International Economics Constraints or Cover? International Institutions and Trade with Sanctioned States Bryan Robert Early, SUNY, University at Albany Sanctions and State Sponsored Terrorism Alfred Cooper Drury, University of Missouri Justin Mohn, University of Missouri, Columbia Matthew Moore, University of Missouri, Columbia Political Cleavages and Economic Sanctions: The Economic and Political Winners and Losers of Sanctions David J. Lektzian, Texas Tech University Dennis P. Patterson, Texas Tech University Say it Aint So: The Impact of Human Rights INGO Shaming on Sanctions Amanda Marie Murdie, Kansas State University Dursun Peksen, East Carolina University Friend or Foe? Sanctions Threatened and Sanctions Imposed Susan H. Allen, University of Mississippi Gary C. Hufbauer, Institute for International Economics DEMOCRATIC POLITICS AND Fri 8:00 am INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-3 Patrick James, University of Southern California Modeling the Democracy-Peace Nexus: New Tools, New Uses Jason Enia, Sam Houston State University Patrick James, University of Southern California Disaggregating the Democratic Peace: Regime Type, Territory, and Interstate Conflict Erik Gartzke, University of California, San Diego Domestic Opposition, Institutions, and Conflict Initiation Patrick E. Shea, Rutgers University Terence Teo, Rutgers University Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University

Disc: 20-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

The Political Economy of Democratic Networking: An Agent-based Model of Cooperative Homophily Zeev Maoz, University of California, Davis National Security Secrecy, Oversight and Foreign Policy Credibility in Democracies Michael P. Colaresi, Michigan State University William R. Thompson, Indiana University DIVERSIONARY POLITICS Fri 4:15 pm AND PROCESSES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-4 Michael P. Colaresi, Michigan State University Fighting for (Electoral) Survival: An Analysis of Term Limits and Interstate Conflict in Latin America Raul C. Gonzalez, CIDE Affect and Images of Success and Failure in War Christopher F. Gelpi, Duke University Scott Sigmund Gartner, University of California, Davis Fear and Greed: Domestic Unrest, Foreign Target, and Interstate Conflict Sung Chul Jung, Rutgers University Territorial Disputes and Domestic Diversion Krista E. Wiegand, Georgia Southern University Rallying for Peace: The Effect of Arms Control Treaties on Presidential Approval Brian Lai, University of Iowa Michael P. Colaresi, Michigan State University FRAMING FOREIGN POLICY Thu 4:15 pm DEBATES No Room Assigned Douglas A. VanBelle, Victoria University of Wellington Decision-Making and Dissensus: Policy Uncertainty, the Media, and the Iraq Surge Debate Katherine Banks, Unversity of Washington John Griswold, University of Washington A Tale of Two Branches: Policy Framing & US Energy Security Amy M. Below, Oregon State University Reconsidering the Irrelevance of Foreign Voices for U.S. Public Opinion Danny Hayes, American University Matthew P. Guardino, Syracuse University Differential News Framing of Unmanned Aerial Drones: Efficient and Effective or Illegal and Inhumane? Timothy M. Jones, University of Washington Penelope Sheets, University of Washington Charles Rowling, University of Washington, Seattle The Electoral Consequences of Military Intervention: Comparing British and American Election Campaigns Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter Barbara Allen, Carleton College B. Gregory Marfleet, Carleton College Douglas A. VanBelle, Victoria University of Wellington Laura Roselle, Elon University

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Disc: 20-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 20-6 Room: Chair: Papers:

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78

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DIVISION PANELS

20-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

TERRORISM & COUNTERSat 4:15 pm TERRORISM No Room Assigned Hayat Alvi, Naval War College How Terrorist Organizations Survive: Cooperation and Competition in Terrorist Group Networks Brian J. Phillips, University of Pittsburgh How Effective are Troop Surges against the Menace of Transnational Terrorism? Seung-Whan Choi, University of Illinois, Chicago Matthew Powers, University of Illinois at Chicago To Negotiate or Not to Negotiate, That is the Question: A Formal Model Alan Steinberg, University of Houston Counter-Terrorism, Terrorism, Mobilization and Domestic Politics Christine Mele, Florida State University Transnational Terrorism and Foreign Policy Daniel Milton, Florida State University NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION Sun 10:15 am No Room Assigned Victor Asal, SUNY, University at Albany Asymmetric Strategic Problems in Nuclear NonProliferation TongFi Kim, Ohio State University Keeping Nuclear Weapons Under Wraps: Conventional Arms Sales to Israel and the Broader Goals of US Foreign Policy Ariel Ilan Roth, Johns Hopkins University Weathering the Shocks of Rule-Bending: The Effects of the US-India Nuclear Agreement on the NonProliferation Regime Maria N. Zaitseva, Cornell University Reversal Aversion, Path Dependence and Nuclear Proliferation: A Behavioral Foreign Policy Decision Making Wondeuk Cho, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Victor Asal, SUNY, University at Albany MANAGING CRISES AND Thu 10:15 am CONFLICTS No Room Assigned Kwei-Bo Huang, National Chengchi University Christopher Darnton, Catholic University of America Opening the Black Box of Conflict Management: Understanding Management Decisions and Policy Substitution Molly M. Melin, Loyola University, Chicago The President, Domestic Opposition, and Strategic Mediation James Preston Todhunter, University of Tennessee, Knoxville High Stakes State-Building: How Third Parties to Internal Conflict Create Security and Build State Institutions Melissa McAdam, University of California, Berkeley Selective Humanitarian Intervention after the End of the Cold War Kuyoun Chung, University of California, Los Angeles

Disc: 20-12 Room: Chair: Papers:

What Do They Want? -- Rebels Goals and Mediation in Civil Wars Carmela Lutmar, Princeton University Lesley G. Terris, Interdisciplinary Center Herzeliya Christopher Darnton, Catholic University of America THE POLITICS OF FOREIGN Sun 8:00 am AID No Room Assigned Brian Lai, University of Iowa Democratization and Foreign Aid Effectiveness in Developing Countries from 1960-2008 Tyler Boone, Western New England College U.S. Interventions and Foreign Aid: The Impact on Human Rights and Democracy William A. Platz, Claremont Graduate University Explaining U.S Economic Statecraft during the War on Terror: Evidence from Aid and Trade David T Hsu, Princeton University Aiding Repression: Theorizing Foreign Aid and Political Violence Jessica Nicole Trisko, Yale University The Struggle for Control Over Aid Expenditure: The Determinants of U.S. Aid Fragmentation Jordan Kyle, Columbia University Elizabeth Sheridan Sperber, Columbia University Brian Lai, University of Iowa LEADERS AND PARTIES IN Sat 2:00 pm FOREIGN POLICY No Room Assigned Daniel S. Geller, Wayne State University The Differential Influence of Political Parties on Foreign Policy in Multiparty Systems Jeroen Joly, University of Antwerp Party System Stability and Conflict Initiation within Democracies Lance Hunter, Texas Tech University Joseph W. Robbins, Shepherd University Britain at War: Securitization, Identity, and the War in Iraq Jarrod Hayes, Georgia Institute of Technology Political Competition, Political Participation, and Democratic Peace in Asia and Africa Benjamin E. Goldsmith, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Arcot Sowmya, University of New South Wales Dimitri Semenovich, University of New South Wales Gorana Grgic, University of Sydney Why Has the United States Not Bombed Iran? The Domestic Politics of Americas Response to Irans Nuclear Program Ido Oren, University of Florida David T. Burbach, Naval War College THE FOREIGN POLICIES OF Thu 8:00 am AUTOCRATIC STATES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-5 Patrick James, University of Southern California

20-10 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 20-13 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 20-11 Room: Chair:

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Disc: 20-14 Room: Chair:

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79

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Disc: 20-15

The Politics of Diversion: Disentangling the Relationship Between Time Horizons and Conflict Propensity in Dictatorships Erica Emily Frantz, IPS Autocratic States and Target Selection: Are All Regime Types Careful in Selecting Targets? Glenn Palmer, Pennsylvania State University Daehee Bak, Pennsylvania State University To Fight at Home or Away?: Regime Type, Unrest and Autocratic Decisions to Repress or Divert Norris Feeney, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Rethinking the Democratic Advantage: A Comparative Study of Audience Costs in Democracies and Dictatorships Jessica Chen Weiss, Yale University Alexandre Debs, Yale University Autocracies Can Do It Too: Domestic Institutions and Cooperation by Nondemocracies Mariana Rodriguez, Vanderbilt University Michaela Mattes, Vanderbilt University Mark Peceny, University of New Mexico HUMAN RIGHTS VS. Sat 8:00 am REALPOLITIK IN OBAMAS FOREIGN POLICY No Room Assigned Seyom Brown, Southern Methodist University John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Harvard University Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University Neta C. Crawford, Boston University Robert A. Pastor, American University START OR STOP AT THE Fri 10:15 am WATERS EDGE? DOMESTIC POLITICS AND THE OBAMA FOREIGN POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-31 Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University Bryan W. Marshall, Miami University Patrick J. Haney, Miami University Peter Trubowitz, University of Texas, Austin Shoon K. Murray, American University THE POLITICS OF USING AND Fri 8:00 am THREATENING MILITARY FORCE No Room Assigned Seung-Whan Choi, University of Illinois, Chicago Resistance, Resolve and Rights: Threats of Force and the Exercise of Power in the Era of Unipolarity Dianne Pfundstein, Columbia University International Organizations and the Use of International Force Clayton J. Cleveland, University of Oregon Taming the Revisionist State: The Effects of Military Defeats on the War-Proneness of Germany vs. Iraq Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa Making Threats: Investigating Causes of State Strategy Kristan Seibel, University of Washington Seung-Whan Choi, University of Illinois, Chicago

20-18

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Disc: 20-19 Room: Chair: Papers:

TREATIES, INTERNATIONAL Thu 2:00 pm AGREEMENTS, AND FOREIGN POLICY No Room Assigned Randall D. Smith, Franklin College President Obama, Congress and International Agreements: An Initial Assessment Glen S. Krutz, University of Oklahoma Jeffrey S. Peake, Bowling Green State University Public Opinion and Senate Treaty Ratification Gyung-Ho Jeong, Claremont Graduate University Who Fudges International Commitments and Why? An Empirical Reassessment of the Evidence on ICC NonSurrender Agreements Tonya L. Putnam, Columbia University Gabriela Jara, Arias Foundation for Peace and Human Progress Entangling Alliances: Presidents and Strategic Issue Linkage in International Negotiations Paul Musgrave, Georgetown University Randall D. Smith, Franklin College WAR AND PUBLIC OPINION Sun 10:15 am No Room Assigned Michael D. Cobb, North Carolina State University Honor among Elites: Self-Defense, Retribution, and Support for War Rachel M. Stein, Stanford University Sunk Costs and Citizen Support for Sustaining Military Operations Abroad Patricia L Sullivan, University of Georgia War, Congressional Acquiescence and the Electoral Connection: A Comparison of the Vietnam and Iraq Wars Kelly Ann McHugh, University of Delaware The Role of Ideology in Foreign Policy Attitude Formation Nicholas Martini, University of Iowa Michael D. Cobb, North Carolina State University CONGRESS AND FOREIGN Thu 10:15 am POLICY No Room Assigned William G. Howell, University of Chicago Another Look at the Cold War Consensus: The Eastern Establishment and the Bipartisan Bureaucracy Michael E. Flynn, Binghamton University, SUNY Bill Cosponsorship as a Foreign Policy Tool? Causes and Consequences of Foreign Policy Cosponsorship in the Post-Cold War U.S. Congress Jungkun Seo, University of North Carolina, Wilmington What is the Effect of Congressional Travel on US Foreign Policy? Andrea E. Jones-Rooy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Philip B. K. Potter, University of Michigan The Democratic Marketplace of Ideas in Foreign Policy: Does it Work? Adam L. Levine-Weinberg, University of Chicago William G. Howell, University of Chicago

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20-16

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Disc: 20-20 Room: Chair: Papers:

20-17

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80

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DIVISION PANELS

20-21

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Disc: 20-22

PSYCHOLOGICAL AND Sat 4:15 pm POLITICAL SOURCES OF DOMESTIC-FOREIGN POLICY OPINION No Room Assigned William O. Chittick, University of Georgia Values and Foreign Policy Attitudes: Reviewing a Subfield of Public Opinion Peter John Liberman, CUNY, Queens Harald Schoen, University of Bamberg Personality Traits, Personal Values and Attitudes Toward Foreign and Domestic Policies Harald Schoen, University of Bamberg Hans K. Rattinger, University of Mannheim Jana Ptzschke, University of Mannheim Basic Personal Values, Political Values, Policy Stances and Domestic-Foreign Policy Opinion William O. Chittick, University of Georgia Jason A. Reifler, Georgia State University Might Makes Right for the Right?: Competing Moralities in the Domestic and Foreign Policy Ideology of American Liberals and Conservatives Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California Paul N. Goren, University of Minnesota POLITICAL SCIENTISTS Sat 2:00 pm DOING FOREIGN POLICY: A ROUNDTABLE ON THE EXPERIENCES OF SCHOLARS AS POLICY-MAKERS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-32 Stephen M. Saideman, McGill University Adam Grissom, RAND Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown University Maria Toyoda, Villanova University Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware CHINA, THE U.S., AND Thu 10:15 am FOREIGN ECONOMIC POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-31 Timothy J. McKeown, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Chinas Trade Diplomacy in the Developing World: An Effective Tool to Expand its Global Influence? Wei Liang, Monterey Institute of International Studies Risky Business: The Political Economy of Chinas Outward Foreign Direct Investment in Developing States Daniel C. ONeill, University of the Pacific Chinas Human Rights and U.S.-China Economic Relations: Examining Interest Group Communities in the Debate Over Chinas MFN Trade Status, 1993/ 1994 Steven J. Campbell, University of South Carolina, Lancaster Dynamic Career Incentive versus Policy Rent-Seeking in Institutionalized Authoritarian Regimes: Testing a Long-Run Model of Trade Policy Determination in China Hans Han-Pu Tung, Harvard University

Disc: 20-24

The Political Economy of Chinas Trade Policy Xiaojun Li, Stanford University Timothy J. McKeown, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Fri 4:15 pm THEORY AND GRAND STRATEGY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-33 Robert M. Farley, University of Kentucky Dualing Liberalisms: Why Democracy Promotion Takes Precedence over Human Rights in U.S. Foreign Policy Will Walldorf, Wake Forest University U.S. Foreign Policy and the Turn-Around: Did the Second World War really Turn the United States into a Multilateral State? Hilde Eliassen Restad, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs New Thinking in Liberal International Relations Theory: Toward a Liberal Theory of Foreign Policy Jeffrey W. Meiser, Johns Hopkins University Neoclassical Realism and State Expansion: Systemic Constraints, Domestic Forces, and Strategic Interactions Tudor Andrei Onea, Dartmouth College Rambo to Rising Sun: Isolating the Influence of Unconventional Sources of Threat Perception and Proliferation Kelly M. Greenhill, Tufts University Brock F. Tessman, University of Georgia AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Thu 8:00 am SEBASTIAN ROSATOS EUROPE UNITED No Room Assigned Michael C. Desch, University of Notre Dame Andrew Moravcsik, Princeton University Nicolas Jabko, Johns Hopkins University David M. Andrews, Scripps College Glyn Morgan, Syracuse University Charles Kupchan, Georgetown University Sebastian Rosato, University of Notre Dame THE CONSEQUENCES OF Thu 4:15 pm CONFLICT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-34 David J. Lektzian, Texas Tech University Zaryab Iqbal, Pennsylvania State University International Intervention in Ethnic and Non-Ethnic Civil Wars Shale Horowitz, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Ada Huibregtse, University of New York Tirana The Phoenix Factor Applied to Civil Wars: The Public Health Effects of Civil War and the Recovery Period Brandon Christopher Prins, University of Tennessee Suveyda Karakaya, University of Tennessee Passing on Withdrawal: Domestic Politics and the Duration of Occupations, 1900-2000 Anthony S. Marcum, University of Maryland

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Disc: 20-25

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20-23 Room: Chair: Papers:

20-26 Room: Chair: Papers:

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81

Disc: 20-27

Why Cant We Be Friends: When Does Rapprochement Occur? Matthew Fehrs, St. Marys College of Maryland Zaryab Iqbal, Pennsylvania State University THE CHANGING NATURE OF THE WORLDS SECOND OLDEST PROFESSION: THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF MODERN DIPLOMACY PROJECT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1497591-3 Fri 2:00 pm

Disc: 21-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

The Cost of Security: Foreign Policy Concessions and Military Alliances Jesse C. Johnson, Rice University Michaela Mattes, Vanderbilt University AUDIENCE COSTS Thu 10:15 am No Room Assigned Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford University How Audience Costs Work: Information, Commitment, and Democracy Shuhei Kurizaki, Texas A&M University Taehee Whang, Texas A&M University When are Audience Costs Socially Optimal? Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University Scott Ashworth, University of Chicago Neither Hawks Nor Doves: Audience Costs in Electoral Authoritarian Regimes Nikolay V. Marinov, Yale University Brandon J. Kinne, University of Texas at Dallas Power-Sharing and Accountability: The Institutionalization of Political Responsibilities in War Shawn L. Ramirez, University of Rochester Jessica Lea Weeks, Cornell University INTERNATIONAL Fri 4:15 pm INTERVENTIONS IN INTRASTATE CONFLICT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-35 Page Fortna, Columbia University Governance and Repeat Civil War Barbara F. Walter, University of California, San Diego Electoral Participation as International Insurance Aila Michela Matanock, Stanford University Highly Institutionalized International Organizations and Repression Johannes Karreth, University of Georgia Jaroslav Tir, University of Georgia Peacekeeping and Womens Livelihoods in Liberia Michael J. Gilligan, New York University Bernd Beber, New York University Alexandra L. Scacco, New York University Page Fortna, Columbia University BEGINNING, MIDDLE AND Sat 2:00 pm END: THE MANY PUZZLES OF MILITARY INTERVENTIONS AND OCCUPATIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-36 Mia M. Bloom, Penn State University Patricia L Sullivan, University of Georgia Decapitation by FIRC: Foreign-Imposed Regime Change and the Fate of Leaders Alexander B. Downes, Duke University When States Leave: Time Horizons and the End of Military Interventions David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University Occupation and Resistance in World Politics Simon Collard-Wexler, Columbia University

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CONFLICT PROCESSES

Division Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina, Chapel Chair: Hill Michaela Mattes, Vanderbilt University 21-1 Room: 21-2 Room: 21-3 Room: 21-4 Room: 21-5 Room: 21-6 Room: Chair: Papers: MODELS OF DOMESTIC INSURGENCY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 4-8 POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE TERRORIST THREAT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-7 DEMOCRATIC POLITICS AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-6 DIVERSIONARY POLITICS AND PROCESSES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-7 THE FOREIGN POLICIES OF AUTOCRATIC STATES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-14 Sat 4:15 pm

Disc: Fri 4:15 pm 21-8

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Fri 4:15 pm

Thu 8:00 am

ALLIANCE FORMATION AND Sat 8:00 am ITS CONSEQUENCES No Room Assigned Mark J.C. Crescenzi, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Alliances, Threats, and Capabilities: An Empirical Evaluation of the Capability Aggregation Argument James D. Morrow, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Paul Poast, University of Michigan Alexander Von Hagen-Jamar, University of Michigan A Socio-Rationalist Theory of Alliance Formation Erik Gartzke, University of California, San Diego Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania Securitizing International Security: How Unreliable Allies Affect Alliance Portfolios Neil Narang, University of California, San Diego Alliances as Tools of Peace: Deterrence and Restraint Songying Fang, Rice University Jesse C. Johnson, Rice University Brett Ashley Leeds, Rice University

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From Bin Lids to Bombs: Northern Irish Women Under Occupation Mia M. Bloom, Penn State University Paul Gill, Penn State University Avoiding the Threshold: Targets of Foreign Military Interventions Kathleen Deloughery, SUNY, University at Albany Ozlem Kilicarslan Savas, SUNY Albany Ian Roxborough, SUNY, Stony Brook University Isaiah Wilson, III, United States Military Academy, West Point CONFLICT DYNAMICS AND Thu 2:00 pm OUTCOMES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-37 David E. Cunningham, University of Maryland Threat Management and Alignment Patterns among Violent Non-State Actors Kanisha Bond, University of Maryland, College Park Grounds for Separation: Comparing Religious and Ethno-Nationalist Movements Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of Maryland Scott Gates, International Peace Research Institute Ragnhild Nords, PRIO The Conflict Trap Haavard Hegre, University of Oslo Havard Strand, PRIO Scott Gates, International Peace Research Institute Tactical Sequencing and Regime Transitions: Mechanisms of Change in Intrastate Insurgencies Orion A. Lewis, Middlebury College Endogenizing Power-Sharing After Ethnic Civil War Julian Wucherpfennig, ETH Zurich, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lars-Erik Cederman, ETH Zurich WHAT WENT BEFORE: Sat 10:15 am ADDING HISTORICAL CONTEXT TO STUDIES OF PEACE AND CONFLICT IN IR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-38 Navin A. Bapat, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Networks, Not Dyads Michael D. Ward, Duke University International Politics among Polis(es): An Analysis of War Among Greek City States David Sobek, Louisiana State University Birth Legacies: The Influence of State Emergence on State Behavior Douglas Lemke, Pennsylvania State University A Theory of the Origins of Interstate Dyads Andrew J. Enterline, University of North Texas David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego THE TRANSNATIONAL DIMENSIONS OF TRANSNATIONAL TERRORISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-39 Sat 2:00 pm

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21-10 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 21-13 Room: Chair: Papers:

Victor Asal, SUNY, University at Albany Aiding Terror? How Foreign Aid Influences Transnational Terrorist Attacks Michael Findley, Brigham Young University Joseph K. Young, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale Foreign Aid, Corrupt Governments, and the Fight Against Terrorism: The Effect of Aid Delivery Channels on Terrorist Attacks Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh Jude C. Hays, University of Pittsburgh Territorial Terrorists: The Unintended Consequences of a Military Footprint Alex Braithwaite, University College London Militarized Interstate Dispute and Transnational Terrorist Attacks Quan Li, Texas A&M University Democracy and the Multilateral Flow of Transnational Terrorism, 1968-2007 Christopher F. Gelpi, Duke University Nazli Avdan, University of Oxford Victor Asal, SUNY, University at Albany THE REPERTOIRE OF Sat 4:15 pm TACTICS IN CONFLICT No Room Assigned Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex Targets of Violence: Why Rebel Groups Attack Governments, Civilians, or Both David E. Cunningham, University of Maryland Explaining the Origins of Nonviolent Campaigns: Evidence from the NAVCO 2.0 Dataset Erica Chenoweth, Wesleyan University Who Uses Terrorism and Is It Effective? Terrorism in Civil Wars Page Fortna, Columbia University What They Are Fighting For: Rebel War Aims and Civil War Conflict Resolution Jakana Thomas, Pennsyvania State University Rethinking Relative Capabilities: The Differential Effects of Insurgent Strength on the Production of Violence against Civilians Reed M. Wood, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University NEW RESEARCH IN Fri 10:15 am QUANTITATIVE TERRORISM STUDIES: REGIME, REPRESSION, STRATEGY AND ETHNICITY No Room Assigned James A. Piazza, Pennsylvania State University Ethnic Mobilization is a Many Splendored Thing Victor Asal, SUNY, University at Albany James A. Piazza, Pennsylvania State University James Igoe Walsh, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Transnational Minority Communities and Terrorism Bryan Joseph Arva, Pennsylvania State University James A. Piazza, Pennsylvania State University Terrorism, Democratization, and U.S. Foreign Policy Navin A. Bapat, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Disc: 21-11

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83

Disc:

Exploring the Outcomes of Counterterrorism in the Middle East and North Africa Erica Chenoweth, Wesleyan University Suicide Attacks - Opportunistic Tactic or Strategic Campaign? Sarat Krishnan, University of Texas at Austin Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin Bobby Jenkins, University of Texas, Austin Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago Joseph K. Young, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale INTERNATIONAL LAW AND Fri 10:15 am CONFLICT MANAGEMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 17-21 Bernd Beber, New York University Can Binding Arbitration and Adjudication Effectively Manage Armed Conflicts? Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Megan Shannon, University of Mississippi Forum Shopping for the Best Adjudicator: Conflict Management and the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa Emilia Justyna Powell, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa The Choice for Multilateral Institutions as a Dispute Settlement Method: The Use of the International Court of Justice in Conflict Management Molly M. Melin, Loyola University, Chicago Alexandru Grigorescu, Loyola University Chicago International Law and the Sustainability of Territorial Change Paul K. Huth, University of Maryland Alyssa Prorok, University of Maryland Evaluating Conflict Management Strategies: Theory and Experimental Analysis Vanessa Lefler, University of Iowa Bernd Beber, New York University DURABILITY OF PEACE AND Fri 8:00 am CIVIL WAR RECURRENCE No Room Assigned Zaryab Iqbal, Pennsylvania State University Exogenous Shocks, Agreement Design, and the Durability of Peace after Civil Wars Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh Scott Cook, University of Pittsburgh Wartime Human Rights Abuses and the Prospects for Peace following Civil War Jessica Stanton, University of Pennsylvania Justice and/or Peace: Post-Conflict Justice and Conflict Reoccurrence Cyanne E. Loyle, University of Maryland Benjamin Appel, University of Maryland Institutional Change We Can Believe In: Democratization, Commitment, and Civil War Recurrence Julian Wucherpfennig, ETH Zurich, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Nils Metternich, Duke University

Disc: 21-17

Leadership Turnover and the Duration of Civil War and Civil Peace Andrew Kirkpatrick, Emory University Nigel Lo, Emory University Carleen Graham, Emory University Scott Gates, International Peace Research Institute THEME PANEL: MOVEMENTS Sun 10:15 am AND MASSACRES: NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND CIVIL WAR VIOLENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 45-3 Samuel S. Stanton, Jr., Grove City College Too Much of a Bad Thing: The Strategic Consequence of Civilian Victimization Jacob Daniel Kathman, University of Mississippi Reed M. Wood, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Retaliation or Restraint? Constituent Responses to Repressive Counter-Terrorism Policies Jennifer Kavanagh, RAND Corporation Organizing Oppression: Organizational Biases in the Production and Targeting of Political Repression Christopher M. Sullivan, University of Notre Dame Options in the Arsenal: Are Repressive Tactics Substitutes or Complements? Courtenay R. Conrad, University of California, Merced Jacqueline H.R. DeMeritt, University of North Texas Neighborhood Civil Conflict and Preemptive Human Rights Abuses Nathan Danneman, Emory University Emily Hencken Ritter, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa Christian Davenport, University of Notre Dame ECONOMICS AND CIVIL WAR Thu 10:15 am No Room Assigned Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh Square Pegs in Round Holes: Inequalities, Grievances, and Civil War Halvard Buhaug Lars-Erik Cederman, ETH Zurich Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex Economic shocks and Civil War Violence in Africa Hanne Fjelde, Uppsala University Local Economic Conditions and Participation in the Rwandan Genocide Willa H. Friedman, University of California, Berkeley Civil Wars and Contemporary State Building; Rebellion, Conflict Duration, and Lootable Resource Wealth Cameron G. Thies, University of Iowa David Sobek, Louisiana State University The Gift of Empty Pockets: Foreign Aid in Fragile States Desha M. Girod, Georgetown University Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh

21-15 Room: Chair: Papers:

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84

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DIVISION PANELS

21-19 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 21-20 Room: Chair: Papers:

INTERVENTION AND Sat 8:00 am PEACEKEEPING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-40 Carmela Lutmar, Princeton University Border Interventions: A Response to Refugee-Influx? Navine Murshid, Colgate University The Supply Side Economics of Peacekeeping: Where Do Peacekeepers Go and Why? Jaroslav Tir, University of Georgia Szymon Mikolaj Stojek, The University of Georgia Making War or Peace? Civil War Duration and ThirdParty Intervention Strategy Benjamin Jones, Ohio State University The Illusion of Intervention: Civil War, Third-Party Intervention, and State Failure Sang Ki Kim, University of Iowa Procuring Peace after Prolonging War Daina Chiba, Rice University Carmela Lutmar, Princeton University INTERNATIONAL LAW, IGOS, Sat 10:15 am AND CONFLICT No Room Assigned Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa The Politics of Self-Defense: The Role of International Law on the Use of Force in International Crises Benjamin Appel, University of Maryland International Organizations as Agents of International Law Charles R. Boehmer, University of Texas, El Paso Trying the Perpetrators and Fueling the War: The [Perverse] Effects of the International Criminal Court Courtney Hillebrecht, University of Nebraska, Lincoln International Law and Public Attitudes toward the Use of Torture: An Experimental Study Geoffrey Wallace, Cornell University Strategic Selection: Rule of Law, Win/Loss Record, and Legal Resolution of Territorial Disputes Krista E. Wiegand, Georgia Southern University Emilia Justyna Powell, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa UN INTERVENTION IN Fri 2:00 pm DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICTS: NEW MODELS AND DATA No Room Assigned Michelle A. Benson, SUNY, University at Buffalo Beyond Cheap Talk? UN Security Council Resolutions in International Conflict Michelle A. Benson, SUNY, University at Buffalo UN Peacekeeping and Civilian Killings Megan Shannon, University of Mississippi Lisa Hultman, Swedish National Defence College Of Time and Power: Using Split Population Models to Explain the Occurrence and Timing of UN Intervention Efforts in International Crises, 1946-2002 Holger Schmidt, George Washington University

Disc: 21-22 Room: Chair: Papers:

Why Do States Publicly Invoke the Right of SelfDefense During Wars?: The UNSC as a Paralegal Institution and Diplomatic Message Transmitter Atsushi Tago, Kobe University UN Bias and Force Commitments in Civil Wars Michelle A. Benson, SUNY, University at Buffalo Jacob Daniel Kathman, University of Mississippi Holger Schmidt, George Washington University Megan Shannon, University of Mississippi EXTERNAL ACTORS AND Fri 2:00 pm INTERNAL CONFLICT No Room Assigned Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Transborder Ethnic Kin and Civil War Lars-Erik Cederman, ETH Zurich Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex Idean Salehyan, University of North Texas Threat by Example: Sanctions & the Diffusion of Human Rights Practices K. Chad Clay, SUNY, Binghamton University External Rebel Bases and Conflict Dynamics Richard W. Frank, University of New Orleans Conditions of Successful Mediation in Internal Conflicts: The Role of Democracy-Building Arrangements in Political Agreements Paulina Maria Pospieszna, University of Konstanz Gerald Schneider, University of Konstanz Politics and the Efficacy of Humanitarian Aid in Civil Conflict Daniel C. Tirone, University of Pittsburgh Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill EXPLORING THE Thu 4:15 pm RATIONALIST EXPLANATIONS FOR WAR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-41 Douglas M. Gibler, University of Alabama Resources, Rationality, and War: Inferences from South America Ana C. A. Alves On the Empirical Implications of Bargaining Under Observation Tyson Chatagnier, University of Rochester Fighting for the Future: Using Battle, instead of Bargaining, to Resolve Commitment Problems in War Thomas M. Dolan, Jr., University of Rochester The Strategic Origins of Indivisibility in Protracted International Conflict Olivier Henripin, Northwestern University Rational-Choice Experiments on War Kai Quek, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Christopher K. Butler, University of New Mexico ECONOMICS AND CONFLICT Thu 8:00 am No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-32 Mark J.C. Crescenzi, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Disc: 21-23

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Disc: 21-21

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85

Papers:

Disc: 21-25 Room: Chair: Papers:

Peace or Profits: Understanding Israeli-Palestinian Economic Exchange Katherine Barbieri, Univerisity of South Carolina Interdependent Foreign Aid and Human Rights Tobias Heinrich, Rice University Economic Consequences of Conflict Kyungkook Kang, Claremont Graduate University Jacek Kugler, Claremont Graduate University Tad Kugler, Roger Williams University Nowhere to Go: Economic Coercion and Extradyadic Trade Katja B. Kleinberg, SUNY, Binghamton University Mixed Messages: The Signaling Value of Economic Sanctions in Interstate Conflict Matthew Daniel Shaffer, University of South Carolina Nadia Jilani, University of South Carolina Mark J.C. Crescenzi, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill THE POLITICS OF TERRORIST Sat 4:15 pm AND MILITANT GROUPS No Room Assigned Manus I. Midlarsky, Rutgers University Decentralization and Domestic Terrorism in Democracies Deniz Aksoy, Pennsylvania State University Poverty and Support for Militant Organizations in Pakistan Graeme Blair, Princeton University Neil Malhotra, University of Pennsylvania Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University C. Christine Fair, Georgetown University Ties That Do Not Bind (Directly): The Education-Terrorism Nexus Revisited Tim Krieger, University of Paderborn Daniel Meierrieks Sarah Brockhoff, University of Freiburg Fundamentalist Religious Groups and Terrorist Attacks: A Violent Match? Nil Seda Satana, Bilkent University Johanna Kristin Birnir, University of Maryland Ideological Polarization in Insurgent Networks Michael Gabbay, University of Washington Ashley Thirkill-Mackelprang, University of Washington Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of Maryland INTERSTATE COALITIONS: Fri 8:00 am CONFLICT WITH COOPERATION IN THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM No Room Assigned Scott Wolford, University of Colorado, Boulder Daniel S. Morey, University of Kentucky The Cascading Dynamics of War Expansion Kyle A. Joyce, University of California, Davis Coalitions and Bargaining During War Daniel S. Morey, University of Kentucky Crisis Bargaining, Diplomatic Coalitions, and World Opinion Scott Wolford, University of Colorado, Boulder

Disc: 21-27 Room: Chair: Papers:

Examining Variation in Military Institutions within International Military Alliances Brian Lai, University of Iowa Jeffrey Stout, University of Iowa How Big Do Wars Grow? Gary Uzonyi, University of Michigan Brett Ashley Leeds, Rice University INSURGENCY AND TACTICS Sun 10:15 am No Room Assigned David B. Carter, Princeton University Islam and the Spatial Ordering of Urban Violence in Iraq David S. Patel, Cornell University Wartime Violence and Perception of Security Forces: The Spatial-temporal Gravity Model Nils B. Weidmann, Yale University Christoph M. Zuercher, University of Ottawa The Role of Weather in Insurgent Violence: A MicroLevel Study of Attacks on Coalition Forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, 2001-2010 Daniel J. Veale, Wayne State University Timothy A. Carter, Wayne State University Do Insurgency Controlled Social Institutions Dictate Rebel Military Tactics? Zuri Linetsky, University of Virginia David B. Carter, Princeton University David Kinsella, Portland State University STRATEGIC DYNAMICS IN Fri 10:15 am CIVIL WARS No Room Assigned David S. Siroky, Arizona State University Divided Negotiations, Joint Consequences: Modeling Government Bargaining with a Factionalized Selfdetermination Movement Christopher K. Butler, University of New Mexico The Law of the Land: Communal Conflict and Legal Authority in West Africa, 1989-2009 Kristine Eck, Uppsala University Fighting Over Peace: Spoilers, Peace Agreements, and the Strategic Use of Violence Andrew G. Reiter, Mount Holyoke College Communicating Strength: Mass Media Reach and the Geography of Insurgency Camber Warren, ETH Zurich The Determinants of Rebel Group Cohesion and Fragmentation: An Empirical Investigation Yael Zeira, New York University Jacob Daniel Kathman, University of Mississippi QUANTITATIVE METHODS Sat 10:15 am AND THE STUDY OF CONFLICT PROCESSES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 8-13 Kevin A. Clarke, University of Rochester Storm Troopers Draining the Swamps? On the Relationship between Conventional and Unconventional Military Effectiveness Tobias Friedrich Karl Boehmelt, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich Ulrich Pilster, University of Essex

Disc: 21-28 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 21-26

Disc: 21-29

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86

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 21-30 Room: Chair: Papers:

First Do No Harm: The Risks of Modeling Temporal Dependence with an Application to the Causes of War Allan Dafoe, University of California, Berkeley A Fit Statistic and Model Comparison Test for Binary Dependent Variable Models Justin E. Esarey, Emory University Long Range Dependencies in Time Series of Political Violence in Iraq and Indonesia Arthur A. Stein, University of California, Los Angeles David A. Meyer, University of California, San Diego Dyad-Specific Effects in Dyadic Analysis of Conflict Jun Xiang, Rutgers University, Newark Kevin A. Clarke, University of Rochester PUBLIC OPINION AND Thu 2:00 pm INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS No Room Assigned Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania The Perceived Threats Posed by Low and HighIncome Trading Partners: An Experiment Alexandra G. Guisinger, University of Notre Dame Public Opinion and Unconventional War Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, George Washington University Hearts or Minds? Persuasive Messages on Climate Change Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin Bethany Albertson, University of Texas, Austin An Experimental Investigation of the Democratic Peace Jessica Lea Weeks, Cornell University Better Than the Truth: Threat Perception and the Perpetually Imperfect Marketplace of Ideas Kelly M. Greenhill, Tufts University Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania NETWORKS AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 50-6 Sat 4:15 pm

Papers:

Disc: 22-4

Outsiders and Executive-Legislative Conflict in Latin America (1980-2007) Miguel Carreras, University of Pittsburgh What Explains Executive Success in the Legislature? Disaggregating the Executive to Examine Ministers Legislative Batting Averages in Latin America Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University Bethany Shockley, Texas A&M University Quantity v. Quality: Statutory Delegation in Mexico Sylvia Gaylord, Colorado School of Miines Strategic Presidential Position Taking Nathan A. Ilderton, University of Central Florida Presidential Political Appointments and Coalition Governance in Brazil, 2007-2010 Sergio Praca, University of So Paulo Bruno Hoepers, University of Pittsburgh Andra Freitas, Universidade de So Paulo Michael L. Mezey, DePaul University Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston WHEN AND HOW CAN Thu 4:15 pm EXECUTIVES MAKE END RUNS AROUND THE CONGRESS? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 23-3 Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University Executive Preemption: When Presidents Issue Unilateral Orders in Lieu of Legislation Michelle Helene Belco, University of Houston Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston Moving Congress: How Presidents Use Appointment Power to Shift Policy Outcomes in Congress Christian R. Grose, University of Southern California The Flip-Side of Delegation: Examining Congressional Reassertion Efforts Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Virginia Justin Peck, University of Virginia Whats So Sinister About Signing Statements? Ian Ostrander, Washington University in St. Louis Joel Sievert The Impact of Legislative Coalitions on Presidential Signing Statements Tracy Sulkin, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Katherine Graham, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS Thu 8:00 am IN THE STUDY OF LEGISLATURES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 50-3 Seth E. Masket, University of Denver Party Realignment and the Transformation of Chilean Politics: from the Frente Democrtico to the Concertacin. Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 21-31 Room:

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LEGISLATIVE STUDIES

Division Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis Chair: Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University 22-1 Room: 22-2 Room: 22-3 FORMAL MODELS OF LEGISLATIVE POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 4-4 NEW APPROACHES IN COALITION RESEARCH No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-15 INTERACTIONS BETWEEN THE LEGISLATURE AND THE EXECUTIVE IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 23-2 Michael L. Mezey, DePaul University Sat 8:00 am Disc: Sat 4:15 pm 22-5

Room: Sat 10:15 am Chair: Papers:

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87

Disc: 22-6 Room: Chair: Papers:

Do Leadership PAC Donations Predict Cosponsorship in the U.S. House of Representatives for the 105th through 110th Congresses? Noah Kaplan, University of Houston Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Maryland George Hawley, University of Houston Spatial Proximity and Roll-Call Voting Behavior in the U.S. Senate Charles J. Finocchiaro, University of South Carolina David Darmofal, University of South Carolina Legislative decision-making in the European Union before and after enlargement: Explaining network ties in an international legislature Robert Thomson, Trinity College, Dublin Daniel Naurin, Gothenburg University Party Contribution Networks and Congressional Leadership PACs Andrea McAtee, University of South Carolina Seth E. Masket, University of Denver Kristin L. Kanthak, University of Pittsburgh SUBNATIONAL LEGISLATURES Fri 8:00 am No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 29-1 Christopher Z. Mooney, University of Illinois, Springfield Pork-Barrel Politics in the Emerging Fiscal State Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego Explaining Variation in African American Representation across U.S. State Legislatures Ben Highton, University of California, Davis Alex Mayer, University of California, Davis What Divides Legislators: The (Issue) Content of the Primary Axis of Legislative Conflict Jesse T. Richman, Old Dominion University James S.C. Battista, SUNY, University at Buffalo Limiting the Evolutionary Path: Explaining Constitutional and Statutory Entrenchment in State Legislatures Nancy Martorano, University of Dayton Ronald D. Hedlund, Northeastern University Keith E. Hamm, Rice University The Veterans Are All Gone: Evaluating Term Limits Now That They Are Fully Implemented Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State University Lyke Thompson, Wayne State University Charles D. Elder, Wayne State University Christopher Z. Mooney, University of Illinois, Springfield Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa LEGISLATIVE CAREERS Thu 10:15 am No Room Assigned Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia The Gingrich Senators and Their Effect on the U.S. Senate Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin Life Before Congress: Using Pre-Congressional Pathways to Assess Competing Explanations for the Modern House Career Scott A. MacKenzie, University of California, Davis

Disc: 22-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

Should I Stay or Should I Go?: A Study of the Political Ambitions of Appointed US Senators and the Decision to Run for Initial Election Stephen R. Routh, California State University, Stanislaus Rolfe D. Peterson, Mercyhurst College Seniority and Support for Government Spending in the U.S. House: Is There a Culture of Spending? Rebekah Myers, Louisiana State University James C. Garand, Louisiana State University Individual and Collective Accountability Revisited: Who Benefits from Recorded Legislative Voting? Royce A. Carroll, Rice University Monika Nalepa, University of Notre Dame Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia Jesse T. Richman, Old Dominion University LEGISLATIVE PROCEDURES Fri 10:15 am AND POLICY OUTCOMES No Room Assigned Richard M. Skinner Bicameral Agenda Control: Examining the Effects of Procedural Tools on Congressional Policy Outcomes, 1883-1937 Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia Anthony Madonna, University of Georgia Jason M. Roberts, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Minority Partys Ability to Make Successful Counter-Proposals in the US Senate Chris Den Hartog, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Nathan W. Monroe, University of California, Merced Using Representatives as Scouts in the Senate Sarah A. Treul, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Congress and the Politics of Problem Solving Scott Adler, University of Colorado, Boulder John D. Wilkerson, University of Washington Signatures, Sequences, and Signals: Discharge Petition Behavior in the U.S. House L. Marvin Overby, University of Missouri Susan Marie Miller, Ohio State University Vincent G. Moscardelli Eleanor Neff Powell, Yale University POLITICAL POLARIZATION Thu 2:00 pm No Room Assigned Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin Political Polarization, Policy Issues and the Study of Congress John Lapinski, University of Pennsylvania Joshua D. Clinton, Vanderbilt University Where Have You Gone, Sam Rayburn? Legislative Polarization and Agreement Jennifer Nicoll Victor, University of Pittsburgh Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago Party Priorities, Agenda Control, and Bipartisan Cooperation in Congress Laurel Harbridge, Northwestern University Winning from the Center: House Moderates Irritate Both Sides Christine DeGregorio, American University

Disc: 22-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

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22-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

88

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DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 22-10 Room: Chair: Papers:

Congress in a Downsian World: A Cyclical Theory of Party System Polarization Lawrence C. Dodd, University of Florida Michael Crespin, University of Georgia Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin LEGISLATORS AND Sat 2:00 pm CONSTITUENTS No Room Assigned Michael J. Ensley, Kent State University After Defeat: The Politics and Consequences of Involuntary Committee Reassignments Eleanor Neff Powell, Yale University Legislator versus Constituency Characteristics in Congressional Representation Benjamin Lauderdale, Harvard University A Strategic Party Government Perspective on the 111th Congress Gregory Koger, University of Miami The Political Geography of Distributive Politics Michael Crespin, University of Georgia Charles J. Finocchiaro, University of South Carolina Austin Clemens, University of Georgia Do Voters Hold Legislators Accountable for the Voting Behavior?: The Impact of Greater Transparency on Roll Call on Electoral Outcomes Carmen Le Foulon, Columbia University Michael J. Ensley, Kent State University Daniel J. Lee, Michigan State University BEYOND STICKS AND STONES: Fri 2:00 pm RHETORIC IN LEGISLATURES No Room Assigned Robi Ragan, Emory University You Lie! The History of Partisan Taunting in Congress Gary King, Harvard University Justin Grimmer, Stanford University Chiara Superti, Harvard University Dynamic Electoral Connection: Senate Floor Speeches and Pursuit of the Re-Election Goal Chad Murphy, University of Mary Washington Benjamin Bishin, University of California, Riverside Losers Politics: A Model of Opposition and CounterOpposition Burt L. Monroe, Pennsylvania State University Eitan Tzelgov, Pennsylvania State University Partisan and Personal Incentives in Parliamentary Speeches: A Computer Content Analysis Akitaka Matsuo, Rice University Shunta Matsumoto, Meijo University Parliamentary Rules, Rights and Rites: Disorder in the British House of Commons Faith Armitage, University of London, Birkbeck College Robi Ragan, Emory University ACCOUNTABILITY OF Sat 4:15 pm LEGISLATORS, A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-68 Frank C. Thames, Texas Tech University

Papers:

Disc: 22-13

Whose Rights Do MPs Defend? Cohesion of Parties, Interest Groups and Other Social Groups in the Swiss Parliament Philippe Blanchard, University of Lausanne Andre Mach, Universite de Lausanne Oscar Mazzoleni, Ufficio di Statistica Andrea Pilotti, University of Lausanne Parties, Coalitions, and Ideology: Agenda-Setting in Colombian Committees Gregg B. Johnson, Valparaiso University Monica Pachon, Universidad de los Andes Autonomy and Influence: A Comparative Theory of Legislative Power Amie Kreppel, University of Florida Principal-Agent Relations in Mexicos Chamber of Deputies: From Hegemony to Democracy Joy Langston, CIDE Curbing Elite Discretion: Banning Legislative Party Switching Olga V. Shvetsova, Binghamton University, SUNY Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia Juan Pablo Micozzi, University of New Mexico Frank C. Thames, Texas Tech University THEME PANEL: WHEN ARE Fri 4:15 pm LEGISLATURES A VENUE FOR DEFENDING RIGHTS? No Room Assigned Womens Rights as US Foreign Policy: Why Do Members of Congress Care? Sara Angevine, Rutgers University Responsiveness in an Era of Inequality: The Case of the U.S. Senate Thomas J. Hayes, University of California, Riverside Can Parliament Protect Rights? Janet Hiebert, Queens University An Indelible Imprint? Assessing the Evolution of Racial Politics in Shaping Conflict in Congress during the Civil Rights Era Michael C. Brady, Denison University Daniel J. Lee, Michigan State University Eric Gonzalez Juenke, Michigan State University The Evolution of Parliamentary Minority Rights in Western Europe Michael Ko, University of Potsdam Cesar Garcia Perez de Leon, Science Po ELECTORAL MANDATES, Sun 8:00 am INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN AND REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico Electoral Mandates, Political Institutions, and Policy Change Brian F. Crisp, Washington University, St. Louis Santiago Olivella, Washington University in St. Louis Joshua D. Potter, Washington University, St. Louis Influence Without Power: The Minority Partys Struggle for Rights in the U.S. House of Representatives Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America

Disc: 22-11 Room: Chair: Papers:

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Disc: 22-14

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Disc: 22-12

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89

Disc: 22-15

Electoral Marginality and Constituency Representation: Resolving Contradictory Findings with the Theory of Partisan Issue Representation Kim Quaile Hill, Texas A&M University Soren Jordan, Texas A&M Unviersity Parliamentary Rules of Procedure and Intra-Party Politics Daniela Giannetti, University of Bologna Determinants of Opposition Fragmentation: Parliamentary Rules and Opposition Strategies Ko Maeda, University of North Texas Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico Jeffrey D. Grynaviski, Wayne State University ROUNDTABLE ON BARRY Fri 4:15 pm BURDENS PERSONAL ROOTS OF REPRESENTATION AND FRANCES LEES BEYOND IDEOLOGY. No Room Assigned Eric Schickler, University of California, Berkeley Eric Schickler, University of California, Berkeley Barbara Sinclair, University of California, Los Angeles C. Lawrence Evans, College of William & Mary Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin, Madison Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland PARTY AND PROCEDURE IN Thu 8:00 am THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS No Room Assigned Jacob R. Straus, Library of Congress Defense Authorization: The Senates Last Best Hope Colleen J. Shogan, Congressional Research Service Toppling the King of the Hill: Understanding Innovation in House Practice James Saturno, Congressional Research Service Majority Party Procedural Advantage in the U.S. Senate: Tabling Motions and Other Mechanisms of Amendment Control David W. Rohde, Duke University Aaron Scott King, Duke University Francis J. Orlando, Duke University Ping Pong and Other Congressional Pursuits: Alternatives to Conference Committees Barbara Sinclair, University of California, Los Angeles Kathryn Pearson, University of Minnesota VOTING AND PARTICIPATION Sat 10:15 am IN LEGISLATURES No Room Assigned Laurel Harbridge, Northwestern University Participation on House Roll Call Votes and the Transformation of the Electoral Connection, 1820 to 1920 John R. Baughman, Bates College Timothy P. Nokken, Texas Tech University Party Unity, Campaign Contributions, and Legislative Success Tracy Sulkin, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign William T. Bernhard, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Disc: 22-18

Endogenous Bias in Ideal Point Estimates Edward Stiglitz, Stanford University Barry R. Weingast, Stanford University Polarization, Party Coalitions, and Lawmaking in the United States Congress Daniel R. DiSalvo, The City College of New YorkCUNY Politicians not Statesmen: How Threatened Legislators Obscure with Appropriations Justin Grimmer, Stanford University Laurel Harbridge, Northwestern University Yael Shomer, Tel Aviv University LEGISLATIVE DISTRICTS: Fri 8:00 am WHERE THEY COME FROM AND HOW THEY MATTER No Room Assigned Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University The One Person One Vote Standard in Redistricting: The Uses and Abuses of Population Deviations in Legislative Redistricting Thomas L. Brunell, University of Texas, Dallas Individual Legislative Strategies: The Effect of Personal and District Characteristics on Legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives Tracy Burdett, Ohio State University A Comparative Study of Independent Redistricting Commissions Jennifer A. Steen, Arizona State University Redistricting Institutions, Partisan Tides, and Congressional Turnover Nicholas Goedert, Princeton University Theories and Measures for Variations in Congressional Constituencies: Diversity, Heterogeneity, and Complexity Michael W Tofias, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Michael J. Ensley, Kent State University Scott de Marchi, Duke University Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University THE RETURN OF DIVIDED Thu 2:00 pm GOVERNMENT: A ROUNDTABLE ON THE 112TH CONGRESS No Room Assigned C. Lawrence Evans, College of William & Mary David W. Rohde, Duke University Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland Thomas E. Mann, Brookings Institution Steven S. Smith, Washington University THE POLITICS OF WOMENS PRESENCE IN LEGISLATURES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-4 EXPLAINING WOMENS SUCCESS AS CANDIDATES AND THEIR POSITION-TAKING AS LEGISLATORS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-14 Sat 8:00 am

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22-16

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Disc: 22-19

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Disc: 22-17 Room: Chair: Papers:

22-20 Room: 22-21

Thu 8:00 am

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90

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

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22-22 Room:

LOBBYING AND PUBLIC POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-10

Sat 8:00 am

23

PRESIDENCY RESEARCH

Division David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt University Chair: 23-1 Room: 23-2 PRESIDENCY, POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT, AND RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-18 INTERACTIONS BETWEEN THE LEGISLATURE AND THE EXECUTIVE IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-3 WHEN AND HOW CAN EXECUTIVES MAKE END RUNS AROUND THE CONGRESS? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-4 Fri 4:15 pm

Sat 10:15 am Disc: 23-6 Room: Thu 4:15 pm Chair: Papers:

Who Serves? Examining White House Staff Backgrounds, 1933-2008 Matthew J. Dickinson, Middlebury College The Administrative Shuffle: First-term Changes in Presidential Staffing James D. King, University of Wyoming James W. Riddlesperger, Jr., Texas Christian University Fidelity to Duty in Presidential Work - the Impact of Unanticipated Events and White House Staff Support Terry Sullivan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Top Secret Memos: National Security Directives and the Modern American Presidency Carlos E. Diaz-Rosillo, Harvard University MaryAnne Borrelli, Connecticut College Andrew C. Rudalevige, Dickinson College PRESIDENTS, PARTIES, AND Thu 2:00 pm ELECTIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-1 Harold F. Bass, Ouachita Baptist University The Electoral College and Candidate Strategy in the 2008 Election David A. Hopkins, Boston College Darshan J. Goux, University of California, Berkeley The Presidentialization of Political Party Leadership? Evaluating Convergence in Party Leadership in Old and New Democracies Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University Paul D. Webb, University of Sussex The Party-Builder-in-Chief: Presidential Midterm Election Campaign Strategies, 1978-2010 Brendan J. Doherty, United States Naval Academy Presidential Partisanship Reconsidered: Eisenhower, Nixon, Ford, and the Rise of the GOP in the South Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University Presidential Responsiveness to Minority Policy Preferences Brian Newman, Pepperdine University John D. Griffin, University of Notre Dame David Karol, University of Maryland THE PUBLIC PRESIDENCY Sat 8:00 am No Room Assigned Michael A. Genovese, Loyola Marymount University The Agenda-Setting Power of Presidential Press Conferences Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North Texas Bipartisanship in the Eyes of the Public: Examining the Effect that Bipartisan Rhetoric Has on Public Appraisals of the President Justin S. Vaughn, Cleveland State University Jose D. Villalobos, University of Texas, El Paso Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University Email Blasts, Primetime Addresses, and Block Walks: An Expanded Model of Presidential Grassroots Lobbying Jonathan Klingler, University of Rochester Going Public in Semi-Presidential Democracies Sebastien G. Lazardeux, SPIRIT

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PRESIDENTS, CONGRESS, AND Fri 8:00 am POLICYMAKING No Room Assigned Richard J. Powell, University of Maine Up the Hill and Across the Aisle: Explaining When Presidents Contact Opposing Congressional Leaders Matthew N. Beckmann, University of California, Irvine Beyond Pivotal Politics: An Analysis of Vote Switching on Veto Override Votes Patrick Hickey, University of Texas, Austin Partisan Influence and Presidential Power: The Implications of Unilateral Action Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester Fang-Yi Chiou, Academia Sinica Investigating the President: Committee Probes and Presidential Approval, 1953-2006 Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University Eric Schickler, University of California, Berkeley Electoral Polarization and Institutional Representation B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University Soren Jordan, Texas A&M Unviersity Gisela Sin, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University THE POLITICS OF THE WHITE Sun 10:15 am HOUSE AND PRESIDENTIAL STAFF No Room Assigned Jose D. Villalobos, University of Texas, El Paso From the Troika to the Cleanup Crew: The Chiefs of Staff in the Reagan White House David B. Cohen, University of Akron Karen M. Hult, Virginia Tech Charles E. Walcott, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Disc: 23-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

23-5

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91

Disc: 23-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

From Short- to Long-Term Effect of Going Public Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin, Madison Jeffrey S. Peake, Bowling Green State University Joseph Cammarano, Providence College EXECUTIVE BRANCH Fri 10:15 am POLITICS No Room Assigned Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley Neutral Competence or Yes-Men?: Beyond the Loyalty-Competence Tradeoff Gary Edward Hollibaugh, Jr., University of Rochester The Visibility of Cabinet Members, 1897-2006 Christopher J. Deering, George Washington University Executives, Weberian Bureaucrats and Quality of Government Victor Lapuente, Goteburg University Carl Johan Dahlstrm, University of Gothenburg Institutional Pathways for Public Agendas: Shaping Public Discourse through Public Advisory Committees Susan L. Moffitt, Brown University Aiding and Abetting the President: Agency Responsiveness to Presidential Electoral Interests John Hudak, Vanderbilt University Bert A. Rockman, Purdue University David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt University ROUNDTABLE HONORING Sat 2:00 pm THE SCHOLARSHIP AND MENTORSHIP OF CHARLES WALCOTT No Room Assigned Robert Maranto, University of Arkansas Charles E. Walcott, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Terry M. Moe, Stanford University Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington Frances Stokes Berry, Florida State University Mary Angela Hendrickson, Wilson College T. Alissa Warters, Francis Marion University James P. Melcher, University of Maine, Farmington CRUCIAL ISSUES OF Sat 4:15 pm PRESIDENTS AND CIVIL WAR: HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL No Room Assigned Matthew Holden, Jr., University of Illinois at Springfield Fred I. Greenstein, Princeton University Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College Scott Gates, International Peace Research Institute IN DEFENSE OF THE Thu 10:15 am CONSTITUTION: THE LIFE AND WORK OF LOUIS FISHER No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-2 Jasmine Farrier, University of Louisville Louis Fisher, Library of Congress David Gray Adler, Idaho State University Nancy Kassop, SUNY, New Paltz

Bruce G. Peabody, Fairleigh Dickinson University James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University Robert J. Spitzer, SUNY, Cortland 23-12 Room: Chair: Papers: PRESIDENTIAL INFLUENCE IN Thu 8:00 am POLICYMAKING No Room Assigned Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington A Speech-Based Measure of Cabinet Members Ideal Points R. Brian Law, University of California, Los Angeles The Presidents Votes on Roll Calls Jonathan P. Olmsted, University of Rochester Presidential Leverage in American Politics: Presidents, Publics, and the State Daniel E. Ponder, Drury University Veto Bargaining and the Line-Item Veto Gisela Sin, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Valeria Palanza, Catholic University of Chile Wartime Opposition as the Protector of Civil Liberties Maryann E. Gallagher, DePauw University Joshua Schlake, DePauw University Christian R. Grose, University of Southern California Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North Texas PRESIDENTIAL RHETORIC Thu 4:15 pm AND COMMUNICATIONS STRATEGIES No Room Assigned Philip Abbott, Wayne State University Halfway There: Examining Obamas Speechmaking at Midterm Shannon L. Bow, University of Texas, Austin Changing the Presidential Voice: A New Path to Leadership in a Partisan Era Diane J. Heith, St. Johns University Change and Continuity in Presidential Communications Strategies, 1961-2009 Richard J. Powell, University of Maine Presidential Leadership in US Financial Institutions Regulation and Reform John T. Woolley, University of California, Santa Barbara Presidents and the Rhetoric of Recessions Donna R. Hoffman, University of Northern Iowa Alison Howard, Dominican University of California Daniel E. Ponder, Drury University Justin S. Vaughn, Cleveland State University RECONSIDERING Sun 8:00 am PRESIDENTIAL POWER IN TIME No Room Assigned Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College Judging Presidents: A Test of Three Typology Hypotheses Bruce Buchanan, University of Texas, Austin The Strategic, Hidden-Hand Presidency of James Madison Melvin C. Laracey, University of Texas, San Antonio

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23-13

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23-10

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23-11

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92

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DIVISION PANELS

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The Progressive Presidency and the Shaping of the Modern Executive Andrea Lee Scoseria Katz, Yale University The Perils of Restoration Politics: 19th Century Antecedents David A. Crockett, Trinity University The Presidential Ranking Game: Critical Review and Some Unexpected Discoveries Curt Nichols, Baylor University Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College Jesse H. Rhodes, University of Massachusetts, Amherst THE POLITICS OF BUREAUCRATIC LEADERSHIP, EXPERTISE, AND EXECUTIVE CONTROL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 24-4 Sat 4:15 pm

23-15

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What Determines If Contracts are Managed Formally or Relationally? Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma Meeyoung Lamothe, University of Oklahoma Representative Contractors? The Implications of Representative Bureaucracy Theory in Federal Procurement William G. Resh, Indiana University, Bloomington John Marvel, American University Beyond Structure: Informal Accountability within Service Delivery Networks Jocelyn M. Johnston, American University Kelly M. LeRoux, University of Illinois, Chicago Barbara S. Romzek, University of Kansas Jeannette Blackmar, University of Kansas Robin Kempf, University of Kansas Food for Thought? Intersectoral Collaborative Public Management Sharon Paynter, East Carolina University Alisa Hicklin Fryar, University of Oklahoma REGULATORY POLICY AND Sat 8:00 am AGENCY BEHAVIOR: NEGOTIATION, COLLABORATION, VOLUNTARY COMPLIANCE, OR CAPTURE? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-3 Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University Organizational Reponses of Regulatory Agencies to Internationalization, Mediatization, and Accountability Challenges Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich Martino Maggetti, University of Zurich Jan Biela, University of Lausanne Manuel Puppis, University of Zurich Lets Negotiate: Business and Government Voluntary Agreements in Toxic Chemicals Lily Y.W. Hsueh, University of Washington Fostering Bureaucratic Policy Learning Through Voluntary Regulatory Programs: The Case of the Federal Aviation Administration Russell W. Mills, Kent State University The Benefits of Capture Dorit Rubinstein Reiss, University of California Principal-Agent Behavior on Regulatory Commissions Craig W. Thomas, University of Washington Tyler Blake Davis, University of Washington Beryl A. Radin, American University THE POLITICS OF Sat 4:15 pm BUREAUCRATIC LEADERSHIP, EXPERTISE, AND EXECUTIVE CONTROL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 23-15 Karen M. Hult, Virginia Tech Agency Politicization, Personnel Turnover, and Bureaucratic Expertise Jowei Chen, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Tim Johnson, Stanford University

24

PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION

24-3

Division Jerrell D. Coggburn, North Carolina State University Chair: 24-1 PUBLIC PERSONNEL Fri 8:00 am SYSTEMS: THE EVOLUTION AND IMPACT OF EMPLOYEE RIGHTS AND PROTECTIONS No Room Assigned Norma M. Riccucci, Rutgers University, Newark The Rights of Veterans and the Impact of Veterans Preference on Minorities and the Federal Civil Service Gregory B. Lewis, Georgia State University Rolling Back State Civil Service Systems: Assessing the Erosion of Employee Rights and Protections, and Their Impacts Sally Coleman Selden, Lynchburg College Gene A. Brewer, University of Georgia To Post or Not to Post: Employee Rights and Social Media Willow Jacobson, University of North CarolinaChapel Hill Shannon H. Tufts, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Results-Based Management in Federal Performance Appraisal Systems Ellen V. Rubin, SUNY Albany What is a Fair Wage for a Government Employee? A Critical Evaluation of Public Sector Wage Setting Theory and Practice Jared Llorens, Louisiana State University J. Edward Kellough, University of Georgia COLLABORATION OR Thu 10:15 am CONTROL? ISSUES IN CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AND NETWORKED DELIVERY No Room Assigned Gene A. Brewer, University of Georgia Outsourcing Local Government Services: Holding Contractors Accountable in Noncompetitive Contract Markets Amanda M. Girth, American University Jocelyn M. Johnston, American University

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Disc: 24-4

Disc: 24-2

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93

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Political Screening and Presidential Appointment of Bureaucratic Leaders in U.S. Federal Government Agencies George A. Krause, University of Pittsburgh Bureaucracy, Politics, and Democracy: Testing Theories of Political Control over the Bureaucracy Kenneth J. Meier, Texas A&M University Laurence J. OToole, University of Georgia Context and Constraint in Presidential Unilateralism Andrew C. Rudalevige, Dickinson College Presidents and the Development of Administrative Independence Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley John W. Patty, Washington University Anthony Michael Bertelli, University of Southern California Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester INSTITUTIONALIZED CHAOS Thu 2:00 pm AND TRANSFORMATION OF GOVERNANCE: EXPLAINING GLOBAL CRISIS OF CAPITALISM No Room Assigned Ali Farazmand, Florida Atlantic University Governance Transformation and Institutionalized Changes: A Comparative Perspective on Market-State Relations B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh Institutionalized Chaos and Transnational Higher Education Changes Peter H. Koehn, University of Montana Institutionalized Chaos and Transformation of Governance: Explaining the Global Crisis of Capitalism Ali Farazmand, Florida Atlantic University The Paradox of Administrative Reform: Progressivism, Corporate Capitalism, and Citizen Estrangement from Government Robert F. Durant, American University Chester A. Newland, University of Southern California THE IMPLICATIONS OF Fri 2:00 pm MOTIVATION, SATISFACTION, AND FIT FOR PUBLIC SERVICE CAREERS No Room Assigned Charles W. Gossett, California State University, Sacramento Sexual Orientation, Altruism, and Preference for Nonprofit and Public Sector Employment Gregory B. Lewis, Georgia State University Eddy S. Ng, Dalhousie University The Effect of Personnel Constraints on Public Managers Job Satisfaction and Turnover Decisions John Marvel, American University David Pitts, American University Value Congruence in the Central Government of South Korea Ellen V. Rubin, SUNY Albany Geunpil Ryu, SUNY, University at Albany

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Public Service Motivation, Volunteering & Lives of Public Service: Differing Motives and Different Career Paths Roger P. Rose, University of Minnesota, Morris Kevin Thompson, University of Minnesota, Crookston Exit, Voice, and Loyalty with Multiple Exit Strategies Andrew B. Whitford, University of Georgia Soo-Young Lee, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies Jerrell D. Coggburn, North Carolina State University Diane E. Schmidt, California State University, Chico MEASURING PERFORMANCE, Fri 10:15 am ACCOUNTABILITY, AND CORRUPTION: EXPLORING APPROACHES AND EFFECTS No Room Assigned Beryl A. Radin, American University The Statistical Measurement of Accountability Concepts in American Governance Anthony Michael Bertelli, University of Southern California Mass Evaluations of the Problem of Political Corruption: A Comparative Study Eric D. Raile, North Dakota State University Exploring the Disparate Impacts of Accountability Policies Alisa Hicklin Fryar, University of Oklahoma Evaluating and Measuring Local Government Corruption and Transparency Gary Bland, Ph.D., RTI International Performance Measures in Forecast Organizations Brent Durbin, Smith College Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma THE POLITICS OF Fri 4:15 pm REPRESENTATIVE BUREAUCRACY No Room Assigned Eckhard Schroeter, Zeppelin University Merit and Patronage: Alternative Tracks to Representation? B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh Nonprofit Advocacy to Create a Procedurally and Substantively Inclusive City Bureaucracy Els de Graauw, CUNY-Baruch College Equality and Diversity in UK Government: Determinants of Minority and Gender Representation in the Civil Service and Local Government Rhys Andrews, University of Cardiff Representative Bureaucracy in Multinational States: A Comparison of Belgium, Canada and Switzerland Luc Turgeon, University of Ottawa The Performance Claim of Representative Bureaucracy: Can It Deliver? Eckhard Schroeter, Zeppelin University Patrick von Maravic, Zeppelin University Representative Bureaucracy and Sexual Orientation: Testing the Passive-Active Link for LGBTs in Higher Education David Pitts, American University

24-7

24-5

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94

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

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Christopher K. Ansell, University of California, Berkeley Donna Kemp, California State University Chico OPERATION INNOVATION OR MORE OF THE SAME OLD? THE STATE OF EGOVERNMENT AROUND THE WORLD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 40-7 Thu 4:15 pm

25-5

24-9

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THE POLITICS OF FEDERAL Sat 10:15 am BUDGET PROCESS REFORM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Practicing Politics Working Group, Panel 4

25

PUBLIC POLICY

Division Mara Sidney, Rutgers University, Newark Chair: 25-1 PUBLIC POLICY AND THE CONTOURS OF AMERICAN POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-4 ETHICAL DILEMMAS AND SECURITY CHALLENGES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-25 REGULATORY POLICY AND AGENCY BEHAVIOR: NEGOTIATION, COLLABORATION, VOLUNTARY COMPLIANCE, OR CAPTURE? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 24-3 Fri 2:00 pm

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Disc: Thu 4:15 pm 25-6 Room: Sat 8:00 am Chair: Papers:

THE POLITICS OF DISASTER: Thu 10:15 am RECOVERY IN CROSSNATIONAL AND CROSSDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 39-2 Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University Flooding The Vote: Hurricane Katrina and Voter Participation in New Orleans Thad E. Hall, University of Utah Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of Technology Recovering from the Ashes: Housing in Japan, 194555 Rieko Kage, University of Tokyo Social, Not Physical, Infrastructure: The Critical Role of Civil Society in Disaster Recovery Daniel P. Aldrich, Purdue University Race, Class & Space: A Comparative Study of Network Assistance in Two New Orleans Neighborhoods Devastated by Hurricane Katrina James R. Elliott, University of Oregon Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University IMMIGRATION POLITICS IN Sun 8:00 am STATES AND CITIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 30-2 Janice Fine, Rutgers University Minimum Wages for Immigrant Workers: Nonprofit Advocacy in the Shadows of Unions Els de Graauw, CUNY-Baruch College New Destinations or Old Politics? Explaining Local Immigration Enforcement Policies Paul G. Lewis, Arizona State University Doris Marie Provine, Arizona State University Monica Varsanyi, CUNY-John Jay College Scott Decker, Arizona State University (West) Proto-Citizens or Criminal Aliens? State Government as the New Battleground for Immigrant Rights Gary M. Reich, University of Kansas Jay Barth, Hendrix College Does the Policy Context Affect Student Outcomes?: State Receptivity and Educational Outcomes of the Children of Immigrants Alexandra Filindra, Brown University Cynthia Garcia-Coll, Brown University David Blanding, Brown University Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern University NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN Sat 10:15 am PUBLIC POLICY THEORIES No Room Assigned Greg Thorson, University of Redlands How Our Understanding of Policy Change is Affected by the Measurement of Public Policy Paul Burstein, University of Washington Investigating the Implementation of BoundarySpanning Policies Chris Koski, Reed College Peter J. May, University of Washington

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FRAMING, FOCUSING EVENTS, Thu 8:00 am AND POLICY CHANGE No Room Assigned Ashlie B. Delshad, Purdue University The Politics of Executive Compensation: Government Regulation in the Wake of Focusing Events Sandra L. Suarez, Temple University A New Face of Poverty?: Economic Crises and Poverty Discourses Helen Abbie Erler, Kenyon College From Rights to Privileges: The Framing of American Veteran Education Benefits Melinda R. Tarsi, University of Massachusetts, Amherst The Image of Corporate Welfare In Tough Economic Times Rene J. Johnson, Kent State University Deborah Stone, Dartmouth College

Disc: 25-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

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95

Disc: 25-8

A New Classification of Public Policies in the American States Saundra K. Schneider, Michigan State University William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University Peter deLeon, University of Colorado, Denver URBAN EDUCATION: Fri 8:00 am INSTITUTIONAL INNOVATION AND SYSTEM PERFORMANCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 30-3 Patrick J. McGuinn, Drew University Mayoral Management: Sustaining Effects of Mayoral Control on School Spending in Urban Systems Francis X. Shen, Vanderbilt University Law School Kenneth K. Wong, Brown University Evaluating Urban Public Schools: Parents, Teachers and State Assessments Kenneth J. Meier, Texas A&M University Nathan Favero, Texas A&M University Implementing Institutional Change: Politics and Cognition in Education Reform Katharine Elizabeth Neem Destler, University of Washington Choice, Voice & Exit: School Vouchers in Milwaukee David J. Fleming, Furman University Susan E. Clarke, University of Colorado, Boulder IDEAS AND AGENDAS IN Thu 2:00 pm COMPARATIVE POLICY ANALYSIS No Room Assigned Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University Where Do Bailouts Fit within Models of Capitalism?: A Comparison of German and US Responses to the Financial Crisis Mark Cassell, Kent State University Timing Health Policy Development and Change: The Drug Gap Katherine Boothe, McMaster University The Pace and Profile of Gender Policy Change in Europe Isabelle Engeli, European University Institute Francesca Gains, University of Manchester Claire Annesley, University of Manchester Shifting Safety: The Rise and Expansion of Safety and Security Issues in the Netherlands Sandra Resodihardjo Iris Geva-May, Simon Fraser University POLICY BY PROXY: Fri 10:15 am NEOLIBERAL EFFICIENCIES AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 42-4 Frances Fox Piven, CUNY, Graduate Center MISgoverned: CONNECTIONS, the Welfare Management System, and the Erosion of Welfare Rights Virginia Eubanks, University at Albany, SUNY Surveillance as Governance: Efficiency and Disaster Preparedness in U.S. Hospitals Torin Monahan, Vanderbilt University Disc:

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The End of Social Work: The Neoliberalization of Doing Good Sanford F. Schram, Bryn Mawr College Governing Health Care Through Consumer Rights Lars Thorup Larsen, University of Aarhus Deborah Stone, Dartmouth College Frances Fox Piven, CUNY, Graduate Center Ronald J. Schmidt, Sr., California State University, Long Beach UNDERSTANDING THE Fri 2:00 pm POLICY PROCESS WITH NETWORK ANALYSIS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 50-4 Ramiro Berardo, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientficas y Tcnicas Evolution of a Governance Network Goktug Morcol, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg Triparna Vasavada, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg Sohee Kim, Penn State Harrisburg The Role of Positive and Negative Feedback in Explaining Policy Changes under a Decentralized Policy Network: A Case Study of Two Korean Bioethics Lawmaking Processes Myong Hwa Lee, Northern Illinois University Its Not All about the Benjamins: Lobbying Networks and U.S. Foreign Aid Policy Erik Kinji Godwin, Texas A&M University Brian Shreck, Texas A&M University Network Methods for the Discovery of Advocacy Coalitions Adam Douglas Henry, West Virginia University Karin Ingold, ETH Zurich Ramiro Berardo, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientficas y Tcnicas POLICY, IDENTITY, AND THE Sun 10:15 am POLITICS OF DIFFERENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Critical Policy Studies, Panel 1 Jacques Bertrand, University of Toronto State-Constructed Categories and the Politics of Difference Dvora Yanow, University of Amsterdam, Faculty of Behavioral and Social Sciences Questioning Race and the Future of Census Classifications Debra Thompson, Harvard University Minority or Majority Moments? Assessing the Impact of Nation-Building Policies on the Institutionalization of Diversity Arjun Tremblay, University of Toronto The Specter of Exceptional Membership: Welfare Reform, Race, and Refugee Status in America Adriano Udani, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Alain G. Gagnon, University du Quebec a Montreal FEDERALISM AND EDUCATION REFORM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 28-2 Sat 2:00 pm

25-11

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Disc: 25-12 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 25-10

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Disc: 25-13 Room:

96

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DIVISION PANELS

Chair: Papers:

Disc: 25-14

Bryan Shelly, Wake Forest University E Pluribus Unum? New Approaches to Intergovernmental Relations and Standards Setting in 21st Century Policymaking Patrick J. McGuinn, Drew University Do We Aim at What We Pay For?: Proficiency Expectations and Educational Resources Douglas S. Reed, Georgetown University The Case of Modern Federalism: Costliness and Durability in Education Reform Domingo Morel, Brown University Jennifer Cassidy, Brown University Pursuing Grants and Reelection: Electoral Credit and Grant Application Decisions by U.S. Governors Sean Nicholson-Crotty, University of Missouri, Columbia Paul Manna, College of William & Mary Paul L. Posner, George Mason University CHANGE AND BACKLASH: Thu 10:15 am ASSESSING OBAMAS PRESIDENCY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-22 Theda Skocpol, Harvard University Hard-Fought Legacy: Obama, Congressional Democrats, and the Struggle for Comprehensive Health Reform Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota Paying Americas Way: The Fraught Politics of Taxes, Investments, and Budgetary Responsibility Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Obamas Immigration Reform: A Tough Sell for a Grand Bargain John D. Skrentny, University of California, San Diego Stephen Skowronek, Yale University Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley EDUCATION POLICY: Thu 4:15 pm POLITICS AND OUTCOMES No Room Assigned Douglas S. Reed, Georgetown University Explaining Party Position Change: The Case of Education Policy Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame Michael T. Hartney, Jr., University of Notre Dame The Pursuit of Equality through Education Finance Reform Sarah A. Hill, California State University, Fullerton D. Roderick Kiewiet, California Institute of Technology Changing School Governance, Improving Outcomes? Sara Elizabeth Dahill-Brown, University of Wisconsin, Madison Segregated Schools: Why They Continue Ryane McAuliffe Straus, College of Saint Rose Douglas S. Reed, Georgetown University LOCAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 39-3 Fri 10:15 am

Chair: Papers:

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Henry B. Sirgo, McNeese State University Studying Cross-Scale Infrastructures, Actors, and Institutions: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Sustainable Cities Chris Weible, University of Colorado, Denver Anu Ramaswami, University of Colorado, Denver City Administrators as Political Animals: Environmental Group Access and Local Political Markets for City Sustainability Policies and Programs Kent E. Portney, Tufts University Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University Citizen Participation in Brownfield Cleanup and Redevelopment: Rights and Realities Lillian V. Majidzadeh, Ohio State University Tomas Koontz, Ohio State University Local Political Leadership and Green Building Taedong Lee, City University of Hong Kong Chris Koski, Reed College Manuel P. Teodoro, Colgate University CHINAS NEW WELFARE Sat 2:00 pm POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 13-11 Hongying Wang, Syracuse University The Political Economy of Chinas Emerging Health Care System Hongying Wang, Syracuse University Authoritatian Assistance: Welfare and Wealth in Urban China Dorothy J. Solinger, University of California, Irvine Expanding the Reach of Chinas Narrow Welfare State: The Post-Mao Reforms in Historical and Comparative Perspective Nara Dillon, Harvard University Changing Pension Policies in a Changing Society Jing Lin, Syracuse University The Politics of Paternalism and Citizenship Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago Mark W. Frazier, University of Oklahoma WHAT MAKES A PERSON OR Sat 4:15 pm PEOPLE CARCERAL No Room Assigned Mary L. (Molly) Shanley, Vassar College Locking up Homo Oeconomicus: Neoliberal Human Capital Theory and the Carceral State Andrew Dilts, University of Chicago Deadbeat or Dead Poor? The Rights of Incarcerated Fathers Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University After Mass Incarceration: Restoring Dignity and Legitimacy to American Incarceration Jonathan Simon, Unversity of California, Berkeley The Hidden Politics of Carceral State Expansion Naomi Murakawa, University of Washington, Seattle Katherine Beckett, University of Washington PUBLIC VALUES AND ATTITUDES IN HEALTH POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 48-2 Fri 4:15 pm

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Disc: 25-15 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 25-18 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 25-16 Room:

25-19

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97

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Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark Addressing the Shortage of Kidneys for Transplantation: Ethical Concerns, Institutional Design, and Practical Consequences David L. Weimer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Aidan Vining, Simon Fraser University Lara Rosen, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Right to Health, or the Lack Thereof: Lessons from Appalachia Laura S. Jensen, Virginia Tech Fatima Sharif, Virginia Tech The Missing Link in the Social Determinants Literature: The Impact of Political Factors on Health Status and Health Disparities in the United States Jillian Medeiros, University of New Mexico Gabriel Sanchez, University of New Mexico Vickie Ybarra, University of New Mexico Autism, Neurodiversity, and the Welfare State: IsThere Space for Accommodating Neurological Difference? Michael Orsini, University of Ottawa Miriam J. Laugesen, Columbia University EXPLAINING PUBLIC POLICY: Fri 4:15 pm HISTORICAL AND COMPARATIVE APPROACHES No Room Assigned Peter C. John, University of Manchester Health Care Governance: Conformity and Decline in European Health Care Systems Kenneth Tommy Nelson, Swedish Institute for Social Research Ingalill Montanari, Sweedish Institute for Social Research The Politics of Social Provision in the New American Labor Market Eva Bertram, University of California, Santa Cruz Constructing Paradigm Change in Early Childhood Education: Rational and Cultural Influences on Policy Change Linda A. White, University of Toronto The Return of Energy Insecurity in the Advanced Industrialized Countries John S. Duffield, Georgia State University Sven Steinmo, European University Institute IDEAS, INSTITUTIONS, AND Thu 8:00 am GENDER IN POLICY STUDIES No Room Assigned Lindsay B. Flynn, University of Virginia Family Politics: Development and Determinants of Family Policy in Comparative Perspective Tommy Ferrarini, Stockholm University How the Belief in a Just World Shapes Gender Attitudes and Social Policy Vicky Wilkins, University of Georgia Jeffrey Wenger, University of Georgia The Woman-State Conflict: A Deconstruction of Fetal Rights Discourse and its Damaging Effect on Womens Reproductive Rights Amanda M. Roberti, Rutgers University, Newark The Citizen Initiative, State Ideology, and Abortion Policy Michael J. New, University of Michigan, Dearborn Patricia Strach, SUNY, University at Albany

25-22

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Disc: 25-23

WOMENS RIGHTS AND Thu 2:00 pm PUBLIC POLICY IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH No Room Assigned Lisa Baldez, Dartmouth College Federalism, Sub-national Politics, and Womens Rights in Latin America Debora Lopreite Rights and Resistance around Ecuadors Civil Society Registry: The Case of Rural and Indigenous Womens Organizations in Chimborazo, Ecuador Susan M. Appe, SUNY, University at Albany Federalism, Decentralization, and the Challenges of Implementing Womens Rights Laws in South America Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary Jennifer Marie Piscopo, University of California, San Diego And the Others? Explaining How the NonMobilization of the Womens Movement against Some Forms of Violence against Women Affects Implementation Peace Medie, University of Pittsburgh Erica Townsend-Bell, University of Iowa THEME PANEL: ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: FEDERALISM AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 28-6 CITIES ON THE FEDERAL POLICY AGENDA: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 30-4 NONPROFIT ADVOCACY AND THE POLITICS OF REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-15 POLICY GAMES, COLLABORATION NETWORKS AND THE POLITICS OF CONFLICT IN WATER MANAGEMENT. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 39-5 ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION AND DECISION MAKING IN A COMPARATIVE CONTEXT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 39-6 HEALTH REFORM IN STATE AND NATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 48-7 Thu 10:15 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: 25-24

Sat 8:00 am

Room: 25-25

Thu 4:15 pm

Room: 25-26

Disc: 25-21 Room: Chair: Papers:

Sat 10:15 am

Room: 25-27

Thu 2:00 pm

Room: 25-28 Room:

Fri 8:00 am

Disc:

98

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

25-29 Room:

GOVERNANCE, POLICY LEARNING AND CHANGE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1497101-2

Fri 2:00 pm

26

LAW AND COURTS

Disc: 26-5 Thu 10:15 am Room: Chair: Papers:

Political Criminology, the Plural State, and the Politics of Affect Leonard C. Feldman, CUNY-Hunter College The Fantasy of Rights Jeffrey R. Dudas, University of Connecticut Michael W. McCann, University of Washington JUDICIALIZED POLITICS OR Thu 8:00 am POLITICIZED JUDICIARIES? THE FUNCTION OF JUDICIARIES IN SYRIA, TURKEY, IRAN AND PAKISTAN No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-32 Tamir Moustafa, Simon Fraser University From Judicial Autonomy to Regime Transformation: The Role of the Lawyers Movement in Pakistan Daud Munir, Princeton University An Authoritarian Juristocracy? The Role of Law in Structuring Government-Opposition Relations in the Islamic Republic of Iran Mirjam Kuenkler, Princeton University Courts, Conflict, and Democracy in Turkey: The Trajectory of the Turkish High Court George Gavrilis, Columbia University Authoritarian Legacies and Judicial Politics in Turkey Asli U. Bali, Yale Law School Steven Heydemann, U.S. Institute of Peace ADVERSARIAL LEGALISM, Sat 8:00 am PRIVATIZED HEARINGS, AND REGULATORY LAW: COMPETING CLAIMS TO JUSTICE No Room Assigned Brendon Swedlow, Northern Illinois University The Epistemology of Due Process Meets Science: Why the Coast Is Hard To See In Court Cases Laura J. Hatcher, Southern Illinois University How Policy Makes Politics: Adversarial Legalism and the Politics of Injury Compensation Jeb Barnes, University of Southern California Thomas F. Burke, Wellesley College Just Under the Radar of Rights: Are University Honor Codes Just? Christine B. Harrington, New York University To Tell or Not to Tell: Adversarialism v. Collaboration in Group Home Location Alison Gash, University of Oregon Delegation and Democracy: Courts, Administrators, and Legislative Specificity Sean Farhang, University of California, Berkeley The Myth of Rights meets the Myth of Regulation Neelum Arya, American University Brendon Swedlow, Northern Illinois University Lynn Mather, SUNY, Buffalo INTER-BRANCH RELATIONS Sat 2:00 pm AND THE SEPARATION OF POWERS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-3 Robert W. Langran, Villanova University

Division Renee A. Cramer, Drake University Chair: 26-1 Room: 26-2 LAW AND THE RIGHTS REVOLUTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-5

Room: Papers:

A JURISPRUDENCE OF Thu 4:15 pm RIGHTS AND LIBERTIES? UNITED STATES ELECTION LAW No Room Assigned Constitutional Rights for Non-People: Citizens United and the Quiet Emergence of Associations as RightsBearing Political Actors Wayne Batchis, University of Delaware Building an American State Between Liberty and Fair Representation: Citizens United v. FEC in Historical Perspective Eric S. Snickars, University of California, Santa Cruz The Cites That Counted: A Decade of Bush v Gore Jurisprudence Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine From Politics to Rights and Back Again: Some Legal Realism on Election Law Litigation Rebecca S. Curry, Hofstra University LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT Fri 4:15 pm AWARD: THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF JAMES GIBSON TO THE STUDY OF LAW AND COURTS No Room Assigned Melinda Gann Hall, Michigan State University Melinda Gann Hall, Michigan State University Vanessa Baird, University of Colorado, Boulder Gregory A. Caldeira, Ohio State University Lee Epstein, Northwestern University Malcolm M. Feeley, University of California, Berkeley Jeffrey A. Segal, Stony Brook University THEME PANEL: STUART Sat 10:15 am SCHEINGOLD AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Michael W. McCann, University of Washington Making the European Constitution in Brussels Malcolm M. Feeley, University of California, Berkeley Myth as Resistance: Stuart Scheingolds Myths as a Forum of Political Estrangement Naomi Murakawa, University of Washington, Seattle Novelty and the Politics of Rights Helena Silverstein, Lafayette College

Disc: 26-6

26-3

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Part:

26-4

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 26-7

Room: Chair:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

99

Papers:

Disc: 26-8 Room: Papers:

Statutory Language and the Separation of Powers Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina Rebecca Ann Reid, University of South Carolina Stare Decisis and Separation of Powers Paul J. Wahlbeck, George Washington University Timothy R. Johnson, University of Minnesota James F. Spriggs, II, Washington University, St. Louis Evolution of a Constitutional Power: Changes in Interpretations of the Commander-in-Chief Clause, 1789-1920 Casey Byrne Dominguez, University of San Diego The Extraordinary Effects of Ordinary Politics: Constitutional Rights During War and Crisis Justin J. Wert, University of Oklahoma Uniting at the Waters Edge: A Defense of Cold War Constitutionalism Mariah Zeisberg, University of Michigan Stephen M. Griffin, Tulane University Matthew E.K. Hall, Saint Louis University HEALTH, LAW, AND POLICY Fri 10:15 am No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 48-3 When Epidemic Disease Trumped Legal Niceties: A Legal and Historical Analysis of the Case of Typhoid Mary Mallon Ilene Albala, Columbia University An Examination of the Relationship Between Genetic Privacy Protections and Stigma Jennifer Starr Guon, University of Washington/ Seattle Childrens Hospital Ending Medical Complicity in State-Sponsored Torture: Is Litigation a Solution? Steven J. Hoffman, McMaster University Vaccine Rights, Politics, and Controversy: Effects of Medical and Political Contestation over HPV Vaccines on Public Attitudes about Vaccination Programs Sarah E. Gollust, University of Minnesota Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University David James Gartner, Arizona State University THE PROMISE, EFFECT, AND Fri 8:00 am LIMITS OF THE RULE OF LAW IN NATIONAL, INTERNATIONAL, AND TRANSNATIONAL SETTINGS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 45-4 Donald D.A. Schaefer, Lane College How Might the Rule of Law Be Developed in NonDemocratic Settings? Results from Sudan Mark Fathi Massoud, McGill University An Ethnographic Study of the Rhetoric versus Reality in the Implementation of Human Rights Relief for the Most Vulnerable Immigrants William Paul Simmons, Arizona State University Building Justice from Truth: Extra-Territorial Litigation and the Process of Human Rights Justice Jeffrey Davis, University of Maryland, Baltimore

Disc: 26-10

Justice within the Arrangement of the Special Court for Sierra Leone Verses Local Perceptions of Justice: A Contradiction or Harmonious? Lydia Apori Nkansah, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology Implications of the Right to Truth: Theory, Rhetoric, & Practice Victoria C. Williams, Alvernia University Jessica Maria Almqvist, University of Autnoma Donald D.A. Schaefer, Lane College THE TEXT AND THE Fri 2:00 pm CONTEXT: AGENDA SETTING, OPINION WRITING, AND PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Joseph Daniel Ura, Texas A&M University Public Opinion and the Median Justice Peter Enns, Cornell University Patrick C. Wohlfarth, University of Maryland The Need for an Answer: Unanimity and Agenda Setting Amy L. Steigerwalt, Georgia State University Pamela C. Corley, Vanderbilt University Artemus Ward, Northern Illinois University Strategic Dissents on the U.S. Courts of Appeals: Theory and Evidence Jonathan P. Kastellec, Princeton University Deborah Beim, Princeton University The Development of Legal Doctrine: Citation Patterns in the US Courts of Appeals Susan Haire, University of Georgia Rorie L. Spill Solberg, Oregon State University Judicial Decision-Making: The Influence of Case Salience on Trial Court Sentencing Salmon A. Shomade, University of New Orleans Bianca Simone Easterly, University of Houston The Genealogy of Law: Identifying Substantive Connections among Supreme Court Cases using Network Community Detection Methods Benjamin Lauderdale, Harvard University Tom Clark, Emory University Roberts Rules of Writing: An Evaluation of Separate Opinion Behavior on the Roberts Court Charles C. Turner, California State University, Chico Nancy Maveety, Tulane University Lori Beth Way, California State University, Chico Brandon L. Bartels, George Washington University Elliot E. Slotnick, Ohio State University MEASURING JUDICIAL Thu 8:00 am INDEPENDENCE AND JUDICIAL POWER No Room Assigned Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas, Austin The Conceptualization and Measurement of Formal Judicial Power Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas, Austin Abby Katharine Blass, University of Texas at Austin

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 26-9

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 26-11

Room: Chair: Papers:

100

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 26-12

A Measurement Model for Synthesizing Multiple Comparative Indicators: The Case of Judicial Independence Drew Linzer, Emory University Jeffrey Staton, Emory University Constitutional Change and Judicial Protection Rights: Evidence from Latin America Julio Rios-Figueroa, Centro de Investigacin y Docencia Econmicas Institutional Design and External Independence Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh Andrea Castagnola, FLACSO Mexico Charles R. Shipan, University of Michigan Tom Ginsburg, University of Chicago THEME PANEL: Sat 2:00 pm INTERNATIONAL LEGALIZATION AND THE RIGHTS REVOLUTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 17-22 Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of California, San Diego International Enforcement Courts Karen J. Alter, Northwestern University Intersubjective Frames and Rational Choice: Transnational Crime and the Case of Human Trafficking Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University Paulette Lloyd, Indiana University, Bloomington The Transnational Spread of American Law Benjamin Brake, Cornell University Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University Martha Finnemore, George Washington University Kathryn Sikkink, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis GOVERNMENT LAWYERS Sat 8:00 am IMPACT ON POLICYMAKING, AGENDA SETTING, AND DECISIONS No Room Assigned Executive Control and Judicial Deference Gbemende Johnson, Vanderbilt University Judicial Response or Litigant Strategy: Examining the Success of the U.S. Solicitor General Brent D. Boyea, University of Texas, Arlington Jeff Yates, Binghamton University, SUNY Damon M. Cann, Utah State University On the Impact of the Solicitor General in the Supreme Court: Distinguishing Influence, Constraint, and Polarization Brandon L. Bartels, George Washington University Legal Epistemic Communities and the Department of Justice: The Impact of Non-Judicial Governmental Experience on Judicial Selection and Judicial Decision-Making Processes James Allen Newman, Idaho State University Ericka Christensen, Washington State University Salmon A. Shomade, University of New Orleans

26-14

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 26-15 Room: 26-16 Room: 26-17 Room: 26-18

STATE COURTS - PERSONNEL, Thu 2:00 pm BEHAVIOR, AND POLICY MAKING No Room Assigned Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh An Empirical Analysis of Recusal Motions in State Supreme Courts Banks P. Miller, University of Texas at Dallas Environmental Standing and Public Opinion in State Courts Mahalley D. Allen, California State University, Chico Legitimacy and Decision-Making on State High Courts Meghan E. Leonard, Illinois State University Judicial Independence and Budget Battles in the States: A Comparative Model of State Constitutional Protections of Judicial Salaries Bradley S. Chilton, Appalachian State University James A. Woods, Thurgood Marshall Federal Stephen M. King, Southeastern University Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh REGIME POLITICS AND JUDICIAL REVIEW No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-5 LITIGATION AND SOCIAL / POLICY CHANGE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-7 RIGHTS ON THE RIGHT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-9 RIGHTS, COURTS, AND CONSTITUTIONS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-10 THE STATE OF THE DISCIPLINE: LAW, COURTS AND POLITICAL SCIENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-11 THE DYNAMICS OF JUDICIAL ELECTIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 29-7 Thu 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Sat 10:15 am

Disc:

Fri 2:00 pm

26-13

Room: 26-19

Room: Papers:

Sat 4:15 pm

Room: 26-20 Room:

Sat 10:15 am

Disc:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

101

27

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE

Division Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University Chair: Gordon Silverstein, Princeton University 27-1 THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS IN EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY LAW AND POLITICAL SCIENCE: DAVID RABBANS LAWS HISTORY: AMERICAN LEGAL THOUGHT AND THE TRANSATLANTIC TURN TO HISTORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-3 IN DEFENSE OF THE CONSTITUTION: THE LIFE AND WORK OF LOUIS FISHER No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 23-11 INTER-BRANCH RELATIONS AND THE SEPARATION OF POWERS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-7 Thu 8:00 am

Room: 27-2

Disc: Thu 10:15 am 27-6

Cold Case File: Marbury v. Madison and the Construction of Officers Rights in the United States Karen Orren, University of California, Los Angeles Christopher Walker, University of California, Los Angeles Building Blocks of the American State: Investigating the Relationship Between Courts and Parties Gregory Elinson, University of California, Berkeley The Political Determinants of Judicial Review Matthew E.K. Hall, Saint Louis University Does the United States Have A Regime of Judicial Supremacy? The Political Empowerment of the Judiciary and the Nature of Judicial Power. Scott Lemieux, College of Saint Rose Richard L. Pacelle, Jr., Georgia Southern University THEME PANEL: MARRIAGE AS Thu 4:15 pm AMBITION AND COMPLICATION: EQUALITY AND THE POLITICS OF LGBTQ RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 47-1 Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, University at Albany Path to Liberation or Stigma as Social Policy? SameSex Marriage and Ironic Freedom Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University Meaning and Emotion in the Struggle for Marriage Equality Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont The Politics of Same-Sex Marriage Rights: Framing and Argumentation in, and for, the Media Shauna F. Fisher, University of Washington Beyond Tolerance: Same-Sex Marriage and the American Professional Class Darel E. Paul, University of Minnesota Marriage in the United States: Changes in Law and Culture E. Annie Wilson, California State University, Dominguez Hills Susan Gluck Mezey, Loyola University, Chicago LITIGATION AND SOCIAL / Fri 8:00 am POLICY CHANGE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-16 Richard L. Pacelle, Jr., Georgia Southern University Do Courts and Litigation as Collective Action Bring a Political Change? Gad Barzilai, University of Washington Strategic Litigants: The Targeting of Justices by Lawyers in the U.S. Supreme Court Ryan Krog, George Washington University Paul J. Wahlbeck, George Washington University Forrest Maltzman, George Washington University

Room: 27-3

Sat 2:00 pm

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: 27-4

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 27-5 Room: Chair: Papers:

RACE AND GENDER IN 19TH Sun 10:15 am (AND EARLY 20TH) CENTURY CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-23 Stuart A. Streichler, University of Washington, Bothell Rethinking Popular Constitutionalism: The Womens Suffrage Movement and Constitutional Vision and Change Elizabeth Beaumont, University of Minnesota Pre-Civil War Debates About Federalism and Immigration Anna O. Law, DePaul University Redeeming Ignorance: the Assault on Education Rights in Southern State Constitutions Paul Emerson Herron, Brandeis University No Longer the Negros Hour: Woman Suffrage and Constitutional Resource Competition Allison M. Martens, University of Louisville The Supreme Court and Racial Minorities 1868-1918 Leslie Friedman Goldstein, University of Delaware Mark A. Kessler, Texas Womans University REGIME POLITICS AND Thu 2:00 pm JUDICIAL REVIEW No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-15 Terri Peretti, Santa Clara University Assertions of Judicial Supremacy: Contexts and Conditions Katy J. Harriger, Wake Forest University

Disc: 27-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

102

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 27-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

Procedural Rules against Legal Mobilization: A Contextual Analysis of the Redesigning of the Rules of the Direct Action for the Abstract Constitutional Review by the Brazilian Supreme Court in the Nineties Andrei Koerner, Unicamp - Universidade Estadual de Campinas Celly Cook Inatomi, State University of So Paulo in Campinas Access to Justice and the Paradox of Legal Mobilization by the Environmental Movement Lisa C. Vanhala, University of Oxford Degrees of Separation: Language, Law, & Elites Joshua Wilson, John Jay College, CUNY Sean Farhang, University of California, Berkeley Terri Peretti, Santa Clara University FEDERALISM AND THE Fri 10:15 am POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 28-3 Michael W. Hail, Morehead State University Congressional, Administrative, and Judicial Processes as Safeguards of Federalism John J. Dinan, Wake Forest University The Right to Fair Housing: Its Development and Growth Charles M. Lamb, SUNY, Buffalo Eric M. Wilk, University of Georgia Nicholas Seabrook, University of North Florida Shadowing Rodriguez: Supreme Court Doctrine and Legal Mobilization in State Reform Politics Michael Paris, CUNY-College of Staten Island The Rise and Importance of State Solicitors General H.W. Perry, Jr., University of Texas, Austin Arguing Gunwall: Can a State Supreme Court Force Its Lawyers to Argue State Constitutional Claims? Richard Price, Syracuse University J. Mitchell Pickerill, Northern Illinois University R. Shep Melnick, Boston College RIGHTS ON THE RIGHT Sat 10:15 am No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-17 Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University An Old Brew in a New Cup: Tea Party Constitutionalism and the Antifederalist Impulse Dennis J. Goldford, Drake University Womens Rights and the Christian Right: Perceptions of Gender Rights and The Legal Worldview of Evangelical Christians Linda Veazey, Ohio University Lobbying the Least Dangerous Branch: The Federalist Society, Idea Diffusion, and Constitutional Change Amanda Hollis-Brusky, Pomona College Culture Warrior: Justice Antonin Scalias Fight for (Selective) Religious Accommodation Daniel Tagliarina, University of Connecticut Common Theory Leads to Uncommon Justice: How the U.S. Supreme Court has Lost Touch with the Common Man Peter R. Yacobucci, Buffalo State College Helen J. Knowles, Whitman College

27-10

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 27-11

RIGHTS, COURTS, AND Fri 2:00 pm CONSTITUTIONS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-18 Ehud N. Sommer, Tel Aviv University Judicialization and Non-Citizens in Comparative Perspective Rebecca E. Hamlin, University of California, Berkeley Dynamic Constitutional Stability Sonia Mittal, Yale University Contested Rules of Law and the Politics of Rights and Liberalization in the Arab World David Mednicoff, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Judicial Decision Making under Changing Constraints: a Comparison between the United States and Europe Gemma Sala, Grinnell College Transnational Legal Arguments and Foreign Amicus Participation in U.S. Supreme Court Litigation, 19792010 Angela G. Narasimhan, Idaho State University Catherine Warrick, Villanova University THE STATE OF THE Sat 4:15 pm DISCIPLINE: LAW, COURTS AND POLITICAL SCIENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-19 Gordon Silverstein, Princeton University Lee Epstein, Northwestern University Ran Hirschl, University of Toronto Michael W. McCann, University of Washington Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, University at Albany Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland H. N. Hirsch, Oberlin College

Room: Chair: Part:

Disc: 27-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

28

FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS

Division Shama Gamkhar, University of Texas at Austin Chair: 28-1 POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF DECENTRALIZATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 6-14 FEDERALISM AND EDUCATION REFORM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-13 FEDERALISM AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-8 Thu 2:00 pm

Room: 28-2 Room: 28-3 Room:

Sat 2:00 pm

Fri 10:15 am

Disc:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

103

28-4

Room:

Chair: Papers:

Disc:

FISCAL FEDERALISM: Sat 4:15 pm FEDERAL ASSISTANCE TO U.S. STATES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Panel 1 Beryl A. Radin, American University Financing Medicaid/CHIP: A National and 50-state Study of Taxpayer Costs, 1980-2008 E Grant Porter, Columbia University Places in Need: The Changing Geography of Poverty and the American Safety Net Scott W. Allard, University of Chicago An Assessment of Fiscal Discipline and Fiscal Federalism in the Early 21st Century Carolyn Jordan Bourdeaux, Georgia State University Peter Bluestone, Georgia State University The Federal Response to Fiscal Distress in the States: An Historical Perspective Jeffrey D. Grynaviski, Wayne State University Sustaining Sustainability: Endogenous Preferences in Principal Agent Models of Federal Grants for Sustainable Energy Anthony Kassekert, Florida State University Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University Kaifeng Yang, Florida State University Jessica Terman, Florida State University Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark Edward A. Miller, University of Massachusetts, Boston POLITICS OF RIGHTS AND Sun 10:15 am FEDERALISM: ETHNICITY AND RACE No Room Assigned Erin K. Jenne, Central European University Does Ethnically-Based Federalism Promote Increased Ethnopolitical Mobilization? Updating the Debate by Examining the Newest Evidence. David J. Meyer, Regent University Decentralization, Citizenship Rules, and Party Control: Why Cant Regional Ethnic Parties and Decentralization Trigger Ethnic Violence? Srinivas Parinandi, University of Michigan Gary Uzonyi, University of Michigan Matthew Wells, University of Michigan How Federalisms Affects The Politics of Rights: Comparing Rights and Race Regimes in Australia, Canada and the United States. Jill Mccalla Vickers, Carleton University Annette Adrianna Isaac, Carleton University Sunita A. Parikh, Washington University THEME PANEL: Thu 10:15 am ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: FEDERALISM AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-23 Joseph F. Zimmerman, SUNY, Albany

Papers:

Disc: 28-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

The Politics of Contested Water Rights Among Individuals and States in the Western US Edella C. Schlager, University of Arizona Tanya Heikkila, University of Colorado-Denver How Did Reggie Do It? Bruce R. Huber, Dartmouth College Institutional Arenas of Power: Linking Institutions with Policy Typologies Manuel P. Teodoro, Colgate University Collaboration in Urban Water Management as an Ecology of Games: The Case of Metropolitan Los Angeles Sara Hughes, University of California, Santa Barbara Elinor Ostrom, Indiana University, Bloomington Barry G. Rabe, University of Michigan ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY IN Sat 8:00 am FEDERAL SYSTEMS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 49-1 Denise L. Scheberle, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay The Politics of Carbon Pricing in Australia, the United States, and Canada Kathryn Harrison, University of British Columbia The Politics of Carbon Pricing in Canada and the United States Barry G. Rabe, University of Michigan Christopher P. Borick, Muhlenberg College Climate Mobilization Networks in Multilevel Systems: Comparing Activism in the United States and the European Union Elizabeth Bomberg, University of Edinburgh Public Attitudes toward Climate Science and Climate Policy in Federal Systems: Canada and the U.S. Compared Erick Lachapelle, Universit de Montral Christopher P. Borick, Muhlenberg College Douglas M. Brown, St. Francis Xavier University THE STATE OF AMERICAN FEDERALISM 2010-2011 No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1497481-2 Fri 2:00 pm

28-5

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 28-8 Room:

29

STATE POLITICS AND POLICY

Division Andrew J. Karch, University of Minnesota, Twin Chair: Cities 29-1 Room: 29-2 Room: Chair: Papers: SUBNATIONAL LEGISLATURES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-6 Fri 8:00 am

Disc: 28-6

Room: Chair:

IDEOLOGY, REPRESENTATION, Sat 4:15 pm AND INEQUALITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 34-1 Martin Johnson, University of California, Riverside Representational Inequality in the U.S. States Martin Gilens, Princeton University Justin Phillips, Columbia University

104

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 29-3 Room: Chair: Papers:

Multimember Districts and Polarized Voting in State Legislatures Will Bullock, Princeton University Representation in the American States Christopher Warshaw, Stanford University Boris Shor, University of Chicago Jonathan Rodden, Stanford University Chris Tausanovitch, Stanford University The Culture Wars Meet State Politics Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona Sylvia Manzano, Texas A&M University Initiatives as Revealed Preferences: A Geographic Approach Justin Levitt, University of Calfornia, San Diego Martin Johnson, University of California, Riverside Jesse T. Richman, Old Dominion University NEW DIRECTIONS IN POLICY Fri 10:15 am DIFFUSION RESEARCH No Room Assigned Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa Bureaucratic Interaction and The Diffusion of Health Policy Innovations Graeme Boushey, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor Policy Attributes, Legislative Entrepreneurs, and Agenda Setting in the Diffusion of Innovations Todd Makse, Radford University Federal Absence Makes A State Get Tougher? The Vertical Diffusion of U.S. Immigration Policies Adriano Udani, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Crossing the Line: Governmental Capacity and Policy Diffusion in the American States Hal T. Nelson, Claremont Graduate University Charles R. Shipan, University of Michigan Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa THE SOURCES AND EFFECTS Fri 2:00 pm OF POLITICAL COMPETITION No Room Assigned Gerald C. Wright, Indiana University, Bloomington Understanding the Effects of Term Limits on Turnover, Competition and Retirements in State Legislatures Lynda W. Powell, University of Rochester Carl E. Klarner, Indiana State University Gary F. Moncrief, Boise State University Richard G. Niemi, University of Rochester The Effect of Public Funding on Electoral Competition: Evidence from the 2008 and 2010 Cycles Kenneth R. Mayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin, Madison When Reds are Redder and Blues are Bluer: Party Competition and the Changing Demand for Lobbying in the American States Jeffrey J. Harden, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill David Lowery, Pennsylvania State University Virginia H. Gray, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill John Cluverius, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Disc: 29-5

Elections and Reform: the Adoption of Civil Service Systems in the U.S. States Olle Folke, Columbia University James M. Snyder, Jr., Harvard University Shigeo Hirano, Columbia University Michael M. Ting, Columbia University The Role of Party: The Legislative Consequences of Personal and Partisan Electoral Competition Jason Eichorst, Rice University Royce A. Carroll, Rice University Boris Shor, University of Chicago Gerald C. Wright, Indiana University, Bloomington ELECTORAL REFORM AND Thu 8:00 am VOTER TURNOUT IN THE AMERICAN STATES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-4 Richard J. Powell, University of Maine What Happens at the Polling Place Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin, Madison David T. Canon, University of Wisconsin, Madison Donald P. Moynihan, University of Wisconsin, Madison Kenneth R. Mayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Jacob R. Neiheisel, University of Wisconsin, Madison Who Makes Voting Easier?: Understanding the Adoption of Election Reform in the American States Daniel Biggers, University of Maryland Michael J. Hanmer, University of Maryland Early Voting and Turnout: A County-Level Analysis Elliott B. Fullmer, Georgetown University When No One Can Knock on Your Door: Getting Out The Vote to Overseas Americans Michael J. Hanmer, University of Maryland Claire M. Smith, Overseas Vote Foundation Paul S. Herrnson, University of Maryland State and Party Rules and Voter Turnout in Presidential Nomination Contests Caitlin Elizabeth Dwyer, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Todd Makse, Radford University Richard J. Powell, University of Maine THEME PANEL: Thu 2:00 pm MAJORITARIAN INSTITUTIONS AND MINORITY RIGHTS: DIRECT DEMOCRACY IN THE AMERICAN STATES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism, Panel 1 Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas State Constitutions And Entrenched Fundamental Rights: Proposition 8, Same-Sex Marriage, and the Basic Structure Doctrine Manoj Mate, Whittier Law School Citizens, Legislators and the Bully Ballot Box: Is the Citizen-Initiative Any Worse for Minority Rights than the Legislative-Referral? Tom Lubbock, University of Oxford

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 29-4 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 29-6

Room:

Chair: Papers:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

105

Disc:

Changing Policy Designs for Deviants: Felon Enfranchisement in Rhode Island Michael Leo Owens, Emory University Marion Orr, Brown University Facilitator or Barrier? State Policies on Bilingual Ballots and Their Impact on Participation Shauna Reilly, Northern Kentucky University Justin Phillips, Columbia University Charles W. Gossett, California State University, Sacramento THE DYNAMICS OF JUDICIAL Sat 10:15 am ELECTIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-20 Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh Attack Advertising and the Incumbency Advantage in State Supreme Courts Melinda Gann Hall, Michigan State University Tipping the Scales: The Role of Political Parties and Interest Groups in State Supreme Court Elections Beth Easter, Indiana University, Bloomington Judicial Elections and the Unintended Consequences of Reform Joseph Ross, University of Arizona The Influence of Judicial Selection Systems on the Careers of State Supreme Court Justices Mark S. Hurwitz, Western Michigan University Todd A. Curry, Western Michigan University Partisanship in State Supreme Court Elections, 19462010 Herbert M. Kritzer, University of Minnesota Lisa M. Holmes, University of Vermont THE STATES AND THE Sun 8:00 am AFFORDABLE CARE ACT OF 2010 No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 48-4 Thomas R. Oliver, University of Wisconsin, Madison Implementing Health Reform in the States: Elections, Appointments, Copartisans, and the ACA Ryan T. Moore, Washington University Medicaid Waivers: Promise, Pitfalls, and Implications for Health Reform Shanna Suzanne Rose, New York University State Health Policies and the Implementation of the 2010 Health Care Reform Lilliard E. Richardson, Jr., University of Missouri, Columbia The Medical Safety Net and the Conditional Charity of Americans: The Ideational Development of Medicaid in the United States E Grant Porter, Columbia University BLUE HEALTH CARE, RED POLITICS Rick Mayes, University of Richmond Benjamin Paul, University of Richmond Mark Carl Rom, Georgetown University Thomas R. Oliver, University of Wisconsin, Madison

29-9

Room: Chair: Papers:

29-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

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THE REDISTRIBUTIVE Thu 10:15 am IMPACT OF STATE POLICY CHOICES No Room Assigned Charles J. Barrilleaux, Florida State University Beyond the Imprisonment Rate: The Effect of Race and Ethnicity on State Prison Conditions Jeremiah C. Olson, University of Kentucky Richard C. Fording, University of Kentucky How Criminal Justice Policy Expertise is Changing the Political Right and Changing the Politics of Crime Garrick L. Percival, University of Minnesota, Duluth Political Inequality and Nondecision-Making in the States William W. Franko, University of Iowa Campaign Finance Laws and Unequal Political Representation Patrick Flavin, Baylor University Higher Education Institutions Matter: The Redistributive Implications of Institutional Financial Aid Luciana Nogueira Dar, University of California, Riverside Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State University Charles J. Barrilleaux, Florida State University INSTITUTIONS, PUBLIC Sat 2:00 pm OPINION, AND FISCAL POLICY No Room Assigned Michael A. Pagano, University of Illinois at Chicago Hard Times, Hard Choices: Michigan Citizens Deliberate Alice Siu, Stanford University James S. Fishkin, Stanford University Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin Nuri Kim, Stanford University Sean Westwood, Stanford University Gaurav Sood, Stanford University Immigration, Welfare Policy and Welfare Generosity in American States, 1996-2008 Ping Xu, Louisiana State University Belinda Creel Davis, Louisiana State University James C. Garand, Louisiana State University Supermajority Limits to Fiscal Policy Ellen Moule, University of South Carolina The Malleability of State Budgets Christian Breunig, University of Toronto Chris Koski, Reed College The Industrial Organization of Regulatory Capture Neal Woods, University of South Carolina Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas at Dallas Shanna Suzanne Rose, New York University RECRUITING WOMEN INTO STATE AND LOCAL POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-12 Thu 4:15 pm

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30

URBAN POLITICS

Division Traci Burch, Northwestern University Chair: Martin George Horak, University of Western Ontario 30-1 Room: 30-2 Room: 30-3 URBAN POLITICS & POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-10 IMMIGRATION POLITICS IN STATES AND CITIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-6 URBAN EDUCATION: INSTITUTIONAL INNOVATION AND SYSTEM PERFORMANCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-8 Fri 4:15 pm Disc: 30-6 Sun 8:00 am Room: Chair: Papers: Fri 8:00 am

The Spaces in Between: A Comparative Analysis of Municipal Climate Governance and Action Pamela Robinson, Ryerson University Christopher Gore, Ryerson University Daniel A. Mazmanian, University of Southern California NEW PERSPECTIVES ON Thu 10:15 am LOCAL VOTING BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-5 Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay Bridging the Turnout Gap: National Electoral Participation and Local Politics in the United States Jefferey M. Sellers, University of Southern California The Third Factor of Political Participation Masataka Harada, University of Chicago Economic Segregation, Voter Mobilization, and Political Participation in Atlanta, 1970-2008 Amy Widestrom, California State University, Long Beach Michael Javen Fortner, University of Illinois, Chicago URBAN GOVERNING POWER: Fri 10:15 am THEORY AND CASES No Room Assigned Michael Leo Owens, Emory University Rethinking Comparative Urban Politics: From Urban Regime Theory to Urban Governance? Jon Pierre, Goteborg University Public Entrepreneurs and Transportation Empires in New York and Los Angeles: How Governance Shapes Agency Performance and Regional Outcomes Scott A. MacKenzie, University of California, Davis Jameson W. Doig, Princeton University Steven P. Erie, University of California, San Diego Civic Capacity and Wicked Problems: A Framework for Research and Strategy Stephen B. Page, University of Washington Waterfront Politics in Toronto and the Limits of Urban Development Theory: When Public Interests Obstruct the Publics Interest Gabriel Eidelman, University of Toronto Clarence N. Stone, George Washington University THE UNEQUAL PROVISION OF Fri 2:00 pm URBAN SERVICES No Room Assigned Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University Impounding Justice: An Analysis of the Enforcement and Adjudication of Vehicle Impoundments in Chicago between 2005 and 2009 Christopher Dimitri Berk, University of Chicago Gabriel Mathless, University of Chicago The Private City: Analyzing Inequality in the Provision of Public Goods Jessica Luce Trounstine, University of California, Merced The Abatement Class: A Case Study on the Politics of Rights, Municipal Tax Abatements and Urban Gentrification for Jersey Citys Gentry Jonathan L. Wharton, Stevens Institute of Technology

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CITIES ON THE FEDERAL Sat 8:00 am POLICY AGENDA: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-24 E. Terrence Jones, University of Missouri, St. Louis Federalism, the Purse and the City: Explaining the Evolution of Urban Policy in the US and in the EU Pier Domenico Tortola, University of Oxford Divorcing Power and Responsibility: How National Policies Have Shaped Local Policy Responses to Foreclosures Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri, St. Louis Dimensionality, Issue Attention, and Agenda Dynamics: The Case of Federal Urban Policy Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University Capacity at the Crossroads: How Local Authorities Try to Shape State and Federal Policy Jen Nelles, PROGRIS Robert Young, University of Western Ontario Michael A. Pagano, University of Illinois at Chicago GREEN CITIES: INFLUENCES Sat 2:00 pm ON LOCAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 39-4 Jessica Luce Trounstine, University of California, Merced Partisanship, Preferences, and Local Vulnerability to Climate Change Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan Daniel J. Hopkins, Georgetown University Why Do Cities Spend on Energy Efficiency: Predicting Demand-Side Management Expenditures of the Municipal-Owned Utilities Hongtao Yi, Florida State University David Matkin, Florida State University Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University Local Ground-Level Ozone Policies: An Examination of Dallas and Houstons Industries And The Impact On Reaching Federal Attainment Status Young Joo Chi, University of Southern California

Disc: 30-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

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Disc: 30-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

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107

Disc: 30-9

Uneven Recovery: An Examination of Public Safety, Education, Housing, and Economic Development in Post-Katrina New Orleans Peter F. Burns, Loyola University New Orleans Matthew O. Thomas, California State University, Chico Karen Mossberger, University of Illinois, Chicago Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri, St. Louis ROUNDTABLE: MULTILEVEL Thu 4:15 pm GOVERNANCE IN CANADA: CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS AND POWER SHIFTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics, Panel 1 Martin George Horak, University of Western Ontario Robert Young, University of Western Ontario Christopher Leo, University of Winnipeg Andrew Sancton, University of Western Ontario Katherine Graham, Carleton University THEME PANEL: THE Fri 8:00 am CHANGING FACE OF STATE POWER: POLICING AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS IN THE U.S. No Room Assigned Traci Burch, Northwestern University Doris Marie Provine, Arizona State University Bernard E. Harcourt, University of Chicago Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania Katherine Beckett, University of Washington STATES & CITIES: STATESat 4:15 pm LEVEL INFLUENCES ON URBAN POLITICS & POLICY No Room Assigned Teri Fair, Suffolk University States, Cities, and the Marketplace of Municipal Economic Development Policy Daniel E. Bliss, Illinois Institute of Technology State Restructuring of Local Policy Regimes Richard C. Hula, Michigan State University Chelsea Haring, Governors State University Nested Governance and Urban Politics: State Municipal Associations and Perceptions of Interjurisdictional Cooperation Christopher Hawkins, University of Central Florida Urban Agendas and State Politics: Policymaking in Pennsylvania Daniel George Lehman, Temple University Michelle J. Atherton, Temple University Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University Jefferey M. Sellers, University of Southern California THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS Thu 8:00 am OF URBAN MARGINALITY No Room Assigned Betina Andrea Cutaia Wilkinson, Wake Forest University

Papers:

Disc: 30-13 Room:

The Rot at the Core- A Comparative Perspective of Narcotics, Violence, Social Marginalization and State Penetration of Inner Cities John L. Froitzheim, College of William & Mary Patronage, Welfare Politics, and the Rise of Hindu Nationalism in Urban India Soundarya Chidambaram, Ohio State University Migrant Workers Rights and State Socialist Institutions in a Marketized, Mobile China Alexsia Chan, Univesity of California, Berkeley Jordan Luc Gans-Morse, Northwestern University Richard Stren, University of Toronto THE RIGHT TO THE CITY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1497121-2 Thu 2:00 pm

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31

WOMEN AND POLITICS RESEARCH

Division Maryann Barakso, University of Massachusetts, Chair: Amherst 31-1 RHETORIC, RIGHTS, AND WOMENS POLITICAL INCORPORATION IN THE AMERICAS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-30 GENDER, POLITICAL ATTITUDES, AND LEADERSHIP No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-64 Thu 8:00 am

30-10

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Sun 8:00 am

30-11

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THEME PANEL: TRANSLATING Fri 2:00 pm INTERNATIONAL WOMENS RIGHTS NORMS INTO PRACTICE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 45-5 Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University State Power, Religion, and Womens Rights: Struggles for Family Law Reform in 70 Countries Mala N. Htun, New School University S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University Womens Rights in Africas Muslim and Non-Muslim Countries: Does Political Context Matter? Alice Kang, University of Nebraska, Lincoln The International Criminal Court, Gender Justice and the challenge of state sovereignty Louise Chappell, University of New South Wales More than a Seat at the Table: The Gender Politics of National Human Rights Institutions Julie Mertus, American University Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University THE POLITICS OF WOMENS Thu 10:15 am PRESENCE IN LEGISLATURES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-20 Christina Xydias, Union College Gender Matters: A Cross-National Study of Actors in the Substantive Representation of Women Silvia Erzeel, Free University of Brussels

30-12 Room: Chair:

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DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 31-5

Gender Turnover and Support for Womens Issues in the US House Brian P. Frederick, Bridgewater State College Politics of Presence: A Study of Womens Legislative Caucuses in the 50 States Anna M. Mahoney, Rutgers University Linking Womens Presence and Policy Representation in Western European Parties Diana Z. OBrien, Washington University in St. Louis Intersectional Impacts of Gender Quotas: The Limits of Womens Representation Christina Xydias, Union College Shannon Drysdale Walsh, University of Notre Dame Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer, University of Missouri Alana S. Jeydel, American River College GENDER EFFECTS IN Sat 2:00 pm CAMPAIGNS, ELECTIONS AND IN POWER No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-6 Mary Kate Lizotte, Birmingham-Southern College Why 2010 was not the Year of the Woman Heather L. Ondercin, Louisiana State University Katie Avinger, Louisiana State University Running Against Each Other: Campaign Effects in Female versus Female Races Jeanette Morehouse Mendez, Oklahoma State University Rebekah Herrick, Oklahoma State University The Effect of Women in Government on the Idealized Leader: A Comparative, Experimental Analysis Melody Ellis Valdini, Portland State University Gender and Terrorism: Responses by and Portrayals of Women Politicians Candice D. Ortbals, Pepperdine University Lori Poloni-Staudinger, Northern Arizona University Group Success and Individual Candidates: Evidence from Voter Responses to Female Mayoral Terms Andrew Healy, Loyola Marymount University Mary Kate Lizotte, Birmingham-Southern College ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS Fri 8:00 am AND WOMENS DESCRIPTIVE, SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 34-2 Decentralized Government in the UK and Germany: Bringing the Substantive Representation of Women Closer to Home, or Putting it Just Out of Reach? Heidi D. Busche, Portland State University Female Political Representation: The Views of Rwandan Female Representatives Hilde Roza Coff, Utrecht University Gender and Elections in Post-Communist Ukraine Frank C. Thames, Texas Tech University Mikhail Rybalko, Texas Tech University

Disc: 31-7

Gender Parity Thwarted? The Effect of Electoral Reform on Senate and European Parliament Elections in France, 1999-2008 Priscilla L. Southwell, University of Oregon Choosing between Electing Women or Ethnic Candidates? Ethnic Concentration and Electoral Rules in African States Kimberly L. Shella, University of California, Irvine Melody Ellis Valdini, Portland State University STRUCTURING WOMENS Sat 10:15 am INCLUSION: POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 34-3 Olga A. Avdeyeva, Loyola University Chicago The Year of the Woman? Institutions, Party Support, and the Election of Women in Brazils 2010 State Legislature Elections Pedro G. dos Santos, University of Kansas Should Women Push for Fewer Women Candidates? List Preference Voting Systems and Gender Representation Marina Popescu, Median Research Centre Mapping the Interactive Effects of Electoral Rules on Gender Representation in Mixed Member Proportional Representation Jessica Fortin, University of Mannheim Christina Eder, Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences Womens Rights in French Politics: How Do Political Parties Play with Electoral Reforms? Annie Laurent, CERAPS Bernard Dolez, CERAPS Rightist Parties and Womens Substantive Representation Karen Celis, University College Ghent Sarah Childs, University of Bristol Heidi D. Busche, Portland State University Eric Gonzalez Juenke, Michigan State University MARKETS, STATES, RIGHTS Fri 4:15 pm AND FAMILIES: POLITICS OF CARE IN A GLOBAL AGE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-37 Tamara Metz, Reed College Surrogacy and Family Formation: Reproductive Rights in a Global Context Mary L. (Molly) Shanley, Vassar College Care and Dilemmas of Freedom in a Global Age: Holding Up Half the Sky on a Second Tamara Metz, Reed College The Family and the Market Redux Maxine Eichner, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Rights and Associations in a Feminist Social Ecology Linda C. McClain, Boston University Monique Deveaux, University of Guelph

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Disc: 31-8

Disc: 31-6

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109

31-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 31-10 Room: Chair: Papers:

SEX, GENDER, AND THE TEA Sun 10:15 am PARTY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-38 Michaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado, Boulder Passionate Patriotism: Gender and the Discourse of Anger in the Tea Party Movement Holloway Sparks Mama Grizzlies Compete for Office: The Construction of Motherhood in the 2010 Elections Ronnee Schreiber, San Diego State University Civil Rights and LGBTQ Scapegoats in the Tea Party Movement Gabriel Hudson, George Mason University Immigration and Differential Time in the Discourse of the Tea Party Paul C. Apostolidis, Whitman College Cynthia Burack, Ohio State University WOMENS HUMAN RIGHTS Thu 2:00 pm NORMS DIFFUSION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 45-6 Elsa Dias Womens Human Rights: A Study of the US International Violence Against Women Act (IVAWA) Sara Angevine, Rutgers University When Family Members are the Persecutors: The Impact of Political Asylum Cases on the Discourse of International Womens Human Rights Eileen Doherty-Sil, University of Pennsylvania A New Era of Enforceable Rights? Recent EU Initiatives to Combat Violence against Women Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder Working Toward the Solution: U. S. Nongovernmental Groups Organizing to Improve Global Womens Rights Barbara C. Burrell, Northern Illinois University Kathryn Green, Northern Illinois University Rachel Elizabeth Walker, Northern Illinois University Alisa Carolyn Von Hagel, Northern Illinois University Elsa Dias WOMENS RIGHTS, Sat 4:15 pm EMPOWERMENT, AND GLOBAL JUSTICE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 45-7 Debra J. Liebowitz, Drew University Framing Wartime Rape: An Analysis of Issue Representation and Adoption Shannon Elizabeth Powers, George Washington University Kerry Frances Crawford, George Washington University The Politics of International Justice for Women: Negotiating Witness Testimony on Sexual Violence at International Criminal Tribunal Rwanda Jonneke Koomen, Willamette University

Disc: 31-12 Room: Chair: Papers:

Patronizing Women: Democracy Promotion, Feminist Empowerment, and Mixed Messages in the Middle East Sheila Carapico, University of Richmond Victim or Villain? The Sexual Politics of Victims Rights and Migrants Rights in the War on Trafficking Edith Celine Marie Kinney, University of California-Berkeley Debra J. Liebowitz, Drew University RECRUITING WOMEN INTO Thu 4:15 pm STATE AND LOCAL POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 29-11 Heather L. Ondercin, Louisiana State University Family Roles and Political Ambition: A Re-Evaluation Jennifer L. Lawless, American University Richard L. Fox, Loyola Marymount University Readiness Meets Opportunity: A Case Study of Womens Increased Representation in the New Jersey Legislature Susan J. Carroll, Rutgers University Kelly Dittmar, Rutgers University Initiative Use and The Recruitment of State Legislative Candidates Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa Candidate Recruitment and Party Networks: How the Beliefs and Behavior of Local Party Leaders Affect Womens Representation Melody Crowder-Meyer, University of the South Resources, Recruitment, and Reasons: Explaining Women of Color State Legislators Paths to Office Becki Scola, Saint Josephs University Kira Sanbonmatsu, Rutgers University Jonathan Winburn, University of Mississippi THE IMPACT OF GENDER ON Fri 10:15 am THE SUPPORT FOR ELECTORAL CANDIDATES AND PUBLIC POLICIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-21 Jeanette Morehouse Mendez, Oklahoma State University Shes My Kind of Gal: An Experimental Assessment of Feminist Identifiers on Support for Female Candidates Melissa Ann Bell, University of Maryland Leading Me On? Gender-Based Cues and the Discouragement of Political Efficacy in Women Brian R. Calfano, Missouri State University Allyson Dale, Missouri State University The Intersection of Party and Gender Stereotypes in Evaluating Political Candidates Monica C. Schneider, Miami University of Ohio Angela L. Bos, College of Wooster A Values Explanation for Gender Differences in Support for Torture Mary Kate Lizotte, Birmingham-Southern College

Disc: 31-13

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DIVISION PANELS

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The Correlates of Personality in Group Dynamics: Is Dominance Always Gendered? Rebecca J. Hannagan, Northern Illinois University Christopher W. Larimer, University of Northern Iowa Jeanette Morehouse Mendez, Oklahoma State University Michael Bang Petersen, University of Aarhus EXPLAINING WOMENS Thu 8:00 am SUCCESS AS CANDIDATES AND THEIR POSITION-TAKING AS LEGISLATORS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-21 Sarah Allen Gershon, Georgia State University The Election of Women Candidates to the United States House of Representatives: The Potential Influence of Term Limits and State Demographic Characteristics Stanley M. Caress, University of West Georgia Todd Kunioka All the Republican Ladies, All the Republican Ladies, Now Put Your Hands Up: The Effect of Gender on Ideology in Roll Call Votes Megan Michelle Moeller, University of Texas, Austin Position Taking by Female Politicians: The Electoral Connection and Ensuing Influence of Political Role Models, 1978-2010 Karen L. Owen, University of Georgia Mark E. Owens, University of Georgia Gender Differences in Representation in the U.S. Senate Kim L. Fridkin, Arizona State University Patrick Kenney, Arizona State University Women, Political Rights, and Representation in British Columbia Jocelyne Praud, University of Regina Sarah Allen Gershon, Georgia State University MAMA GRIZZLIES, THE TEA Fri 2:00 pm PARTY, AND THE PROCESS OF REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-2 Ronnee Schreiber, San Diego State University Mama Grizzlies and the Midterms: Women and the Tea Party Melissa Deckman, Washington College Party Factions and the Politics of Rights Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University Are All Women Invited to the Party? The Rise of the New Republican Women in the 2010 Midterm Elections Isabelle Josephine Kuerschner Process Representation Andrew S. McFarland, University of Illinois, Chicago Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona

31-16

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31-14

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 31-17 Room: Chair: Papers:

WOMENS MOVEMENT Sat 8:00 am DYNAMICS: STRATEGIC AND INSTITUTIONAL UNDERPINNINGS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-3 Andrea Y. Simpson, University of Richmond Working the Gender Gap: Womens Groups, Registration, and Voter Turnout Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina Annie L. Boiter-Jolley, University of South Carolina What Two Waves of American Feminism Reveal about the Mechanisms of Recurring Movements Anne N. Costain, University of Colorado, Boulder Determinants of Success for Social Movement and Advocacy Organizations Mitchell Brown, Auburn University Social Movements and Institutional Selectivity: Comparing Womens and Squatters Movements in the Portuguese Transition Daniela Melo Gendered Federal Systems: Informal Norms, Intersectionality and the Process of Change Lee Ann Banaszak, Pennsylvania State University S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University Melissa A. Haussman, Carleton University Kristin Goss, Duke University GENDERING HEALTH AND Thu 10:15 am WELFARE POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 48-5 Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The Right to Maternal Health in North-South Comparative Perspective Candace Johnson, University of Guelph Surma Das, University of Guelph More than a Womans Issue: The Making of Family Policy in the US and UK since 1960 Leah Miriam Persky, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee The Politics of Reproductive Health: Why Political Scientists Need to Study Baby-Making and Its Consequences Beate Sissenich, Indiana University The Politics of Birthing Rights: An Analysis of Reproductive Choice through Policy Designs Kristin L. Schumacher, University of Colorado, Denver Saba Naseem Siddiki, University of Colorado, Denver Obamas Fatherhood Initiative: New Fathers or Neopatriarchy? Jyl Josephson, Rutgers University, Newark Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill WOMENS RIGHTS AND Fri 8:00 am REPRESENTATION IN A POSTSOVIET WORLD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 13-12 Olga A. Avdeyeva, Loyola University Chicago

Disc: 31-15

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Disc: 31-18

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111

Papers:

Womens Rights and Law Enforcement in the PostSoviet World Sophia Wilson, University of Washington, Seattle Islam and the Election of Women: Evidence from Four Postcommunist States Robert G. Moser, University of Texas, Austin The Effects of Ethnicity and Sex on Voters Assessment of Political Leadership: Experimental Evidence from Four Russian Regions Richard E. Matland, Loyola University, Chicago Olga A. Avdeyeva, Loyola University Chicago Lobbying for Womens Human Rights: A Comparative Analysis of Womens Lobbies across Post-Communist Europe and Central Asia Douglas Page, University of South Carolina Changes in Postcommunist Gender Regime: The Case of Central and Eastern Europe in Comparative Perspective Katalin Fabian, Lafayette College WOMENS RIGHTS AND Fri 4:15 pm EMPOWERMENT IN THE MIDDLE EAST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-33 Lisa A. Blaydes, Stanford University Gendered Political Opportunity Structures and Womens Activism in Egypt: Factors Leading Women to Seek out Their Rights Jennifer Nowlin, Ohio State University The Consequences of International Support for Womens Political Participation in Jordan Sarah S. Bush, Princeton University Amaney Jamal, Princeton University Capturing Elites and Institutions in the Struggle for Rights of Islamic Women in Morocco Eve N. Sandberg, Oberlin College Doing Daily Battle in Israel: Womens Political Mobilization Patricia J. Woods, University of Florida De Jure vs. De Facto: Exploring the Substance of Womens Political Empowerment in the Arab World Bozena Christine Welborne, University of Nevada, Reno Laura Sjoberg, University of Florida Lisa A. Blaydes, Stanford University WOMEN IN EXECUTIVE Sat 2:00 pm POWER AROUND THE WORLD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-69 Gretchen M. Bauer, University of Delaware Progress in the Midst of Continued Obstacles: Womens Advancement to Cabinet Posts in Canada and the United States Farida Jalalzai, University of Missouri, St. Louis The Evolution of Womens Presence in the Executive Branch: Latin America Mark P. Jones, Rice University Tiffany D. Barnes, Rice University Prominence in All Affairs of Our Country: Women Executives in Sub-Saharan Africa Gretchen M. Bauer, University of Delaware

Disc: 31-21 Room: 31-22 Room: 31-23 Room: 31-24

Women in Executive Power: Some General Trends Manon Tremblay, University of Ottawa Rainbow Murray, University of London, Queen Mary PARTISANSHIP BY GENDER, RACE, AND CLASS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-14 GENDER STEREOTYPES AND VOTING BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-16 THE GENDER GAP IN POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-18 WOMENS RIGHTS: ABORTION, IDENTITY, AND ABROAD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 41-5 BETWEEN REGULATION AND RIGHTS: SEXUALITY, GENDER, AND THE POLITICS OF NORMAL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 47-2 Sat 8:00 am

Sat 10:15 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Fri 8:00 am

31-19

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Sat 4:15 pm

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32

RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS

Division Yvette M. Alex-Assensoh, Indiana University, Chair: Bloomington David I. Lublin, American University 32-1 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: DESMOND KING AND ROGERS SMITHS STILL A HOUSE DIVIDED: RACE AND POLITICS IN OBAMAS AMERICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-9 Fri 10:15 am

Room: 32-2

Disc: 31-20 Room: Chair: Papers:

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CIVIL RIGHTS AND THE Thu 2:00 pm POLITICS OF ANTIDISCRIMINATION No Room Assigned Major G. Coleman, SUNY, New Paltz The Return of Yellow Peril: Examining Anti-China Rhetoric in the 2010 Midterm Election Kathy Rim, Wesleyan University The Effect of Electoral Laws on Political and Economic Discrimination of Ethnic Minorities Natalia Matukhno, University of Arizona Megan Hauser, University of Arizona A Regional Analysis of Discrimination Complaints in America Charles M. Lamb, SUNY, Buffalo Eric M. Wilk, University of Georgia Nicholas Seabrook, University of North Florida

112

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DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 32-3

The Justice that Justice Denied: The Problematic Case of the Black Farmers Civil Rights Settlement with the Department of Agriculture Terri R. Jett, Butler University Ethnicity, Prejudice and Anti-Discrimination Policies: A Comparative Examination of the Feelings of Discrimination of Migrant-Origin Minorities Laura Morales, University of Manchester Amparo Gonzlez-Ferrer, Spanish Research Council (CSIC) Jon Rogstad, Institute for Social Research Immigration Policy, Immigrant Policy, and the Undocumented: Critical Interrogations Ronald J. Schmidt, Sr., California State University, Long Beach Gladys Mitchell-Walthour, Johns Hopkins Unviersity THEME PANEL: IMMIGRANT Sat 8:00 am RIGHTS, FELONS RIGHTS AND THE POLITICS OF INCLUSION No Room Assigned Michael Leo Owens, Emory University Spatial and Temporal Proximity: Examining the Effects of the 2006 Immigrant Rights Marches on Latino Political Attitudes Michael A. Jones-Correa, Princeton University Sophia Jordan Wallace, Cornell University J. Chris Zepeda-Millan, Cornell University Stereotypes of Immigrants Tested: Media Consumption, Civic Engagement and Political Participation Ruoxi Li, University of Wisconsin, Madison Bradley Jones, University of Wisconisn, Madison Assessing the Effect of Social Desirability on Nativism and Immigration Attitude Responses Benjamin R. Knoll, Centre College Explicit Racial Resentment and the Restoration of Voting Rights for Felons David C. Wilson, University of Delaware Michael Leo Owens, Emory University Darren Davis, University of Notre Dame Incarceration and Racial Inequality in Voter Turnout Jake Rosenfeld, University of Washington Becky Pettit, University of Washington Jennifer Laird, University of Washington Bryan Sykes, University of Washington Robin D. Jacobson, University of Puget Sound Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern University MUSLIM RIGHTS, IDENTITY Fri 2:00 pm AND ACCEPTANCE IN THE DIASPORA No Room Assigned Karam Dana, Harvard University Conceiving and Mobilising for Rights in Different Political Opportunity Structures: The Cases of French and British Muslims Imne Ajala, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies Nation 2.0: Measuring Minority and National Identities among Young Immigrant Minorities in Denmark and Sweden Emily Cochran Bech, Columbia University

Disc:

Comparing Consolidated Democracies: State Policies Toward Muslim Minorities in the West Serdar Kaya, Simon Fraser University Intergroup Contact, Group Threat, and Ethnic Tolerance in Scandinavian Regions Tor Georg Jakobsen, Sr-Trndelag University College Karam Dana, Harvard University Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center Berlin INDIGENOUS RIGHTS IN THE Thu 4:15 pm AMERICAS No Room Assigned The Reasons for Refusal: American Indian Land Claims and Elected Officials in New York State Anne FB Flaherty, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville Emerging Power Brokers: The Emergence of Energy Sovereignty in Tribal Communities Paula Mohan Indigenous Rights to Land: The Chilean Governments Recent Experience Processing Mapuche Land Requests Kelly Bauer, George Washington University The Strange Career of Federal Indian Policy: Understanding American Indian Activism from the Late 19th Century Forward Laura Evans, University of Washington Ronald J. Schmidt, Jr., University of Southern Maine LATINO, ASIAN AND AFRICANFri 8:00 am AMERICAN GROUP IDENTITIES AND CONSCIOUSNESS No Room Assigned Tony Affigne, Providence College The Politics of Race: How Threat Cues and Group Position Can Activate White Identity Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan Hanes Walton, Jr., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Robert Mickey, University of Michigan Ashley E. Jardina, University of Michigan Like Crabs in a Bucket: Identity and Latino Perceptions of Intra-Group Competition Tetsuya Matsubayashi, University of North Texas Regina P. Branton, University of North Texas Tony E. Carey, Jr., University of North Texas Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas Asian American Public Opinion: Analysis and Comparison with Other Race Groups Saemyi Park, University of Wisconsin, Madison Identity in Context: the Political Determinants of Latino Group Consciousness Ali Adam Valenzuela, Stanford University Still Waters Run Deep: The Complexities of AfricanAmerican Identities and Political Attitudes Brian D. McKenzie, University of Maryland Fredrick C. Harris, Columbia University

32-5 Room: Papers:

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Disc: 32-6

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113

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A Federalist View of Co-Ethnic Voting: Snapshots from Congressional, Gubernatorial, and Mayoral Contests John G. Bretting, University of Texas-El Paso Arturo Vega, St. Marys University Rodney E. Hero, University of California, Berkeley Carlos Figueroa, New School University RACE, ETHNICITY AND Thu 8:00 am PARTISANSHIP No Room Assigned Jan E. Leighley, American University Knowledge Matters: Information, Policy CrossPressures and Black Partisanship Claudine Gay, Harvard University Shaping Transnational Partisanship among Immigrants in the United States: the Role of Political Campaigns Katsuo A. Nishikawa, Trinity University James A. McCann, Purdue University Elections, Ethnic Parties, and the Salience of Ethnic Identity: Evidence from the Baltic States, 1993-2008 Masaaki Higashijima, Michigan state University Ryo Nakai, Waseda University Identity, Rights and Census in French Party Politics Lorenzo Morris, Howard University The Dynamics of Party Coalitions at the State and Congressional District Level Bernard L. Fraga, Harvard University The Evolution of Latino Political Participation from 1989-2011: An Application of Bayesian Model Averaging Francisco I. Pedraza, Texas A&M University Jamie D. Smart, Texas A&M University What They Think Depends on Who You Ask: Methodological Errors in Survey Estimates of Latino Two-Party Vote Gary M. Segura, Stanford University Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington Jan E. Leighley, American University Rosario Aguilar-Pariente, Centro de Investigacin y Docencia Econmicas POLITICAL EMPOWERMENT Fri 4:15 pm AND INCORPORATION ACROSS RACIAL AND ETHNIC BOUNDARIES No Room Assigned Zoltan L. Hajnal, University of California, San Diego South Asian Political Incorporation through Elite Mobilization: Towards a New Model of Political Incorporation Sangay K. Mishra, University of Southern California Contextual Influences on the Political Incorporation of Asians: Evidence from the Bay Area Loan Le, University of California, Los Angeles The Pursuit of Victory and Incorporation: Elite Strategy,Group Pressure, and Cross Racial Mobilization Loren Collingwood, University of Washington

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Notes from the Underground: Popular Music and African American Empowerment Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas Andrew L. Aoki, Augsburg College A Law for Small Numbers?: Latino Empowerment in Small-Margin Electoral Contexts Tony Affigne, Providence College The Political Incorporation of (In)migrants in the United States: The Case of Puerto Ricans Jose E. Cruz, SUNY, University at Albany Catherine Paden, Simmons College Rafael Augusto Jimeno, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville POLITICIANS OF COLOR AND Sun 8:00 am THE COMPLEXITIES OF REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Kerry L. Haynie, Duke University Latino Candidates in the States: A Censored Model of Minority Election Changes What We Think About Representation Eric Gonzalez Juenke, Michigan State University The Legislative Effectiveness of Minority Members of Congress Michael Stephen Rocca, University of New Mexico Gabriel Sanchez, University of New Mexico President Obama and the Paradox of Descriptive Representation in the Executive Office Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania Minority Representatives, Electoral Constraint, and Racialized Institutions: When and Where Does Descriptive Representation Matter? Rene R. Rocha, University of Iowa Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa Natasha Altema, University of Iowa Minority Report: Examining How the Creation of Majority-Minority Districts Affected the Representation of African-Americans in Congress Douglas Williams, University of Missouri, Columbia Sophia Jordan Wallace, Cornell University Benjamin Marquez, University of Wisconsin, Madison THE OBAMA EFFECT ON Sat 10:15 am RACIAL ATTITUDES, RACIAL PREJUDICE AND RACIAL PESSIMISM No Room Assigned Andrea Y. Simpson, University of Richmond A Theory of Prejudice and Why it Persists (or To Whom is Obama Still Black?) Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan Racial Pessimism in the Early Obama Era: An Analysis of Individual-Level Change and Racial Group Differences Michael C. Dawson, University of Chicago Julie Lee Merseth, University of Chicago Im not Racist. I Voted for Obama: Youth White Racial Attitudes in a Time of Prominent Black Politicians Candis Watts Smith, Duke University

32-9

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32-10

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A Different Look at Implicit Racial Attitudes in the 2008 US Presidential Election: The Role of Implicit Ambivalence in Vote Choice David C. Martin, SUNY Stony Brook University Joseph P. McCormick, II, Pennsylvania State University York ANALYZING DESCRIPTIVE Sat 4:15 pm AND SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION ACROSS INSTITUTIONS IN AMERICA AND ABROAD No Room Assigned Michael Javen Fortner, University of Illinois, Chicago Examining Descriptive Racial Representation in Brazil Gladys Mitchell-Walthour, Johns Hopkins Unviersity Ethnicity, Descriptive Representation and Confidence in the Supreme Court: Examining Latino Attitudes toward the Court Robert D. Wrinkle, University of Texas-Pan American Diana Evans, Trinity College James P. Wenzel, University of Texas, Pan American Jerry L. Polinard, University of Texas, Pan American Ana Belen Franco, University of Texas, Pan American Who Represents Latinos? Descriptive and Substantive Representation in the States Nicole Kalaf-Hughes, University of California, Davis Symbolic Values of Descriptive Representation by Race and Gender at Subnational Levels Pei-te Lien, University of California, Santa Barbara Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame Christine Marie Sierra, University of New Mexico Carol Hardy-Fanta, University of Massachusetts, Boston Christian R. Grose, University of Southern California Barbara L. Graham, University of Missouri-St. Louis MULTIRACIAL COMPONENTS Sat 2:00 pm OF POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION AND ENGAGEMENT No Room Assigned Luis Ricardo Fraga, University of Washington Generations of Immigrants: Paths of Immigrant and Immigrant-Descendant Political Engagement Across Generations Louis DeSipio, University of California, Irvine Latino Politics: How Children of Immigrants Redefine Stereotype Threats and Discrimination Vanessa Cruz, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Politica and Politics: Examining the Role that Country of Origin Political Engagement Plays in the Adult Political Socialization of Latino Immigrants in the U.S. Marcela Garcia-Castanon, University of Washington, Seattle Disc: 32-13 Room: Chair: Papers:

Culture of Poverty, Culture of Apathy: Race, Class and the Role of Culture in Shaping Political Participation Jamila D. Michener, University of Chicago The Political Socialization of Black Youth: A Hardship Analysis Carolyn Barnes, University of Michigan Elan McCollum, University of Michigan Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington Eric Gonzalez Juenke, Michigan State University IDENTITY AND PERCEPTIONS Thu 10:15 am No Room Assigned Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University Racial Attitudes and Mixed Race Identification: Comparing Opinion Across Whites, Blacks, Asians and Latinos Natalie Masuoka, Tufts University Empathy in the Context of Survey Vignettes: An Experimental Look at Race and Self-Identification Maya Sen, Harvard University Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University Mobilizing Inclusion: Redefining Citizenship through Get-Out-the-Vote Campaigns Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College Experimental Test of the Effects of Racial Segregation on Intergroup Attitudes Ryan D. Enos, Harvard University Mixed Messages and Signals: The Activation and DeActivation of Latino Identity in Response to Anti-andPro-Immigrant Rhetoric Porsha Cropper, Harvard University Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside RACE, RELIGION, AND Sat 4:15 pm POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 33-2 Benjamin R. Knoll, Centre College Race, Religion, and Nationality: Determinants of Partisan and Ethnic Identification among Muslims in America Rachel M. Gillum, Stanford University Gods Economy Trumps Trickle-Down: How Black Liberation Theology Begets a Second Bill of Rights Larycia A. Hawkins, Wheaton College Race, Religion, and Punitiveness in the Criminal Justice System Stephen A. Huss, Texas A&M University Perceptions of Obamas Faith-Based Policy Among Black Churches and Clergy David K. Ryden, Hope College Proposition 8 and the Limits of Partisan Politics among Asian Christians Joseph Yi, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies Benjamin R. Knoll, Centre College Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas

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32-12

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115

32-15 Room:

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THE NEW LATINO POLITICS? Thu 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science, Panel 1 Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, University of Texas, Pan American Assessing the Hispanic Threat Hypothesis: A Comparison of Anglo and Hispanic Political Values and Orientations Jennifer L. Merolla, Claremont Graduate University Adrian D. Pantoja, Pitzer College Strategic or Biased Recruitment? The Effect of District Competition and Race of Elected Officials on Voter Mobilization Ricardo Ramirez, University of Notre Dame Latino Candidate Preferences and the 2008 Democratic Presidential Primaries Antonio Rodriguez, University of Maryland Latino Political Behavior: Endorsements and Preferences Andrea Benjamin, PhD, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Applying Racial Resentment to Hispanics: A Valid Approach? Kristyn Miller-Karl, University of Michigan David L. Leal, University of Texas, Austin CANDIDATES AND TURNOUT Sat 2:00 pm IN MAJORITY-MINORITY DISTRICTS No Room Assigned Henry Flores, St. Marys University, San Antonio Not All Black Candidates Are Equal: An Analysis of the Mediating Factors between Descriptive Representation and Black Turnout Christopher Stout, Wellesley College African-American Turnout in Majority-Minority Districts Ismail K. White, Ohio State University Luke Keele, Ohio State University The Supply Side of Minority Representation: When Do Minority Candidates Run, and When Do They Win? Paru Shah, Macalester College Melissa J. Marschall, Rice University Articulate and Clean: Class Bias and Voter Preferences Among African American Candidates Andra N. Gillespie, Emory University Matthew B. Platt, Harvard University Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Sun 10:15 am AND BLACK POLITICAL FIGURES: RESULTS FROM THE CCES NCOBPS PANEL No Room Assigned Kathie Stromile Golden, Mississippi Valley State University Watch What You Say: Can All Candidates Talk about Racial Inequality, or Just the Minorities? Tyson D. King-Meadows, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

Disc: 32-18 Room:

Perceptions of Obama Decision-Making and Communication Style Shayla C. Nunnally, University of Connecticut Affective Reactions to Michelle Obama based on Dress Elka Stevens, Howard University Perceived Racial Motivations/Pressures Behind Obamas Election Eleanor Nicole Thornton, Johns Hopkins University Racial Group Priming Experiments David C. Wilson, University of Delaware David C. Wilson, University of Delaware Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University THEORIZING SETTLERCOLONIALISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1497231-2 Fri 10:15 am

33

RELIGION AND POLITICS

Division Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati Chair: 33-1 Room: 33-2 Room: 33-3 Room: Chair: Papers: RELIGION AND POLITICS IN EUROPE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-15 RACE, RELIGION, AND POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 32-14 Fri 4:15 pm

Sat 4:15 pm

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RELIGION AND POLITICS IN Thu 10:15 am THE U.S. CONGRESS No Room Assigned James L. Guth, Furman University Polarized Protestants: A Confessional Explanation for Congressional Extremism Nicole Asmussen, University of Rochester Representation, Religion & the Median Voter in the U.S. Congress Alicia Diana Forster, University of Florida Voting from the Pew: Elite Religious Affiliations, Partisan Change, and Policy on Moral Issues in the U.S. Senate, 1976-2009 Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz, University of Rhode Island John Michael McTague, Washington College Lucy M. Williams, University of Rhode Island Religious Affiliation and Representation Styles in the US Congress, 1980-2008. David C. Barker, University of Pittsburgh Christopher J. Carman, Strathclyde University James L. Guth, Furman University RELIGIOUS IDENTITY AND Sat 2:00 pm POLITICS No Room Assigned Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Of Belief, Behavior and Motivation: How Do We Connect Religiosity to Political Attitudes? Amanda Balzer, University of Nebraska, Lincoln

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The Struggle for Group Membership: Religion and American Identity Carly Jacobs, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Religious Identity and Voter Defection: Evaluating the Importance of Voters Perceptions of Religious OutGroups in the 2008 Presidential Election Jason A. Wood, University of Cincinnati Religious Identity and the Democratic Citizen Jay Jennings, Temple University Richard P. Haesly, California State University, Long Beach Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas SECULARISM, RELIGIOSITY, Fri 2:00 pm AND POLITICS No Room Assigned Paul A. Djupe, Denison University The Political Mobilization of Seculars, 1980-2008 Susan B. Hansen, University of Pittsburgh A Secular America? Examining the Political Consequences of Secularism in American Politics Patrick Schoettmer, University of Notre Dame David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame John C. Green, University of Akron Unchurched Believers, Intermittent Identifiers, and Atheists: Understanding Political Behavior among Non-Churchgoers Michele Margolis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Demands from God and Government: Why Religiosity Shapes Public Opinion Philip Habel, Southern Illinois University J. Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois University Paul A. Djupe, Denison University RELIGIOUS ELITES AND Thu 4:15 pm POLITICS: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES No Room Assigned Franklyn C. Niles, John Brown University Going to Extremes: Stereotypes, Constitutional Violations, and Support for Religious Elites Paul A. Djupe, Denison University Brian R. Calfano, Missouri State University Clergy as Political Elites Elizabeth A. Oldmixon, University of North Texas Between Pulpit and Pew: Religious Influence on Political Belief and Behavior in Kenya Steven Lichty, University of Florida Pentecostalism, Preachers, and Political Outcomes: Experimental Evidence from Ghana and Nigeria John F. McCauley, University of Maryland Franklyn C. Niles, John Brown University RIGHTS AND RELIGION Sun 8:00 am No Room Assigned John R. Pottenger, University of Alabama, Huntsville Beyond Rights: Religion Offsets Self-interest in the Lockean State Elissa B. Alzate, Susquehanna University Disc:

33-5 Room: Chair: Papers:

Religious Rights, Theology, and the Intersection of Religion and Politics in the Ideas of Thomas Helwys and John Locke Robin Marshall Bittick, Sam Houston State University Political Toleration and the Problem of Religious Politics Bryan T. McGraw, Wheaton College Recovering a Pluralist Politics: The Politics of Rights in Early Modern Political Theory Paul A. Brink, Gordon College Religion, Rights and Democracy: Power and Domination in the Liberal Democratic Theory of Rawls and Murray John R. Robichaux John R. Pottenger, University of Alabama, Huntsville Michael L. Coulter, Grove City College RELIGION AND AMERICAN Fri 8:00 am POLITICAL BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati Religious Factors and American Public Support for Israel: 1992-2008 James L. Guth, Furman University Why Faith Matters: How Members of Religious Communities Negotiate Contentious Political Issues Richard P. Haesly, California State University, Long Beach Liesl Haas, California State University, Long Beach Mitt Romney, Anti-Mormonism, and the Politics of Religious Difference in the United States David T. Smith, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Party Identification and Ideology among JewishAmerican Voters Herbert F. Weisberg, The Ohio State University Religion, Ideology and Political Participation, 19722008 Peter W. Wielhouwer, Western Michigan University Joseph Quin Monson, Brigham Young University Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati RELIGION AND HUMAN Sat 8:00 am RIGHTS No Room Assigned Timothy A. Byrnes, Colgate University Does Religion Promote or Discourage Property Rights and the Rule of Law? Christian Bjoernskov, Aarhus University Niclas Berggren, The Ratio Institute Women, Property Rights, and Islam Feryal Marie Cherif, University of California, Riverside Benjamin Bishin, University of California, Riverside Faith in Markets: Branding Humanitarianism Leslie Vinjamuri, School of Oriental and African Studies Stephen Hopgood, University of London The Determinants of Tolerance in Arab Societies Ani Sarkissian, Michigan State University

33-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

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117

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Religious Infusion and Intergroup Conflict: Results from the Global Group Relations Project Carolyn M. Warner, Arizona State University Steven L. Neuberg, Arizona State University Stephen Mistler, Arizona State University Eric Hill, Arizona State University Anna Berlin, Arizona State University Timothy A. Byrnes, Colgate University COMPARATIVE POLITICS AND Fri 10:15 am RELIGION No Room Assigned Anthony Gill, University of Washington Globalization and the Politicization of Religion: An Empirical Test with CSES Data Stratos Patrikios, University of Strathclyde Georgios Xezonakis, University of Exeter The Last Refuge of the Scoundrel: Religion and Nationalism in Global Perspective J. Christopher Soper, Pepperdine University Joel S. Fetzer, Pepperdine University Belonging but Not Believing (Strongly): Examining the Political Implications of the Resurgence of Orthodoxy in Post-Soviet Russia Geoffrey Evans, Oxford University Ksenia Mankowska, University of Oxford Covering Islam Revisited: Recent Developments in the United States and Germany Gregory G. Holyk, Washington & Lee University Annika M. Hinze, Washington and Lee University Explaining the Discourse on Muslims and Welfare in the West: Racism, Militancy, Elections and Murdoch Abdulkader Sinno, Indiana University Hicham Bou Nassif, Indiana University Antje V. Schwennicke, Indiana University Scott Randall Williamson Sener Akturk, Koc University Anthony Gill, University of Washington RELIGION AND POLITICAL GROUP ACTIVISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-6 RELIGION AND POLITICAL PARTIES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-14 RELIGION AND IR: METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 43-9 RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN DEMOCRATIZATION CONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM THE FIVE MUSLIM DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-12 Thu 8:00 am

34

REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

Division David M. Farrell, University College Dublin Chair: 34-1 Room: 34-2 IDEOLOGY, REPRESENTATION, AND INEQUALITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 29-2 ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS AND WOMENS DESCRIPTIVE, SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-6 STRUCTURING WOMENS INCLUSION: POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-7 Sat 4:15 pm

Fri 8:00 am

Room: 34-3

Sat 10:15 am

Room: 34-4

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Disc: 33-11 Room: 33-12

Sun 10:15 am

Room: 33-13

Sat 10:15 am

Disc: 34-5

IS SIZE EVERYTHING? Sat 2:00 pm DISTRICT SIZE, PARTY SIZE, AND ELECTORAL SYSTEM EFFECTS No Room Assigned Kenneth R. Benoit, London School of Economics and Political Science The Relationship between Party System Size and Electoral Institutions: Unidirectional or Endogenous? Robin E. Best, University of Missouri, Columbia Legislative Effects of Electoral Mandates Margit Tavits, Washington University Santiago Olivella, Washington University in St. Louis Does Size Matter? An Experiment on the Effects of District Magnitude on Voter Coordination Rafael Hortala-Vallve, London School of Economics Simon Hix, London School of Economics Does STV Help Independents? Evidence from Four Islands Liam Weeks, Trinity College Dublin The Effect of Change in Electoral System on Incumbency Advantage: Redistricting and Divergence of Districts Electoral Competitiveness Kong Joo Shin, New York University Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern Denmark DESCRIPTIVE Fri 10:15 am REPRESENTATION IN PRACTICE No Room Assigned Ian McAllister, Australian National University A Primer on Voter Discrimination Against Untouchable Politicians in India: Evidence from Natural and Survey Experiments Rikhil Bhavnani, University of Wisconsin, Madison

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Thu 2:00 pm

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Disc: 34-6

Should Parliaments Reflect Diversity? Examining Elite Attitudes about Descriptive Representation Across Countries Helena Cook, University of Exeter Are Citizens Evenly Represented in Latin America? Margarita Corral, Vanderbilt University The Representative Relation: Home Styles in European Democracies Sam Depauw, Free University of Brussels Audrey Andr, Vrije Universiteit Brussel A Dual View on Gatekeeping. Citizens and Members of Parliament on the Use and Effectiveness of Political Participation Repertoires Sofie Marien, Catholic University of Leuven Marc Hooghe, Catholic University Leuven Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University Christine Arnold, Universiteit Maastricht THE COMPARATIVE STUDY Thu 4:15 pm OF ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS AND REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside Endogeneity in Voters Self-Positioning Marc A. Bodet, University of British Columbia Richard G.C. Johnston, University of British Columbia The Dynamics of Democratic Representation: How Democracy Works Russell J. Dalton, University of California, Irvine David M. Farrell, University College Dublin Ian McAllister, Australian National University Social Diversity Affects the Number of Parties Even Under First Past the Post Rules Caitlin Milazzo, University of California, Davis Robert G. Moser, University of Texas, Austin Ethan Scheiner, University of California, Davis Representation: What Is it Good for? Estimating Representations Impact on Voters Attitudes Using Regression Discontinuity Design Reuben Kline, European University Institute Linkages Between Parties and Voters in Comparative Perspective: Understanding How and Why Political System Characteristics Mediate Voting Behavior Cross-nationally Andrija Henjak, University of Zagreb Gabor A. Toka, Central European University Marina Popescu, Median Research Centre Jack Vowles, University of Exeter Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan DISTRICT REPRESENTATION, Fri 2:00 pm CLIENTELISM AND CORRUPTION No Room Assigned David M. Farrell, University College Dublin Median Districts and District Medians: Electoral Adaptation to Majoritarian Politics in Post 1994 Japan Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University Mathew D. McCubbins, University of Southern California Kyohei Yamada, Yale University Jun Saito, Yale University Disc: 34-8

Electoral Rules, Corruption Charges, and Electoral Accountability: Comparative Analysis of Italy, Japan, and the United States Kenichi Ariga, Harvard University The Origins of Pre-Electoral Fraud: Testing the Effect of Proportionality Ruben Ruiz-Rufino, Centro de Estudios Polticos y Constitucionales Electoral Rules and Strategic Voting for Clientelistic Parties: Regression Discontinuity Evidence from Morocco Miquel Pellicer Eva Wegner, University of Cape Town The Suspended Step of the Stork: Parliamentary Representation and Subsequent Electoral Performance Nasos Roussias, Juan March Institute Elias Dinas, University of Oxford Pedro Riera Sagrera, European University Institute Daniel Stockemer, University of Ottawa Yael Shomer, Tel Aviv University THE DETERMINANTS OF Fri 4:15 pm CANDIDATE CHOICE IN PREFERENTIAL VOTING SYSTEMS No Room Assigned Michael Marsh, Trinity College, Dublin Preferential Voting in Finland: How Much Do Candidates Matter, and to Whom and Why? Lauri Karvonen, Abo Akademi Preferential Voting in Denmark Jorgen Elklit, University of Aarhus From Around Here? The Importance of Locality for Finnish Voters Candidate Choice Asa Bengtsson, Abo Akademi University Candidate Voting in PR Election: Evidence from Switzerland Georg Lutz Personal and Party Cues in a Changing Environment: Ireland 2002-2011 Michael Marsh, Trinity College, Dublin John Kevin Curtice, University of Strathclyde RIGHTS AND OTHER Sat 8:00 am NORMATIVE VALUES IN PROCESSES OF ELECTORAL REFORM No Room Assigned Constituting the Electorate: Democratization and the Politics of Electoral System Choice in Advanced Democracies Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Norms and Electoral Reform: Debating Gender Quotas in Sweden and France Mona Lena Krook, Columbia University The Political Economy of Post-Conflict Electoral System Design Benjamin Reilly, Australian National University Debating Electoral Reform in the United Kingdom: Change in Ideas of Elections and Electoral Systems since 1945 Alan J. Renwick, University of Reading Berna Numan, University of Reading

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Disc: 34-7

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Disc: 34-10

The Manipulation of Norms? The Language of Campaigning in the British Electoral System Referendum Jack Vowles, University of Exeter R. Kenneth Carty, University of British Columbia THEME ROUNDTABLE: HANNA Thu 8:00 am PITKINS CONCEPT OF REPRESENTATION REVISITED: A NEW AGENDA FOR STUDYING REPRESENTATION RIGHTS? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee 1 (Concepts and Methods), Panel 1 Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University Anne Phillips, London School of Economics Karen Celis, University College Ghent Karen Bird, McMaster University Dario Castiglione, University of Exeter Michael D. Minta, Washington University in St. Louis Carole Jean Uhlaner, University of California, Irvine S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University

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After Citizens United and SpeechNow.org: Considering the Consequences of New Campaign Finance Activities Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico National Political Conditions and the Intertwining of Incumbent and Party Fundraising in the U.S. House Bruce A. Larson, Gettysburg College Eric S. Heberlig, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Understanding the Impact of the Internet and Firsttime Donors in the 2008 Election Cycle David B. Magleby, Brigham Young University Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young University Joseph A. Olsen, Brigham Young University Paul Allen Beck, Ohio State University Robert G. Boatright, Clark University PARTY AND INTEREST GROUP Sat 4:15 pm RESPONSES TO CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Campaign Finance Research Group-2 Rick D. Farmer, Oklahoma Insurance Department Citizens United, States Divided? The Interaction of Transparency and Spending in State Elections Douglas Spencer, University of California, Berkeley Abby Wood, University of California, Berkeley The Value of Majority Party Status Reconsidered Jonathan Wand, Stanford University The Politics of American Business Jonathan S. Krasno, SUNY, Binghamton Gregory Robinson, SUNY, Binghamton Special Interest Partisanship: The Transformation of American Political Parties in Government Katherine Krimmel, Columbia University Allan J. Cigler, University of Kansas Timothy Werner, Grinnell College RELIGION AND POLITICAL Thu 8:00 am GROUP ACTIVISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 33-11 Allen D. Hertzke, University of Oklahoma Party Activism and Religion, 1960-2008 Ryan Claassen, Kent State University Solidarity and Discord in Interest Group Memberships: How the Social Context of Religious Congregations Affects Interest Group Involvement Andrew R. Lewis, American University Paul A. Djupe, Denison University Party Pressure on Religious and Moral Issues in Congress Lilliana Hall Mason, SUNY, Stony Brook Naser Javaid, Roosevelt University Effectual Reasoning and the Decision to Become Politically Active: Moving beyond Citizen Characteristics and The Ask Kimberly H. Conger, Colorado State University Allen D. Hertzke, University of Oklahoma PARTY CHANGE ON RIGHTS ISSUES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-24 Thu 10:15 am

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35

POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES

Division Joseph Quin Monson, Brigham Young University Chair: Kelly D. Patterson, Brigham Young University 35-1 Room: 35-2 PRESIDENTS, PARTIES, AND ELECTIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 23-6 MAMA GRIZZLIES, THE TEA PARTY, AND THE PROCESS OF REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-15 WOMENS MOVEMENT DYNAMICS: STRATEGIC AND INSTITUTIONAL UNDERPINNINGS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-16 Thu 2:00 pm

Fri 2:00 pm

Disc: 35-6

Room: 35-3

Sat 8:00 am

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Room: 35-4 Room:

Chair: Papers:

DYNAMICS OF CAMPAIGN Sat 2:00 pm FUNDRAISING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Campaign Finance Research Group, Panel 1 Paul Allen Beck, Ohio State University Do Caps on Donations Work? Eric McGhee, Public Policy Institute of California Where Does the Money Come From: The Timing and Geography of Campaign Contributions to Presidential Candidates in the 2000 and 2008 Primaries Andrew J. Dowdle, University of Arkansas Karen Sebold, University of Arkansas Scott Limbocker, University of Arkansas

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Disc: 35-8

Joseph Quin Monson, Brigham Young University Party Position Change and the Politics of Gay Rights in the U.S. Congress David Karol, University of Maryland Two Roads Diverged: Abortion, Modernization and the GOP in the 1974 Election Burdett A. Loomis, University of Kansas In Search of American Populism: Alternative Dimensions of Public Opinion Byron E. Shafer, University of Wisconsin, Madison William J.M. Claggett, Florida State University First to the Party: The Interest Group Origins of the Partisan Realignment on Civil Rights Christopher Baylor, University of California, Los Angeles Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University John J. Coleman, University of Wisconsin, Madison PARTY DISTANCING AND Sat 10:15 am PARTY POLARIZATION IN AMERICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-7 William J. Crotty, Northeastern University Structural Barriers to Political Consensus Gerald M. Pomper, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Marc D. Weiner, Rutgers University The Dynamics of Internal Party Coalition-Building Howard L. Reiter, University of Connecticut Party, Ideology and Programmatic Commitment William J. Crotty, Northeastern University Hispanics as an Emergent Force in Party Politics Rodolfo O. de la Garza, Columbia University John H. Aldrich, Duke University Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University PANEL TO HONOR THE Fri 8:00 am SCHOLARSHIP OF GERALD M. POMPER No Room Assigned Kathleen A. Frankovic, CBS News Building on Pomper: Party Platform and Issue Positioning, 1980-2008 William J. Crotty, Northeastern University Party Activists, Ideological Extremism, and Party Polarization: Should We Be Generalizing about Party Activists? Marjorie R. Hershey, Indiana University, Bloomington Beth Easter, Indiana University, Bloomington Party Realignment in New England Maureen Moakley, University of Rhode Island William G. Mayer, Northeastern University John Hart, Australian National University LOBBYING AND PUBLIC Sat 8:00 am POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-22 Thomas T. Holyoke, California State University, Fresno

Papers:

Disc: 35-11

Who Cares About the Lobbying Agenda? David C. Kimball, University of Missouri, St. Louis Beth L. Leech, Rutgers University Marie Hojnacki, Pennsylvania State University Jeffrey M. Berry, Tufts University Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Rise of the New Asian Lobbies in Washington, D.C.: China, India and Korea Ronald J. Hrebenar, University of Utah Who Does Not Lobby: Representation of Interests in Health Care Politics Amy Melissa McKay, Georgia State University Citizen and Lobbyist Access to Members of Congress: Who Gets It and Who Gives It? Matthew T. Harrigan, University of Florida Burdett A. Loomis, University of Kansas Ruth S. Jones, Arizona State University SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND Thu 10:15 am POLITICAL MOBILIZATION: NEW APPROACHES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-70 Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Meaning Making and Mobilization: Reconceptualizing the Role of Grievances in Social Movement Theory Erica Simmons, University of Chicago An Identity-Based Theory of the Partisan Dimensions of Social Movements Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan Plutocrats, Populists, and the Tea Party David S. Meyer, University of Caliornia, Irvine Contagious Contention: A Network Approach to Collective Action on Climate Change Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University RECIPROCAL INFLUENCES OF Fri 8:00 am PARTISANSHIP AND ISSUE ATTITUDES: THE U.S. AND EUROPE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-8 Thomas John Scotto, University of Essex Party Structuring of Policy Attitudes and Conflict Extension: An Experimental Assessment Thomas M. Carsey, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame Beyond Endogeneity? Removing Political Conditioning from Economic Perceptions Geoffrey Evans, Oxford University Mark A. Pickup, University of Oxford Personal Values, Party Identification, and the Origins of Public Opinion Paul N. Goren, University of Minnesota The Reciprocal Influences of Dutch Voters Policy Beliefs and Party Evaluations James Adams, University of California, Davis Catherine E. De Vries, University of Amsterdam Debra Lynn Leiter, University of California, Davis

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Disc: 35-12

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121

Disc: 35-13

The Development and Dynamics of Party Identification in New Democracies: A Comparative Cohort Analysis Anja Neundorf, University of Oxford Thomas John Scotto, University of Essex Logan Dancey, University of Pittsburgh WHY PEOPLE CONTRIBUTE Sat 4:15 pm TO POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS AND WHY THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS MATTER No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-9 Hans Hassell, University of California, San Diego Campaign Finance Reform and Polarization: Has the Individual-Donor Revolution Advantaged Ideologically Extreme Candidates? Adam Bonica, New York University Social Campaign Giving Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago Erin Hartman, University of California, Berkeley The Effect of Redistricting on Individual Campaign Contributions Jenna Bednar, University of Michigan Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan Donating Money versus Time: Why People Donate Money to Some Candidates yet Donate Time to Others Adam Seth Levine, Vanderbilt University Cindy D. Kam, Vanderbilt University Canvassing for Cash: The Effect of Canvassing on Campaign Contributions Andra N. Gillespie, Emory University Joshua A Berman, Emory University Hans Hassell, University of California, San Diego Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San Diego RELIGION AND POLITICAL Sun 10:15 am PARTIES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 33-12 David A. Dulio, Oakland University Islamist Party Success in the Arab World Michael D. H. Robbins, University of Michigan When Do Islamist Parties Impact Policy Outcomes?: What Islamists in the Middle East Can Learn from Islamist Parties in Asia Quinn Mecham, Middlebury College Friend or Foe: Muslim Immigrants and Left Political Parties in Western Europe Janna Bray, University of Michigan Religious Parties in Secular States: Comparing Catholic and Sunni Political Activism in Mexico and Turkey Luis F. Mantilla, Georgetown University Ahmet T. Kuru, San Diego State University NONPROFIT ADVOCACY AND Thu 4:15 pm THE POLITICS OF REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-25 Steven Rathgeb Smith, Georgetown University

Papers:

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Disc: 35-16

Nonprofits, City Politics, and the Pursuit of Sustainability Jeffrey M. Berry, Tufts University Kent E. Portney, Tufts University Whose Interests? Women?s Organizations and National Policy Advocacy, 1880-2000 Kristin Goss, Duke University American Standards for American Children: A Century of Organizing for Child Well-Being Doug Imig, University of Memphis When Bad Things Happen to Privileged People: Interest Groups, Representation, and the Construction of National Crises Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Interest Group Advocacy When the Party in Power Changes Yutaka Tsujinaka, University of Tsukuba Robert J. Pekkanen, University of Washington COMPARATIVE PARTIES, Fri 10:15 am ELECTIONS, AND REPRESENTATION No Room Assigned Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan Candidate Selection Procedures, Electoral Rules, and Legislative Party Cohesion in Mixed Electoral System Countries Jessica Robinson Preece, Brigham Young University Political Party Responses to European Parliamentary Election Results Zeynep Somer-Topcu, Vanderbilt University Do Voters Understand Party Promises? Mandate Responsiveness in East European Politics Tatiana Kostadinova, Florida International University Petia A. Kostadinova, University of Florida Rethinking Party Membership: Towards a Functional Measurement Strategy Susan Scarrow, University of Houston Aldo Fernando Ponce, University of Houston Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan Brandon C. Zicha, Free University of Amsterdam THE FUNCTIONS OF POLITICAL PARTIES IN NEW DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 44-14 Sat 2:00 pm

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ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR

Division Cindy D. Kam, Vanderbilt University Chair: 36-1 MOTIVATING PARTICIPATION: GUILT, HOPE, DISGUST, ANXIETY AND GREED No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-13 Sat 4:15 pm

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36-2

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WHO PARTICIPATES? IDENTITY, OPPORTUNITY, DISPOSITION AND MOBILIZATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-14 POLITICAL BEHAVIOR AND HISTORICAL INSTITUTIONALISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-2 ELECTORAL REFORM AND VOTER TURNOUT IN THE AMERICAN STATES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 29-5 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON LOCAL VOTING BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 30-6 GENDER EFFECTS IN CAMPAIGNS, ELECTIONS AND IN POWER No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-5 PARTY DISTANCING AND PARTY POLARIZATION IN AMERICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-8 RECIPROCAL INFLUENCES OF PARTISANSHIP AND ISSUE ATTITUDES: THE U.S. AND EUROPE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-12 WHY PEOPLE CONTRIBUTE TO POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS AND WHY THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS MATTER No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-13

Fri 4:15 pm

Sat 2:00 pm

Disc: 36-11

The Causes of Voter Shortsightedness: Evidence from a Survey Experiment Neil Malhotra, University of Pennsylvania Andrew Healy, Loyola Marymount University Voter Motivations in Large Elections: A Large-Scale Internet Game Theoretic Experiment Rebecca B. Morton, New York University John G. Bullock, Yale University WHO VOTES? ISSUES IN Thu 4:15 pm VALIDATION AND OVERREPORTING No Room Assigned Daniel Biggers, University of Maryland Lying Survey Respondents or Flawed Government Records? An Examination of Turnout Over-Reporting and Vote Validation in the 2008 ANES Panel Study Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University Matthew Berent Validating the Causes of Political Participation: Testing Social Desirability Bias in a Web-Survey Experiment Maria Solevid, University of Gothenburg Mikael Persson Over-reporting Political Participation due to Expressive or Instrumental Concerns? Evidence from a Survey Experiment Benjamin David Farrer, SUNY, Binghamton Racial and Ethnic Differences in Voter Validation: Evidence from the 2010 California Election Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California Mchel Angela Martinez, University of Southern California Justin Berry, University of Southern California Michael J. Hanmer, University of Maryland PARTICIPATION AND Fri 8:00 am ECONOMIC INEQUALITY No Room Assigned Margarita Corral, Vanderbilt University Who Votes Now? Voter Turnout and Class Bias, 19722008 Jan E. Leighley, American University Jonathan Nagler, New York University Revealing the Socioeconomic Inequality of Participatory Expansion: A Latent Class Analysis Jennifer Oser Michael Shalev, Hebrew University Inequality and Turnout in Europe Markus Steinbrecher, University of Mannheim Gilg U.H. Seeber, University of Innsbruck Income Inequality and Political Engagement in Eastern Europe Ksenia Mankowska, University of Oxford The Vicious Cycle: The Exclusion of Low Socioeconomic Status Voters from Mobilization Efforts Carrie Levan, University of California, Los Angeles Patrick Flavin, Baylor University UNDERSTANDING THE 2010 Sun 8:00 am CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS No Room Assigned Elizabeth Simas, University of California, Davis

Room: 36-4

Thu 8:00 am

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Thu 10:15 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Room: 36-7

Sat 10:15 am

Room: 36-8

Fri 8:00 am

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Sat 4:15 pm

Room: 36-10

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EXPERIMENTS ON CUEThu 2:00 pm TAKING, MYOPIA, AND RATIONALITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 51-4 Carl Lucas Palmer, University of Notre Dame Understanding and Curing Myopic Voting Gabriel S. Lenz, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Informing the Electorate? How Party Cues and Policy Information Affect Citizens Opinions Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis Ballot Design and Vote Outcomes Devra Coren Moehler, University of Pennsylvania Rosario Aguilar-Pariente, Centro de Investigacin y Docencia Econmicas

Disc: 36-13 Room: Chair:

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123

Papers:

Disc: 36-14 Room: Chair: Papers:

Conservative Shift, Tea Party Movement, or Health Care Backlash? Election Specific Explanations for the 2010 Midterm Elections Jonathan Day, Western Illinois University President Obama and the Influence of Racial Attitudes on 2010 Voting Behavior Michael Tesler, University of California, Los Angeles Explaining the Republican Resurgence in the 2010 Congressional Elections Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San Diego Was the Tea Party Responsible for the Republican Victory in the 2010 House Elections? Jon R. Bond, Texas A&M University, College Station Richard Fleisher, Fordham University Nathan A. Ilderton, University of Central Florida Ben Highton, University of California, Davis PARTISANSHIP BY GENDER, Sat 8:00 am RACE, AND CLASS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-21 Patrick I. Fisher, Seton Hall University Partisan Gender Gaps and Racial Divides Nancy Burns, University of Michigan Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Ashley E. Jardina, University of Michigan Molly Reynolds, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor A Relational Explanation of the Gender Gap in the Vote Paul A. Djupe, Denison University Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale Anand E. Sokhey, University of Colorado, Boulder Aggregation Paradox: Explaining Why Poor States Supported Republicans Iris Hui, UCLA Partisan Deviation, Economic Self-Interest, and the Behavior of High Income Voters Gary M. Segura, Stanford University Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside The Latin@ Gender Identification Gap?: Male-Female Differences in Immigrant Self-Identification Heather Silber Mohamed, Brown University Patrick J. Egan, New York University INTERPERSONAL DYNAMICS Thu 4:15 pm AND VOTING BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 50-5 Andrew S. Waugh, University of California, San Diego Dynamics, Expertise, and Influence within Political Communication Networks Robert Huckfeldt, University of California, Davis Matthew T. Pietryka, University of California, Davis Jack Reilly, University of California, Davis T.K. Ahn, Seoul National University

Disc: 36-16 Room: Chair: Papers:

Conditions for Dyadic Partisan Agreement and Disagreement: An Analysis of Voters Social Networks at the 2009 German Federal Election Rudiger Schmitt-Beck, University of Mannheim Julia Partheymller, University of Mannheim How Long Does Conflict in Social Networks Affect Political Behavior? Anand E. Sokhey, University of Colorado, Boulder Casey A. Klofstad, University of Miami Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale Cross-Pressures and Political Behavior: Untangling the Causal Mechanism Joshua A. Tucker, New York University Ted Brader, University of Michigan Andrew Therriault, New York University David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame GENDER STEREOTYPES AND Sat 10:15 am VOTING BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-22 Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Evaluating Women Candidates: The Impact of Political Gender Stereotypes on Vote Choice in the 2010 Midterm Elections Kathleen Dolan, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Overcoming Gender Stereotypes: How Candidate Signaling Affects Voter Evaluations Danielle Thomsen, Cornell University Gendered Candidates: How Perceived Masculinity and Femininity Interact with Partisanship to Shape Citizen Reactions Nicholas Winter, University of Virginia Terrorist Threat and the Activation of Masculine Stereotypes on Candidate Evaluations Jennifer L. Merolla, Claremont Graduate University Elizabeth Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University Mirya R. Holman, Florida Atlantic University Gender and Age Stereotypes in the Evaluation of Female Candidates Jason Windett, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Jessica C. Gerrity, Congressional Research Service EXPERIMENTS ON SOCIAL Thu 8:00 am PRESSURE AND MOBILIZATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 51-5 Matthew D. Cravens, University of Minnesota Voter Mobilization through Friends and Family: A Large Scale Field Experiment on the Social Nature of Political Participation Christopher B. Mann, University of Miami Casey A. Klofstad, University of Miami Voter Mobilization: Tests of Explanations and Enhancements of Get-out-the-Vote Techniques Richard E. Matland, Loyola University, Chicago Gregg R. Murray, Texas Tech University

Disc:

Disc: 36-15 Room: Chair: Papers:

36-17

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DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 36-18 Room: Chair: Papers:

Voter Mobilization in a Field Experiment of 100 Million Facebook Users Robert Bond, University of California, San Diego James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego Jason Jeffrey Jones, University of California, San Diego Small Cues and Large Effects: Results From a Psychological Medley Field Experiment on Turnout Seth J. Hill, Yale University Alan Gerber, Yale University Gregory Huber, Yale University Conor M. Dowling, Yale University David Doherty, Yale University The Half-life of Mobilization David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University THE GENDER GAP IN Fri 2:00 pm POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-23 Kira Sanbonmatsu, Rutgers University Gender Gaps in Political Discussion: A Cross-National Comparison Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale Lilach Nir, Hebrew University Gender by Race: The Massive Participation Gender Gap in American Politics Stephen D. Ansolabehere, Harvard University Eitan Hersh, Harvard University From Westminster to Proportional Representation: The Dynamics of the Gender Gap in Political Engagement in New Zealand Miki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State University Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer, University of Missouri The Novelty of Women on the National Stage: How Candidates Change Political Attitudes and Engagement Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter Maarja Lhiste, University of Exeter The Impact of Womens Suffrage: Female Voters and the Election of 1920 Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame J. Kevin Corder, Western Michigan University Jeffrey W. Koch, SUNY, Geneseo FOUNDATIONS OF ECONOMIC Sat 10:15 am PERCEPTIONS AND ECONOMIC VOTING No Room Assigned Matthew Incantalupo, Princeton University Using Objective Local Economic Conditions to Estimate the Effect of Perceptions of National Economic Conditions on Vote Choice Thomas G. Hansford, University of California, Merced Brad T. Gomez, Florida State University How the Content of News Coverage Affects Economic Perceptions and Political Behavior Adam Seth Levine, Vanderbilt University Yanna Krupnikov, Indiana University, Bloomington What Information is Relevant in Economic Voting? Jonathan David Rogers, Florida State University Marcelo Tyszler, University of Amsterdam

Disc: 36-20 Room: Chair: Papers:

What Do Voters Believe about the Economy? Erik Snowberg, Caltech Stephen D. Ansolabehere, Harvard University Marc Meredith, University of Pennsylvania Gubernatorial Midterm Slumps James M. Snyder, Jr., Harvard University Olle Folke, Columbia University Andrew Healy, Loyola Marymount University UNDERSTANDING THE 2010 Thu 10:15 am BRITISH ELECTIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by British Politics Group, Panel 1 Caitlin Milazzo, University of California, Davis Campaign Dynamics and Political Choice in the 2010 British General Election Harold D. Clarke, University of North Texas David Sanders, University of Essex Marianne C. Stewart, University of Texas at Dallas Paul F. Whiteley, University of Essex William Craig Meddaugh, Rice University Strategic Voting in the 2010 UK General Election John H. Aldrich, Duke University Aaron Houck, Duke University Paul R. Abramson, Michigan State University Renan Levine, University of Toronto Thomas John Scotto, University of Essex Abraham Diskin, Hebrew University of Jerusalem The UK 2010 General Election: Testing a Full Economic Voting Model Richard Nadeau, University de Montreal Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa Martial Foucault, Universite de Montreal When Do Social Norms Increase Turnout? Campaign Competitiveness and the 2010 British General Election Campaign Jane Green, University of Manchester The PM and the Pendulum Model in the 2010 British Election Matthew Lebo, SUNY, Stony Brook Helmut Norpoth, SUNY, Stony Brook James Adams, University of California, Davis Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter ECONOMIC VOTING IN Fri 10:15 am COMPARATIVE CONTEXT No Room Assigned David Hill, Stetson University Spatial Economic Voting: Ideological Proximity and Accountability for Economic Outcomes Laron K. Williams, Texas Tech University Guy D. Whitten, Texas A&M University Are Latin American Voters Campesinos o. Empresarios? Economic Perceptions and Government Support 1995-2008 Matthew Singer, University of Connecticut Ryan Carlin, Georgia State University In Times of Crisis: The Conditions and Consequences of Economic Voting K. Amber Curtis, University of Colorado, Boulder Joseph Jupille, University of Colorado, Boulder

Disc: 36-21 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 36-19

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125

Disc: 36-22

Explaining the Lula Effect: Presidents, Parties and Incumbency Effect in Latin American Presidential Elections Ignazio De Ferrari, London School of Economics and Political Science The Attribution of Governments Responsibility in Latin America: A Comparative Study of Economic Voting across Institutional Contexts Maria Celeste Ratto, CONICET/UNSAM Randolph T. Stevenson, Rice University ELECTORAL CHOICE AND Sat 4:15 pm COMPETITION: EFFECTS ON TURNOUT AND IMPLICATIONS FOR ATTITUDES No Room Assigned William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University Open Ballots, the Cost of Voting and Voter Turnout Gaps: Is More Choice Better? Aina Gallego, Stanford University Electoral Choice and Political Participation Jon Rogowski, University of Chicago Too Much of a Good Thing? Large Choice Sets, Parties, and Representation in Multimember Districts Saul Cunow, University of California, San Diego Party Competition and Turnout: A Comparison Over Space, Time, and Level John M. Bruce, University of Mississippi Robert D. Brown, University of Mississippi Jennifer Wilking, University of California, Davis William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University THE SEAMY SIDE OF Sun 10:15 am DEMOCRACY: CORRUPTION, SCANDAL, AND ILLICIT FUNDING IN ELECTIONS No Room Assigned Mason Wallace Moseley, Vanderbilt University Voting for Corrupt Politicians: Observational and Experimental Evidence from Afghanistan Rikhil Bhavnani, University of Wisconsin, Madison Luke N. Condra, University of California, San Diego Why Do Malfeasant Politicians Maintain Political Support? Testing the Uninformed Voter Argument Marko Klasnja, New York University Public Views on Corruption: Where Do They Come From and How Do They Affect Political Behavior? Yuliya V. Tverdova, University of California, Irvine Clientelism and Observability on Voting Behavior Han Il Chang, New York University Buying Other Peoples Elections: Evidence from a Survey Experiment in Lebanon Daniel Corstange, University of Maryland, College Park Charles H. Blake, James Madison University THE NATIONAL ASIAN Fri 8:00 am AMERICAN SURVEY AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR STUDIES OF POLITICAL BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Asian Pacific American Caucus, Panel 1

Chair: Papers:

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Disc: 36-25 Room: Chair: Papers:

Michael A. Jones-Correa, Princeton University Using the National Asian American Surveys Weighted and Unweighted Data S. Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California, Riverside Janelle Wong, University of Southern California Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California The Effects of Residential Concentration and Ethnic Media Use on Asian American Public Opinion Loan Le, University of California, Los Angeles Mobilizing the Asian American Electorate: Examining Differences in Political Orientations and Policy Attitudes by Media Language Preference Kathy Rim, Wesleyan University The Participatory Politics of Asian American Racial Solidarity Julie Lee Merseth, University of Chicago Asian American Political Participation: Emerging Constituents and their Political Identities Janelle Wong, University of Southern California Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California S. Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California, Riverside John H. Mollenkopf, CUNY, Graduate Center FRENCH PRESIDENTIAL Sat 8:00 am ELECTIONS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 2 Veronique Jerome, University of Paris XI-Sud Orsay French Presidential Elections: The Heavy Variables Richard Nadeau, University de Montreal French Presidential Elections: Ideology Eric Belanger, McGill University French Presidential Elections: The Role of Issues Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa French Presidential Elections: Leaders Richard Nadeau, University de Montreal Bruno Jrme PARTY IMAGES IN THE U.S. Fri 2:00 pm AND COMPARATIVE CONTEXTS No Room Assigned Priscilla L. Southwell, University of Oregon The Macro-Competence of American Candidates and Parties Jane Green, University of Manchester Will Jennings, University of Manchester Leader or Liability?: How Individual Candidates Influence Party Image Elizabeth Simas, University of California, Davis Ideological Uncertainty and its Consequences for Individuals Evaluation of Political Parties around the World Marco Fernandez, Duke University John H. Aldrich, Duke University Sinziana Dorobantu, Duke University

Disc: 36-23

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Disc: 36-26

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Disc: 36-24

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DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 36-27 Room: Chair: Papers:

Party System and Individual Influences on Ideological Assessments of Parties: A Four Country Examination Christopher Raymond, University of Missouri, Columbia John R. Petrocik, University of Missouri, Columbia Which Party Characteristics Matter Most? The Electoral Impact of Parties Character-Based Valence Attributes in Nine Western European Democracies, 1976-2003. Michael Clark, Northern Illinois University Zeynep Somer-Topcu, Vanderbilt University CAMPAIGNS AND CAMPAIGN Sun 10:15 am EFFECTS No Room Assigned John Barry Ryan, Florida State University When Massive Ad Spending Meets Debates: The Effects of the Whitman-Brown 2010 Gubernatorial Debates Kenneth M. Winneg, University of Pennsylvania Bruce Hardy, Louisiana State University Kathleen Hall Jamieson, University of Pennsylvania Playing to the Audience: Issue Emphasis on Campaign Websites in the 2010 Midterm Election Andrew Therriault, New York University Negative about Negativity: Public Opinion and the Framing of Negative Campaigning Kyle Mattes, University of Iowa David P. Redlawsk, Rutgers University Public Attention and Political Campaigns: Is All Attention Good Attention? William Curtis Ellis, Auburn University Montgomery Colin D. Swearingen, University of Oklahoma Joseph T. Ripberger, University of Oklahoma Campaign Message Strategies in Presidential Elections Jaeyun Sung, University of Georgia Yanna Krupnikov, Indiana University, Bloomington THE STRATEGIC USE OF Sat 2:00 pm ISSUES IN ELECTIONS No Room Assigned Daniel Stockemer, University of Ottawa Nonseparable Preferences, Issue Voting, and Issue Packaging in Elections Dean P. Lacy, Dartmouth College Nowhere to Hide or Nothing to Hide? The Strategy of Unambiguous Position-Taking John Barry Ryan, Florida State University Kerri Milita, Florida State University Elizabeth Simas, University of California, Davis When Dimensions Collide: The Electoral Success of Issue Entrepreneurs Sara Binzer Hobolt, Oxford University Catherine E. De Vries, University of Amsterdam David A. M. Peterson, Iowa State University POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, Thu 2:00 pm DIVERSITY, AND SORTING No Room Assigned Eitan Hersh, Harvard University Becoming Red and Blue: The Economic Foundations of Political Diversity across the US States Lucy M. Goodhart, Columbia University

Disc:

Urban Form and Electoral Bias: Evidence from the U.S. States Jowei Chen, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Jonathan Rodden, Stanford University Conceptualizing and Measuring Geographic Polarization of Partisan Preferences Iris Hui, UCLA Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania

37

PUBLIC OPINION

Division Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington Chair: 37-1 IGNORANCE, INFORMATION AND ATTENTION: WHAT DO WE KNOW, AND WHY DO WE KNOW IT? No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-3 POLITICAL CONSTRAINT AND OPINION CHANGE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-4 NEUROTIC LIBERALS, PSYCHOTIC CONSERVATIVES, MORAL INTUITIONS, AND IMAGINED IDEOLOGIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-8 THE ORIGINS AND IMPORT OF TRUST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-15 POLARIZATION, TOLERANCE, COMPROMISE AND CULTURE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-17 RACE, IMMIGRATION AND PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-18 THE POLITICS OF THE TEA PARTY MOVEMENT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-7 Fri 4:15 pm

Room: 37-2 Room: 37-3

Sat 8:00 am

Fri 2:00 pm

Room: 37-4 Room: 37-5 Room: 37-6 Room: 37-7 Room: 37-8

Thu 10:15 am

Sun 8:00 am

Disc: 36-28 Room: Chair: Papers:

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 4:15 pm

Disc: 36-29 Room: Chair: Papers:

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MUSLIM AND ARAB PUBLIC Sun 10:15 am OPINION AND THE ROLE OF ISLAM No Room Assigned Karam Dana, Harvard University Islam and the American Electorate: An Experimental Assessment of Political and Racial Identifiers on Support for Muslim Candidates Kerem Ozan Kalkan, Middle East Technical University Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame John C. Green, University of Akron

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

127

Disc: 37-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

Struggling for the Hearts and Minds of the Arab Street: Political and Social Attitudes of Yemeni University Students Dino N. Bozonelos, University of California, Riverside Fernando Carvajal, Universtity of Exeter Arab and Muslim Americans: Public Opinion, Foreign Policy Advocacy, and the Palestinian State Khalil M. Marrar, DePaul University Sherri S. Replogle, Loyola University, Chicago Islamophobia, the British Public and the New Security Agenda Lauren M. McLaren, University of Nottingham Matthew Goodwin, University of Manchester David John Cutts, University of Manchester Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas NEW RESEARCH ON GENDER Sat 10:15 am AND PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa Public Attitudes toward Women as Public Leaders Jackie Filla, Chatham University Christopher W. Larimer, University of Northern Iowa The Role of Fictional Television in Public Opinion towards Racial Minorities and Women Jeremiah Garretson, SUNY, Stony Brook University Where Do Mama Grizzlies Come From? The Palin Political Discourse of Motherhood and Implications for a Feminist Politics Leah Hope Gates, American University-SIS DO PEOPLE ACTUALLY Thu 2:00 pm AGREE WITH JAN BREWER? PUBLIC OPINION ON IMMIGRATION No Room Assigned Acculturation Threat and Public Opposition to Immigration in the U.S. Ben Jordan Newman, SUNY Stony Brook University Attitudes toward Immigration and Immigrants: Race, Afrocentrism, and the Person-Positivity Bias Stuart N. Soroka, McGill University Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University Allison Harell, University du Quebec a Montreal Illegality, National Origin Cues, and Public Opinion on Immigration Kevin M. Esterling, University of California, Riverside S. Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California, Riverside Michael Neblo, Ohio State University David Lazer, Northeastern University Identity and Immigration Opinion across the United States Ashley E. Jardina, University of Michigan MINORITY PUBLIC OPINION TODAY No Room Assigned Rene R. Rocha, University of Iowa Fri 8:00 am

Papers:

Disc: 37-12 Room: Papers:

The Complicated Constituency: A Study of Immigrant Opinions about Political Representation Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University Exploring Political Allegiance and Race in the Age of Obama Christopher C. Towler, University of Washington Racial Context and the Effect on Public Opinion Jillian Medeiros, University of New Mexico Does a High-Choice Media Environment Increase Political Extremism? A test of the selective exposure theory & its impact on the political attitudes of Whites, Blacks and Latinos. Mona S. Kleinberg, Rutgers University James A. McCann, Purdue University INTER-GROUP ATTITUDES Fri 10:15 am AND PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Residential Integration and Perceptions of Discrimination in the Multiracial Context: Interminority Solidarity or Competition? Jonathan Hoffman, University of California, Washington Center Theyre All Out to Get Me? An Examination of InterGroup Competition Among Multiple Populations Benjamin Fontaine Gonzalez, University of Washington Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington Gabriel Sanchez, University of New Mexico Joblessness Matters? African American and Latino Relations in the Changing Economic Context Myra Brielle Harbin, Brown University Natalie Masuoka, Tufts University ELECTIONS, VOTERS AND Thu 2:00 pm PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Microfoundations of Momentum: Does Leading in Polls Make Candidates More Appealing? Todd Donovan, Western Washington University Catching Conflict via the Initiative: A Comprehensive Theory of Spillover Effects in Ballot Measure Elections Joshua J. Dyck, University at Buffalo, SUNY Televised Debates Matter, Sort of John W. Williams, Principia College Brian D. Roberts, Principia College Public Opinion Polls and Audience Understanding: Exploring the Relationships between Interactivity and Political Engagement Ann E. Williams, Georgia State Unviersity Stephen P. Nicholson, University of California, Merced SOCIAL IDENTITY AND Thu 4:15 pm ATTITUDES TOWARDS OUTGROUPS TODAY No Room Assigned Why the Public Has Become More Supportive of Gay Rights but not Abortion Rights Mark A. Smith, University of Washington The New New Racism Thesis: Limited Government Values and Race-Conscious Policy Attitudes Jason Gainous, University of Louisville

37-10

Disc: 37-13 Room: Papers:

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Disc: 37-14

37-11 Room: Chair:

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128

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DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 37-15 Room: Chair: Papers:

Immigration and Social Distrust in the Construction of Welfare Policy across the American States Jason Kehrberg, University of Kentucky Adam Michael Butz, University of Kentucky Community Context as a Predictor of Gay Rights Opinion Melanie Bowers, Michiga State University Patrick J. Egan, New York University CROSS GROUP COMPARISONS Sat 8:00 am IN PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned John R. Alford, Rice University The Genetics of the Perceptions on Cross-strait Relations: Evidence from Taiwanese Twins Yu-Kang Lee, National Sun Yat-sen University Chung-Yao Hsu, Kaohsiung Medical University Party Systems and the Nature of Partisan Categories Stephen P. Nicholson, University of California, Merced Evan Heit, University of California, Merced Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter Aidan Feeney, Queens University, Belfast Christopher J. Carman, Strathclyde University Brett Hayes, University of New South Wales Agenda Pushers: Re-evaluating Scales of Attitudes Towards Lesbians and Gay Men Betsy L. Cooper, University of Washington, Seattle Anger: Racial Resentment Drives Opposition to Health Care Reform Antoine J. Banks, University of Maryland Mosques as American Institutions: Muslim Incorporation in American Politics Karam Dana, Harvard University Kassra Oskooii, University of Washington Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington NEW RESEARCH ON THE Thu 8:00 am RELEVANCE OF RACIAL ATTITUDES No Room Assigned The Other Side of the Coin: Framing Racial Inequality as White Privilege Tehama Lopez, Ohio University Framing Torture: Islam, Threat, and Public Support for Torture Paul Gronke, Reed College Darius M. Rejali, Reed College Illegals Everywhere: Threatened American Identity & Opposition to Immigration in the U.S. Allyson Shortle, Ohio State University VOTER SOPHISTICATION AND Sun 8:00 am POLITICAL KNOWLEDGE No Room Assigned Rumors, Truths, and Reality: A Study of Political Misinformation Adam J. Berinsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Measuring Distinct Effects of Political Knowledge Cengiz Erisen, TOBB - University of Economics and Technology Daniel R. Cassino, Fairleigh Dickinson University

The Bright Side and the Dark Side of Political Sophistication: Issue Voting and Race in the 2008 Presidential Election Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida Theories of Conspiracy Theories Joseph E. Uscinski, University of Miami Joseph M. Parent, University of Miami 37-18 ECONOMIC AND POLICY Fri 4:15 pm EVALUATIONS AMONG THE PUBLIC No Room Assigned Gregory McAvoy, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Pocketbook versus Sociotropic Evaluations of the 2010 Health Care Reform David Konisky, Georgetown University Lilliard E. Richardson, Jr., University of Missouri, Columbia Are Policy Preferences Single-Peaked? Evidence from a Survey Experiment Patrick J. Egan, New York University Voters Asymmetric Responses to the Economy: Evidence from Time-Series Analyses Roland Kappe, SUNY Stony Brook University Attributing Blame: Social Context, Identity, and Attributions for Events Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas Mark R. Joslyn, University of Kansas COMPARATIVE POLITICS AND Sat 2:00 pm PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned The Relationship between Regime Approval and Democratic Transition Gregory A. Petrow, University of Nebraska, Omaha Jonathan Benjamin-Alvarado, University of Nebraska, Omaha What Goes Around Comes Around: Migration and Democratic Diffusion in Latin America David Crow, CIDE Clarisa Perez-Armendariz, Bates College Socialization and Attitudes towards Democracy among Second-Generation Immigrants in Australia Juliet Eliza Pietsch, Australian National University Ian McAllister, Australian National University PARTISANSHIP, IDEOLOGY Fri 8:00 am AND PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned The New Deal Realignment in Real Time Helmut Norpoth, SUNY, Stony Brook Andrew H. Sidman, CUNY, John Jay College Clara H. Suong, Stony Brook University The Role of Universal Values in Partisanship and Candidate Evaluation Christopher D. DeSante, Duke University The Effect of Mandatory National Service on Political Ideology Ryan Garcia, Rochester Institute of Technology Partisanship Transformed? Comparing the Young Boomers and Millennials Zachary Folsom Cook, DePaul University William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University

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37-19 Room: Papers:

37-16

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37-20 Room: Papers:

37-17 Room: Papers:

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129

37-21 Room: Papers:

ELECTORAL POLITICS AND Sun 10:15 am PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Swing Voters or Core Partisans? Ideological Groups and the Vote for President Hovannes Abramyan, University of California, Los Angeles Electoral Competition and Roll Call Votes: Exploring the Contextual Determinants of Citizen Political Knowledge Andrew P. Kelly, University of California, Berkeley Wealthy Americans and the Common Good: Findings from SESA Benjamin I. Page, Northwestern University Larry M. Bartels, Vanderbilt University Jason Seawright, Northwestern University The Successor Elections: Political Engagement in Elections with a Vice President on the Ballot Matthew A. Childers, University of California, San Diego METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN Fri 2:00 pm PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Loren Collingwood, University of Washington Asking Sensitive Questions in an Indian Village: The Impact of an Original Audio Self-Administered Methodology on Misreporting Simon Chauchard, New York University The Problem with Captive Audiences: Framing and Information Search Thomas John Leeper, Northwestern University James N. Druckman, Northwestern University Jordan Mathias Fein, Northwestern University The Causes and Consequences of Political Innumeracy Eric D. Lawrence, George Washington University John M. Sides, George Washington University Event Count Models in Survey Research Tse-min Lin, University of Texas, Austin Ariel Helfer, University of Texas, Austin Dorothy Lam Morgan, University of Texas at Austin Cengiz Erisen, TOBB - University of Economics and Technology EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVES ON Sat 4:15 pm PUBLIC OPINION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-19 Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter Comparative Political Behavior: The Place of Turkey within the European Union Cengiz Erisen, TOBB - University of Economics and Technology Elif Erisen, Cal Poly State University Better = Faster?: Explaining the Desired Speed of European Integration Thomas Malang, University of Konstanz Europolis and the European Wide Public Sphere: Empirical Explorations of a Counter-factual Ideal Alice Siu, Stanford University James S. Fishkin, Stanford University Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin

Disc:

Public opinion in Europe, more united than divided? Pierre Philippe Balestrini Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron

38

POLITICAL COMMUNICATION

Division Travis N. Ridout, Washington State University Chair: 38-1 MUGGLES TRUST JON STEWART: COMEDIC NEWS, FICTION AND POLITICAL BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-9 THE EFFECTS OF MEDIA EXPOSURE ON EMOTION, COGNITION AND PHYSIOLOGY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-10 Thu 4:15 pm

Room: 38-2

Sat 10:15 am

Room: 38-3 Room: Chair: Papers:

37-22 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 37-23 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 38-4 Room: Chair: Papers:

POLITICAL ADVERTISING Sat 2:00 pm No Room Assigned Craig Leonard Brians, Virginia Tech Who Goes Negative? Quantifying Negativity in Congressional Campaign Advertising Brent Durbin, Smith College Truth in Advertising? The Veracity of Positive and Negative Political Advertising Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter Barbara Allen, Carleton College The Politics of Identity in Indonesia: Results from Campaign Advertisements Colm Fox, George Washington University Jeremy Menchik, University of Wisconsin, Madison Democratic Accountability in Campaign Advertising Philip E. Jones, University of Delaware Forming a Response: Candidate Advertising in Political Campaigns Matthew Barnes, Princeton University In a Different Voice? Explaining the Gender of Voiceover Announcers in Political Advertising Travis N. Ridout, Washington State University Patricia Strach, SUNY, University at Albany Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University Kathleen Searles, Washington State University Katherine Zuber, SUNY, University at Albany Paul B. Freedman, University of Virginia Michael G. Hagen, Temple University CAMPAIGNS Thu 8:00 am No Room Assigned Joseph Cobetto, University of Missouri, Columbia A Net Gain?: The Electoral Benefits of Web 2.0 Campaigning in the Australian 2010 Federal Election Rachel K. Gibson, University of Manchester Ian McAllister, Australian National University MeTube: Politicians and YouTube in Advanced Democracies Rob Salmond, University of Michigan

130

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DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 38-5 Room: Chair: Papers:

Say What? Congressional Candidate Issue Emphasis On Air and Online Hannah Goble, Texas Christian University Luke Harville, Texas Christian University Amy Sentementes, Texas Christian University Gender Bias in the Media: Campaigns for State Level Executive Office in Germany and the United States Sarah Elise Wiliarty, Wesleyan University Bruce Hardy, Louisiana State University Israel S. Waismel-Manor, University of Haifa POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Sat 8:00 am BEYOND THE UNITED STATES No Room Assigned Laura Roselle, Elon University News Media Consumption and the Democratic Behavior of Individuals in Latin America Ryan Salzman, University of North Texas A Beautiful New Facebook Friendship? - Political Parties and Generation Z John W. Hogan, Dublin Institute of Technology Kevin Lynch, Dublin Institute of Technology Economic Ads and Economic Assessments: The Fight for Economic Opinion in the U.S. and Mexico Austin Hart, University of Texas, Austin The Mediatization of Online Campaigning: Evidence From German Party Websites in State, National, and European Parliamentary Elections Eva Johanna Schweitzer, University of Mainz A Tale of Two Presidents: International News Coverage of the US during the Barack Obama and George W. Bush Presidencies Stephen J. Farnsworth, George Mason University S. Robert Lichter, George Mason University Roland Schatz Bryan Gervais, University of Maryland David L. Paletz, Duke University DETERMINANTS AND Sun 8:00 am CHARACTER OF MEDIA COVERAGE No Room Assigned C. Danielle Vinson, Furman University When Foreign Political Actors Matter: Press Performance during Political Crises Meital Balmas Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Gadi Wolfsfeld, Hebrew University The Determinants of Media Storms Amber Ellen Boydstun, University of California, Davis Anne Hardy, University of Antwerp Stefaan Walgrave, University of Antwerp A Tale of Two Senators: Using Media to Gain Influence in the Senate C. Danielle Vinson, Furman University The Press and Unprecedented Presidential Travel: Comparing the Clinton and Obama Visits to Ghana in US and W. African Newspapers Todd M. Schaefer, Central Washington University Adam J. Schiffer, Texas Christian University Tim Groeling, University of California, Los Angeles

38-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 38-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

POLITICAL KNOWLEDGE Fri 10:15 am No Room Assigned Toby Bolsen, Georgia State University Political Knowledge, Representation, and the Mass Media Jason Barabas, Florida State University Joseph M. Wachtel The Effects of Early Voting Campaign News Cycles on Voter Competence Johanna Dunaway, Louisiana State University Robert M. Stein, Rice University Political Misinformation and Public Opinion Emily Thorson, University of Pennsylvania Learning in the Echo Chamber: Political Knowledge and the Educative Effect of Political Talk Radio James Benjamin Taylor, Georgia State University How Do Media Systems Influence Citizens Political Knowledge and the Social Inequalities of Knowledge? Marina Popescu, Median Research Centre Gabor A. Toka, Central European University Does Party Cue Amplification Result from Priming or Learning? How Low Information Election Campaign Communication Affects Voting Behavior Jeffrey A. Gottfried, University of Pennsylvania Christopher Muste, University of Montana Spencer Piston, University of Michigan MEDIA AND POLICY Fri 2:00 pm OUTCOMES No Room Assigned Joseph Cammarano, Providence College Cheap Talk. The Differential Impact of the Media on Executive Press Releases, Speeches, and Policy Votes in Belgium Jeroen Joly, University of Antwerp Amber Ellen Boydstun, University of California, Davis Immigration Politics in Italy and the UK: The Influence of the Media Alex A. Caviedes, SUNY Fredonia Standoff in Iran: New Media, Transnational Civil Society and Prospects for Political Reform Anshul Jain, Boston University The Strategy of Leadership Announcements: Rhetorical Strategies and Policy Change Ishan Joshi, Cornell University How Do Autocracies Use the Media? Andrea E. Jones-Rooy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Steven L. Livingston, George Washington University NEGATIVITY, INCIVILITY AND Fri 4:15 pm NASTINESS No Room Assigned Jan P. Vermeer, Nebraska Wesleyan University The Effect of Negative Campaigning on White Voter Attitudes Toward Black Candidates Yanna Krupnikov, Indiana University, Bloomington Spencer Piston, University of Michigan Measuring Incivility on the Internet Robert M. Eisinger, Savannah College of Art and Design

Disc: 38-6

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Disc: 38-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

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131

Disc: 38-10 Room: Chair: Papers:

Candidate Ad Campaigns: Saving Negativity for the Net? Allison Clark Pingley, University of South Carolina, Upstate Culture of Negativity?: Evidence for Down-Ballot Diffusion of Negative Campaign Techniques in the U.S. States Patricia S. Hallam Joseph, University of Pittsburgh Anonymity and Agreeableness: Opinion Expression Online Lindsay Hoffman, University of Delaware Rebecca Riley, University of Delaware Timothy Vercellotti, Western New England College OPINION AND BEHAVIORAL Fri 8:00 am CHANGE No Room Assigned Todd M. Schaefer, Central Washington University Persistence and Change of Public Opinion in an Experimental Debate over the Patriot Act Dennis Chong, Northwestern University James N. Druckman, Northwestern University How Voters React to Group-Based Appeals Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Getting the Message: The Influence of Explicit Racial Cues in Campaigns Joshua A. Green, University of California, Berkeley Anonymity in the Aggregate: Online Newspaper Comments as a New Measure of Social Context for Predicting Individual Political Attitudes Francisco I. Pedraza, Texas A&M University Effects of the 2008 Obama Presidential Campaign on White Racial Prejudice Seth K. Goldman, University of Pennsylvania Difference and Deliberation: The (de)Mobilizing Effects of Politically Heterogeneous Relationships Anand E. Sokhey, University of Colorado, Boulder David Lazer, Northeastern University Michael Neblo, Ohio State University Kevin M. Esterling, University of California, Riverside Joseph E. Uscinski, University of Miami ISSUE CONVERGENCE AND Thu 10:15 am DIALOGUE No Room Assigned Mary E. Stuckey, Georgia State University Neither Ownership nor Convergence: How Campaigns Select Their Agenda Solomon Messing, Stanford University The Role of Context and Dynamics in Campaign Issue Emphases Kevin K. Banda, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Price of Campaign Dialogue Keena Lipsitz, CUNY, Queens College District Ideology and the Rhetoric of Party Owned Issues Brian K. Arbour, CUNY, John Jay College Party Institutionalization, Issues, and Political Dialogue Inaki Sagarzazu, University of Oxford Danny Hayes, American University Jenny L. Holland, Washington State University

38-12

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THE FLOW OF POLITICAL Sat 10:15 am INFORMATION IN THE DIGITAL AGE: WHATS BETTER AND WHATS WORSE? No Room Assigned Gadi Wolfsfeld, Hebrew University W. Lance Bennett, University of Washington Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University Michael X. Delli Carpini, University of Pennsylvania Scott L. Althaus, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign TIM COOKS LEGACY TO Thu 2:00 pm POLITICAL COMMUNICATION AND BEYOND No Room Assigned Diana M. Owen, Georgetown University Jack Yeager, Louisiana State University David L. Paletz, Duke University Doris A. Graber, University of Illinois, Chicago Paul Gronke, Reed College Regina G. Lawrence, Louisiana State University Lyn Ragsdale, Rice University Martha Joynt Kumar, Towson University JOURNALIST AND NEWS Sat 4:15 pm MEDIA INFLUENCE No Room Assigned Diane J. Heith, St. Johns University Do Partisan Media Polarize? Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania Fair and Balanced? Public Evaluation of News Media Bias James W. Endersby, University of Missouri, Columbia Popular Exemplars in TV News and their Effect on Peoples Perception of Public Opinion. A Large Survey-embedded Experiment Stefaan Walgrave, University of Antwerp Knut De Swert, University of Antwerp Bias in a Laboratory Simulation of a Signaling Game with Implications for the Influence of the News Media Timothy J. Groseclose, University of California, Los Angeles Stephen J. Farnsworth, George Mason University US ELECTIONS WEB 1.0 THROUGH WEB 2.0 No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 40-1 TWEET! HOW 140 CHARACTERS IS CHANGING POLITICS, POLICY AND POLITICAL COMMUNICATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 40-3 Sat 10:15 am

38-13

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38-14 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 38-11 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 38-15 Room: 38-16

Fri 2:00 pm

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132

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

39

SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

39-6

Division David Konisky, Georgetown University Chair: 39-1 THEME PANEL: INTERNATIONAL POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-2 THE POLITICS OF DISASTER: RECOVERY IN CROSSNATIONAL AND CROSSDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-5 LOCAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-16 GREEN CITIES: INFLUENCES ON LOCAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 30-5 Fri 4:15 pm

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: 39-2

Thu 10:15 am

Room: 39-3 Room: 39-4

Fri 10:15 am

Sat 2:00 pm

Room: 39-5

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

POLICY GAMES, Sat 10:15 am COLLABORATION NETWORKS AND THE POLITICS OF CONFLICT IN WATER MANAGEMENT. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-26 Edella C. Schlager, University of Arizona Governing Complex Commons: Policy Networks and the Ecology of Games Ramiro Berardo, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientficas y Tcnicas Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis John T. Scholz, Florida State University Investigating the Politics of Collaborative Processes: A Study of Collective Choice Decision-Making in the Everglades Restoration Program Tanya Heikkila, University of Colorado-Denver Andrea K. Gerlak, University of Arizona Management Styles, Democratic Legitimacy and Outcomes in Governance Networks in the Dutch Water Sector Jurian Edelenbos, Erasmus University Ingmar van Meerkerk, Erasmus University Erik-Hans Klijn, Erasmus University Federalism and the Politics of Environmental Investment: Setting Priorities for Drinking Water Protection Dorothy Daley, University of Kansas Megan Mullin, Temple University Chris Weible, University of Colorado, Denver

Disc: 39-7

ENVIRONMENTAL Thu 2:00 pm INFORMATION AND DECISION MAKING IN A COMPARATIVE CONTEXT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-27 Troy D. Abel, Western Washington University Environmental Information Disclosure in the United States: Comparing State Policy Actions, Effects, and Needs Michael E. Kraft, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay Culture Context and Environmental Information Usage: Toxic Release Data in Thailand and Indonesia Mark C. Stephan, Washington State University, Vancouver Ellen A. Rogers, Washington State University How do Ecological Facts Become Policy Relevant Information? Comparing Public Participation and Regulatory Drivers in the Portland-Vancouver Region Paul Thiers, Washington State University. Vancouver Mark C. Stephan, Washington State University, Vancouver Science Policy, Public Participation, and Climate Change: Development and Use of Scientific Information in Policy Making Tomas Koontz, Ohio State University Ajay Singh, Ohio State University Peter J. May, University of Washington THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS Thu 8:00 am OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY No Room Assigned Mark Zachary Taylor, Georgia Institute of Technology A Post-modern IT State: South Korean Science and Technology Policy since 1988 Joel R. Campbell, Troy University Self-Reinforcing Mechanism and Continuity in Policy Network: The Case of the Korean IT Industry Hyun Park Digital Contents Transfer in the East Asia: the Role of Technological Development and Governments Policies Wonkyung Rhee, Waseda University Politics of Intellectual Property Rights and Development: Theory and Evidence based on Indias Aquaculture Sector Anitha Ramanna Pathak, University of Pune So Young Kim, KAIST COMPARATIVE Sat 8:00 am ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS No Room Assigned Phillip Stalley, DePaul University Paradoxes of Democratization: Environmental Politics in East Asia Mary Alice Haddad, Wesleyan University The Politics of Environmental Justice in China Richard Balme, Institut dEtudes Politiques de Paris

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 39-8 Room: Chair: Papers:

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133

Disc: 39-9 Room: Chair: Papers:

Globalization and Environmental Rights: Increased Imbalance, New Momentum, or Stalemate? Lada V. Kochtcheeva, North Carolina State University Brazil and the Politics of Climate Change Kathryn Hochstetler, University of Waterloo Grassroots Democracy and the Institutionalization of Climate Change Policy in Germany and the United States McGee W. Young, Marquette University Carol J. Hager, Bryn Mawr College Brent S. Steel, Oregon State University REGULATING RISKS: KNOWN Fri 8:00 am AND UNKNOWN No Room Assigned David Konisky, Georgetown University Attitudes Toward Genetically Modified Foods in the European Union: Predictors of Acceptance and Implications for Policy Robert F. Durant, American University Jerome S. Legge, Jr., University of Georgia Contested Technology, Contested Governance: The Fight over GMO Regulation in France Patricia Stapleton, CUNY-Graduate Center The Transatlantic Shift in Health, Safety, and Environmental Risk Regulation, 1960- 2010 David Vogel, University of California, Berkeley Institutional Rivalry and the Politics of Risk Regulation: The Case of Pipeline Safety David M. Shafie, Chapman University Richard Balme, Institut dEtudes Politiques de Paris THE POLITICS OF Sat 4:15 pm INNOVATION No Room Assigned Sara R. Jordan, University of Hong Kong Military Innovation as a Model for Energy Innovation Charles Eugene Gholz, University of Texas, Austin Innovation Politics: When and How Does Technological Change Create Political Action? Mark Zachary Taylor, Georgia Institute of Technology A Shot in the Arm? Implications of Obamacare for the Biotechnology Industry Volker W. Lehmann, Friedrich-Ebert-Foundation Politics and Rulemaking at the Copyright Office, or, How to Jailbreak Your iPhone Without Being Sued Gabriel J. Michael, George Washington University Gautam Mukunda, Massachusetts Institute of Technology CLIMATE CHANGE: PUBLIC Thu 4:15 pm ATTITUDES AND POLITICAL REALITIES No Room Assigned Eric Lindquist, Texas A&M University Fair Weather Friends?: Economics, Public Opinion, and Climate Change Lyle A. Scruggs, University of Connecticut

Disc: 39-12

International Public Attitudes Toward Climate Change and Environmental Rights Yael Wolinsky-Nahmias, Northwestern University So Young Kim, KAIST In the Hot Seat: The Impact of Vulnerability to Climate Change on Environmental Attitudes among Africans Jennifer L. De Maio, California State University, Northridge Kristy E.H. Michaud, California State University, Northridge Defending the Rights for Development and Effectiveness of Global Environmental Governance: BRICs in the Post Kyoto International Climate Change Negotiations Wei Liang, Monterey Institute of International Studies Equity Norms and Chinas Climate Change Diplomacy Phillip Stalley, DePaul University Eric Lindquist, Texas A&M University SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY NETWORKS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 50-10 Thu 2:00 pm

Room:

40

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS

Division Antoinette Pole, Montclair State University Chair: 40-1 Room: Chair: Papers: US ELECTIONS WEB 1.0 Sat 8:00 am THROUGH WEB 2.0 No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 38-15 Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University Technological Development of Congressional Candidate Web Sites 2002-2008 Michael Parkin, Oberlin College James N. Druckman, Northwestern University Martin Kifer Samara Mani Klar, Northwestern University A Comparative Analysis of Social Network and Traditional Political Participation in the 2008 and 2010 Elections Christine B. Williams, Bentley University Wayne P. Steger, DePaul University Online Campaigning Revisited: Candidates Use of Digital Media in the 2010 Midterm Elections Michael Xenos, University of Wisconsin, Madison Antoinette Pole, Montclair State University Politics in 140 Characters or Less: Campaign Communication, Network Interaction, and Political Participation on Twitter Leticia Bode, University of Wisconsin, Madison Kajsa E. Dalrymple, University of Wisconsin, Madison Dhavan Vinod Shah, University of Wisconsin

Disc: 39-10 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 39-11

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134

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DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 40-2 Room: Chair: Papers:

Second Order Elections and Second Order Conversations? A Content Analysis of Youth Wall Conversations on Facebook for Political Candidates at last Presidential and Midterm Congressional Elections Juliana Fernandes, Florida International University Magda Giurcanu, University of Florida Ji Young Kim, University of Florida Do People like Candidates on Facebook? Not really--from direct to institutional and indirect effects of social media in politics Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, University of Oxford Cristian Vaccari, University of Bologna Kevin Jay Wallsten, California State University, Long Beach ISNT ANYTHING PRIVATE Sun 8:00 am ANYMORE? No Room Assigned Gerson Moreno-Riano, Regent University Upgrading Privacy Theory: A Systemic Turn Ryan Biava, University of Wisconsin, Madison The nexus of information technologies and political rights George Robert Boynton, University of Iowa Information Privacy Rights and Cybersecurity: Public Sector Threats and Risks of the University Cheryl L. Brown, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Full-Body Scanners, Live Information and Rights in the Airport: A Theoretical Perspective on Information Circulation Eric Kula, Pennsylvania State University Micah Altman, Harvard University Robert J. Domanski, CUNY-Graduate Center TWEET! HOW 140 Fri 2:00 pm CHARACTERS IS CHANGING POLITICS, POLICY AND POLITICAL COMMUNICATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 38-16 Derrick L. Cogburn, American University A Cross-National Comparative Analysis on Personalized Political Campaigning: The Case of Twitter in South Korea, the Netherlands and the UK Maurice Vergeer, Radboud University Nijmegen To Tweet or not to Tweet: Comparative Analysis of Twitter Adoption in the United States Congress and the European Parliament Rolfe D. Peterson, Mercyhurst College Lena Surzhko-Harned, University of Pittsburgh Putting New Media in Old Strategies: Candidate Use of Twitter During the 2010 Midterm Elections Leticia Bode, University of Wisconsin, Madison David Lassen, University of Wisconsin, Madison Benjamin Sayre, University of Wisconsin, Madison Young Mie Kim, University of Wisconsin-Madison Dhavan Vinod Shah, University of Wisconsin Microblogging and the News: Twitter and Intermedia Agenda Setting Kevin Jay Wallsten, California State University, Long Beach George Robert Boynton, University of Iowa Michael Xenos, University of Wisconsin, Madison

40-4

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 40-5 Room: Chair: Papers:

THEME PANEL: ARE YOUR Fri 10:15 am DATA PRIVATE? CYBER SECURITY IN A WIKILEAKS WORLD No Room Assigned Elizabeth (Betty) C. Hanson, University of Connecticut Its 2010, Do You Know Where Your Information Is? National Information Security Policies in Comparative Perspective Kenneth S. Rogerson, Duke University The Right to Tinker: Open Source Innovation and Adaptation as National Security Threat Nina Kollars, Ohio State University Data Sharing, Privacy and Organizational History: DHS Fusion Centers Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University First Amendment Rights, Information Superiority, Image, and Operation Security: Crafting a Military Communication Model for the Cyber Age Christina M. Knopf, SUNY, Potsdam Information Technologies, Democratization and Digital Activism: WikiLeaks as/for New Politics of Rights M. Selcan Kaynak, Bogazici University Michael Margolis, University of Cincinnati Colin J. Bennett, University of Victoria JUST DO IT!: PARTIES AND Sun 10:15 am GROUPS RIDE THE WEB No Room Assigned Nanette S. Levinson, American University The Politics of the Tea Party Patriots Group on Facebook: Examining Source Hyperlinks and Topical Discussion for Networked Agenda Formation By Sharon Meraz Sharon Meraz, University of Illinois at Chicago Campaigning in the Digital Age: An Analysis of State Party Websites Diana Tracy Cohen, Central Connecticut State University Marija Anna Bekafigo, University of Southern Mississippi Normalization 2.0: Evidence From German Online Campaigns in the National Elections 2002-2009 Eva Johanna Schweitzer, University of Mainz Technological Specifics and the Collective Action Problem: An Experimental Study Young Mie Kim, University of Wisconsin-Madison The Persistence of Participation: Community, Disability, and Social Networks Paul Manuel Aviles Baker, Georgia Institute of Technology Nathan Moon, Georgia Institute of Technology John C. Bricout, University of Texas at Arlington Barry Coughlan, University Of Limerick Jessica Pater, Georgia Institute of Technology Rising Tides and Extremist Networks: Clusters, Cliques, and Antisocial Networking Robert D. Duval, West Virginia University Kyle Christensen, Columbus State University Bret D. Wilson, West Virginia University Arian Spahiu, West Virginia University Alexandra Samuel, Angus Reid Consultants Melissa K. Merry, University of Louisville

Disc: 40-3

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135

40-6

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 40-7

ARE WE REALLY BOWLING Sat 10:15 am ALONE? MOBILIZATION, CIVIC ENGAGEMENT AND THE INTERNET No Room Assigned Diana Tracy Cohen, Central Connecticut State University The Impact of the Internet on Political Knowledge Ian McAllister, Australian National University Rachel K. Gibson, University of Manchester Moving on from social dialogue into political discussion online?: Examining the motivation of political participation in online communities Sungsoo Hwang, Yeungnam University Participation in the Political Blogosphere Abe Gong, University of Michigan Civic Participation and Social Media: Are They Bowling Together? Daniel Halpern, Rutgers University Sun Kyong Lee, Rutgers University The Role of Public Information in Race-Based Voter Mobilization Eitan Hersh, Harvard University Small States as Norm Entrepreneurs: Information Policy, Wikileaks, and Anonymous Jessica L. Beyer, University of Washington, Seattle Diana M. Owen, Georgetown University David A. Karpf, Rutgers University OPERATION INNOVATION OR Sat 2:00 pm MORE OF THE SAME OLD? THE STATE OF EGOVERNMENT AROUND THE WORLD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 24-9 Darrell M. West, The Brookings Institution The Information Rights-centered Conflicts in the Public Sector Jeongyoon Lee, SUNY, University at Albany Lost Youth? German Students Attitudes and Experiences with E-government Gerhard Fuchs, University of Stuttgart Does E-Government Use Contribute to Citizen Engagement with Government and Community? Karen Mossberger, University of Illinois, Chicago Megan Haller, University of Illinois, Chicago Meng-hao Li, University of Illinois at Chicago Extending Rights: Innovations In Global Internet Governance Nanette S. Levinson, American University Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES: Fri 4:15 pm TECHNOLOGY AND HUMAN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 45-8 George J. Andreopoulos, CUNY, John Jay College and Graduate Center American Overexposed? Human Rights and Propaganda in an era of Hegemonic Crisis Eric Michael Fattor, Colorado State University

Disc:

The Politicization of North Korean Human Rights in U.S. Foreign Policy Andrew Yeo, Catholic University of America Dissent versus the (Online) Surveillance State: Measuring Authoritarian Control of the Internet James D. Fielder, University of Iowa Drug Wars, Social Networks and the Right to Information: The Rise of Informal Media as the Freedom of Press Lifeline in Northern Mexico Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, University of Texas at Brownsville Jose Nava, University of Texas at Brownsville The Social Dynamics and Implications of Rights Articulation in Chinas Online Forums: The Case of Xinfang Lacey Bradley-Storey, Northeastern University Joel R. Pruce, University of Denver Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, University of Massachusetts, Lowell TECHNOLOGY, Thu 8:00 am DEVELOPMENT AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: BEYOND INSTRUMENTALITY, LIBERALIZATION, AND PARTICIPATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Practicing Politics Working Group, Panel 2

40-9

Room:

41

POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM

Division Lee Trepanier, Saginaw Valley State University Chair: 41-1 AMERICAN TRAGEDY: THE POLITICAL THOUGHT OF HERMAN MELVILLE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-2 THE PHILOSOPHER ROLE: CASTING POLITICAL THEORY IN OUR FILM DREAMSCAPES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-56 Thu 8:00 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: 41-2

Sat 2:00 pm

Room: 41-3

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 40-8

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DOSTOEVSKY AND THE Fri 4:15 pm PROBLEM OF WESTERN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-38 Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College Hermits, Heroes, and Demagogues: Notes from Underground and the Social Sciences Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin, Madison Nationhood and the Other: F.M. Dostoevsky and K.N. Leontiev on the Russian National Spirit Ethan Alexander-Davey, University of Wisconsin, Madison Dostoevsky and the Politics of Patricide and Patriacide in The Brothers Karamazov John P. Moran, Kennesaw State University

136

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Disc: 41-4

How Bodies Read and Write: Dostoevskys Devils and Coetzees Master of Petersburg Michael S. Kochin, Tel Aviv University Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College Khalil Habib, Salve Regina University POETRY, PHILOSOPHY, AND Sat 4:15 pm POLITICS IN GREEK AND RENAISSANCE TRAGEDY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 2 Mary P. Nichols, Baylor University Euripides Medea: The Monstrous Justice of the Scorned Marlene K. Sokolon, Concordia University Oedipus and Socrates: Poetry and Philosophy on the Quest for Self-Knowledge Ann Ward, University of Regina Machiavellis New Oedipus: On The Prince Kenneth Mathew DeLuca, Hampden-Sydney College Machiavellis Mandragola and the Frustrations of Philosophy Katherine Philippakis, Farella Braun & Martel Michael S. Kochin, Tel Aviv University Andrew Bibby, Michigan State University Mary P. Nichols, Baylor University WOMENS RIGHTS: Fri 8:00 am ABORTION, IDENTITY, AND ABROAD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-24 Edwina Barvosa, University of California, Santa Barbara Reproductive Rights and Modern Film: Five Women, Six Movies and the Politics of Abortion Kevan M. Yenerall, Clarion University Colonialism and the Diasporic Condition: Jamaica Kincaids Alternative to Rights Discourse Marla Brettschneider, University of New Hampshire From Stigma to Strategy: Intersectionality and Articulated Identities Andrea Y. Simpson, University of Richmond Fighting for the Father(land): Patriarchy and Pluralism in Eritrea and the DPRK Lisa Boswell Sharlach, University of Alabama, Birmingham Edwina Barvosa, University of California, Santa Barbara Jacob Schiff, University of Toronto RIGHTS, PLACE, AND Fri 10:15 am ALIENATION IN AMERICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Ciceronian Society, Panel 1 Justin S. Vaughn, Cleveland State University Walker Percy and the Modern World Robert M. Schaefer, University of West Georiga Liberty and Equality in Tom Wolfes America Carol L. McNamara, Utah State University

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Critiquing the Cult of Scientism: An Examination of Walker Percys, Herman Melvilles, and Nathaniel Hawthornes Criticisms of the Ideological-religious Pursuit of Science and its Dehumanizing Effects Peter Daniel Haworth The Preacher and the Polity in the Thought of Jonathan Edwards Coyle Neal, Catholic University of America The Prison of the Corollaries: Bertrand de Jouvenel and Political Scale Kevin Honeycutt, Sweet Briar College William Blackstones Ninth Amendment: Federalism and the Common-Law Rights Retained by the People Joseph S. Devaney, Catholic University H. Lee Cheek, Jr., Athens State University Drew Kennedy Thompson, Louisiana State University THE AMBIGUITY OF RIGHTS: SEXUALITY AND GENDER IN POLITICAL NARRATIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 47-4 Thu 2:00 pm

41-7

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NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE

Disc: 41-5

Division Laura Katz Olson, Lehigh University Chair: 42-1 ENGAGING EMANCIPATORY SOCIAL SCIENCE AND SOCIAL THEORY: A CRITICAL ROUNDTABLE ON ERIK OLIN WRIGHTS ENVISIONING REAL UTOPIAS. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-23 HERBERT MARCUSE AND ONE-DIMENSIONAL POLITICS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-28 THEME PANEL: LABOR RIGHTS AND LABOR HISTORY IN SEATTLE AND THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-21 POLICY BY PROXY: NEOLIBERAL EFFICIENCIES AND THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-10 Sat 8:00 am

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Thu 4:15 pm

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Thu 10:15 am

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41-6 Room: Chair: Papers:

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THE STRUGGLE FOR RIGHTS Fri 4:15 pm AT HOME AND ABROAD No Room Assigned Joseph G. Peschek, Hamline University Why the Tea Party? The Failure of Progressive Politics in the US John C. Berg, Suffolk University

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137

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Afghan Womens Rights: Saved, Served, or Sidelined? Nandini Deo, Lehigh University The Immigrant Rights Movement: A New Chicano Civil Rights Movement? Jean Williams, Cal Poly Suspect Citizenship: The Morality of Belonging and Feminist Peace Politics Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University Housing Rights and Inequality in Postwar America Alexander von Hoffman, Harvard University Laura Katz Olson, Lehigh University Alix Lindsey Olson, University of Massachusetts, Amherst PROGRESSIVES, MONEY AND Thu 2:00 pm POLITICS No Room Assigned John Ehrenberg, Long Island University Building a Left in Congress: Structural and Strategic Challenges Gordon Lafer, University of Oregon Whos Bankrolling the Battle against Affirmative Action? The Quiet Influence of Right-Wing Foundations and Patrons Daniel N. Lipson, SUNY, New Paltz The Less Told Story of American Exceptionalism: Race, Nationalism, and Sectarianism Joseph M. Schwartz, Temple University Moneys Been Talking: How Citizens United v. FEC Obfuscates the View of the Role of Wealth in Our Democracy Elisabeth K. Chaves, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University The Limits of Political Representation: Antiforeclosure Activism and the Poor in US Cities Michael David Forrest, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Nancy S. Love, Appalachian State University FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Sat 4:15 pm EATING, CONSUMPTION, AND THE POLITICAL IMAGINARY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-58 Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech An Exciting New Recipe: From Food as Waste to Eating as Economy Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech Breaking Bread, Sharing Soup and Smashing the State: Anarchist Alternatives to Charity and the State Sean Parson, University of Alaska, Fairbanks Spaces of Eating Well: Foodies, Farmers Markets, and Gastronomic Authenticity Katherine Young, University of Hawaii, Hilo Three Ecologies of Consumption Anatoli Ignatov, Johns Hopkins University Clyde W. Barrow, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth Daniel J. OConnor, California State University, Long Beach

42-8

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THE RATIONAL RADICALISM Thu 8:00 am AND POLITICAL THEORY OF STEPHEN ERIC BRONNER: A ROUNDTABLE No Room Assigned Michael J. Thompson, William Paterson University Jason A. Schulman, CUNY-Lehman College Christine A. Kelly, William Paterson University Manfred B. Steger, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology Michael Forman, University of Washington, Tacoma Micheline Ishay, University of Denver Stephen Eric Bronner, Rutgers University, New Brunswick FRAMING AND BALANCING Fri 2:00 pm FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS: IMPLICATIONS FOR U.S. SOCIAL POLICY No Room Assigned Joseph Kling, St. Lawrence University Bankruptcy as Welfare: Personal Bankruptcys Place in the American Social Safety Net Serena Laws, Dartmouth College Deconstructing Wisconsin: Mass Media Culture, Protest, and Lessons from the 1960s Era Edward P. Morgan, Lehigh University Political Equality as a Foundational Human Right Thomas S. De Luca, Jr., Fordham University Controlling the Scope of the Conflict: The Illiberal Foundation of Liberal Democracy Sarah Loretto Houser, Georgetown University These Rights Spell Security: The New Deals Reconceptualization of Rights Brian Stipelman, Dowling College Gerard Huiskamp, Wheaton College THEME PANEL: HOW CAN Fri 4:15 pm POLITICAL SCIENCE HELP US UNDERSTAND THE POLITICS OF DECARCERATION? No Room Assigned Andrew Dilts, University of Chicago Traci Burch, Northwestern University Andrew Dilts, University of Chicago Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University Amy E. Lerman, Princeton University Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania

42-9

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NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE PLENARY SESSION: FRANCES FOX PIVEN, DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR AT THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Room: No Room Assigned

Sat 8:30 pm

Disc: 43-7

Train an Army, Buy a Warlord: Extending Government Authority in Weak States Nicholai Lidow, Stanford University Stephen D. Krasner, Stanford University THEME PANEL: Fri 2:00 pm TRANSNATIONAL LAW AND POLITICS No Room Assigned Tim Buthe, Duke University Transnational Legal Process and State Change Gregory C. Shaffer, Loyola University Chicago The International Investment Regime since the 1980s Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University Evaluating the Transnational Anti-Corruption Regime: Case Studies from Argentina and Brazil Kevin Davis, New York University Guillermo Jorge, San Andres University Mara Machado, Getulio Vargas Law School The Transnational Politics of Law: The Evolution of Citations to Foreign Law at the U.S. Supreme Court Tim Buthe, Duke University Lucy Coleman McKinstry, Tulane University The Limits of Global Judicial Dialogue David S. Law, Washington University in St. Louis Christopher A. Whytock, University of California, Irvine Karen J. Alter, Northwestern University NARRATIVES OF COLLECTIVE Sun 8:00 am RESENTMENTS AND DURABLE TENSIONS IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS No Room Assigned Martin O. Heisler, University of Maryland Richard Ned Lebow, Dartmouth College Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania Robert I. Rotberg, Harvard University Xavier Guillaume, University of Geneva Martin O. Heisler, University of Maryland RELIGION AND IR: Sat 10:15 am METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 33-13 Ron E. Hassner, University of California, Berkeley Monica Duffy Toft, Harvard University Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania Jonathan T. Chow, Amherst College Ron E. Hassner, University of California, Berkeley INTERNATIONAL POLITICS OF Fri 8:00 am INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN No Room Assigned Karl Orfeo Fioretos, Temple University Institutional Proliferation in the International System: Explaining Coordination and Conflict Patricia Goff, Wilfrid Laurier University Warren Clarke, Wilfrid Laurier University Negotiating Institutional Design: The Role of Legal Experts in the Creation of the ICC Anne Holthoefer, University of Chicago

43

INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS

Division Karl Orfeo Fioretos, Temple University Chair: 43-1 PREVENTIVE WAR, COMMITMENT PROBLEMS, AND HISTORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-5 THE DOMESTIC POLITICAL ORIGINS OF INTERNATIONAL STRATEGY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-10 THINKING GLOBALLY, RESEARCHING LOCALLY: UNDERSTANDING LOCALLEVEL VIOLENCE IN CIVIL WARS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-15 THE TIMES THEY ARE ACHANGIN: THE INTERNATIONAL AND DOMESTIC CONSEQUENCES OF GREAT POWER SHIFTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-20 Sun 10:15 am

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Fri 10:15 am

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Thu 4:15 pm Disc:

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43-8 Sat 4:15 pm Room: Chair: Part:

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IKENBERRYS LIBERAL Thu 2:00 pm LEVIATHAN DEBATED No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-42 Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College Charles Kupchan, Georgetown University David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University G. John Ikenberry, Princeton University STATE-BUILDING OVER TIME Fri 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-43 Stephen D. Krasner, Stanford University Census Anomalies and State-Building Jesse Driscoll, University of California, San Diego Suresh Naidu, Columbia University Membership Has Its Privileges: The Changing Benefits of Statehood Tanisha Fazal, Columbia University Ryan D. Griffiths, Johns Hopkins University State-Building in Paradise: Polynesia in the 19th Century Miles Kahler, University of California, San Diego

43-9

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139

Disc: 43-11

The Ontological Foundations of a Complex Systems Approach to International Politics Matto Mildenberger, Yale University Thomas F. Homer-Dixon, University of Waterloo Intergovernmental Organizations and Interest Convergence in Various Issue Areas Stacy Bondanella Taninchev, Gonzaga University Enlargement, Institutional Change, and Integration in the EU and Beyond R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Jonathan B. Slapin, University of Houston Anand Menon, University of Birmingham Mark A. Pollack, Temple University THE GLOBAL POLITICS OF Sat 2:00 pm STATE-MAKING AND GREAT POWERS No Room Assigned Peter Trubowitz, University of Texas, Austin Why States Underreach: Lessons from Americas Rise to Great Powerdom Peter Trubowitz, University of Texas, Austin Popular Narratives versus Chinese History: Implications for Chinas Rise Ja Ian Chong, National University of Singapore Is Unipolarity Just a Moment? What Can Chinas Past Tell Us about Americas Future? Xiangfeng Yang, University of Southern California State-Making and Globalization: The Microfoundations of Chinas Grand Strategy Roselyn Hsueh, Temple University Thomas J. Christensen, Princeton University M. Taylor Fravel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology VARIETIES OF HISTORICAL Fri 10:15 am INQUIRY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS No Room Assigned Etel L. Solingen, University of California, Irvine Religion and International Conflict: Causal Mechanisms and Historical Examples John M. Owen, IV, University of Virginia Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown University The Role of Counterfactual Analysis in Process Tracing Colin Elman, Syracuse University Mechanisms of Continuity and Change in Official Narratives of Dark Pasts Jennifer M. Dixon, Harvard University Clashing Convictions: Exceptionalism, 9/11, and the Emotional Weight of Human Rights Andrew A.G. Ross, Ohio University Historical Institutionalism and International Relations Karl Orfeo Fioretos, Temple University Etel L. Solingen, University of California, Irvine THE PAST AND PRESENT IN THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS No Room Assigned Geoffrey Herrera, Pitzer College Thu 10:15 am

Papers:

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The Complexity of Financial Goods and Governance W. Travis Selmier, Indiana University Varieties of Keynesianism: A Study of the Fiscal Stimuli by the UK and the USA Ayse Kaya, Swarthmore College Geoffrey Herrera, Pitzer College Changing Private Authority in the Governance of Financial Markets: Leading the Dance, or Following it? Kevin Young, London School of Economics The Politics of Ambiguity: The IMFs Article IV and the Domestic/Systemic Divide Michelle Frasher, Molloy College Craig Borowiak, Haverford College Jonathon W. Moses, Norwegian University of Science & Technology DIPLOMACY IN Thu 8:00 am INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-44 Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California Robert F. Trager, University of California, Los Angeles Jennifer Mitzen, Ohio State University Maia Keapuolani Davis Cross, University of Southern California Paul Sharp, University of Minnesota-Duluth

43-14

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44

COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION

Disc:

Division Melani Cammett, Brown University Chair: 44-1 Room: 44-2 25 YEARS AFTER No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-2 PARTICIPATORY GOVERNANCE: RESHAPING DEMOCRACY, ECONOMIC SECURITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-17 REGIME STABILITY AND PROSPECTS FOR DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-29 WORKING TO EXPAND AND PROTECT RIGHTS IN AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES: CHINA, RUSSIA, AND MARTIAL LAW TAIWAN No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 13-1 Sat 4:15 pm

43-12

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Thu 2:00 pm

Room: 44-3 Room: 44-4

Fri 2:00 pm

Sat 8:00 am

Disc: 43-13

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140

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44-5

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AUTHOR MEETS CRITIC: Fri 10:15 am ROUNDTABLE ON SVEN STEINMOS THE EVOLUTION OF MODERN STATES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 14-16 Mark Blyth, Brown University Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania T.J. Pempel, University of California, Berkeley Margaret Weir, University of California, Berkeley Sheri Berman, Barnard College-Columbia University Henry Farrell, George Washington University Sven Steinmo, European University Institute SUB-NATIONAL DEMOCRACY, Sat 10:15 am AUTHORITARIANISM, AND HYBRID REGIMES: THEORETICAL APPROACHES AND CROSS-REGIONAL EVIDENCE. No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-71 Carlos Gervasoni, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella Identifying Persistant Subnational Authoritarian Regimes in Mexico Allyson L. Benton, Centro de Investigacin y Docencia Econmicas National Institutions, Subnational Outcomes: U.S. Federalism and the Construction of the Authoritarian Solid South in the United States Edward Gibson, Northwestern University Mission or Empire, Word or Sword? The Human Capital Legacy in Post-Colonial Democratic Development Tomila Lankina Lullit Getachew, Pacific Economics Group Explaining Electoral Competition in Sub-national Authoritarian Elections in the Russian Federation Inga Anna-Liisa Saikkonen, University of Oxford Sub-national Political Variation and Property Rights in Russia Gulnaz Sharafutdinova, Miami University Steven Levitsky, Harvard University Carlos Gervasoni, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella STATE-SOCIETY RELATIONS Thu 4:15 pm IN DEMOCRATIC RURAL LATIN AMERICA: THE SEARCH FOR NEW FORMS OF INTEREST REPRESENTATION AFTER THE DEMISE OF CORPORATISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-34 Rural Interest Articulation after Corporatism in Mexico: Indigenous Mobilization Still Does Not Substitute for Citizenship Todd Eisenstadt, American University Willibald Sonnleitner, El Colegio de Mexico Reserved Domains: Clientelist Continuity in Shifting Subnational Polities in Brazil Alfred P. Montero, Carleton College

Disc:

Regional Autonomy and Municipal Politics in PostNeoliberal Bolivia Roberta L. Rice, University of Toronto, Scarborough Migrant Political Influence as a Democratizing Force in Local Governments? A Comparative Study of Political Change in Three Mexican States Michael S. Danielson, American University Globalization, NAFTA and Migration: Mexicos Loss of Food and Labor Sovereignty Gerardo Otero, Simon Fraser University Jose Antonio Lucero, University of Washington Cesar Zucco, Jr., Insituto Universitario de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro BUCKING THE TREND: THE Thu 10:15 am PUZZLE OF ENDURING AUTHORITARIANISM IN THE ARAB WORLD No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-35 Sean L. Yom, Temple University Toshka: The Faade of Great Public Works in Authoritarian Regimes Emma Deputy, University of Texas, Austin Polishing the Police State: PR Campaigns and Authoritarian Image Building in Tunisia and Syria Laryssa Chomiak, University of Maryland Shana R Marshall, University of Maryland The Puzzle of Party Formation in Authoritarian Regimes Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University Authoritarianism, Before and After War in Iraq Pete W. Moore, Case Western Reserve University Personalistic Authoritarian Control: The Cornering of Egypts Wafd Party Eric Robert Trager, University Pennsylvania Sean L. Yom, Temple University COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF Sun 8:00 am PUBLIC GOODS PROVISION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-36 Jennifer N. Brass, Indiana University, Bloomington Collaborative Provision of Localized Energy Services in Developing Countries Jennifer N. Brass, Indiana University, Bloomington Sanya Carley, Indiana University Whos Got the Power? Ownership and State Control of Power Plants in pPost-Soviet Countries Susanne A. Wengle, University of Chicago Learning from the Outlier: the Reassertion of State Authority in Ituri, Democratic Republic of Congo Laura Seay, Morehouse College New Hybrid Institutions: Muslim Public Schools in Post-conflict Democratic Republic of Congo Ashley Leinweber, University of Flordia The Politics of Public Service Outsourcing: Collaborative Governance and the Erosion of HIV Prevention Programs in Brazil Jessica Alexis Jolicoeur Rich, University of California, Berkeley Melani Cammett, Brown University

44-6

44-8

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Disc: 44-9

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44-10

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 44-11 Room: Chair: Papers:

THE IMPACT OF Thu 8:00 am DECENTRALIZATION ON STATE-WIDE PARTIES IN NONWESTERN DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-37 Michael Buehler, Northern Illinois University Why Do State-wide Parties Adopt Regional Faces? Comparing Golkars Sharia-Politics in Three Indonesian Provinces Michael Buehler, Northern Illinois University Parties, Presidents, and Provinces: The Consequences of Decentralization in the Philippines Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Party Behavior in a Decentralized Political System: Examining Identity Politics in Ugandas 2011 Local Elections Gina M. S. Lambright, George Washington University An Unintended Consequence of Top-Down Decentralization and Electoral Reform: The Emergence of De Facto Regional Parties in Indonesia Sarah Shair-Rosenfield, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Decentralization and New Forms of Electoral Campaigning in Post-Suharto Indonesia Andreas Ufen, German Institute of Global and Area Studies Lori Thorlakson, University of Alberta (RE)STRUCTURING Sun 10:15 am DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-38 Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas, Austin The Role of Diffusion and Domestic Politics in Judicial Design Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas, Austin Abby Katharine Blass, University of Texas at Austin The Imperial Presidency and other Myths: Notes on the Measurement of Institutional Power Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin Tom Ginsburg, University of Chicago The Infrastructure of Democracy: Institutions of Electoral Governance in Latin America Diana Kapiszewski, University of California, Irvine John S. Alexander, University of California, Irvine Robert E Nyenhuis, University of California, Irvine Constitutional Coups: Consolidating Executive Power in Latin American Democracies Katja Newman, University of California, Irvine The Politics of Elite Punishment: Why Some Corrupt Presidents are Prosecuted but Not Others? Vidal Romero, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico Jose Antonio Cheibub, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Andrew S. Reynolds, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

44-12

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RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN Thu 2:00 pm DEMOCRATIZATION CONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM THE FIVE MUSLIM DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 33-14 Wolfgang Merkel, WZB From Faith to Freedom: The Role of Religious Actors in Global Political Liberalization Timothy Samuel Shah, Boston University Monica Duffy Toft, Harvard University Religious and Laik Actors and the Question of Democracy in Turkey Murat Akan, Bogazici University Religion and Democratization in Post-Communist Albania. Is It Possible to be Islamic, Democratic and European at the Same Time? Arolda Elbasani, Social Science Research Centre The Diverse Role of Muslim Actors in Malis and Senegals Democratic Consolidation Processes Julia Leininger, German Development Institute Between Diversity and Exclusivism: The Role of Islamic Actors in Indonesias First Democratic Decade Mirjam Kuenkler, Princeton University Wolfgang Merkel, WZB FOREIGN AID AND CIVIL Thu 8:00 am SOCIETY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-39 Sheila Carapico, University of Richmond Do Citizens Attribute Public Goods and Services to the Correct Actor? A Theoretical Model and Empirical Test of Attribution Decisions in the Context of Zambia Audrey E. Sacks, University of Washington Title: Civilians and the Reintegration of Ex-Insurgents in Aceh, Indonesia Yuhki Tajima, University of California, Riverside The Democracy Establishment Sarah S. Bush, Princeton University Foreign Aid, Ccivil Society, and Electoral Clientelism Anya Vodopyanov, Harvard University Foreign Aid and Health: Does PEPFAR Aid Adversely Affect Health Outcomes in Developing Countries? Melina Platas, Stanford University Melissa Lee, Stanford University Anne Mariel Peters, Wesleyan University Manal A. Jamal, James Madison University THE FUNCTIONS OF Sat 2:00 pm POLITICAL PARTIES IN NEW DEMOCRACIES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-17 Lars Svasand, University of Bergen The functions of political parties: In party theory and in Malawi Lars Svasand, University of Bergen Party Competition on National Identity Issues in Eastern Europe Oleh Protsyk, European Centre for Minority Issues

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Disc: 44-15

Candidate Recruitment and Former Rebel Parties John Ishiyama, University of North Texas Africa, Democracy, and the Role of International Political Party Assistance. Richard Whitehead, Temple University Gero Erdmann, German Institute of Global and Area Studies THE IMPACT OF COUNTERSat 4:15 pm HEGEMONIC POWERS ON DEMOCRATIZATION AFTER THE COLD WAR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-40 Henry E. Hale, George Washington University Explaining the Efficacy of Russia as a Black Knight Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto Post-Soviet Authoritarianism: The Impact of International Actors and Alliances David R. Cameron, Yale University Mitchell A. Orenstein, Johns Hopkins University The Sources and Limits of Russias Influence in the Post-Soviet Space Timothy J. Colton, Harvard University Henry E. Hale, George Washington University Javier Corrales, Amherst College RIGHTS UNDER Fri 8:00 am AUTHORITARIAN RULE: CHINA AND THE MIDDLE EAST IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Michaelle L. Browers, Wake Forest University When Does An Autocrat Compromise with Social Forces? Determinants of the Extension of Social Rights in China Chelsea Chia-chen Chou, Cornell University Public Feedback in Authoritarian Regimes: When do Arab Gulf Monarchs Consult with their Citizens? Quinn Mecham, Middlebury College From Subjects to Citizens? Rights, Obligations, and the New Politics of Citizenship in the Arab Gulf Calvert W. Jones, Yale University Michaelle L. Browers, Wake Forest University Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University DEMOCRACY AND Sat 2:00 pm AUTHORITARIANISM IN MUSLIM SOCIETIES No Room Assigned Vickie Langohr, College of the Holy Cross International Hierarchy and Democratization in the Muslim World Amaney Jamal, Princeton University Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University Rentier States and Regional Effects: Authoritarianism in Muslim-majority Countries Ahmet T. Kuru, San Diego State University Understanding the Democratic Exceptionalism of Muslim Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa Shaheen Mozaffar, Bridgewater State University

Disc: 44-18

Women, Islam and Democracy Re-Visited Manal A. Jamal, James Madison University Does the Process of Transition Shape the Prospects of Democratic Consolidation: Tentative Answers from Pakistan and Bangladesh Aqil Shah, Harvard University Vickie Langohr, College of the Holy Cross EXTERNAL ACTORS AND Fri 4:15 pm POLITICAL CHANGE: THE SUCCESSES AND THE LIMITS OF DEMOCRACY PROMOTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 13-13 M. Steven Fish, University of California, Berkeley Vigilant Authoritarians and the Diffusion of Democracy Valerie Bunce, Cornell University Karrie J. Koesel, University of Oregon Sharon Wolchik, George Washington University International Assistance and Political Liberalization in the Post-Cold War Era Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill When Does Foreign Support Help Politicians Get Elected? Nikolay V. Marinov, Yale University Political Parties and Democratic Change: When Do External Actors Change Agendas? Milada Anna Vachudova, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto M. Steven Fish, University of California, Berkeley ROUNDTABLE ON BO Thu 10:15 am ROTHSTEINS THE QUALITY OF GOVERNMENT. THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION, SOCIAL TRUST AND INEQUALITY IN INTERNATIONAL COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE (FORTHCOMING UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS) No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-72 Sheri Berman, Barnard College-Columbia University Marc F. Plattner, National Endowment for Democracy Nancy Bermeo, Oxford University Michael Johnston, Colgate University Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg MICRO AND INSTITUTIONAL FOUNDATIONS OF CLIENTELISM No Room Assigned Jun Saito, Yale University Sun 8:00 am

Room: Chair: Papers:

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Disc: 44-16

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Disc:

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44-17

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44-20

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143

Papers:

Disc: 44-21

More Competition, Less Democracy: The Paradox of Resurrecting Clientelism in Contemporary Europe and Japan Takeshi Ito, Senshu University Masako Suginohara, University of Tokyo Rethinking Clientelism and Dominant-Party Survival in Mexico Yuriko Takahashi, Kobe University Does Redistricting Hinder Clientelism? A Game Theoretical Analysis Yusaku Horiuchi, Australian National University Meg Sato, Australian National University Clientelism and Trade Liberalization: Institutional Foundations of Agricultural Protectionism in Japan and Korea Yuki Asaba, Yamaguchi Prefectural University Remittances, Clientelism, and Electoral Dynamics Faisal Z. Ahmed, Princeton University How Have Atomic Power Plants Changed Fukushimas Local Public Finance and Politics?: Exploiting Synthetic Control Methods Michihito Ando, Uppsala University Miriam A. Golden, University of California, Los Angeles INSTITUTIONS AND Sat 8:00 am ELECTORAL STRATEGIES IN THE MIDDLE EAST No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-41 Nathan Brown, George Washington University Women, Tribes, and Ruling Parties in Nondemocratic Elections: Theory and Evidence from the Arab World Ellen M. Lust, Yale University Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University Strategic Elites? Strategic Tribes? Electoral Rules and Strategic Behavior in Jordan Gail Jeanne Buttorff, University of Kansas Local Elite Recruitment as a Post-Moderation Islamist Electoral Strategy Feryaz Ocakli, Brown University Electoral Institutions and Varieties of Clientelism Anya Vodopyanov, Harvard University Do the Buses Run on Time? Local Government and Public Goods Provision in Jordan Eleanor X. Gao, University of Michigan Melani Cammett, Brown University MECHANISMS AFFECTING Thu 4:15 pm THE QUALITY OF DEMOCRACY No Room Assigned Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University The Lopsided World of Democracy: Toward a Theoretical Model Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University Jrgen Mller, University of Aarhus Are Elections a Feature of Neo-Authoritarianism or a Mechanism for Democratization? Michael Bernhard, University of Florida Ruchan Kaya, University of Florida

Disc:

Remedy Choice on the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and its Implications for Compliance Jeffrey Staton, Emory University Alexia Romero, Stanford University Democratic Diffusion within Countries Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University Staffan I. Lindberg, Gothenburg University

45

HUMAN RIGHTS

Division Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State Chair: University 45-1 INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY AND INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-19 DO INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS ADVANCE HUMAN RIGHTS? NEW EMPIRICAL LINKAGES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 17-2 THEME PANEL: MOVEMENTS AND MASSACRES: NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND CIVIL WAR VIOLENCE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-17 THE PROMISE, EFFECT, AND LIMITS OF THE RULE OF LAW IN NATIONAL, INTERNATIONAL, AND TRANSNATIONAL SETTINGS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-9 THEME PANEL: TRANSLATING INTERNATIONAL WOMENS RIGHTS NORMS INTO PRACTICE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-3 WOMENS HUMAN RIGHTS NORMS DIFFUSION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-10 WOMENS RIGHTS, EMPOWERMENT, AND GLOBAL JUSTICE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-11 AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES: TECHNOLOGY AND HUMAN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 40-8 Fri 10:15 am

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Sun 8:00 am

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Sun 10:15 am

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Thu 2:00 pm

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144

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45-9

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REVISITING DAVID P. Sat 8:00 am FORSYTHES CONTRIBUTIONS TO HUMAN RIGHTS No Room Assigned Richard P. Hiskes, University of Connecticut The Skeptical Forsythe, Peace, Human Rights and Realpolitik Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University The United States, Justice and Human Rights Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, SUNY, Purchase From Human Rights in World Politics (1983) to Human Rights in International Relations (2006) Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State University Liberalism in a World of Realist States Todd Landman, University of Essex International Law and Human Rights David L. Richards, University of Memphis Ethics, Politics, and the Democratic War on Terror Sonia Cardenas, Trinity College The Politics of the ICRC: How International Relations Influence What the ICRC Does Barbara Ann J. Rieffer-Flanagan, Central Washington University David P. Forsythe, University of Nebraska THEME PANEL: AUTHORThu 4:15 pm MEETS-CRITICS: KATHRYN SIKKINK ON THE JUSTICE CASCADE: HOW HUMAN RIGHTS PROSECUTIONS ARE CHANGING WORLD POLITICS No Room Assigned Hun Joon Kim, Griffith University Kathryn Sikkink, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis Leslie Vinjamuri, School of Oriental and African Studies David Mendeloff, Carleton University Bronwyn Anne Leebaw, University of California, Riverside Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University WOMENS RIGHTS IN Sat 2:00 pm PERSPECTIVE: LEGAL, POLITICAL, AND CULTURAL EVIDENCE No Room Assigned Victoria C. Williams, Alvernia University The Evolution and Status of Legal Guarantees Relating to Violence Against Women: A New Dataset and Global Analysis David L. Richards, University of Memphis Jillienne Haglund, Florida State University International Womens Human Rights Revisited Hee-Kang Kim, Korea University Islam and the Language of Human Rights in Nigeria: Rights Talk and Religion in Domestic Politics Brandon Kendhammer, Ohio University

Disc: 45-12

Womens Rights in International Law: Why is CEDAW Different? Neil A. Englehart, Bowling Green State University Melissa K. Miller, Bowling Green State University Petro-Sexual Politics: Petroleum, Gender Violence, and Transnational Justice Heather M. Turcotte, University of Connecticut Understanding Womens Property Rights Feryal Marie Cherif, University of California, Riverside Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, SUNY, Purchase Bethany Barratt, Roosevelt University PROTECTING SOCIAL AND Sat 10:15 am ECONOMIC RIGHTS IN AN AGE OF PLENTY AND SCARCITY No Room Assigned William F. Felice, Eckerd College Hungry for Justice: Social Mobilization on the Right to Food in India Shareen Hertel, University of Connecticut The 2008 Food Crisis as a Critical Event for the Food Sovereignty and Food Justice Movements Noha Shawki, Illinois State University Food as a Right: How Hunger was Constructed as a Global Problem Michelle Jurkovich, George Washington University Palliative Care as a Late Modern Citizenship Right Katherine Pettus, UCSD Human Rights Violations in an Era of Scarcity Clair Apodaca, Florida International University William F. Felice, Eckerd College POLITICAL DETERMINANTS Thu 10:15 am OF RIGHTS PROTECTION No Room Assigned Turan Kayaoglu, University of Washington, Tacoma Institutions, Incentives and Human Rights David L. Cingranelli, SUNY, Binghamton Mikhail G. Filippov, SUNY, Binghamton The Right to Development: Nigerias Elusive Choice Victor Adefemi Isumonah, University of Ibadan The Political Economy of Human Trafficking Richard W. Frank, University of New Orleans Political Competition and Refugee Policy Lamis Abdelaaty, Princeton University Human Rights, Technology, and Power Joel R. Pruce, University of Denver The Information and Intimidation Content of Rights Violations Christopher J. Fariss, University of California San Diego Joseph Kling, St. Lawrence University Micheline Ishay, University of Denver A ROUNDTABLE IN THE Fri 10:15 am MEMORY OF RICHARD PIERRE CLAUDE AND PETER BAEHR No Room Assigned Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, SUNY, Purchase

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45-11

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145

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George J. Andreopoulos, CUNY, John Jay College and Graduate Center Julie Mertus, American University Todd Landman, University of Essex David P. Forsythe, University of Nebraska

46

QUALITATIVE AND MULTI-METHOD RESEARCH

Disc: 46-5

Diasporas for Peace? The Building of Transnational Coalitions in the Host County Alexandra C. Budabin, New School University Changes of Identity, Changes of Course: the NonCrisis Kind of Foreign Policy Transformation Dessislava Kirilova, Yale University Philip G. Roeder, University of California, San Diego INVESTIGATING CONFLICT Sun 10:15 am PROCESSES No Room Assigned Derek Beach, University of Aarhus The Origins and Persistence of State-Sponsored Militias: Path Dependent Processes in Third World Military Development Ariel Ahram, University of Oklahoma Non-Citizen Soldiers, Veterans, and Their Families: Political Rights and Wrongs Jennifer Lamm, University of Texas, Austin Using Mixed Methods for Counterfactual Causal Inference Nahomi Ichino, Harvard University Adam Glynn, Harvard University Kevin M. Quinn, University of California, Berkeley Derek Beach, University of Aarhus RELIGIOUS MOTIVATIONS Fri 8:00 am FOR POLITICAL ACTIONS No Room Assigned Bradley A. Thayer, Baylor University The Domestic Politics of International Religious Defamation Peter Shane Henne, Georgetown University Opportunity Junctures as Catalysts: Islam, Secularism, and Democratic Consolidation in Turkey Ramazan Kilinc, Michigan State University A Mixed-Method Inquiry of Religion and Immigrant Integration: How and Why Triangulation Matters Saba Ozyurt, University of California, Irvine Essentially Contested Subjects: Some Epistemological Considerations when Studying Terrorists and Homosexuals Shawn Richard Schulenberg, Marshall University Bradley A. Thayer, Baylor University QUALITATIVE COMPARATIVE Thu 8:00 am ANALYSIS No Room Assigned Axel Marx, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Qualitative Techniques in Political Science, Accepting Unstructured Methods for Knowledge Building Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University Causation and Qualitative Comparative Analysis Johannes Gerschewski, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB) Explaining and Predicting Womens Representation in Parliament: The Limitations of Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) Daniel Stockemer, University of Ottawa From Probable to Possible: Explaining Military Coups through Qualitative Comparative Analysis Aries A. Arugay, Georgia State University

Division Rose McDermott, Brown University Chair: 46-1 NEW FRONTIERS: NEUROPOLICY, CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT, EVOLUTION AND EMOTION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-20 GLOBAL DATASETS: NEW AND FORTHCOMING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-3 Thu 2:00 pm

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Fri 10:15 am

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INNOVATIVE METHODS IN Sat 8:00 am QUALITATIVE AND MULTIMETHOD RESEARCH No Room Assigned Robert Kaufman Adcock, George Washington University What is Process-Tracing Actually Tracing? Empirical Narratives Versus Investigating Theorized Causal Mechanisms Derek Beach, University of Aarhus Rasmus Brun Pedersen, Aarhus University Taking Plausibility Seriously: Theory Projection, Historical Knowledge Selection and Theory Construction in Comparative Politics Marcus Kreuzer, Villanova University The Practice of Politics A Video-based Ethnography of Policy-making Tanja Pritzlaff, University of Bremen Comparative-Historical Analysis after Fieldwork: Why Good Theory-Building Requires Methodological Sin Sean L. Yom, Temple University Jan Erk, Leiden University Sequence Analysis for Political Science Philippe Blanchard, University of Lausanne Robert Kaufman Adcock, George Washington University QUALITATIVE Thu 4:15 pm INVESTIGATIONS OF IDENTITY No Room Assigned Negotiating Insider/Outsider Status: How Identity Influences What Political Elites Say Nadia E. Brown, Saint Louis University Missionaries, Modernists and the Origins of Intolerance in Islamic Institutions Jeremy Menchik, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Changing of a Flag and the Changing of a Nation: Meaning-Making in Spain and How a Soccer Team Changed State Identity Victor M. Olivieri, University of Florida

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146

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DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 46-8

Choosing and Combining Units in Qualitative and Quantitative Comparative Research Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley Axel Marx, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven CROSS-CULTURAL AND Sun 8:00 am MULTI-METHOD INVESTIGATION OF PROCESSES OF DEMOCRATIZATAION No Room Assigned Candice D. Ortbals, Pepperdine University Measuring the Impact of the Immeasurable? Methodological Challenges in Evaluating Democracy and Governance Aid Jennifer Gauck, University of Kent Why Violent Secession? A Multi-Method Analysis of Evidence from the Former Soviet Union Scott G Feinstein, University of Florida In the Shadow of the Party: Electoral Hegemony in Modern Day Tanzania Yonatan Morse, Georgetown University Candice D. Ortbals, Pepperdine University QUALITATIVE Sat 10:15 am INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS RESEARCH No Room Assigned Michael Strausz, Texas Christian University What Causes IR? Differentiating Causal Analysis in International Relations James F. Robinson, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico Assessing Parallel Explanations: A Method for Disentangling Competing Explanations in Qualitative International Relations Research Peter Shane Henne, Georgetown University The Disorderly State of International Order: In Search of an Elusive Concept Kyle M. Lascurettes, University of Virginia Cultural Intimacy in International Relations Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University Ayse Zarakol, Washington & Lee University Critical Junctures in U.S. foreign policy toward the UN Security Council Clayton J. Cleveland, University of Oregon Michael Strausz, Texas Christian University QUALITATIVE APPROCHES TO Sat 2:00 pm PUBLIC POLICY RESEARCH No Room Assigned Laura Sjoberg, University of Florida Obamas Delicate Balance: Moral and Practical Emphases in Obamas Healthcare Reform Rhetoric Noam Schimmel, London School of Economics Health Disparities, Local Knowledge, and Public Policy Laura S. Jensen, Virginia Tech Fatima Sharif, Virginia Tech Rethinking the Politics of Expertise: Examining the Role of Gender Expertise in Public Policy Season Hoard, Washington State University

Disc: 46-11

Triggering Events and the Limits of Local Law Enforcement Reform Neil J. Kraus, University of Wisconsin, River Falls Laura J. Hatcher, Southern Illinois University AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Thu 4:15 pm MAN IS BY NATURE A POLITICAL ANIMAL: EVOLUTION, BIOLOGY, AND POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-22 Rose McDermott, Brown University Pete Hatemi, University of Sydney Kevin B. Smith, University of Nebraska, Lincoln James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego Michael Bang Petersen, University of Aarhus James N. Druckman, Northwestern University Chris T. Dawes, University of California, San Diego THE METHODS CAF Thu 12:15 pm No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods, Panel 1 Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah Jen Jankowski, University of Utah Analyzing Visual Materials Mary L. Bellhouse, Providence College APD: Methodological Issues Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon Archival Research Emily Hauptmann, Western Michigan University Concepts: Reflexive Approaches Frederic C. Schaffer, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Critical Constructivist and Discourse Analysis Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago Critical Race Theory Stephen H. Marshall, University of Texas, Austin Feminist Methods Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University Field Research Overseas (Political Ethnography, Participant Observation, etc.) Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Interpretive Policy Analysis: Value-critical, Policy Discourse, Policy Spaces Ronald J. Schmidt, Sr., California State University, Long Beach Dvora Yanow, University of Amsterdam, Faculty of Behavioral and Social Sciences Intersectionality Frances B. Henderson, Maryville College Political Ethnography and Participant-Observation: Field Research in the US Katherine Cramer Walsh, University of Wisconsin, Madison Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University Post-colonial Analysis Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson College Public Law Pamela Brandwein, University of Michigan Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, University at Albany

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46-12 Room:

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Disc: 46-10 Room: Chair: Papers:

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147

Reflexive Historical Analysis Ido Oren, University of Florida Research Design for Interpretive Projects Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah 46-13 Room: Chair: Papers: PROCESS TRACING Thu 10:15 am No Room Assigned Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University Process Tracing and Causal Mechanisms David Waldner, University of Virginia Process Tracing: From Philosophical Roots to Best Practices Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University Process Tracing on Ideational Arguments Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia Matthew Evangelista, Cornell University James A. Caporaso, University of Washington MULTIMETHOD RESEARCH: Fri 10:15 am FROM SLOGAN TO TOOLKIT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 8-14 David Collier, University of California, Berkeley Taylor C. Boas, Boston University Prerna Singh, Harvard University Thad Dunning, Yale University Alison E. Post, University of California, Berkeley Jason Seawright, Northwestern University FIELD RESEARCH: Fri 2:00 pm BOUNDARIES, BIASES AND EVOLVING PRACTICES IN ONTHE-GROUND DATA GATHERING No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-73 Diana Kapiszewski, University of California, Irvine History, Borders, and Varieties of Field Research in Political Science Diana Kapiszewski, University of California, Irvine Surveys and Experiments as Forms of Field Research Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa Cruz Eyes Wide Shut: The Challenge of Producing Data in Developing Countries Kamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine Ethical Dilemmas of Fieldwork Among Ordinary People Lee Ann Fujii, University of Toronto The Future of Field Research in Political Science Lauren M. MacLean, Indiana University Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE Fri 4:15 pm POLITICS OF STATE FEMINISM: INNOVATION IN COMPARATIVE RESEARCH TO A COMPARATIVE THEORY OF RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-74 Mieke Verloo, Radboud University Nijmegen

Part:

Dorothy E. McBride, Florida Atlantic University Yvonne Galligan, Queens University Belfast Valerie Sperling, Clark University Fiona S. Mackay, University of Edinburgh Birgit Sauer, University of Vienna Joyce V. Outshoorn, Leiden University Joni Lovenduski, University of London, Birkbeck College STRATEGIES OF CASE Sat 8:00 am SELECTION No Room Assigned Vera Eva Troeger, University of Essex Qualitative versus Quantitative Strategies of Case Selection Gary Goertz, University of Arizona Matching Quantitative Case Selection Procedures with Case-Study Analytic Goals Jason Seawright, Northwestern University Case Selection via Matching Richard Nielsen, Harvard University John Henry Sheffield Process Tracing: A Qualitative Perspective James Mahoney, Northwestern University Vera Eva Troeger, University of Essex John Gerring, Boston University HISTORY, CONFLICT AND Sat 4:15 pm DEMOCRACY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES TO CONTENTIOUS POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-42 Benjamin Smith, University of Florida Guillermo Trejo, Duke University Benjamin Smith, University of Florida Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley Mark Beissinger, Princeton University Matthew Lange, McGill University Deborah J. Yashar, Princeton University CRAFTING INTERPRETIVE RESEARCH: THEORETICAL POSSIBILITIES AND PRACTICAL CHALLENGES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1497241-2 Fri 8:00 am

46-17 Room: Chair: Papers:

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46-15

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46-19

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47

SEXUALITY AND POLITICS

Division Michael J. Bosia, St. Michaels College Chair: 47-1 THEME PANEL: MARRIAGE AS AMBITION AND COMPLICATION: EQUALITY AND THE POLITICS OF LGBTQ RIGHTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 27-6 Thu 4:15 pm

Disc: 46-16

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47-2

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Disc: 47-3

BETWEEN REGULATION AND Sat 4:15 pm RIGHTS: SEXUALITY, GENDER, AND THE POLITICS OF NORMAL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-25 Maryann Barakso, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Regulating Poverty through Love? The Promotion of Healthy Marriage as Welfare State Reform in the United States Anne-Marie DAoust, University of Pennsylvania Luc Turgeon, University of Ottawa Bar the Door! Gender Non-Conformity, Transgender Activists, and Inclusive Exclusiveness Beth Kiyoko Jamieson, Princeton University Five Dimensions of Bond Girls: Tracing the Waves of Feminism through Generations of James Bond Films Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University Formal Equality in Law, Moral Regulation in Practice: Courts versus Policy Makers as Champions of Sexuality and Reproductive Rights in Canada Linda A. White, University of Toronto The Strategic Use of Politics of Care: The Different Manifestations of Right-wing Politics and Left-wing Activism Daniela Mansbach, New School University H. Howell Williams, New School for Social Research Paisley Currah, CUNY-Brooklyn College STATES OF SEXUALITY: Sat 8:00 am RIGHTS, POLICIES, AND MOVEMENTS IN CONTENTION No Room Assigned Laura Sjoberg, University of Florida Desire Recast: Production of Iranian Gay Identity Kate Korycki, University of Toronto Abouzar Nasirzadeh, University of Toronto Below the (Bible) Belt: Religion and Sexuality Education in American Public Schools Mark Carl Rom, Georgetown University The Differing Directions of Counter-Hegemonic Approaches to HIV/AIDS Policy in South Africa and Brazil: Sexuality, Racial Hierarchies, and Global (un)Civil Society Laurel Sprague, Wayne State University Reactionary Politics: The Application and Expansion of Decency Laws to Suppress Anarchists and Sexual Deviants Following the Assassination of William McKinley, 1901-1906 Ryan LaRochelle, Brandeis University Meredith L. Weiss, University at Albany, SUNY THE AMBIGUITY OF RIGHTS: Thu 2:00 pm SEXUALITY AND GENDER IN POLITICAL NARRATIVE No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 41-7 Lee Trepanier, Saginaw Valley State University The Two-ness of Female Marines: W.E.B. Du Bois The Souls of Black Folk and the Experience of American Servicewomen Emerald Archer, Woodbury University

Disc:

They Had the Freedom and the Power: Hitchcocks Vertigo and the History of Sexuality John Steinmetz, University of Oregon Lifting the Ban on Gays in the Military: The Role of Pop Culture Susan R. Burgess, Ohio University Chocolate, Spirits, and Butterflies: The Social Construction of Political Narratives by Latina Writers Gratzia Villarroel, St. Norbert College Norah Humerez-Comtois, CEFAM International, InC. Lorraine Elizabeth Krall, Georgetown University Cyrus Ernesto Zirakzadeh, University of Connecticut SEXUAL MINORITY RIGHTS Fri 10:15 am AND LGBTQ PEOPLE: DISCOURSE AND FRAMING IN MOVEMENT ACTIVISM No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus, Panel 1 Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont Stretching the Margins and Trading Taboos: A Paradoxical Approach to Sexual Rights Advocacy in Africa Sybille Ngo Nyeck, University of California, Los Angeles The Right to Name Hate: Utilizing Hate Group Designations to Reframe Political Challenges to LGBT Rights Stephen Edward McMillin, University of Chicago Rights, Death and the Politics of Self-Negation Vincent Jungkunz, Ohio University Sexuality and Human Capabilities: Problems with Immutability as a Basis for Rights Emily R. Gill, Bradley University Why Gays of Color Protest: At the Intersection of Gay and Racial/Ethnic Identities Erwin S. de Leon, The Urban Institute Arnold Fleischmann, Eastern Michigan University PUBLIC OPINION, THE LAW, Thu 8:00 am AND LGBT RIGHTS: FROM GLOBAL TO LOCAL No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus, Panel 2 Shawn Richard Schulenberg, Marshall University From Death Penalty to Legal Marriage: LGBT Politics in a Global Perspective Enze Han, Princeton University Joseph OMahoney, George Washington University Human Rights and the Inclusion of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity: Developments in the European Institutions and New Opportunities for NGOs and States for the Internalization and Externalization of Human Rights after Lisbon Ronald L. Holzhacker, University of Twente The Barometer of Gay Rights Susan Dicklitch, Franklin & Marshall College Berwood Yost, Franklin and Marshall College Bryan Dougan, Franklin & Marshall College

47-5

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149

Disc: 47-7

Public Opinion and Gay Rights: Do members of Congress Follow Their Constituents Preferences? Justin Phillips, Columbia University Gary Mucciaroni, Temple University THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS Sat 10:15 am OF LGTB RIGHTS IN LATIN AMERICA No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Latin American Studies Association, Panel 2

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Contested Capacity: Market Disruptions, ConsumerLabor Coalitions, and Health Care Reform Margaret Weir, University of California, Berkeley Charles Eaton, University of California, Berkeley The Political Economy and Partisan Politics of Health Care in the United States and the United Kingdom Alex Waddan, University of Leicester Lobbying in Committee on Health Care Reform, 20092010 Richard L. Hall, University of Michigan Cheryl L. Brown, University of North Carolina, Charlotte AUTISM POLITICS AND Thu 4:15 pm POLICY No Room Assigned John J. Pitney, Jr., Claremont McKenna College Brad R. McKay John E. McNulty, SUNY, Binghamton Dana Lee Baker, Washington State University Michael Orsini, University of Ottawa VALUES, PUBLIC OPINION, Sat 8:00 am AND HEALTH CARE: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES No Room Assigned Rick Mayes, University of Richmond Reconceptualizing Public Opinion About Health Care: What Americans Believe About Doctors, Drug Companies and the Curative Power of Medicine Eric M. Patashnik, University of Virginia Alan Gerber, Yale University Rights, Responsibilities and the Ideology of Mental Health Lynn M. Sanders, University of Virginia Making Rights a Reality? Disability Rights Activists and Legal Mobilization in Canada and the UK Lisa C. Vanhala, University of Oxford Mass Media, Public Opinion and Health Care Antonia Maioni, McGill University The Impact of Social Values on Tobacco Policy Adoption and Outcomes: A Comparative Analysis Stephanie Frisbee, West Virginia University Donley T. Studlar, West Virginia University Sara R. Jordan, University of Hong Kong

48

HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY

Division Rogan Kersh, New York University Chair: 48-1 Room: 48-2 EVOLVING APPROACHES TO GLOBAL HEALTH No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 17-8 PUBLIC VALUES AND ATTITUDES IN HEALTH POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-19 HEALTH, LAW, AND POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 26-8 THE STATES AND THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT OF 2010 No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 29-8 GENDERING HEALTH AND WELFARE POLICY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 31-17 Fri 2:00 pm

Fri 4:15 pm 48-9

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Fri 10:15 am

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Sun 8:00 am

Room: 48-5 Room: 48-6

Thu 10:15 am

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PLENARY ROUNDTABLE: THE Fri 6:00 pm FATE OF THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT AND THE RIGHT TO HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE No Room Assigned Rogan Kersh, New York University Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of Technology James A. Morone, Brown University Harold Pollack, University of Chicago Theda Skocpol, Harvard University HEALTH REFORM IN STATE Fri 8:00 am AND NATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-28 Edward A. Miller, University of Massachusetts, Boston The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act: The Victory of Unorthodox Lawmaking ? Anne Laure Beaussier, Universit de Montpellier

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CANADIAN POLITICS

Division Donley T. Studlar, West Virginia University Chair: 49-1 Room: 49-2 Room: Chair: Papers: ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY IN FEDERAL SYSTEMS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 28-7 Sat 8:00 am

48-7 Room: Chair: Papers:

ELECTORAL POLITICS IN Sat 2:00 pm CANADA No Room Assigned Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida Harper vs. History: Dynasties and Interludes in Canadian Electoral Politics Lawrence LeDuc, University of Toronto Jon H. Pammett, Carleton University

150

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Disc: 49-3

The Non-Obvious Effects of Public Funding of Elections on Political Parties in the Canadian Provinces and U.S. States Keith E. Hamm, Rice University Jaclyn J. Kettler, Rice University Quebecs New Push for Sovereignty: Increasing Civic Nationalism and New Part Quebecois Strategies for the Next Provincial Election Glen Duerr, Kent State University Explaining Comparative Voter Turnout in the Canadian Provinces Since 1965: The Importance of Context Alan Siaroff, University of Lethbridge Jared Wesley, University of Manitoba Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame CANADIAN POLITICS AND Thu 4:15 pm POLICY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE No Room Assigned Donley T. Studlar, West Virginia University Gendering Prime Ministerial and Presidential Leadership in Anglo-American Systems Patricia Lee Sykes, American University Westminster Redux?: Parliamentary Democracy and 21st Century Challenges Scott Streiner, Carleton University Dominant Party Regimes in Canada and Australia: Going the Way of the Dodo Bird? Steffen G. Schneider, University of Bremen Amir Abedi, Western Washington University Democracy and Income Inequality: Measurement and Modeling of the Western Hemispheric Experience Ross E. Burkhart, Boise State University Melissa A. Haussman, Carleton University

50-5 Room: 50-6 Room: Chair: Papers:

INTERPERSONAL DYNAMICS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-15

Thu 4:15 pm

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NETWORKS AND Sat 4:15 pm INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 21-31 Zeev Maoz, University of California, Davis Exports of Another Type: The Determinants of Interstate Transmission of Terrorism Victor Asal, SUNY, University at Albany Hyun Hee Park, SUNY, University at Albany R. Karl Rethemeyer, SUNY, Albany Conflict and Information: A Structuralist Reinterpretation Renato Corbetta, University of Alabama, Birmingham A Model of Suppression: From Insurgencies and Terrorism to Pandemics and Bank Runs David A. Siegel, Florida State University Longitudinal Network Models of Global Trade, 19902008 Michael D. Ward, Duke University John Stephen Ahlquist, Florida State University Mapping the Structure of International Inequalities and the Poverty-Conflict Nexus Alex Braithwaite, University College London David Hudson, University College London Niheer Dasandi, University College London Zeev Maoz, University of California, Davis CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Sat 8:00 am OF PARTISAN NETWORKS No Room Assigned Gregory Koger, University of Miami Democratic Donor Factions During the 2007-8 Invisible Primary Jonathan Bernstein Casey Byrne Dominguez, University of San Diego Electoral Institutions and Legislative Behavior: The Effects of Primary Processes. R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of Technology Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago Your Money Where Your Mouth Is: Financial Contributions and Presidential Candidate Endorsements in the U.S. Congress Hans Noel, Georgetown University Suzanne M. Robbins, George Mason University Partisanship without Partisans: How Campaign Finance Networks Induce Polarization in a Partyless Environment Seth E. Masket, University of Denver Boris Shor, University of Chicago Gregory Koger, University of Miami LEGISLATIVE NETWORKS Fri 10:15 am AND LAWMAKING No Room Assigned Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan

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50

POLITICAL NETWORKS

Division Skyler J. Cranmer, University of North Carolina, Chair: Chapel Hill 50-1 SOCIAL NETWORKS: INFORMATION, PREJUDICE, ANGER AND ATTITUDES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-6 NETWORKS IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-26 SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS IN THE STUDY OF LEGISLATURES No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 22-5 UNDERSTANDING THE POLICY PROCESS WITH NETWORK ANALYSIS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-11 Fri 8:00 am

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Sat 10:15 am

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Thu 8:00 am

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151

Papers:

Disc: 50-9

The Major Players in Policy Change: Distinct Networks in American Lawmaking Matt Grossmann, Michigan State University Socializing in Session: The Social Bases of Legislative Behavior Jon Rogowski, University of Chicago Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego Choosing to Matter: Legislative Activity, Voting Networks, and Policy Influence in the European Parliament Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Social and Political Utility of Congressional Caucus Networks Jennifer Nicoll Victor, University of Pittsburgh Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan METHODOLOGICAL Sat 2:00 pm INNOVATIONS IN THE STUDY OF NETWORKS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 8-15 Hans Noel, Georgetown University Modeling Network Structure Using Graph Motifs: The SSRN Conflict Studies eJournal Co-authorship Network Andrew Conway, New York University Behavioral Contagion in a 100 million Person Online Social Network Robert Bond, University of California, San Diego Jason Jeffrey Jones, University of California, San Diego James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego Encoding Political Data in Thick Networks David A. Meyer, University of California, San Diego Follow the Leader: Hierarchical Group Dynamics in the U.S. Congress Yunkyu Sohn, University of California, San Diego James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego Hans Noel, Georgetown University SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND Thu 2:00 pm ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY NETWORKS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 39-12 Tanya Heikkila, University of Colorado-Denver Systemic Risk and Network Fragmentation: Analyzing Conflict and Collaboration in an EnvironmentallyStressed Area Ramiro Berardo, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientficas y Tcnicas Networked Governance of the High Seas Marine Protected Areas Betul Gokkir, University of Florida Divided Advocacy Networks: Conflict and Competition in Global Climate Change Politics Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland

Disc:

Does Supply Meet Demand? International Institutions, Member States, and National Security Policy-Making Carlotta Maria Minnella Networks and Innovation in the Mexican Ceramics Sector Steven Samford, University of New Mexico Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis

51

EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH

Division Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University Chair: 51-1 FORMAL MODELS AND EXPERIMENTS: THE NEW FRONTIERS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 4-3 HOW PEOPLE THINK AND DELIBERATE ABOUT POLITICS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 5-16 THE IMPACT OF TRANSPARENCY ON GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: COMPARATIVE EVIDENCE FROM FIELD EXPERIMENTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-18 EXPERIMENTS ON CUETAKING, MYOPIA, AND RATIONALITY No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-10 EXPERIMENTS ON SOCIAL PRESSURE AND MOBILIZATION No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-17 Thu 10:15 am

Room: 51-2

Fri 4:15 pm

Room: Chair: Papers:

Room: 51-3

Sun 8:00 am

Room: 51-4

Thu 2:00 pm

Room: 51-5

Thu 8:00 am

Room: 51-6 Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc: 50-10

Room: Chair: Papers:

METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN Sat 4:15 pm RANDOMIZED EXPERIMENTS No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 8-16 Rebecca B. Morton, New York University Bias in Political Communication Experiments Thomas John Leeper, Northwestern University James N. Druckman, Northwestern University Comparing Treatment Effects in Parallel Experiments Jennifer Jerit, Florida State University Jason Barabas, Florida State University Scott Clifford, Florida State University Blocking for Sequential Political Experiments Ryan T. Moore, Washington University Finding Our Way from Causal GENERALIZATION to Causal Generalization David Hendry, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign James H. Kuklinski, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

152

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

DIVISION PANELS

Disc: 51-7

Seasoned Subjects- The Accidental Training of Laboratory Participants in Political Science Experiments Amir Fairdosi, University of Chicago Thomas Wood, University of Chicago Rebecca B. Morton, New York University THEME PANEL: ORGANIZING Fri 8:00 am FOR RIGHTS IN AFRICA, ASIA, AND THE SOUTHWEST: FIELD EXPERIMENTS IN HETEROGENEOUS COMMUNITIES No Room Assigned James L. Gibson, Washington University, St. Louis Democratic Institutions and Collective Action Capacity: Results from a Field Experiment in PostConflict Liberia James D. Fearon, Stanford University Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University Jeremy M. Weinstein, Stanford University Can the Poor Be Organized? Experimental Evidence from Self-Help Groups in Rural India Raj M. Desai, Georgetown University Shareen Joshi, Georgetown University The Effect of Social Capital on Voter Turnout: A Field Experiment in Two Southwestern Cities Meghan Condon, University of Wisconsin, Madison Does a Little Power Corrupt? The Effect on Strategic Decision-making of Holding Local Political Office in Zambia Daniel Enemark, University of Calfornia, San Diego Yuhki Tajima, University of California, Riverside James L. Gibson, Washington University, St. Louis

Room: Chair: Papers:

Disc:

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

153

RELATED GROUP PANELS


AFRICAN POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
Chair: Katharine A. Baldwin, University of Florida Jeffrey K. Conroy-Krutz, Michigan State University Brandon Kendhammer, Ohio University Beth Elise Whitaker, University of North Carolina, Charlotte

AGING POLICY AND POLITICS GROUP


Chair: Cynthia Massie Mara, Penn State Panel 1 POLICY AND POLITICS OF Thu 2:00 pm AGING IN OECD STATES: HEALTH REFORM, LONGTERM CARE AND AGEIDENTITY POLITICS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: William P. Brandon, University of North CarolinaCharlotte Papers: Long-Term Residential Care: An International Study of Promising Practices Pauline Vaillancourt Rosenau, University of Texas, Houston Flying Beneath the Radar of Health Reform: The Community Living Assistance Services and Supports (CLASS) Act Edward A. Miller, University of Massachusetts, Boston Care for the Frail Elderly in Quebec: Initiatives for Public and Private Services in the Development of Public Policy Howard A. Palley, University of Maryland Japans Healthcare Reform for the Elderly under the New Government Toshiyuki Nishikawa, Surugadai University Disc: Cynthia Massie Mara, Penn State University

Panel 1 ACCOUNTABILITY AND Fri 10:15 am REDISTRIBUTION IN AFRICA Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 12-43 Chair: Benjamin Arah, Bowie State University Papers: The Political Economy of Local Democracy: Service Delivery and Accountability in Mozambique since 1999 Beatrice Reaud, American University Opposition Parties and Service Delivery in African Cities Danielle Elise Resnick, United Nations-World Institute for Development Economics Research Ethnic Political Mobilization in Africas Multiparty Regimes Michelle Kuenzi, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Gina M. S. Lambright, George Washington University The Distributional Logic of Government Transfers in Malawi Kim Yi Dionne, Texas A&M University Jeremy Horowitz, Dartmouth College Disc: Sandra F. Joireman, Wheaton College Panel 2 SOUTH SUDAN: A LENS FOR A Sat 8:00 am NEW PARADIGM OF AFRICAN POLITICS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: William Reno, Northwestern University Papers: Maintaining Institutionalized Authority in an Ethnically Fragmented Social Landscape: Assessing the Validity of the South Sudan-Somalia Comparison Miklos Gosztonyi, Northwestern University Prizes and Compromises: The Survival of the Sudan Peoples Liberation Army Christopher Day, Northwestern University The Strategy behind the LRA Strategy: US Intervention and Regional Stability Adam Branch, San Diego State University Corruption and State-Building in South Sudan Zachariah Cherian Mampilly, Vassar College Disc: Ariel Zellman, Northwestern University William Reno, Northwestern University

AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT


Chair: Panel 1 Room: Chair: Papers: Steven Kautz, Michigan State University Benjamin A. Kleinerman, Michigan State University AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM Sat 10:15 am No Room Assigned Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame The Origins of American Exceptionalism James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia Two Cities on a Hill: From Winthrop to Reagan Patrick J. Deneen, Georgetown University American Exceptionalism in the Early Republic Peter S. Onuf, University of Virginia Our Republican Example: The Significance of the US in the 21st Century Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania Alan Ray Gibson, California State University, Chico

Disc:

Panel 2 EXECUTIVE POWER AND THE Sun 8:00 am POLITICS OF RIGHTS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Steven Kautz, Michigan State University Papers: Jeffersons Executive: More Unitary, More Responsible, and Less Stable Jeremy D. Bailey, University of Houston

154

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

Disc:

Law and the Problem of the Exception in American Constitutionalism Tobin L. Craig, Michigan State University Benjamin A. Kleinerman, Michigan State University Alexander Hamilton on Executive Discretion George Thomas, Claremont McKenna College Restraining the Discretionary Executive: The Turn to Formalism and Beyond Lucas Thompson, Yale University Quantum Constitutionalism: Time and Probability in James Madisons Theory of Rights Greg Weiner, Brown University Dustin A. Gish, College of the Holy Cross Randal R. Hendrickson, Duke University

ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS


Chair: Hahrie C. Han, RWJ Fellow, Harvard/Wellesley College Carolyn Wong, Carleton College Fri 8:00 am

Panel 1 THE NATIONAL ASIAN AMERICAN SURVEY AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR STUDIES OF POLITICAL BEHAVIOR Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-24

AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR POLITICAL & LEGAL PHILOSOPHY


Chair: James E. Fleming Jacob T. Levy, McGill University

Panel 1 NOMOS: FEDERALISM AND Sun 8:00 am SUBSIDIARITY: AGAINST DUAL FEDERALISM Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-39 Chair: Jacob T. Levy, McGill University Papers: Defending Dual Federalism: A Self-Defeating Enterprise Sotirios A. Barber, University of Notre Dame Disc: Ernest Young, Duke University Michael Blake, University of Washington Panel 2 NOMOS: FEDERALISM AND Sat 2:00 pm SUBSIDIARITY: THE CONSTITUTION AND FEDERALISM Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-40 Chair: James E. Fleming Papers: Federalism and Subsidiarity: Perspectives from Law Steven G. Calabresi, Northwestern University Disc: Jenna Bednar, University of Michigan Andreas Follesdal, University of Oslo Panel 3 NOMOS: FEDERALISM AND Sat 8:00 am SUBSIDIARITY: THE CITY AND SUBSIDIARITY Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 2-59 Chair: Nancy L. Rosenblum, Harvard University Papers: Cities, Subsidiarity, and Federalism Daniel Weinstock, Universite de Montreal Disc: Loren A. King, Wilfrid Laurier University Judith Resnik, Yale University

Panel 2 ASIAN AMERICAN IDENTITY Thu 4:15 pm AND POLITICS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by the Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession Chair: Pei-te Lien, University of California, Santa Barbara Papers: Race, Space, and the New Political Configurations of Northern California Bay Area Politics Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay James S. Lai, Santa Clara University Beyond Whiteness: Asian Americans and Latinos in the U.S. Imagination Claire Jean Kim, University of California, Irvine Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley Proposition 8 and the Limits of Politics among Asian Ethnic Churches Joseph Yi, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies The Hmong in America: Concepts of Identity and Political Freedom Carolyn Wong, Carleton College To Know is to Love: Asian American Support for Incumbents in Comparative Perspective Robert W. Scharr, University of Florida Disc: Andrew L. Aoki, Augsburg College Pei-te Lien, University of California, Santa Barbara

RELATED GROUP PANELS

ASSOCIATION FOR ISRAEL STUDIES


Chair: Menachem Hofnung, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Panel 1 POLITICS OF RIGHTS IN THE Sun 8:00 am MIDDLE EAST Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Menachem Hofnung, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Papers: Higher Education and Political Attitude Change: Is Israel the Exception that Proves the Rule? Kenneth D. Wald, University of Florida Danielle Feinstein The Rights of Israels Palestinian Minority in the TwoState Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Dov Waxman, CUNY-Baruch College Ilan Peleg, Lafayette College Right to Homeland? Israel, Zionism, and the Territorial Integrity Norm Ariel Zellman, Northwestern University BORDERS and RIGHTS: The Case of Israel Ayelet Harel-Shalev, Ben-Gurion University Rebecca Kook, Ben-Gurion University

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

155

Middle Ground or Common Ground? The Political Ethics of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Uriel Abulof, Tel-Aviv University

ASSOCIATION FRANAISE DE SCIENCE POLITIQUE GROUP


Chair: Amy Mazur Panel 1 FRENCH LEGISLATIVE Sat 2:00 pm POLITICS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-20 Chair: Olivier Costa Papers: Amending The Constitution in France. Constitutional Flexibility, Divided Government & SemiPresidentialism Sylvain Brouard, Sciences Po Bordeaux Comparative Analysis of The Citizens Attitudes Towards Representation in France and Germany Vincent Tiberj, Sciences Po Elisa Deiss-Helbig, Institut dEtudes Politiques Bordeaux Mirjam Dagefrde French MPs between Nation and Constituencies Olivier Costa Eric Kerrouche, Sciences Po, Bordeaux Tinette Schnatterer, Science Po Bordeaux Committee Structure Outside Congress. Assessing Informational, Partisan and Distributive Theories of Legislative Organization in the French Parliament Sebastien G. Lazardeux, SPIRIT Exploring the Representational Roles of French MEPs Nathalie Brack, Universit libre de Bruxelles Disc: Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Panel 2 FEMINIST MOVEMENTS AND Thu 10:15 am THE CHALLENGE OF PLURALISM: PRACTICES OF INTERSECTIONALITY IN A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University Papers: Uneven Commitments: Charting Feminist Attention to Intersectionality in Uruguay Erica Townsend-Bell, University of Iowa Invisible or Intrumentalised? Migrant Women at the Intersections Leah Bassel, City University London Diverging Projects of Emancipation: Feminists Struggles with Intersectionality in France and Canada Elonore Lpinard, Universit de Montral Democratic Theory and the Practice of Intersectionality: A European Perspective Birte Siim, Aalborg University Disc: Mieke Verloo, Radboud University Nijmegen Wendy Sarvasy, University of California, Berkeley

ASSOCIATION FOR POLITICS AND THE LIFE SCIENCES


Chair: Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg Albert Somit, Southern Illinois University

Panel 1 CURRENT RESEARCH IN Thu 2:00 pm BIOPOLITICS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Donald G Tannenbaum, Gettysburg College Papers: The Competing Meanings of Biopolitics in Political Science: Biological and Post-Modern Approaches to Politics Laurette T. Liesen, Lewis University Mary B. Walsh, Elmhurst College An Examination of Contingency among Gene Synthesis Companies Shannon R. Fye, George Mason University The Religious Brain: Can Neurosciences Tell Us about Religious Consciousness Aaron Burgess Psychological Dysfunction and Major Accomplishments: The Presidency of Lyndon Johnson Robert E. Gilbert, Northeastern University Disc: Donald G Tannenbaum, Gettysburg College Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg

ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF NATIONALITIES


Chair: Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University Thu 8:00 am Panel 1 HISTORICAL LEGACIES IN CONTEMPORARY POLITICS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-41

Panel 2 POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE Fri 10:15 am HOLOCAUST: NEW FINDINGS AND RESEARCH AGENDAS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-75 Chair: Keith A. Darden, Yale University Papers: The Pogroms of Summer 1941 in Comparative Perspective Jeffrey Kopstein, University of Toronto Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley Swords or Shields? Implementing and Subverting the Final Solution in German-occupied Europe Ethan J. Hollander, Wabash College Is the Holocaust Unique?: Lessons from Its Etiology for the Case of Sudan Manus I. Midlarsky, Rutgers University Party Politics in Hell: Explaining Jewish Resistance during the Holocaust Evgeny Finkel, University of Wisconsin, Madison Disc: Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University

156

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

ASSOCIATION OF CHINESE POLITICAL STUDIES


Chair: Ming Wan, George Mason University Thu 10:15 am Panel 1 A NEW COLD WAR? UNDERSTANDING THE RECENT CHILL IN US-CHINA RELATIONS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 18-19

BRAZILIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION


Chair: Amncio Jorge Oliveira, University of So Paulo Fabiano Guilherme M. Santos Thu 10:15 am

Panel 1 POLITICAL PARTICIPATION AND POLICY OUTCOMES IN CONTEMPORARY BRAZIL Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 11-23

Panel 2 CHINESE TRADITIONS IN Fri 4:15 pm INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Ja Ian Chong, National University of Singapore Papers: A Confucian Theory of Justice Baldwin Bon-Wah Wong, London School of Economics Neo-Confucian Cosmopolitanism and Chinese Perception of World Order: A Study of Wang Yangmings virtue Politics and Cultural Pluralism Shaojin Chai, University of Notre Dame Between Tianxia and Westphalia: China Searches for Its Position in the World Fei-Ling Wang, Georgia Institute of Technology Conception of Threat in Chinese Strategic Culture: Medicine as Analogy Kelvin C. K. Cheung, University of Manchester Disc: Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison

BRITISH POLITICS GROUP


Chair: Florence Faucher-King Thu 10:15 am Panel 1 UNDERSTANDING THE 2010 BRITISH ELECTIONS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-20 Panel 2 Room: Chair: Papers:

RELATED GROUP PANELS

THE YEAR IN REVIEW Fri 4:15 pm No Room Assigned Graham K. Wilson, Boston University The Year in Review: Britains Multi-Party Governance Andrew Russell, University of Manchester The Year in Review Philip Cowley, University of Nottingham

THE ASSOCIATION OF KOREAN POLITICAL STUDIES


Chair: HeeMin Kim, Florida State University Panel 1 WHAT (NOT) TO DO WITH Thu 4:15 pm NORTH KOREA? Room: No Room Assigned Chair: HeeMin Kim, Florida State University Part: Victor D. Cha, Georgetown University Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego Hyug Baeg Im, Korea University David C. Kang, University of Southern California

WALTER BAGEHOT RESEARCH COUNCIL ON NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY


Chair: Joseph Prudhomme, Washington College Panel 1 THE U.S. PRESIDENT, Sun 10:15 am CONGRESS, AND THE CONDUCT OF MILITARY CONFLICT IN THE 21ST CENTURY IN THE LIGHT OF NEW FORMS WARFARE Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Frank P. Le Veness, St. Johns University Part: Joseph DiSarro, Washington & Jefferson College Matthew A. Pauley, Manhattanville College Joseph Prudhomme, Washington College Alan G. Stolberg, United States Army War College James Schelberg, Washington College

Panel 3 THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS IN Sat 8:00 am THE UK Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Political Studies Association, Panel 1 Chair: Bonnie M. Meguid, University of Rochester Papers: Religious Free Exercise in Britain: The Case of the Equalities Act 2010 Jerold Waltman, Baylor University RIGHTS AND TERRITORIAL POLITICS IN THE UK DURING FISCAL CRISIS James Mitchell, University of Strathclyde Laura Polverari, University of Strathclyde Defending the Rights of the Poor. Framing Policy or Delivering the goods? Conservative and Liberal Government Policy Since May 2010 Mark P. Shephard, University of Strathclyde Membership rights and intra-party politics Anika Gauja, University of Sydney Disc: Florence Faucher-King, Sciences Po Terrell Carver, University of Bristol Panel 4 DEBATES ABOUT Sat 10:15 am IMMIGRATION AND RACE IN THE UK Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Cas Mudde, DePauw University Papers: Muslims, Immigration, and Public Opinion in the United Kingdom Abdulkader Sinno, Indiana University Timothy Hellwig, Indiana University, Bloomington Malcolm X at Oxford Union: Race, Rights, and the Defense of Liberty Saladin Malik Ambar, Lehigh University Disc: Vincent Tiberj, Sciences Po Janet M. Laible, Lehigh University

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

157

CAMPAIGN FINANCE RESEARCH GROUP


Chair: Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico Michael J. Malbin, Campaign Finance Institute Sat 2:00 pm

Panel 1 DYNAMICS OF CAMPAIGN FUNDRAISING Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-4 Panel 2 PARTY AND INTEREST GROUP RESPONSES TO CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 35-5

Disc: Sat 4:15 pm Panel 3 Room: Chair: Part:

Conceptualizing Rights within Public Networks: A Target Population Pilot Study Kathleen M. Hale, Auburn University Mitchell Brown, Auburn University Federalism, Executive Orders and Intergovernmental Management Michael W. Hail, Morehead State University Jeremy L. Hall, University of Texas-Dallas Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas at Dallas Dale A. Krane, University of Nebraska, Omaha FEDERALISM AND RIGHTS Sun 8:00 am No Room Assigned John J. Dinan, Wake Forest University Lisa L. Miller, Rutgers University David B. Robertson, University of Missouri, St. Louis Robert A. Schapiro, Emory University Malcolm M. Feeley, University of California, Berkeley

CATO INSTITUTE
Chair: Christopher Preble, The Cato Institute John Samples, The Cato Institute

Panel 1 EXPLORING THE ORIGINS Thu 2:00 pm AND IMPLICATIONS OF THE MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Christopher Preble, The Cato Institute Part: Michael C. Desch, University of Notre Dame Charles Eugene Gholz, University of Texas, Austin Benjamin H. Friedman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Andrew L. Ross, University of New Mexico William P. Ruger, III, Texas State University, San Marcos

CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE


Chair: Stephen M. King, Southeastern University Panel 1 THE POLITICS OF MEMORY Sat 2:00 pm AND RECONCILIATION Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Loramy Christine Gerstbauer, Gustavus Adolphus College Papers: The Politics of Truth, Justice and Reconciliation in Latin America Vilma C. Balmaceda, Nyack College Securitization of the Northwest Passage: The SinoJapan relationship and the role of reconciliation in the opening of the Arctic to transshipment of commerce and the exploitation of resources Kevin J. Cooney, Northwest University The Humbled Superpower: US foreign policy and possibilities of contrition Loramy Christine Gerstbauer, Gustavus Adolphus College Contested Memory in Japan: The 2007 Textbook Controversy over the Battle of Okinawa Mari Ishibashi, Randolph College Reconciliation as Middle Way: Jews, Christians, Muslims, and the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict Scott T. Waalkes, Malone University Disc: Mark R. Amstutz, Wheaton College

CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM


Chair: Richard L. Cole, University of Texas, Arlington Thu 2:00 pm Panel 1 THEME PANEL: MAJORITARIAN INSTITUTIONS AND MINORITY RIGHTS: DIRECT DEMOCRACY IN THE AMERICAN STATES Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 29-6

Panel 2 OBAMA ADMINISTRATION: Sat 4:15 pm SHAPING INTRGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS IN THE OBAMA YEARS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: John Kincaid, Lafayette College Papers: Congressional Preemption during the Obama Administration Joseph F. Zimmerman, SUNY, Albany To Tax or Not To Tax? The Benefits of Tax Exemption of Municipal Bonds for State and Local Government Shama Gamkhar, University of Texas at Austin Beibei Zou, University of Texas, Austin Paul Jack, Estrada Hinojosa & Company, Inc Michael Granof, University of Texas at Austin

THE CHURCHILL CENTRE


Chair: James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage Panel 1 A ROVING COMMISSION: Thu 8:00 am POLITICS IN CHURCHILLS AUTOBIOGRAPHY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Daniel N. Myers, The Churchill Centre Papers: Churchill as Author and Dreamer Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College Opening the Magic Casements of the Mind: Churchills Autobiography as Education James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage

158

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

Disc:

Drawing Design from Chaos: Churchills Conception of the Statesman in My Early Life and Marlborough Charles R. Sullivan, University of Dallas Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los Angeles

Brian T. Kennedy, Claremont Institute Panel 5 XENOPHON, THE Thu 4:15 pm PHILOSOPHER, AND THE THEOLOGICAL-POLITICAL PROBLEM Room: No Room Assigned Chair: James H. Nichols, Jr., Claremont McKenna College Papers: The Dialectical Theology of Memorabilia 4.6, or, Xenophons Socratic kalam David Oliver Davies, University of Dallas Xenophon and Cicero on the Best Regime Timothy W. Caspar, Hillsdale College Why Does a Philosopher Masquerade as a Soldier? The Case of Xenophon Eric Buzzetti, Concordia University Disc: Khalil Habib, Salve Regina University Robert C. Bartlett, Boston College Panel 6 THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY OF Fri 4:15 pm FORT SUMTER: LESSONS FOR PRESIDENTIAL POWER TODAY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: David K. Nichols, Baylor University Papers: Rehabilitating Lincoln John Yoo, University of California-Berkeley The Constitutional Logic of Fort Sumter Michael A. Genovese, Loyola Marymount University Presidential Power and the Limits of Executive Prerogative John Marini, University of Nevada, Reno The Curious Case of Jose Arguelles Thomas Karako, Kenyon College A Popular Demand and a Public Necessity: Prerogative, the Plebiscitary Presidency, and the Lincoln Example Jason Jividen, Saint Vincent College Panel 7 JAFFAS THOMISM AND Thu 10:15 am ARISTOTELIANISM RECONSIDERED Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Christopher James Wolfe, Claremont Graduate University Part: Douglas Kries, Gonzaga University Paul O. Carrese, United States Air Force Academy John William Grant, Hillsdale College Richard J. Dougherty, University of Dallas Panel 8 THE REAGAN LEGACY FOR Sat 4:15 pm TODAYS POLITICS ON THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF HIS BIRTH Room: No Room Assigned Chair: John B. Kienker, Claremont Review of Books Papers: Lessons from Reagan? Andrew E. Busch, Claremont McKenna College Was Reagan a Great President? Stephen F. Knott, U.S. Naval War College Craig Shirley, Shirley & Banister Public Affairs Reagan on the Campaign Trail Craig Shirley, Shirley & Banister Public Affairs

CICERONIAN SOCIETY
Chair: Peter Daniel Haworth Fri 10:15 am Panel 1 RIGHTS, PLACE, AND ALIENATION IN AMERICA Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 41-6

Panel 2 THE ROMAN KNOWS Sun 10:15 am Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 4

RELATED GROUP PANELS

CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY


Chair: Ronald J. Pestritto, Jr., Hillsdale College Panel 1 LEO STRAUSS AND CARL Fri 8:00 am SCHMITT Room: No Room Assigned Chair: William Morrisey, Hillsdale College Papers: Strauss vs. Schmitt on the Political Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame Recent Attempts to Link Strauss and Schmitt: Misreadings and Misalliances Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame Carl Schmitt and Strausss German Nihilism Jon Fennell Disc: Svetozar Minkov, Roosevelt University Panel 2 THE RECENT TERM OF THE Fri 10:15 am U.S. SUPREME COURT Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Melanie M. Marlowe, Miami University Part: Anthony A. Peacock, Utah State University Robert Alt, The Heritage Foundation Kathleen Arnn, Claremont Graduate University Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin Panel 3 Room: Chair: Part: THE 112TH CONGRESS Thu 8:00 am No Room Assigned Scott E. Yenor, Boise State University Kevin Portteus, Hillsdale College William Voegeli, Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Joseph Postell, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs Michael M. Uhlmann, Claremont Graduate University

Panel 4 PROSPECTS FOR THE 2012 Sat 10:15 am PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Luigi Bradizza, Salve Regina University Part: Charles R. Kesler, Claremont McKenna College Bradley C.S. Watson, Saint Vincent College John J. Pitney, Jr., Claremont McKenna College

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

159

Disc:

Charles R. Kesler, Claremont McKenna College Kiron Kanina Skinner, Carnegie Mellon University

COMMITTEE FOR ANALYSIS OF MILITARY OPERATIONS AND STRATEGY


Chair: Jason Lyall, Yale University Panel 1 CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN Fri 10:15 am CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Isaiah Wilson, III, United States Military Academy, West Point Part: John Griswold, University of Washington Rachel Sondheimer, United States Military Academy Lee Robinson, United States Military Academy Deborah Avant, University of California, Irvine Kent Park, United States Military Academy

Panel 9 THE RETURN TO FOUNDING Thu 2:00 pm PRINCIPLES: SHOULD NATURAL RIGHTS BE PART OF THE CONSERVATIVE RESURGENCE? Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Ronald J. Pestritto, Jr., Hillsdale College Part: Matthew Spalding, The Heritage Foundation Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia Hadley Arkes, Amherst College Patrick J. Deneen, Georgetown University Panel 10 THE RESURGENCE OF STATE Fri 2:00 pm SOVEREIGNTY: THE RIGHT MOVE FOR CONSERVATISM? Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Ralph A. Rossum, Claremont McKenna College Part: Stephen Klugewicz William Voegeli, Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Richard M. Gamble, Hillsdale College Michael P. Federici, Mercyhurst College Matthew Spalding, The Heritage Foundation Panel 11 DOES A RETURN TO THE Sat 2:00 pm CONSTITUTION MEAN A RETURN TO LIBERTARIANISM? Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Ryan P. Williams, Claremont Graduate University Part: Michael S. Greve, American Enterprise Institute Michael M. Uhlmann, Claremont Graduate University Eric Claeys, George Mason University Nikolai G. Wenzel, Hillsdale College Panel 12 THE PHILOSOPHICAL Sat 8:00 am FOUNDATIONS OF LIBERALISM Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Robert K. Faulkner, Boston College Papers: Lockes State of Nature Nasser Behnegar, Boston College Locke, Smith, and the Problem of Human Nature Peter McNamara, Utah State University Paolo Sarpi on Constitutionalizing Religion Christopher Nadon, Claremont McKenna College Disc: Susan Shell, Boston College Peter C. Myers, University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire Peter Josephson, Saint Anselm College

COMMITTEE FOR POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY


Chair: Florence Faucher-King, Sciences Po Panel 1 RIGHTS CLAIMING AND Thu 4:15 pm POLITICAL PARTICIPATION Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna Papers: Right to Information as a Tool to Empower the Marginalized: the Case of India Prakash Sarangi, University of Hyderabad Structure and Dynamics of Nationalist Mobilization in the Global South, 1870-2005 Chungse Jung, SUNY, Binghamton University Citizens Facing Transnationals: BP and the Rights Struggle in Transcaucasia Mikhail A. Molchanov Torn Souls: Expectations and Aspirations of Homeand Hostlands on Mega Power Diasporas Kjell Engelbrekt, Stockholm University Disc: Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna Anika Gauja, University of Sydney

COMMITTEE ON THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE GOOD SOCIETY


Chair: Stephen L. Elkin, University of Maryland Jeremy A. Janow, University of Maryland, College Park

Panel 1 XENOPHON AND THE Sat 2:00 pm CONSTITUTION OF THE GOOD SOCIETY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Gregory A. McBrayer, Emory University Papers: Xenophons Regime of the Lacedaimonians Susan D. Collins, University of Houston Xenophons Presentation of the Trial of Socrates Wayne Ambler, University of Colorado Xenophons Poroi and the Political Economy of the Good Society John D. Lewis, Duke University Xenophon on the Constitution of the Athenians Gregory A. McBrayer, Emory University

160

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

COMPARATIVE URBAN POLITICS


Chair: Ronald K. Vogel, University of Louisville Thu 4:15 pm Panel 1 ROUNDTABLE: MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE IN CANADA: CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS AND POWER SHIFTS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 30-9

Panel 2 THE RIGHT TO THE CITY IN Thu 2:00 pm COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 30-13 Chair: David Imbroscio, University of Louisville Part: Cara Nine, University College Cork Loren A. King, Wilfrid Laurier University David Imbroscio, University of Louisville Mark Purcell, University of Washington Edesio Fernandes, University College London

Disc:

CONFERENCE GROUP ON ITALIAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY


Chair: James Lawrie Newell, University of Salford Panel 1 THE ITALIAN POLITICAL Thu 10:15 am SYSTEM 150 YEARS ON: THE RISORGIMENTOS RELEVANCE TODAY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: James Lawrie Newell, University of Salford Papers: A Search Long 150 Years: Understanding Cabinet Instability in Italy Arianna Farinelli Alessandro Cagossi, West Virginia University Italy at 150: Still a Divisied Society Laura Polverari, University of Strathclyde Was Italian Nation-Building Really a Failure? An Empirical Investigation into the Nationalization of a Peripheral Territory: The Case of Sardinia Christophe Roux, University of Montpellier The Risorgimento in 20th Century Italian Political Discourse Rosario Forlenza, Princeton University Bjorn Thomassen, American University of Rome Shall Risorgimento be Celebrated? Media, Politics and Cultural History of a Seemingly Uncontested National Past Chiara Tedaldi, University College Dublin Disc: Simona Piattoni, University of Innsbruck

A New Model of Performance Politics in Taiwan Karl Ho, University of Texas, Dallas Harold D. Clarke, University of North Texas Li-Khan (Tim) Chen, Soochow University Categorizing the Candidates Campaign Promises of Taiwanese Legislative Yuan Elections----Multi-label Classification Approach Da-Chi Liao, National Sun Yat-sen University Cheng-Xun Lee, National Sun Yat-Sen University Fu-ren Lin, National Tsing-Hua University Yu Tze Huang Political Polarization in Taiwan and the United States: Rational Politicians and Irrational Policies Alexander C. Tan, University of Canterbury Caleb M. Clark, Auburn University Who are the Independent Voters? Implications for Taiwans 2012 Presidential Elections T.Y. Wang, Illinois State University Ching-hsin Yu, National Chengchi University Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison Eric C.C. Chang, Michigan State University

RELATED GROUP PANELS

Panel 2 THE TAIWAN EXPERIENCE Fri 4:15 pm AND DEMOCRACY IN CHINA Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Dennis Hickey, Missouri State University Papers: Promoting Human Rights and Democracy: Comparing China to Taiwan Su-Mei Ooi, Butler University A Comparison of Institutional Confidence in China and Taiwan Chun-Chih Chang, National Chengchi University Lu-huei Chen, National Chengchi University A Typological Analysis of Democratic Attitudes in Mainland China and Taiwan Hsin-hao Huang, National Taiwan Normal University Economic Interdependence and Liberal Peace? The US-China-Taiwan Relations in the Era of Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) Dean Chen, University of California, Santa Barbara Testing the Diversionary Theory of Foreign Policy in Minor Powers: A Comparison of Three Young Asian Democracies Hsiao-Chi Hsu, University of Washington, Seattle Disc: Shelley Rigger, Davidson College Yuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan University

CRITICAL POLICY STUDIES


Chair: Jennifer Dodge, New York University Frank Fischer, Rutgers University, Newark Sun 10:15 am

CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES


Chair: Yuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan University Panel 1 NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE Sat 8:00 am STUDY OF TAIWAN POLITICS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Hans J. Stockton, University of St. Thomas Papers: Differences in the MMM Systems between Taiwan and Japan and Their Political Consequences Chi Huang, National Chengchi University

Panel 1 POLICY, IDENTITY, AND THE POLITICS OF DIFFERENCE Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-12 Panel 2 GOVERNANCE, POLICY LEARNING AND CHANGE Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 25-29 Chair: Jennifer Dodge, SUNY-Albany

Fri 2:00 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

161

Papers:

Disc:

Learning Unlimited? Working Across Boundaries in a Case of Collaborative Governance on the Youth Domain in Amsterdam, the Netherlands Tamara Metze, Tilburg University Program Change, Value Change, Both or Neither? Making Sense of The Big Society Elizabeth Super, University of Edinburgh Civil Society Organizations and Policy Learning: Assessing Unique Contributions to Collaborative Governance Jennifer Dodge, New York University Protecting the Environment: The EPAs New Approach Sara Rinfret, Hartwick College Craig W. Thomas, University of Washington

Disc:

Language and the Evocation of Order On Eric Voegelins Concept of the Political Matthias Riedl, Central European University Voegelins Voyages in Languages between Consciousness and Reality Tilo Schabert, University of Erlangen, Nuremberg Barry Cooper, University of Calgary Steven Francis McGuire, Eastern University

ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY


Chair: Ellis Sandoz, Louisiana State University Panel 1 MYSTICISM & POLITICS IN Fri 2:00 pm VOEGELINS THEORY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Ellis Sandoz, Louisiana State University Papers: What is a Mystic Philosopher and Why does it Matter? Ellis Sandoz, Louisiana State University Achtung Dei! Eric Voegelin and the Consciousness of Political Inspiration Meins G.S. Coetsier, Ghent University EHOC The Voice of Revelation in the Conversation of Mankind Steven Ealy, Liberty Fund, Inc. Jihad in Islamic Thought and Practice Scott Segrest, U.S. Military Academy Disc: William Petropulos, Eric Voegelin Archive, Munich Macon W. Boczek, Kent State University Panel 2 RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE AND Sat 8:00 am POLITICS: ERIC VOEGELIN AND BEYOND Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Claudia Kinkela, National Endowment for the Humanities Papers: Politicsand Religion in the Late Paleolithic Barry Cooper, University of Calgary Nietzsches Most Abysmal Thought Michael Allen Gillespie, Duke University The Noetic Turn: From Zarathustra to the Wisdom of Salomon Wolfgang Leidhold, University of Cologne Communicating Mystical Experience: The Problem of Secondary Symbolism Eugene Webb, University of Washington Disc: Meins G.S. Coetsier, Ghent University EHOC Glenn Hughes, St. Marys University (TX) Panel 3 THE LANGUAGES OF ERIC Thu 2:00 pm VOEGELIN Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Tilo Schabert, University of Erlangen, Nuremberg Papers: Eric Voegelin and the Languages of Science and Common Sense John F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge Voegelins Uses of Metaphor Glenn Hughes, St. Marys University (TX)

Panel 4 THE RANGE OF HUMAN Thu 8:00 am MEMORY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Manfred Henningsen, University of Hawaii-Manoa Papers: The Origins of Evil and the Banality of its Perpetrators: Schelling, Freud, Arendt, Voegelin Manfred Henningsen, University of Hawaii-Manoa American Forgetting: Abraham Lincoln, the Conquest of the West and the Removal of Indians Patrick S. Johnston, University of Hawaii at Manoa The Khmer Rouge and the Re-Visioning of the Khmer Empire Steven Michael DeBurger, University of Hawaii at Manoa The African Bushmen and the Origins of Human Consciousness Louis Gershon Herman, University of Hawaii, West Oahu Disc: Juergen Gebhardt, University of Erlangen, Nuremberg Michael G. Franz, Loyola College of Maryland Panel 5 ORDER AND DISORDER IN Sat 4:15 pm INTERNATIONAL POLITICS: FROM PACEM IN TERRIS TO THE REGENSBURG ADDRESS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Timothy Fuller, Colorado College Papers: Pacem in Terris and the Regensburg Address Timothy Fuller, Colorado College 21st Century International Politics: The Perspective from the Small States Martin Palous, Czech Ambassador to the United Nations Pacem in Terris and Just War Theory David D. Corey, Baylor University Joseph de Maistres Insufficient Response to the Crisis T. John Jamieson, Independent Scholar Disc: David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America William M. Thompson-Uberuaga, Duquesne University Panel 6 IS THERE A CLASH OF Fri 10:15 am CIVILIZATIONS? GEOPOLITICS AND GLOBALIZATION. Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Greg Russell, University of Oklahoma Part: Timothy J. Lomperis, Saint Louis University Michael C. Desch, University of Notre Dame Peter Von Sivers, University of Utah David Clinton, Baylor University Daniel G. Lang, Lynchburg College Greg Russell, University of Oklahoma

162

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

Panel 7 WHAT DOES MASS MAN DO Thu 10:15 am WITH HIS SOUL? POPULAR ARTS IN DEMOCRACIES Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Charles R. Embry, Texas A&M University, Commerce Papers: The Original Port Huron Statement: Identity and Second Reality in The Big Lebowski Alan I. Baily, Stephen F. Austin State University Harry, Ron, Hermione: J.K. Rowling, Aristotelian Friendship and the Fully Human Life. Jeffrey C. Herndon, Texas A&M UniversityCommerce J.R.R. Tolkeins Lord of the Rings: mythopoesis, heroism, and providence Thomas J. McPartland, Kentucky State University Justice and the Western Perception of Dostoevsky: Woody Allens Crimes and Misdemeanors and Match Point Michal Maciej Kuz, Louisiana State University The Gnostic Zombie: Bare Life and the Death of the Soul Peter Yoonsuk Paik, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Disc: Timothy Hoye, Texas Womans University Rodney Kilcup, Independent scholar Panel 8 REALISM IN POLITICAL Fri 4:15 pm PHILOSOPHY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Matthias Riedl, Central European University Papers: Phenomenalism and Spiritual Realism Juergen Gebhardt, University of Erlangen, Nuremberg A Renaissance of Realism? Recent Contributions to Realistic Philosophical Tradition Hans-Joerg Sigwart, University of Erlangen, Nuernberg Hobbes and Spinoza. The Realist Reaction to Religious Warfare Maxwell Reed Staley, Central European University Rousseau in the Philosophy of Eric Voegelin Carolina Armenteros, University of Groningen Disc: Peter Brickey LeQuire, University of Chicago Michael Allen Gillespie, Duke University Panel 9 VOEGELIN AND Sat 10:15 am PERSONALISM Room: No Room Assigned Chair: David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America Papers: Wojtylas Personalism and Kantian Human Dignity: Parallel Avenues of Reason within the Tension toward the Ground of Existence. Gustavo A. Santos, Catholic University of America Humanity and the Human Person in Kant, Schelling, and Voegelin Steven Francis McGuire, Eastern University Voegelin and the Philosophy of Personalism: The Early Years William Petropulos, Eric Voegelin Archive, Munich Lonergans Voegelin: Why Voegelin is and is not an Existentialist Sarah Shea, McGill University

Disc:

John F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge

Panel 10 PERSPECTIVES ON THE Fri 8:00 am CRISIS OF MODERNITY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Sylvie Courtine-Denamy, CEVIPOF Papers: Hunting the Devils: Eric Voegelin and Simone Weil Sylvie Courtine-Denamy, CEVIPOF Modernity and secularisation in The Legitimacy of the Modern Age of Hans Blumenberg Thierry Gontier, University of Jean Moulin - Lyon 3 Eric Voegelin and Hannah Arendt on Action Robert Virdis, McMaster University On the Centrality of the Jewish Experience in the Political Theory of Hannah Arendt Jennifer Richard, Louisiana State University Disc: Daniel Ronald Larabie, University of Calgary David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America Panel 11 A REPUBLIC IF YOU CAN Sat 2:00 pm KEEP IT: CONSTITUTIONALISM IN CRISIS? Room: No Room Assigned Chair: James R. Stoner, Jr., Louisiana State University Part: Hadley Arkes, Amherst College Matthew J. Franck, Witherspoon Institute Ralph A. Rossum, Claremont McKenna College James R. Stoner, Jr., Louisiana State University David C. Brown, Loyola University, New Orleans Panel 12 VOEGELIN STUDIES AND Thu 4:15 pm EAST ASIAN POLITICS: THE SILENT BRUSH-POLITICS & ART IN CHINA Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Paul Caringella, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace Papers: Writing Outside the City Walls Barret Dolph, Zhen Jiang Chinese Culture Center Hieroglyph: Origin and Essence of Chinese Calligraphy Jiang Li Qun, Su Technology and Science University Tian Jiang, Jiang Su University The Reception of Hannah Arendt in China Benjamin Li, Jiang Su University Disc: Timothy J. Lomperis, Saint Louis University Eugene Webb, University of Washington Zhang Xu-Rui, JingNan Morning Newspaper Tian Jiang, Jiang Su University

RELATED GROUP PANELS

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

163

EUROPEAN CONSORTIUM FOR POLITICAL RESEARCH


Chair: Jacob Torfing, Roskilde Universitet Panel 1 COLLABORATIVE Thu 8:00 am INNOVATION IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR: HOW CAN GOVERNANCE NETWORKS PRODUCE POLICY INNOVATION? Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Jacob Torfing, Roskilde Universitet Eva Sorensen, Roskilde University Papers: Enhancing Collaborative Innovation in the Public Sector Jacob Torfing, Roskilde Universitet Eva Sorensen, Roskilde University Collaborative Governance: The Role of Leadership in Facilitating Creative Problem-Solving Christopher K. Ansell, University of California, Berkeley Alison Gash, University of Oregon Christopher Koliba, University of Vermont Fostering Innovation Through Project Evaluation Criteria Experimentation in a Regional Transportation Planning Governance Network Christopher Koliba, University of Vermont Asim Zia, University of Vermont Collaborative Regional Governance in the Netherlands: Credible Innovations or Persistent Routines? Tamara Metze, Tilburg University Disc: Jean Kunz, Policy Research Initiative Banny Banerjee, Stanford University

Disc:

France Back in the Chair: FPEU08, G8 and G20 Presidencies Compared Helen Drake, Loughborough University I Love You, Me Neither: Policy Transfer in Higher Education Policy and the Dual Role of Globalization in Discourse and Modes of Governance in France Cecile Hoareau, UC BERKELEY Andrew M. Appleton, Washington State University

GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICAL SCIENTISTS


Chair: Guoli Liu, College of Charleston Quansheng Zhao, American University

FRENCH POLITICS GROUP


Chair: Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University Thu 4:15 pm Panel 1 THEME PANEL: PARITY AND THE SHIFT FROM UNIVERSAL TO GROUP RIGHTS IN FRANCE Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 15-5 Panel 2 FRENCH PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 36-25

Sat 8:00 am

Panel 1 POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT Fri 2:00 pm UNDER AN AUTHORITARIAN REGIME: FINDINGS FROM RECENT SURVEY RESEARCH IN CHINA Room: No Room Assigned Chair: M. Kent Jennings, University of California, Santa Barbara Papers: Social Trust and Local Governance in Rural China Jie Chen, Old Dominion University Narisong Huhe, Old Dominion University Measuring Political Trust in China: Reflections on Surveys in the Last Two Decades Lianjiang Li, Chinese University of Hong Kong Why is the Central State More Persuasive? The Effects of Public Service Announcements on Political Trust and Satisfaction in Urban China Daniela Stockmann, Leiden University Ashley Esarey, Whitman College Jie Zhang, Communication University of China Effects of Third-Party Presence on Survey Responses: The Chinese Case Wenfang Tang, University of Iowa Liying Ren, Peking University Religious, Social and Political Values of Chinese Christians: A Preliminary Study Yang Zhong, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Disc: Ning Zhang, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo M. Kent Jennings, University of California, Santa Barbara Panel 2 DYNAMICS IN CROSS-STRAIT Sat 8:00 am RELATIONS: TAIWAN, CHINA, AND THE ASIA-PACIFIC STABILITY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Anand A. Yang, University of Washington Papers: The Moral and Institutional Basis of Cross-Taiwan Strait Political Reconciliation Jacques De Lisle, University of Pennsyvlania Butter versus Guns: Economic Interdependence and the Cross-Strait Relations Chung-chian Teng, National Chengchi University Yeh-Chung Lu, National Chengchi University Democratization and Political Reconciliation between Rivalries: The Case of Cross-Taiwan Strait Relations Kwei-Bo Huang, National Chengchi University

Panel 3 FRANCE AT THE EU, G8 AND Fri 2:00 pm G20: INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE IN QUESTION? Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Political Studies Association, Panel 2 Chair: Andrew M. Appleton, Washington State University Papers: Sarkozy lanti-Americain: French anti-Americanism and International Economic Governance Sophie Meunier, Princeton University The Return of the State? French Economic Policy under Nicolas Sarkozy Jonah Levy, University of California, Berkeley

164

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

Disc:

Electoral Reform, Issue Cleavages and the Consolidation of a Two-Party System in Taiwan Shelley Rigger, Davidson College The Internal-External Nexus in the Cross-Taiwan Strait Relations John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, University of South Carolina Shelley Rigger, Davidson College

Panel 3 RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITY Sat 10:15 am OF A RISING CHINA Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Susan Whiting, University of Washington Papers: Status and Responsibility: China Reconsiders its International Role Yong Deng, U.S. Naval Academy The Internal Challenge to the Making of Chinas Diplomatic Strategy Yufan Hao, University of Macau Can China Be a Benign Hegemony? Jianwei Wang, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point Lili Wu, University of Macau Critical Energy and Climate Issues in Local and Global Perspectives: Cases from China and the United States P. Brian Fisher, College of Charleston Guoli Liu, College of Charleston Why Does China Reject the International Criminal Court? Chinas Dilemma in International Human Rights and Humanitarian Regimes Jing Tao, Cornell University Disc: Yitan Li, Seattle University

Disc:

Do Traditional Get Out the Vote Campaign Methods Work In Spain? A Pilot Experiment on Non-Partisan Mobilisation of Immigrant Voters Laura Morales, University of Manchester Luis Ramiro, University Carlos III The Liberal Developmentalist State: The Role of the State in the Construction of Spanish Multinationals Pablo Toral, Beloit College Coalition formation in transitional regimes. The case of Spain and Portugal (1974-1978) Ivo Lima Veiga, University College London Thomas D. Lancaster, Emory University

INDIGENOUS STUDIES NETWORK


Chair: Anne FB Flaherty, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville Sheryl R. Lightfoot, University of British Columbia

RELATED GROUP PANELS

GREEN POLITICS AND THEORY


Chair: Joel J. Kassiola, San Francisco State University David Whiteman, University of South Carolina

Panel 1 RESPONSES TO CLIMATE Thu 2:00 pm CHANGE: ETHICS, RIGHTS, AND JUSTICE Room: No Room Assigned Chair: David Schlosberg, University of Sydney Breena Holland, Lehigh University Part: Simon L. Caney, University of Oxford Paul Baer, University of California at Berkeley Sudhir Chella Rajan, Indian Institute of Technology Madras

Panel 1 LAWS, ORGANIZATIONS, AND Fri 8:00 am INDIGENOUS PEOPLES RIGHTS Room: No Room Assigned Papers: Determinants of Successful American Indian Resistance to the Establishment of State Government Jurisdiction under Public Law 280: A Comparative Case Study of the Processes of Exemption and Retrocession Shane D. Day, Indiana University, Bloomington Sarabeth Anderson, Grand View College ENDORSEMENT, NOT IMPLEMENTATION: INDIGENOUS RIGHTS IN THE ANGLOSPHERE Sheryl R. Lightfoot, University of British Columbia Inventing the Indigenous: The International Labor Organization and Indigenous Peoples Jan Ldert, University of British Columbia Public opinion, Framing, and Strategy for Indigenous Justice: What is the Role of Public Will? Fiona MacDonald, University of Manitoba Indigenous Rights and International Human Rights Courts : Between Specificity and Circulation of Principles Elisa Ruozzi, University of Turin Disc: Anne FB Flaherty, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville Panel 2 THEORIZING SETTLERFri 10:15 am COLONIALISM Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 32-18 Chair: Dory Nason, University of British Columbia Paula Mohan Papers: Ressentiment and Indigenous Anti-Colonialism Glen S. Coulthard, University of British Columbia Interrogating Settlement Robert Nichols, University of Alberta Formations of Settler-Colonialism: Nonwhite migrants, Indigenous peoples, and Settler Nation-Building Rita Dhamoon, University of the Fraser Valley Circumscribed Spheres of Belonging and Action: Framing Indigenous Self-Determination in Terms of Non-Domination Derek Kornelsen, University of British Columbia

IBERIAN STUDIES GROUP


Chair: Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida Panel 1 DEVELOPMENTS IN IBERIAN Sat 2:00 pm POLITICS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Kevin Costa, Radio France Internationale Papers: THE GLOBAL CRISIS AND THE SPANISH FINANCIAL SYSTEM. FROM BOOM TO BUST? Sebastian Royo, Suffolk University

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

165

Disc:

Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson College James Simeone, Illinois Wesleyan University

INSTITUTE FOR CONSTITUTIONAL STUDIES


Chair: Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland Maeva Marcus, George Washington University Sat 8:00 am

Panel 1 RACE, GENDER, AND SEXUALITY IN INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 7-14

INTELLIGENCE STUDIES GROUP


Chair: Loch K. Johnson, University of Georgia Panel 1 ASSESSING INTELLIGENCE Sun 10:15 am REFORM Room: No Room Assigned Chair: James Igoe Walsh, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Part: Amy Zegart, University of California, Los Angeles James J. Wirtz, Naval Postgraduate School Loch K. Johnson, University of Georgia Patrick M. Morgan, University of California, Irvine Joshua Rovner, US Naval War College

Panel 2 CRAFTING INTERPRETIVE Fri 8:00 am RESEARCH: THEORETICAL POSSIBILITIES AND PRACTICAL CHALLENGES Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 46-19 Chair: Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Papers: Collecting Sensitive Data: On the Challenges of Studying Violence in Conflict Devorah Manekin, University of California, Los Angeles The Political Effect of Political Ethnography Revisited: Contributing to a Local Government Election Campaign While Researching It Morris D. Bidjerano, Walden University Embedded Ecologies: A Political Ethnography of Wildlife Conservation Parakh Hoon, Virginia Tech Object or Subject? The Role of Interpretive Methods for Studying Gender Jessica Peet, University of Florida Disc: Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Panel 3 CONCEPTUALIZATION: Fri 2:00 pm THEORETICAL APPROACHES AND EMPIRICAL APPLICATIONS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee 1 (Concepts and Methods), Panel 2

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF GERMAN POLITICS


Chair: Dan Hough, University of Sussex Panel 1 RETHINKING GERMAN Fri 8:00 am FEDERALISM: PERSPECTIVES ON A MULTI-LEVEL STATE Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University Papers: Understanding Germany as a Multi-level State Charlie Jeffery, University of Edinburgh Handling Diversity - The Politics of Migration in German Federalism Julia von Blumenthal, Humboldt University Territory Versus Party: Explaining Public Policy Variation in the German Lnder Ed Turner, Aston University The Second-orderness of Voting Behaviour in State Elections: Evidence from the German Multi-level System Jochen Mueller, University of Mannheim Marc Debus, University of Mannheim

IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #12 (BIOLOGY AND POLITICS)


Chair: Panel 1 Room: Chair: Papers: Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University Albert Somit, Southern Illinois University EVOLUTION AND POLITICS Sat 8:00 am No Room Assigned Albert Somit, Southern Illinois University The Evolution of Political Organization Michael Latner, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Struggling for Recognition Doron Shultziner Maneuvering Minds: The Artful Management of Reason and Emotion for Political Gain Nancy E. Aiken Albert Somit, Southern Illinois University

Disc:

IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #36 (POWER)


Chair: Mark Haugaard, National University of Ireland, Galway Kevin Ryan, National University of Ireland, Galway Thu 8:00 am

INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES AND METHODS


Chair: Ido Oren, University of Florida Thu 12:15 pm Panel 1 THE METHODS CAF Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 46-12

Panel 1 IS POWER ZERO-SUM? Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 3-13

166

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE 1 (CONCEPTS AND METHODS)


Chair: Cas Mudde, DePauw University Frederic C. Schaffer, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Thu 8:00 am

Disc:

De-composing Preferences over Institutional Change Kuniaki Nemoto, Harvard University Melodie Chika Ogawa, Harvard University

LABOR PROJECT
Chair: Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota Susan E. Orr, SUNY, Brockport Sat 4:15 pm

Panel 1 THEME ROUNDTABLE: HANNA PITKINS CONCEPT OF REPRESENTATION REVISITED: A NEW AGENDA FOR STUDYING REPRESENTATION RIGHTS? Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 34-10

Panel 1 THE POLITICS OF LABOR RIGHTS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-9

Panel 2 CONCEPTUALIZATION: Fri 2:00 pm THEORETICAL APPROACHES AND EMPIRICAL APPLICATIONS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods, Panel 3 Chair: Robert Kaufman Adcock, George Washington University Papers: Concept Misformation in Multi-Method Research: Mechanism Muddling and Conceptual Slippage Ariel Ahram, University of Oklahoma The Concept Construction of Chinese Democracy Wen-Hsuan Tsai, National Cheng-chi University Thin Descriptions: The Limits of Survey Research on the Meaning of Democracy Frederic C. Schaffer, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Political Concepts Between Individual Meaningmaking and Socio-political Traditions: Bridging the Gap Jrgen Petersen Disc: Robert Kaufman Adcock, George Washington University

Panel 2 WORKERS RIGHTS IN AN Fri 4:15 pm INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-33 Chair: Susan E. Orr, SUNY, Brockport Papers: Defining and Defending Workers Rights in International Trade Treaties Gordon Lafer, University of Oregon H-1B Guestworkers, Non-Resident Disputants: Resistance and Law in the New US Knowledge Economy (1990-2010) Gabrielle Clark Asymmetric Governance, Labour Standards, and Migrants Rights Branka Likic Brboric, Linkping University Carl-Ulrik Schierup, Linkping University The UN Global Compact and The Integration of Human Rights Principles into Business Practices Daniel Braaten, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Disc: Richard Michael Locke, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mohammed Rodwan Abouharb, University College London

RELATED GROUP PANELS

LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION


Chair: Cynthia McClintock, George Washington University Panel 1 DECENTRALIZED NATURAL Fri 2:00 pm RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN RECENTRALIZING LATIN AMERICA Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Kent Eaton, University of California, Santa Cruz Papers: Recentralization in Latin America: Institutional Arenas and Presidential Leverage J. Tyler Dickovick, Washington and Lee University Global Governors and Local Governance: Transnational Advocacy Networks and De Facto Decentralization of Watershed Management in Ecuador Craig M Kauffman, George Washington University Decentralization of Water Management Through the Consolidation of Water User Organizations in the Chambo River Basin, Ecuador Jaime D. Hoogesteger van Dijk, Wageningen UR

JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP


Chair: Deborah J. Milly, Virginia Tech Panel 1 THE UNIMAGINED PARTY AND Sat 2:00 pm POLITICIAN RESPONSES TO JAPANS ELECTORAL REFORMS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Ellis S. Krauss, University of California, San Diego Kenneth Mori McElwain, University of Michigan Papers: Legal Mobilization in Japan: Using Litigation to Influence Policy-Making Celeste Arrington, Harvard University When Politicians Play with Fire: Explaining the Sudden Attention to Foreign and National Security Policy by Japans Political Leadership Amy Louise Catalinac, Harvard University Candidate Recruitment Strategies in Changing Electoral Environments Daniel Markham Smith, University of California, San Diego Robert J. Pekkanen, University of Washington

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

167

Disc:

Decentralization and Deforestation: Examining the Ecological Footprint of Local Governments in Three Latin American Countries Krister P. Andersson, University of Colorado Tom Evans, Indiana University Clark C. Gibson, University of California, San Diego Glenn D. Wright, University of Colorado, Boulder Kent Eaton, University of California, Santa Cruz Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis

Part:

Stephen D. Ansolabehere, Harvard University Michael P. McDonald, George Mason University Michael Kang, Emory University Micah Altman, Harvard University Justin Levitt, Loyola Law School

LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, AND TRANSGENDERED CAUCUS


Chair: Cynthia Burack, Ohio State University Shawn Richard Schulenberg, Marshall University Fri 10:15 am

Panel 2 THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS Sat 10:15 am OF LGTB RIGHTS IN LATIN AMERICA Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 47-7 Chair: Mario Martn Pecheny, Universidad de Buenos Aires Papers: A Discursive Earthquake: Debates, Opinions and Reactions Around Same Sex Marriage in Mexico City Oscar E. Laguna Maqueda, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana-Xoxhimilco Guillermo De los Reyes, University of Houston Why Was Argentina the First Country in Latin America to Legalize Gay Marriage and Adoption? Javier Corrales, Amherst College Mario Martn Pecheny, Universidad de Buenos Aires Explaining Variance in the Expansion of Lesbian and Gay Rights in Latin America: Argentina, Chile, Mexico, and Uruguay Jordi Diez, University of Guelph Political Parties and Same-Sex Partnership Recognition in Latin America Shawn Richard Schulenberg, Marshall University Religion Enters Sexual Politics: Catholic and Evangelical Churches Discuss Same-Sex Marriage in Argentina Juan Marco Vaggione, CONICET/Universidad Nacional de Crdoba Daniel Jones, CONICET/Universidad Nacional de Buenos Aires Disc: Kenneth Sherrill, CUNY, Hunter College

Panel 1 SEXUAL MINORITY RIGHTS AND LGBTQ PEOPLE: DISCOURSE AND FRAMING IN MOVEMENT ACTIVISM Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 47-5 Panel 2 PUBLIC OPINION, THE LAW, AND LGBT RIGHTS: FROM GLOBAL TO LOCAL Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 47-6

Thu 8:00 am

MCCONNELL CENTER FOR POLITICAL LEADERSHIP


Chair: Aida Just, Intercollegiate Studies Institute Panel 1 STATESMANSHIP AND Sat 4:15 pm DEMOCRACY Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Rouven J. Steeves, U.S. Air Force Academy Papers: The Steward in Statesmanship: Taking Responsibility for the Most Important Things Timothy L. Simpson, Morehead State University Democratic Leadership: Principled Motivator John W. Carter, U.S. Naval Academy Moral Leadership and Administrative Statesmanship: Safeguards of Democracy in a Constitutional Republic Chad B. Newswander, University of South Dakota Detached Statesmanship: The Successes and Failures of Alexander Hamilton Angelo Valente, Catholic University of America Disc: Phillip G. Henderson, Catholic University of America

LATINO CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE


Chair: Rodney E. Hero, University of California, Berkeley Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College Thu 4:15 pm

Panel 1 THE NEW LATINO POLITICS? Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 32-15

NATIONAL HUMANITIES INSTITUTE


Chair: Gregory S. Butler, New Mexico State University Panel 1 THE POLITICS OF HUMAN Thu 4:15 pm SCALE Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Claes G. Ryn, Catholic University of America Papers: TBA Gregory S. Butler, New Mexico State University TBA Michael P. Federici, Mercyhurst College TBA Jeffrey Polet, Hope College

LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDY GROUP


Chair: Bruce E. Cain, University of California, Berkeley Richard L. Hasen, Loyola Law School

Panel 1 REDISTRICTING Sat 8:00 am ROUNDTABLE: LAW AND POLITICS IN THE NEW DECADE Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Mark E. Rush, American University of Sharjah Bruce E. Cain, University of California, Berkeley

168

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

POLICY STUDIES ORGANIZATION


Chair: Hank C. Jenkins-Smith, University of Oklahoma Thu 10:15 am Panel 1 POVERTY AND PUBLIC POLICY Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1497581-1

Bruce M. Russett, Yale University Bruce J. Bueno de Mesquita, New York University and Stanford University Panel 3 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Sat 2:00 pm FORECASTING Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa Papers: The Primary Model: Beyond New Hampshire Helmut Norpoth, SUNY, Stony Brook Michael Bednarczuk, SUNY, Stony Brook University Who Should Be Nominated to Run in the 2012 Presidential Election? Long-term Forecasts Based on Candidates Biographies. Andreas Graefe J. Scott Armstrong, University of Pennsylvania FORECASTING THE 2012 US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION: WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM A STATE LEVEL POLITICAL ECONOMY MODEL? Veronique Jerome, University of Paris XI-Sud Orsay Bruno Jrme Assessing the Bias of the Electoral College Brian J. Gaines, University of Illinois Neil Thomas Baer, University of Illinois-Urbana/ Champaign Disc: Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa Lara Michelle Brown, Villanova University

POLITICA: STUDY OF MEDIEVAL POLITICAL THOUGHT


Chair: Gerson Moreno-Riano, Regent University Panel 1 POLITICS AND ECONOMICS IN Fri 4:15 pm THE MIDDLE AGES Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Gerson Moreno-Riano, Regent University Papers: Do we need Jerusalem and Athens? A Straussian Reflection on the Role of Religion Mara Alejandra Vanney Money Matters: Labor, Commerce and the Politics of Inclusion Before 1250 Cary J. Nederman, Texas A&M University Property and Politics in the Political Thought of John of Paris Gerson Moreno-Riano, Regent University

RELATED GROUP PANELS

POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP


Chair: James E. Campbell, SUNY, University at Buffalo Panel 1 ISSUES IN FORECASTING Fri 10:15 am ELECTIONS Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Alan I. Abramowitz, Emory University Papers: Issues of Election Forecasting: Theory, Stability, Multiple Forecasts, and Accuracy James E. Campbell, SUNY, University at Buffalo Election Forecasting: Theory v. Practice Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa Charles P. Tien, CUNY-Hunter College Campaigns and the Forecasting of Election Outcomes: Combining Historical and Campaign-Period Prediction Models Eric Belanger, McGill University Stuart N. Soroka, McGill University Combining Within and Across Methods for Greater Accuracy in Presidential Elections Forecasting Alfred G. Cuzan, University of West Florida Andreas Graefe J. Scott Armstrong, University of Pennsylvania Randall J. Jones, Jr., University of Central Oklahoma Disc: Alan I. Abramowitz, Emory University Panel 2 THE PREDICTIONEERS GAME Sat 8:00 am AND BEYOND: AN ASSESSMENT OF BRUCE BUENO DE MESQUITAS FORECASTING MODEL Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Patrick James, University of Southern California Part: Rose McDermott, Brown University James Lee Ray, Vanderbilt University

POLITICAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION


Chair: Terrell Carver, University of Bristol Panel 1 THE POLITICS OF RIGHTS IN Sat 8:00 am THE UK Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by British Politics Group, Panel 3 Panel 2 FRANCE AT THE EU, G8 AND Fri 2:00 pm G20: INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE IN QUESTION? Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 3

POVERTY, INEQUALITY, AND PUBLIC POLICY CAUCUS


Chair: Daniel Ivan Gutierrez-Sandoval, Policy Studies Organization Max J. Skidmore, University of Missouri, Kansas City

Panel 1 POVERTY AND PUBLIC Thu 10:15 am POLICY Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Policy Studies Organization, Panel 1 Chair: Max J. Skidmore, University of Missouri, Kansas City Papers: Foreign Aid and Poverty Reduction: Does Aid Channel Matter? Gabriella R. Montinola, University of California, Davis Reducing Poverty Through Social Security Andrew Dobelstein, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

169

Disc:

Invisibility and Political Legitimacy: A Case Study in News Coverage of Poverty Andrew R. Cline, Missouri State University Conditional Cash Transfers (CCTs) and Chile Solidario: An Assessment of the Successes and Failures of the CCTs in Latin America with a Focus on the Chile Solidario Program Silvia Borzutzky, Carnegie Mellon University The Celebration of Enfranchisement: Coming Together to Vote on Election Day Martha E. Kropf, University of North Carolina, Charlotte David Pezzella, University of North CarolinaCharlotte Max J. Skidmore, University of Missouri, Kansas City

PRACTICING POLITICS WORKING GROUP


Chair: Irene S. Wu, Federal Communications Commisssion Fri 8:00 am Panel 1 GOVERNING BILATERALLY: THE POLITICS OF BITS AND PTAS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 16-5

Panel 3 THE CHANGING NATURE OF Fri 2:00 pm THE WORLDS SECOND OLDEST PROFESSION: THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF MODERN DIPLOMACY PROJECT Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 20-27 Chair: Jorge Heine, Centre for International Governance Innovation Papers: Stretching the Boundaries of who does Diplomacy: Current Debates and Future Scenarios about the role of celebrities Andrew F. Cooper, University of Waterloo Human Rights Diplomacy in the Modern World David P. Forsythe, University of Nebraska Out with the Old, In with the Old: Cultural Diplomacy in the Digital Age Patricia Goff, Wilfrid Laurier University From club to network diplomacy Jorge Heine, Centre for International Governance Innovation Disc: Carlos Portales, American University Panel 4 THE POLITICS OF FEDERAL Sat 10:15 am BUDGET PROCESS REFORM Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 24-10 Chair: James D. Savage, University of Virginia Papers: Tie Me to the Mast: The Politics of Fiscal Rules Steve Redburn, National Academy of Sciences Will It Take a Crisis? The Prospects for Democratic Foresight in Dealing with Fiscal Challenges Paul L. Posner, George Mason University Path Dependence in the Federal Budget Process: Explanation and Prescription Roy T. Meyers, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Smoke and Mirrors: Public Uncertainty, PsuedoOpinions and The Illusion of Public Perceptions of Budget Forecasts Michael Brogan, Rider University Disc: James D. Savage, University of Virginia

Panel 2 TECHNOLOGY, Thu 8:00 am DEVELOPMENT AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: BEYOND INSTRUMENTALITY, LIBERALIZATION, AND PARTICIPATION Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 40-9 Papers: Deliberating Information Technologies for Development (ICT4D): Lessons From History J. P. Singh, Georgetown University Future research questions related to telecom, media, and Internet policy: a perspective from inside the Federal Communications Commission Irene S. Wu, Federal Communications Commisssion When Do States Disconnect Their Digital Networks? Participation and Deliberation in the Modern Authoritarian State Philip N. Howard, University of Washington Sheetal P. Agarwal, University of Washington Muzammil M. Hussain, University of Washington Disjointed Innovation: The Political Economy of Digitally Mediated Institutional Reform Jane E. Fountain, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Seeing Like a Slum: Participatory Technology for Participatory Democracy Kevin Donovan Tim Kelly, The World Bank Disc: Stuart W. Shulman, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL OF FEDERALISM


Chair: Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University Sat 4:15 pm Panel 1 FISCAL FEDERALISM: FEDERAL ASSISTANCE TO U.S. STATES Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 28-4

Panel 2 THE STATE OF AMERICAN Fri 2:00 pm FEDERALISM 2010-2011 Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 28-8 Chair: Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University Papers: An Overview of American Federalism in 2010-2011 Shama Gamkhar, University of Texas at Austin J. Mitchell Pickerill, Washington State University

170

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

Disc:

Emergency Response, Doctrinal Confusion and Federalism in the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University Sarah DeYoung, North Carolina State University A New Educational Federalism? What Race to the Top Reveals About the Influence of No Child Left Behind Paul Manna, College of William & Mary Contested Federalism and American Climate Policy Barry G. Rabe, University of Michigan Lisa L. Miller, Rutgers University

SLOVENIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION


Chair: Miro Hacek, University of Ljubljana Panel 1 TWENTY YEARS AFTER THE Sat 2:00 pm BREAKUP OF YUGOSLAVIA: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Miro Hacek, University of Ljubljana Papers: Hangover After Transition Party: Democracy and Capitalism Misinterpreted in Post-Communist Slovenia Cirila Toplak, University of Ljubljana Metaphor change and persistence: Use of political metaphors in the breakup of Yugoslavia Jernej Pikalo, University of Ljubljana Twenty Years After the Breakup of Yugoslavia: Case of Serbia Vladimir Dejan Pavicevic, University of Belgrade Political Economy of Yugoslav Dissolution: Between Economic Nationalism and Europeanization Zdravko Petak, University of Zagreb Serbia as a Failed State Milan ljubomir Podunavac, University of Belgrade Socialism or Statism: The Case of the Disintegration of Yugoslavia Dejan Jovic, University of Stirling Politically Incorrect Understanding of Social Reconstruction in Post-Conflict Bosnia and Herzegovina or Why Bosnia and Herzegovina Is Not Yugoslavia in Small Dino Abazovic, University of Sarajevo Disc: Cornell W. Clayton, Washington State University

Panel 3 SOCRATES ON JUSTICE, EROS, Sat 2:00 pm AND THE GODS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-39 Chair: Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas, Austin Papers: Desiring God: Law and the Moral Sense in Platos Minos Robert Goldberg, St. Johns College Self-Knowledge and Knowledge of Erotics in Platos Phaedrus David Levy, Boston College Socrates Alcibiades Problem David Leibowitz, Kenyon College Gravity and Levity: Aristophanes and Socrates on the Gods Lisa Leibowitz, Kenyon College Disc: Robert C. Bartlett, Boston College Timothy W. Burns, Skidmore College Panel 4 THE ROMAN KNOWS Sun 10:15 am Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by Ciceronian Society, Panel 2 Chair: Justin B. Litke, George Washington University Papers: Athenian Virtue in Plutarchs Lives of Themistocles and Aristides Andrew Hertzoff, California State University, Sacramento Cicero on the Mixed Regime Jed William Atkins, Duke University The Roots of Order in Post-Modern Times: The Ancient Polis, the Modern Republic, and the PostModern Cosmopolitan Alpha City Rouven J. Steeves, U.S. Air Force Academy Disc: J. Jackson Barlow, Juniata College Jason Caro, University of Houston, Downtown

RELATED GROUP PANELS

SOCIETY FOR ROMANIAN STUDIES


Chair: Paul E. Sum, University of North Dakota Panel 1 SOCIETY FOR ROMANIAN Thu 2:00 pm STUDIES Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Paul E. Sum, University of North Dakota Papers: Corruption an Enemy of Civil Society: The Case of Post-Communist Europe Patty Zakaria, Wayne State University The Unbearable Burden of Forgetting. Lustration in Post-Communist Romania Andreea Maierean, Boston University Representation Rights in Media: The Case of Political Candidates to the 2009 Romanian Elections for the European Parliament Madalina Botan, National School of Political Studies & Public Administration The Right to Information in Post-Communist Europe: The Case of Romania Mihaiela Ristei Gugiu, Central Michigan University Can the Degree of Citizen Autonomy and Responsibility Influence the Outlook of Gender Equality? - A Comparative Study on the Prospects of Traditional Ethics and the Feminist Ethics in the Wake of a Proceduralist Conception of Rights Mirela Ghita-Nemes, Babes-Bolyai University

SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT


Chair: Leslie G. Rubin, Duquesne University Thu 8:00 am Panel 1 VIOLENCE, ACTION, AND WITHDRAWAL IN DEMOCRATIC ATHENS Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 1-16 Panel 2 POETRY, PHILOSOPHY, AND POLITICS IN GREEK AND RENAISSANCE TRAGEDY Room: No Room Assigned Co-sponsored by 41-4

Sat 4:15 pm

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

171

Disc:

Ronald F. King, San Diego State University

SOCIETY OF CATHOLIC SOCIAL SCIENTISTS


Chair: Kenneth L. Grasso, Texas State University Panel 1 TOCQUEVILLE AND Fri 8:00 am CATHOLICISM Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Kenneth L. Grasso, Texas State University Papers: Where does Democracy in America Fit in the Disagreement Between Modern Political Philosophy and Medieval Catholic Political Thought About What Constitutes Society? Gary D. Glenn, Northern Illinois University Tocqueville on Christianity and the Natural Equality of Man Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College Tocquevilles Thomistic Correction of the Magnanimous Man on Greatness and Justice (and Its Connection to Walker Percys Catholic Revision of the Southern Stoic Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College Disc: Kenneth L. Grasso, Texas State University Carson L. Holloway, University of Nebraska, Omaha

WOMENS CAUCUS FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE


Chair: Brigid Harrison, Montclair State University Panel 1 20 YEARS AFTER ANITA HILL: Fri 10:15 am AN EXAMINATION OF SEXUAL HARASSMENT IN ACADEME AND BEYOND Room: No Room Assigned Chair: Brigid Harrison, Montclair State University Part: Terry L. Karl, Stanford University Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina James D. Decker, Macon State College

172

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS


APSA MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS APSA Meetings
Organized Sections Meeting 2012 APSA Program Committee Meeting Thu 7:00 am Sat 7:00 am 31 Women and Politics Research Business Meeting 32 Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Business Meeting 33 Religion and Politics Business Meeting 35 Political Organizations and Parties Business Meeting Political Organizations and Parties Organized Section Executive Council Business Meeting 38 Political Communication Business Meeting 40 Information Technology and Politics Business Meeting 41 Politics, Literature, and Film Business Meeting 42 New Political Science Business Meeting New Political Science Editorial Board Business Meeting New Political Science Publications Executive Committee Business Meeting 43 International History and Politics Business Meeting 44 Comparative Democratization Business Meeting 46 Qualitative and Multi-method Research Business Meeting 47 Sexuality and Politics Business Meeting 49 Canadian Politics Business Meeting 50 Political Networks Business Meeting 51 Experimental Research Experimental Political Science Business Meeting Publius: The Journal of Federalism Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Thu 12:15 pm

Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered (LGBT) in the Profession Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by the Sexuality and Politics Organized Section and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Caucus

DIVISION MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS Section Meetings


2 Foundations of Political Theory Business Meeting 5 Political Psychology Business Meeting 6 Political Economy Business Meeting 7 Politics and History Business Meeting 8 Political Methodology Business Meeting 10 Political Science Education Business Meeting 11 Comparative Politics Business Meeting 19 International Security and Arms Control Business Meeting 21 Conflict Processes Business Meeting 22 Legislative Studies Business Meeting 23 Presidency Research Business Meeting Presidency Research Group Board Meeting 24 Public Administration Business Meeting 25 Public Policy Business Meeting 26 Law and Courts Business Meeting 28 Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations Business Meeting 29 State Politics and Policy Business Meeting 30 Urban Politics Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Fri 7:00 am Sat 6:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Sat 12:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm

Fri 6:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Thu 12:15 pm

Fri 12:15 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

Sat 6:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm

Fri 7:00 am

Section Receptions
2 Foundations of Political Theory Reception 7 Politics and History Reception 19 International Security and Arms Control Reception Co-Sponsored by the Journal of Strategic Studies 20 Foreign Policy Reception Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

173

Co-Sponsored by Conflict Processes Organized Section 21 Conflict Processes Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Foreign Policy Organized Section 22 Legislative Studies Reception 23 Presidency Research Board Meeting Reception 24 Public Administration Reception Co-Sponsored by Public Policy Organized Section Fri 7:30 pm Thu 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm

Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society Business Meeting French Politics Group Business Meeting Indigenous Studies Network Business Meeting Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Business Meeting Labor Project Business Meeting Latino Caucus in Political Science Business Meeting

Fri 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm

25 Public Policy Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Public Administration Organized Section 26 Law and Courts Reception Fri 7:30 pm

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Policy Studies Organization Editorial Meeting The Association of Korean Political Studies Business Meeting Womens Caucus for Political Science Business Meeting Sat 9:00 am Fri 6:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm

31 Women and Politics Research Women of Color Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by the Womens Caucus for Political Science 33 Religion and Politics Reception 40 Information Technology and Politics Reception 42 New Political Science Reception Thu 7:30 pm Thu 7:30 pm Sat 10:00 pm

Related Group Receptions


American Society for Political & Legal Philosophy Reception Sat 7:30 pm Association Franaise de Science Politique Group Reception Fri 10:00 pm Co-Sponsored by French Politics Group and French Embassy British Politics Group Reception Christians in Political Science Reception Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society Reception European Consortium for Political Research Reception Fri 7:30 pm Sat 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm

43 International History and Politics Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Organized Section 44 Comparative Democratization Reception Sat 7:30 pm

46 Qualitative and Multi-method Research Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by International History and Politics Organized Section 47 Sexuality and Politics Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered in the Profession and Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Caucus 49 Canadian Politics Reception Fri 7:30 pm

French Politics Group Reception Fri 10:00 pm Co-Sponsored by Association Franaise de Science Politique and French Embassy Latino Caucus in Political Science Reception Sat 7:30 pm

RELATED GROUP MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS Related Group Meetings


African Politics Conference Group Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Sexuality and Politics Organized Section and Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered in the Profession The Association of Korean Political Studies Reception Fri 7:30 pm

American Society for Political & Legal Philosophy Business Meeting Sat 12:15 pm Christians in Political Science Business Meeting Sat 6:15 pm

Womens Caucus for Political Science Women of Color Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by the Women and Politics Research Organized Section Reception in Honor of Women in the Fri 7:30 pm Profession

174

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

Co-Sponsored by the Women and Politics Research Organized Section

AFFILIATE GROUP MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS Affiliate Group Meetings


Business Meeting Editorial Board Meeting American National Election Studies Board Meeting Public Meeting Catalist Data Catalist Data Information Session Empirical Implications of Theoretical Models Business Meeting Journal of Politics Editorial Board Meeting Legislative Studies Quarterly Editorial Board Meeting Midwest Political Science Association MPSA Council Meeting MPSA 2012 Program Committee Meeting National Conference of Black Political Scientists Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Sat 8:00 am Sat 10:00 am Thu 6:15 pm Fri 8:00 am Thu 12:15 pm Fri 8:00 am Fri 2:00 pm Fri 4:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm

Co-Sponsored by Rice University, University of Texas, Texas Tech University, and University of Houston Texas Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Texas A&M University, Rice University, University of Texas, and University of Houston Texas Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Texas A&M University, Rice University, University of Texas, and Texas Tech University Texas Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Texas A&M University, Rice University, Texas Tech University, and University of Houston Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Social Science Quarterly 29 State Politics and Policy Reception 30 Urban Politics Reception 38 Political Communication Reception American University Reception Boston College Department of Political Science Reception City University of New York Graduate Center Reception Thu 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm Thu 7:30 pm Thu 7:30 pm

Northwestern University Department of Political Science Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Pi Sigma Alpha Board Meeting Politics and Policy Editorial Board Meeting Review of Policy Research Editorial Board Meeting Southern Political Science Association Executive Council Meeting Theory and Event Editorial Board Meeting Thucydides Research Group Reception of Thucydides Research Group Yale University Business Meeting Thu 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm Sun 10:00 am Fri 6:15 pm

Columbia University Department of Political Science Reception Fri 7:30 pm Cornell University Government Department Reception Duke University Department of Political Science Reception Florida State University Reception Global Policy Journal Reception Co-Sponsored by London School of Economics Harvard University Department of Government Reception Institute for Humane Studies Reception Fri 7:30 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm Thu 7:30 pm

Inter-University Consortium for Political & Social Research Reception Fri 7:30 pm Intercollegiate Studies Institute Reception Jack Miller Center Reception Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm

Affiliate Group Receptions


Reception Thu 7:30 pm Reception Fri 7:30 pm Reception Fri 10:00 pm Co-Sponsored by the French Politics Group and the Association Franaise de Science Politique Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by the International Security and Arms Control Organized Section Texas Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-Sponsored by Texas A&M University, University of Texas, Texas Tech University, and University of Houston Texas Reception Fri 7:30 pm

Johns Hopkins University Department of Political Science Reception Thu 7:30 pm London School of Economics Reception Co-Sponsored Global Policy Journal MIT Political Science Department Reception Fri 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

175

National Conference of Black Political Scientists Reception

Thu 7:30 pm

New York University Wilf Family Department of Politics Reception Thu 7:30 pm Ohio State University Department of Political Science Reception Thu 7:30 pm Pi Sigma Alpha Reception Political Research Quarterly Reception Co-Sponsored by Washington State University Political Studies Association Reception Princeton University Reception Quarterly Journal of Political Science Reception Rutgers University Reception Thu 6:00 pm Thu 7:30 pm

Thu 7:30 pm Fri 10:00 pm Fri 10:00 pm Fri 7:30 pm

Stanford University Department of Political Science Reception Fri 7:30 pm University of California, Berkeley Reception University of California, San Diego Reception University of Chicago Reception University of Maryland College Park Reception University of Michigan Reception University of Oregon Reception Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm Thu 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm

University of Pennsylvania Political Science Department Reception Thu 7:30 pm University of Rochester Political Science Department Reception Sat 7:30 pm University of Wisconsin Madison Reception Washington State University Reception Co-Sponsored by Political Research Quarterly Yale University Reception Fri 7:30 pm Thu 7:30 pm

Fri 7:30 pm

176

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)

A
Aagaard Seeberg, Michael ........35 Aaroe, Lene................................21 Abazovic, Dino.........................171 Abbarno, Aaron J. .....................23 Abbas, Asma .........................8, 13 Abbott, Kenneth W. ...................69 Abbott, Philip.............................92 Abdelaaty, Lamis .....................145 Abdelal, Rawi .............................45 Abedi, Amir ..............................151 Abel, Andrea ..............................66 Abel, Troy D. ............................133 Abouharb, Mohammed Rodwan .................................167 Abrajano, Marisa........................45 Abramowitz, Alan I. ........... 28, 169 Abramson, Paul R....................125 Abramson, Scott........................42 Abramyan, Hovannes ..............130 Abulof, Uriel.............................156 Acevedo, Maria Cecilia..............49 Ackelsberg, Martha A. .................8 Ackerly, Brooke A.............. 17, 108 Acs, Alex....................................31 Adams, James ........... 18, 121, 125 Adams, Karen Ruth ............. 74, 76 Adamson, Fiona B. ........ 68, 69, 74 Adamson, Morgan .......................8 Adcock, Robert Kaufman ....... 146, 167 Adida, Claire Leslie ............. 26, 45 Adler, David Gray ......................92 Adler, Scott ................................88 Adolphs, Ralph ..........................23 Affigne, Tony.................... 113, 114 Agarwal, Sheetal P...................170 Aggarwal, Vinod K.....................50 Aguilar-Pariente, Rosario ....... 114, 123 Ahlquist, John Stephen..... 30, 151 Ahmed, Amel F. .......................119 Ahmed, Faisal Z....................... 144 Ahn, T.K....................................124 Ahram, Ariel..................... 146, 167 Ahuja, Amit ................................48 Aiken, Nancy E. .......................166 Ajala, Imne .............................113 Akan, Murat..............................142 Aksoy, Deniz ........................ 70, 86 Akturk, Sener ..................... 45, 118 Albala, Ilene .............................100 Albertson, Bethany....................87 Albertus, Michael.......................24 Alcaniz, Isabella.........................65 Aldrich, Daniel P. .......................95 Aldrich, John H......... 27, 121, 125, 126 Aleman, Eduardo .................41, 87 Aleman, Jose .............................39 Alex-Assensoh, Yvette M. .......112 Alexander, Amy C. .....................43 Alexander, John S. .................. 142 Alexander, Michelle .....................1 Alexander-Davey, Ethan ..........136 Alexiadou, Despina....... 24, 25, 37, 39 Alford, John R. ........................129 Aligica, Paul Dragos..................65 Allard, Scott W.........................104 Allee, Todd L..............................69 Allen, Barbara .................... 78, 130 Allen, Christopher S. ..... 56, 57, 58

Allen, Mahalley D..................... 101 Allen, Susan H. ..........................78 Almqvist, Jessica Maria ..........100 Alperovitz, Gar.............................9 Alptekin, Huseyin ......................59 Alt, Robert................................159 Altema, Natasha.......................114 Alter, Karen J. .................. 101, 139 Althaus, Scott L. ...................... 132 Altman, Micah .................. 135, 168 Alvarez, R. Michael ...... 23, 95, 151 Alves, Ana C. A..........................85 Alvi, Hayat............................ 77, 79 Alzate, Elissa B........................117 Ambar, Saladin Malik...............157 Amberg, Stephen.......................56 Ambler, Wayne.........................160 Ames, Barry ...............................39 Amstutz, Mark R. .....................158 Andersen, Ellen Ann ....... 102, 149 Anderson, Christopher J...........57 Anderson, Justin V. ...................69 Anderson, Karen M....................44 Anderson, Sarabeth.................165 Anderson, Sarah........................24 Andersson, Krister P. ..............168 Ando, Michihito .......................144 Andr, Audrey..........................119 Andreopoulos, George J. .........66, 68, Andrews, David M......................81 Andrews, Rhys ..........................94 Ang, Yuen Yuen .........................26 Angevine, Sara .................. 89, 110 Anghie, Antony............................6 Anikin, Evgeny E. ......................54 Anker, Elisabeth.....................4, 17 Anner, Mark................................61 Annesley, Claire.........................96 Anria, Santiago ..........................46 Ansell, Ben William ...................36 Ansell, Christopher K. ....... 95, 164 Ansolabehere, Stephen D....... 125, 168 Aoki, Andrew L. ............... 114, 155 Aparicio, Francisco Javier ........51 Apodaca, Clair .........................145 Apostolidis, Paul C.............. 9, 110 Appe, Susan M. .........................98 Appel, Benjamin .................. 84, 85 Appel, Hilary ..............................27 Appleton, Andrew M. ...............164 Arah, Benjamin ........................154 Arana, Ignacio............................41 Arat, Zehra F. Kabasakal .........145 Arbour, Brian K........................132 Arceneaux, Kevin .............. 20, 152 Archer, Emerald.......................149 Ardanaz, Martin ...................25, 43 Arel-Bundock, Vincent ..............43 Arias, Luz Marina.......................26 Ariga, Kenichi .................... 37, 119 Arkes, Hadley .................. 160, 163 Arlen, Gordon R...........................5 Armenteros, Carolina ..............163 Armitage, Faith ..........................89 Armstrong, J. Scott .................169 Arneil, Barbara.........................3, 9 Arnhart, Larry ............................16 Arnn, Kathleen.........................159 Arnold, Christine ............... 58, 119 Arnold, Kathleen R. .....................7 Aronson, Jacob .........................71 Arrington, Celeste ...................167 Arriola, Leonardo R. ..................49

Arruda de Almeida, Monica.......64 Art, David ............................. 46, 59 Art, Robert J. .............................76 Arugay, Aries A........................146 Arva, Bryan Joseph...................83 Arya, Neelum .............................99 Asaba, Yuki ..............................144 Asal, Victor .................. 79, 83, 151 Ascher, Ivan Andr ......................8 Ashbee, Edward.........................42 Ashworth, Scott................... 18, 82 Asmussen, Nicole....................116 Atanasov, Iliya ...........................31 Atherton, Michelle J. ...............108 Atkins, Jed William..................171 Atkinson, James ........................24 Atkison, Larissa M.......................5 Auld, Graeme .............................68 Avant, Deborah ........................160 Avdan, Nazli .........................75, 83 Avdeyeva, Olga A. ... 109, 111, 112 Avelino, George F. .....................39 Avinger, Katie ..........................109 Avramenko, Richard ................136 Azari, Julia Rezazadeh ...... 91, 111 Azmanova, Albena............... 10, 11 Azpuru, Dinorah.........................37

B
Baccini, Leonardo ............... 60, 65 Bachner, Jennifer ......................34 Back, Hanna...............................37 Backer, David.............................50 Baer, Judith A. .........................102 Baer, Neil Thomas ...................169 Baer, Paul.................................165 Bagashka, Tanya .......................54 Bailey, Jeremy D......................154 Baily, Alan I.............................. 163 Baird, Vanessa...........................99 Bak, Daehee...............................80 Baker, Andy .........................35, 61 Baker, Dana Lee.......................150 Baker, Paul Manuel Aviles.......135 Bakich, Spencer D. .............. 70, 74 Bakiner, Onur.............................28 Bakir, Caner ...............................41 Bakke, Kristin Marie ............ 72, 73 Balasubramanyan, Ramnath .....20 Balcells, Laia .............................47 Baldez, Lisa .........................66, 98 Baldi, Gregory Charles........ 55, 57 Baldwin, David A. ......................61 Baldwin, Katharine A......... 35, 154 Balestrini, Pierre Philippe .......130 Balfour, Lawrie.............................3 Bali, Asli U. ................................99 Balmaceda, Vilma C.................158 Balmas, Meital .........................131 Balme, Richard ................ 133, 134 Balzer, Amanda........................116 Banaszak, Lee Ann.................. 111 Banda, Kevin K........................132 Banerjee, Banny ......................164 Banks, Antoine J. .................... 129 Banks, Katherine .......................78 Bapat, Navin A..................... 70, 83 Barabas, Jason................ 131, 152 Barakso, Maryann............ 108, 149 Baranowski, Michael K..............34 Barber, IV, Benjamin S...............35 Barber, Sotirios A. ...................155 Barberia, Lorena G. ...................39

Barbieri, Katherine.....................86 Bargu, Banu.............................3, 6 Barker, David C........................116 Barkin, J. Samuel ......................68 Barlow, J. Jackson ............ 12, 171 Barma, Naazneen.......................68 Barnes, Carolyn.......................115 Barnes, Jeb................................99 Barnes, Lucy..............................47 Barnes, Matthew ......................130 Barnes, Tiffany D............... 40, 112 Barnett, Michael N. ....................73 Barratt, Bethany.......................145 Barreto, Matt A........ 114, 115, 127, 128, 129 Barria, Lilian A...........................67 Barrilleaux, Charles J. ............. 106 Barrington, Lowell W. ..............156 Barrow, Clyde W. .....................138 Barry, Colin ................................61 Bartels, Brandon L. ......... 100, 101 Bartels, Larry M. .................. 3, 130 Barth, Jay...................................95 Bartilow, Horace A.....................63 Bartlett, Robert C............. 159, 171 Barvosa, Edwina..................1, 137 Barzilai, Gad ............................102 Bas, Muhammet.........................74 Basant, Rakesh..........................50 Basedau, Matthias .....................51 Bass, Harold F. ..........................91 Bassel, Leah ............................156 Bassi, Anna................................18 Bastiaens, Ida ............................63 Batchis, Wayne ..........................99 Bateman, David Alexander........30 Battista, James S.C. ..................88 Bauer, Gretchen M...................112 Bauer, Kelly..............................113 Baughman, John R....................90 Baume, Sandrine JeanneAntide........................................8 Baumgartner, Frank R. .... 121, 156 Bayar, Murat...............................45 Baylor, Christopher .................121 Baynes, Kenneth .......................17 Bayram, A. Burcu ................21, 67 Beach, Derek ........................... 146 Bearce, David H. .................. 62, 63 Beatty, Linnea ............................74 Beauchamp, Nicholas................31 Beaumont, Elizabeth ...............102 Beausoleil, Emily J. .....................5 Beaussier, Anne Laure ............150 Beazer, Quintin H.................53, 63 Beber, Bernd.................. 41, 82, 84 Bech, Emily Cochran...............113 Becher, Michael ...................25, 55 Beck, Paul Allen ......................120 Beckett, Katherine ............. 97, 108 Beckley, Michael C. ...................70 Beckmann, Matthew N...............91 Bedi, Sonu ........................... 11, 17 Bednar, Jenna.................. 122, 155 Bednarczuk, Michael ...............169 Beerbohm, Eric.................... 12, 17 Behnegar, Nasser ....................160 Beim, Deborah .........................100 Beissinger, Mark ................ 36, 148 Bekafigo, Marija Anna ............. 135 Belanger, Eric .................. 126, 169 Belco, Michelle Helene ..............87 Belge, Ceren ..............................72 Bell, Duncan ................................4 Bell, Melissa Ann.....................110

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

177

Bellhouse, Mary L............4, 7, 147 Bellin, Eva R. .........................1, 46 Below, Amy M. ...........................78 Beltran, Cristina................... 10, 17 Ben-Artzi, Ruth .................... 64, 68 Ben-Ishai, Elizabeth.....................8 Ben-Josef Hirsch, Michal ..........71 Ben-Porath, Sigal R. ..................17 Bengtsson, Asa .......................119 Benhabib, Seyla.....................6, 10 Benjamin, PhD, Andrea ........... 116 Benjamin-Alvarado, Jonathan ...............................129 Bennett, Andrew ................ 74, 148 Bennett, Colin J. ...................... 135 Bennett, Jane.............................10 Bennett, W. Lance ...................132 Benoit, Kenneth R. ............ 31, 118 Benson, Michelle A....................85 Benton, Allyson L. ...................141 Berardo, Ramiro ........ 96, 133, 152 Berent, Matthew.......................123 Berg, John C...................... 34, 137 Berger, Benjamin F. ............. 12, 15 Berger, Daniel ............................35 Berger, William ..........................12 Berggren, Niclas ......................117 Bergo, Bettina G. .......................11 Berinsky, Adam J............... 61, 129 Berk, Christopher Dimitri ........ 107 Berk, Mary..................................12 Berkowitz, Roger ...................7, 11 Berlin, Anna .............................118 Berliner, Daniel ..........................46 Berman, Joshua A ...................122 Berman, Sheri .................. 141, 143 Bermeo, Nancy ........................143 Bermeo, Sarah ...........................62 Bernal, Angelica Maria ..............16 Bernhard, Michael ............. 57, 144 Bernhard, William T. ............64, 90 Bernhardt, Brian ..........................9 Bernhardt, Dan ..........................19 Bernstein, Jonathan ................151 Berry, Frances Stokes ...............92 Berry, Jeffrey M. .............. 121, 122 Berry, Justin ............................123 Bersch, Katherine Schlosser ....43 Bertelli, Anthony Michael .... 56, 94 Bertram, Eva ..............................98 Bertrand, Jacques .....................96 Best, Robin E..................... 32, 118 Betti, Daniel ...............................14 Betts, Alexander ........................73 Bevir, Mark ...................................4 Beyer, Jessica L. .....................136 Bhavnani, Rikhil............... 118, 126 Biava, Ryan..............................135 Bibby, Andrew .........................137 Biberman, Yelena.......................42 Bickford, Susan ...........................5 Bidjerano, Morris D. ................166 Biebricher, Thomas ...................13 Biela, Jan ...................................93 Bielasiak, Jack...........................53 Biggers, Daniel ................ 105, 123 Biglaiser, Glen ...........................60 Bilev, Gavril................................52 Bird, Karen......................... 57, 120 Birkland, Thomas A. .... 93, 95, 171 Birney, Mayling ..........................53 Birnir, Johanna Kristin ..............86 Bishin, Benjamin ............... 89, 117 Bither-Terry, Russell ..................46 Bittick, Robin Marshall ............117 Bjoernskov, Christian ..............117 Blackmar, Jeannette ..................93 Blackwell, Matthew ....................31 Blair, Graeme .............................86 Blake, Charles H. .....................126 Blake, Daniel J...........................63 Blake, Michael.................... 12, 155 Blanchard, Philippe ........... 89, 146 Bland, Ph.D., Gary .....................94 Blanding, David .........................95

Blanton, Hart..............................21 Blanton, Robert G......................63 Blanton, Shannon Lindsey........63 Blass, Abby Katharine..... 100, 142 Blatt, Jessica .............................13 Blaydes, Lisa A.................. 37, 112 Bleck, Jaimie .............................37 Bleek, Philipp Carroll.................69 Bleich, Erik J........................44, 55 Bliss, Daniel E. ........................108 Bloom, Mia M. ...................... 82, 83 Bluestone, Peter ......................104 Blumenberg, Johannes N..........42 Blyth, Mark......................... 65, 141 Boas, Morten .............................75 Boas, Taylor C. ........................148 Boatright, Robert G. ................120 Bob, Clifford A...........................62 Boczek, Macon W. ...................162 Bodansky, Daniel.......................67 Bode, Leticia.................... 134, 135 Bodet, Marc A. .........................119 Boehmelt, Tobias Friedrich Karl..........................................86 Boehmer, Charles R. .................85 Boehmke, Frederick J. .... 105, 110 Bogliaccini, Juan .......................46 Bohle, Dorothee.........................59 Bohman, James.........................15 Bohnet, Heidrun.........................70 Boiter-Jolley, Annie L. .............111 Bolsen, Toby...................... 21, 131 Bolzendahl, Catherine ...............56 Bomberg, Elizabeth .................104 Bond, Jon R.............................124 Bond, Kanisha ...........................83 Bond, Robert ............. 20, 125, 152 Bonica, Adam ..........................122 Bonneau, Chris W............ 101, 106 Boone, Catherine.......................45 Boone, Tyler...............................79 Boothe, Katherine......................96 Borick, Christopher P. .............104 Borowiak, Craig ................... 9, 140 Borrelli, MaryAnne.....................91 Boryczka, Jocelyn M. ..............138 Borzutzky, Silvia ......................170 Bos, Angela L. .........................110 Bosia, Michael J. .....................148 Bossuroy, Thomas.....................36 Bosteels, Bruno ...........................8 Botan, Madalina.......................171 Botcheva-Andonova, Liliana .....65 Botero, Sandra...........................43 Boudreau, Cheryl.....................123 Bourdeaux, Carolyn Jordan ....104 Bourke, James E. ......................16 Boushey, Graeme ....................105 Boutin, Kenneth J......................76 Bow, Shannon L. .......................92 Bowen, Wyn...............................76 Bowers, Melanie ......................129 Bowler, Shaun.......... 115, 119, 124 Bowyer, Benjamin T. ..................23 Box-Steffensmeier, Janet M. .....32 Boydstun, Amber Ellen ........... 131 Boyea, Brent D. .......................101 Boylan, Brandon M....................70 Boyle, Michael J. .......................74 Boynton, George Robert .........135 Bozonelos, Dino N...................128 Bozovic, Iva ...............................54 Braaten, Daniel ........................167 Brack, Nathalie ........................156 Brader, Ted................... 21, 23, 124 Bradizza, Luigi .........................159 Bradley, Megan .................... 15, 17 Bradley-Storey, Lacey .............136 Brady, Henry E...........................53 Brady, Michael C........................89 Bragaw, Stephen G.............. 27, 28 Braithwaite, Alex................ 83, 151 Brake, Benjamin ......................101 Brambor, Thomas ......................39 Brams, Steven J. .......................19

Branch, Adam ..........................154 Brandon, William P. .................154 Brandwein, Pamela.................. 147 Branton, Regina P....................113 Brass, Jennifer N..................... 141 Brass, Paul R. ............................28 Braun, Robert ............................58 Bray, Janna ..............................122 Brazys, Samuel..........................64 Breiner, Peter D. ........................15 Bretting, John G. .....................114 Brettschneider, Corey L. .......3, 11 Brettschneider, Marla ..............137 Breunig, Christian ............. 25, 106 Brewer, Gene A..........................93 Breznitz, Dan .............................59 Brians, Craig Leonard ....... 34, 130 Bricout, John C........................135 Brink, Paul A............................ 117 Brinks, Daniel M. ............. 100, 142 Brito Vieira, Mnica .....................6 Broache, Michael Patrick ..........66 Brockhoff, Sarah........................86 Brogan, Michael.......................170 Bronner, Stephen Eric .............138 Brooks, Risa A...........................77 Brooks, Sarah M. ................. 39, 46 Brouard, Sylvain ......................156 Browers, Michaelle L. ..............143 Brown, Cheryl L............... 135, 150 Brown, Christopher M. ..............61 Brown, Colin ..............................56 Brown, David C........................163 Brown, David S.................... 24, 25 Brown, Douglas M. .................. 104 Brown, Lara Michelle...............169 Brown, Mitchell................ 111, 158 Brown, Nadia E........................146 Brown, Nathan .....................1, 144 Brown, Robert D. .....................126 Brown, Robert L. ................. 62, 77 Brown, Seyom ...........................80 Brown, Wendy .............................8 Broz, J. Lawrence......................61 Bruce, John M. ........................126 Brule, Rachel .............................48 Brunell, Thomas L. ....................90 Brunkhorst, Hauke.....................15 Bruyneel, Kevin M. ...... 4, 147, 166 Buchanan, Bruce .......................92 Buchanan, Scott C.....................77 Buchler, Justin...........................90 Buchwalter, Andrew ..................13 Buckinx, Barbara ................. 12, 16 Budabin, Alexandra C. ............146 Buehler, Michael ......................142 Bueno de Mesquita, Bruce J....................................... 45, 169 Bueno de Mesquita, Ethan .......19, 37, 84 Buhaug, Halvard ........................84 Bukovansky, Mlada....................68 Buliga-Stoian, Adriana ..............53 Bullock, John G. ...................... 123 Bullock, Will.............................105 Bulutgil, H. Zeynep ....................47 Bumiller, Kristin...........................9 Bunce, Valerie..........................143 Buonanno, Laurie Ann ..............33 Burack, Cynthia ............... 110, 168 Burbach, David T. ......................79 Burch, Traci ............. 107, 108, 138 Burden, Barry C................. 90, 105 Burdett, Tracy ............................90 Burgess, Aaron........................156 Burgess, Susan R....................149 Burgoon, Brian ..........................35 Burke, Thomas F........................99 Burkhart, Ross E. .................... 151 Burns, Nancy ...........................124 Burns, Peter F. .........................108 Burns, Timothy W. ...................171 Burrell, Barbara C....................110 Burstein, Paul ............................95 Busby, Joshua .....................72, 87

Busch, Andrew E..................... 159 Busch, Nathan E........................77 Busche, Heidi D. ...................... 109 Bush, Sarah S.................. 112, 142 Bustikova-Siroky, Lenka............43 Buthe, Tim.................... 60, 62, 139 Butler, Christopher K........... 85, 86 Butler, Gregory S.....................168 Butt, Ahsan Ishaq......................73 Buttorff, Gail Jeanne ...............144 Butz, Adam Michael.................129 Buzzetti, Eric............................159 Byrne, William F................... 12, 13 Byrnes, Timothy A........... 117, 118

C
Cagossi, Alessandro ...............161 Cain, Bruce E...........................168 Calabresi, Steven G.................155 Caldeira, Gregory A...................99 Calfano, Brian R. ............. 110, 117 Calhoun, Craig.............................8 Callan, Eamonn .........................17 Callander, Steven.......................18 Calvo, Ernesto F. .......................88 Cameron, David R....................143 Cammarano, Joseph ......... 92, 131 Cammett, Melani ...... 140, 141, 144 Camp, Edwin..............................25 Campbell, Andrea Louise.........27, 97, 150 Campbell, David E. .......... 117, 151 Campbell, James E..................169 Campbell, Joel R. ....................133 Campbell, Steven J....................81 Canache, Damarys ....................37 Canetti, Daphna ............. 20, 23, 51 Caney, Simon L.................. 10, 165 Cann, Damon M. ...................... 101 Canon, David T. .......................105 Cantor, Paul A............................13 Cantu, Francisco .......................38 Cao, Xiaoxia...............................21 Capoccia, Giovanni ........... 55, 147 Caporaso, James A. .......... 65, 148 Carapico, Sheila............... 110, 142 Caraway, Teri L. ................. 64, 167 Cardenas, Sonia ................ 66, 145 Careja, Romana .........................58 Caress, Stanley M....................111 Carey, John M............................38 Carey, Jr., Tony E..................... 113 Caringella, Paul .......................163 Carley, Sanya ...........................141 Carlin, Ryan .............................125 Carlitz, Ruth ...............................51 Carlson, Jon D.......................8, 71 Carman, Christopher J. ... 116, 129 Carnes, Matthew E.....................63 Caro, Jason..............................171 Caro, Veronica .....................24, 41 Carpenter, R. Charli ...................62 Carreira Da Silva, Filipe...............6 Carreras, Miguel .................. 41, 87 Carrese, Paul O........................159 Carroll, Royce A. ............... 88, 105 Carroll, Susan J. ...................... 110 Carsey, Thomas M. .................. 121 Carson, Jamie L.........................88 Carter, Betsy ..............................56 Carter, David B.....................70, 86 Carter, Jeff .................................50 Carter, John W. ........................168 Carter, Niambi M. .......................29 Carter, Timothy A.......................86 Carty, R. Kenneth .................... 120 Carvajal, Fernando ..................128 Carver, Terrell .................. 157, 169 Casella, Alessandra...................19 Caspar, Timothy W. ................. 159 Casper, Gretchen G. ............ 38, 40 Cassatella, Andrea.......................7 Cassell, Mark .............................96

178

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

Cassese, Erin.............................32 Cassidy, Jennifer .......................97 Cassino, Daniel R. ...................129 Castagnola, Andrea .................101 Castaneda-Angarita, Nestor ......41 Castiglione, Dario ....................120 Catalinac, Amy Louise ............167 Caughey, Devin Michael ............30 Cavari, Amnon ................... 92, 105 Caviedes, Alex A. ....................131 Ceaser, James W. ............ 154, 160 Cederman, Lars-Erik...... 83, 84, 85 Cedroni, Lorella .........................10 Celis, Karen ............... 57, 109, 120 Ceneviva, Ricardo .....................39 Cerny, Philip G...........................14 Cerwonka, Allaine........................7 Cha, Victor D............................157 Chai, Shaojin ...........................157 Chakrabarty, Bidyut.....................4 Chambers, Simone ..............16, 17 Chan, Alexsia...........................108 Chandra, Kanchan............... 39, 40 Chaney, Eric...............................37 Chang, Chun-Chih ...................161 Chang, Eric C.C. .......... 24, 40, 161 Chang, Han Il ........................... 126 Chapman, Terrence ............. 62, 70 Chapman Osterkatz, Sandra .....39 Chappell, Louise......................108 Charnock, Emily Jane ...............30 Chatagnier, Tyson......................85 Chatterjee, Abhishek ........... 29, 51 Chauchard, Simon...................130 Chaves, Elisabeth K. ...............138 Chazan, Naomi.............................1 Cheah, Pheng ..............................6 Checkel, Jeffrey T. ...................148 Cheek, Jr., H. Lee .................... 137 Cheibub, Jose Antonio............142 Chen, Dan ..................................54 Chen, Dean ..............................161 Chen, Jie ..................................164 Chen, Jowei ....................... 93, 127 Chen, Li-Khan (Tim) ................161 Chen, Lu-huei ..........................161 Chenoweth, Erica ................83, 84 Cherif, Feryal Marie ......... 117, 145 Cherniss, Joshua L. ..................16 Chernykh, Svitlana ....................24 Chestnut, Sheena ......................49 Cheung, Kelvin C. K. ...............157 Chi, Young Joo ........................107 Chiba, Daina ........................32, 85 Chidambaram, Soundarya.......108 Chien, Dennis Chiahon .............71 Childers, Matthew A. ............... 130 Childs, Sarah ...........................109 Chilton, Adam ............................60 Chilton, Bradley S....................101 Chiou, Fang-Yi ...........................91 Chiozza, Giacomo................ 51, 71 Chittick, William O. ....................81 Chiu, Yvonne .........................6, 74 Cho, Joan E. ..............................51 Cho, Seo-Young.........................63 Cho, Seok-ju ........................ 18, 19 Cho, Wondeuk ...........................79 Choi, Seung-Whan........ 70, 71, 79, 80 Chomiak, Laryssa....................141 Chong, Alberto ..........................38 Chong, Dennis .........................132 Chong, Ja Ian................... 140, 157 Chou, Chelsea Chia-chen........143 Choucri, Nazli ............................77 Chow, Jonathan T. ...................139 Christensen, Ericka .................101 Christensen, Kyle ....................135 Christensen, Thomas J. ..........140 Christiano, Thomas ...................12 Christov, Theodore ................6, 12 Chung, Kuyoun..........................79 Ciccariello-Maher, George.........11 Cichowski, Rachel A..................44

Cidam, Cigdem ..........................15 Cigler, Allan J. .........................120 Cingranelli, David L. .......... 61, 145 Cioffi, John W. ...........................43 Civettini, Andrew J.W. ......... 21, 22 Claassen, Christopher...............49 Claassen, Ryan........................120 Claeys, Eric..............................160 Claggett, William J.M...............121 Clark, Ann Marie ........................66 Clark, April K. ............................23 Clark, Caleb M. ........................161 Clark, Gabrielle ........................167 Clark, Janine..............................40 Clark, Michael ..........................127 Clark, Tom................................100 Clarke, Harold D. ............. 125, 161 Clarke, Kevin A.............. 31, 86, 87 Clarke, Michelle Tolman ..........3, 5 Clarke, Susan E. ........................96 Clarke, Warren .........................139 Clary, Christopher......................76 Clay, K. Chad ....................... 61, 85 Clayton, Amanda .......................30 Clayton, Cornell W...................171 Clemens, Austin ........................89 Clements, Paul...........................16 Cleveland, Clayton J.......... 80, 147 Clifford, Scott...........................152 Clifford, Stacy A. .........................9 Cline, Andrew R.......................170 Clinton, David ..........................162 Clinton, Joshua D. .....................88 Clough, Emily R.........................30 Clunan, Anne L. .........................77 Cluverius, John .......................105 Coakley, John ............................58 Cobb, Michael D. ................. 63, 80 Cobetto, Joseph ......................130 Coe, Andrew ..............................74 Coen, David ...............................42 Coetsier, Meins G.S. ................162 Coff, Hilde Roza............... 56, 109 Cogburn, Derrick L. ................. 135 Coggburn, Jerrell D. ............ 93, 94 Cohen, Adam .............................58 Cohen, Cathy J. ...........................1 Cohen, David B..........................91 Cohen, Diana Tracy ......... 135, 136 Cohen, Eliot A............................77 Cohen, Hagit ..............................19 Cohen, Michael D. .....................69 Cohen, William W.......................20 Cohon, Adam J. ................... 25, 39 Cojoc, Doru................................18 Colaresi, Michael P. ...................78 Cole, Richard L........................158 Coleman, John J......................121 Coleman, Major G. ...................112 Coles, Romand ......................8, 10 Colgan, Jeff.......................... 45, 65 Collard-Wexler, Simon...............82 Collier, David ..................... 34, 148 Collingwood, Loren ......... 114, 130 Collins, Kevin.............................21 Collins, Susan D. .....................160 Colton, Timothy J. ...................143 Comstock, Audrey Lynn............68 Condon, Meghan .....................153 Condra, Luke N.................. 36, 126 Conger, Kimberly H. ................120 Conklin, William E. ....................13 Connolly, William E....................10 Conover, Pamela Johnston .......23 Conrad, Courtenay R...........73, 84 Conroy-Krutz, Jeffrey K...........154 Conway, Andrew................ 71, 152 Cook, Helena ...........................119 Cook, Scott ................................84 Cook, Zachary Folsom ............129 Cooley, Alexander......................72 Cooney, Kevin J.......................158 Cooper, Andrew F. ...................170 Cooper, Barry...........................162 Cooper, Betsy L. ...................... 129

Cooper, Melinda...........................8 Cooper, Scott B. ........................63 Copeland, Dale .................... 70, 73 Copelovitch, Mark S. ........... 61, 64 Copsey, Nathaniel......................57 Corbetta, Renato......................151 Corder, J. Kevin .......................125 Corduneanu-Huci, Cristina.......24, 40 Corey, David D......................... 162 Corley, Pamela C. .................... 100 Corliss, Catherine L...................59 Corradetti, Claudio ......................9 Corral, Margarita.............. 119, 123 Corrales, Javier ............... 143, 168 Correa, Diego Sanches .............42 Correa-Cabrera, Guadalupe ....136 Corrigan, Bryce .........................31 Corstange, Daniel ........ 25, 50, 126 Cortell, Andrew P. ......................68 Costa, Carlos E..........................40 Costa, Kevin ...................... 58, 165 Costa, Olivier ...........................156 Costain, Anne N.......................111 Coughlan, Barry.......................135 Coulter, Michael L....................117 Coulthard, Glen S. ............... 3, 165 Courtine-Denamy, Sylvie ......... 163 Cowley, Philip ..........................157 Cox, Gary W...............................47 Cox, Robert Henry .....................59 Craemer, Thomas ................19, 20 Craig, Tobin L. .........................155 Cramer, Renee A........................99 Crammer, Cale .............................4 Cranmer, Skyler J. ...................151 Cravens, Matthew D. ...............124 Crawford, Kerry Frances ......... 110 Crawford, Neta C. ......................80 Crepaz, Markus M. L..................56 Crescenzi, Mark J.C....... 82, 85, 86 Crespin, Michael ........................89 Crisp, Brian F. ............................89 Crockett, David A.......................93 Cronin, Audrey Kurth ................77 Cropper, Porsha.......................115 Cross, Maia Keapuolani Davis ............................... 59, 140 Crotty, William J. .....................121 Crow, David..............................129 Crowder-Meyer, Melody........... 110 Cruz, Jose E. ...........................114 Cruz, Jose Miguel......................37 Cruz, Vanessa ..........................115 Culbert, Jennifer L.....................11 Culpepper, Pepper D. .... 34, 38, 43 Cunningham, David E................83 Cunningham, Kathleen Gallagher..................... 73, 83, 86 Cunow, Saul....................... 51, 126 Curley, Tyler M. ..........................68 Currah, Paisley .................... 8, 149 Curry, Rebecca S.......................99 Curry, Todd A...........................106 Curtice, John Kevin.................119 Curtis, K. Amber ...................... 125 Curtis, William M. ........................8 Cutts, David John....................128 Cuzan, Alfred G. ......................169 Czobor-Lupp, Mihaela .................5

D
DAoust, Anne-Marie ...............149 DCosta, Anthony P....................49 DOrazio, Vito.............................69 Dafoe, Allan ...............................87 Dagefrde, Mirjam ...................156 Dahbour, Omar ..........................16 Dahill-Brown, Sara Elizabeth.....97 Dahl, Erik J. ...............................78 Dahlstrm, Carl Johan ..............92 Dale, Allyson............................110 Daley, Dorothy .........................133

Dalrymple, Kajsa E. .................134 Dalton, Russell J. ....................119 Daly, Sarah Zukerman ......... 47, 72 Dana, Karam ......... 1, 50, 113, 127, 129 Dancey, Logan .........................122 Dancygier, Rafaela............... 49, 62 Danielson, Michael S. ..............141 Danneman, Nathan ....................84 Dar, Luciana Nogueira.............106 Darden, Keith A. .... 42, 45, 53, 156 Darmofal, David ...................31, 88 Darnell, Alfred............................38 Darnton, Christopher.................79 Das, Surma ..............................111 Dasandi, Niheer .......................151 Datz, Giselle...............................64 Davenport, Christian ........... 55, 84 Davidson, Michael .....................49 Davidson-Schmich, Louise K. .............................................46 Davies, David Oliver ................159 Davis, Belinda Creel ................106 Davis, Christina ............. 62, 66, 69 Davis, Darren ...........................113 Davis, Jr., James W. ..................68 Davis, Jeffrey ...........................100 Davis, Kevin.............................139 Davis, Tyler Blake......................93 Dawes, Chris T................... 22, 147 Dawson, Jill ...............................34 Dawson, Michael C. .................114 Dawuni, Josephine J. ................68 Day, Christopher......................154 Day, Jonathan ..........................124 Day, Shane D. ..........................165 Dayal, Anjali Kaushlesh ............74 de Carvalho, Gustavo Seignemartin...........................64 De Ferrari, Ignazio ...................126 de Graauw, Els.....................94, 95 De la Calle, Luis...................47, 70 de la Garza, Rodolfo O. ........... 121 De La O Torres, Ana Lorena .....38 de Leon, Erwin S. ....................149 De Lisle, Jacques ....................164 De los Reyes, Guillermo..........168 De Luca, Jr., Thomas S. ..........138 De Maio, Jennifer L. .......... 73, 134 de Marchi, Scott.........................90 De Miguel, Carolina G. ..............42 De Swert, Knut.........................132 de Vreese, Claes H. ...................55 De Vries, Catherine E. ..... 121, 127 Dean, Jodi..............................9, 12 Deardorff, Michelle D.................34 Debs, Alexandre .................. 45, 80 DeBurger, Steven Michael .......162 Debus, Marc.............................166 Decker, James D......................172 Decker, Scott .............................95 Deckman, Melissa....................111 Deeg, Richard E.........................57 Deegan-Krause, Kevin...............57 Deering, Christopher J. .............92 DeGregorio, Christine................88 Deiss-Helbig, Elisa...................156 deLeon, Peter.............................96 Delli Carpini, Michael X. ..........132 Dellmuth, Lisa Maria..................68 Deloughery, Kathleen ................83 Delshad, Ashlie B. .....................95 DeLuca, Kenneth Mathew .......137 Demchak, Chris C......................76 DeMeritt, Jacqueline H.R..... 73, 84 Den Hartog, Chris......................88 Deneen, Patrick J. ....... 4, 154, 160 Deng, Yong ..............................165 Deo, Nandini ............................138 Depauw, Sam ...........................119 Deputy, Emma..........................141 Desai, Raj M.............................153 DeSante, Christopher D..... 31, 129 Desch, Michael C....... 81, 158, 162 DeSipio, Louis .........................115

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

179

Desposato, Scott W. ..................51 Destler, Katharine Elizabeth Neem .......................................96 Deudney, Daniel................. 76, 139 Devaney, Joseph S. .................137 Deveaux, Monique ...................109 Dewan, Torun.............................18 DeYoung, Sarah .......................171 Dhamoon, Rita .........................165 Diarra, Gaoussou.......................64 Dias, Elsa .................................110 Diaz-Cayeros, Alberto.......... 25, 50 Diaz-Rosillo, Carlos E................91 Dickinson, Matthew J. ...............91 Dicklitch, Susan.......................149 Dickovick, J. Tyler ...................167 Dienstag, Joshua Foa..................7 Diermeier, Daniel .......................18 Diez, Jordi................................168 Dillon, Professor, Michael ...........3 Dillon, Nara ................................97 Dilts, Andrew ..................... 97, 138 Dimitrov, Martin ................... 43, 52 Dinan, John J................... 103, 158 Dinas, Elias ..............................119 Dinesen, Peter Thisted ..............22 Dionne, Kim Yi ................... 26, 154 DiSalvo, Daniel R.......................90 DiSarro, Joseph.......................157 Disch, Lisa J. .............................12 Diskin, Abraham ......................125 Distelhorst, Gregory ............43, 53 Dittmar, Kelly ...........................110 Dixon, Jennifer M. ...................140 Djupe, Paul A. .......... 117, 120, 124 Dobelstein, Andrew .................169 Dobuzinskis, Laurent........... 15, 16 Doces, John...............................26 Dodd, Lawrence C. ....................89 Dodge, Jennifer ............... 161, 162 Dogo, Harun...............................76 Doherty, Brendan J....................91 Doherty, David .........................125 Doherty-Sil, Eileen...................110 Doig, Jameson W.....................107 Dolan, Kathleen .......................124 Dolan, Jr., Thomas M.................85 Dolez, Bernard .........................109 Dolgert, Stefan Paul ....................4 Dolph, Barret ...........................163 Domanski, Robert J.................135 Domingo, Ligaya........................30 Dominguez, Casey Byrne....... 100, 151 Dominguez, Jaime ............. 95, 113 Donavan, Janet L.......................33 Donnelly, Michael ......................62 Donnelly, Paul F. ........................33 Donno, Daniela ..........................38 Donovan, Kevin .......................170 Donovan, Todd.........................128 Dring, Holger ...........................44 Dorobantu, Sinziana ................126 dos Santos, Pedro G. ..............109 Dougan, Bryan.........................149 Dougherty, Richard J...............159 Douglas, Andrew .........................6 Douglass, Rex............................49 Dow, Douglas C. ....................6, 15 Dow, Jay K.................................32 Dowd, Robert Alfred ..................44 Dowding, Keith ..........................14 Dowdle, Andrew J....................120 Dowling, Conor M. ...................125 Downes, Alexander B. ...............82 Downs, William M. ... 39, 41, 55, 58 Doyle, II, Thomas E. ..................74 Dragomir, Cristina .....................59 Dragu, Tiberiu C. ................. 18, 19 Drake, Helen ............................164 Dreher, Axel ...............................63 Dreyer, John Russell .................70 Driscoll, Jesse .........................139 Drope, Jeffrey ............................67 Drozdova, Katya .................. 76, 77

Druckman, James N. ...... 130, 132, 134, 147, 152 Drury, Alfred Cooper .................78 Dryzek, John S. ................... 17, 38 Dubin, Kenneth A. .....................42 Duch, Raymond M. ....................32 Dudas, Jeffrey R. .......................99 Duell, Dominik ...........................25 Duerr, Glen...............................151 Duffield, John S. ........................98 Duggan, Catherine S.M..............26 Dulio, David A..........................122 Dumitrescu, Delia ......................20 Dumm, Thomas L. .................3, 10 Dunaway, Johanna ..................131 Dunning, Thad ................... 36, 148 Dunoff, Jeffrey L........................67 Durant, Robert F. ............... 94, 134 Durbin, Brent ..................... 94, 130 Dutton, Yvonne ..........................71 Duval, Robert D. ......................135 Duvanova, Dinissa S. .......... 42, 54 Dvir-Gvirsman, Shira .................21 Dwyer, Caitlin Elizabeth...........105 Dwyre, Diana........ 89, 90, 120, 158 Dyck, Joshua J. .......................128

E
Ealy, Steven .............................162 Early, Bryan Robert ............. 70, 78 Easter, Beth ..................... 106, 121 Easter, Gerald M. .......................26 Easterly, Bianca Simone ......... 100 Eastin, Joshua C. ......................63 Eaton, Charles .........................150 Eaton, Kent ...................... 167, 168 Eck, Kristine ..............................86 Eckhouse, Laurel.......................32 Edelenbos, Jurian.................... 133 Edelstein, David M.....................82 Eder, Christina .........................109 Edge, Jennifer............................67 Edwards, Erica Elizabeth ..........56 Edwards, Margaret Emily ..........38 Egan, Patrick J. ............... 124, 129 Eggers, Andrew C......................47 Ehrenberg, John ......................138 Ehrlich, Sean D.................... 57, 61 Eichhorst, Werner......................38 Eichner, Maxine .......................109 Eichorst, Jason........................105 Eidelman, Gabriel ....................107 Eilstrup-Sangiovanni, Mette ......75 Eisenstadt, Todd...................... 141 Eisinger, Robert M. ..................131 El-Ghobashy, Mona ............. 40, 43 Elbasani, Arolda ......................142 Elder, Charles D.........................88 Elinson, Gregory......................102 Elis, Roy.....................................42 Elkin, Stephen L. .....................160 Elkins, Zachary .................. 35, 142 Elklit, Jorgen............................119 Ellermann, Antje ........................55 Elliott, Heather A. ................ 41, 67 Elliott, James R..........................95 Ellis, Elisabeth H. ................13, 16 Ellis, Karen ................................50 Ellis, William Curtis .................127 Elman, Colin ............................140 Elshtain, Jean Bethke..........4, 7, 9 Elsig, Manfred............................60 Embry, Charles R.....................163 Emmerman Mazner, Karen ........11 Endersby, James W. ................132 Enemark, Daniel................. 32, 153 Enev, Todor G. ...........................53 Engel, Stephen M. .....................30 Engelbrekt, Kjell ......................160 Engeli, Isabelle ..........................96 Englehart, Neil A......................145 English, William E......................20 Engstrom, Erik J........................87

Enia, Jason ................................78 Enns, Peter ..............................100 Enos, Ryan D. ..........................115 Ensley, Michael J................. 89, 90 Enterline, Andrew J. ..................83 Ephraim, Laura ............................7 Epstein, Lee ....................... 99, 103 Epstein, Rachel..........................41 Erdmann, Gero ........................143 Erie, Steven P...........................107 Erisen, Cengiz.................. 129, 130 Erisen, Elif ......................... 20, 130 Erk, Jan....................................146 Erler, Helen Abbie......................95 Erman, Eva ................................10 Erzeel, Silvia ............................108 Esarey, Ashley ................... 52, 164 Esarey, Justin E................... 31, 87 Escobar-Lemmon, Maria C........87 Eshbaugh-Soha, Matthew ... 91, 92 Esquith, Stephen L. .....................7 Esterling, Kevin M. ..... 21, 22, 128, 132 Estevez-Abe, Margarita .............44 Etchemendy, Sebastian ....... 41, 55 Eubanks, Virginia ......................96 Euben, J. Peter ............................5 Eun, Jonghoon ..........................32 Evangelista, Matthew...............148 Evans, C. Lawrence...................90 Evans, Diana............................115 Evans, Geoffrey ............... 118, 121 Evans, Laura............................113 Evans, Tom ..............................168 Everett, Andrea..........................73 Ewig, Christina ..........................44

F
Faber, Michael J.........................30 Fabian, Katalin.........................112 Fails, Matthew D. .......................26 Fair, C. Christine............ 69, 76, 86 Fair, Teri ...................................108 Fairdosi, Amir ..........................153 Fang, Songying ................... 62, 82 Fanis, Maria ...............................71 Farazmand, Ali...........................94 Farhang, Sean.................... 99, 103 Farias, Maria Elisa .....................64 Farid, May ..................................52 Farinelli, Arianna .....................161 Fariss, Christopher J...............145 Farley, Robert M. .......................81 Farmer, Rick D. ........................120 Farnsworth, Stephen J. ... 131, 132 Farrar-Myers, Victoria A. ...........92 Farrell, David M................ 118, 119 Farrell, Henry ..................... 65, 141 Farrer, Benjamin David............123 Farrier, Jasmine.........................92 Fatovic, Clement..........................5 Fattor, Eric Michael..................136 Faucher-King, Florence.... 57, 157, 160 Faulkner, Robert K...................160 Favero, Nathan ..........................96 Favretto, Katja I. ........................73 Fazal, Tanisha ..........................139 Fearon, James D................ 74, 153 Feaver, Peter D. .........................77 Federici, Michael P........... 160, 168 Feeley, Malcolm M. ............ 99, 158 Feeney, Aidan ..........................129 Feeney, Norris............................80 Fehrs, Matthew ..........................82 Fein, Jordan Mathias ...............130 Feinstein, Danielle ...................155 Feinstein, Scott G....................147 Feiock, Richard C. ..... 97, 104, 107 Feit, Mario ....................................9 Feldman, Leonard C. ........... 15, 99 Feldmann, Andreas E. ...............44 Felice, William F.......................145

Felter, Joe ..................................77 Feng, Huiyun .............................68 Fennell, Jon .............................159 Fenner, Sofia..............................46 Feola, Michael..............................7 Ferguson, Kathy E.......................7 Ferguson, Kennan .....................13 Ferguson, Mark..........................34 Ferguson, Michaele L. ......... 9, 110 Fernandes, Edesio...................161 Fernandes, Juliana ..................135 Fernandez, Marco .............. 50, 126 Fernandez-Albertos, Jose .........22 Ferrarini, Tommy .......................98 Ferraz, Claudio ..........................25 Ferree, Karen E..........................37 Fesnic, Florin Nicolae................58 Fettweis, Christopher J. ............21 Fetzer, Joel S. ..........................118 Field, Sandra..............................12 Fielder, James D. .....................136 Figueroa, Carlos ......................114 Filindra, Alexandra ....................95 Filion, Diane...............................20 Filippov, Mikhail G. ..................145 Filla, Jackie ..............................128 Findley, Michael .........................83 Fine, Janice................................95 Finkel, Evgeny ................... 26, 156 Finkel, Jodi S. ............................39 Finkel, Steven E.........................23 Finnemore, Martha...................101 Finocchiaro, Charles J. ....... 88, 89 Fioretos, Karl Orfeo......... 139, 140 Fischer, Frank ..........................161 Fish, M. Steven ........................143 Fisher, Louis ..............................92 Fisher, P. Brian ........................165 Fisher, Patrick I........................124 Fisher, Shauna F. .....................102 Fishkin, James S. ............ 106, 130 Fitzgerald, Jennifer....................61 Fjelde, Hanne .............................84 Flaherty, Anne FB ............ 113, 165 Flanders, Chad ..........................15 Flavin, Patrick .................. 106, 123 Fleckenstein, Timo ....................38 Fleischmann, Arnold ...............149 Fleisher, Richard......................124 Fleming, David J........................96 Fleming, James E. ...................155 Flood, Chris ...............................58 Florence, Joseph .......................51 Flores, Henry ...........................116 Flores, Thomas E. .....................50 Flores-Macias, Francisco ..........45 Flores-Macias, Gustavo A. ........27 Flynn, Jeffrey .........................9, 10 Flynn, Lindsay B........................98 Flynn, Michael E. .......................80 Fogarty, Edward A. ....................67 Foley, Peter ................................23 Folke, Olle........................ 105, 125 Follesdal, Andreas...................155 Fordham, Benjamin O. ..............63 Fording, Richard C. ................. 106 Forlenza, Rosario ....................161 Forman, Michael ................ 10, 138 Forman-Barzilai, Fonna .............10 Forrest, Michael David ............138 Forshee, Jennifer Paige ............16 Forst, Rainer ..............................10 Forster, Alicia Diana ................116 Forsythe, David P..... 145, 146, 170 Fortin, Jessica .........................109 Fortna, Page ........................82, 83 Fortner, Michael Javen .... 107, 115 Foucault, Martial ......................125 Fountain, Jane E......................170 Fowler, James H. ........ 19, 20, 125, 147, 152 Fox, Colm.................................130 Fox, Cybelle ...............................29 Fox, Justin ........................... 18, 19 Fox, Richard L. ........................110

180

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

Fraga, Bernard L......................114 Fraga, Luis Ricardo .................115 Franceschet, Susan...................98 Francis, Megan Ming .................29 Franck, Matthew J. .................. 163 Franco, Ana Belen ...................115 Frank, Jason ............................3, 6 Frank, Richard W. .............. 85, 145 Franklin Fowler, Erika...... 100, 130 Franko, William W....................106 Frankovic, Kathleen A. ............121 Fransen, Luc..............................64 Frantz, Erica Emily ....................80 Franz, Michael G......................162 Franzese, Jr., Robert J. .............25 Frasher, Michelle .....................140 Fravel, M. Taylor .... 49, 71, 74, 140 Frazer, Michael L. ................ 13, 16 Frazier, Mark W. .........................97 Frederick, Brian P. ...................109 Frederiksen, Jens ......................17 Freedman, Paul B. ...................130 Freeze, Kent E. ..........................42 Freitas, Andra ..........................87 Fridkin, Kim L. .........................111 Fried, Amy .................................30 Frieden, Jeffry A. ........... 45, 60, 61 Friedman, Benjamin H. ...... 71, 158 Friedman, Edward ........... 157, 161 Friedman, Willa H. .....................84 Frisbee, Stephanie...................150 Frisina Doetter, Lorraine ...........67 Froitzheim, John L...................108 Frost, Samantha ..........................7 Frost-Keller, Amanda.................21 Frymer, Paul.........................29, 44 Fuchs, Frieda .............................56 Fuchs, Gerhard ........................136 Fuhrmann, Matthew...................76 Fujii, Lee Ann...........................148 Fujita, Taisuke............................67 Fukumoto, Kentaro....................31 Fuller, Timothy..................... 7, 162 Fullmer, Elliott B. .....................105 Fung, Archon................. 22, 38, 46 Fye, Shannon R. ...................... 156

G
Gabbay, Michael ........................86 Gagnon, Alain G. .......................96 Gagnon, Jennifer M. ....................5 Gailmard, Sean ........ 18, 19, 92, 94 Gaines, Brian J. .......................169 Gaines, Natalie Susan ...............17 Gainous, Jason.................. 34, 128 Gains, Francesca.......................96 Galasso, Vincenzo .....................24 Gallagher, Maryann E. ...............92 Gallego, Aina ...........................126 Gallego, Maria E. .......................40 Galligan, Yvonne...................... 148 Galvin, Daniel.......................30, 91 Gamble, Richard M. .................160 Gamkhar, Shama ..... 103, 158, 170 Gamm, Gerald...................... 30, 88 Gandhi, Jennifer ...... 23, 40, 50, 51 Ganguly, Sumit ..........................77 Gans-Morse, Jordan Luc..........53, 108 Gao, Eleanor X......................... 144 Garand, James C. .............. 88, 106 Garcia, Ryan ............................129 Garcia Bedolla, Lisa ......... 10, 115, 155 Garcia Iommi, Lucrecia .............33 Garcia Perez de Leon, Cesar ...58, 89 Garcia Ponce, Omar ..................35 Garcia-Castanon, Marcela .......115 Garcia-Coll, Cynthia ..................95 Garcia-Sanchez, Miguel.............37 Garfias, Francisco .....................39 Garretson, Jeremiah................128

Garriga, Ana Carolina................41 Garsten, Bryan.............................3 Gartner, David James ........ 69, 100 Gartner, Scott Sigmund.............78 Gartzke, Erik ........................78, 82 Gash, Alison ...................... 99, 164 Gates, Leah Hope .................... 128 Gates, Scott ................... 83, 84, 92 Gauck, Jennifer .......................147 Gauja, Anika .................... 157, 160 Gauri, Varun...............................67 Gavin, Jr., Francis J. .................70 Gavrilis, George.........................99 Gay, Claudine........................... 114 Gaylord, Sylvia .................... 51, 87 Gebhardt, Juergen........... 162, 163 Geddes, Barbara........................45 Geering, Dominik.......................42 Gehlbach, Scott ............. 19, 26, 45 Gelbman, Shamira M. .......... 29, 34 Gelineau, Francois.....................37 Geller, Daniel S. ................... 71, 79 Gelpi, Christopher F.............78, 83 Genna, Gaspare M. ....................68 Genovese, Michael A......... 91, 159 Gent, Stephen E............. 82, 84, 85 Gerber, Alan..................... 125, 150 Gerber, Elisabeth R. ........ 107, 122 Gerlak, Andrea K. ....................133 Geron, Kim....................... 107, 155 Gerring, John..................... 35, 148 Gerrity, Jessica C. ...................124 Gerschewski, Johannes ..........146 Gershon, Sarah Allen ..............111 Gerstbauer, Loramy Christine................................158 Gervais, Bryan .........................131 Gervasoni, Carlos....................141 Gest, Justin................................59 Getachew, Lullit .......................141 Getmansky, Anna ......................19 Geva-May, Iris ............................96 Ghita-Nemes, Mirela ................171 Gholz, Charles Eugene.... 134, 158 Giannetti, Daniela ......................90 Gibbons, Michael T. .................8, 9 Gibbons, Rebecca Davis ...........69 Gibler, Douglas M. .....................85 Gibson, Alan Ray.....................154 Gibson, Clark C. ................ 26, 168 Gibson, Edward .......................141 Gibson, James L......................153 Gibson, Rachel K............. 130, 136 Gidengil, Elisabeth L. ................20 Gierzynski, Anthony ..................21 Gilardi, Fabrizio ................... 41, 93 Gilbert, Robert E......................156 Gilens, Martin..................... 21, 104 Gill, Anthony............................118 Gill, Emily R. ............................149 Gill, Jeff......................................32 Gill, Paul.....................................83 Gillespie, Andra N............ 116, 122 Gillespie, Michael Allen ...... 7, 162, 163 Gilligan, Michael J. .............. 71, 82 Gillion, Daniel Q.......................114 Gillum, Rachel M. .................... 115 Gin, Willie...................................29 Gingrich, Jane R.................. 41, 57 Ginsburg, Tom ........... 35, 101, 142 Giraudy, PhD, Maria Agustina..................................44 Girod, Desha M.............. 24, 62, 84 Girth, Amanda M........................93 Gish, Dustin A. ........................155 Gisselquist, Rachel M................73 Giurcanu, Magda ............... 54, 135 Givens, John Wagner ..........52, 53 Givens, Terri E. .............. 55, 58, 59 Givoni, Michal ..............................8 Glaser, James M. .......................28 Glass, James M. ........................16 Glassman, Matthew ............. 29, 30 Glazier, Rebecca ........................34

Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede .......83, 84, 85 Glenn, Gary D. .........................172 Glezos, Simon............................13 Gloppen, Siri..............................67 Glosny, Michael ................... 74, 77 Glover, Robert W. ................ 15, 16 Glynn, Adam ............................146 Gneiting, Uwe ............................67 Goble, Hannah .........................131 Godrej, Farah ...............................4 Godwin, Erik Kinji......................96 Goedert, Nicholas......................90 Goerres, Achim..........................55 Goertz, Gary....................... 67, 148 Goetze, Catherine ......................74 Goff, Patricia.................... 139, 170 Goff, Sarah.................................16 Gokkir, Betul ............................152 Goldberg, Robert .....................171 Golden, Kathie Stromile ..........116 Golden, Miriam A............... 40, 144 Golder, Ben ..................................9 Goldford, Dennis J. .................103 Goldman, Harvey S....................13 Goldman, Seth K. .................... 132 Goldsmith, Benjamin E..............79 Goldstein, Avery .................. 72, 76 Goldstein, Judith Lynn ..............65 Goldstein, Leslie Friedman .....102 Goldstone, Jack A. ....................37 Gollust, Sarah E.......................100 Golub, Mark .................................4 Gomez, Brad T. ........................ 125 Gomez, Eduardo J. ....................29 Gomez, Priscila Ortega .............50 Gong, Abe................................136 Gontier, Thierry........................163 Gonzlez-Ferrer, Amparo .........56, 113 Gonzalez, Benjamin Fontaine ................................128 Gonzalez, Lucas I. .....................26 Gonzalez, Raul C. ......................78 Gonzalez Juenke, Eric...... 89, 109, 114, 115 Goodfield, Eric.............................8 Goodhart, Lucy M. ...................127 Goodhart, Michael .....................67 Goodliffe, Jay...........................120 Goodman, Sara Wallace ...... 55, 56 Goodwin, Matthew ...................128 Gorbachyk, Andriy.....................53 Gordon, Jane A............................8 Gordon, Sanford C. ...................19 Gore, Christopher.................... 107 Goren, Lilly J. ...................... 8, 149 Goren, Paul N. ............. 72, 81, 121 Goss, Kristin.................... 111, 122 Gossett, Charles W............ 94, 106 Gosztonyi, Miklos ....................154 Gottfried, Jeffrey A. .................131 Gottschalk, Marie......... 1, 108, 138 Gould, Carol C. .................... 15, 16 Gourevitch, Alexander H. ..........12 Gourevitch, Peter A. ..................43 Goux, Darshan J........................91 Gowa, Joanne ............................65 Goyer, Michel .......................56, 57 Graber, Doris A. .......................132 Graber, Mark A........... 27, 103, 166 Graefe, Andreas.......................169 Graham, Barbara L. .................115 Graham, Benjamin .....................71 Graham, Carleen........................84 Graham, Katherine............. 87, 108 Grandi, Francesca .....................47 Granof, Michael .......................158 Grant, Daragh J. ........................29 Grant, J. Andrew........................73 Grant, J. Tobin .........................117 Grant, John William.................159 Grasso, Kenneth L...................172 Gray, Julia ............................41, 60 Gray, Virginia H........................105

Green, Brendan R. .....................71 Green, Elliott D. .........................48 Green, Jane...................... 125, 126 Green, Jeffrey E.........................12 Green, Jessica F. ................. 65, 68 Green, John C.................. 117, 127 Green, Joshua A......................132 Green, Kathryn ........................110 Green, Matthew N. .....................89 Greenberg, Edward S. ...............30 Greene, Samuel A................ 53, 54 Greenhill, Brian D. ............... 62, 69 Greenhill, Kelly M. ............... 81, 87 Greenleaf, Anne Regan .............61 Greenstein, Fred I. .....................92 Greer, Christina M......................29 Greer, Scott L....................... 41, 67 Gregory, Paul .............................46 Greve, Michael S......................160 Grgic, Gorana ............................79 Grieco, Joseph M. .....................68 Griffin, John D. .................... 22, 91 Griffin, Stephen M....................100 Griffiths, Ryan D. .....................139 Grigorescu, Alexandru ..............84 Grimmer, Justin ................... 89, 90 Grisham, Kevin E........... 71, 73, 75 Grissom, Adam..........................81 Griswold, John .................. 78, 160 Gritter, Matthew .........................30 Grittersova, Jana .......................58 Groeling, Tim ...........................131 Groenendyk, Eric William..........21 Gronke, Paul .................... 129, 132 Gronlund, Kimmo ......................38 Grose, Christian R. ...... 87, 92, 115 Groseclose, Timothy J. ........... 132 Gross, James.............................19 Gross, Justin H..........................32 Grossman, Guy..........................26 Grossman, Shelby .....................45 Grossmann, Matt .....................152 Gruber, Lloyd.............................76 Gruszczynski, Michael W. .........21 Grynaviski, Eric .........................68 Grynaviski, Jeffrey D. ........ 90, 104 Guardino, Matthew P. ................78 Gueorguiev, Dimitar...................42 Gugiu, Mihaiela Ristei ............. 171 Guilhot, Nicolas .....................9, 33 Guillaume, Xavier ....................139 Guisinger, Alexandra G. ............87 Gulotty, Robert ..........................65 Gundlupet, Vaidya .....................67 Gundogdu, Ayten.................12, 13 Gunitskiy, Vsevolod............. 68, 73 Guon, Jennifer Starr ................100 Guth, James L. ................ 116, 117 Gutierrez, Francisco Aurelio Eduardo...................................36 Gutierrez-Sandoval, Daniel Ivan........................................169 Gutmann, Amy...........................17

H
Hritier, Adrienne................. 42, 46 Ha, Eunyoung ............................61 Haas, Liesl ...............................117 Habel, Philip.............................117 Habib, Khalil .................... 137, 159 Hacek, Miro ..............................171 Hacker, Jacob S....................... 150 Hacker-Cordn, Casiano A.W. .........................................15 Haddad, Mary Alice .................133 Hadden, Jennifer ............. 121, 152 Haesly, Richard P.....................117 Haeusermann, Silja.............. 42, 44 Hafer, Catherine ...................18, 19 Hafner-Burton, Emilie Marie ....101 Haftel, Yoram Z. .........................60 Hagemann, Sara ........................38 Hagen, Michael G. ...................130

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

181

Hager, Carol J. .........................134 Haggard, Stephan........ 43, 61, 157 Haglund, Jillienne.................... 145 Hahn, Kyu S...............................20 Haid, Christopher James...........41 Haider-Markel, Donald P. ........ 105, 129 Hail, Michael W. ............... 103, 158 Hainmueller, Jens ......................61 Haire, Susan ............................100 Hajnal, Zoltan L........................114 Hale, Henry E. .................... 45, 143 Hale, Kathleen M......................158 Hall, Jeremy L..........................158 Hall, Matthew E.K. ........... 100, 102 Hall, Melinda Gann ............ 99, 106 Hall, Richard L. ........................150 Hall, Thad E. ..............................95 Hallam Joseph, Patricia S. ......132 Haller, Megan ...........................136 Halperin, Eran ............................19 Halpern, Daniel ........................136 Hamann, Kerstin .......... 34, 57, 165 Hamlin, Rebecca E. .................103 Hamm, Keith E................... 88, 151 Han, Enze.................................149 Han, Hahrie C...........................155 Handlin, Samuel.........................42 Hanes, Douglas William ............10 Haney, Patrick J.........................80 Haney Lopez, Ian .......................15 Hankla, Charles R. ............... 25, 64 Hanlon, William Walker .............26 Hanmer, Michael J. .......... 105, 123 Hannagan, Rebecca J..............111 Hanniman, Kyle .........................25 Hansen, Holley E. ................ 58, 59 Hansen, Susan B. .................... 117 Hansford, Thomas G. ..............125 Hanson, Elizabeth (Betty) C. ...........................................135 Hanson, Jonathan ......... 24, 26, 51 Hanson, Margaret ......................67 Hanvelt, Marc ...............................9 Hao, Yufan ...............................165 Haptonstahl, Stephen R. ...........31 Harada, Masataka ....................107 Harber, Matthew.........................26 Harbin, Myra Brielle.................128 Harbridge, Laurel................. 88, 90 Harcourt, Bernard E. ........... 8, 108 Harden, Jeffrey J. ....................105 Harding, Robin..................... 39, 49 Hardy, Anne .............................131 Hardy, Bruce .................... 127, 131 Hardy-Fanta, Carol...................115 Harel-Shalev, Ayelet.................155 Harell, Allison ..........................128 Haring, Chelsea .......................108 Harkness, Kristen A. .................50 Harmel, Robert...........................54 Harrigan, Matthew T.................121 Harriger, Katy J........................102 Harrington, Christine B. ............99 Harris, Fredrick C. ...................113 Harris, Jonathan Andrew .... 31, 49 Harris, Richard A. ......................27 Harrison, Brigid .......................172 Harrison, Kathryn ....................104 Hart, Austin..............................131 Hart, John ................................121 Hart, Roderick P.........................21 Hartman, Erin..................... 32, 122 Hartney, Jr., Michael T. ..............97 Hartsock, professor emeritus, Nancy ..................................8, 12 Harville, Luke ...........................131 Hasen, Richard L. .................... 168 Hashim, S. Mohsin.....................43 Hassanpour, Navid ....................36 Hassel, Anke..............................55 Hassell, Hans ...........................122 Hassid, Jonathan.......................53 Hassner, Ron E. .......................139 Hatcher, Laura J. ............... 99, 147

Hatemi, Pete........... 19, 21, 22, 147 Haugaard, Mark ................. 15, 166 Haughton, Tim John ..................57 Hauptmann, Emily ...................147 Hauser, Megan .........................112 Haussman, Melissa A. ..... 111, 151 Hawkesworth, Mary ........... 12, 147 Hawkins, Christopher ..............108 Hawkins, Darren G.....................64 Hawkins, Larycia A..................115 Hawley, George..........................88 Hawn, Heather L. ................. 33, 50 Haworth, Peter Daniel...... 137, 159 Hayes, Brett .............................129 Hayes, Danny..................... 78, 132 Hayes, Jarrod ............................79 Hayes, Thomas J. ......................89 Haynie, Kerry L........................114 Hays, Jude C..............................83 Hayward, Clarissa R. ........... 14, 15 He, Baogang ..............................17 He, Kai........................................68 Healy, Andrew.......... 109, 123, 125 Heaney, Michael T. ... 121, 151, 152 Hearn, Eddie ..............................61 Heberlig, Eric S........................120 Hecht, Jason D. .........................57 Hechter, Michael ............ 41, 45, 48 Hedberg, Masha................... 25, 42 Hedlund, Ronald D. ...................88 Hegre, Haavard ..........................83 Heikkila, Tanya......... 104, 133, 152 Heine, Jorge.............................170 Heinrich, Tobias.........................86 Heinze, Eric A. ..................... 71, 72 Heisler, Martin O. .....................139 Heit, Evan.................................129 Heith, Diane J. ................... 92, 132 Hekman, Susan............................8 Helbling, Marc.................... 45, 113 Helfer, Ariel ..............................130 Helgesson, Karin Svedberg ......65 Heller, Patrick.............................38 Hellwig, Timothy ......................157 Henderson, Frances B.............147 Henderson, Phillip G. ..............168 Hendrickson, Mary Angela ........92 Hendrickson, Randal R............155 Hendrix, Burke.........................4, 7 Hendrix, Cullen S.......................72 Hendry, David ..........................152 Henjak, Andrija ........................119 Henke, Marina Elisabeth............68 Henne, Peter Shane......... 146, 147 Hennessy, Alexandra..... 55, 56, 59 Henningsen, Manfred ..............162 Henripin, Olivier.........................85 Henry, Adam Douglas................96 Heredia-Ortiz, Eunice.................25 Herman, Louis Gershon ..........162 Herndon, Jeffrey C. .................163 Hero, Rodney E................ 114, 168 Herrera, Geoffrey .....................140 Herrick, Rebekah .....................109 Herrigel, Gary ............................43 Herring, Ronald J. ............... 49, 50 Herrnson, Paul S. ....................105 Herron, Paul Emerson ............. 102 Hersh, Eitan ............. 125, 127, 136 Hershey, Marjorie R. ................121 Hertel, Shareen .................. 61, 145 Hertzke, Allen D. ...................... 120 Hertzoff, Andrew......................171 Herzog, Alexander .....................37 Hesli, Vicki L. .............................53 Hess, Diana................................17 Hetherington, Marc J. ........ 22, 121 Heumann, Stefan .......................29 Heydemann, Steven...................99 Hibben, Mark R. .........................64 Hicken, Allen D. ................. 24, 142 Hickey, Dennis ................... 54, 161 Hickey, Patrick ...........................91 Hicklin Fryar, Alisa .............. 93, 94 Hicks, Raymond...................60, 65

Hicks, Timothy.....................24, 56 Hiebert, Janet.............................89 Higashijima, Masaaki...............114 Highton, Ben...................... 88, 124 Hildebrandt, Timothy .................52 Hill, David........................... 23, 125 Hill, Eric ...................................118 Hill, Kim Quaile..........................90 Hill, Sarah A...............................97 Hill, Seth J................................125 Hillebrecht, Courtney........... 66, 85 Hillygus, Sunshine.....................32 Hinojosa, Magda ........................40 Hinze, Annika M.......................118 Hirano, Shigeo ................... 31, 105 Hiroi, Taeko................................51 Hirsch, Alexander Victor ...........18 Hirsch, H. N.............................. 103 Hirschl, Ran .............................103 Hirschmann, Nancy J. ...........9, 17 Hiscox, Michael J. .....................61 Hiskes, Richard P.....................145 Hite, Nancy ................................51 Hitt, Matthew P. ..........................18 Hix, Simon ................... 38, 57, 118 Ho, Karl ....................................161 Hoard, Season .........................147 Hoareau, Cecile .......................164 Hobfoll, Stevan ..........................23 Hobolt, Sara Binzer ...... 19, 20, 22, 127 Hochschild, Jennifer L. ..... 28, 115 Hochstetler, Kathryn................134 Hoepers, Bruno .........................87 Hoepner, Martin .........................55 Hoffman, Donna R. ....................92 Hoffman, Jonathan .................. 128 Hoffman, Lindsay ....................132 Hoffman, Steven J. ............ 67, 100 Hofmann, Tobias............ 60, 63, 67 Hofnung, Menachem ...............155 Hogan, John W. ................. 33, 131 Hojnacki, Marie ........................121 Holden, Jr., Matthew ............29, 92 Holland, Breena ................. 11, 165 Holland, Jenny L......................132 Hollander, Ethan J. .................. 156 Hollibaugh, Jr., Gary Edward ....92 Hollifield, James F. ....................55 Hollis-Brusky, Amanda ............103 Holloway, Carson L. ................172 Hollyer, James Richard .............39 Holman, Mirya R. .....................124 Holmes, Lisa M. .......................106 Holthoefer, Anne...................... 139 Holyk, Gregory G..................... 118 Holyoke, Thomas T. .................121 Holzhacker, Ronald L. ............. 149 Holzwarth, John S. ....................12 Homer-Dixon, Thomas F...........72, 140 Honeycutt, Kevin .....................137 Hoogesteger van Dijk, Jaime D. ...........................................167 Hooghe, Marc..................... 34, 119 Hoon, Parakh ...........................166 Hoover Green, Amelia ...............36 Hopgood, Stephen...................117 Hopkin, Jonathan ......................44 Hopkins, Daniel J. ...................107 Hopkins, David A.......................91 Horak, Martin George ...... 107, 108 Horiuchi, Yusaku .....................144 Horne, Benjamin ........................71 Horne, Cynthia M.................53, 58 Horowitz, Jeremy.....................154 Horowitz, Juliana Menasce .......44 Horowitz, Michael .............. 87, 139 Horowitz, Shale..........................81 Hortala-Vallve, Rafael ........ 18, 118 Houck, Aaron ...........................125 Hough, Dan ..............................166 Houser, Sarah Loretto ............. 138 Hovsepian, Nubar ........................1 Howard, Alison ..........................92

Howard, Lise Morj..............71, 74 Howard, Marc Morj ..............1, 54 Howard, Philip N......................170 Howard-Hassmann, Rhoda E. ........................................... 145 Howarth, David R...................8, 12 Howell, Chris .............................55 Howell, William G.......................80 Howes, Dustin..............................4 Howorth, Jolyon ........................59 Hoye, Timothy..........................163 Hoyer, Eric ...................................5 Hoyt, Timothy ...................... 76, 77 Hrebenar, Ronald J..................121 Hsieh, John Fuh-sheng ...........165 Hsu, Chung-Yao.......................129 Hsu, David T ..............................79 Hsu, Hsiao-Chi.........................161 Hsueh, Lily Y.W. .........................93 Hsueh, Roselyn .......................140 Hsueh, Vicki.................................5 Htun, Mala N. ..................... 40, 108 Huang, Chi ...............................161 Huang, Hsin-hao ......................161 Huang, Kwei-Bo................. 79, 164 Huang, Yu Tze..........................161 Huber, Bruce R. .......................104 Huber, Evelyne..................... 44, 45 Huber, Gregory ........................125 Huber, John D............................36 Huberty, Mark.............................59 Huckfeldt, Robert.....................124 Hudak, John...............................92 Hudson, David .........................151 Hudson, Gabriel.......................110 Huerta, Juan Carlos............. 33, 34 Hufbauer, Gary C. ......................78 Hughes, Glenn .........................162 Hughes, Llewelyn ......................45 Hughes, Sara ...........................104 Huhe, Narisong........................164 Hui, Iris............................. 124, 127 Huibregtse, Ada .........................81 Huiskamp, Gerard....................138 Hula, Richard C........................108 Hulsey, John ..............................53 Hult, Karen M. ...................... 91, 93 Hultman, Lisa.............................85 Humerez-Comtois, Norah ........149 Humphrey, Mathew Innell ..........15 Humphreys, Macartan .............153 Hunter, Lance.............................79 Hunter, Wendy ...........................44 Hurst, William ...................... 46, 52 Hurwitz, Mark S........................106 Husbands, Jo L..........................77 Huss, Stephen A......................115 Hussain, Muzammil M. ............170 Hutchings, Vincent L. ..............113 Huth, Paul K...............................84 Hutnick, Jennifer Ann Laks.......62 Hwang, Sungsoo .....................136 Hyde, Susan Dayton............ 35, 38

I
Iaryczower, Matias ......... 18, 19, 32 Ibrahim, Leila ...............................5 Ichino, Nahomi................... 36, 146 Idema, Timo ...............................35 Idris, Murad..................................8 Ifergane, Gal ..............................19 Ignatov, Anatoli........................ 138 Ignazi, Piero ....................... 59, 160 Iida, Fumio .................................15 Ikenberry, G. John ...................139 Ilderton, Nathan A.............. 87, 124 Im, Hyug Baeg ................... 69, 157 Imai, Kosuke ..............................31 Imbroscio, David......................161 Imig, Doug ...............................122 Inatomi, Celly Cook .................103 Incantalupo, Matthew ..............125 Ince, Onur Ulas............................6

182

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

Inglehart, Ronald .......................43 Ingold, Karin ..............................96 Inman, Kris.................................49 Invernizzi Accetti, Carlo ..............6 Iqbal, Zaryab .................. 81, 82, 84 Irepoglu, Yasemin......................68 Isaac, Annette Adrianna ..........104 Isaac, Jeffrey C............................1 Ishay, Micheline ............... 138, 145 Ishibashi, Mari .........................158 Ishiyama, John .................. 34, 143 Isiksel, Turkuler ...................15, 16 Isumonah, Victor Adefemi.......145 Ito, Takeshi...............................144 Itzkowitz-Shifrinson, Joshua .....73 Ivison, Duncan.......................9, 17 Iyengar, Shanto.......... 20, 128, 132

Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson,

J
Jrme, Bruno ................. 126, 169 Jabko, Nicolas .....................59, 81 Jablonski, Ryan Steele..............24 Jack, Paul ................................158 Jackman, Simon D.....................35 Jackson, Alice M. ......................33 Jackson, Sarita D. .....................60 Jackson-Biffle, Natalie M...........33 Jacob, Anil G. ............................49 Jacobs, Alan M. .......................148 Jacobs, Carly ...........................117 Jacobs, Lawrence R. ........... 27, 97 Jacobson, Gary C. ........... 122, 124 Jacobson, Robin D. .................113 Jacobson, Willow ......................93 Jacoby, Wade.............................59 Jacoby, William G. ...... 23, 96, 126, 129 Jagmohan, Desmond...................4 Jain, Anshul.............................131 Jakobi, Anja P. ..................... 65, 76 Jakobsen, Tor Georg ...............113 Jalalzai, Farida.........................112 Jamal, Amaney ... 1, 43, 44, 48, 50, 72, 112, 143 Jamal, Manal A. ............... 142, 143 James, Patrick ............. 78, 79, 169 Jamieson, Beth Kiyoko ........... 149 Jamieson, Kathleen Hall..........127 Jamieson, T. John ...................162 Janara, Laura A. ..........................4 Jankowski, Jen ........................147 Janow, Jeremy A. .................... 160 Jara, Gabriela ............................80 Jardina, Ashley E. ... 113, 124, 128 Javaid, Naser ...........................120 Jeffery, Charlie.........................166 Jelen, Ted G. ............ 116, 117, 128 Jenkins, Bobby ..........................84 Jenkins, Jeffery A......................87 Jenkins-Smith, Hank C. ...........169 Jenne, Erin K. .............. 45, 73, 104 Jennings, Jay...........................117 Jennings, M. Kent....................164 Jennings, Will ..........................126 Jensen, Laura S................. 98, 147 Jensen, Nathan.................... 60, 63 Jensenius, Francesca R. ..... 28, 48 Jentleson, Bruce W. ............ 71, 80 Jeong, Gyung-Ho.......................80 Jeong, Jihyeon ..........................49 Jerit, Jennifer...........................152 Jerome, Veronique........... 126, 169 Jett, Terri R. .............................113 Jeydel, Alana S........................109 Jia, Nan ......................................26 Jiang, Tian ...............................163 Jilani, Nadia ...............................86 Jimenez, Luis F. .........................41 Jimeno, Rafael Augusto ..........114 Jividen, Jason..........................159 John, Peter C. ...................... 56, 98 Johns, Leslie .............................65 Johnson, Candace...................111

Carter R. ....................70 Gbemende ...............101 Gregg B. .............. 41, 89 James D.................5, 16 Jesse C. .....................82 Joel W. .......................40 Kimberley S. ........ 28, 29 Kristina ................60, 63 Loch K. .................... 166 Martin.... 19, 20, 32, 104, 105 Johnson, Matthew A..................27 Johnson, Rene J......................95 Johnson, Tana ...........................62 Johnson, Tim .............................93 Johnson, Timothy R. ...............100 Johnston, Alison L. ...................57 Johnston, Jocelyn M. ................93 Johnston, Michael ...................143 Johnston, Noel Pereyra.......24, 60 Johnston, Patrick ......................71 Johnston, Patrick S. ................162 Johnston, Richard G.C. ...........119 Johnston, Steven...............6, 7, 11 Joireman, Sandra F..................154 Jolly, Seth Kincaid............... 56, 58 Joly, Jeroen ....................... 79, 131 Jones, Benjamin ........................85 Jones, Bradley................... 21, 113 Jones, Bryan D. ...........................1 Jones, Calvert W......................143 Jones, Cara................................49 Jones, Daniel ...........................168 Jones, E. Terrence...................107 Jones, Jason Jeffrey ....... 125, 152 Jones, Mark P. .........................112 Jones, Nicholas Steven.............64 Jones, Philip E.........................130 Jones, Jr., Randall J. ...............169 Jones, Ruth S. .........................121 Jones, Timothy M. .....................78 Jones Luong, Pauline................45 Jones West, Karleen..................26 Jones-Correa, Michael A. ......... 10, 113, 126 Jones-Rooy, Andrea E....... 80, 131 Jordan, Sara R................. 134, 150 Jordan, Soren ...................... 90, 91 Jordan, Stuart V............. 18, 19, 94 Jorge, Guillermo ......................139 Jose-Thota, Betcy......................74 Josephson, Jyl ........................111 Josephson, Peter......... 13, 14, 160 Joshi, Ishan .............................131 Joshi, Shareen.........................153 Joshi, Shashank ........................76 Joshi, Siddharth ........................63 Joslyn, Mark R.........................129 Jovic, Dejan .............................171 Joyce, Kyle A.............................86 Judd, Diana M..............................9 Jung, Chungse ........................160 Jung, Sung Chul........................78 Jungkunz, Vincent ...................149 Junisbai, Barbara ......................54 Junn, Jane Y. ............. 23, 123, 126 Jupille, Joseph ........................125 Jurado, Ignacio..........................41 Jurkovich, Michelle.................. 145 Jusko, Karen Long ....................35 Just, Aida........................... 59, 168

K
Kachi, Aya..................................40 Kage, Rieko................................95 Kahler, Miles ................ 74, 75, 139 Kahn, Victoria ..............................3 Kalaf-Hughes, Nicole ...............115 Kalinin, Kirill ..............................31 Kalkan, Kerem Ozan................127 Kalmoe, Nathan P. .....................22 Kaltenthaler, Karl C. ..... 58, 63, 69, 130

Kaltwasser, Cristbal Rovira.....46 Kalyvas, Stathis N. ........ 36, 37, 83 Kam, Christopher J ............. 35, 47 Kam, Cindy D...........................122 Kamran, Annelies Z. ..................75 Kang, Alice...............................108 Kang, David C..........................157 Kang, Kyungkook ......................86 Kang, Michael ..........................168 Kang, Myung-koo ......................61 Kang, Susan Lee .......................61 Kang, Yi......................................24 Kanthak, Kristin L......................88 Kapiszewski, Diana.......... 142, 148 Kaplan, Cynthia S. .....................53 Kaplan, Noah .............................88 Kaplan, Oliver ............................74 Kaplan, Stephen B.....................64 Kaplow, Jeffrey ..........................74 Kappe, Roland .........................129 Karakaya, Suveyda ..............43, 81 Karako, Thomas.......................159 Karakoc, Ekrem ...................51, 58 Karch, Andrew J. .....................104 Karl, Terry L. ............................172 Karlan, Dean ..............................38 Karol, David ....................... 91, 121 Karp, Jeffrey A.......... 78, 125, 129, 130 Karpf, David A. ........................136 Karpowitz, Christopher F...........22 Karreth, Johannes .....................82 Karvonen, Lauri .......................119 Kasara, Kimuli ...........................35 Kashin, Konstantin Daniel.........36 Kassekert, Anthony .................104 Kassiola, Joel J. ......................165 Kassop, Nancy...........................92 Kastellec, Jonathan P. .............100 Kastner, Scott L. .................. 62, 74 Kaswan, Mark J. ..........................9 Katada, Saori N..........................67 Katagiri, Nori........................ 69, 73 Kathman, Jacob Daniel ...... 84, 85, 86 Katz, Andrea Lee Scoseria........93 Katzenstein, Mary Fainsod.........1, 97, 138 Katzenstein, Peter J.................101 Kauffman, Craig M...................167 Kaufman, Robert R. ............. 36, 44 Kaufman, Stuart J................74, 81 Kaufmann, Eric P. ......................48 Kautz, Steven...........................154 Kavakli, Kerim Can ....................67 Kavanagh, Jennifer....................84 Kaya, Ayse ...............................140 Kaya, Ruchan...........................144 Kaya, Serdar ............................113 Kayaoglu, Turan................. 68, 145 Kaynak, M. Selcan ...................135 Kayser, Mark Andreas ...............58 Ke, Yanyu...................................63 Kearn, Jr., David W. ............. 74, 76 Kearney, Patrick.........................66 Keck, Margaret E. ........................6 Keck, Thomas M. ............. 102, 103 Kedziora, Jeremy.......................19 Keech, William R. ................38, 39 Keefer, Philip .......................25, 40 Keele, Luke ........................ 32, 116 Keeler, John T.S.........................59 Kehrberg, Jason ......................129 Kelemen, R. Daniel ............ 57, 140 Kellam, Marisa ...........................39 Kelley, Judith ................. 62, 67, 69 Kellner, Douglas ........................10 Kellough, J. Edward ..................93 Kelly, Andrew P........................130 Kelly, Christine A. ....................138 Kelly, John E..............................57 Kelly, Nathan..............................51 Kelly, Tim .................................170 Kemerli, Pinar ..............................5 Kemp, Donna .............................95

Kempf, Robin .............................93 Kendhammer, Brandon.... 145, 154 Kenkel, Brenton ...................19, 31 Kennedy, Brian T. .................... 159 Kennedy, John James ...............54 Kenney, Patrick........................111 Kenny, Paul D. ...........................28 Kenski, Kate M...........................21 Keohane, Robert O. ...................65 Kerner, Andrew.................... 25, 26 Kerrouche, Eric........................156 Kersch, Ken I. ............................27 Kersh, Rogan ...........................150 Kesler, Charles R............. 159, 160 Kessel, Alisa ............................5, 7 Kessler, Mark A........................102 Kettler, Jaclyn J. ...................... 151 Khagram, Sanjeev .....................69 Khemani, Stuti ...........................25 Kienker, John B. ...................... 159 Kiewiet, D. Roderick ..................97 Kifer, Martin .............................134 Kilby, Christopher......................62 Kilcup, Rodney ........................163 Kilgour, Marc .............................19 Kilicarslan Savas, Ozlem...........83 Kilinc, Ramazan................. 58, 146 Killian, Shane Thomas ..............39 Kim, Claire Jean ......................155 Kim, David Kyuman.................6, 8 Kim, Diana Younghwa ...............49 Kim, G. Jiyun .............................69 Kim, Hee-Kang.........................145 Kim, HeeMin.............................157 Kim, Hun Joon.........................145 Kim, Jeong-Hyun .......................63 Kim, Ji Young ..........................135 Kim, Moonhawk .........................60 Kim, Nuri ..................................106 Kim, Sang Ki..............................85 Kim, So Young................. 133, 134 Kim, Sohee.................................96 Kim, Soo Yeon ..................... 60, 65 Kim, Sungmoon................... 16, 17 Kim, TongFi................................79 Kim, Young Mie........................135 Kimball, David C. .....................121 Kincaid, John..................... 26, 158 Kinder, Donald R. .................... 124 Kinderman, Daniel Phillip..........64 Kindervater, Garnet .....................9 King, Aaron Scott ......................90 King, Desmond ..........................29 King, Gary..................................89 King, James D. ..........................91 King, Loren A................... 155, 161 King, Ronald F. ........................172 King, Stephen M. ............. 101, 158 King-Meadows, Tyson D..........116 Kingsley, Allison F. ..............63, 64 Kinkela, Claudia.......................162 Kinne, Brandon J.......................82 Kinney, Edith Celine Marie ......110 Kinsella, David...........................86 Kirdis, Esen ...............................44 Kirilova, Dessislava .................146 Kirkpatrick, Andrew...................84 Kirshner, Jonathan ....................72 Kirzinger, Ashley E. ...................32 Kiss, Zsolt..................................19 Kitschelt, Herbert.......................37 Kittilson, Miki Caul .................. 125 Klar, Samara Mani....................134 Klarner, Carl E. ........................105 Klasnja, Marko ................... 53, 126 Kleinberg, Katja B................ 63, 86 Kleinberg, Mona S. .................. 128 Kleine, Mareike O. .....................66 Kleinerman, Benjamin A......... 154, 155 Klemmensen, Robert ......... 22, 118 Klijn, Erik-Hans ........................133 Kline, Reuben ..........................119 Kling, Joseph................... 138, 145 Klingler, Jonathan .....................91

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

183

Klofstad, Casey A. ............. 20, 124 Klosko, George ..........................15 Klugewicz, Stephen .................160 Knoll, Benjamin R............ 113, 115 Knopf, Christina M...................135 Knott, Stephen F. .....................159 Knowles, Helen J..................... 103 Ko, Michael ..............................89 Koblentz, Gregory .....................76 Koch, Jeffrey W. ......................125 Kochanek, Joseph .......................6 Kochin, Michael S....................137 Kochtcheeva, Lada V. ..............134 Koehler, Sebastian.....................25 Koehn, Peter H...........................94 Koerner, Andrei .......................103 Koesel, Karrie J. ......................143 Koga, Jun...................................50 Koger, Gregory .................. 89, 151 Kohama, Shoko .........................74 Koinova, Maria V..................68, 73 Kokkonen, Andrej......................22 Kolev, Kiril..................................36 Koliba, Christopher .................164 Kollars, Nina ............................135 Kollman, Kenneth W. ....... 119, 122 Kolodny, Robin A............... 91, 119 Konisky, David......... 129, 133, 134 Kono, Daniel Y. .................... 60, 65 Kook, Rebecca.........................155 Koomen, Jonneke.............. 68, 110 Koontz, Tomas................... 97, 133 Kopstein, Jeffrey .....................156 Koremenos, Barbara ........... 66, 67 Kornelsen, Derek .....................165 Korpi, Walter ..............................56 Korycki, Kate ...........................149 Kosack, Stephen........................51 Koski, Chris ................. 95, 97, 106 Kostadinova, Petia A. ..............122 Kostadinova, Tatiana ......... 54, 122 Koubi, Vally................................70 Kousser, Thad............................88 Kowalski, Maria G......................13 Kraft, Michael E. ......................133 Krajewska, Magdalena...............29 Krall, Lorraine Elizabeth..........149 Krane, Dale A...........................158 Krasner, Stephen D. .......... 72, 139 Krasno, Jonathan S. ................120 Kraus, Jeffrey F..........................33 Kraus, Neil J. ...........................147 Krause, George A. .....................94 Krause, Sharon R. ......... 14, 15, 17 Krauss, Ellis S. ........................167 Krebs, Ronald R. .......................71 Krehbiel, Keith ...........................18 Kreppel, Amie ............................89 Kreuzer, Marcus.......................146 Kricheli, Ruth .......................37, 45 Krieckhaus, Jonathan.......... 24, 26 Krieger, Tim ...............................86 Kries, Douglas .........................159 Krimmel, Katherine.................. 120 Kriner, Douglas L.................72, 91 Krishnan, Sarat..........................84 Kritzer, Herbert M. ...................106 Kroenig, Matthew................. 69, 70 Krog, Ryan ...............................102 Kroh, Martin ...............................21 Krook, Mona Lena ............. 39, 119 Kropf, Martha E........................170 Kropko, Jonathan ......................31 Krosnick, Jon A. ................ 32, 123 Krupnikov, Yanna..... 125, 127, 131 Krutz, Glen S..............................80 Kryder, Daniel ............................28 Kselman, Daniel Max .................37 Kubik, Jan........................ 147, 166 Kuehn, David .............................42 Kuenkler, Mirjam................ 99, 142 Kuenzi, Michelle.......................154 Kuerschner, Isabelle Josephine .............................111 Kugler, Jacek .............................86

Kugler, Tad.................................86 Kuhn, Patrick Michael ...............49 Kuklinski, James H..................152 Kula, Eric .................................135 Kulick, Manuela S. .....................42 Kulkarni, Anupma L...................50 Kumagai, Naoko Naoko.............68 Kumar, Martha Joynt ............... 132 Kunioka, Todd..........................111 Kunz, Jean ...............................164 Kuo, Alexander ..........................26 Kuo, Joanna Didi .......................36 Kupchan, Charles .............. 81, 139 Kuperman, Alan J. .....................45 Kurizaki, Shuhei.........................82 Kurtz, Marcus J..........................36 Kuru, Ahmet T.................. 122, 143 Kurzer, Paulette .........................59 Kuz, Michal Maciej...................163 Kwek, Dorothy .............................5 Kwon, Hyeok Yong ....................21 Kyle, Jordan...............................79

L
Lpinard, Elonore ..................156 Lpinard, Elonore ....................57 Ldert, Jan...............................165 Lhiste, Maarja ........................125 Lacalle, Marina...........................40 Lachapelle, Erick .....................104 Lacina, Bethany.........................39 Lacquement, Jr., Richard A.......77 Lacy, Dean P. ..................... 20, 127 Ladwig, III, Walter Carl ..............76 Lafer, Gordon................... 138, 167 Laguna Maqueda, Oscar E. .....168 Lahav, Gallya .............................59 Lai, Brian........................ 78, 79, 86 Lai, James S. ...........................155 Laible, Janet M.........................157 Laird, Jennifer..........................113 Laitin, David D. .................... 26, 48 Lake, David A............... 72, 83, 139 Lake, Milli...................................61 Lam, Natalie ...............................35 Lamb, Charles M.............. 103, 112 Lambright, Gina M. S....... 142, 154 Lamm, Jennifer........................146 Lamothe, Meeyoung ..................93 Lamothe, Scott .................... 93, 94 Lampert, Joseph........................34 Lancaster, Thomas D...............165 Landa, Dimitri ................ 18, 19, 25 Landman, Todd ................ 145, 146 Landry, Pierre F..........................54 Lane, Jr., Joseph H....................14 Lane, Melissa .........................3, 15 Lang, Daniel G. ........................162 Lang, Dennis..............................17 Lange, Matthew .......................148 Langer, Arnim ............................36 Langohr, Vickie ........................143 Langran, Robert W.....................99 Langston, Joy ......................51, 89 Lankina, Tomila........................141 Lanteigne, Marc .........................61 Lapinski, John ...........................88 LaPorte, Jody Marie ..................53 Lapuente, Victor ........................92 Larabie, Daniel Ronald ............163 Laracey, Melvin C. ............... 30, 92 Larimer, Christopher W. ... 23, 111, 128 Larizza, Marco............................50 LaRoche, Christopher David .......6 LaRochelle, Ryan.....................149 Larsen, Lars Thorup ..................96 Larson, Bruce A.......................120 Lascurettes, Kyle M........... 73, 147 Laslier, Jean-Francois ...............19 Lassen, David ..........................135 Latner, Michael ........................166 Lauderdale, Benjamin........ 89, 100

Lauer, Ritu .................................72 Laugesen, Miriam J. ..................98 Laurent, Annie .........................109 LaVaque-Manty, Mika.................16 Lavariega Monforti, Jessica L. ........................................... 116 Laver, Michael J.........................37 Lavi, Iris .....................................23 Law, Anna O. ........................... 102 Law, David S. ........................... 139 Law, R. Brian .............................92 Lawler, Peter Augustine ......... 160, 172 Lawless, Jennifer L. ................110 Lawrence, Eric D. ....................130 Lawrence, Joyce........................65 Lawrence, Regina G. ...............132 Laws, Serena ...........................138 Lawson, Chappell ......................37 Lax, Jeffrey R..................... 31, 103 Layman, Geoffrey C......... 121, 127 Layton, Matthew L. ....................37 Lazardeux, Sebastien G. ... 91, 156 Lazer, David ............... 21, 128, 132 Le, Loan ........................... 114, 126 Le, Tom ......................................74 Le Foulon, Carmen ....................89 Le Veness, Frank P. .................157 Leal, David L............................ 116 Leblang, David..................... 62, 64 Lebo, Matthew .........................125 Lebow, Richard Ned ................139 Lebron, Christopher ..................15 LeDuc, Lawrence .....................150 Lee, Alexander.....................35, 48 Lee, Byung-Jae..........................31 Lee, Cheng-Xun .......................161 Lee, Christine M...........................4 Lee, Daniel J. ....................... 18, 89 Lee, Dong Sun ...........................69 Lee, Dongmin.............................69 Lee, Feng-yu ..............................49 Lee, Frances E...........................90 Lee, Hak-Seon............................63 Lee, Helen Hyun-Young.............40 Lee, Jeongyoon .......................136 Lee, Jinmin ................................16 Lee, Ju Hee ................................69 Lee, Melissa .............................142 Lee, Myong Hwa ........................96 Lee, Soo-Young .........................94 Lee, Su-Hyun .............................51 Lee, Sun Kyong .......................136 Lee, Sunny.................................69 Lee, Taedong .............................97 Lee, Taeku.................... 22, 27, 126 Lee, Yu-Kang ...........................129 Leeb, Claudia ........... 11, 12, 13, 17 Leebaw, Bronwyn Anne ..........145 Leech, Beth L...........................121 Leeds, Brett Ashley ............. 82, 86 Leeper, Thomas John...... 130, 152 Leff, Carol Skalnik .....................58 Leff, Nathaniel............................45 Lefler, Vanessa ..........................84 Legge, Jr., Jerome S................134 Lehman, Daniel George...........108 Lehmann, Volker W..................134 Lehoucq, Fabrice.......................36 Leibowitz, David ......................171 Leibowitz, Lisa.........................171 Leidhold, Wolfgang .................162 Leighley, Jan E. ............... 114, 123 Leininger, Julia ........................142 Leinweber, Ashley ...................141 Leiras, Marcelo C.......................26 Leiter, Debra Lynn ...................121 Lektzian, David J. ................ 78, 81 Lemieux, Scott.........................102 Lemke, Douglas.........................83 Lenowitz, Jeffrey .........................6 Lenz, Gabriel S. .......................123 Leo, Christopher......................108 Leon, Sandra .............................41 Leonard, Meghan E. ................101

LeQuire, Peter Brickey ...... 11, 163 Lerman, Amy E. ................. 29, 138 LeRoux, Kelly M.........................93 Leslie, Isis I............................8, 10 Leslie, John ...............................56 LeSure, Ainsley Nicole ..............12 Levan, Carrie ........................... 123 LeVeck, Brad..............................22 Levendusky, Matthew S.......... 127, 132 Leventoglu, Bahar .....................74 Levi, Margaret ................ 30, 35, 61 Levin, Ines .................................32 Levine, Adam Seth .... 21, 122, 125 Levine, Meredith A...............24, 27 Levine, Renan ..........................125 Levine-Weinberg, Adam L. ........80 Levinson, Nanette S. ....... 135, 136 Levinson, Sanford ............. 28, 159 Levitan, Lindsey C.....................20 Levitsky, Steven................. 44, 141 Levitt, Justin .............. 25, 105, 168 Levy, David ..............................171 Levy, Jack S......................... 70, 78 Levy, Jacob T. ..........................155 Levy, Jonah..............................164 Lewis, Andrew R......................120 Lewis, David E. .................... 91, 92 Lewis, Garrett Darl.....................32 Lewis, Gregory B................. 93, 94 Lewis, Janet...............................49 Lewis, John D. .........................160 Lewis, Orion A. ..........................83 Lewis, Paul G.............................95 Lewis-Beck, Michael S. .......... 125, 126, 169 Li, Benjamin.............................163 Li, Lianjiang .............................164 Li, Meng-hao ............................136 Li, Peter M..................................32 Li, Quan ......................... 60, 63, 83 Li, Ruoxi...................................113 Li, Xiaojun..................................81 Li, Yitan ....................................165 Li, Yuting....................................53 Li Qun, Jiang ........................... 163 Liang, Wei .......................... 81, 134 Liao, Da-Chi .............................161 Liao, You-Te ...............................67 Liberman, Peter John .......... 72, 81 Liberman, Varda.........................19 Lichter, S. Robert.....................131 Lichty, Steven ..........................117 Lidow, Nicholai ........................139 Lieb, Jennifer F. .........................29 Lieber, Keir A. ............................76 Lieberman, Evan S. ...................45 Lieberman, Robert C. .......... 28, 29 Liebowitz, Debra J. .................. 110 Lien, Pei-te....................... 115, 155 Lienesch, Michael ..................5, 12 Lierl, Malte .................................32 Liese, Andrea.............................66 Liesen, Laurette T. ...................156 Lightfoot, Sheryl R. ............. 3, 165 Likic Brboric, Branka...............167 Lim, Elvin T. ...............................30 Lim, Sijeong...............................26 Limbocker, Scott...................... 120 Lin, Fu-ren ...............................161 Lin, Jing .....................................97 Lin, Tse-min .............................130 Linch, Amy T. .............................12 Lind, Jennifer M.........................74 Lindberg, Staffan I. ............ 37, 144 Lindley, Dan ...............................73 Lindquist, Eric .........................134 Lindvall, Johannes ....................37 Linetsky, Zuri .............................86 Linn, Suzanna ...................... 22, 32 Linzer, Drew ....................... 42, 101 Lipscy, Phillip Y. ........................61 Lipsitz, Keena ..........................132 Lipsmeyer, Christine S. .............41 Lipson, Daniel N. .....................138

184

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

Lischer, Sarah Kenyon ..............71 Listhaug, Ola .............................59 Litke, Justin B..........................171 Little, Andrew.............................19 Littvay, Levente.............. 20, 21, 22 Liu, Amy H. .......................... 25, 26 Liu, Guoli ......................... 164, 165 Liu, Mingxing .............................43 Livingston, Alexander .................9 Livingston, Steven L................131 Livne, Yair ..................................45 Lizotte, Mary Kate............ 109, 110 Llewellyn, Morgan .....................32 Llorens, Jared............................93 Llorente-Saguer, Aniol...............19 Lloyd, Paulette.........................101 Lo, Nigel.....................................84 Locke, Jill L. ................................5 Locke, Richard Michael..... 61, 167 Lockhart, Sarah P. .....................55 Loewen, Peter John...................22 Lokaneeta, Jinee......................8, 9 Lombardini, III, John T...........4, 17 Lomperis, Timothy J........ 162, 163 Long, Austin ........................ 71, 73 Long, James D...........................37 Longo, Matthew .........................51 Loomis, Burdett A. .................. 121 Lopatin, Esther ..........................66 Lopez, Anthony C. .....................23 Lopez, Tehama.........................129 Lopez-Santana, Mariely .............56 Lopreite, Debora ........................98 Lorentzen, Peter L. .............. 45, 52 Lou, Diqing ................................42 Loury, Glenn C.......................1, 15 Love, Nancy S...................... 8, 138 Lovell, George I. ........................30 Lovenduski, Joni .....................148 Lowenstein, Daniel H...............159 Lowery, David ..........................105 Lowndes, Joseph E. .......... 28, 147 Lowry, Robert C............... 106, 158 Loyle, Cyanne E.........................84 Lu, Jie .................................. 31, 53 Lu, Xiaobo..................................22 Lu, Yeh-Chung .........................164 Lubbock, Tom ..........................105 Lubell, Mark N.......... 133, 152, 168 Lublin, David I.................... 42, 112 Lucero, Jose Antonio ..............141 Luders, Joseph E. .....................30 Luke, Timothy W......................138 Lukes, Timothy J. ........................5 Luna, Juan Pablo.......................44 Lundgren, Jennifer ....................20 Lupia, Arthur.................... 114, 123 Lupu, Noam ...............................35 Lupu, Yonatan...................... 62, 65 Luskin, Robert C........ 20, 106, 130 Lussier, Danielle Nicole.............54 Lust, Ellen M...................... 40, 144 Lustick, Ian S. .................. 139, 141 Lutmar, Carmela .................. 79, 85 Lutz, Georg ..............................119 Lyall, Jason..............................160 Lynch, Kevin ............................131 Lynch, Meghan Foster...............36 Lyne, Mona M....................... 36, 38

M
Mller, Jrgen .................... 35, 144 Maas, Willem..............................59 Maass, Richard ..........................73 MacDonald, Andrew ..................53 Macdonald, Bradley J................10 MacDonald, Fiona.................... 165 MacDonald, Jason A..................87 Macdonald, Julia........................77 MacDonald, Paul K. ...................77 Macedo, Stephen .................12, 17 MacGilvray, Eric.........................13 Mach, Andre...............................89

Machado, Fabiana .....................35 Machado, Mara .......................139 MacInnis, Bo ..............................32 Mackay, Fiona S.......................148 MacKenzie, Scott A. .......... 88, 107 Mackin, Glenn ............................15 MacKuen, Michael B..................20 MacLean, Lauren M. ................148 MacMullen, Ian R. ......................17 Madonna, Anthony ....................88 Maeda, Ko ..................................90 Magaloni, Beatriz .... 25, 37, 45, 48, 49 Maggetti, Martino.......................93 Magleby, David B. ....................120 Mahdavi, Paasha........................64 Maheshri, Vikram.......................25 Mahmood, Saba.........................10 Mahnken, Thomas G..................77 Mahoney, Anna M. ...................109 Mahoney, Daniel J. ......... 136, 137, 158 Mahoney, James ................ 35, 148 Maierean, Andreea...................171 Maiolo, Joe.................................77 Maioni, Antonia........................150 Majidzadeh, Lillian V..................97 Makse, Todd.............................105 Malang, Thomas ......................130 Malbin, Michael J..................... 158 Malecki, Michael ............ 31, 32, 58 Malesky, Edmund J. ...... 38, 43, 60 Malet, David ...............................71 Malhotra, Neil............... 22, 86, 123 Maliniak, Daniel .........................65 Maloyed, Christie L....................14 Maltzman, Forrest....................102 Mampilly, Zachariah Cherian..................................154 Manekin, Devorah ....................166 Manger, Mark S. .........................65 Mankowska, Ksenia......... 118, 123 Mann, Christopher B. ........ 22, 124 Mann, Thomas E........................90 Manna, Paul ....................... 97, 171 Manow, Philip ............................44 Mansbach, Daniela ..................149 Mansfield, Edward D..................65 Manske, Beatrice .......................66 Mantena, Karuna....................3, 11 Mantilla, Luis F.........................122 Manzano, Dulce ...................22, 40 Manzano, Sylvia.......................105 Maoz, Zeev......................... 78, 151 Mara, Cynthia Massie ..............154 Maranto, Robert.........................92 Marasco, Robyn...........................3 Marcum, Anthony S. ..................81 Marcus, George E. ............... 13, 20 Marcus, Maeva.........................166 Marek, Paulina Anna ........... 39, 41 Mares, Isabela...................... 38, 43 Marfleet, B. Gregory ..................78 Margalit, Yotam M. ............... 22, 61 Margolis, Michael.....................135 Margolis, Michele.....................117 Marien, Sofie............................119 Marin, Mara ..........................11, 12 Marini, John .............................159 Marinov, Nikolay V. ...... 35, 82, 143 Mariotti, Shannon ........................3 Markell, Patchen ........................12 Markus, Stanislav ......................24 Marlowe, Melanie M. ................159 Marquez, Benjamin .................. 114 Marrar, Khalil M........................128 Marschall, Melissa J. ...............116 Marsh, Michael.........................119 Marshall, Bryan W......................80 Marshall, Shana R....................141 Marshall, Stephen H. ...............147 Marso, Lori...................................7 Martel, James R. ....................3, 12 Martel, William C........................76 Marten, Kimberly .......................77

Martens, Allison M............. 34, 102 Martin, Andrew D.......................32 Martin, David C. .......................115 Martin, Janet M. ................... 92, 93 Martin, Lanny W................... 32, 37 Martin, Lisa L. ...................... 61, 62 Martin, Susan B. .................. 69, 76 Martin, Susanne.........................55 Martinek, Wendy L.....................53 Martinez, Mchel Angela ..........123 Martinez, Michael D. ....... 129, 150, 151 Martinez Franzoni, Juliana ........44 Martinez-Ebers, Valerie J........ 113, 114, 115 Martinez-Gallardo, Cecilia .........39 Martinez-Vazquez, Jorge ...........25 Martini, Nicholas........................80 Martorano, Nancy ......................88 Marvel, John ........................ 93, 94 Marx, Axel ........................ 146, 147 Marx, Paul ..................................38 Masket, Seth E............. 87, 88, 151 Mason, Lilliana Hall .................120 Masoud, Tarek E. ....... 37, 141, 144 Massoud, Mark Fathi ............... 100 Masuoka, Natalie ....... 23, 115, 128 Matanock, Aila Michela .............82 Mate, Manoj..............................105 Mather, Lynn ..............................99 Mathless, Gabriel.....................107 Matkin, David ...........................107 Matland, Richard E. ......... 112, 124 Matovski, Aleksandar ................53 Matsubayashi, Tetsuya ............113 Matsumoto, Shunta ...................89 Matsuo, Akitaka .........................89 Mattes, Kyle .............................127 Mattes, Michaela .................. 80, 82 Matthes, Melissa Marie............4, 8 Matthijs, Matthias ......................59 Mattingly, Daniel Christopher....32 Mattozzi, Andrea ........................18 Matukhno, Natalia....................112 Maveety, Nancy........................100 Maxwell, Lida E..........................15 May, Peter J. ...................... 95, 133 Mayer, Alex ................................88 Mayer, Kenneth R. ...................105 Mayer, William G. .....................121 Mayes, Rick...................... 106, 150 Mayka, Lindsay Rose ................47 Mazaheri, Nimah ........................51 Mazmanian, Daniel A. ..............107 Mazur, Amy ..............................156 Mazur, Amy G. ......... 120, 156, 164 Mazzoleni, Oscar .......................89 Mazzuca, Sebastian ...................44 McAdam, Melissa.......................79 McAllister, Ian ......... 118, 119, 129, 130, 136 McAtee, Andrea .........................88 McAvoy, Gregory .....................129 McAvoy, Paula ...........................17 McBrayer, Gregory A. ..............160 McBride, Dorothy E. .......... 57, 148 McCann, James A............ 114, 128 McCann, Michael W. .... 30, 99, 103 McCartney, Alison Rios Millett ......................................33 McCarty, Nolan ..........................28 McCarty, Timothy Wyman .........16 McCauley, John F.....................117 McClain, Linda C. .................... 109 McClean, Tom ............................46 McClellan, Fletcher ....................34 McClendon, Gwyneth Calvert............................... 42, 45 McClintock, Cynthia ................167 McClure, Kirstie M. ......................7 McClurg, Scott D. ...... 20, 124, 125 McCollum, Elan........................115 McCormick, John P................3, 12 McCormick, II, Joseph P.......... 115 McCown, Alex ............................15

McCubbins, Mathew D.............119 McDermott, Rose ..... 146, 147, 169 McDonagh, Eileen......................29 McDonald, Michael P. ..............168 McDonald, Patrick J. .................70 McDoom, Omar Shahabudin .....49 McDowell, Daniel .......................64 McElwain, Kenneth Mori.... 24, 167 McFarland, Andrew S. ............. 111 McGann, Anthony J. ..................13 McGhee, Eric ...........................120 McGinnis, Briana L. .....................6 McGovern, Patrick .....................33 McGraw, Bryan T......................117 McGraw, Sean............................44 McGuinn, Patrick J. ............. 96, 97 McGuire, James W...............37, 40 McGuire, Steven Francis ........ 162, 163 McHugh, Kelly Ann....................80 McHugh, Mary A. .......................33 McIvor, David Wallace ...............16 McKay, Amy Melissa................121 McKay, Brad R. ........................150 McKean, Benjamin.....................17 McKenzie, Brian D. .................. 113 McKeown, Timothy J. ................81 McKinstry, Lucy Coleman .......139 McKoy, Christopher A. ................9 McLaren, Lauren M..................128 McLean, Iain S. ..........................47 McMahon, Kevin J. ....................30 McMahon, Patrice ......................75 McMann, Jason Ian....................63 McMann, Kelly M. ............ 143, 144 McMillin, Stephen Edward.......149 McNamara, Carol L. .................137 McNamara, Kathleen R..............65 McNamara, Peter .....................160 McNulty, John E.......................150 McPartland, Thomas J.............163 McQueen, Alison .......................15 McTague, John Michael...........116 McWilliams, Susan Jane .........3, 4 Mearsheimer, John J. .... 72, 76, 80 Mebane, Jr., Walter R.................43 Mecham, Quinn................ 122, 143 Medani, Khalid ...........................50 Meddaugh, William Craig ........125 Medearis, John N.......................15 Medeiros, Jillian................. 98, 128 Medie, Peace..............................98 Mednicoff, David................ 66, 103 Meguid, Bonnie M......... 42, 43, 57, 157 Meier, Claude .............................64 Meier, Kenneth J..................94, 96 Meierding, Emily ........................70 Meierrieks, Daniel ......................86 Meiser, Jeffrey W. ......................81 Meister, Robert L. ........................8 Melcher, James P. ......................92 Mele, Christine...........................79 Melin, Molly M......................79, 84 Melnick, R. Shep................ 29, 103 Melo, Daniela ...........................111 Melo, Marcus Andre ............ 39, 51 Melton, James Douglas .......24, 35 Mena-Mora, Amalia ....................24 Menaldo, Victor..........................24 Menchik, Jeremy.............. 130, 146 Mendelberg, Tali ........................22 Mendeloff, David......................145 Mendez, Jeanette Morehouse ............ 109, 110, 111 Menon, Anand.................... 59, 140 Menon, Jane ..............................50 Meraz, Sharon..........................135 Meredith, Marc .........................125 Merkel, Wolfgang.....................142 Merolla, Jennifer L........... 116, 124 Merrill, III, Samuel......................18 Merry, Melissa K. .....................135 Merseth, Julie Lee ........... 114, 126 Mershon, Carol A.......................89

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

185

Mertha, Andrew .........................60 Mertus, Julie .................... 108, 146 Meserve, Stephen August ........25, 58 Messing, Solomon............. 20, 132 Metternich, Nils..........................84 Mettler, Suzanne ........................27 Metz, Tamara............................109 Metze, Tamara.................. 162, 164 Meunier, Sophie.......................164 Meyer, David A................... 87, 152 Meyer, David J. ........................104 Meyer, David S.........................121 Meyer, Holger.............................64 Meyer, John M. ..........................13 Meyers, Roy T. .........................170 Mezey, Michael L. ......................87 Mezey, Susan Gluck ................102 Michael, Gabriel J. ...................134 Michalopoulos, Stelios ..............48 Michaud, Kristy E.H. ................134 Michelbach, Philip A....................7 Michelson, Melissa R...... 115, 116, 168 Michener, Jamila D. .................115 Michener, Robert Gregory .........46 Mickey, Robert ................... 28, 113 Micozzi, Juan Pablo............. 40, 89 Midlarsky, Manus I............. 86, 156 Mierzejewski, Melanie................53 Migdal, Joel S. ..................... 40, 72 Milazzo, Caitlin................. 119, 125 Mildenberger, Matto.................140 Milewicz, Karolina M..................60 Milita, Kerri...............................127 Milkis, Sidney M.........................29 Miller, Banks P. ........................ 101 Miller, Benjamin ...................76, 80 Miller, Beth ..................... 20, 21, 22 Miller, Char Roone .......................6 Miller, Edward A....... 104, 150, 154 Miller, Gregg D.............................5 Miller, Jennifer L. .......................75 Miller, Joshua I. .........................13 Miller, Lisa L. ................... 158, 171 Miller, Melissa K.......................145 Miller, Patrick R....................22, 23 Miller, Susan Marie ....................88 Miller, Will J. ............ 33, 34, 63, 69 Miller-Karl, Kristyn...................116 Mills, Russell W. ........................93 Milly, Deborah J. ...................... 167 Milner, Helen V. .................... 60, 61 Milton, Daniel.............................79 Min, Brian K. ........................ 25, 40 Minkenberg, Michael .................55 Minkov, Svetozar .....................159 Minnella, Carlotta Maria...........152 Minnite, Lorraine C. .....................1 Minozzi, William .........................18 Minta, Michael D. .....................120 Minzarari, Dumitru .....................71 Mirilovic, Nikola .........................71 Miroff, Bruce ..............................30 Mishra, Sangay K.....................114 Misra, Shefali .............................16 Mistler, Stephen.......................118 Mistree, Dinsha Farrokh Allen .................................. 46, 48 Mitchell, Charles L............. 23, 146 Mitchell, Dona-Gene ..................19 Mitchell, James.................. 58, 157 Mitchell, Sara McLaughlin ........84, 85 Mitchell-Walthour, Gladys ...... 113, 115 Mittal, Sonia .............................103 Mitzen, Jennifer .......................140 Moakley, Maureen ....................121 Mockabee, Stephen T. ...... 22, 116, 117 Moe, Terry M. .............................92 Moehler, Devra Coren..............123 Moeller, Megan Michelle ..........111 Moffitt, Susan L. ........................92

Mohan, Paula ................... 113, 165 Mohanty, Peter...........................59 Mohn, Justin ..............................78 Molchanov, Mikhail A. ............. 160 Mollenkopf, John H. ................126 Monahan, Torin ..........................96 Moncrief, Gary F. .....................105 Mondak, Jeffery .........................37 Money, Jeannette.......................55 Monroe, Burt L..................... 31, 89 Monroe, Kristen Renwick ..........23 Monroe, Nathan W. ....................88 Monshipouri, Mahmood.......... 144, 145 Monson, Joseph Quin .... 117, 120, 121 Montanari, Ingalill ......................98 Monteiro, Nuno P. ......................76 Montero, Alfred P. ....................141 Montfort, Aleister.......................50 Montinola, Gabriella R.............169 Montoya, Celeste M. ................110 Moon, J. Donald.........................17 Moon, Nathan...........................135 Mooney, Christopher Z. .............88 Moore, Matthew .........................78 Moore, Pete W..........................141 Moore, Ryan T.................. 106, 152 Morales, Laura ................. 113, 165 Moran, John P. .........................136 Moraski, Bryon J. ......................54 Moravcsik, Andrew ........ 57, 67, 81 Morcol, Goktug ..........................96 Morefield, Jeanne ....................3, 4 Morel, Domingo .........................97 Morelli, Massimo........................41 Moreno-Riano, Gerson .... 135, 169 Morey, Daniel S..........................86 Morgan, Dorothy Lam..............130 Morgan, Edward P....................138 Morgan, Glyn .......................15, 81 Morgan, Jana .............................51 Morgan, Kimberly J. ..................58 Morgan, Patrick M....................166 Morgenstern, Scott .............. 42, 51 Moriarty, II, J. Thomas ...............74 Morone, James A................. 4, 150 Morrell, Michael E. .....................13 Morris, Lorenzo .......................114 Morrisey, William .....................159 Morrison, Kevin ...................27, 64 Morrow, James D.......................82 Morse, Yonatan ........................147 Morton, Rebecca B. ........ 123, 152, 153 Moscardelli, Vincent G. .............88 Moseley, Mason Wallace ......... 126 Moser, Robert G............... 112, 119 Moser, Scott...............................47 Moses, Jonathon W. ................140 Mosher, Michael A. ....................12 Mosley, Layna ...................... 60, 61 Mossberger, Karen .......... 108, 136 Moule, Ellen .............................106 Moustafa, Tamir .........................99 Moyn, Samuel ..............................6 Moynihan, Donald P.................105 Mozaffar, Shaheen ...................143 Mucciaroni, Gary ............... 30, 150 Mudde, Cas ................ 46, 157, 167 Muddiman, Ashley.....................21 Mueller, Jennifer A.....................75 Mueller, Jochen .......................166 Mueller, John .............................74 Mukunda, Gautam ...................134 Muller, James W.......................158 Mullin, Megan...........................133 Mulroy, Quinn W. .......................28 Munck, Gerardo L. ............... 34, 35 Mundy, Jacob Andrew......... 74, 75 Munir, Daud................................99 Muppirisetty, Sreedevi...............47 Murakawa, Naomi ................97, 99 Murali, Kanta..............................50 Murdie, Amanda Marie ..............78

Murillo, Maria Victoria ......... 43, 44 Murphy, Andrew R. ......................4 Murphy, Ann Marie ....................60 Murphy, Chad.............................89 Murray, Gregg R. .....................124 Murray, Rainbow.......... 46, 57, 112 Murray, Shoon K. .......................80 Murshid, Navine.........................85 Murtazashvili, Jennifer Brick....26, 41 Musgrave, Paul ..........................80 Muste, Christopher ............ 23, 131 Mutz, Diana C.............................65 Myatt, David P............................18 Myers, C. Daniel.........................21 Myers, Daniel N........................158 Myers, Ella ...................................5 Myers, Peter C. ........................160 Myers, Rebekah .........................88 Mylonas, Harris..........................45

N
Nachmias, David........................40 Nackenoff, Carol .................. 27, 29 Nacol, Emily.................................5 Nadeau, Richard .............. 125, 126 Nadon, Christopher .................160 Naghshpour, Shahdad...............76 Nagler, Jonathan...................... 123 Naidu, Suresh ..........................139 Nakai, Ryo................................114 Nalepa, Monika ..........................88 Nam, Illan ...................................41 Nance, Mark .........................63, 72 Naranch, Laurie E. .................9, 11 Narang, Neil .........................73, 82 Narasimhan, Angela G. ........... 103 Nardulli, Peter F. ........................35 Naseemullah, Adnan A. .............49 Nasirzadeh, Abouzar ...............149 Nason, Dory .............................165 Nassif, Hicham Bou.................118 Nasstrom, Sofia .........................15 Naurin, Daniel ............................88 Nava, Jose ............................... 136 Navia, Patricio D. ................. 40, 41 Navot, Doron..............................23 Neeman, Ari ..............................17 Neal, Coyle...............................137 Neblo, Michael ..... 17, 21, 128, 132 Nedelsky, Jennifer .....................17 Nederman, Cary J. ............... 7, 169 Negretto, Gabriel L. ...................38 Neiheisel, Jacob R................... 105 Nelles, Jen ...............................107 Nelson, Hal T............................105 Nelson, Kenneth Tommy ...........98 Nemoto, Kuniaki ......................167 Nenadic, Natalie...........................8 Ness, Immanuel .........................61 Neuberg, Steven L. .................. 118 Neuman, W. Russell ..................20 Neumayer, Eric ..........................63 Neundorf, Anja.........................122 New, Michael J...........................98 Newell, James Lawrie..............161 Newland, Chester A...................94 Newman, Abraham ..............59, 65 Newman, Ben Jordan ..............128 Newman, Brian ..........................91 Newman, James Allen ............. 101 Newman, Katja.........................142 Newswander, Chad B. ............. 168 Nexon, Daniel H. .......... 72, 81, 140 Ng, Eddy S. ................................94 Ngo Nyeck, Sybille .................. 149 Nichols, Curt..............................93 Nichols, David K. .....................159 Nichols, Jr., James H...............159 Nichols, Mary P. .......................137 Nichols, Robert.................. 11, 165 Nichols, William J. .......................5 Nicholson, Stephen P. ..... 128, 129

Nicholson-Crotty, Sean..............97 Nichter, Simeon C.......... 25, 37, 44 Nickerson, David W. ........ 124, 125 Niedzwiecki, Sara ......................46 Nielsen, Rasmus Kleis ............135 Nielsen, Richard ................ 37, 148 Niemi, Richard G. ....................105 Niemi, William L.........................10 Niki, Kenta .................................26 Nikolayenko, Olena....................53 Niles, Franklyn C. .................... 117 Nincic, Miroslav ...................69, 72 Nine, Cara ................................161 Nippert, Colin.............................71 Nir, Lilach.................................125 Nishikawa, Katsuo A. ..............114 Nishikawa, Toshiyuki............... 154 Nkansah, Lydia Apori ..............100 Nobles, Melissa .........................28 Noel, Hans ....................... 151, 152 Noergaard, Asbjoern Sonne......22 Nokken, Timothy P.....................90 Nolan Garcia, Kimberly A..........61 Noland, Marcus..........................61 Nooruddin, Irfan........... 48, 51, 143 Nords, Ragnhild.......................83 Norden, Deborah L. ...................38 Norpoth, Helmut ...... 125, 129, 169 Norrander, Barbara .......... 105, 111 Norris, Andrew...........................13 Norris, Pippa........................ 38, 46 Norris, William ...........................61 Norton, Anne ...............................4 Norval, Aletta .......................10, 12 Noury, Abdul G. .........................71 Noveck, Jennifer........................50 Novkov, Julie L. .......... 28, 29, 102, 103, 147 Nowlin, Jennifer.......................112 Nuez, Matias ............................19 Numan, Berna ..........................119 Nunnally, Shayla C. .................116 Nunnari, Salvatore ...............18, 24 Nye, Jr., Joseph S................ 14, 80 Nyenhuis, Robert E .................142 Nyhan, Brendan .........................20 Nzelibe, Jide ..............................62

O
OBrien, Diana Z. .....................109 ONeill, Daniel C.........................81 OBrien, Diana Z. .......................39 OBrien, Kevin J................... 52, 53 OConnor, Daniel J. .................138 ODonnell, Guillermo A..............35 OLoughlin, John V. ...................73 OMahoney, Joseph .................149 OMahony, Angela......................62 ONeil, Siobhan..........................70 ONeill, Daniel I. ...........................4 OToole, Laurence J...................94 Oates, John................................68 Oatley, Thomas .................... 63, 65 Ober, Josiah.................................3 Oberman, Kieran John ..............16 Ocakli, Feryaz ..........................144 Odera, Levy C. ...........................37 Oetken, Jennifer L. ....................39 Ogawa, Melodie Chika.............167 Oge, Kerem ................................54 Ogorzalek, Thomas K. ...............28 Okayama, Hiroshi ......................28 Oldmixon, Elizabeth A.............117 Oliveira, Amncio Jorge..........157 Olivella, Santiago............... 89, 118 Oliver, Thomas R. .................... 106 Oliveros, Virginia .......................50 Olivieri, Victor M. .....................146 Olmsted, Jonathan P. ................92 Olsen, Joseph A. .....................120 Olsen, Tricia...............................26 Olson, Alix Lindsey .................138 Olson, David J. ..........................30

186

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

Olson, Jeremiah C. .................. 106 Olson, Joel...................................4 Olson, Kevin ..............................10 Olson, Laura Katz............ 137, 138 Ondercin, Heather L. ....... 109, 110 Onea, Tudor Andrei ............. 73, 81 Ono, Yoshikuni .................... 37, 56 Onorato, Massimiliano G...........36 Onuch, Olga................... 39, 42, 53 Onuf, Peter S. ..........................154 Ooi, Su-Mei ..............................161 Oren, Ido .................... 79, 148, 166 Orenstein, Mitchell A. ........ 27, 143 Orey, Byron DAndra ........... 20, 23 Orlando, Francis J. ....................90 Ornston, Darius .........................59 Orr, Marion ...............................106 Orr, Raymond...............................3 Orr, Susan E.............................167 Orren, Karen ...................... 27, 102 Orsini, Michael................... 98, 150 Ortbals, Candice D. ......... 109, 147 Osborn, Tracy ............ 88, 110, 114 Oser, Jennifer .................... 46, 123 Oskarsson, Sven .......................22 Oskian, Giulia ............................13 Oskooii, Kassra .......................129 Osorio, Javier ............................49 Ostrander, Ian ............................87 Ostrom, Elinor ................... 65, 104 Otero, Gerardo.........................141 Outshoorn, Joyce V. ................148 Overby, L. Marvin ......................88 Owen, David.........................10, 12 Owen, Diana M........... 33, 132, 136 Owen, IV, John M............... 72, 140 Owen, Karen L. ........................111 Owens, Mark E......................... 111 Owens, Michael Leo ....... 106, 107, 113 Oxley, Douglas...........................21 Ozdemir, Ugur............................40 Ozel, Isik ....................................63 Ozyurt, Saba ............................146

P
Pacelle, Jr., Richard L. ............102 Pachon, Monica .........................89 Packer, Adam Terrence .............24 Paden, Catherine ............... 30, 114 Pagano, Michael A........... 106, 107 Pagden, Anthony .........................4 Page, Benjamin I......................130 Page, Douglas..........................112 Page, Stephen B. .....................107 Paik, Christopher................. 32, 70 Paik, Peter Yoonsuk ................163 Palanza, Valeria .........................92 Paler, Laura B. ..................... 24, 38 Paletz, David L................. 131, 132 Palfrey, Thomas .........................19 Palley, Howard A. .................... 154 Palmer, Carl Lucas ...... 22, 23, 123 Palmer, Glenn ............................80 Palmer-Rubin, Brian ..................47 Palous, Martin..........................162 Pammett, Jon H. ......................150 Pan, Jennifer..............................24 Panagia, Davide.........................10 Panagopoulos, Costas ..... 22, 116, 125, 134 Pandya, Sonal S. ................. 60, 62 Pang, Xun ..................................31 Pangle, Thomas L....................171 Panke, Diana........................ 58, 67 Pantoja, Adrian D. ...................116 Parel, Anthony .............................4 Parent, Joseph M.....................129 Parikh, Sunita A................. 38, 104 Parinandi, Srinivas ..................104 Paris, Michael ..........................103 Park, Hyun ...............................133 Park, Hyun Hee........................151

Park, Kent ................................160 Park, Saemyi............................113 Park, Sunkyoung .......................51 Parker, Christopher S. ......... 28, 29 Parker-Stephen, Evan................20 Parkin, Michael ........................134 Parks, Kristen ............................25 Parson, Sean ...........................138 Partheymller, Julia.................124 Passavant, Paul A..................9, 11 Pastor, Robert A. .......................80 Patashnik, Eric M..................... 150 Patel, David S. ............... 37, 51, 86 Patel, Sunita...............................11 Pater, Jessica ..........................135 Patrick, Stewart M......................77 Patrikios, Stratos ............... 58, 118 Patten, Alan ...............................15 Patterson, Dennis P. ..................78 Patterson, Kelly D....................120 Patton, Paul R............................15 Patty, John W....................... 19, 94 Paul, Benjamin.........................106 Paul, Darel E. ........................... 102 Paul, T.V. ....................................77 Pauley, Matthew A. .................. 157 Pavicevic, Vladimir Dejan........ 171 Paynter, Sharon .........................93 Payton, Autumn Lockwood......63, 68 Peabody, Bruce G......................92 Peacock, Anthony A................ 159 Peake, Jeffrey S................... 80, 92 Pearlman, Wendy.........................1 Pearson, Kathryn.......................90 Pearson, Margaret M. .......... 62, 74 Pearson-Merkowitz, Shanna.... 116 Peaslee, Liliokanaio...................33 Peceny, Mark..............................80 Pecheny, Mario Martn.............168 Peck, Justin ...............................87 Pedahzur, Ami................ 43, 55, 84 Pedersen, Rasmus Brun ......... 146 Pedraza, Francisco I........ 114, 132 Peet, Jessica............................166 Peisakhin, Leonid V. ..................42 Pekkanen, Robert J. ........ 122, 167 Peksen, Dursun .........................78 Pelc, Krzysztof J.................. 62, 65 Peleg, Ilan ................................155 Pellicano, Liz .............................17 Pellicer, Miquel ........................119 Pempel, T.J...............................141 Pemstein, Daniel........................58 Pencek, Bruce............................34 Pennock, Andrew ......................65 Pepinsky, Thomas ............... 26, 37 Percival, Garrick L. .................. 106 Pereira, Carlos ...........................51 Peress, Michael .........................32 Peretti, Terri ..................... 102, 103 Perez, Cristian ...........................46 Perez, Sofia A. ............... 45, 56, 58 Perez-Armendariz, Clarisa.......129 Perez-Linan, Anibal ........... 36, 101 Perkins, Lucas R. ........................5 Perliger, Arie ..............................55 Perlstein, Rick............................28 Pernin, Christopher ...................76 Perry, Elizabeth J.......................52 Perry, Jr., H.W. .........................103 Persky, Leah Miriam ................111 Person, Robert...........................54 Persson, Mikael .......................123 Peruzzotti, Enrique ....................38 Peschek, Joseph G.................. 137 Pestritto, Jr., Ronald J..... 159, 160 Petak, Zdravko.........................171 Peters, Anne Mariel ........... 72, 142 Peters, B. Guy............................94 Peters, Margaret E. ....................62 Petersen, Jrgen .....................167 Petersen, Michael Bang.... 21, 111, 147 Peterson, David A. M......... 22, 127

Peterson, Rolfe D. ............. 88, 135 Peterson, Steven A.......... 156, 166 Petrocik, John R. .....................127 Petropulos, William ......... 162, 163 Petrova, Margarita H..................67 Petrova, Tsveta ..........................54 Petrow, Gregory A. .................. 129 Pettit, Becky.............................113 Pettus, Katherine .....................145 Pevehouse, Jon C................62, 65 Peyrouse, Sebastien..................61 Pezzella, David.........................170 Pfiffner, James P. .......................92 Pfundstein, Dianne ....................80 Phelan, William ..........................66 Philippakis, Katherine .............137 Phillips, Anne...........................120 Phillips, Brian J. ........................79 Phillips, Justin ... 31, 104, 106, 150 Piattoni, Simona ......................161 Piazza, James A.........................83 Pickerill, J. Mitchell ......... 103, 170 Pickering, Paula M.....................54 Pickup, Mark A. .......................121 Picot, Georg...............................44 Pierce, Clayton ..........................10 Pierce, Doug ..............................20 Pierre, Jon ............................... 107 Pierret, Thomas C.H. .................40 Pierskalla, Jan Henryk......... 25, 26 Pierson, Paul .............................97 Pietryka, Matthew T. ................124 Pietsch, Juliet Eliza .................129 Pikalo, Jernej ...........................171 Pilat, Joseph F. ..........................77 Pilotti, Andrea ............................89 Pilster, Ulrich .............................86 Pinderhughes, Dianne M. ........115 Pingley, Allison Clark ..............132 Pinto, Pablo Martin ....................60 Pinto, Santiago Miguel ..............60 Piombo, Jessica ........................73 Piscopo, Jennifer Marie.......40, 98 Piston, Spencer .......................131 Pitney, Jr., John J. ........... 150, 159 Pitts, David.................................94 Pitts, Jennifer...........................3, 4 Piven, Frances Fox................1, 96 Pizzi, Elise..................................26 Plane, Patrick.............................64 Platas, Melina...........................142 Platt, Matthew B.......................116 Plattner, Marc F. .......................143 Platz, William A..........................79 Pliskin, Ruthie............................19 Plouffe, Michael ................... 65, 66 Pluemper, Thomas.....................31 Plutzer, Eric................................19 Poast, Paul.................................82 Podunavac, Milan ljubomir......171 Pogrebinschi, Thamy.................16 Polborn, Mattias K. ....................18 Pole, Antoinette .......................134 Polet, Jeffrey............................168 Polinard, Jerry L. .....................115 Polk, Jonathan T. .......................56 Pollack, Harold ........................150 Pollack, Mark A.................. 67, 140 Pollak, Johannes .......................70 Pollock, III, Philip H. ..................34 Poloni-Staudinger, Lori ........... 109 Polverari, Laura ............... 157, 161 Pomper, Gerald M. ...................121 Ponce, Albert .............................29 Ponce, Aldo Fernando.............122 Ponce-Rodriguez, Raul..............25 Ponder, Daniel E. .......................92 Pontuso, James.........................13 Pontusson, Jonas................ 35, 55 Pop-Eleches, Grigore ......... 41, 53, 143 Popa, Mircea ..............................24 Popa, Sebastian Adrian.............20 Popescu, Marina ...... 109, 119, 131 Popiden, Sandra N.....................64

Portales, Carlos .......................170 Porter, E Grant................. 104, 106 Porter, Jack................................77 Portney, Kent E.................. 97, 122 Portteus, Kevin ........................159 Posner, Daniel N. .......................45 Posner, Paul L. .................. 97, 170 Pospieszna, Paulina Maria ........85 Post, Alison E. ................... 43, 148 Postell, Joseph ........................159 Potoski, Matthew .......................61 Pottenger, John R....................117 Potter, Joshua D. .......................89 Potter, Philip B. K. .....................80 Ptzschke, Jana.........................81 Poulsen, Lauge Skovgaard .......60 Powell, Eleanor Neff ............ 88, 89 Powell, Emilia Justyna ........ 84, 85 Powell, Jr., G. Bingham .............39 Powell, Jonathan M. ..................50 Powell, Lynda W. .....................105 Powell, Richard J......... 91, 92, 105 Powell, Robert ...........................74 Powell, Scott R. .........................63 Powers, Kathy L. .......................68 Powers, Matthew .......................79 Powers, Ryan M.........................66 Powers, Shannon Elizabeth ....110 Powner, Leanne C......................67 Poznyak, Dmitriy V. ...................22 Praca, Sergio .............................87 Prakash, Aseem.........................61 Prasanna, Tanusri......................74 Praud, Jocelyne.......................111 Preble, Christopher .................158 Preece, Jessica Robinson.......122 Press, Daryl G...................... 74, 76 Press-Barnathan, Galia .............70 Price, Richard ..........................103 Prins, Brandon Christopher .....77, 81 Pritzlaff, Tanja ..........................146 Prorok, Alyssa ...........................84 Protsyk, Oleh ...........................142 Provine, Doris Marie.......... 95, 108 Pruce, Joel R. .................. 136, 145 Prudhomme, Joseph ..............157 Puente, Ignacio..........................41 Pugh, Jeff...................................73 Puppis, Manuel ..........................93 Purcell, Mark............................161 Putnam, Tonya L............ 62, 66, 80

Q
Qasqas, Areej ............................75 Quek, Kai ...................................85 Quinn, Kevin M. .......................146 Quiroz-Flores, Alejandro ..... 24, 32

R
Rabban, David ...........................27 Rabe, Barry G. ................. 104, 171 Radasanu, Andrea .......................6 Radenovic, Marko ......................28 Radin, Beryl A.............. 93, 94, 104 Radnitz, Scott B.........................54 Rae, Nicol C. ..............................30 Ragan, Robi ...............................89 Ragsdale, Lyn ..........................132 Rahe, Paul A. ........................... 172 Rahman, Fatima Z......................50 Rahman, Smita A.......................13 Raile, Eric D. ..............................94 Rajan, Sudhir Chella................165 Raleigh, Clionadh ......................72 Ramakrishnan, S. Karthick..... 126, 128 Ramanna Pathak, Anitha.........133 Ramaswami, Anu.......................97 Ramirez, Ricardo .....................116 Ramirez, Shawn L......................82

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

187

Ramiro, Luis ............................165 Ramos, Jennifer.........................72 Ramsay, Kristopher W. ....... 19, 74, 82 Rana, Aziz F. ..............................29 Randazzo, Kirk A. .................... 100 Rapp-Hooper, Mira.....................70 Rasmussen, Claire E. ..................5 Rathbun, Brian C. ........ 72, 81, 140 Rattinger, Hans K. .....................81 Ratto, Maria Celeste ................126 Rauchhaus, Robert.............. 70, 76 Raustiala, Kal.......................62, 67 Ravenhill, John..........................61 Ray, James Lee........................169 Ray, Subhasish ..........................42 Raymond, Christopher ............127 Read, Benjamin L. ...................148 Read, James H...........................14 Reategui, Felix ...........................36 Reaud, Beatrice .......................154 Rector, Chad ........................ 62, 77 Redburn, Steve ........................170 Redhead, Mark.................6, 12, 13 Redlawsk, David P. ...... 19, 20, 127 Reed, Douglas S. .......................97 Reed, William L..........................74 Reeskens, Tim ...........................21 Reeves, Andrew.........................47 Regan, Priscilla M............ 135, 136 Rehfeld, Andrew ........................16 Reich, Gary M. ...........................95 Reid, Kyla...................................16 Reid, Rebecca Ann .................. 100 Reif, Megan E.............................48 Reifler, Jason A. ............ 20, 72, 81 Reilly, Benjamin .......................119 Reilly, Jack...............................124 Reilly, Shauna ..........................106 Reinhardt, Mark ...........................5 Reisenbichler, Alexander ..........58 Reiss, Dorit Rubinstein .............93 Reiter, Andrew G. ......................86 Reiter, Howard L. .....................121 Rejali, Darius M........................129 Remington, Thomas F. ..............54 Ren, Liying...............................164 Renno, Lucio R. ...................35, 51 Reno, William........................... 154 Rensmann, Lars Peter...........7, 17 Renwick, Alan J. ...................... 119 Replogle, Sherri S....................128 Repnikova, Maria .......................52 Resh, William G. ........................93 Resnick, Danielle Elise............154 Resnik, Judith..........................155 Resodihardjo, Sandra................96 Restad, Hilde Eliassen ..............81 Rethemeyer, R. Karl.................151 Reuter, Ora John .......................54 Reynolds, Andrew S. ...............142 Reynolds, Molly .......................124 Rhee, Wonkyung .....................133 Rhodes, Jesse H.................. 30, 93 Rhodes, Martin J. ......................58 Riccucci, Norma M. ...................93 Rice, Roberta L........................141 Rich, Jessica Alexis Jolicoeur ...............................141 Richani, Nazih............................41 Richard, Jennifer .....................163 Richards, David L. ...................145 Richardson, Jr., Lilliard E....... 106, 129 Richman, Jesse T. ....... 32, 88, 105 Richter, Brian Kelleher ........ 25, 26 Richter, Thomas.........................51 Rickard, Stephanie J. .......... 64, 65 Riddlesperger, Jr., James W......91 Ridout, Travis N. ......................130 Riedl, Matthias ................. 162, 163 Riedl, Rachel Beatty ..................50 Rieffer-Flanagan, Barbara Ann J.............................................145 Riera Sagrera, Pedro ... 40, 42, 119

Rigger, Shelley................. 161, 165 Riley, Rebecca .........................132 Rim, Kathy ....................... 112, 126 Rinfret, Sara.............................162 Ringe, Nils ......................... 57, 152 Rios-Figueroa, Julio ................101 Ripberger, Joseph T.................127 Ripsman, Norrin M.....................78 Ritter, Emily Hencken ................84 Rivero, Gonzalo .........................51 Rizova, Tatiana P........................53 Robbins, Joseph W. ..................79 Robbins, Michael D. H. ............122 Robbins, Suzanne M................151 Roberti, Amanda M....................98 Roberts, Brian D. .....................128 Roberts, Jason M. .....................88 Roberts, Kenneth M...................47 Roberts, Neil ............................6, 9 Roberts, Patrick S......................76 Roberts, William Clare...............10 Robertson, David B. ................158 Robertson, Graeme ........... 41, 143 Robichaux, John R. .................117 Robin, Corey..............................11 Robinson, Amanda ....................48 Robinson, Gregory .................. 120 Robinson, James F. .................147 Robinson, Lee..........................160 Robinson, Pamela ...................107 Rocca, Michael Stephen..........114 Rocha, Rene R................. 114, 128 Rockman, Bert A. ......................92 Rodden, Jonathan ........... 105, 127 Rodriguez, Antonio..................116 Rodriguez, Mariana....................80 Rodriguez-Raga, Juan Carlos......................................37 Roeder, Philip G.......................146 Roederer-Rynning, Christilla.....58 Roessler, Philip.................... 41, 73 Rogers, Ellen A........................133 Rogers, Jonathan David..........125 Rogers, Melvin L........................10 Rogerson, Kenneth S. ............. 135 Rogowski, Jon ................. 126, 152 Rogstad, Jon ...........................113 Rohde, David W. ........................90 Rohner, Dominic ........................41 Rohrschneider, Robert ..............42 Rojo Mendoza, Reynaldo T .......50 Rom, Mark Carl................ 106, 149 Romero, Alexia ........................144 Romero, Vidal ..........................142 Romzek, Barbara S....................93 Rood, Timothy .............................4 Roodhouse, Elizabeth ...............21 Roper, Steven D.........................67 Rosato, Sebastian .....................81 Rose, Justin.................................4 Rose, Roger P. ...........................94 Rose, Shanna Suzanne ........... 106 Roselle, Laura.................... 78, 131 Rosen, Lara................................98 Rosenau, Pauline Vaillancourt ...........................154 Rosenberg, Mark Y. ...................44 Rosenberg, Shawn W. ...............20 Rosenblum, Nancy L. ........ 11, 155 Rosenbluth, Frances McCall ....56, 119 Rosendorff, B. Peter ............60, 66 Rosenfeld, Jake .......................113 Rosenthal, Maoz ........................40 Ross, Andrew A.G. .................. 140 Ross, Andrew L. ...................... 158 Ross, Joseph ...........................106 Ross, Michael L. .................. 51, 64 Ross, Robert S...........................72 Rossello, Diego Hernan.............10 Rossum, Ralph A............. 160, 163 Rotberg, Robert I. .................... 139 Roth, Ariel Ilan...........................79 Rothenberg, Lawrence S..... 19, 91 Rothstein, Bo ..................... 43, 143

Rottinghaus, Brandon ...............87 Roussias, Nasos................ 38, 119 Routh, Stephen R. .....................88 Roux, Christophe.....................161 Rovner, Joshua.................. 78, 166 Rowling, Charles .......................78 Roxborough, Ian ........................83 Royo, Sebastian.......................165 Rozenas, Arturas .......................37 Rubenstein, Jennifer C..........5, 12 Rubin, Ellen V. ..................... 93, 94 Rubin, Leslie G. .......................171 Rudalevige, Andrew C. ........91, 94 Rudolph, Thomas J. ..................22 Rudra, Nita ........................... 41, 63 Rueda, David .......................35, 38 Rueda, Miguel R. .......................31 Ruegger, Seraina .......................70 Ruger, III, William P..................158 Ruibal, Alba ...............................40 Ruiz-Rufino, Ruben .................119 Ruozzi, Elisa ............................165 Rush, Mark E. ..........................168 Russell, Andrew.......................157 Russell, Greg ...........................162 Russett, Bruce M. .................... 169 Ryan, John Barry.....................127 Ryan, Kevin..............................166 Ryan, Timothy J.........................28 Rybalko, Mikhail ......................109 Ryden, David K........................115 Ryn, Claes G............................ 168 Ryu, Geunpil ..............................94

S
Sabbagh, Daniel.........................56 Sabl, Andrew .........................3, 12 Sacks, Audrey E. .....................142 Sadiq, Kamal............................148 Sagarzazu, Inaki.......................132 Sager, Alex.................................15 Sahgal, Neha..............................44 Saideman, Stephen M.......... 73, 81 Saiegh, Sebastian M..... 24, 34, 36, 43 Saikkonen, Inga Anna-Liisa .... 141 Sainz, Jaime...............................24 Saito, Jun......................... 119, 143 Sala, Gemma............................103 Salehyan, Idean ...................72, 85 Salmond, Rob ..........................130 Salzman, Ryan .........................131 Samford, Steven ................ 50, 152 Samphantharak, Krislert............43 Samples, John .........................158 Samuel, Alexandra...................135 Samuels, David J........... 35, 36, 43 San-Akca, Belgin ................. 70, 71 Sanbonmatsu, Kira .......... 110, 125 Sanchez, Gabriel........ 98, 114, 128 Sanchez, Thania ........................66 Sanchez-Cuenca, Ignacio..........70 Sancton, Andrew .....................108 Sandberg, Eve N......................112 Sanders, David ........................125 Sanders, Elizabeth.....................30 Sanders, Lynn M................ 17, 150 Sandovici, Maria Elena..............59 Sandoz, Ellis ............................162 Sanger, Catherine ......................68 Santos, Fabiano Guilherme M............................................157 Santos, Gustavo A...................163 Sapotichne, Joshua.......... 96, 107, 108 Sarangi, Prakash .....................160 Sarbahi, Anoop K. .....................71 Sarbaugh-Thompson, Marjorie ........................... 88, 106 Sargsyan, Irena L. .....................74 Sarkissian, Ani.........................117 Sartori, Anne E. .........................74 Sarvasy, Wendy .......................156

Sass, Jensen .............................17 Sassoon, Joseph .......................43 Satana, Nil Seda ........................86 Sato, Meg .................................144 Saturno, James..........................90 Sauer, Birgit .............................148 Saunders, Adam M. ...................38 Saunders, Elizabeth Nathan......87 Savage, James D. ....................170 Savun, Burcu ................. 24, 83, 84 Sawyer, Mark Q..........................28 Sayan, Serdar ............................63 Sayre, Benjamin.......................135 Scacco, Alexandra L............ 41, 82 Scalera, Jamie ...........................69 Scarcelli, Marc ...........................70 Scarrow, Susan........................122 Scartascini, Carlos ..............38, 39 Schaap, Andrew...........................9 Schabert, Tilo........................... 162 Schaefer, Donald D.A. ............. 100 Schaefer, Robert M. ................. 137 Schaefer, Todd M. ............ 131, 132 Schaffer, Frederic C......... 147, 167 Schaffer, Lena M........................70 Schaffner, Brian F. ..... 23, 124, 132 Schaler, Claudia.........................16 Schapiro, Robert A. ................. 158 Scharr, Robert W. .................... 155 Schatz, Roland.........................131 Scheberle, Denise L.................104 Scheideman, Jason ...................76 Scheiner, Ethan .......................119 Schelberg, James ....................157 Scherer, Matthew ...................6, 13 Scherer, Thomas........................46 Scheuerman, William E. ............10 Scheve, Kenneth F...............36, 62 Schickler, Eric...................... 90, 91 Schierup, Carl-Ulrik .................167 Schiff, Jacob...................... 11, 137 Schiffer, Adam J. .....................131 Schildkraut, Deborah....... 115, 128 Schimmel, Noam......................147 Schimmelfennig, Frank .............58 Schirmer, Dietmar ......................58 Schlter, Elmar ..........................45 Schlager, Edella C. .......... 104, 133 Schlake, Joshua ........................92 Schleiter, Petra ..........................40 Schlichte, Klaus.........................75 Schlosberg, David ............. 11, 165 Schmidt, Diane E. ......................94 Schmidt, Holger.........................85 Schmidt, Jr., Ronald J. ............113 Schmidt, Sr., Ronald J...... 96, 113, 147 Schmidt, Vivien A. .....................57 Schmitt-Beck, Rudiger ............124 Schmitter, Philippe C.................35 Schmitz, Hans Peter ..................67 Schnatterer, Tinette .................156 Schneider, Aaron ................. 27, 55 Schneider, Gerald ......................85 Schneider, Monica C................110 Schneider, Saundra K................96 Schneider, Steffen G................151 Schoen, Harald ..........................81 Schoettmer, Patrick .................117 Schofield, Norman.....................40 Scholz, Bettina...........................16 Scholz, John T. ........................133 Schoolman, Morton ............. 11, 13 Schram, Peter ............................70 Schram, Sanford F. ................1, 96 Schreiber, Darren.......................20 Schreiber, Ronnee ........... 110, 111 Schrodt, Philip A. ......................32 Schroeter, Eckhard ....................94 Schubert, Samuel Randolf ........70 Schulenberg, Shawn Richard.................. 146, 149, 168 Schuler, Paul J...........................42 Schulhofer-Wohl, Jonah............72 Schulman, Alex..........................12

188

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

Schulman, Jason A. ................138 Schultz, Kenneth A.............. 35, 82 Schumacher, Kristin L.............111 Schuster, Martin.........................41 Schwartz, Joseph M. ...............138 Schwartz-Shea, Peregrine ...... 147, 148 Schweitzer, Eva Johanna ....... 131, 135 Schweller, Randall .....................71 Schwennicke, Antje V. .............118 Schwindt-Bayer, Leslie A. ...... 109, 125 Scoggins, Suzanne E. ...............52 Scola, Becki .............................110 Scott, Joanna Vecchiarelli...........9 Scotto, Thomas John ....... 72, 121, 122, 125 Scruggs, Lyle A. ................ 41, 134 Seabrook, Nicholas ......... 103, 112 Seagrave, Stephen Adam..........16 Searing, Donald D......................21 Searles, Kathleen.....................130 Seawright, Jason ............. 130, 148 Seay, Laura ..............................141 Sebold, Karen ..........................120 Sechser, Todd S.........................76 Seeber, Gilg U.H. .....................123 Seeleib-Kaiser, Martin................38 Seery, John E.............................10 Segal, Jeffrey A. ........................99 Segrest, Scott ..........................162 Segura, Gary M................ 114, 124 Seibel, Kristan ...........................80 Selden, Sally Coleman ..............93 Selden, Zachary A. ....................59 Seligson, Mitchell A...................37 Selinger, Jeffrey S .....................30 Sell, Susan K. ............................60 Sellers, Jefferey M. .......... 107, 108 Selmier, W. Travis ....................140 Selvik, Kjetil ...............................40 Selway, Joel .........................36, 49 Semenovich, Dimitri ..................79 Sen, Maya ................................115 Sened, Itai ..................................40 Sentementes, Amy...................131 Seo, Jungkun.............................80 Seri, Guillermina Sofia ................8 Servalli, Fabio ............................41 Settle, Jaime E............... 19, 20, 22 Seybolt, Taylor B. ......................70 Seymour, Lee .............................72 Shadlen, Kenneth ................60, 65 Shadmehr, Mehdi.......................19 Shafer, Byron E........................121 Shaffer, Gregory C...................139 Shaffer, Matthew Daniel.............86 Shafie, David M........................134 Shah, Aqil ................................143 Shah, Dhavan Vinod ........ 134, 135 Shah, Paru ...............................116 Shah, Timothy Samuel ............142 Shair-Rosenfield, Sarah...........142 Shaker, Lee ................................22 Shalev, Michael .................. 46, 123 Shami, Mahvish ...................26, 48 Shanks, Torrey J....................8, 11 Shanley, Mary L. (Molly) .... 97, 109 Shannon, Megan.................. 84, 85 Shapiro, Ian............................3, 15 Shapiro, Jacob Norman...... 49, 74, 86 Shapiro, Kam .........................9, 13 Shapiro, Michael J. ................5, 10 Sharafutdinova, Gulnaz........... 141 Sharif, Fatima..................... 98, 147 Sharlach, Lisa Boswell............137 Sharp, Paul ..............................140 Shawki, Noha ...........................145 Shea, Patrick E. .........................78 Shea, Sarah..............................163 Sheafer, Tamir..........................131 Shechter, Benli M. .......................8 Sheets, Penelope.......................78

Sheffield, John Henry..............148 Shelby, Tommie .........................10 Shelef, Nadav G. ........................51 Shell, Susan.............................160 Shella, Kimberly L. .................. 109 Shelly, Bryan..............................97 Shen, Francis X. .................. 23, 96 Shephard, Mark P.....................157 Sherrill, Kenneth......................168 Shi, Tianjian .........................31, 53 Shiffrin, Steven ..........................11 Shih, Victor C....................... 43, 46 Shimizu, Kay..............................61 Shin, Adrian ...............................63 Shin, Doh C................................16 Shin, Kong Joo........................118 Shipan, Charles R............ 101, 105 Shippen, Nichole Marie .............10 Shipper, Apichai W. ...................45 Shirley, Craig ...........................159 Shockley, Bethany .....................87 Shogan, Colleen J. ....................90 Shomade, Salmon A. ....... 100, 101 Shomer, Yael...................... 90, 119 Shor, Boris ....................... 105, 151 Shortle, Allyson .......................129 Shotts, Kenneth W.....................18 Shreck, Brian .............................96 Shulman, George M. ..............3, 15 Shulman, Stuart W...................170 Shultziner, Doron.....................166 Shum, Matthew ..........................32 Shvetsova, Olga V. .............. 67, 89 Siaroff, Alan .............................151 Siddiki, Saba Naseem..............111 Sides, John M. .........................130 Sidman, Andrew H...................129 Sidney, Mara ..............................95 Siegel, David A. ................. 25, 151 Sierra, Christine Marie.............115 Sierra, Jazmin ............................45 Sievert, Joel ...............................87 Sigman, Rachel..........................51 Sigwart, Hans-Joerg ................163 Siim, Birte ................................156 Sikkink, Kathryn .............. 101, 145 Sil, Rudra ...................................58 Silber Mohamed, Heather........124 Siller, Hans Christian.................26 Silva, G. Eduardo.......................55 Silva, Guilherme A.....................71 Silverstein, Gordon.......... 102, 103 Silverstein, Helena.....................99 Silvester, Jo ...............................21 Simas, Elizabeth ...... 123, 126, 127 Simeone, James ......................166 Simmons, Beth A....... 80, 101, 139 Simmons, Erica ................. 47, 121 Simmons, William Paul............100 Simon, Jonathan........................97 Simon, Joshua.............................6 Simonelli, Nicole........................68 Simpser, Alberto .................. 39, 45 Simpson, Andrea Y. ........ 111, 114, 137 Simpson, Timothy L. ............... 168 Sin, Gisela............................ 91, 92 Sinanovic, Ermin .......................16 Sinclair, Barbara ........................90 Sinclair, Betsy..... 88, 95, 122, 151, 152 Singer, David Andrew..........62, 65 Singer, Matthew .......................125 Singh, Ajay...............................133 Singh, J. P. ...............................170 Singh, Jakeet ...............................4 Singh, Naunihal .........................73 Singh, Prerna ..................... 28, 148 Sinha, Aseema.....................49, 60 Sinmazdemir, Tolga ...................25 Sinno, Abdulkader........... 118, 157 Sircar, Neelanjan........................25 Sirgo, Henry B. ..........................97 Sirnate, Vasundhara ..................49 Siroky, David S. ................... 41, 86

Sissenich, Beate ................ 67, 111 Siu, Alice.......................... 106, 130 Sjoberg, Fredrik M. ....................43 Sjoberg, Laura .... 46, 68, 112, 147, 149 Skaaning, Svend-Erik ........ 35, 144 Skidmore, Max J. ............. 169, 170 Skinner, Kiron Kanina ............. 160 Skinner, Richard M. ............. 23, 88 Skocpol, Theda............ 27, 97, 150 Skowronek, Stephen ........... 27, 97 Skrentny, John D. ................ 44, 97 Slapin, Jonathan B. .................140 Slater, Dan ........................... 46, 49 Slettebak, Rune .........................72 Sliwinski, Sharon.........................5 Sloam, James ......................34, 46 Slotnick, Elliot E. .....................100 Smart, Jamie D. .......................114 Smith, Amy Erica................. 35, 37 Smith, Anna Marie ............... 10, 11 Smith, Benjamin ................ 72, 148 Smith, Candis Watts ................114 Smith, Charles Anthony ............99 Smith, Claire M. .......................105 Smith, Daniel Markham ........... 167 Smith, David T.................... 20, 117 Smith, Heather M. ......................66 Smith, Jennifer K.......................57 Smith, Kevin B......................... 147 Smith, Kimberly K......................11 Smith, Mark A. .........................128 Smith, Randall D........................80 Smith, Robert W.........................34 Smith, Rogers M. ....... 28, 138, 154 Smith, Steven Rathgeb............122 Smith, Steven S. ........................90 Smith, Todd Graham..................72 Smith, Verity ..............................12 Smyrl, Marc E. ...........................56 Snickars, Eric S. ........................99 Snidal, Duncan ..........................66 Sniekers, Florian........................55 Snowberg, Erik .................. 18, 125 Snyder, Jr., James M. ...... 105, 125 Snyder, Quddus Z......................68 Sobek, David........................83, 84 Soborski, Rafal ..........................58 Sohn, Yunkyu...........................152 Soifer, Hillel David ............... 36, 44 Sokhey, Anand E. ...... 22, 124, 132 Sokhey, Sarah Wilson ...............25 Sokolon, Marlene K. ................137 Solevid, Maria ..........................123 Solingen, Etel L. ................ 70, 140 Solinger, Dorothy J....................97 Solomon, Johanna.....................20 Somer-Topcu, Zeynep ...... 56, 122, 127 Somit, Albert.................... 156, 166 Sommer, Ehud N......................103 Sommerer, Thomas ...................66 Son, Kyong-Min ...........................9 Sondheimer, Rachel ................160 Song, Sarah ...............................44 Sonnleitner, Willibald...............141 Sood, Gaurav ..................... 20, 106 Soper, J. Christopher ..............118 Sorens, Jason P................... 25, 26 Sorensen, Christopher ..............58 Sorensen, Eva..........................164 Soroka, Stuart N. ....... 20, 128, 169 Soskice, David ...........................47 Sotomayor, Arturo .....................77 Soule, Suzanne..........................33 Southwell, Priscilla L....... 109, 126 Sowmya, Arcot ..........................79 Spahiu, Arian ...........................135 Spalding, Matthew ...................160 Spanihelova, Lucie ....................67 Sparks, Holloway.....................110 Spencer, Douglas ....................120 Sperber, Elizabeth Sheridan......79 Sperling, Valerie.......................148 Spezio, Michael L. .....................21

Spill Solberg, Rorie L. .............100 Spina, Nicholas J.......................53 Spirling, Arthur ..........................47 Spirova, Maria............................58 Spitzer, Robert J. .......................92 Spitzer, Scott .............................30 Spoerri, Marlene S. ....................54 Sprague, Laurel .......................149 Spresser, Carrie D. ....................20 Spriggs, II, James F. ................100 Squatrito, Theresa .....................66 Srinivas, Smita...........................49 St. Marie, Amanda .....................70 St. Marie, Joseph J....................33 Staats, Joseph L.................. 60, 64 Staisch, Matthias .......................68 Staley, Maxwell Reed...............163 Stalley, Phillip .................. 133, 134 Stam, Allan C. ............................23 Stanig, Piero ..............................40 Staniland, Paul..................... 49, 76 Stanton, Jessica ........................84 Stanton, Jr., Samuel S. ........73, 84 Stapleton, Patricia ...................134 Staring, Scott ...............................6 Stark, Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik .....3 Stasavage, David ........... 35, 36, 39 Staszak, Sarah ...........................28 Staton, Jeffrey ................. 101, 144 Stauffer, Jill E. ...........................10 Stears, Marc...........................9, 14 Steedman, Marek D. ..................29 Steel, Brent S...........................134 Steele, Abbey.......................47, 74 Steele, Carie...............................64 Steen, Jennifer A. ......................90 Steeves, Rouven J........... 168, 171 Steger, Manfred B. ...................138 Steger, Wayne P. ......................134 Stegmueller, Daniel....................31 Steigerwalt, Amy L. .................100 Stein, Arthur A...........................87 Stein, Rachel M.................... 70, 80 Stein, Robert M. .......................131 Steinberg, Alan ..........................79 Steinberger, Peter J............. 13, 15 Steinbrecher, Markus...............123 Steinmetz, John.......................149 Steinmo, Sven.................... 98, 141 Steinwand, Martin................ 56, 64 Stephan, Mark C. .....................133 Stephan, Paul B. ........................62 Stephens, John D. ............... 42, 44 Sterling, Rebekah ......................13 Stern, Rachel .............................53 Stevens, Daniel.................. 78, 130 Stevens, Elka ...........................116 Stevens, Jacqueline ............11, 12 Stevenson, Randolph T. ..... 32, 37, 126 Stewart, Brandon Michael .........31 Stewart, Frances........................36 Stewart, Marianne C. ...............125 Stewart, Mark G. ........................74 Stiglitz, Edward..........................90 Stilz, Anna............................ 12, 15 Stimson, Shannon C....................5 Stipelman, Brian ......................138 Stockemer, Daniel.... 119, 127, 146 Stockmann, Daniela.................164 Stockton, Hans J. .................... 161 Stojek, Szymon Mikolaj .............85 Stoker, Laura ..................... 27, 147 Stokes, Susan C. .......................36 Stolberg, Alan G. .....................157 Stolle, Dietlind ...........................20 Stone, Clarence N.............. 28, 107 Stone, Deborah.................... 95, 96 Stone, Randall W. ................ 62, 66 Stoner, Jr., James R. ...............163 Stout, Christopher ...................116 Stout, Jeffrey .............................86 Stout, Jeffrey L. .......................1, 8 Stoyan, Alissandra T..................46 Strach, Patricia .................. 98, 130

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

189

Strachan, J. Cherie ....................34 Strand, Havard...........................83 Straus, Jacob R. ........................90 Straus, Ryane McAuliffe............97 Straus, Scott ............................156 Strausz, Michael ......................147 Strauts, Erin...............................21 Street, Alex ................................56 Streich, Philip ............................70 Streichler, Stuart A. .................102 Streiner, Scott ..........................151 Streitfeld-Hall, Jaclyn D.............62 Stren, Richard..........................108 Strolovitch, Dara Z....... 1, 121, 122 Strom, Kaare..............................39 Strong, Tracy B......................7, 11 Stroud, Natalie Jomini...............21 Stroup, Sarah S. ........................62 Struett, Michael J.................71, 72 Stuckey, Mary E. ................ 30, 132 Studlar, Donley T. ............ 150, 151 Stullerova, Kamila ............... 12, 13 Su, Yu-Sung ...............................31 Suarez, Sandra L. ......................95 Subotic, Jelena .......... 68, 145, 147 Suginohara, Masako................144 Sugiyama, Natasha Borges.......44 Suhay, Elizabeth ........................23 Sulam, Ian ..................................32 Sulkin, Tracy ........................ 87, 90 Sullivan, Charles R. .................159 Sullivan, Christopher M.............84 Sullivan, Kathleen S. .................29 Sullivan, Patricia L...............80, 82 Sullivan, Terry............................91 Sum, Paul E. ............................171 Sung, Jaeyun ...........................127 Suong, Clara H. .......................129 Super, Elizabeth.......................162 Superti, Chiara.....................24, 89 Surzhko-Harned, Lena............. 135 Svasand, Lars ..........................142 Svolik, Milan ........................45, 51 Swaine, Lucas........................8, 15 Swank, Duane H. ................. 41, 64 Swanstrom, Todd............. 107, 108 Swartz, Peter Goodings.............61 Swearingen, Colin D. ...............127 Swedlow, Brendon.....................99 Sykes, Bryan............................113 Sykes, Jennifer ..........................31 Sykes, Patricia Lee .................. 151 Sznajder Lee, Aleksandra .........58 Szwarcberg, Mariela ............39, 40 Szymanski, Ann-Marie E. ..........27

T
Tagliarina, Daniel .....................103 Tago, Atsushi.............................85 Tajima, Yuhki.................... 142, 153 Takahashi, Yuriko ....................144 Tallberg, Jonas .............. 66, 67, 68 Tamir, Yael..................................17 Tamm, Henning..........................73 Tan, Alexander C. .................... 161 Tan, Sor-hoon ............................17 Tang, Wenfang................... 54, 164 Taniguchi, Masaki......................31 Taninchev, Stacy Bondanella ............................140 Tannenbaum, Donald G...........156 Tao, Jing ..................................165 Tarnopolsky, Christina H. ......3, 10 Tarrow, Sidney .........................121 Tarsi, Melinda R. ........................95 Tausanovitch, Chris.................105 Tavits, Margit ..................... 40, 118 Taylor, James Benjamin ..........131 Taylor, Liza...................................8 Taylor, Mark Zachary ....... 133, 134 Taylor, Robert S. ....................6, 15 Taylor, Zack................................28

Taylor-Robinson, Michelle M........................................37, 87 Tedaldi, Chiara.........................161 Teitel, Ruti G. .............................10 Teitelbaum, Emmanuel ..............39 Templer, Rachel ...........................4 Teng, Chung-chian .................. 164 Teo, Terence...............................78 Teodoro, Manuel P. ............ 97, 104 Teorell, Jan ..........................35, 36 Tepe, Sultan ...............................50 Terada, Rei .................................10 Terchek, Ronald...........................4 Terman, Jessica.......................104 Terris, Lesley G..........................79 Terry, William .............................26 Tesler, Michael .........................124 Tessman, Brock F. .....................81 Thames, Frank C. .............. 89, 109 Thayer, Bradley A. ...................146 Theisen, Ole Magnus.................72 Theiss-Morse, Elizabeth .... 19, 117 Thelen, Kathleen........................38 Theriault, Sean M.................88, 89 Therriault, Andrew........... 124, 127 Thiers, Paul..............................133 Thies, Cameron G.......... 64, 65, 84 Thirkill-Mackelprang, Ashley.....86 Thomas, Craig W. .............. 93, 162 Thomas, George ......................155 Thomas, Jakana.........................83 Thomas, Matthew O.................108 Thomas, Melanee.......................46 Thomassen, Bjorn ...................161 Thompson, Alexander ...............66 Thompson, Debra ......................96 Thompson, Douglas Ian ..............4 Thompson, Drew Kennedy......137 Thompson, Frank J. .......... 98, 104 Thompson, Kevin ......................94 Thompson, Lauren ....................20 Thompson, Lucas.................... 155 Thompson, Lyke ........................88 Thompson, Michael J. ............. 138 Thompson, William R. ...............78 Thompson-Uberuaga, William M............................................162 Thomsen, Danielle...................124 Thomson, Robert.......................88 Thorlakson, Lori ......................142 Thornton, Eleanor Nicole ........116 Thorson, Emily ........................131 Thorson, Greg............................95 Thurschwell, Adam....................11 Tiberj, Vincent.................. 156, 157 Tien, Charles P.........................169 Tillery, Jr., Alvin B. ....................29 Tillman, Erik R. ..........................58 Timmons, Jeffrey F. ............. 39, 50 Ting, Michael M........................105 Tingley, Dustin Halliday.............61 Tir, Jaroslav .........................82, 85 Tirone, Daniel C. ........................85 Titiunik, Rocio............................32 Tobin, Jennifer..................... 62, 64 Todhunter, James Preston ........79 Toender, Lars .............................10 Tofias, Michael W ......................90 Toft, Monica Duffy ..... 73, 139, 142 Toka, Gabor A.................. 119, 131 Tolay, Juliette.............................16 Tolbert, Caroline J. .................. 128 Tolleson-Rinehart, Sue ............111 Toloudis, Nicholas .....................55 Tomlins, Christopher Lawrence.................................29 Tommasi, Mariano .....................38 Tomz, Michael R. ................. 22, 61 Toplak, Cirila............................171 Topper, Keith................................8 Toral, Pablo..............................165 Torfing, Jacob..........................164 Torres-Reyna, Oscar..................39 Tortola, Pier Domenico............107 Towler, Christopher C..............128

Townes, Miles ............................33 Townsend-Bell, Erica......... 98, 156 Toyoda, Maria ............................81 Trager, Eric Robert .................. 141 Trager, Robert F. ......................140 Traven, David .............................68 Treier, Shawn .............................32 Trejo, Guillermo ................. 36, 148 Tremblay, Arjun..........................96 Tremblay, Manon .....................112 Trepanier, Lee .................. 136, 149 Treul, Sarah A. ...........................88 Trisko, Jessica Nicole ...............79 Troeger, Vera Eva .............. 31, 148 Trounstine, Jessica Luce ........107 Troupel, Aurlia .........................57 Trubowitz, Peter................. 80, 140 Tsai, Lily.....................................52 Tsai, Tsung-han .........................31 Tsai, Wen-Hsuan......................167 Tsoukalis, Loukas......................57 Tsujinaka, Yutaka.....................122 Tucker, Joshua A. .............. 53, 124 Tudor, Maya Jessica ..................28 Tufis, Claudiu Daniel .................58 Tufts, Shannon H. ......................93 Tully, James .................................3 Tung, Hans Han-Pu....................81 Turcotte, Heather M. ................145 Turgeon, Luc...................... 94, 149 Turner, Charles C............... 34, 100 Turner, Dale..................................3 Turner, Ed ................................166 Turner, Jack ...............................10 Tverdova, Yuliya V. ............ 63, 126 Tynes, Robert.............................70 Tyson, Vanessa..........................28 Tyszler, Marcelo .......................125 Tzelgov, Eitan ............................89

U
Udani, Adriano................... 96, 105 Ufen, Andreas ..........................142 Uhlaner, Carole Jean ...............120 Uhlmann, Michael M. ....... 159, 160 Umeda, Michio ...........................32 Undurraga, Beltran ....................12 Ura, Joseph Daniel .................. 100 Urbinati, Nadia ...........................12 Urpelainen, Johannes................65 Uscinski, Joseph E.......... 129, 132 Uzonyi, Gary ...................... 86, 104

Varshney, Ashutosh...................36 Vasavada, Triparna ....................96 Vashdi, Dana..............................23 Vatter, Miguel .........................8, 15 Vaughn, Justin S. ........ 91, 92, 137 Vaynman, Jane ..........................77 Vazquez Arroyo, Antonio Y. ......11 Veale, Daniel J. ..........................86 Veazey, Linda ...........................103 Vega, Arturo.............................114 Veiga, Ivo Lima ........................165 Velasquez, Simon Esteban.......47, 50 Vercellotti, Timothy............ 22, 132 Vergeer, Maurice ......................135 Verghese, Ajay...........................39 Verhulst, Bradley ................. 20, 21 Verloo, Mieke ................... 148, 156 Vermeer, Jan P. ........................ 131 Vickers, Jill Mccalla.................104 Victor, David G..................... 45, 65 Victor, Jennifer Nicoll ........ 88, 152 Viehoff, Daniel ...........................12 Villa, Dana R. .............................12 Villalobos, Jose D......................91 Villarroel, Gratzia .....................149 Vining, Aidan .............................98 Vinjamuri, Leslie .............. 117, 145 Vinson, C. Danielle .................. 131 Virdis, Robert........................... 163 Visser, Jelle................................55 Vodopyanov, Anya........... 142, 144 Voegeli, William ............... 159, 160 Voeten, Erik.......................... 62, 64 Vogel, David....................... 43, 134 Vogel, Ronald K. ......................161 Volden, Craig ................. 18, 25, 26 vom Hau, Matthias.....................44 von Blumenthal, Julia..............166 Von Hagel, Alisa Carolyn.........110 Von Hagen-Jamar, Alexander....82 von Heyking, John F........ 162, 163 von Hoffman, Alexander..........138 von Maravic, Patrick..................94 Von Sivers, Peter .....................162 von Stein, Jana.................... 66, 69 Von Vacano, Diego A...................8 Voorend, Koen ...........................44 Vowles, Jack .................... 119, 120 Vrablikova, Katerina ..................46 Vrbetic, Marta.............................71

W
Waalkes, Scott T. .....................158 Wachtel, Joseph M. .................131 Waddan, Alex...........................150 Wadia, Khursheed .....................57 Wagner, Michael W. ............. 19, 21 Wahlbeck, Paul J. ............ 100, 102 Waismel-Manor, Israel S. ..........19, 131 Walcott, Charles E. .............. 91, 92 Wald, Kenneth D. .....................155 Waldner, David.........................148 Walgrave, Stefaan............ 131, 132 Waligore, Timothy P.....................4 Walker, Christopher .................102 Walker, Larissa ..........................11 Walker, Rachel Elizabeth .........110 Wallace, Geoffrey................. 68, 85 Wallace, Jeremy L. ....................46 Wallace, Sherri L........................33 Wallace, Sophia Jordan.......... 113, 114 Wallach, John R.........................12 Walldorf, Will..............................81 Walling, Carrie Booth ................68 Wallsten, Kevin Jay .................135 Walsh, David J. ................ 162, 163 Walsh, James Igoe ............ 83, 166 Walsh, Katherine Cramer ........147 Walsh, Mary B..........................156 Walsh, Shannon Drysdale .......109

V
Vabulas, Felicity.........................66 Vaccari, Cristian.......................135 Vachudova, Milada Anna.........143 Vaggione, Juan Marco.............168 Vail, Mark I. ................................55 Vaishnav, Milan ..........................49 Valdini, Melody Ellis ................109 Valelly, Richard M. ......... 27, 28, 30 Valente, Angelo........................168 Valentino, Benjamin A. ..............62 Valentino, Nicholas A. ......... 21, 23 Valenzuela, Ali Adam...............113 Valenzuela, J. Samuel................44 Valfort, Marie-Anne ....................26 Valls, Andrew ...............................4 Van Camp, Nathan .......................6 van der Veen, A. Maurits ...........42 Van Houweling, Robert..............22 van Meerkerk, Ingmar..............133 van Spanje, Joost......................55 Van Weelden, Richard ...............18 VanBelle, Douglas A. .................78 Vandenbroek, L. Matthew..........22 Vanhala, Lisa C................ 103, 150 Vanney, Mara Alejandra..........169 Vanzo, John P. ...........................71 Varsanyi, Monica .......................95

190

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

Walt, Stephen M.......................139 Walter, Barbara F. ......................82 Waltman, Jerold.......................157 Walton, Jr., Hanes.............. 29, 113 Wampler, Brian ..........................38 Wan, Ming ................................157 Wand, Jonathan................. 32, 120 Wang, Di.....................................64 Wang, Fei-Ling.........................157 Wang, Hongying ........................97 Wang, Jianwei..........................165 Wang, T.Y..................................161 Wang, Yuan-kang.....................161 Wantchekon, Leonard.... 35, 38, 39 Ward, Ann ................................137 Ward, Artemus .........................100 Ward, Ian ................................8, 17 Ward, Michael D..... 25, 73, 83, 151 Warner, Carolyn M. ............ 58, 118 Warren, Camber.........................86 Warren, Dorian T. ......... 15, 28, 147 Warren, Mark E. .........................17 Warrick, Catherine ...................103 Warshaw, Christopher ............. 105 Warters, T. Alissa.......................92 Watson, Bradley C.S................159 Watson, Sara..............................55 Waugh, Andrew S. ...................124 Waxman, Dov ...........................155 Way, Lori Beth .........................100 Way, Lucan A. ..........................143 Weaver, Robert Kent..................56 Weaver, Timothy ........................28 Weaver, Vesla Mae.....................27 Webb, Eugene.................. 162, 163 Webb, Paul D. ............................91 Weber, Christopher R. ...............32 Wedeen, Lisa ................... 147, 148 Weeks, Jessica Lea .............82, 87 Weeks, Liam ............................118 Weeraratne, Suranjan ................70 Wegner, Eva .............................119 Weible, Chris...................... 97, 133 Weidmann, Nils B. .....................86 Weil, Carola................................68 Weimer, David L.........................98 Weinbaum, Eve S.......................61 Weinberg, Prof, Leonard B........55 Weiner, Greg ............................155 Weiner, Marc D.........................121 Weingast, Barry R......................90 Weinstein, Jeremy M. ..............153 Weinstock, Daniel ....................155 Weir, Margaret.................. 141, 150 Weisberg, Herbert F. ................117 Weisiger, Alex ...................... 70, 82 Weiss, Jessica Chen ...........74, 80 Weiss, Meredith L. ...................149 Weissert, Carol S............. 166, 170 Weith, Paul Thomas ..................32 Weitz-Shapiro, Rebecca ............40 Welborne, Bozena Christine....112 Weldon, S. Laurel .... 108, 111, 120 Weller, Dylan ................................5 Wellhausen, Rachel ...................63 Wellhofer, E. Spencer ................59 Wells, Matthew.........................104 Welzel, Christian........................43 Wendling, Ccile........................70 Wenger, Jeffrey..........................98 Wengle, Susanne A. ................141 Wenzel, James P. .....................115 Wenzel, Nikolai G.....................160 Werner, Timothy ......................120 Wert, Justin J...........................100 Wesley, Jared...........................151 West, Cornel ..........................8, 10 West, Darrell M. .......................136 Westerwinter, Oliver ..................75 Westwood, Sean ......................106 Weymouth, Stephen J. ..............26 Whang, Taehee ..........................82 Wharton, Jonathan L. ..............107 Whatley, Warren.........................48 Wheat, Elizabeth Erin ................33

Wheatley, Jonathan ...................54 Wheeler, Nicholas C ............ 42, 58 Whelan, Robert K. .....................28 Whitaker, Beth Elise ................154 White, Ismail K.........................116 White, Kaiba...............................72 White, Linda A. .................. 98, 149 White, Stephen K...................8, 16 Whitehead, Richard .................143 Whiteley, Paul F. ......................125 Whiteman, David......................165 Whitford, Andrew B. ..................94 Whiting, Susan ........................165 Whitman, Richard Gordon.........57 Whitten, Guy D. .......................125 Whitten-Woodring, Jenifer ...... 136 Whittington, Keith E. .................27 Whytock, Christopher A. .........139 Wibbels, Erik M.............. 25, 35, 41 Widestrom, Amy ......................107 Wiegand, Krista E. ............... 78, 85 Wielhouwer, Peter W................117 Wiens, David..............................16 Wilcox, Clyde ...........................121 Wilf, Meredith.............................69 Wiliarty, Sarah Elise.................131 Wilk, Eric M...................... 103, 112 Wilkerson, John D. ....................88 Wilking, Jennifer................ 53, 126 Wilkins, David E...........................3 Wilkins, Vicky ............................98 Wilkinson, Betina Andrea Cutaia ....................................108 Wilkinson, Steven I........ 28, 39, 49 Williams, Ann E. ......................128 Williams, Christine B. ..............134 Williams, Douglas ....................114 Williams, H. Howell..................149 Williams, Jean..........................138 Williams, John W. ....................128 Williams, Kenneth C. .................18 Williams, Laron K. ...................125 Williams, Lucy M. .................... 116 Williams, Melissa S....................17 Williams, Ryan P. .....................160 Williams, Victoria C. ........ 100, 145 Williamson, Scott Randall .......118 Williamson, Thad .........................9 Wilson, Bret D..........................135 Wilson, Bruce M. .......................34 Wilson, David C. .............. 113, 116 Wilson, E. Annie ...................... 102 Wilson, Graham K....................157 Wilson, III, Isaiah ............... 83, 160 Wilson, Joshua ........................103 Wilson, Matthew ........................40 Wilson, Sophia.........................112 Wilson, Steven...........................25 Wimmer, Andreas ......................45 Winburn, Jonathan .................. 110 Windett, Jason.........................124 Winecoff, Will.............................65 Wing, Susanna D. ......................67 Wingrove, Elizabeth R. ..........4, 10 Winneg, Kenneth M. ................127 Winstead, William ........................9 Winter, Nicholas.......................124 Winter, Yves .................................3 Winters, Matthew S.............. 62, 64 Wirtz, James J. ........................166 Wise, Carol.................................41 Wiseman, Alan E. ......................18 Wittels, Willam D..........................3 Wittenberg, Jason............ 148, 156 Wohlfarth, Patrick C. ............... 100 Wohlforth, William C...........72, 76, 139 Wolak, Jennifer ....................20, 23 Wolbrecht, Christina.......... 97, 125 Wolchik, Sharon ......................143 Wolf, Jeremy................................5 Wolfe, Christopher James.......159 Wolford, Scott...................... 50, 86 Wolfsfeld, Gadi ................ 131, 132 Wolinsky-Nahmias, Yael ..........134

Woliver, Laura R. ............. 111, 172 Wong, Baldwin Bon-Wah......... 157 Wong, Carolyn .........................155 Wong, Janelle ..........................126 Wong, Kenneth K.......................96 Wong, Mabel ..............................13 Wong, Tom K. ............................55 Wong, Wendy....................... 62, 73 Woo, Byungwon ............ 53, 63, 64 Wood, Abby .............................120 Wood, Alan B.............................13 Wood, B. Dan.............................91 Wood, Elisabeth Jean........ 36, 148 Wood, Jason A. .......................117 Wood, Reed M. .............. 63, 83, 84 Wood, Thomas.........................153 Woodall, Gina S. ........................40 Woods, James A......................101 Woods, Neal.............................106 Woods, Patricia J.....................112 Woodward, Jennifer ..................28 Woodward, Susan L. .................75 Woolley, John T. ........................92 Woon, Jonathan.........................18 Worthy, Ben ...............................46 Wren, Anne ................................35 Wright, Erik Olin ..........................9 Wright, Gerald C. .....................105 Wright, Glenn D. ................ 50, 168 Wright, Leah M...........................29 Wright, Thomas J. ............... 76, 77 Wright, Thorin Martin ................71 Wrinkle, Robert D. ...................115 Wu, Chin-en ...............................49 Wu, Irene S. .............................170 Wu, Lili .....................................165 Wucherpfennig, Julian ........ 83, 84 Wurgaft, Benjamin Aldes ..........11 Wuthnow, Joel R........................69

Young, Ernest ..........................155 Young, Joseph K. ................ 83, 84 Young, Katherine .....................138 Young, Kevin............................140 Young, McGee W. .............. 28, 134 Young, Patricia T........................54 Young, Robert.................. 107, 108 Yu, Ching-hsin .........................161 Yueh, Jui-Chi .............................71 Yusuf, Moeed Wasim .................50

Z
Zackin, Emily .............................30 Zaitseva, Maria N. ......................79 Zakaras, Alex ...............................5 Zakaria, Patty ...........................171 Zanotti, Laura.............................11 Zapryanova, Galina....................58 Zarakol, Ayse ...........................147 Zarazaga, Rodrigo .....................44 Zechmeister, Elizabeth ...... 37, 124 Zegart, Amy ....................... 78, 166 Zeigerman, Tomer........................5 Zeira, Yael ..................................86 Zeisberg, Mariah ................ 15, 100 Zellman, Ariel................... 154, 155 Zeng, Ka.....................................63 Zepeda-Millan, J. Chris............113 Zhan, Jing Vivian .................41, 54 Zhang, Dong ..............................43 Zhang, Guang ............................53 Zhang, Jie ................................164 Zhang, Ning .............................164 Zhang, Qi ...................................43 Zhang, Wu..................................53 Zhang, Xin..................................64 Zhao, Quansheng ....................164 Zhong, Yang............................. 164 Zhou, Qiang ...............................63 Zhu, Boliang ........................ 38, 60 Zhu, Jiangnan ............................53 Zia, Asim ..................................164 Ziblatt, Daniel F. ...................36, 47 Zicha, Brandon C.....................122 Ziegfeld, Adam W. .....................49 Ziegler, J. Nicholas ....................43 Ziegler Rogers, Melissa.............24 Zimmerman, Brigitte..................32 Zimmerman, Joseph F. .... 104, 158 Zirakzadeh, Cyrus Ernesto......149 Zivi, Karen..............................9, 10 Zolberg, Aristide R. ...................29 Zorn, Christopher ................31, 32 Zou, Beibei...............................158 Zuber, Katherine ......................130 Zubida, Hani...............................40 Zucco, Jr., Cesar................ 35, 141 Zuckert, Catherine H.......... 11, 159 Zuckert, Michael P. .......... 154, 159 Zuckerwise, Lena K. ....................8 Zuercher, Christoph M...............86

X
Xenos, Michael ................ 134, 135 Xezonakis, Georgios ...............118 Xiang, Jun..................................87 Xu, Ping ............................. 45, 106 Xu-Rui, Zhang ..........................163 Xydias, Christina ............. 108, 109

Y
Yacobucci, Peter R. .................103 Yamada, Kyohei ................. 26, 119 Yamin, Priscilla ..........................29 Yang, Anand A.........................164 Yang, Dali L................................97 Yang, Kaifeng...........................104 Yang, Xiangfeng.......................140 Yano, Tae ...................................20 Yanow, Dvora..................... 96, 147 Yarhi-Milo, Keren .......................78 Yashar, Deborah J. ............ 45, 148 Yates, Jeff ................................101 Ybarra, Vickie.............................98 Ye, Maoliang ..............................32 Ye, Min .......................................53 Yeager, Jack.............................132 Yeh, Yao-Yuan............................54 Yenerall, Kevan M. ...................137 Yenor, Scott E. .........................159 Yeo, Andrew............................. 136 Yi, Hongtao ..............................107 Yi, Joseph ........................ 115, 155 Yildirim, A.Kadir.........................43 Yirush, Craig Bryan ...................29 Yom, Sean L............... 72, 141, 146 Yoo, John.................................159 Yordanova, Nikoleta ..................42 Yoshihara, Toshi ........................76 Yost, Berwood .........................149 You, Jong-sung..........................39 Youatt, Rafi ................................11 Young, Daniel Taylor .................31

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS

191

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