In addition to the APSA awards (see full listing and citations in the Gazette in this issue as well as pictures under APSA Awards in this section), the following recognitions were announced by the APSA Organized Sections.
SECTION 01. FEDERALISM & INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
Publius, The Journal of Federalism Best Article Award
This award is for the best article published in Publius, The Journal of Federalism in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Michael Gusmano, Chair, The Hastings Center; Paul Manna, College of William and Mary; Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Newark
Recipient: Gwen Arnold, University of California, Davis
Title: “When Cooperative Federalism Isn’t: How U.S. Federal Interagency Contradictions Impede Effective Wetland Management.” Publius, The Journal on Federalism 45(2): 244–269
SECTION 02. LAW AND COURTS
Best Graduate Student Paper Award
The Best Graduate Student Paper Award is given annually for the best paper on law and courts written by a graduate student.
Award Committee: Justin Wedeking, Chair, University of Kentucky; Martha Ginn, Augusta University; Morgan Hazelton, St. Louis University; Matthew Hitt, Louisiana State University; Alicia Uribe, University of Illinois
Recipient: Thomas Gray, University of Virginia
Title: “Executive Influence on State Supreme Court Justices: Strategic Deference in Reappointment”
Teaching and Mentoring Award
The Teaching and Mentoring Award recognizes innovative teaching and instructional methods and materials in law and courts. Examples of innovations that might be recognized by this award include (but are not limited to) outstanding textbooks, websites, classroom exercises, syllabi, or other devices designed to enhance the transmission of knowledge about law and courts to undergraduate or graduate students.
Award Committee: Richard Pacelle, Chair, University of Tennessee; Jennifer Bowie, University of Richmond; Alyx Mark, North Central College; Laura Moyer, University of Louisville; Teena Wilhelm, University of Georgia
Recipient : Susan Haire, University of Georgia
Lasting Contribution Award
The Lasting Contribution Award is given annually for a book or journal article, 10 years or older, that has made a lasting impression on the field of law and courts.
Award Committee: Ryan Owens, Chair, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Chris Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh; Gbemende Johnson, Hamilton College; Maya Sen, Harvard University; Patrick Schmidt, Macalester College
Recipients: Andrew D. Martin, University of Michigan and Kevin M. Quinn, University of California, Berkeley
Title: “Dynamic Ideal Point Estimation via Markov Chain Monte Carlo for the U.S. Supreme Court, 1953–1999.” 2002. Political Analysis. 10: 134–153
Lifetime Achievement Award
The Lifetime Achievement Award is an award for a lifetime of significant scholarship, teaching and service to the law and courts field.
Award Committee: Susan Haire, Chair, University of Georgia; Rachel Caufield, Drake University; Ken Kersch, Boston College; David Law, University of Hong Kong; Christine Nemacheck, College of William & Mary
Recipient: Lee Epstein, Washington University in St. Louis
Best Conference Paper Award
The Law and Courts Best Conference Paper Award (formerly the American Judicature Society Award) is given annually for the best paper on law and courts presented at the previous year’s annual meetings of the American, international, or regional political science associations. Single and coauthored papers, written by political scientists, are eligible. Papers may be nominated by any member of the Section.
Award Committee: Paul Collins, Chair, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Rachael Hinkle, University at Buffalo; Scott Lemieux, College of St. Rose; Salmon Shomade, University of New Orleans; Jeffrey Yates, Binghamton University
Recipient: Jonathan P. Kastellec, Princeton University
Title: “Empirically Evaluating the Counter-Majoritarian Difficulty: Public Opinion, State Policy, and Judicial Review Before Roe v. Wade”
Best Journal Article Award
The Best Journal Article Award recognizes the best journal article on law and courts written by a political scientist and published during the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Lori Hausegger, Chair, Boise State University; Drew Lanier, University of Central Florida; Danny Lempert, State University of New York at Potsdam; Kelly Rader, Yale University; Albert Yoon, University of Toronto
Recipient: Rachael Hinkle, University at Buffalo
Title: “Legal Constraint in the U.S. Courts of Appeals.” Journal of Politics 77(3): 721–735
Law and Courts Service Award
The Law and Courts Service Award recognizes service to the section in the literal sense, as in service on committees and in leadership positions, as well as service within the section, as in service to the profession within the field of law and courts in the form of archiving data, promoting infrastructure, representing the profession in the media, etc.
Award Committee: Matthew Hall, Chair, University of Notre Dame; Bethany Blackstone, University of North Texas; Rebecca Gill, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Kirk Randazzo, University of South Carolina; Susanne Schorpp, Georgia State University
Recipient: Christine Harrington, New York University
SECTION 03. LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Richard F. Fenno Prize
In the tradition of Professor Fenno’s work, this prize is designed to honor work that is both theoretically and empirically strong. Moreover, this prize is dedicated to encouraging scholars to pursue new and different avenues of research in order to find answers to previously unexplored questions about the nature of politics.
Award Committee: Craig Volden, Chair, University of Virginia; Leslie Schwindt-Bayer, Rice University; Andrew Taylor, North Carolina State University
Recipients: Sven-Oliver Proksch, McGill University and Jonathan B. Slapin, University of Essex
Title: The Politics of Parliamentary Debate: Parties, Rebels and Representation. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Carl Albert Dissertation Award
The Carl Albert Dissertation Award is given annually for the best dissertation in legislative studies. Topics may be national or subnational in focus—on Congress, parliaments, state legislatures, or other representative bodies.
Award Committee: Michael Barber, Chair, Brigham Young University; Jennifer Clark, University of Houston; Jason Windett, Saint Louis University
Recipient: Molly E. Reynolds, Brookings Institution
Title: “Exceptions to the Rule: Majoritarian Procedures and Majority Party Power in the U.S. Senate.” University of Michigan, 2015
CQ Press Award
The CQ Press Award for the best paper on legislative studies presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Daniel Magleby, Cochair, Binghamton University; Pamela McCann, Cochair, University of Southern California; Ben Highton, University of California, Davis
Recipients: John Voorheis, University of Oregon; Nolan McCarty, Princeton University; Boris Shor, Georgetown University
Title: “Unequal Incomes, Ideology and Gridlock: How Rising Inequality Increases Political Polarization.”
Jewell-Loewenberg Award
The Jewell-Loewenberg Paper Award for the best article in the Legislative Studies Quarterly in the previous year.
Award Committee: Barry Burden, Chair, University of Wisconsin; Jason Casellas, University of Houston; Susan Miller, University of South Carolina
Recipients: Janet Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University; Josh M. Ryan, Utah State University; Anand Edward Sokhey, University of Colorado at Boulder
Title: “Examining Legislative Cue-Taking in the US Senate.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 40 (2015): 13–53
Alan Rosenthal Prize
In the spirit of Alan Rosenthal’s work, this prize is dedicated to encouraging young scholars to study questions that are of importance to legislators and legislative staff and to conduct research that has the potential application to strengthening the practice of representative democracy.
Award Committee: Gisela Sin, Chair, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Sunil Ahuja, The Higher Learning Commission; Seth Masket, University of Denver
Recipient: James M. Curry, University of Utah
Title: Legislating in the Dark. University of Chicago Press, 2015
SECTION 04. PUBLIC POLICY
Aaron Wildavsky Enduring Contribution Award
The Aaron Wildavsky Enduring Contribution Award is given for the best book or article published in the general area of public policy during the past twenty (20) plus years.
Award Committee: Paul Quirk, University of British Columbia; Ann Bowman, Texas A&M University; Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Recipient: Robert D. Putnam, Harvard University
Title: Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. Simon and Schuster, 2001
Best Comparative Policy Paper Award
Given to a scholar who has received his or her PhD within the last five years and whose career to date demonstrates unusual promise.
Award Committee: Karen Jusko, Stanford University; Brian Min, University of Michigan; Jacinct Jordana Casajuana, Pompeu Fabra University; Klaus Schubert, University of Muenster; Zach Elkins, University of Texas at Austin
Recipients: Vladimir Gimpelson, Higher School of Economics, Moscow and Daniel Treisman, University of California, Los Angeles
Title: “Misperceiving Inequality”
Best Poster on Public Policy Award
The Best Poster on Public Policy Award is given for the best paper or poster presented at the poster session at the previous APSA meeting.
Award Committee: Sarah Anzia, University of California, Berkeley; Hongtao Yi, The Ohio State University; Christian Breunig, University of Konstanz; Edella Schlager, University of Arizona
Recipient: Alexander Bolton, Duke University
Title: “Ideological Diversity and Policymaking in the United States”
Recipients: Delphia Shanks-Booth and Mallory SoRelle, Cornell University
Title: “Information v. Ideology: Recognizing (Government) Benefits in the Submerged State”
Best Paper on Public Policy Award
The Best Paper on Public Policy Award recognizes the best paper on Public Policy given at the previous APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Samuel Workman, University of Oklahoma; Jeronimo Cortina, University of Houston; R. Kent Weaver, Georgetown University
Recipient: Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University
Title: “Wage Theft, Public Policy, and the Politics of Workers’ Rights”
Theodore J. Lowi Policy Studies Journal Best Article Award
The Theodore J. Lowi Policy Studies Journal Best Article Award is given to recognize an article of particular distinction published at any time in Policy Studies Journal.
Award Committee: Susan Moffitt, Brown University; Graeme Boushey, University of California, Irvine; Laura Evans, University of Washington
Recipients: Megan E. Hatch, Cleveland State University and Elizabeth Rigby, George Washington University
Title: “Laboratories of (In)equality? Redistributive Policy and Income Inequality in the American States” Policy Studies Journal. 43(2): 163–187
SECTION 05. POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
Emerging Scholars Award
Given to a scholar who has received his or her PhD within the last five years and whose career to date demonstrates unusual promise.
Award Committee: Christina Wolbrecht, Chair, University of Notre Dame; Heath Brown, CUNY, John Jay College and Graduate Center; Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Recipient: Samara Klar, University of Arizona
Jack Walker Award
The Jack Walker Award recognizes an article published in the last two calendar years that makes an outstanding contribution to research and scholarship on political organizations and parties.
Award Committee: Florence Faucher, Chair, Science Politique-Paris; Robert G. Boatright, Clark University; Ann-Kristin Kölln, University of Gothenburg
Recipient: Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University
Title: “Brand Dilution and the Breakdown of Political Parties in Latin America.” World Politics 66 (4): 561–602
Leon D. Epstein Outstanding Book Award
Recognizes a book published in the last two calendar years that made an outstanding contribution to research and scholarship on political organizations and parties.
Award Committee: Peter Francia, Chair, East Carolina University; Marie Hojnacki, Pennsylvania State University; Markus Wagner, University of Vienna
Recipients: Sven-Oliver Proksch, McGill University and Jonathan B. Slapin, University of Essex
Title: The Politics of Parliamentary Debate: Parties, Rebels and Representation. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Recipients: Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and Fabio Rojas, Indiana University, Bloomington
Title: Party in the Street: The Antiwar Movement and the Democratic Party after 9/11. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Samuel J. Eldersveld Career Achievement Lifetime Award
This award recognizes a scholar whose lifetime professional work has made an outstanding contribution to the field.
Award Committee: Jeffrey M. Berry, Chair, Tufts University; Paul Webb, University of Sussex; Hal Bass, Ouachita Baptist University
Recipient: Kay L. Schlozman, Boston College
SECTION 06. PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
John Gaus Award
The John Gaus Award honors the recipient’s lifetime of exemplary scholarship in the joint tradition of political science and public administration. The winner delivers the Gaus Award at the APSA Annual Meeting. This year, the Gaus Lecture was presented at 6:30–7:30 PM on Friday, September 2nd, followed by a reception, all at the conference in Philadelphia.
Award Committee: Lael Keiser, University of Missouri; Frances Berry, Florida State University; Dan Carpenter, Harvard University
Recipient: Rosemary O’Leary, University of Kansas
Herbert Kaufman Best Paper Award
Awarded to the best paper presented on a panel sponsored (or cosponsored) by the Public Administration Organized Section at the previous APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Scott Robinson, University of Oklahoma; Dominic Bearfield, Texas A&M University; Claudia Avellaneda, Indiana University
Recipient: Asmus Leth Olsen, University of Copenhagen
Title: “Negative Performance Information Causes Asymmetrical Evaluations and Elicits Strong Responsibility Attributions.”
Herbert A. Simon Best Book Award
The Herbert A. Simon Book Award is for significant contributions to public administration scholarship.
Award Committee: Rich Fording, University of Alabama; Ann Bowman, Texas A&M University; Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma
Recipient: Manuel Teodoro, Texas A&M University
Title: Bureaucratic Ambition: Careers, Motives, and the Innovative Administrator. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press
Paul A. Volcker Junior Scholar Research Grant Award
This is awarded to junior scholars researching public administration issues that affect governance in the United States and abroad. Proposals will be judged on their potential to shed new light on important public administration questions, their scholarly and methodological rigor, and their promise for advancing practice and theory development.
Award Committee: John Bryson, Chair, University of Minnesota; Amanda Girth, Ohio State University; Amanda Rutherford, Indiana University
Recipient: Jennifer Dodge, Rockefeller College, University at Albany, State University of New York
Title: “Technological controversies and emerging governance: The case of ‘fracking’ in New York and Pennsylvania”
Recipient: Sanghee Park, Boise State University,
Title: “Cutback or Collaboration? Finding a Tipping Point for Saving Without Damaging Performance”
Recipient: Agustin Leon-Moreta, University of New Mexico
Title: “Inequality and the Quality of Local Government in the United States”
Best Poster Award
This is awarded for the best poster presented at the 2015 APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Manny Teodoro, Texas A&M University and Scott Robinson, University of Oklahoma
Recipients: Simon Haeder, Susan Webb Yackee and Jason Webb Yackee, University of Wisconsin
Title: “Coalition Drift? Congressional Accountability and Government Regulation, 1950–1987”
SECTION 07. CONFLICT PROCESSES
Best Paper Award
This award is given annually for the best paper written by one or more untenured scholars (graduate students, post-docs, or faculty) and presented as part of a conflict processes sponsored panel or poster session at the previous annual meeting. Papers are eligible only if all authors are untenured at the time the paper is presented. Nominations must be made by a member of the Conflict Processes Organized Section; self-nominations are encouraged.
Award Committee: Michael Colaresi, Chair, Michigan State University; David B. Carter, Princeton University; Erica Chenoweth, University of Denver
Recipient: Zachary C. Steinert-Threlkeld, University of California, San Diego
Title: “Spontaneous Collective Action: Peripheral Mobilization during the Arab Spring.” APSA Annual Meeting, 2015
Best Book Award
This award is given annually for the best book in conflict processes that was published in the two calendar years prior to the year in which the award is given. Edited volumes and textbooks are not eligible for the award. Nominations must be made by a member of the Conflict Processes Organized Section; self-nominations are encouraged.
Award Committee: Lars-Erik Cederman, Chair, ETH Zurich; Kyle Beardsley, Duke University; Zaryab Iqbal, Pennsylvania State University
Recipient: Scott Strauss, University of Wisconsin
Title: Making and Unmaking Nations: The Origins and Dynamics of Genocide in Contemporary Africa. Cornell University Press, 2015
SECTION 08. REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
George H. Hallet Award
The George H. Hallett Award is presented annually to the author of a book published at least ten years ago that has made a lasting contribution to the literature on representation and electoral systems.
Award Committee: G. Bingham Powell, Chair, University of Rochester; Ken Kollman, University of Michigan; Susan E. Scarrow, University of Houston
Recipient: Susan Stokes, Yale University
Title: Mandates and Democracy: Neoliberalism by Surprise in Latin America. Cambridge University Press, 2001
Lawrence Longley Award
The Lawrence Longley Award is given for the best article published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Guy Grossman, Chair, University of Pennsylvania; Lucas Leemann, University College London; Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Recipients: Rafaela M. Dancygier, Princeton University; Karl-Oskar Lindgren, Uppsala University; Sven Oskarsson, Uppsala University; Kåre Vernby, Stockholm University
Title: “Why Are Immigrants Underrepresented in Politics? Evidence from Sweden.” American Political Science Review, 2015
Leon Weaver Award
The Leon Weaver Award given for the best paper presented at the previous year’s annual meeting at a panel sponsored by the Representation and Electoral Systems Division.
Award Committee: Jonathan Slapin, Chair, University of Essex; Justin Kirkland, University of Houston; Robin Kolodny, Temple University
Recipient: Amy Catalinac, New York University
Title: “Positioning under Alternative Electoral Systems: Evidence from 7,497 Japanese Candidate Election Manifestos”
SECTION 09. PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Neustadt Award for the Best Book on the Presidency
The Richard E. Neustadt Award is given for the best book published during the year that contributed to research and scholarship in the field of American presidency.
Award Committee: Julia Azari, Chair, Marquette University; Joseph Pika, University of Delaware; Jon Rogowski, Washington University, St. Louis; Mariah Zeisberg, University of Michigan
Recipients: Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University and Andrew Reeves, Washington University, St. Louis
Title: The Particularistic President: Executive Branch Politics and Political Inequality. Cambridge University Press, 2015
The Legacy Award
The Legacy Award is given to a living author for a book, essay, or article, published at least 10 years prior to the award year that has made a continuing contribution to the intellectual development of the fields of presidency and executive politics.
Award Committee: Raymond Tatalovich, Chair, Loyola University of Chicago; Magna Inacio, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil; Dan Ponder, Drury University; Rebecca U. Thorpe, University of Washington
Recipient: Samuel Kernell, University of California, San Diego
Title: Going Public: New Strategies of Presidential Leadership. CQ Press, 1986
Founder’s Best Paper Award
The Founders Award honoring Lester Seligman will be given for the best paper on executive politics authored by a PhD-holding scholar at the previous year’s (2015) APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Janet Martin, Chair, Bowdoin College; Andrew Dowdle, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville; Lilly Goren, Carroll University; William Mayer, Northeastern University
Recipient: Jasmine Farrier, University of Louisville
Title: “Judicial Restraint and the New War Powers”
Founder’s Best Graduate Student Paper Award
The Founders Award honoring Stephen Wayne will be given for the best paper on executive politics presented by a graduate student at either the preceding year’s APSA Annual Meeting or at any of the regional meetings.
Award Committee: Michelle Belco, Chair, University of Houston; Graham Dodds, Concordia University, Montreal; Joshua Kennedy, Georgia Southern University; Jeffrey Peake, Clemson University
Recipient: Kenneth Lowande, University of Virginia
Title: “Delegation or Unilateral Action?”
George C. Edwards III Dissertation Award
The George C. Edwards III Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation in presidency research completed and accepted during the previous two calendar years (January 1, 2014– December 31, 2015).
Award Committee: Matthew Beckmann, Chair, University of California, Irvine; Lara Brown, George Washington University; Anthony Madonna, University of Georgia
Recipient: Rachel Augustine Potter, University of Michigan
Title: “Writing the Rules of the Game: The Strategic Logic of Agency Rulemaking”
SECTION 10. POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Society for Political Methodology Poster Award
This award recognizes the best political methodology poster given at any political science conference in the preceding year.
Award Committee: Erin Hartman, University of California, Los Angeles; Richard Nielsen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Shana Gadarian, Syracuse University; Karen Jusko, Stanford University; Maya Sen, Harvard University
Recipient: Yuki Shirito, Princeton University
Title: “Topical N-Gram Citation Model”
Recipient: Anton Strezhnev, Harvard University
Title: “A New Method for Estimating Treatment Effects under ‘Truncation-by-Death’”
Career Achievement Award
The Career Achievement Award honors an outstanding career of intellectual accomplishment and service to the profession in the political methodology field.
Award Committee: Robert J. Franzese, Jr., University of Michigan; Wendy K. Tam Cho, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Lonna Atkeson, University of New Mexico; Kosuke Imai, Princeton University; Simon Jackman, Stanford University
Recipient: Keith T. Poole, University of Georgia
Excellence in Mentoring Award
The Society for Political Methodology Excellence in Mentoring Award honors members of the Organized Section on Political Methodology who have demonstrated an outstanding commitment to mentoring and advising graduate and/or undergraduate students-particularly those from underrepresented groups.
Award Committee: R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of Technology; D. Sunshine Hillygus, Duke University; F. Daniel Hidalgo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Recipient: Janet Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University
Warren Miller Prize
This award is given for the best article in the journal Political Analysis.
Award Committee: Neil Malhotra, Stanford University; Megan Shannon, Colorado University; Arthur Spirling, New York University; Thad Dunning, University of California, Berkeley
Recipient: Pablo Barberá, New York University
Title: “Birds of the Same Feather Tweet Together: Bayesian Ideal Point Estimation Using Twitter Data.” Political Analysis 23(1): 76–91
Statistical Software Award
This award recognizes statistical software that has made a significant contribution to the advancement of political science.
Award Committee: Mike Ward, Duke University; Matt Blackwell, Harvard University; Alexander Tahk, University of Wisconsin
Recipients: Jirka Lewandowski, Nicolas Merz, Sven Regel, and Pola Lehmann, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung
Title: manifestoR: Access and Process Data and Documents of the Manifesto Project
Emerging Scholar Award
The Emerging Scholar Award honors a young researcher, within ten years of their degree, who is making notable contributions to the field of political methodology.
Award Committee: Josh Clinton, Vanderbilt University; Adam Berinsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Jas Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley
Recipient: Rocio Titiunik, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Harold F. Gosnell Prize
The Harold Gosnell Prize recognizes the best work of political methodology presented at a political science conference in the previous year.
Award Committee: Michael Peress, Stony Brook University; Suzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State University; Brandon Stewart, Princeton University
Recipients: Marc Ratkovic, Princeton University and Dustin Tingley, Harvard University
Title: “Sparse Estimation with Uncertainty: Subgroup Analysis in Large Dimensional Designs”
John T. Williams Dissertation Prize
In recognition of the John T. Williams’ contribution to graduate training, the John T. Williams Award has been established for the best dissertation proposal in the area of political methodology.
Award Committee: Justin Grimmer, Stanford University; Matt Blackwell, Harvard University; Teppei Yamamoto, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Recipient: Dean Knox, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Title: “Essays on Modeling and Causal Inference in Network Data”
SECTION 11. RELIGION AND POLITICS
Aaron Wildavsky Dissertation Award
Recognizes the best dissertation on religion and politics successfully defended within the last two years.
Award Committee: Hanna Lerner, Chair, Tel Aviv University; Amelie Barras, York University; Robert Braithwaite, Michigan State University
Recipient: Shoaib A. Ghias, University of California, Berkeley.
Title: “Defining Shari’a: The Politics of Islamic Judicial Review.”
Honorable Mention: Alicia D. Forster, University of Florida.
Title: “American Political Behavior and the Role of Religious Context.”
Honorable Mention: Jonathan S. Blake, Columbia University.
Title: “Ritual Contention in Divided Societies: Participation in Loyalist Parades in Northern Ireland.”
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award recognizes the best paper dealing with religion and politics presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Jonathan Laurence, Chair, Boston College; Ted Jelen, University of Nevada; Ruth Marshall, University of Toronto
Recipient: Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois, Chicago.
Title: “The Elusive Structure of State Secularism and its Disguised Critics.”
SECTION 13. URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS
Dennis Judd Best Book Award
The Best Book Award recognizes the best book on urban politics published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Jeff Henig, Chair, Columbia University; Hal Wolman, George Washington University; Juliet Gainsborough, Bentley College
Recipient: Lorrie Frasure-Yokely, University of California, Los Angeles
Title: Racial and Ethnic Politics in American Suburbs. Cambridge University Press 2015
Best Dissertation on Urban Policy
The Best Dissertation Award is given annually for the best dissertation on urban politics accepted in the previous year.
Award Committee: Mara Sidney, Chair, Rutgers University; Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University; Allison Bramwell, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Recipient: Zachary Todd Taylor, Western University
Title: “The Politics of Metropolitan Development: Institutions, Interests, and Ideas in the Making of Urban Governance in the United States and Canada, 1800–2000.” University of Toronto
Byran Jackson Dissertation Research on Minority Politics Award
The Byran Jackson Award recognizes the outstanding scholarship by a graduate student in the area of race and urban politics.
Award Committee: Paru Shah, Chair, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; Kristin Good, Dalhousie University; Marquita Bowers-Brown, Lindenwood University
Recipient: Diane Wong, Cornell University
Title: “Disappearing Chinatowns: The Struggle Against Gentrification in San Francisco, New York City, and Boston.”
Norton Long Career Achievement Award
The Norton Long Career Achievement Award is presented annually to a scholar who has made distinguished contributions to the study of urban politics over the course of a career through scholarly publication, the mentoring of students, and public service.
Award Committee: Michael Rich, Chair, Emory University; Megan Mullin, Duke University; Timothy Krebs, University of New Mexico
Recipient: Steve Erie, University of California, San Diego
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper given at an Urban Politics Section panel at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Woody Sanders, Chair, University of Texas at San Antonio; Neil Kraus, University of Wisconsin at River Falls; Scott Minkoff, State University of New York at New Paltz; Vladimir Kogan, Ohio State University
Recipients: Patricia Strach, University at Albany, State University of New York; Kathleen Sullivan, Ohio University; and Elizabeth Pérez-Chiqués, University at Albany, State University of New York
Title: “Trash: A Political History, 1880–1920.”
Clarence Stone Scholar Award
The Clarence Stone Scholar Award recognizes up to two young scholars who are making a significant contribution to the study of urban politics. The award is to be given to up to two post-PhD scholars who are in their career (pre-tenure, or recently advanced within the last three years).
Award Committee: Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Recipients: Danielle Resnick, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC; Amy Widestrom, Arcadia University
SECTION 15. SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Elinor Ostrom Career Achievement Award
The Career Achievement Award is given to an individual in recognition of their lifetime contribution to the study of science, technology, and environmental politics.
Award Committee: Dorothy Daley, University of Kansas; Helen Ingram, University of California, Irvine; Eric Smith, University of California, Santa Barbara
Recipient: Margaret Keck, Johns Hopkins University
Emerging Young Scholar Award
The Emerging Young Scholar Award is given in recognition of a researcher, within ten years of their PhD degree, who is making notable contributions to the field of science, technology, and environmental politics.
Award Committee: Ronald Mitchell, University of Oregon; Kathy Hochstedler, University of Waterloo; David Konisky, Indiana University
Recipient: Graeme Auld, Carleton University
Lynton K. Caldwell Award
The Lynton Keith Caldwell Prize is given for the best book on environmental politics and policy published in the past three years.
Award Committee: Jessica F. Green, New York University; David Shafie, Chapman University; Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University
Recipient: Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland, College Park
Title: Networks in Contention: The Divisive Politics of Climate Change. Cambridge University, 2015
Recipient: Graeme Auld, Carleton University
Title: Constructing Private Governance: The Rise and Evolution of Forest, Coffee, and Fisheries Certification. Yale University Press, 2014
Virginia M. Walsh Dissertation Award
The Virginia Walsh Dissertation Award, given in honor of a young scholar who tragically passed away, is given for the best dissertations in the field of science, technology and environmental politics.
Award Committee: Tabitha Benney, University of Utah; Stefan Renckens, University of Toronto; Graeme Auld, Carleton University
Recipient: Matto Mildenberger, University of California, Santa Barbara
Title: “Fiddling While the World Burns: The Double Representation of Carbon Polluters in Comparative Climate Policymaking.” Yale University, 2015
Don K. Price Award
The Don K. Price Award recognizes the best book on science, technology, and environmental politics published in the last year.
Award Committee: Thomas Birkland, North Carolina State University; Stephen Ansolabehere, Harvard University; Bentley Allan, Johns Hopkins University
Recipient: Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland
Title: Networks in Contention: The Divisive Politics of Climate Change. Cambridge University Press
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper published in a relevant journal in the last two years. Relevant journals include political science, public administration, public policy, interdisciplinary environmental science, and science and technology studies journals.
Award Committee: Neil Carter, University of York; Heather Hodges, Reed College; Matthew Arbuckle, University of Cincinnati
Recipients: Arun Agrawal, University of Michigan; Ashwini Chhatre, Indian School of Business; Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan
Title: “Motivational Crowding in Sustainable Development Interventions.” American Political Science Review 109 (3): 470–487.
Sabatier Best Conference Paper Award
The Paul A. Sabatier Best Conference Paper Award is given for the best paper on science, technology, and environmental politics presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Deserai A Crow, University of Colorado Boulder; Elizabeth A. Albright, Duke University; Matto Mildenberger, University of California, Santa Barbara
Recipients: Sarah E. Anderson, University of California, Santa Barbara; Heather Hodges, Reed College; Andrew J. Plantinga, University of California, Santa Barbara; Matthew Wibbenmeyer, University of California, Santa Barbara
Title: “Salience of Wildfire Risks and the Management of Public Lands.” APSA Annual Meeting, 2015
SECTION 16. WOMEN AND POLITICS RESEARCH
Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation on women and politics completed and accepted in the previous year.
Award Committee: Alice Kang, Chair, University of Nebraska, Lincoln; Rosanne Kennedy, New York University; Samantha Majic, CUNY-John Jay College
Recipient: Dawn Teele, Yale University (PhD); University of Pennsylvania (assistant professor)
Title: “The Logic of Women’s Enfranchisement: A Comparative Study of the United States, France, and the United Kingdom.” Yale University, 2015
Honorable Mention: Hürcan Asli Aksoy, University of Tübingen
Title: “Engendering Democracy in Turkey: Participation and Inclusion of Women’s Civil Society Organizations under AKP Rule.” University of Tübingen, 2015
Best Paper Award
This award is given for the best paper presented at the previous year’s annual meeting in the field of women and politics.
Award Committee: Meg Rincker, Purdue University Northwest; Tiffany Barnes, University of Kentucky
Recipients: Sarah Bush, Temple University and Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
Title: “How Gender Stereotypes Can Increase Engagement with Female Officeholders: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Tunisia”
Honorable Mention: Abigail S. Post and Paromita Sen, University of Virginia
Title: “A Woman in a Man’s World: A Gendered Understanding of Crisis Bargaining”
Okin-Young Award
The Okin-Young Award in Feminist Political Theory, cosponsored by Women and Politics, Foundations of Political Theory, and the Women’s Caucus for Political Science, commemorates the scholarly, mentoring, and professional contributions of Susan Moller Okin and Iris Marion Young to the development of the field of feminist political theory. This annual award recognizes the best paper on feminist political theory published in an English language academic journal during the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Shatema Threadcraft, Rutgers University; Jill Locke, Gustavus Adolphus College; Karen Celis, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Recipient: Jakeet Singh, Illinois State University
Title: “Religious Agency and the Limits of Intersectionality.” Hypatia 30 (4): 657–674, Fall 2015
SECTION 17. FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
David Easton Award
The David Easton Award is given for a book that broadens the horizons of contemporary political science by engaging issues of philosophical significance in political life through any of a variety of approaches in the social sciences and humanities.
Award Committee: Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley; Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania; Joe Carens, University of Toronto
Recipient: Patrick Wolfe, past university affiliations include: University of Melbourne, Victoria University and La Trobe University
Title: Traces of History: Elementary Structures of Race. Verso 2015
First Book Award
The First Book Award is given for a first book by a scholar in the early stages of his or her career in the area of political theory or political philosophy.
Award Committee: John Seery, Pomona College; Joan Tronto, University of Minnesota; David Gutterman, Willamette University
Recipient: Neil Roberts, Williams College
Title: Freedom as Marronage. University of Chicago Press
Recipient: Shalini Satkunanandan, University of California, Davis
Title: Extraordinary Responsibility: Politics Beyond the Moral Calculus. Cambridge University Press
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper presented on a foundations panel at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Karuna Mantena, Yale University; Craig Borowiak, Haverford College; Antonio Y. Vázquez-Arroyo, Rutgers University
Recipient: Josh Simon, Columbia University
Title: “Jose Marti’s Immanent Critique of American Imperialism”
SECTION 18. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation in the area of information technology and politics.
Award Committee: Michael Jensen, Chair, University of Canberra; Lauren Copeland, Baldwin Wallace University; Ken Rogerson, Duke University
Recipient: David Benson, Southern Methodist University
Title: “The Internet Effect: How Authoritarian Governments use Internet Communication Technologies to Maintain Control of States.”
Best Book Award
The Best Book Award recognizes the best book in the area of information technology and politics. The contest is limited to books published in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Catie Bailard, Chair, George Washington University; Jeff Gulati, Bentley University; Laurie Freeman, University of California, Santa Barbara; Alan Steinberg, Rice University
Recipient: Eitan Hersch, Yale University
Title: Hacking the Electorate: How Campaigns Perceive Voters. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Best Information Technology and Politics Article Award
The Best Published Article Award recognizes the best scholarly article published about information technology and politics. The contest is limited to articles published in the calendar year.
Award Committee: Rachel Gibson, Chair, University of Manchester; Dachi Liao, National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung,Taiwan; Gerhard Fuchs, Universität Stuttgart, Stuttgart
Recipient: Pablo Barberá, New York University
Title: “Birds of the Same Feather Tweet Together: Bayesian Ideal Point Estimation Using Twitter Data.” Political Analysis, 23 (1): 76–91.
Best Conference Paper Award
The Best Conference Paper Award recognizes the best conference paper in the area of information technology and politics.
Award Committee: Jessica Feezell, Chair, University of New Mexico; Kevin Wallsten, California State University, Long Beach; Brian Krueger, University of Rhode Island; Cecilia Manrique, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse
Recipients: Yannis Theocharis, Mannheim Centre for European Social Research; Pablo Barberá, New York University; Zoltán Fazekas, University of Southern Denmark; Sebastian Adrian Popa, Mannheim Centre for European Social Research
Title: “A Bad Workman Blames his Tweets.”
SECTION 19. INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL
Kenneth N. Waltz Dissertation Award
Kenneth N. Waltz Dissertation Award is awarded to a successfully defended doctoral dissertation on any aspect of security studies, which has been submitted in final, library copy in previous calendar year. The committee welcomes nominations for dissertations employing any approach (historical, quantitative, theoretical, policy analysis, etc.) to any topic in the field of security studies. Manuscripts are judged according to (1) originality in substance and approach; (2) significance for scholarly or policy debate; (3) rigor in approach and analysis; and (4) power of expression.
Award Committee: Michael Horowitz, Chair, University of Pennsylvania; J.D. Kenneth Boutin, Deakin University; David Edelstein, Georgetown University; Stacie Goddard, Wellesley College
Recipient: Daniel Krcmaric, Duke University
Title: “The Justice Dilemma: International Criminal Accountability, Mass Atrocities, and Civil Conflict.”
Honorable Mention: Carrie Lee, Stanford University
Title: “The Politics of Military Operations”
SECTION 20. COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Sage Best Paper Award
The Sage Best Paper Award is given to the best paper in the field of comparative politics presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Susan Woodward, Chair, City University of New York, Graduate School; Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University; Amit Ahuja, University of California, Santa Barbara
Recipients: Vladimir Gimpelson, Higher School of Economics, Moscow and Daniel Triesman, University of California, Los Angeles
Title: “Misperceiving Inequality”
Luebbert Best Book Award
The Luebbert Book Award is given for the best book in the field of comparative politics published in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Dan Slater, Chair, University of Chicago; Marius Busemeyer, University of Konstanz; Melanie Cammett, Harvard University; David Rueda, Oxford University
Recipient: Michael Albertus, University of Chicago
Title: Autocracy and Redistribution: The Politics of Land Reform. Cambridge University Press 2015
Recipient: Catherine Boone, London School of Economics
Title: Property and Political Order in Africa: Land Rights and the Structure of Politics. Cambridge University Press 2014
Luebbert Best Article Award
The Luebbert Article Award is given for the best article in the field of comparative politics published in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Vivien Schmidt, Chair, Boston University; Jane Gingrich, Oxford University; Guillermo Trejo, University of Notre Dame
Recipient: Perna Singh, Brown University
Title: “Subnationalism and Social Development in India: A Comparative Analysis of Indian States.” World Politics, June 2015
Lijphart/Przeworski/Verba Data Set Award
The Data Set Award recognizes a publicly available data set that has made an important contribution to the field of comparative politics.
Award Committee: Carsten Jensen, Chair, Aarhus University; Joe Wright, Pennsylvania State University; Dawn Brancati, Washington University, St. Louis
Recipients: Michael Coppedge, University of Notre Dame; John Gerring, Boston University; Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Gothenburg; Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University; Jan Teorell, Lund University; David Altman, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile; Michael Bernard, University of Florida; Steven Fish, University of California, Berkeley; Adam Glynn, Emory University; Allen Hicken, University of Michigan; Carl Henrik Knutsen, Oslo University; Kyle L. Marquardt, University of Gothenburg; Kelly McMann, Case Western Reserve University; Farhad Miri, University of Gothenburg; Pamela Paxton, University of Texas at Austin; Daniel Pemstein, North Dakota State University; Jeffrey Staton, Emory University; Eltan Tzelgov, University of East Anglia; Yi-ting Wang, National Cheng Kung University; Brigitte Zimmerman, University of North Carolina; Frida Andersson, University of Gothenburg; Josefine Pernes, University of Gothenburg; Natalia Stepanova, University of Gothenburg; Valeriya Mechkova, University of Gothenburg
Title: Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) Data Set, https//v-dem.net/en/data
Powell Graduate Mentoring Award
This prize, introduced in 2012, will be awarded on a bi-annual basis to a political scientist who throughout his or her career has demonstrated a particularly outstanding commitment to the mentoring of graduate students in comparative politics. The prize was named in honor of G. Bingham Powell and was initiated by his students, presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Evelyne Huber, Chair, University of North Carolina; Anke Hassel, Hertie School, Berlin; Mona Leena Krook, Rutgers University
Recipient: Suzanne Berger, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
SECTION 21. EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
Best Article Award
This award is given for the best article dealing with European politics and society published in the last year.
Award Committee: Lenka Bustikova, Arizona State University; Lucy Barnes, University of Kent; Mareike Kleine, London School of Economics
Recipients: Evgeny Finkel, George Washington University; Scott Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Tricia D. Olsen, University of Denver
Title: “Does Reform Prevent Rebellion? Evidence from Russia’s Emancipation of the Serfs.”
Comparative Political Studies, 2015, 48 (8): 984–1019
Best Book Award
The Best Book Award is given for the best book on European politics and society published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Kathleen Thelen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Mitchell Orenstein, University of Pennsylvania; Sara Goodman Wallace, University of California, Irvine
Recipient: Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan
Title: Nations under God: How Churches Use Moral Authority to Influence Policy. Princeton University Press, 2015
Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation Award
The Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation on European politics and society filed during the previous year.
Award Committee: Jane Gingrich, Oxford University; Sarah Wiliarty, Wesleyan University; Scott Abramson, University of Rochester
Recipient: Dawn Langan Teele, University of Pennsylvania
Title: “The Logic of Women’s Enfranchisement: A Comparative Study of the United States, France, and the United Kingdom.” Yale University, 2015
Peter Mair Award
The Peter Mair Memorial Award will fund the travel of two young scholars to attend the APSA meeting. Named in memory of professor Peter Mair, one of the foremost scholars of European politics, the award is meant explicitly to enable young scholars of European politics without adequate funding to present a paper in one of the panels organized by the EPS section.
Award Committee: Matthias Matthijs, Chair, Johns Hopkins University; Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan; Duane Swank, Marquette University
Recipients: Björn Bremer, European University Institute and Magda Giurcanu, Charles University, Prague
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper given on EPS sponsored panels at the previous annual meetings.
Award Committee: Antonis Ellinas, Chair, University of Cyprus; Klaus Armingeon, University of Bern; Milada Vachudova, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Recipients: Stanislav Markus, University of Chicago and Volha Charnysh, Harvard University
Title: “Big Business and the Politics of Wealth Defense: The Case of Ukrainian Oligarchs”
Recipients: Daphne Halikiopoulou and Tim Vlandas, University of Reading
Title: “Risks, Costs and Labour Markets: Explaining Cross-National Patterns of Far Right Party Success in European Parliament Elections”
SECTION 22. STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
Career Achievement Award
The Career Achievement Award given every biennium to a political scientist who has made a significant lifetime contribution to the study of politics and public policies in the American states.
Award Committee: Michael Berkman, Chair, Pennsylvania State University; James Garand, Louisiana State University; Virginia Gray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Recipient: Melinda Gann Hall, Michigan State University
Christopher A. Mooney Dissertation Award
This award is given for the best dissertation in American state politics and policy completed during the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Keith Hamm, Chair, Rice University; Lael Keiser, University of Missouri, Columbia; Jeffrey Yates, Binghamton University
Recipient: Chidambaram Parinandi (directed by Jenna Bednar and Charles Shipan), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Title: “Devolution and Policy Experimentation under Federalism: Essays on Innovation and Emulation in the American States”
Best Article Award
The award recognizes the best journal article on US state politics or policy published during the previous calendar year in any peer-reviewed journal.
Award Committee: Tom Carsey, Chair, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Bob Erikson, Columbia University; Chris Reenock, Florida State University
Recipients: Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa; Tracy L. Osborn, University of Iowa and Emily U. Schilling, University of Tennessee
Title: “Pivotal Politics and Initiative Use in the American States”
Political Research Quarterly 68 (4): 665–677
Virginia Gray Best Book Award
To be awarded annually to the best political science book published on the subject of US state politics or policy in the preceding three calendar years. Thus, books would be eligible to be considered for the award for three years.
Award Committee: Jennifer Wolak, Chair, University of Colorado; Jennifer Hayes Clark, University of Houston; Susan Miller, University of South Carolina
Recipients: Christopher W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh and Damon M. Cann, Utah State University
Title: Voters’ Verdicts: Citizens, Campaigns, and Institutions in State Supreme Court Elections. University of Virginia Press
Recipients: Ray La Raja and Brian Schaffner, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Title: Campaign Finance and Political Polarization: When Purists Prevail. University of Michigan Press
SPPQ Best Paper Award
The State Politics and Policy Award is given for the best paper on state politics and policy presented at any professional meeting in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Tracy Osborn, Chair, University of Iowa; Daniel Lewis, Siena College; Kerri Melitta, Illinois State University
Recipient: Mona Vakilifathi, University of California, San Diego
Title: “Constraining Bureaucrats Today Knowing You’ll Be Gone Tomorrow: The Effect of Legislative Term Limits on Statutory Discretion”
SECTION 23. POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Timothy E. Cook Best Graduate Student Paper Award
The Cook Award recognizes the best paper on political communication presented by a graduate student at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Brian Harrison, Northwestern University; Shannon McGregor, University of Texas; Alan Steinberg, Rice University
Recipient: Nick Anspach, Temple University
Title: “The Inadvertent Audience: How Online Peer Influence Mitigates Selective Exposure”
David Swanson Career Achievement
The David Swanson Career Achievement Award (jointly administered with the International Communication Association) recognizes distinguished and sustained contributions to the field as planners, editors, and leaders and in roles that require time and energy, innovation, and personal dedication. The award honors David Swanson, one of the founders of political communication who gave exemplary service to the ICA Political Communication Division and the APSA
Political Communication Section. In his memory, the ICA division presents the award every other year.
Award Committee: Gianpietro Mazzoleni, University of Milan; David L. Paletz, Duke University; Lindsay H. Hoffman, University of Delaware; Steven Livingston, George Washington University; Magdalena Wojcieszak, University of Amsterdam
Recipient: Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
Paul Lazarsfeld Best Paper Award
The Paul Lazarsfeld Award recognizes the best paper on political communication presented at the previous year’s APSA annual meeting.
Award Committee: Georgia Kernell, Northwestern University; Shelley J. Boulianne, MacEwan University; Betty Hanson, University of Connecticut
Recipients: Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University; Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University
Title: “Citizen Engagement (and Disengagement) in Response to Social Ills”
Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award
One outstanding doctoral dissertation award in political communication may be given annually. To be considered for the award, the dissertation research must pertain to some aspect of political communication.
Award Committee: Kathleen Hall Jamieson, University of Pennsylvania; Johanna Dunaway, Texas A&M University; Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University
Recipient: Emily Sydnor, Southwestern University
Title: “Fighting Words and Fiery Tone: The Interaction of Political Incivility and Psychological Conflict Orientation”
SECTION 24. POLITICS AND HISTORY
J. David Greenstone Book Prize
The J. David Greenstone Book Prize recognizes the best book in history and politics in the past two calendar years.
Award Committee: Erik J. Engstrom, Chair, University of California, Davis; K. Orfeo Floretos, Temple University; Adria Lawrence, Yale University
Recipient: Robert Mickey, University of Michigan
Title: Paths Out of Dixie: The Democratization of Authoritarian Enclaves in America’s Deep South, 1944–1972. Princeton University Press, 2015
Mary Parker Follett Award for Best Article
The Mary Parker Follett Prize recognizes the best article on Politics and History published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Daniel Carpenter, Chair, Harvard University; Tulia Faletti, University of Pennsylvania; Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley
Recipients: Prerna Singh, Brown University
Title: “Subnationalism and Social Development: A Comparative Analysis of Indian States.” World Politics 67 (3): 506–562
Walter Dean Burnham Dissertation Award
The Walter Dean Burnham Award is given for the best dissertation in the field of politics and history.
Award Committee: Evelyne Huber, Chair, University of North Carolina; Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan; Jonathan M. Obert, Amherst College
Recipient: Sarah Johnson, University of Chicago
Title: “The Ages We Live By: Historical Periodization in Social and Political Thought”
SECTION 25. POLITICAL ECONOMY
Michael Wallerstein Award
The Michael Wallerstein Award is given for the best published article in political economy in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Stephanie Rickard, London School of Economics; Carie Steele, Texas Tech University; Soo Yeon Kim, National University of Singapore
Recipients: Ernesto Calvo, University of Maryland, College Park and Jonathan Rodden, Stanford University
Title: “The Achilles Heel of Plurality Systems: Geography and Representation in Multiparty Democracies.” American Journal of Political Science 59 (4): 789–805
William H. Riker Book Award
The Best Book Award, named for William H. Riker, is given for the best book on political economy published during the past three calendar years.
Award Committee: Miriam Golden, University of California, Los Angeles; Assema Sinha, Claremont McKenna College; Charles Shipan, University of Michigan
Recipient: David Skarbek, King’s College London
Title: The Social Order of the Underworld: How Prison Gangs Govern the American Penal System. Oxford University Press, 2014
Honorable Mention: Megumi Naoi, University of California, San Diego
Title: Building Legislative Coalitions for Free Trade in Asia: Globalization as Legislation. Cambridge University Press 2015
Honorable Mention: David A. Steinberg , Johns Hopkins University
Title: Demanding Devaluation: Exchange Rate Politics in the Developing World. Cornell University Press, 2015
Mancur Olson Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award, named for Mancur Olson, is given for the best dissertation in political economy completed in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Victor Shih, University of California, San Diego; Cheryl Schonhard-Bailey, London School of Economics; Scott Gates, Peace Research Institute Oslo
Recipient: Charlotte Cavaillé, Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse
Title: “Demand for Redistribution in the Age of Inequality”
Recipient: Rachel Augustine Potter, University of Virginia
Title: “Writing the Rules of the Game: The Strategic Logic of Agency Rule Making”
Fiona McGillivray Prize Best Paper Award
The Fiona McGillivray Prize is given for the best paper in Political Economy presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University; Oeindrila Dube, New York University; Antoinette Handley, University of Toronto
Recipient: Francisco Garfias, Stanford University
Title: “Elite Competition and State Capacity Development: Theory and Evidence from Post-Revolutionary Mexico”
SECTION 27. NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Christian Bay Best Paper Award
The Christian Bay Award recognizes the best paper presented on a New Political Science panel at the previous year’s annual meeting.
Award Committee: Robert Kirsch, Chair, Arizona State University; Lucrecia Iommi, Fairfield University; Joshua Yesnowitz, Williams College
Recipient: Jocelyn Boryczka, Fairfield University
Title: “An Anatomy of Sexism: The Colonized Vagina.”
Michael Harrington Book Award
The Michael Harrington Book Award is given for an outstanding book that demonstrates how scholarship can be used in the struggle for a better world.
Award Committee: Heike Schotten, Chair, University of Massachusetts, Boston; Laurence Davis, University College Cork; Jeff Broxmeyer, University of Toledo
Recipient: Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania
Title: Caught: The Prison State and the Lockdown of American Politics. Princeton University Press, 2015
Richard Cloward and Francis Fox Piven Award
The Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven Award recognizes an activist group, in the region of the annual meeting that puts the ideals of the New Political Science Section, “to make the study of politics relevant to the struggle for a better world,” into practice.
Award Committee: Maggie Gray, Chair, Adelphi University; Andrew Scerri, Virginia Tech; Jennifer Lawrence, Virginia Tech; Frances Piven, Honorary, CUNY-Graduate Center
Recipient: Urban Tree Connection
Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement Award
The Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement Award recognizes a progressive political scientist who has had a long, successful career as a writer, teacher and activist.
Award Committee: Terrell Carver, Chair, University of Bristol; Timothy Luke, Virginia Tech; Nancy Love, Appalachian State University
Recipient: V. Spike Peterson, University of Arizona
Stephen Eric Bronner Dissertation Award
For an outstanding political science dissertation finished within the previous year of the APSA Meeting which exemplifies the commitment to use scholarship in the struggle for a better world.
Award Committee: Manfred Steger, Chair, University of Hawaii, Manoa; Isaac Kamola, Trinity College; John Ehrenberg, Long Island University; Stephen Eric Bronner, honorary, Rutgers University
Recipient: Dean Snyder, Antioch College
Title: “Commercial Capital and the Political Economy of Agricultural Overproduction.” Syracuse University, 2015
SECTION 28. POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Robert E. Lane Best Book Award
The Robert E. Lane Award for the best book in political psychology published in the past year.
Award Committee: Kent Jennings, University of California, Santa Barbara; Beth Miller Vonnahme, University of Missouri, Kansas City; Daniel Myers, University of Minnesota
Recipients: Bethany Albertson, University of Texas at Austin and Shana Gadarian, Syracuse University
Title: Anxious Politics: Democratic Citizenship in a Threatening World. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Recipient: Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware
Title: Nationalist Passions. Cornell University Press, 2015
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given to the most outstanding paper in political psychology delivered at the previous year’s Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: David Redlawsk, Rutgers University; Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College; Michael Tesler, University of California, Irvine
Recipients: Eric Groenendyk, University of Memphis and Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
Title: “What Motivates Reasoning? A Goal-Oriented Theory of Political Evaluation”
Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation in political psychology filed during the previous year.
Award Committee: Zoe Oxley, Union College; Elizabeth Suhay, American University; Timothy Ryan, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Recipient: Eun Bin Chung, University of Utah
Title: “Overcoming the History Problem: Group-Affirmation in International Relations”
Distinguished Junior Scholars Award
The APSA Political Psychology Section will give up to five $400 grants, meant for travel to the APSA, for junior scholars (graduate students or those no more than seven years since receiving their PhD).
Award Committee: Casey Klofstad, University of Miami; Monica Schneider, Miami University; Cengiz Erisen, TOBB University of Economics and Technology
Recipients: Matthew Ward, University of Houston; D.J. Flynn, Northwestern University; Tarah Williams, University of Illinois
SECTION 29. POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
Craig L. Brians Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Research and Mentorship
Established in 2014, this award will be awarded annually at the Teaching and Learning Conference, with recognition also given at the APSA annual Political Science Education Section reception.
Award Committee: Victor Asal, Chair, University at Albany, SUNY; Mitchell Brown, Auburn University; Steve Greene, North Carolina State University
Recipients: Elizabeth Matto, Rutgers University and Jeffrey Fine, Clemson University
Best APSA Conference Paper Award
The Best Conference Paper Award is given for the best presentation on undergraduate education at the past year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Bobbi Gentry, Chair, Bridgewater College; Diane Lowenthal, American University; Jeffrey Sosland, American University
Recipients: Eric Michael French, Oklahoma State University and Brendon Wrestler, Indiana State University
Title: “How to Lose a Class in Ten Days: The Link between Pedagogy and Student Retention”
Lifetime Achievement Award
The Lifetime Achievement Award is given to a person whose lifetime contribution to political science have had a significant impact on undergraduate education.
Award Committee: Sherri L. Wallace, Chair, University of Louisville; Patrick McKinlay, Morningside College; Joseph Roberts, Roger Williams University; Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY; Terry Gilmour, Midland College; Bobbi Gentry, Bridgewater College; Ex-Officio: Renee Van Vechten, University of the Redlands
Recipient: Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
SECTION 30. POLITICS, LITERATURE AND FILM
Wilson Carey McWilliams Best Paper Award
The Wilson Carey McWilliams Best Paper Award is given for the best paper presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Claudia Franziska Brühwiler, University of St.Gallen, Switzerland; Davide Panagia, University of California, Los Angeles; Carl Scott, Utah Valley University; Ann Ward, University of Regina, Canada
Recipient: Arlene Saxonhouse, University of Michigan
Title: “Save Our City: The Curious Absence of Aeschylus in Modern Political Thought.” APSA Annual Meeting, 2015
SECTION 31. FOREIGN POLICY
Distinguished Scholar Award
Recognizes a history of distinguished scholarship in the field of foreign policy.
Award Committee: Cameron Thies, Arizona State University; Susan Allen, University of Mississippi; James Scott, Texas Christian University
Recipient: Robert Jervis, Columbia University
Best Paper Award
Recognizes the best paper on foreign policy presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Desha Girod, Georgetown University; Alexandra Guisinger, Temple University; Elizabeth Saunders, George Washington University
Recipient: Danielle Lupton, Colgate University
Title: “Military Experience and Congressional Oversight of the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq”
Best Graduate Student Paper Award
Panel chairs from any division are invited to nominate outstanding graduate student papers presented at the APSA Annual Meeting that are relevant to the study of foreign policy.
Award Committee: Bridget Coggins, University of California, Santa Barbara; Dennis Foster, Virginia Military Institute; Brendan Green, University of Cincinnati
Recipient: Mark Bell, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Title: “What Do Nuclear Weapons Offer States? A Theory of State Foreign Policy Response to Nuclear Acquisition”
Recipient: Lina Benabdallah, University of Florida
Title: “Emerging Powers as Socializers: Examining Norm Diffusion and Knowledge Production in China’s Security Strategy.”
SECTION 32. ELECTIONS, PUBLIC OPINION, AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Warren E. Miller Prize
The Warren E. Miller Prize is awarded every two or three years for an outstanding career of intellectual accomplishment and service to the profession in the elections, public opinion, and voting behavior field.
Award Committee: Cindy Kam, Chair, Vanderbilt University; Ted Brader, University of Michigan; Robert Van Houweling, University of California, Berkeley
Recipient: John Aldrich, Duke University
Philip E. Converse Best Book Award
The Philip E. Converse Best Book Award is given for an outstanding book in the field published at least five years before.
Award Committee: Tatishe Nteta, Chair, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; William Bianco, Indiana University; John Ryan, Stony Brook University
Recipients: Marc Hetherington, Vanderbilt University and Jonathan Weiler, University of North Carolina
Title: Authoritarianism and Polarization in American Politics. Cambridge University Press, 2009
Emerging Scholar Award
The Emerging Scholar Award is awarded to the top scholar in the field who is within 10 years of her or his PhD.
Award Committee: Cherie Maestas, Chair, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; Steve Nicholson, University of California, Merced; Mark Peffley, University of Kentucky
Recipients: Yanna Krupnikov, Stonybrook University and Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper delivered at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Anand Sokhey, Chair, University of Colorado; Jessica Preece, Brigham Young University, Adam Levine, Cornell University
Recipients: David A.M. Peterson, Iowa State University; Kyle Saunders, Colorado State University; Scott McClurg, Southern Illinois University; Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
Title: “Macrointerest: The Public as Attentive Gods of Vengeance but Lazy Gods of Reward (with Apologies to V.O. Key)”
Best Article in Political Behavior Award
This award is for the best article published in Political Behavior in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: David Peterson, Chair, Iowa State University; Nichole Bauer, University of Alabama; Zeynep Somer-Topcu, University of Texas at Austin
Recipient: Cecelia Mo, Vanderbilt University
Title: “The Consequences of Explicit and Implicit Gender Attitudes and Candidate Quality in the Calculation of Voters.”
SECTION 33. RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS
Best Book Award for Race Relations in the United States
The Best Book Award is given for the best book in the field of race, ethnicity, and politics.
Award Committee: Natasha Altema McNeely, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Ivy Cargile, California State University Bakersfield; Tony Affigne, Providence College
Recipient: Lorrie Frasure-Yokley, University of California, Los Angeles
Title: Racial and Ethnic Politics in American Suburbs. Cambridge University Press
Recipient: Claire Jean Kim, University of California, Irvine
Title: Dangerous Crossings: Race, Species, and Nature in a Multicultural Age. Cambridge University Press
Recipient: Christopher T. Stout, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Title: Bringing Race Back In: Black Politicians, Deracialization, and Voting Behavior in the Age of Obama. University of Virginia Press
Recipient: Betina Cutaia Wilkinson, Wake Forest University
Title: Partners or Rivals? Power and Latino, Black, and White Relations in the Twenty-First Century. University of Virginia Press
SECTION 34. INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
Jervis and Schroeder Best Book Award
This award may be granted to a single- or multi-authored book, or to an edited volume. The award will be given to works published in the calendar year prior to the year of the APSA Annual Meeting at which the award is presented. The copyright date of a book will establish the relevant year.
Award Committee: Jonathan Kirshner, Chair, Cornell University; Stacie Goddard, Wellesley College; Erik Grynaviski, George Washington University
Recipients: Andrew Phillips, University of Queensland and Jason Sharman, Griffith University, Queensland
Title: International Order in Diversity: War, Trade, and Rule in the Indian Ocean. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Recipient: Ronald Krebs, University of Minnesota
Title: Narrative and the Making of US National Security. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Outstanding Article Award
The Outstanding Article Award in International History and Politics recognizes exceptional peer-reviewed journal articles representing the mission of the International History and Politics Section of the American Political Science Association, including innovative work that brings new light to events and processes in international politics, encourages interdisciplinary conversations between political scientists and historians, and advances historiographical methods. The Outstanding Article Award is given to a published article that appeared in print in the calendar year preceding the APSA Annual Meeting at which the award is presented. It may be granted to an article that is single- or co-authored. The year of final journal publication, as detailed by print citation, establishes eligibility.
Award Committee: Henry Nau, Chair, George Washington University; Hyon Joo Yoo, Trinity University; Jeff Colgan, Brown University
Recipients: Andrew Phillips, University of Queensland and Jason Sharman, Griffith University, Queensland
Title: “Explaining Durable Diversity in International Systems: State, Company, and Empire in the Indian Ocean” International Studies Quarterly (2015) 59: 436–448
Honorable Mention: Michael Beckley, Tufts University
Title: “The Myth of Entangling Alliances: Reassessing the Security Risks of US Defense Pacts” International Security 39 (4): 7–48
SECTION 35. COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
Juan Linz Best Dissertation Award
Given for the best dissertation in the comparative study of democracy completed and accepted in the two calendar years immediately prior to the APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Henry Thomson, Nuffield College, University of Oxford; Mai Hassan, University of Michigan; Christian von Soest, German Institute of Global and Area Studies
Recipient: Bryn Rosenfeld, Nuffield College, University of Oxford
Title: “Varieties of Middle Class Growth and Democratic Preference Formation”
Best Book Award
Given for the best book in the field of Comparative Democratization published in 2015 (authored, coauthored, or edited).
Award Committee: Kurt Weyland, University of Texas at Austin; Sheena Chestnut Greitens, University of Missouri; Rachel Beatty Riedl, Sciences Po Bordeaux
Recipient: Kenneth Roberts, Cornell University
Title: Changing Course in Latin America: Party Systems in the Neoliberal Era. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Best Article Award
Single-authored or co-authored articles focusing directly on the subject of democratization and published in 2015 are eligible.
Award Committee: Jordan Gans-Morse, Northwestern University; Sebastian Mazzuca, Johns Hopkins University; Simeon Nichter, University of California, San Diego
Recipient: Daniel Treisman, University of California, Los Angeles
Title: “Income, Democracy, and Leader Turnover” American Journal of Political Science 59 (4): 927–942
Best Field Work Award
This prize rewards dissertation students who conduct especially innovative and difficult fieldwork. Scholars who are currently writing their dissertations or who complete their dissertations in 2015 are eligible.
Award Committee: Barry Driscoll, Grinnell College; Michael Broache, University of Tampa; Colm Fox, Singapore Management University
Recipient: Pia Raffler, Yale University
Title: “Bureaucrats versus Politicians: A Field Experiment on Political Oversight and Local Public Service Provision”
Recipient: Kathleen Klaus, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Title: “Claiming Land: Institutions, Narratives, and Political Violence in Kenya”
Best Paper Award
Given to the best paper on comparative democratization presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting. Papers must be nominated by panel chairs or discussants.
Award Committee: Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas at Austin; Allen Hicken, University of Michigan; Edmund Malesky, Duke University
Recipient: Anne Meng, University of California, Berkeley
Title: “Ruling Parties in Authoritarian Regimes: A Theory of Endogenous Institutional Change”
SECTION 37. QUALITATIVE AND MULTI-METHOD RESEARCH
Giovanni Sartori Book Award
The Giovanni Sartori Book Award honors Giovanni Sartori’s work on qualitative methods and concept formation, and especially his contribution to helping scholars think about problems of context as they refine concepts and apply them to new spatial and temporal settings. The award is intended to encompass two types of contributions: new research on methodology per se (i.e., studies that introduce specific methodological innovations or that synthesize and integrate methodological ideas in a way that is in itself a methodological contribution) and substantive work that is an exemplar for the application of qualitative methods.
Award Committee: Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University; Katerina Linos, University of California at Berkeley; Craig Parsons, University of Oregon
Recipient: Ronald R. Krebs, University of Minnesota
Title: Narrative and the Making of US National Security. Cambridge University Press, 2015
Honorable Mention: Anna Grzymała-Busse, University of Michigan
Title: Nations under God: How Churches Use Moral Authority to Influence Policy. Princeton University Press, 2015
Alexander L. George Article Award
The Alexander L. George Article Award honors Alexander George’s contributions to the comparative case-study method, including his work linking that method to a systematic concern with research design, and his contribution of developing the idea and the practice of process tracing. This award may be granted to a journal article or to a chapter in an edited volume that stands on its own as an article. The award will be given to an article or book chapter published in the calendar year prior to the year of the APSA meeting at which the award is presented, with the date of publication being established by the journal issue for articles and the copyright date of the book for chapters.
Award Committee: Carolyn Warner, Arizona State University; Sarah Parkinson, University of Minnesota; Jonathan Mercer, University of Washington
Recipients: Thomas Rixen, University of Bamberg and Lora Anne Viola, Free University of Berlin
Title: “Putting Path Dependence in its Place: Toward a Taxonomy of Institutional Change” Journal of Theoretical Politics 27 (2): 301–323
Sage Paper Award
The Sage Paper Award honors Sara and George McCune, who founded and sustained Sage Publications as a leading publisher of social science methodology— including very centrally qualitative methods. This award will be given to a paper presented at the previous Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association.
Award Committee: Rasmus Brun Pedersen, Aarhus University; Ramazan Kilinc, University of Omaha; Daniel Beland, University of Saskatchewan
Recipients: Erica S. Simmons, University of Wisconsin–Madison and Nicholas Rush Smith, City University of New York – City College
Title: “Comparison and Ethnography: What Each Can Learn from the Other”
David Collier Mid-Career Achievement Award
The Award honors David Collier’s contributions—through his research, graduate teaching, and institution-building—as a founder of the qualitative and multi-method research movement in contemporary political science. The award will be presented annually to a mid-career political scientist to recognize distinction in methodological publications, innovative application of qualitative and multi-method approaches in substantive research, and/or institutional contributions to this area of methodology.
Award Committee: Peter Hall, Harvard University; Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago; John Gerring, Boston University; James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Recipient: Lauren Mathews Morris MacLean, Indiana University
SECTION 38. SEXUALITY AND POLITICS
Cynthia Weber Best Conference Paper Award
The Best Conference Paper Award recognizes the best paper exploring sexuality and politics presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Helma de Vries-Jordan, Chair, University of Pittsburgh at Bradford; Julie Moreau, Northern Arizona University; Drew Walker, Brown University
Recipients: Joseph J. Fischel, Yale University and Hilary R. O’Connell, AccessMatters.Org
Title: “Disabling Consent, or Reconstructing Sexual Autonomy” Columbia Journal of Gender Equality 30 (2), 2015
Kenneth Sherrill Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation on sexuality and politics completed and successfully defended in the previous two calendar years.
Award Committee: Tiffany Willoughby-Herard, Chair, University of California, Irvine; Jeremiah Garretson, California State University at East Bay; Bogdan Popa, Oberlin College
Recipient: Satoko Itani, University of Toronto
Title: “Japanese Female and ‘Trans’ Athletes: Negotiating Subjectivity and Media Constructions of Gender, Sexuality, and Nation.” University of Toronto, 2015
Recipient: Carly Thomsen, University of California, Santa Barbara
Title: “Unbecoming: Visibility Politics and Queer Rurality.” University of California, Santa Barbara, 2014
SECTION 39. HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY
Leonard S. Robins Best Paper Award
The Len Robins Best Paper on Health Politics and Policy Award honors the late Len Robins, who through his presence and gentle questioning at virtually every health politics panel graciously nurtured the scholarship of both junior and senior scholars.
Award Committee: Shanna Rose, Claremont McKenna College; James Brasfield, Webster University; Miriam Laugeson, Columbia University
Recipients: Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota and Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University
Title: “The Contingency of Policy Feedback Effects: How Policy Features Interact with Political Conditions and Motivations to Shape Public Opinion”
Outstanding Public Engagement in Health Policy
Awarded to an individual who has been working to improve health and the health care system by actively engaging in politics and policy making.
Award Committee: Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark; Michael S. Sparer, Columbia University; Sarah Gollust, University of Minnesota; Bert Rockman, Purdue University; Karen Baird, SUNY at Purchase; David Jones, Boston University; Shanna Rose, Claremont McKenna College
Recipient: Bruce C. Vladeck, Nexera, Inc.
SECTION 40. CANADIAN POLITICS
Mildred Schwartz Lifetime Achievement
The Mildred A. Schwartz Lifetime Achievement Award recognizes scholarship and leadership in bringing the study of Canadian politics to the international political science community.
Award Committee: Scott Matthews, Chair, Memorial University of Newfoundland; Kent Weaver, Georgetown University; Denis Saint Martin, University of Montreal; Anthony Sayers, University of Calgary; Mildred Schwartz, University of Illinois, Chicago
Recipient: Keith Banting, Queen’s University
SECTION 41. POLITICAL NETWORKS
Political Ties Award
This award is given on a biennial basis to the best article published on political networks.
Award Committee: Pablo Barberá, New York University; Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth University; Jacob Montgomery, Washington University in St. Louis
Recipients: Skyler J. Cranmer, Ohio State University; Elizabeth J. Menninga, University of Iowa; Peter J. Mucha, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Title: “Kantian fractionalization predicts the conflict propensity of the international system” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 (38)
Best Conference Paper Award
This award is given annually to the best paper on political networks presented by a faculty person delivered at a political science conference in the previous year.
Award Committee: Samara Klar, University of Arizona; Philip Leifeld, University of Glasgow; Skylar Cranmer, Ohio State
Recipients: Jennifer M. Larson, New York University and Janet I. Lewis, US Naval Academy
Title: “Ethnic Networks.” APSA Annual Meeting 2015
John Sprague Award
This award is given annually to the best paper on political networks presented by a graduate student delivered at a political science conference in the previous year.
Award Committee: Sandra Gonzalez-Bailon, University of Pennsylvania; Jungmoo Woo, University of Kentucky
Recipient: Mia Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Title: “Sharing Constituencies: Polarization and Representation in the Extended Party Network.” Midwest Political Science Association Annual Meeting, 2016
Best Book Award
The best book award is given on a biennial basis to the best book published on political networks.
Award Committee: Justin Gross, Chair, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Gwen Arnold, University of California, Davis; Sarah Parkinson, University of Minnesota
Recipient: Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland, College Park
Title: Networks in Contention: The Divisive Politics of Climate Change. Cambridge University Press, 2015
SECTION 42. EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award recognizes a paper that was scheduled to be presented at APSA and features experimental research.
Award Committee: Josh Kertzer, Harvard University; Jeff Conroy-Krutz, Michigan State University; Sean Westwood, Dartmouth College
Recipients: David Broockman, Stanford University and Daniel Butler, Washington University
Title: “The Causal Effects of Elite Position-Taking on Voter Attitudes: Field Experiments with Elite Communication”
Best Book Award
The Best Book Award recognizes the best book published in 2015 that either uses or is about experimental research methods in the study of politics.
Award Committee: Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University; Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University; Daniel Butler, Washington University
Recipient: Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University
Title: American Insecurity: Why Our Economic Fears Lead to Political Inaction. Princeton University Press 2015
Best Dissertation Award
The Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation completed in calendar year 2015 that utilizes experimental methods on substantive questions about politics or makes a fundamental contribution to experimental methods.
Award Committee: Jonathan M. Ladd, Georgetown University; Antoine Banks, University of Maryland; Kathleen Searles, Lousiana State University
Recipient: Eun Bin Chung, Ohio State University
Title: “Overcoming the History Problem: Group-Affirmation in International Relations”
Public Service Award
Many experiments only occur thanks to the assistance of non-researchers who provide access to resources and data. This award recognizes a special form of public service: the facilitation of randomized experiments in political science by those outside the academy.
Award Committee: Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College; Samara Klar, University of Arizona; Kristin Kanthak, University of Pittsburgh
Recipient: Dave Fleischer, Leadership Lab of the Los Angeles LGBT Center
SECTION 43. MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Best Paper Award
Award for best paper on migration and/or citizenship presented at the previous APSA Annual Meeting (either as part of a panel or poster session).
Award Committee: James Hollifield, Chair, Southern Methodist University; Mara Sidney, Rutgers University; Fiona Adamson, University of London
Recipients: Antje Ellermann, University of British Columbia and Agustin Goenaga Orrego, Lund University
Title: “Race, Gender, Class, Disability, and the Ethics of Immigrant Selection”
Best Dissertation Award
Award for best dissertation on migration and/or citizenship accepted in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: David FitzGerald, Chair, University of California, San Diego; Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley; Helen Marrow, Tufts University
Recipient: Gerasimos Tsourapas, University of London
Title: “Trading People, Consolidating Power: Emigration and Authoritarianism in Modern Egypt”
Recipient: Daisy Kim, Johns Hopkins University
Title: “Bargaining Citizenship: Women’s Organizations, the State, and Marriage Migrants in South Korea”
Best Article Award
Award for best article on migration and/or citizenship accepted in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Julie Novkov, Chair, University of Albany, SUNY; Maria Koinova, University of Warwick; Cara Wong, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Recipient: Sara Goodman, University of California, Irvine
Title: “Conceptualizing and Measuring Citizenship and Integration Policy: Past Lessons and New Approaches” Comparative Political Studies 48, 2015
Best Book Award
Best Book Award for the best book on migration and/or citizenship published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Jacqueline Stevens, Chair, Northwestern University; Elizabeth Cohen, Syracuse University; H. Richard Friman, Marquette University
Recipient: Leila Kawar, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Title: Contesting Immigration Policy in Court: Legal Activism and Its Radiating Effects in the United States and France. Cambridge University Press, 2015
SECTION 45. CLASS AND INEQUALITY
Best Paper Award
Awarded to the best paper presented on the topic of economic or social class inequality at the American Political Science Association’s Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Jacob Hacker, Yale University; Peter Enns, Cornell University; Martin Gilens, Princeton University
Recipient: Eleanor Neff Powell, University of Wisconsin
Title: “Legislative Consequences of Fundraising Influence”
Recipients: Tali Mendelberg, Katherine McCabe, and Adam Thal, Princeton University
Title: “The Rich are Different from You and Me: How Wealthy Student Bodies Foster Economically Conservative Students”