Annual Meeting and Exhibit Review
For the first time in its history, the American Political Science Association held its annual meeting in Seattle, Washington, bringing together more than 6,000 political scientists from all over the world for a variety of programmatic, networking, and social events. From September 1 to September 4, scholars gathered in the beautiful Pacific Northwest to explore an exciting program focused on the theme The Politics of Rights. The 2011 Annual Meeting Program Chairs Frances Hagopian, Harvard University, and Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University, developed a theme that asked “the discipline bring its empirical and normative lenses to reflect on the domestic, comparative, and international dimensions of the complex politics of rights.”
Wednesday, August 31, offered a preconvention professional day featuring 34 short courses sponsored by APSA's Organized Sections, related groups, and other affiliated organizations. Topics ranged from multi-method research to Latino politics to social media use. Thursday, September 1 marked the official beginning of the meeting with numerous panels and roundtable discussions, as well as several key events. The Awards Ceremony and Luncheon recognized more than 30 individuals for their outstanding books, dissertations, and notable career achievements. APSA's Siting and Engagement Committee hosted a popular tour of Seattle's rich labor history. International attendees and graduate students were given a special welcome, with get togethers hosted by APSA for both groups. The eventful first day of the meeting culminated with the presidential address by APSA President Carole Pateman, University of California, Los Angeles, titled “Participatory Democracy Revisited,” followed by the 107th Annual Meeting Opening Reception. Attendees at the reception enjoyed a live band, hors d'oeuvres, and beverages. In addition to these special events, the exhibit hall opened on Thursday with more than 80 political science publishers and related companies, a variety of sponsored coffee breaks and receptions, and the poster presentations.
Along with panels, poster sessions, meetings, and receptions, Friday, September 2, included several notable talks, including an address delivered by APSA James Madison Award recipient Jane Mansbridge titled “Democracy's Unsolved Problems.” Attendees were also invited to attend the Foundations of Political Theory Plenary Address, delivered by Arjun Appadurai, New York University, and the John Gaus Award Lecture, delivered by Hal Rainey, University of Georgia titled “Organizations, Politics, and Public Purposes: Analyzing Public Organizations and Public Management.” The APSA Reception Honoring Teaching, sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha, was also held on Friday evening to recognize individuals who have won teaching awards at their university or college in the past year.
On Saturday, September 3, members were encouraged to attend the APSA Annual All Member Business Meeting and were offered a chance to participate in APSA governance. Attendees of this meeting also witnessed the leadership transition, as President Carole Pateman passed the gavel to President-Elect G. Bingham Powell, Jr. Participants also had the opportunity to attend the New Political Science Plenary Address delivered by Frances Fox Piven, “Beating Back the Corporate Assault.” The meeting officially concluded on Sunday, September 4 at noon.
In addition to these scholarly pursuits, meeting attendees also had an opportunity to explore the vibrant city of Seattle, where urban sophistication meets natural beauty. Seattle's variety of coffee houses, museums, outdoor activities, attractions, and idyllic weather made the city a perfect host for this meeting.
APSA thanks all the organizations that supported the 2011 Annual Meeting, including all its exhibitors and sponsors. Meeting sponsors included Cambridge University Press, Lynne Rienner Publishers, Pearson, Pi Sigma Alpha, and YouGov Scientific Research.
New 2011-12 APSA Officers Elected
G. Bingham Powell, Jr., the Marie C. and Joseph C. Wilson Professor of Political Science at the University of Rochester, became APSA's 108th president on September 4 at the close of the APSA Annual Meeting. Carole Pateman, distinguished professor of political science at the University of California, Los Angeles, and honorary professor in the School of European Studies at Cardiff University, symbolically passed the gavel to Powell at the APSA's All Member Business Meeting on September 3, 2011.
Joining Powell in guiding APSA are five new officers. Eight new members of the council will be elected in an all-member election during the month of October. Election results will be available on the APSA website and in the January 2012 issue of PS.
Powell's scholarly work has been in the field of comparative politics. His book Contemporary Democracies: Participation, Stability and Violence (Harvard University Press, 1982) won the APSA's Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award. His most recent articles focus on explaining ideological congruence between citizens and their representatives. He has served as the editor of the American Political Science Review from 1991 to 1995, and as vice-president and organizer of panels for sections on comparative political behavior and teaching political science at the APSA annual meetings. He is a former Guggenheim Fellow, and in 1991, he was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Assuming the position of president-elect is Jane J. Mansbridge, the Charles F. Adams Professor at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. She has an MA in history and a PhD in political science from Harvard University. Her research lies at the intersection between democratic theory and empirical social science, with a focus on political inequalities and the democratic processes that can counteract those inequalities. Her second book, Why We Lost the ERA, co-recipient of the Kammerer award in 1987 and the Victoria Schuck award in 1988, studies flawed deliberation within a social movement.
In 1989–90, Mansbridge was program chair of the APSA annual meeting, and she has also served as vice-president and a member of the council and executive committee. She has been vice-president and president of the Caucus for Women in Political Science. She currently serves on the editorial boards of Political Theory, Journal of Political Philosophy, and Journal of Politics, among others.
Other 2011–12 officers are vice-presidents, Morris Fiorina, Stanford University; Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida; and Niraja Gopal Jayal, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; treasurer, Jonathan Benjamin-Alvarado, University of Nebraska, Omaha; and secretary, Lisa L. Martin, University of Wisconsin, Madison.
2011 Frank J. Goodnow Award for Distinguished Service Presented to Tony Affigne and Robert J-P. Hauck
The Frank J Goodnow Award, created by the APSA Council in 1996, honors the contributions of individuals to the development of the political science profession and the building of the American Political Science Associaiton. APSA's first president, Frank J. Goodnow, exemplified the public service and volunteerism that this award recognizes. Goodnow was the first of many who voluntarily contributed an extraordinary amount of time, energy and attention to building our dynamic and learned profession. The 2011 Frank J. Goodnow award was presented to co-winners Tony Affigne and Robert J-P. Hauck at the APSA Awards Ceremony on Thursday, September 1 in Seattle, Washington. For detais amd the full citations of the awards and all APSA awards, see the Gazette, this issue.
APSA's 2011 Organized Sections Awards Presented
In addition to the awards presented at the APSA Awards Ceremony on Thursday, September 1, (see full listing and citations in the Gazette, this issue) the following recognitions were announced at the business meetings and receptions of the APSA Organized Sections.
SECTION 1. FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
Daniel Elazar Distinguished Federalism Scholar Award
Recognizes a lifetime of contributions to the study of federalism and intergovernmental relations.
Award Committee: Chair: Sean Nicholson-Crotty, University of Missouri; Jennifer Jensen, Binghamton University, SUNY; Robert Dilger, Congressional Research Service
Recipient: Michael Pagano, University of Illinois at Chicago
Deil S. Wright Best Paper Award
Presented to the author of the best paper on federalism and intergovernmental relations presented at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Douglas Brown, Saint Francis Xavier University; David Konisky, Georgetown University; Juliet Gainsborough, Bentley University
Recipients: Timothy Conlan, George Mason University; Paul L. Posner, George Mason University
Title: “Inflection Point? Federalism and the Obama Administration”
Martha Derthick Book Award
Presented to the author of a book published at least ten years ago that has made a lasting contribution to the study of federalism and intergovernmental relations.Award Committee: Chair: Sandra Vergari, University at Albany, SUNY; Matthew Bosworth, Winona State University; Dan Palazzola, University of Richmond
Recipient: Alice Rivlin, The Brookings Institution
Title: Reviving the American Dream: The Economy, the States, and the Federal Government (Brookings Institution Press, 1992)
SECTION 2. LAW AND COURTS
Lasting Contribution Award
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: Chair: James L. Gibson, Washington University; Ryan C. Black, Michigan State University; Jonathan Kastellec, Princeton University; Doris Marie Provine, Arizona State University; Donald R. Songer, University of South Carolina
Recipients: William Felstiner, University of California, Santa Barbara; Richard Abel, University of California, Los Angeles; Austin Sarat, Amherst College
Title: “The Emergence and Transformation of Disputes: Naming, Blaming, Claiming” (Law and Society Review 15: 631-654, 1981
C. Herman Pritchett Award
For the best book on law and courts written by a political scientist and published the previous year.
Award Committee: Chair: Forrest Maltzman, George Washington University; Eileen Braman, Indiana University; Michael W. McCann, University of Washington
Recipient: Sean Farhang, University of California, Berkeley
Title: The Litigation State (Princeton University Press, 2010)
Honorable Mention: Michael Paris, College of Staten Island (CUNY)
Honorable Mention Title: Framing Equal Opportunity: Law and Politics of School Finance Reform (Stanford University Press, 2010)
Honorable Mention: Jeffrey K. Staton, Emory University
Honorable Mention Title: Judicial Power and Strategic Communication in Mexico (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Best Graduate Student Paper
For the best paper on law and courts written by a graduate student.
Award Committee: Chair: Virginia A. Hettinger, University of Connecticut; Paul Collins, University of North Texas; Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania
Recipient: Douglas Rice, Pennsylvania State University
Title: “The Impact of Supreme Court Activity on the Judicial Agenda: Calling to Action or Settling the Law” (Conference on Empirical Legal Studies, 2010)
Honorable Mention: Dominic J. Nardi, Jr, University of Michigan
Honorable Mention Title: “Why Do Dictators Rule by Law? A Cross-National Study of Judicial Empowerment under Authoritarian Regimes,” (Third Annual Graduate Student Conference on Democracy & Governance, University of Connecticut, 2010)
Lifetime Achievement Award
Honors a distinguished career of scholarly achievement and service to the Law and Courts field.
Award Committee: Chair: Jeffrey Segal, Stony Brook University; Paul Brace, Rice University; Herbert M. Kritzer, University of Minnesota; Isaac Unah, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Teena Wilhelm, University of Georgia
Recipient: James L. Gibson, Washington University of Saint Louis
Teaching and Mentoring Award
Recognizes innovative teaching and instructional methods and materials in law and courts.
Award Committee: Chair: Richard A. Brisbin, Jr., West Virginia University; Damon M. Cann, Utah State University; Lief Carter, Colorado College; Laura P. Moyer, Louisiana State University; Matthew J. Streb, Northern Illinois University
Recipient: Milton Heumann, Rutgers University
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: Chair: Stacia L. Haynie, Louisiana State University; Thomas G. Hansford, University of California Merced; Reginald S. Sheehan, Michigan State University
Recipients: Tom S. Clark, Emory University; Benjamin Lauderdale, Princeton University
Title: “Locating Supreme Court Opinions in Doctrine Space” (American Journal of Political Science, 54 (October) 871-890, 2010)
Best Conference Paper
For the best paper on law and courts presented at the previous year's annual meetings of the American, International, and regional political science associations.
Award Committee: Chair: Susan Haire, University of Georgia; Brandon L. Bartels, George Washington University; Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Recipients: Stefanie A. Lindquist, University of Texas at Austin; Pamela C. Corley, Vanderbilt University
Title: State Courts, State Legislatures, and United States Supreme Court Review (2010 APSA Annual Meeting)
Honorable Mention: Clifford J. Carrubba, Emory University; Tom S. Clark, Emory University
Honorable Mention Title: Rule Creation in a Political Herarchy (2010 Midwest Political Science Association Annual Meeting)
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 infrastructures, represent the media, etc.Award Committee: Chair: Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina; Pamela C. Corley, Vanderbilt University; David S. Law, Washington University; Kevin T. McGuire, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Julie Novkov, University at Albany SUNY
Recipient: Wayne McIntosh, University of Maryland
SECTION 3. LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Alan Rosenthal Prize
For the best book or article in legislative studies written by a junior scholar that has potential value to legislative practitioners.
Award Committee: Chair: Colleen J. Shogan, Congressional Research Service; Craig Goodman, Texas Tech University; Susan J. Carroll, Rutgers University
Recipient: Kristina Miler, University of Maryland
Title: Constituency Representation in Congress (Cambridge University Press 2010)
CQ Press Award
For the best paper on legislative studies that was presented at the 2010 annual meeting of the APSA.
Award Committee: Chair: Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer, University of Missouri, Columbia; Christian R. Grose, University of Southern California; Christopher Z. Mooney University of Illinois, Springfield
Recipients: Sean Theriault, University of Texas; David Rohde, Duke University
Title: “The Gingrich Senators and Their Effect on the U.S. Senate” (2010 APSA Annual Meeting)
Carl Albert Dissertation Award
For the best doctoral disseration in the area of legislative studies. Topics may be national or subnational in focus-on Congress, parliaments, state legislatures, or other representative bodies.
Award Committee: Chair: Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University; Patrick J. Egan, New York University; Elizabeth A. Oldmixon, University of North Texas
Recipient: Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University
Title: “The Competition Cure? The Consequences of Completive Congressional Elections” (University of Wisconsin, Madison 2010)
Jewell-Loewenburg Award
For best article in the Legislative Studies Quarterly in the previous year (2010).
Award Committee: Chair: Scott R. Meinke, Bucknell University; L. Marvin Overby, University of Missouri, Columbia; Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San Diego
Recipients: Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania; Jeremy C. Pope, Brigham Young University
Title: “Measuring Aggregate-Level Ideological Heterogeneity” Legislative Studies Quarterly 35 (2) 259-282. 2010
Richard F. Fenno Prize
For the best book in legislative studies published in 2010.
Award Committee: Chair: Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland; Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Lynda W. Powell, University of Rochester
Recipient: Gregory Koger, University of Miami
Title: Filibustering: A Political History of Obstruction in the House and Senate (University of Chicago Press 2010)
SECTION 4. PUBLIC POLICY
Aaron Wildavsky Enduring Contribution Award
For the best book or article published in the general area of public policy during the past twenty plus years.
Award Committee: Chair: Paul Quirk, University of British Columbia; Cathy Johnson, Williams College; Sven Steinmo, European University Institute
Recipient: Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley
Title: “Increasing Returns, Path Dependence, and the Study of Politics,” (American Political Science Review 94 (2) June 2000 251-267)
Excellence in Mentoring Award
To recognize sustained efforts by a senior scholars to encourage and facilitate the career of emerging political scientists in the field of public policy.
Award Committee: Chair: Joseph McCormick, Pennsylvania State University; Craig Volden, Ohio State University; Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, University of North Carolina
Recipient: Bryan Jones, University of Texas at Austin
Best Paper
For the best paper on Public Policy given at the previous APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Joe Soss, University of Minnesota; Khalilah Brown-Dean, Yale University; Margaret Weir, University of California, Berkeley
Recipients: Susan L. Moffitt, Brown University; David K. Cohen, University of Michigan
Title: “The Politics of Bad News: Politics, Policy and Practice in K–12 Education”
Theodore J. Lowi Policy Studies Best Article Award
To recognize an article of particular distinction published at any time in Policy Studies Journal.
Award Committee: Chair: David Meyer, University of California, Irvine; Robert Rich, University of Illinois, Chicago; Patricia Strach, University at Albany, SUNY
Recipients: William T. Gormley Jr., Georgetown University; Deborah Phillips, Georgetown University; Shirley Adelstein, Georgetown University; Catherine Snow, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Title: “Head Start's Comparative Advantage: Myth or Reality”? (Policy Studies Journal 38 (3) August 2010: 397-418)
Best Comparative Policy Paper Award
To recognize an article of particular distinction published in the area of comparative public policy, awarded in collaboration with the International Comparative Policy Analysis Forum/Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis.
Award Committee: Chairs: Peter May, University of Washington; Iris Geva-May, Simon Fraser University; Louise Comfort, University of Pittsburgh; Alan Jacobs, University of British Columbia; David Levi-Faur, Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Sarah Pralle, Syracuse University
Recipients: Shaun Bevan, Pennsylvania State University; Will Jennings, University of Manchester
Title: “Opinion-Responsiveness of Governing Agendas in the US and the UK: Institutional Filtering of Issue Priorities of the Public” (2010 APSA Annual Meeting, Washington DC)
Best Poster on Public Policy Award
For the best paper or poster presented at the poster session at the previous APSA meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Carolyn Tuohy, University of Toronto; Scott Allard, University of Chicago; Doug Imig, University of Memphis
Recipient: Lindsay Flynn, University of Virginia
Title: “The Work-Family Tradeoff: How Some Countries are Managing Better than Others” 2010 APSA Annual Meeting in Washington DC
SECTION 5. POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
Emerging Scholars Award
Awarded to a scholar who has received his or her PhD within the last seven (7) years and whose career to date demonstrates unusual promise.
Award Committee: Chair: Beth Leech, Rutgers University; James Adams, University of California, Davis; David Karol, American University;
Recipient: Christine Mahoney, University of Virginia
Jack Walker Award
This award honors an article published in the last two calendar years thta makes an outstanding contribution to research and scholarship on political organizations and parties.
Award Committee: Chair: Duane Swank, Marquette University; Raymond J. La Raja; University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Cathy Jo Martin, Boston University;
Recipient: Guillermo Trejo, Duke University
Title: “Religion Competition and Ethnic Mobilization in Latin America: Why the Catholic Church Promotes Indigenous Movements in Mexico” American Political Science Review 103 (3): 323-342
Leon D. Epstein Outstanding Book Award
Honors a book published in the last two calendar years that makes an outstanding contribution to research and scholarship on political organizations and parties.
Award Committee: Chair: Byron E. Shafer, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Frank Baumgartner, University of North Carolina; Amy McKay, Georgia State University;
Recipient: David R. Mayhew, Yale University
Title: Partisan Balance: Why Political Parties Don't Kill the U.S. Constitutional System (Princeton University Press, 2011)
Best POP Paper/Party Politics Award
Honors the best paper presented on a POP panel at the preceding APSA annual meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Dara Strolovitch, University of Minnesota; Ronald Hrebenar, University of Utah; Seth Masket, University of Denver;
Recipients: Lee Drutman, The Progressive Policy Institute; Daniel Hopkins, Georgetown University
Title: “The Inside View: Using the Enron Email Archive to Understand Business Lobbying,” 2010 APSA Annual Meeting, Washington DC
Samuel J. Eldersveld Award
To honor a scholar whose lifetime professional work has made an outstanding contribution to the field.
Award Committee: Chair: David Rohde, Duke University; Scott Ainsworth, University of Georgia; Paul Allen Beck, Ohio State University:
Recipient: Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
SECTION 6. PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Herbert Kaufman Award
For the best paper presented on a panel sponsored by the Public Administration section at the 2010 APSA Annual Meeting in Washington DC.
Award Committee: Chair: Jeff Brudney, Cleveland State University; Jared Llorens, Louisiana State University; Rick Kearney, North Carolina State University
Recipient: Kenneth Meier, Texas A&M University; Larry O'Toole, University of Georgia
Title: “Organizational Performance: Measurement Theory and a Application Or, Common Source Bias, the Achilles Heel of Public Management Research”
Volcker Junior Scholar Research Grant
Awarded to a junior scholar researching public administration issues affecting governance in the United States and abroad.
Award Committee: Chair: Sally Selden, Lynchburg College; Sharon Mastracci, University of Illinois, Chicago; Amanda Girth, American University
Recipient: William Resh, student at American University, Assistant Professor at Indiana University Fall 2011
Title: “Political Control, Managerial trustworthiness, and Active Dyadic Trust; Antecedents of Intellectual Capital and Bureaucratic Discretion in Federal Agencies”
SECTION 8. REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
George H. Hallet Award
For a book, at least ten years old, that has made a lasting contribution to the literature on representation and electoral systems.
Award Committee: Josep Colomer, Georgetown University (Chair); Bernard Grofman, University of California, Irvine; Alan Renwick, University of Reading UK
Recipient: Anthony Downs, The Brookings Institution
Title: Economic Theory of Democracy (Addison Wesley, 1997)
Lawrence Longley Award
For the best article on representation and electoral systems published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Matt Golder, Pennsylvania State University (Chair); Garrett Glasgow, University of California, Santa Barbara; Leslie Schwindt-Bayer, University of Missouri
Recipient: David Stasavage, New York University
Title: “When Distance Mattered. Geographic Scale and the Development of European Representative Assemblies.” APSR 104; 625-643.
SECTION 9. PRESIDENCY RESEARCH
Founder's Award named in honor of Dom Bonafede for the Best Paper by a Graduate Student
For the best paper presented by a graduate student at either the preceding year's APSA annual meeting or at any of the regional meetings in 2010-2011.
Award Committee: Chair: Ken Mayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Hal Bass, Ouachita Baptist University; Karen Hoffman, Marquette University; Alison Howard, Dominican University of California; Justin Vaughn, Cleveland State University
Recipient: John Hudak, Vanderbilt University
Title: The Politics of Federal Grants: Presidential Influence Over the Distribution of Federal Funds
Founder's AwardNamed in Honor of Peri Arnold for the Best Paper by a PhD-Holding Scholar
For the best paper authored by a PhD-holding scholar at the previous year's APSA annual meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Teri Bimes, University of California, Berkeley; Chuck Cameron, Princeton University; Diane Heith, Saint John's University; Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston; Mel Laracey, University of Texas at San Antonio
Recipients: Matthew Beckman, University of California, Irvine; Vimal Kumar, Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur
Title: “Opportunism in Polarization: Presidential Success in Senate Key Votes, 1953 – 2008”
George C. Edwards 111 Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation in presidency research completed and accepted during the 2009 or 2010 calendar year
Award Committee: Chair: Karen Hult, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Randall E. Adkins, University of Nebraska at Omaha; Richard Powell, University of Maine; Bert Rockman, Purdue University; Christopher Kelley, Miami University
Recipient: Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Title: “The Party Politics of Presidential Rhetoric” (University of Wisconsin 2010)
Richard E. Neustadt Award for the Best Book on the Presidency
For the best book on the U.S. presidency published during the previous year.
Award Committee: Chair: Steven Schier, Carleton College; Meena Bose, Hofstra University; John Burke, University of Vermont; Terry Sullivan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Steve Wayne, Georgetown University
Recipient: Jeffrey E. Cohen, Fordham University
Title: Going Local: Presidential Leadership in the Post-Broadcast Age (Cambridge University Press 2010)
Best Undergraduate Paper Award
The best undergraduate paper completed in the academic year 2009-2010.
Award Committee: Chair: Robert Maranto, University of Arkansas; Lara Brown, Villanova University; Nancy Kassop, SUNY New Paltz; Bruce Nesmith, Coe College; Jose Villalobos, University of Texas, El Paso
Recipient: Alexander Gibbons, University of Maryland
Title: “Keeping Time for Skowronek: A Quantification of Secular and Political Time”
SECTION 10. POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Harold F. Gosnell Prize
For the best work in political methodology presented at any political science conference during the preceding year.
Award Committee: Chair: Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan; Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago; Matthew Lebo, Stony Brook University, SUNY
Recipients: Robert Franzese, University of Michigan; Jude Hays, University of Pittsburgh; Aya Kachi, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Title: “Modeling History-Dependent Network Convolution”
John T. Williams Award
For the best dissertation proposal in the area of political methodology.
Award Committee: Chair: Patrick T. Brandt, University of Texas at Dallas; Michael Colaresi, Michigan State University; Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago
Recipient: Matthew Blackwell, Harvard University
Title: “Essays in Political Methodology and American Politics”
Warren Miller Prize
For the best article in Political Analysis in the previous year.
Award Committee: Chair: J. Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois University; David Darmofal, University of South Carolina; Michael Hanmer, University of Maryland, College Park
Recipient: Justin Grimmer, Stanford University
Title: “A Bayesian Hierarchical Topic Model for Political Texts: Measuring Expressed Agendas in Senate Press Releases” Political Analysis 2010 (18) 1-35
Society for Political Methodology Poster Award
For the best poster presented at the annual summer Political Methodology Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Suzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State University; Curtis Signorio, University of Rochester; Karen Jusko, Stanford University; Dean Lacy, Dartmouth University; William Clark, University of Michigan; Robert Erikson, Columbia University; Jana von Stein, Un
Recipient: Fernando Daniel (Danny) Hidalgo, University of California, Berkeley
Title: “Digital Democracy: The Consequences of Electronic Voting Technology in Brazil”
Statistical Software Award
Recognizes individual(s) for developing statistical software that makes a significant research contribution.
Award Committee: Chair: Jasjeet Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley; Kosuke Imai, Princeton University; Michah Altman, Harvard University; Andrew Martin, Washington University, Saint Louis; Simon Jackman, Stanford University
Recipients: Norman Nie, Stanford University; Dale Bent, Stanford University; Hadlai Hull, Stanford University
Title: Statistical Package for the Social Sciences
Political Methodology Emerging Scholar Award
To honor a young researcher, within ten years of their degree, who is making notable contributions to the field of political methodology.
Award Committee: Chair: Simon Jackman, Stanford University; Wendy Tam Cho, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Kevin Quinn, University of California, Berkeley; Jeffrey Lewis, University of California, Los Angeles
Recipient: Kosuke Imai, Princeton University
SECTION 11. RELIGION AND POLITICS
Aaron Wildavsky Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation on religion and politics successfully defended in 2009 and 2010.
Award Committee: Chair: Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University; Yuksel Sezgin, Harvard Divinity School; Eldon J. Eisenach, University of Tulsa; Joseph Yi
Recipient: Samuel Goldman, Harvard University
Title: “The Shadow of God: Strauss, Jacobi, and the theology-Political Problem”
Recipient: Brandon Kendhammer, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Title: “Muslims Talking Politics: Framing Islam and Democracy in Northern Nigeria”
Hubert Morken Award
For the best publication dealing with religion and politics published during 2008 and 2009.
Award Committee: Chair: David Campbell, University of Notre Dame; Michael Gibbons, University of South Florida; Iza Hussin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois, Chicago
Recipient: Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, Northwestern University
Title: The Politics of Secularism in International Relations (Princeton University Press 2008)
Recipient: Vincent Phillip Munoz, Notre Dame University
Title: God and the Founders: Madison, Washington, and Jefferson (Cambridge University Press 2009)
Paul J. Weber Award
For the best paper dealing with religion and politics presented at the 2010 APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Nader Hashemi, University of Denver; Mirjam Kunkler. Princeton University; Jonathan Laurence, Boston College; Paul Djupe, Denison University
Recipient: Lisa Blaydes, Stanford University
Title: “How Does Islamist Local Governance Affect the Lives of Women?: A Comparative Study of Two Cairo Neighborhoods”
SECTION 13. URBAN POLITICS
Norton Long Career Achievement Award
Presented 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: Chair: Susan E. Clarke, University of Colorado, Boulder; Wilbur Rich, Wellesley College; Karen Mossberger, University of Illinois, Chicago
Recipient: Rodney Hero, University of California, Berkeley
Norton Long Young Scholars Award
For scholars who completed their PhD within the last three years (this also includes ABDs) and submitted a paper proposal for the 2011 APSA meetings to the 2011 program chairs.
Award Committee: Traci Burch, Northwestern University; Martin Horak, University of Western Ontario
Recipient: Gabe Edelman, University of Toronto
Title: Waterfront Politics in Toronto and the Limits of Urban Development Theory: When Public Interests Obstruct the Public's Interest”
Recipient: Jen Nelles, PROGRIS
Title: Capacity at the Crossroads: How Local Authorities Try to Shape State and Federal Policy
Recipient: Josh Sapotichne, Michigan State University
Title: Dimensionality, Issue Attention, and Agenda Dynamics: The Case of Federal Urban Policy
Recipient: Francis Shen, Vanderbilt University
Title: Mayoral Management: Sustaining Effects of Mayoral Control on School Spending in Urban Systems
The Bryan Jackson Dissertation in Ethnic and Racial Politics Research Support Award
Given to a graduate student studying racial and ethnic politics in an urban setting.
Award Committee: Chair: Kristin Good, Dalhousie University; Teri Fair, Suffolk University; Jamila Celestine-Michener, University of Chicago
Recipient: Emily Farris, Brown University
Title: “Pathways to Power: An Examination of Latino Local Elected Officials”
Best Book Award
For the best book on urban politics published in 2010.
Award Committee: Chair: Melissa Marschall, Rice University; Lorraine Minnite, Barnard College; Christopher R. Berry, University of Chicago
Recipient: Zoltan Hajnal, University of California, San Diego
Title: America's Uneven Democracy: Race, Turnout and Representation in City Politics (Cambridge University Press)
Recipient: Peter Eisenstadt, Independent Scholar
Title: Rochdale Village: Robert Moses, 6,000 Families, and New York City's Great Experiment Integrated Housing (Cornell University Press)
Best Paper Award
For the best paper delivered at an Urban Politics Section panel at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Herman (Buzz) Boschken, San Jose State University; Jennifer Nelles, University of Toronto; Andra Gillespie, Emory University
Recipient: Vladimir Kogan, University of California, San Diego
Title: “Who Benefits from Jurisdictional Competition?”
Recipient: Scott Minkoff, Barnard College
Title: “The Proximate Polity: The Spatial Context of Local Developmental Goods Provision”
Best Dissertation in Urban Politics
For the best dissertation on urban politics completed and accepted in the previous year.
Award Committee: Chair: Cynthia Jackson-Elmoore, Michigan State University; Joel Rast, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University
Recipient: Quinton Mayne, Princeton University
Title: “The Satisfied Citizen: Participation, Influence, and Public Perceptions of Democratic Performance”
SECTION 15. SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Don K. Price Award
For the best book in science and technology politics published in the past 3 years.
Award Committee: Chair: Roger Handberg, University of Central Florida; Robert Paarlberg, Wellesley College; Viktor Mayer-Schoenberger, Oxford University
Recipient: Ann Campbell Keller, University of California, Berkeley
Title: Science in Environmental Policy (MIT Press, 2009)
Virginia Walsh Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertations in science, technology and environmental politics.
Award Committee: Chair: Mark Zachary Taylor, George Institute of Technology; Rob McMonagle, Neumann University; Jennifer Bussell, University of Texas, Austin
Recipient: Jessica F. Green, Case Western Reserve University
Title: Private Actors, Public Goods: Private Authority in Global Environmental Politics (PhD 2010, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University
Lynton K. Caldwell Award
For the best book in environmental politics published in the past 3 years.
Award Committee: Chair: George A. Gonzalez, University of Miami; Megan Mullin, Temple University; David L. Feldman, University of California, Irvine
Recipients: Rachel Schurman, University of Minnesota Twin Cities; William A. Munro, Illinois Wesleyan University
Title: Fighting for the Future of Food: Activists versus Agribusiness in the Struggle over Biotechnology (University of Minnesota Press, 2010)
SECTION 16. WOMEN AND POLITICS RESEARCH
Best Paper Award
For the best paper presented at the 2010 APSA meeting on women and politics.
Award Committee: Chair: Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame; Jonneke Koomen, Willamette University; Celia Valiente, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid; Sue Carroll, Rutgers University
Recipient: Lisa Blaydes, Stanford University
Title: “How Does Islamist Local Governance Affect the Lives of Women?: A Comparative Study of Two Cairo Neighborhoods”
Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertations on women and politics completed and successfully defended in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Chair: Holli Semetko, Emory University; Kira Sanbonmatsu, Rutgers University; Mala Htun, University of New Mexico; Melanie Hughes, University of Pittsburgh
Recipient: Dara Kay Cohen, University of Minnesota
Title: “Explaining Sexual Violence During Civil War”
Recipient: Rosanne Kennedy, Union Institute & University of Cincinnati, Ohio
Title: “Rousseau and the Perversion of Gender”
Women and Politics Research/Foundations of Political Theory Okin-Young Award
The Okin-Young Award in Feminist Political Theory is co-sponsored by Women and Politics, Foundations of Political Theory, and the Women's Caucus for Political Science. This annual award recognizes the best paper on feminist political theory published in an English language journal during the previous academic year.
Award Committee: Chair: Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan; Erica Townsend-Bell, University of Iowa; Lilly Goren, Carroll University
Recipient: Jennifer Elinsahr, Kalamazoo College
Title: “Structural Domination and Structural Freedom: A Feminist Perspective,” (Feminist Review vol 94)
SECTION 17. FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
David Easton Award
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: Chair: Leslie Paul Thiele, University of Florida; Cary J. Nederman, Texas A&M University;
Recipient: Joseph M. Schwatz, Temple University
Title: The Future of Democratic Equality: Rebuilding Social Solidarity in a Fragmented America (Routledge, 2009)
Best Paper Award
For the best paper presented on a foundation panel at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Simon A. Stow, College of William & Mary; Laurie E. Naranch, Siena College; Barbara Cruikshank, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Recipient: Farah Godrej, University of California, Riverside
Title: “Gandhi's Body: Asceticism, Pain and Suffering in Environmental Political Discourse”
SECTION 18. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
Best Published Article
Recognizes the best scholarly article published in the previous calendar year about information technology and politics.
Award Committee: Chair: Diane T. Cohen, Central Connecticut State University; Cecilia G. Manrique, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse; Laura Roselle, Elon University
Recipient: Kevin Wallsten, California State University, Long Beach
Title: “‘Yes We Can’: How Online Viewership, Blog Discussion, Campaign Statements, and Mainstream Media Coverage Produced a Viral Video Phenomenon”, Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 7:2, 163-181.
Best Book Award
Recognizes the best book in the area of information technology and politics published in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Chair: Micah Altman, Harvard University; Priscilla Regan, George Mason University
Recipient: Philip N. Howard, University of Washington
Title: The Digital Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy: Information Technology and Political Islam (Oxford University Press, 2010)
Award for Learning Innovations in Information Technology & Politics
This award recognizes outstanding computer related work that is important to the field of information technology and politics. It includes software and/or websites and/or other creative technologies.
Award Committee: Chair: Robert Boynton, University of Iowa; Jerry Goldman, Northwestern University
Recipients: Marcela Velasco, Colorado State University; Gamze Çavdar, Colorado State University
Title: Assessing the Impact of Clickers in Large Classes
SECTION 19. INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL
Joseph K. Kruzal Memorial Award
Awarded to a scholar with a distinguished career in national security affairs both as an academic and a public servant.
Award Committee: Chair: Peter Feaver, Duke University; Catherine Kelleher, Brown University; Steven Grenier, US Army; Jeffrey Larsen, SAIC and University of Denver
Recipient: Andrew Marshall, United States Department of Defense Office of Net Assessment
Kenneth N. Waltz Dissertation Prize
Awarded to a successfully defended doctoral dissertation on any aspect of security studies, which has been submitted in final, library copy in calendar year 2010.
Award Committee: Chair: Andrew Dorman, King's College London; Chris D Demchak US Naval War College; Joshua Rovner US Naval War College; Katherine Brown King's College London
Recipient: Paul Staniland, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Title: Explaining Cohesion, Fragmentation and Control in Insurgent Groups
SECTION 20. COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Data Set Award
For a publicly available data set that has made an important contribution to the field of comparative politics.
Award Committee: Chair: Mark Tessler, University of Michigan; Ernesto Calvo, University of Maryland; Lyle Scruggs, University of Connecticut
Recipient: Peter Wallensteen, University of Uppsala
Title: “Uppsala Conflict Data Program”
Greg Leubbert Best Article Award
For the best article in the field of comparative politics published in 2009 or 2010.
Award Committee: Chair: Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan; Keith Darden, Yale University; Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Recipients: Stathis Kalyvas, Yale University; Laia Balcells, Institute for Economic Analysis, CSIC
Title: “International System and Technologies of Rebellion: How the End of the Cold War Shaped Internal Conflict.” American Political Science Review 104: 3, 415-429
Greg Leubert Best Book Award
For the best book in the field of comparative politics published in 2009 or 2010.
Award Committee: Chair: Nicolas van de Walle, Cornell University; Macartan Humphries, Columbia University; Randy Stevenson, Rice University
Recipient: James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Title: Colonialism and Postcolonial Development: Spanish America in Comparative Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Sage Best Paper Award
The best paper in the field of comparative politics presented at the 2010 APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Markus Kreuzer, Villanova University; Grigo Pop-Eleches, Princeton University; Tulia Falleti, University of Pennsylvania
Recipient: Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University
Title: “Normative frameworks, electoral interests, and the boundaries of legitimate participation in post-Fascist democracies. The case of Italy.”
Honorable Mention: Noam Lupu, Princeton University; Jonas Pontusson, Universite' de Geneve
Honorable Mention Title: “The Structure of Inequality and the Politics of Redistribution”
SECTION 21. EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
Ernst B. Haas Dissertation Award
Given to the best dissertation on European Politics and Society filed in 2010.
Award Committee: Vivien Schmidt, Boston University; Jae-Jae Spoon, University of Iowa; Erin Jenne, Central European University
Recipient: Gregory Bald, Georgetown University
Title: The Politics of Differentation: Education Reform in Postwar Britain and Germany
Recipient: Quinton Mayne, Princeton University
Title: The Satisfied Citzen: Participation, Influence, and Public Perception of Democratic Performance
Best Paper Award
Given for the best paper on European Politics and Society presented at the 2010 APSA meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Sarah Wiliarty, Wesleyan University; Duane Swank, Marquette University; Jan-Hinrik Meyer-Sahling, University of Nottingham
Recipients: Ben Ansell, University of Minnesota; David Art, Tufts University
Title: Membership Matters: Radical Right Wing Party Composition in Comparative Perspective
SECTION 22. STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
SPPQ Award
For the best paper on state politics and policy presented at any professional meeting in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Chair: Beth Reingold, Emory University; Richard Fording, University of Kentucky; Stacy Gordon, University of Nevada, Reno; Christopher Mooney, University of Illinois, Springfield
Recipients: Michael Berkman, Pennsylvania State University; Eric Plutzer, Pennsylvania State University
Title: “Multi-Level Policy Responsiveness to Public Opinion: From Statehouse to Street-Level”
Best Paper Award
For the best paper on state politics and policy presented at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida; Martin Johnson, University of California, Riverside; Wendy Martinek, Binghamton University
Recipients: Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego; Justin H. Phillips, Columbia University
Title: “The Roots of Executive Power”
Christopher A. Mooney Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation in American State Politics and Policy Research completed during the 2010 calendar year.
Award Committee: Chair: David Lowery, Pennsylvania State University; Elizabeth Rigby, George Washington University; Sandy Schneider, Michigan State University;
Recipient: Julianna Pacheco, Pennsylvania State University
Title: Dynamic Public Opinion and Policy Responsiveness in the American States
Best Graduate Student Paper Award
For the best paper on state politics and policy presented by a Graduate Student at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida; Martin Johnson, University of California, Riverside; Wendy Martinek, Binghamton University;
Recipients: Heather Creek, University of Maryland; Stephen Yoder, University of Maryland
Title: “With a Little Help from Our Feds: Understanding State/Federal Cooperation on Immigration Enforcement”
Career Achievement Award
Given 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: Chair: Christopher Z. Mooney, University of Illinois, Springfield; Jim Battista, University at Buffalo, SUNY; Fred Boehmke, University of Iowa; Melinda Gann Hall, Michigan State University; Justin Phillips, Columbia University;
Recipient: Gerald Wright, Indiana University, Bloomington
SECTION 23. POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Paul Lazarsfeld Best Paper Award
For the best paper on political communication presented at the previous years APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: John Barry Ryan, Florida State University; Laura Roselle, Elon University; Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University;
Recipients: Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University; Martin Johnson, University of California, Riverside
Title: “Does Media Fragmentation Produce Mass Polarization? Selective Exposure and a New Era of Minimal Effects” 2010 APSA Annual Meeting
Timothy Cook Best Graduate Student Paper Award
For the best paper on political communication presented by a graduate student at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Craig Brians, Virginia Tech; Todd Belt, University of Hawaii at Hilo; Dino Christenson, Ohio State University
Recipients: Sara Esralew, Ohio State University; Dannagal Goldthwaite Young, University of Delaware
Title: “The Influence of Parodies on Mental Models: Exploring the Tina Fey-Sarah Palin Phenomenon” 2010 Annual Meeting
Murray Edelman Distinguished Career Award
For lifetime service to the study of political communication.
Award Committee: Chair: Dietram Scheufele, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Michael Delli Carpini, University of Pennsylvania; Sarah Oates, University of Glasgow
Recipient: Diana Mutz, University of Pennsylvania
Doris Graber Outstanding Book Award
For the best book of the year published on political communication within the last ten years.
Award Committee: Chair: Andrew Rojecki, University of Illinois, Chicago; Markus Prior, Princeton University; Oya Dursun-Ozkanca, Elizabethtown College
Recipient: Robert M. Entman, George Washington University
Title: Projections of Power: Framing News, Public Opinion and U.S. Foreign Policy (University of Chicago Press, 2004)
SECTION 24. POLITICS AND HISTORY
Mary Parker Follett Award
For the best article or chapter in politics and history published in 2009 or 2010.
Award Committee: Chair: Eric M. Patashnik, University of Virginia; Lee Ann Banaszak, Pennsylvania State University; Jessica Luce Trounstine, University of California, Merced
Recipients: Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford; Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University
Title: “The Historical Turn in Democratization Studies: A New Research Agenda for Europe and Beyond,” Comparative Political Studies (August/September 2010 vol. 43 no. 8-9: 931–968)
Walter Dean Burnham Award
For the best dissertation in the field of Politics and History.
Award Committee: Chair: James Mahoney, Northwestern University; Colleen M. Grogan, University of Chicago; Robert Mickey, University of Michigan
Recipient: Emily Zackin, Hunter College (CUNY)
Title: “Positive Constitutional Rights in the United States” (completed at Princeton University 2010; Adviser: Keith Whittington)
J. David Greenstone Book Prize
For the best book in politics and history published in 2009 or 2010.
Award Committee: Chair: Sidney M. Milkis, University of Virginia; Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia; Nicole E. Mellow, Williams College
Recipient: James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Title: Colonialism and Postcolonial Development: Spanish America in Comparative Perspective (Cambridge University Press: New York 2010)
SECTION 25. POLITICAL ECONOMY
Best Paper Award
For the best paper in Political Economy presented at the APSA meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: William T. Bernhard, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University; David M. Primo, University of Rochester
Recipient: Milan Svolik, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Title: “Learning to Love Democracy: A Theory of Democratic Consolidation and Breakdown”
Mancur Olsen Award
For the best dissertation completed and accepted in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Chair: James N. Druckman, Northwestern University; Jonathan Rodden, Stanford University; Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Recipient: Tiberiu Dragu, Stanford University
Title: Essays on Executive Power
Honorable Mention: Brian Greenhill, Dartmouth College
Honorable Mention Title: Norm Transmission in Networks of Intergovermental Organizations
Honorable Mention: Dustin Tingley, Harvard University
Honorable Mention Title: Essays on Understanding International Relations through Experimentation
William H. Riker Book Award
For the best book on political economy.
Award Committee: Chair: Charles R. Shipan, University of Michigan; Orit Kedar, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem; David Stasavage, New York University
Recipient: Ben W. Ansell, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Title: From The Ballot to the Blackboard: The Redistributive Political Economy of Education (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Honorable Mention: Zachary Elkins, University of Texas at Austin; Tom Ginsberg, University of Chicago; James Melton, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies
Honorable Mention Title: The Endurance of National Constitutions (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
Michael Wallerstein Award
For the best published article in Political Economy in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Chair: Scott H. Ainsworth, University of Georgia; B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University; Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San Diego
Recipient: John Ahlquist, University of Wisconsin
Title: “Building Strategic Capacity: The Political Underpinnings of Coordinated Wage Bargaining (American Political Science Review 104 (1) 171–88)
SECTION 27. NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Christian Bay Best Paper Award
For the best paper presented at a New Political Science panel at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Richard J. Meagher Jr., Randolph-Macon College; Elisabeth Chaves, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Kenton Worcester, Marymount Manhattan College
Recipient: Brian Waddell, University of Connecticut, Stamford
Title: That Time Again? Revisiting the Debates Over the Wagner Act
Francis Fox Piven and Richard Cloward Award
For an active group, in the region of the annual meeting, that puts the ideals of the New Political Science Section, “to make the study of politics relevent to the struggle for a better world,” into practice.
Award Committee: Chair: Michael J. Bosia, St. Michael's College; Wendy Sarvasy, California State University, East Bay; Sean Parson, University of Alaska, Fairbanks; Carl Boggs, National University; Honorary Member: Frances Fox Piven, CUNY Graduate Center
Recipient: Sarah Laslette, Director, South Seattle Community College, Labor Education and Research Center, Seattle, Washington
Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement Award
For a progressive political scientist who has had a long, successful career as a writer, teacher and activist.
Award Committee: Chair: John Ehrenberg, Long Island University; John Berg, Suffolk University; Manfred Steger, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
Recipient: George Katsiaficas, Wentworth Institute of Technology
Michael Harrington Book Award
For an outstanding book that demonstrates how scholarship can be used in the struggle for a better world.
Award Committee: Chair: Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University; Sanford Shram, Bryn Mawr College; Joe Kling, Saint Lawrence University
Recipient: Michelle Alexander, Ohio State University
Title: The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness (New York Press, 2010)
SECTION 28. POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Best Dissertation Award
For the best paper in the area of Political Psychology that was presented during the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Melinda S. Jackson, San Jose State University; Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis; Erin Cassese, West Virginia University; Alina Oxendine, Hamline University
Recipient: Toby Bolsen, Georgia State University
Title: “Private Behaviors for the Public Good: Citizens' Actions and U.S. Energy Conservation,” (completed at Northwestern University; Advisor: Jamie Druckman)
Robert Lane Best Book Award
For the best book in political psychology published in the last year.
Award Committee: Chair: Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Ted Brader, University of Michigan; Jennifer Wolak, University of Colorado
Recipients: Mark Peffley, University of Kentucky; Jon Hurwitz, University of Pittsburgh
Title: Justice in America (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Best Paper Award
For the best dissertation in political psychology filed in the previous year.
Award Committee: Chair: Toby Bolsen, Georgia State University; Neil Malhotra, University of Pennsylvania; Martin Johnson, University of California, Riverside; Jason Reiffler, Georgia State University
Recipients: Dennis Chong, Northwestern University, Jamie Druckman, Northwestern University
Title: “Dynamic Public Opinion”
Honorable Mention: Jennifer Jerit, Florida State University; Jason Barabas, Florida State University
Honorable Mention Title: “Partisan Perceptual Bias and the Information Environment”
Honorable Mention: Brad Verhulst, Virginial Commonweath University; Peter Hatemi, Pennsylvania State University; Nicholas G. Martin, University of Queensland
Honorable Mention Title: “The Development of Political Attitudes and Personality Traits”
SECTION 29. POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
The Best Presentation Award
For the best presentation (be it in a paper, poster, or roundtable format) delivered in a session sponsored by the Undergraduate Education Section at the Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Shannon Jenkins, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth; John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Recipients: Joseph Gershtenson, Eastern Kentucky University; Dennis L. Plane, Juniata College
Title: Attitudes about Voter Registration: The Influence of Teaching
SECTION 30. POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
Wilson Carey McWilliams Best Paper Award
For the best paper presented on a politics, literature and film panel at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Natalie Taylor, Skidmore College; James H. Read, College of Saint Benedict
Recipient: Charles Rubin, Duquesne University
Title: To Life: Golems, Monsters, and the Biotechnology Future
SECTION 33. RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS
Best Book Award on Racial and Ethnic Political Identities, Ideologies and Theories
Award Committee: Chair: Robin Jacobson, University of Puget Sound; Sharon Wright Austin, University of Florida; Joseph Yi, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies; Melissa Michelson, Menlo College; Maurice Mangum, Texas Southern University
Recipient: Cristina Beltrán, Haverford College
Title: The Trouble With Unity: Latino Politics and the Creation of Identity (Oxford University Press, 2010)
Best Book Award on Racial Power and Social Movement Theory
Award Committee: Chair: Robin Jacobson, University of Puget Sound; Sharon Wright Austin, University of Florida; Joseph Yi, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies; Melissa Michelson, Menlo College; Maurice Mangum, Texas Southern University
Recipient: Christian Davenport, University of Notre Dame
Title: Media Bias, Perspective and State Repression: The Black Panther Party (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation completed in the period January 2010 to December 2010 on race, ethnicity, and politics
Award Committee: Chair: Cara Wong, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Chris Parker, University of Washington; John Mollenkopf, City University of New York, Graduate Center
Recipient: Clare Adida, University of California, San Diego
Title: Immigrant Exclusion and Insecurity in Africa (Stanford University 2010)
Best Textbook Award on Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Award Committee: Chair: Robin Jacobson, University of Puget Sound; Sharon Wright Austin, University of Florida; Joseph Yi, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies; Melissa Michelson, Menlo College; Maurice Mangum, Texas Southern University
Recipients: Paula D. McClain, Duke University; Steven C. Tauber, University of South Florida
Title: American Government in Black and White (Paradigm Publishing, 2010)
SECTION 34. INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
Jervis and Schroeder Best Book Award
For the best book on international history and politics published in the calendar year prior to the year of the APSA meeting at which the award is presented.
Award Committee: Chair: David A. Baldwin, Princeton University; Elizabeth Kier, University of Washington; Keith Darden, Yale University
Recipient: James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Title: Colonialism and Postcolonial Development: Spanish America in Comparative Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
SECTION 35. COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
Best Article Award
Awarded to single-authored or co-authored articles focusing directly on the subject of democratization and published in 2010 are eligible.
Award Committee: Chair: Ellen M. Lust, Yale University; Milan Svolik, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto
Recipients: Ben W. Ansell, University of Minnesota; David Samuels, University of Minnesota
Title: “Inequality and Democratization: A Contractarian Approach” Comparative Political Studies, December 2010 vol. 43 no. 12 1543-1574.
Best Book Award
For the best book in the field of comparative democratization published in 2010 (authored, co-authored, or edited).
Award Committee: Chair: Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego; Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University; Amaney Jamal, Princeton University
Recipient: Timothy Frye, Columbia University
Title: Building States and Markets after Communism: The Perils of Polarized Democracy (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Recipient: Monica Nalepa, University of Notre Dame
Title: Skeletons in the Closet: Transitional Justice in Post-Communist Systems (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Best Field Research Award
Rewards dissertation students who conduct especially innovative and difficult fieldwork.
Award Committee: Chair: Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University; Gretchen Helmke, University of Rochester; Sunila S. Kale, University of Washington
Recipient: Clare Adida, University of California, San Diego
Title: “Immigrant Exclusion and Insecurity in Africa,” defended at Stanford University 2010
Honorable Mention: Rodrigo Zarazaga, University of California, Berkeley
Honorable Mention Title: “Peronist Hegemony and Clientelism: Strategic Interactions among Mayors, Brokers, and Poor Voters”
Juan Linz Best Dissertation Award
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 where the award will be presented.
Award Committee: Chair: Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University; Victor C. Shih, Northwestern University; Maya Jessica Tudor, University of Oxford
Recipient: Ekrem Karakoc, University of Florida
Title: “A Theory of Redistribution in New Democracies: How Democracy Has Increased Income Disparity in Southern and Postcommunist Europe”
Honorable Mention: Prerna Singh, Princeton University
Honorable Mention Title: “Subnationalism and Social Development: A Comparative Analysis of Indian States,” submitted at Princeton University.
Best Paper Award
Recognizes the “best paper” presented on a Human Rights section panel at the American Political Science Association Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Jeffrey Kopstein, University of Toronto; Alexandre Debs, Yale University; Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University
Recipient: Robert D. Woodberry, University of Texas at Austin
Title: “Weber Through the Back Door: Protestant Competition, Elite Power Dispersion, and the Global Spread of Democracy” (presented at 2010 APSA meeting)
Honorable Mention: Thad Dunning, Yale University; Susan Stokes, Yale University
Honorable Mention Title: “How Does the Internal Structure of Political Parties Shape Their Distributive Strategies?” (presented at 2010 APSA meeting)
SECTION 36. HUMAN RIGHTS
Best Book Award
For the best single-authored, multi-authored or edited volume on human rights published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Chair: Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State University; Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, State University of New York, Purchase; Bethany Barratt, Roosevelt University
Recipient: Karen Engle, University of Texas, Austin
Title: The Elusive Promise of Indigenous Development: Rights, Culture and Strategy (Duke University Press, 2010)
Distinguished Scholar Award
Recognizes an individual who has worked in the field of Human Rights and made an exceptional contribution to the field through research, teaching, and mentorship.
Award Committee: Chair: Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University; Jack Donnelly, University of Denver; David P. Forsythe, University of Nebraska
Recipient: Mark Gibney, University of North Carolina, Asheville
SECTION 37. QUALITATIVE AND MULTI-METHOD RESEARCH
Sage Paper Award
For the best paper presented at the previous APSA Annual Meeting .
Award Committee: Chair: Stacie Goddard, Wellesley College; Eleonora Pasotti, University of California, Santa Cruz; Alison Post, University of California, Berkeley
Recipient: Adria Lawrence, Yale University
Title: Political Equality and Nationalist Opposition in the French Colonial Empire
Alexander George Article/Book Chapter Award
Granted to a journal article or to a chapter in an edited volume that stands on its own as an article.
Award Committee: Chair: Henry Hale, George Washington University; Timothy Pachirat, New School for Social Research; Joe Soss, University of Minnesota
Recipients: Sukriti Issar, Brown University; Melani Cammett, Brown University
Title: Bricks and Mortar Clientelism: Sectarianism and the Logics of Welfare Allocation in Lebanon, World Politics 62(3) (July 2010) 381-421
Giovanni Sartori Book Award
Granted to a single-authored or multi-authored book, or to an edited volume published in the calendar year prior to the year of the APSA meeting at which the award is presented.
Award Committee: Chair: Hein Goemans, University of Rochester; Daniel Brinks, University of Texas at Austin; Adria Lawrence, Yale University
Recipient: Lauren Morris MacLean, Indiana University
Title: Informal Institutions and Citizenship in Rural Africa: Risk and Reciprocity in Ghana and Cote d'Ivoire (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
SECTION 38. SEXUALITY AND POLITICS
Sexuality and Politics Best Conference Paper Award
For the best paper exploring sexuality and poltics presented at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Chair: Maxine Eichner, University of North Carolina; Roddrick Colvin, John Jay College; Rosalind Petchesky, Hunter College (CUNY)
Recipient: Beth Kiyoko Jamieson, Princeton University
Title: Fixing Gender: Gender Classifications, Transgender and Gender Non-Conforming Prisoners, and the Politics of Law
Sexuality and Politics Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation on sexuality and politics completed and successfully defended in the previous two calendar years.
Award Committee: Chair: Ronald Holzhacker, University of Groningen; Paul Amar, University of California, Santa Barbara; Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota
Recipient: Jeremiah J. Garretson, Stony Brook, State University of New York
Title: Changing Media, Changing Minds: The Lesbian and Gay Movement, Television, and Public Opinion
Recipient: Sami Zeidan, Graduate Center of the City University of New York
Title: Navigating International Rights and Local Politics: Sexuality Governance in a Post-Colonial Setting
SECTION 40. CANADIAN POLITICS
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: Chair: André Blais, Université de Montréal; Michelle L. Dion, McMaster University; Harold D. Clarke, University of Texas at Dallas; D. Munroe Eagles, University at Buffalo, SUNY; Mildred A. Schwartz, New York University
Recipient: Allan Kornberg, Duke University
Recipient: John C. Courtney, University of Saskatchewan
Seymour Martin Lipset Best Book Award
To honor a significant contemporary contribution to the scholarship on Canadian politics, or Canada in a comparative perspective, or a comparative analysis of Canada with other countries, particularly the United States.
Award Committee: Chair: R. Kenneth Carty, University of British Columbia; Antonia Maioni, McGill University; Michael Lusztig, Southern Methodist University; Jeffrey M. Ayres, Saint Michael's College, Vermont; Christine Rothmayr, University of Montreal
Recipient: Mildred A. Schwartz, New York University
Title: Party Movements in the United States and Canada (Rowman & Littlefield, 2006)
SECTION 42. EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Best Paper Award
For the best paper presented at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting featuring experimental analyses.
Award Committee: Chair: Joshua Tucker, New York University; Rose McDermott, Brown University; James Gibson, Washington University; Eric Dickson, New York University
Recipients: Michael Tomz, Stanford University; Robert P. Van Houweling, University of California, Berkeley
Title: Candidate Repositioning
Honorable Mention: Deborah Jordan Brooks, Dartmouth College
Honorable Mention Title: Assessing the Double Bind: Public Reactions to Displays of Toughness by Male and Female Candiates
Honorable Mention: Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh
Honorable Mention Title: Democratic Accountability and Retrospective Voting in the Lab
Best Book Award
For the best book published in 2010 that either uses or is about experimental research methods in the study of politics.
Award Committee: Chair: Ted Brader, University of Michigan; Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University; Susan Hyde, Yale University; Ismail White, Ohio State
Recipient: Rebecca B. Morton, New York University; Kenneth C. Williams, Michigan State University
Title: Experimental Political Science and the Study of Causality: From Nature to the Lab (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation completed in the 2010 calendar year that utilizes experimental methods on substantive political science research, or makes a fundamental contribution to experimental methods.
Award Committee: Chair: Sean Gaillard, University of California, Berkeley; Bethany Albertson, University of Texas; Shana Gadarian, Syracuse University; Nick Valentino, University of Michigan
Recipient: Andrew Owen, University of British Columbia
Title: The Negativity Effect in Retrospective Voting (completed at Princeton University, Adviser Larry Bartels)
Honorable Mention: Toby Bolsen, Georgia State University
Honorable Mention Title: Private Behaviors for the Public Good: Citzens' Actions andUS Energy Conservation (completed at Northwestern University, Adviser James N. Druckman)
2011 Ralph Bunche Scholars Present Posters at Annual Meeting
The following Ralph Bunche Scholars were selected to present their Ralph Bunche Summer Institute research papers in a poster session at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting in Seattle. Congratulations!
Kristal Davis, Eastern Michigan University, “Bridging Geographical, Racial, and Political Divides? Public Attitudes and the Future of Metropolitan Detroit”
Meka Este-McDonald, Stanford University, “Expanding the Hurwitz/Peffley Model: How Race Shapes Public Opinion on Foreign Aid”
Ashley Nelcy García, University of Texas at Austin, “Mexicanos al Grito de Guerra: What is causing the drug war in México?”
Dirk Michael Horn, California State University, Bakersfield, :Political Freedom, Corruption, Public Institutions, and Economic Growth: A Global Analysis Since the Fall of the Soviet Union”
Brianna Nicole Mack, Emory University, “Where Did The Mule Go? Analyzing Linked Fate Trends within the 40-and-under Black Population”
Vanessa Quince, Binghamton University, “All Work and No Pay: The Effect of Tourism on Workers' Rights”
Brennan Robinson, University of Delaware, “The Color Line: How Skin Color Affects Latinos' Perceptions of Commonality”
Samuel Nickolas Sinyangwe, Stanford University, “Public Perceptions of Barack Obama's Race and the Effect of Obama's Race on Public Support for his Presidency”
Sanata Sy-Sahande, University of Maryland, College Park, “Foreign Direct Investment: Solution or Problem? The Economic Dimensions of Ethnic Conflict in Africa”
Dilara Kadriye Uskup, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, “The (Black) Woman in the Mirror: Determining the Relationship between Internalized Body Image and Sexual Risk Taking Behaviors in African American Women”
About the Institute
The Ralph Bunche Summer Institute is a five-week program for minority undergraduate students who are interested in pursuing a doctoral degree in political science. The APSA initiated the institute in 1986, and since 2000, it has been hosted and cosponsored by Duke University, under the direction of professor Paula D. McClain. For more information or to download an application for the 2012 institute, visit the APSA website at http:// www.apsanet.org_content_6602.cfm .
Graduate Student and Scholars Funded
To increase graduate student participation at the Annual Meeting, the association awarded Advanced Graduate Student Travel Grants for the 2011 Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington. Recognizing challenging economic times across academia, Cambridge University Press offered $5000 to supplement the APSA travel grant program and support graduate students and scholars participating in the Annual Meeting. The names and institutional affiliations of the awardees follow.
US Graduate Students Supported by Cambridge University Press
Jeffrey Bernard Arnold, University of Rochester
Michael Patrick Broache, Columbia University
Audrey Lynn Comstock, Cornell University
Emma Deputy, University of Texas, Austin
Kelly Dittmar, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Robert Garrow, Claremont Graduate University
Ryan Steele Jablonski, University of California, San Diego
Andrea Lee Scoseria Katz, Yale University
Julia Hyeyong Kim, University of California, Los Angeles
Lorraine Elizabeth Krall, Georgetown University
Thomas John Leeper, Northwestern University
Victor M. Olivieri, University of Florida
Jeremiah C. Olson, University of Kentucky
Mr. Michael Plouffe, University of California, San Diego
Anne Pluta, University of California, Santa Barbara
Jack Reilly, University of California, Davis
Alan Steinberg, University of Houston
Melinda R. Tarsi, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Jeffrey A Taylor, University of Maryland
James Benjamin Taylor, Georgia State University
Christopher James Wolfe, Claremont Graduate University
International Scholars
Anne Laure Beaussier, CEPEL- Université de Montpellier
Nathalie Brack, Universite Libre de Bruxelles
Yvonne Chiu, University of Hong Kong
Claudio Corradetti, University of Rome “Tor Vergata”
Olivier Costa,
Anne-Marie D'Aoust, Carleton University
Gaoussou Diarra, CERDI, Université d'Auvergne
Elif Erisen, Bilkent University
Taisuke Fujita, Keio University
Lucas I. Gonzalez, Universidad de San Martin
Raul C. Gonzalez, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas
Francisco Aurelio Eduardo Gutierrez, Universidad Nacional, Bogota
Tobias Hofmann, National University of Singapore
Anil G. Jacob, United States-India Educational Foundation
Aida Just, Bilkent University
TongFi Kim, Griffith University
Tim Krieger, University of Paderborn
Naoko Naoko Kumagai, International University of Japan
Simon Labouret, IEP Grenoble
Marcelo C. Leiras, Universidad de San Andres
Levente Littvay, Central European University
Dmitriy V. Poznyak, University of Cincinnati
Felix Reategui, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú
Tim Reeskens, Tilburg University
Kyla Reid, University of Sydney
Carlos A. Romero, Universidad Central de Venezuela
Alba Ruibal, European University Institute
Inaki Sagarzazu, University of Oxford
Prakash Sarangi, University of Hyderabad
Ehud N. Sommer, Tel Aviv University
Yu-Sung Su, Tsinghua University
Christina H. Tarnopolsky, McGill University
María Alejandra Vanney, Austral University
Jianwei Wang, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point
International Graduate Students at US Institutions
Lamis Abdelaaty, Princeton University
Aries A. Arugay, Georgia State University
Andrew Bibby, Michigan State University
Juan Bogliaccini, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Alessandro Cagossi, West Virginia University
Daina Chiba, Rice University
Pedro G. dos Santos, University of Kansas
Sandra Field, Princeton University
Jennifer M. Gagnon, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Lucrecia Garcia Iommi, University of Notre Dame
Betul Gokkir, University of Florida
Daragh J. Grant, University of Chicago
Masataka Harada, University of Chicago
Jeanette Yih Harvie, University of California, Santa Barbara
Mi Hwa Hong, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Yanyu Ke, University of Kentucky
Sang Ki Kim, University of Iowa
Patrick Michael Kuhn, University of Rochester
Holger Meyer, University of Georgia
Salvatore Nunnari, California Institute of Technology
Feryaz Ocakli, Brown University
Jennifer Oser, Universtiy of Pennsylvania
Sung Wook Paik, University of Maryland
Saemyi Park, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Vasundhara Sirnate, University of California, Berkeley
Maoliang Ye, Harvard University
Hongtao Yi, Florida State University
Nick Zavediuk, Saint Louis University
US Graduate Students
Faisal Z. Ahmed, Princeton University
Huseyin Alptekin, University of Texas, Austin
Sara Angevine, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Kevin K. Banda, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Ida Bastiaens, University of Pittsburgh
Nathaniel Birkhead, Indiana University, Bloomington
Russell Bither-Terry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Leticia Bode, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Lacey Bradley-Storey, Northeastern University
Mr. Edwin Camp, Yale University
Betsy Carter, University of California, Berkeley
Sandra Chapman Osterkatz, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Elisabeth K. Chaves, Virginia Tech
Clayton J. Cleveland, University of Oregon
Christopher D. DeSante, Duke University
Jennifer M. Dixon, University of California, Berkeley
Harun Dogo, RAND Graduate School
Kyle Dvorak, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
Jason Eichorst, Rice University
Michael David Forrest, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Colm Fox, George Washington University
Frieda Fuchs,
Bryan Gervais, University of Maryland
Matteo Giglioli,
Sarah Goff, Princeton University
Austin Hart, University of Texas, Austin
Erin Hartman, University of California, Berkeley
Sara Hughes, University of California, Santa Barbara
Anshul Jain, Boston University
Ashley E. Jardina, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Jay Jennings, Temple University
Jesse C. Johnson, Rice University
Cara Jones, University of Florida
Jeffrey Kaplow, University of California, San Diego
Craig M Kauffman, George Washington University
Andrew Kirkpatrick, Emory University
Nina Kollars, Ohio State University
Jody Marie LaPorte, University of California, Berkeley
Helen Hyun-Young Lee, Michigan State University
Brad LeVeck, University of California, San Diego
Adam L. Levine-Weinberg, University of Chicago
Justin B. Litke, Western Kentucky University
Yonatan Lupu, University of California, San Diego
Andreea Maierean, Boston University
Gwyneth McClendon, Princeton University
Alex McCown, New School University
Julie Lee Merseth, University of Chicago
Kristin Grace Michelitch, New York University
Melanie Mierzejewski, University of Illinois, Chicago
Sonia Mittal, Yale University
Thomas K. Ogorzalek, Columbia University
Marina Omar, University of Virginia
Mark E. Owens, University of Georgia
Saba Ozyurt,
Katherine Pettus, University of California, San Diego
Ngoc Phan, Rice University
Spencer Piston, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
E. Grant Porter, Columbia University
Joel R. Pruce, University of Denver
Michael Rivera, University of California, San Diego
Jon Rogowski, University of Chicago
Ryan Salzman, University of North Texas
Steven Samford, University of New Mexico
Thomas Scherer, Princeton University
Jonah Schulhofer-Wohl, Yale University
Karen Sebold, University of Arkansas
Sarah Shair-Rosenfield, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Patrick E. Shea, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Benli M. Shechter, University of Maryland
Ms. Kimberly L. Shella, University of California, Irvine
Heather Silber Mohamed, Brown University
Erica Simmons, University of Chicago
Heidi Jane M. Smith, Florida International University
Nicholas J. Spina, University of Missouri, Columbia
Patricia Stapleton, CUNY-Graduate Center
Rebekah Sterling, University of California, Los Angeles
Daniel Tagliarina, University of Connecticut
Drew Kennedy Thompson, Louisiana State University
Daniel C. Tirone, University of Pittsburgh
James Preston Todhunter, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Gary Uzonyi, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Daniel J. Veale, Wayne State University
Ke Wang, University of Pennsylvania
Jennifer Wilking, University of California, Davis
Jason Windett, Saint Louis University
Willam D. Wittels, Duke University
Jeremy Wolf, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Jennifer Woodward, SUNY, University at Albany
Joel R. Wuthnow, Princeton University
Patty Zakaria, Wayne State University