In addition to the awards presented at the APSA Awards Ceremony on Thursday, September 2, 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
The Daniel Elazar Distinguished Scholar Award recognizes a lifetime of contributions to the study of federalism and intergovernmental relations.
Award Committee: Jeremy Hall, University of Texas, Dallas, chair; Cheryl Collier, University of Windsor; John Dinan, Wake Forest University
Recipient: Richard Simeon, University of Toronto
Deil Wright Best Paper Award
The Deil Wright Best Paper Award is presented to the author of the best paper on federalism and intergovernmental relations presented at the last APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Carolyn Johns, Ryerson University, chair; Shama Gamkhar, University of Texas at Austin; Christopher Borick, Muhlenberg College
Recipient: Jennifer Wallner, University of Regina, Canada
Title: “Does Diversity Always Lead to Decentralization and Difference?”
Martha Derthick Best Book Award
The Martha Derthick Best Book Award is presented to the author of a book published at least 10 years ago that has made a lasting contribution to the study of federalism and intergovernmental relations.
Award Committee: Kiki Caruson, University of South Florida, chair; Patrick McGuinn, Drew University; Edella Schlager, University of Arizona
Recipient: Paul E. Peterson, Harvard University
Title: The Price of Federalism (Brookings Institution Press, 1995)
SECTION 3: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
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: Michele Swers, Georgetown University, chair; Christopher Berry, University of Chicago; John Griffin, Notre Dame University
Recipients: David C.W. Parker, Montana State University, and Craig Goodman, Texas Tech University
Title: “Making a Good Impression: Resource Allocation, Home Styles and Washington Work,” Legislative Studies Quarterly 34 (4): 493–524
CQ Press Award
The CQ Press Award is given for the best paper on legislative studies presented at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Lauren Bell, Randolph Macon College, chair; Kenneth Shotts, Stanford University; Garry Young, George Washington University
Recipient: Christian Grose, Vanderbilt University
Title: “Priming Rationality: A Theory and Field Experiment of Participation in Legislatures”
Jewell-Loewenberg Award
The Jewell-Loewenberg Paper Award is presented for the best article in the Legislative Studies Quarterly in the previous year.
Award Committee: Cherie Maestas, Florida State University, chair; Neil Malhotra, Stanford University; Jamie Carson, University of Georgia
Recipient: Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San Diego
Title: “Recovering a Basic Space from Elite Surveys: Evidence from Latin America,” Legislative Studies Quarterly 34 (1): 117–43
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: Damon Cann, Utah State University, chair; Linda Fowler, Dartmouth College; C. Lawrence Evans, College of William and Mary
Recipient: Frances Lee, University of Maryland, College Park
Title: Beyond Ideology: Politics, Principles, and Partisanship in the U.S. Senate (University of Chicago Press, 2009)
Carl Albert Dissertation Award
The Carl Albert Dissertation Award is given for the best doctoral dissertation in the area of legislative studies.
Award Committee: Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University, chair; Tom Clark, Emory University; Andrew Taylor, North Carolina University
Recipient: Patrick Egan, New York University
Title: “Issue Ownership and Representation in American Politics” (Ph.D., Berkeley, 2008)
SECTION 4: PUBLIC POLICY
Best Paper on Public Policy Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper on public policy given at the previous APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Jennifer Hochschild, Harvard University, chair; Ann Bowman, Texas A&M University; Doug Imig, University of Memphis
Recipients: Eric Patashnik, University of Virginia, and Julian Zeiler, Princeton University
Title: “When Policy Does Not Remake Politics: The Limits of Policy Feedback”
SECTION 5: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
Jack L. Walker, Jr. Award
This award honors 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: Paul Goren, University of Minnesota, chair; Robert Van Houweling, University of California, Berkeley; Michael Tomz, Stanford University
Recipients: Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University, and Duane Swank, Marquette University
Title: “The Political Origins of Coordinated Capitalism: Business Organizations, Party Systems, and State Structure in the Age of Innocence,” American Political Science Review 102 (2): 181–98
Leon Epstein Outstanding Book Award
This 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: John Green, University of Akron, chair; Larry Bartels, Princeton University; John Coleman, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Recipients: Frank Baumgartner, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; David Kimball, University of Missouri, Saint Louis; Marie Hojnacki, Pennsylvania State University; Beth Leech, Rutgers University; and Jeffrey Berry, Tufts University
Title: Lobbying and Policy Change: Who Wins, Who Loses and Why (University of Chicago Press, 2009)
Samuel J. Eldersveld Award
This award honors a scholar whose lifetime professional work has made an outstanding contribution to the field.
Award Committee: L. Sandy Maisel, Colby College, chair; Jeffrey Berry, Tufts University; Ruth S. Jones, Arizona State University
Recipient: David W. Rohde, Duke University
Emerging Scholar Award
This honor is awarded to a scholar who has received his or her Ph.D. within the last seven years and whose career to date demonstrates unusual promise.
Award Committee: Christina Woldbrecht, University of Notre Dame, chair; Peter Francia, East Carolina University; Hans Noel, Georgetown University
Recipient: David Karol, American University
Perspectives on Politics/Party Politics Award
This award honors the best paper presented on a Perspectives on Politics panel at the previous APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Marie Hojnacki, Pennsylvania State University, chair; John Aldrich, Duke University; David Dulio, Oakland University
Recipients: Seth Masket, University of Denver; Michael Heaney, University of Michigan; Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota; Dara Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Title: “Networking the Parties: A Comparison of Democratic and Republican National Convention Delegates in 2008”
SECTION 6: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Herbert Kaufman Award
The Herbert Kaufman Award is given for the best paper presented at the previous APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Jerrell D. Coggburn, North Carolina State University, chair; Lael Keiser, University of Missouri, Columbia; Eric Zeemring, San Francisco State University
Recipients: Jeffrey L. Brudney, Cleveland State University; Chung-Lae Cho, Ewha Woman's University; Deil S. Wright
Title: “Sector Choice: Its Role in Explaining Contracting Performance”
Honorable Mention: Jennifer Bussell, University of Louisville
Title: “Evaluating Public Service Reforms in India”
Herbert Simon Book Award
The Herbert Simon Book Award is conferred annually for the best book on public administration published in the last three to five years that has made a significant contribution to public administration scholarship.
Award Committee: Michael A. Pagano, University of Illinois, Chicago, chair; Norma M. Riccucci, Rutgers University, Newark; Brian K. Collins, University of North Texas
Recipient: Paul Light, New York University
Title: A Government Ill Executed: The Decline of the Federal Service and How to Reverse It (Harvard University Press, 2008)
Volcker Junior Scholar Research Grant
The Volcker Junior Scholar Research Grant is awarded to a junior scholar researching public administration issues affecting governance in the United States and abroad.
Award Committee: Charles W. Gossett, California State University, Sacramento, chair; Thomas P. Lauth, University of Georgia; Sally Selden, Lynchburg College
Recipient: Amanda Girth, American University
SECTION 9: PRESIDENCY RESEARCH
The Founder's Award (Ph.D.)
The Founder's Award (Ph.D.), named in honor of Stephen Wayne, is given 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 the past two calendar years.
Award Committee: B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University, chair; Brandice Canes-Wrone, Princeton University; Julia Azari, Marquette University; Daniel DiSalvo, City College of New York; Bruce Nesmith, Coe College
Recipient: Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Title: “The Presidential Rhetoric and the Economic Policy Image of the Parties”
The Founder's Award
The Founder's Award, named in honor of James Young, is given for the best paper presented by a Ph.D.-holding scholar at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: John Woolley, University of California, Santa Barbara, chair; George Edwards, Texas A&M University; Dan Galvin, Northwestern University; Brian Newman, Pepperdine University; James King, University of Wyoming
Recipient: Kevin J. McMahon, Trinity College
Title: “Richard Nixon, the Supreme Court, and the Politics of Desegregation in the Urban North”
Richard E. Neustadt Best Reference Book Award
The Richard E. Neustadt Award is given for the best reference book published during the previous year.
Award Committee: Joel Aberbach, University of California, Los Angeles, chair; Anthony Bertelli, University of Southern California; George Krause, University of Pittsburgh
Co-Recipient: George C. Edwards, Texas A&M University, and William Howell, University of Chicago
Title: The Oxford Handbook of the American Presidency (Oxford University Press, 2009)
Co-Recipient: Lyn Ragsdale, Rice University
Title: Vital Statistics on the Presidency, Third Edition (CQ Press, 2009)
Richard E. Neustadt Award for the Best Book on the Presidency
The Richard E. Neustadt Award is given for the best book on the U.S. presidency published during the previous year.
Award Committee: Paul Quirk, University of British Columbia, chair; William Howell, University of Chicago; Matthew Beckmann, University of California, Irvine; Martha Joynt Kumar, Towson State University; Richard Waterman, University of Kentucky
Recipient: B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University
Title: The Myth of Presidential Representation (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
Best Undergraduate Paper Award
This award is given for the best undergraduate paper completed in the past two academic years.
Award Committee: Lydia Andrade, University of the Incarnate Word, chair; Shannon Bow, University of Texas; Karen Hoffman, Marquette University; Jose Villalobos, University of Texas at El Paso; Diane Heith, Saint Johns University
Recipient: No award given
George C. Edwards III Dissertation Award
This award is given for the best dissertation on the presidency completed and accepted during the past calendar year.
Award Committee: Karen Hult, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, chair; Richard Powell, University of Maine; Bert Rockman, Purdue University; Randy Adkins, University of Nebraska-Omaha; Christopher Kelley, Miami University of Ohio
Recipient: No award given
SECTION 10: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Career Achievement Award
The Career Achievement Award recognizes an individual whose work in political methodology has demonstrated outstanding intellectual accomplishment and service to the profession.
Award Committee: Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University, chair; Nancy Burns, University of Michigan; Jake Bowers, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; John Jackson, University of Michigan; Tse-Min Lin, University of Texas, Austin
Recipient: Gary King, Harvard University
Harold F. Gosnell Prize
The Harold Gosnell Prize is given for the best work of political methodology presented at a political science conference between August 1, 2008, and July 31, 2009.
Award Committee: Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan, chair; Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago; Matthew Lebo, SUNY–Stony Brook
Recipient: Jong Hee Park, University of Chicago
Title: “Joint Modeling of Dynamic and Cross-Sectional Heterogeneity: Introducing Hidden Markov Panel Models”
John T. Williams Award
The award established for the best dissertation proposal in the area of political methodology in recognition of John T. Williams' contribution to graduate training.
Award Committee: Patrick T. Brandt, University of Texas at Dallas, chair; Michael Colaresi, Michigan State University; Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago
Recipient: Teppei Yamamoto, Princeton University
Society for Political Methodology Poster Award
This award is given for the best poster presented at the 2009 Summer Conference on Political Methodology or the 2009 APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Suzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State University, chair; 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, University of Michigan; Drew Linzer, Emory University; Tom Carsey, University of North Carolina
Recipients: R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of Technology, and John Brehm, University of Chicago
Statistical Software Award
The Statistical Software Award recognizes statistical software that has made a significant contribution to the advancement of political analysis.
Award Committee: Jasjeet Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley, chair; Kosuke Imai, Princeton University; Micah Altman, Harvard University; Andrew Martin, Washington University, Saint Louis; Simon Jackman, Stanford University
Recipients: Jeffrey Dubin, University of California, Los Angeles; and Doug Rivers, Stanford University
Warren Miller Prize
The Warren Miller Price is given for the best article appearing in Political Analysis in the previous year.
Award Committee: J. Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois University, chair; David Darmofal, University of South Carolina; Michael Hanmer, University of Maryland, College Park
Recipient: Daniel Corstange, University of Maryland
Title: “Sensitive Questions, Truthful Answers? Modeling the List Experiment with LISTIT,” Political Analysis 17 (1)
SECTION 11: RELIGION AND POLITICS
Aaron Wildavsky Dissertation Award
The Aaron Wildavsky Award is given for the best dissertation on religion and politics successfully defended in 2008 or 2009.
Award Committee: Ted Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, chair; Gamze Cavdar, Colorado State University; Mark Jendrysik, University of North Dakota; Ani Sarkissian, Michigan State University
Recipient: Karrie J. Koesel, University of Oregon
Title: “Belief in Authoritarianism, Religious Revivals, and the Local State in Russia and China”
Paul J. Weber Award
The Paul J. Weber Award is given for the best paper dealing with religion and politics presented at the 2009 APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Elizabeth Oldmixon, University of North Texas, chair; Rodney Grunes, Centenary College; Sandy Livington, University of Aberdeen; Tarek Masoud, Harvard University
Recipient: No award given
SECTION 13: URBAN POLITICS
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is presented to the best paper given at an Urban Politics Section panel at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Jered Carr, Wayne State University, chair; Yue Zhang, University of Illinois, Chicago; Benoy Jacob, University of Colorado, Denver
Recipient: Jen Nelles, University of Toronto
Title: “Cooperation and Capacity: Exploring the Sources and Limits of City-Region Governance Partnership”
Best Dissertation in Urban Politics Award
This award is given for the best dissertation on urban politics completed and accepted in the previous year.
Award Committee: E. Terrence Jones, University of Missouri-Saint Louis, chair; Hal Wolman, George Washington University; Kristin Good, Dalhousie University
Recipient: Joshua Sapotichne, University of Washington
Title: “Reconstructing National Urban Policy: Agenda Setting in Complex Policy Areas”
Norton Long Career Achievement Award
This 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: Clarence Stone, George Washington University, chair; Wilbur Rich, Wellesley University; Ann O. M. Bowman, Texas A & M University
Recipient: Susan Clarke, University of Colorado, Boulder
Norton Long Young Scholars Award
This award is given for scholars who completed their Ph.D. within the last three years (including ABDs) and submitted a paper proposal for the 2010 APSA Annual Meeting to the 2010 program chairs.
Award Committee: Mara Sidney, Rutgers University, Newark; Michael L. Owens, Emory University
Co-Recipient: Justin Gest, London School of Economics and Political Science
Title: “Alienation among European Muslims: Spanish Moroccans and British Bangladeshis”
Co-Recipient: Scott Louis Minkoff , University of Colorado, Boulder
Title: “A Space-Time Analysis of Local Competition and Cooperation”
Co-Recipient: Meg Elizabeth Rithmire, Harvard University
Title: “Closed Neighborhoods in Open Cities: The Politics of Socio-Spatial Change in Urban China”
Co-Recipient: Paolo Spada, Yale University
Title: “The Effects of Participatory Democracy: Evidence from Brazilian Participatory Budgeting”
Co-Recipient: Manuel P. Tedodoro, Colgate University
Title: “Political Institutions and Environmental Policy Choices: Water Conservation in America”
Best Book Award
The Best Book Award is given for the best book on urban politics published in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Jessica Trounstine, University of California, Merced, chair; Jill Gross, CUNY–Hunter; Richard Fogelesong, Rollins College
Recipient: To be announced
The Bryan Jackson Dissertation in Ethnic and Racial Politics Research Support Award
This award is given to a graduate student studying racial and ethnic politics in an urban setting.
Award Committee: Yvette Alex-Assensoh, Indiana University, Bloomington; Peter Burns, Loyola University, New Orleans; Shah Shah, Macalester College
Recipient: Jamilia Celestine-Michener, University of Chicago
Title: “The Politics of Help Seeking in Marginalized Populations”
SECTION 15: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY & ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Don K. Price Award
The Don K. Price Award is given for the best book on science, technology, and environmental politics published in the past three years.
Award Committee: Dan Breznitz, Georgia Institute of Technology, chair; Steven Epstein, Northwestern University; Robert Paarlberg, Wellesley College
Recipient: Viktor Mayer-Schonberger, National University of Singapore
Title: Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age (Princeton University Press, 2009)
Lynton K. Caldwell Award
The Lynton Keith Caldwell Prize is for the best book on environmental politics and policy published in the past three years.
Award Committee: Loren R. Cass, College of the Holy Cross, chair; Margaret E. Keck, Johns Hopkins University; Robert J. Duffy, Colorado State University
Recipient: Megan Mullin, Temple University
Title: Governing the Tap: Special District Governance and the New Local Politics of Water (MIT Press, 2009)
Virginia M. Walsh Best Dissertation Award
The Virginia M. Walsh Award is given for the best dissertation in science, technology, and environmental politics finished in the last two years.
Award Committee: Mark Zachary Taylor, Georgia Institute of Technology, chair; Phillip Stalley, DePaul University; Kathryn Hochstetler, University of Waterloo
Recipient: Jennifer Bussell, University of Texas, Austin
Title: “Resisting Reform: Technological Backwardness in Political Perspective”
Honorable Mention: Shelley L. Hurt, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
Title: “Science, Power, and the State: United States Foreign Policy, Intellectual Property Law, and the Origins of Agricultural Biotechnology, 1969–1994” (New School for Social Research)
SECTION 16: WOMEN AND POLITICS RESEARCH
Best Dissertation Award
This award is given to the author of the best dissertation completed and successfully defended on women and politics written in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley, chair; Olga A. Avedyeva, Loyola University, Chicago; Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University; Diana Michele Prindeville, New Mexico State University; Jennifer Nedelsky, University of Toronto
Recipient: Samantha Majic, John Jay College
Title: “Protest by Other Means? Sex Worker, Social Movement Evolution, and the Political Possibilities of Nonprofit Service Provision”
Dissertation Chair: Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given to the best paper presented at the previous year's APSA meeting on women and politics.
Award Committee: Laura Woliver, University of South Carolina, chair; Penny Weiss, Saint Louis University; R. Amy Elman, Kalamazoo College; Sarah Childs, University of Bristol; Wendy Smooth, Ohio State University
Recipient: Celia Valiente, Universidad Carlos III, Madrid Spain
Title: “Political Regimes Matter in ‘Abeyance’ Times: Feminist Organizing in Franco's Spain (1930–1975)”
The Okin-Young Award (Co-sponsored by Foundations of Political Theory and the Women's Caucus for Political Science)
The Okin-Young Award in Feminist Political Theory 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. The award recognizes the best paper on feminist political theory published in an English language academic journal during the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Kathy Ferguson, University of Hawaii, chair; Brooke Ackerly Vanderbilt University; Heike Schotten, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Recipient: Ann Towns, University of Delaware
Title: “The Status of Women as a Standard of ‘Civilization,’” European Journal of International Relations 15 (4): 681–706
SECTION 17: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
The 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: Thomas Dumm, Amherst College, chair; Mark Blasius, CUNY Graduate Center; Melissa Orlie, University of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
Recipient: George Shulman, New York University
Title: American Prophecy: Race and Redemption in American Political Culture (University of Minnesota Press, 2008)
Honorable Mention: Robert Gooding-Williams, University of Chicago
Title: In the Shadow of DuBois: Afro-Modern Political Thought in America (Harvard University Press, 2009)
Honorable Mention: Marc Epprecht, Queens University, Kingston Ontario Canada
Title: Heterosexual Africa?The History of an Ida from the Age of Exploration to the Age of AIDS (Ohio University Press, 2008)
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper presented on a foundation panel at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Anna Marie Smith, Cornell University, chair; Patricia Moynagh, Wagner College; Linda M. G. Zerilli, University of Chicago
Recipients: Phillip Michelbach, West Virginia University, and Andrew Poe, University of California, San Diego
Title: “Renewing Democratic Authority: Hamlet's Politics with (and against) Carl Schmitt”
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: Patchen Markell, University of Chicago, chair; Brooke Ackerly, Vanderbilt University; Eloise A. Buker, Saint Louis University
Recipient: Jeffrey Edward Green, University of Pennsylvania
Title: The Eyes of the People: Democracy in an Age of Spectatorship (Oxford University Press, 2009)
Honorable Mention: Mark B. Brown, California State University, Sacramento
Title: Science in Democracy: Expertise, Institutions, and Representation (MIT Press, 2009)
Honorable Mention: Danielle Celermajer, University of Sydney
Title: The Sins of the Nation and the Ritual of Apologies (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
SECTION 18: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
Best Graduate Student Paper Award
The Best Graduate Student Paper Award recognizes the best sole-authored conference paper written by a political science graduate student working in the area of information technology and politics written during the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: David Karpf, University of Pennsylvania and Brown University; Christine Williams, Bentley College; Renee Marlin-Bennett, Johns Hopkins University
Recipients: Jessica Timpany Feezell, Meredith Conroy, and Mario Guerrero, University of California, Santa Barbara
Title: “Facebook is…Fostering Political Engagement: A Study of Online Social Networking Groups and Offline Participation”
Best Book Award
The Best Book Award is given for the best book on information technology and politics published in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Micah Altman, Harvard University, chair; Stuart Shulman, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Priscilla Regan, George Mason University
Recipients: Stephen Coleman, University of Leeds, and Jay G. Blumler, University of Leeds and University of Maryland
Title: The Internet and Democratic Citizenship: Theory, Practice and Policy (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
Best Instructional Political Science Website
The Best Instructional Political Science Website Award recognizes the Website with the best instructional value for teaching political science.
Award Committee: Derrick Cogburn, American University, chair; Andrew Chadwick, University of London; Kenneth Rogerson, Duke University
Recipient: Chirag Shah, Rutgers University
Web Site: Context Miner, http://contextminer.com/index.php
Honorable Mention: Kenneth Janda and Jerry Goldman, Northwestern University; Jeffrey Berry, South Texas Community College
Web Site: IDEALog, http://idealog.org
SECTION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL
Kenneth N. Waltz Dissertation Prize
The Kenneth N. Waltz Dissertation Award is awarded to a successfully defended doctoral dissertation on any aspect of security studies that has been submitted in final, library copy in the 2009 year.
Award Committee: Andrew Dorman, Kings College London; Chris Demchak, Naval War College; David Sacko, U.S. Air Force Academy; Joshua Rovner, Naval War College
Recipient: Keren Yarhi Milo, University of Pennsylvania
Title: “Knowing Thy Adversary: Assessments of Intentions in International Relations”
Joseph Kruzel Memorial Award for Public Service
This award is given to a scholar who has been active in national security affairs both as an academic and a public servant.
Award Committee: Peter Feaver, Duke University, chair; Catherine Kelleher, Brown University; Steven Grenier, U.S. Army; Jeffrey Larsen, SAIC
Recipient: Stephen D. Krasner, Hoover Institution and Stanford University
SECTION 20: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Gregory Leubbert Best Article Award
This award is given to the best article in the field of comparative politics published in the previous two calendar years.
Award Committee: Ruth Berins Collier, University of California, Berkeley, chair; Robert Pekkanen, University of Washington; Lily Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Scott Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Recipients: Shawn Treier, University of Minnesota, and Simon Jackman, Stanford University
Title: “Democracy as a Latent Variable,” American Journal of Political Science 52 (1)
Gregory Luebbert Book Prize
The Luebbert Book Award is given for the best book in the field of comparative politics published in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego, chair; Ray Duch, University of Oxford; Randall Hansen, University of Toronto
Recipients: James Habyarimana, Georgetown University; Macartan Humphries, Columbia University; Daniel Posner, University of California, Los Angeles; Jeremy Weinstein, Stanford University
Title: Coethnicity: Diversity and the Dilemmas of Collective Action (Russell Sage)
Lijphart/Przeworski/Verba Dataset Award
The Dataset Award is given for a publicly available data set that has made an important contribution to the field of comparative politics.
Award Committee: Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg, chair; Jose Cheibub, University of Illinois, Urbana–Champaign; David Cingranelli, SUNY, Binghamton
Recipient: Mark Tessler, University of Michigan, principal investigator; Amaney Jamal, Princeton University, co-principal investigator
Title: Arab Barometer
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: Dorothy J. Solinger, University of California, Irvine, chair; Matthew Adam Kocher, Yale University; Daniel ZIblatt, Harvard University
Recipient: Makus Kreuzer, Villanova University
Title: “Historical Knowledge and Quantitative Analysis: The Case of the Origins of Proportional Representation”
Honorable Mention: Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University, and Graeme B. Robertson, University North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Title: “Elections, Information and Political Change in the Post-Cold War Era”
SECTION 21: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
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: Bonnie Meguid, University of Rochester, chair; R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick; Gwendolyn Sasse, University of Oxford, Nufield College
Recipient: Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University
Title: From Economic Crisis to Reform: IMF Programs in Latin America and Eastern Europe (Princeton University Press, 2009)
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: Tanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität Berlin, chair; Jane R. Gingrich, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities; Karl Orfeo Fioretos, Temple University
Recipient: Mareike Kleine, Freie Universität Berlin
Title: “All Roads Lead Away From Rome: A Liberal Theory of International Regimes”
SECTION 22: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper on state politics and policy presented at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: James King, University of Wyoming, chair; Elizabeth Rigby, University of Houston; Neal Woods, University of South Carolina
Recipients: Arthur Lupia, Yanna Krupnikov, Adam Seth Levine, Spencer Piston and Alexander Von Hagen-Jamar, University of Michigan
Title: “Why State Constitutions Differ in the Treatment of Same-Sex Marriage”
Best Graduate Paper Award
The Best Graduate Paper Award is given for the best paper on state politics and policy presented by a graduate student at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: James King, University of Wyoming, chair; Elizabeth Rigby, University of Houston; Neal Woods, University of South Carolina
Recipient: Julianna Pacheco, Pennsylvania State University
Title: “Thermostatic Policy Responsiveness in the Fifty States”
Christopher A. Mooney Dissertation Award
This award is given for the best dissertation in American state politics and policy research.
Award Committee: Elizabeth Rigby, University of Houston, chair; Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State University; Todd Donovan, Western Washington University
Recipient: Nicole D. Kazee, Yale University
Title: “Wal-Mart Welfare: Business, Fiscal Regimes, and the Politics of Health Policy in the American States”
Dissertation Advisor: Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University
SPPQ Award
This award is given for the best paper on state politics and policy presented at any professional meeting in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Eric Plutzer, Pennsylvania State University; Beth Reingold, Emory University; Dennis Grady, Appalachian State University
Recipients: Jeffrey R. Lax and Justin H. Phillips, Columbia University
Title: “Explaining Democratic Performance in the States”
Career Achievement Award
Award Committee: Ron Weber, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, chair; Andrew Karch, University of Texas; Nancy Martorano Miller, University of Dayton; Christopher Z. Mooney, University of Illinois, Springfield; Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona
Recipient: Ken Meier, Texas A&M University
SECTION 23: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Best Graduate Student Paper Award
This award is given for the best paper on political communication presented by a graduate student at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Craig Brians, Virginia Tech, chair; Christopher Weber, Louisiana State University; Stephenie Burkhalter, Humboldt State University
Recipient: Dino Christenson, Ohio University
Title: “Learning from Campaigns: Political Information and Context in Presidential Elections”
SECTION 24: POLITICS AND HISTORY
J. David Greenstone Award
This award is given for the best book in politics and history published in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University, chair; Kathleen Sullivan, Ohio University; Robert Lieberman, Columbia University
Co-Recipient: Anthony Chen, University of Michigan
Title: The Fifth Freedom: Jobs, Politics, and Civil Rights in the United States, 1941–1972 (Princeton University Press, 2009)
Co-Recipient: Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University
Title: The Motherless State: Women's Political Leadership and American Democracy (University of Chicago Press, 2009)
Mary Parker Follett Award
The Mary Parker Follett Award is given for the best article or chapter in politics and history published in the previous two calendar years.
Award Committee: Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University, chair; Sheldon Pollack, University of Delaware; Richard Ellis, Willamette University
Recipient: Stephen Skowronek, Yale University
Title: “The Conservative Insurgency and Presidential Power: A Developmental Perspective on the Unitary Executive,” Harvard Law Review 122:2070
Walter Dean Burnham Award
The Walter Dean Burnham Award is given for the best dissertation in politics and history presented at the previous year's Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Gerard Berk, University of Oregon, chair; Christopher Howard, College of William and Mary; Christopher S. Allen, University of Georgia
Recipient: Colin Destin Moore, Harvard University
Title: “Institutions of Empire: Information, Delegation, and the Political Control of American Imperialism, 1890–1913”
Honorable Mention: Maya Jessica Tudor, Princeton University
Title: “Twin Births, Divergent Democracies: The Social and Institutional Origins of Regime Outcomes in India and Pakistan, 1920–1958”
SECTION 25: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper in political economy presented at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Timothy Frye, Columbia University, chair; Mark Kayser, Hertie School of Governance, Berlin; Toke Aidt, University of Cambridge
Recipients: Torun Dewan, London School of Economics and Political Science, and David P. Myatt, University of Oxford
Title: “On the Rhetorical Strategies of Leaders: Speaking Clearly, Standing Back, and Stepping Down”
Honorable Mention: Xiabo Lu and Kenneth F. Scheve, Yale University; Matthew J. Slaughter, Dartmouth College
Title: “Envy, Altruism and the International Distribution of Trade Protection”
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: Raymond M. Duch, University of Oxford, chair; Susan Rose-Ackerman, Yale University; Jessica Troustine, University of California, Merced
Recipient: Orit Kedar, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Title: Voting for Policy, Not Parties: How Voters Compensate for Power Sharing (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
Mancur Olson Award
The Mancur Olson Award is given for the best dissertation completed and accepted in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Strom Thacker, Boston University, chair; Michael Tomz, Stanford University; Shigeo Hirano, Columbia University
Recipient: Stephen B. Kaplan, Yale University
Title: “From Spendthrifts to Misers: Globalization and Latin American”
Michael Wallerstein Award
The Michael Wallerstein Award is given for the best published article in political economy in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: David S. Brown, University of Colorado, chair; Pablo Beramendi, University of Oxford; Karl Ove Moene, University of Oslo
Recipient: Moses Shayo, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Title: “A Model of Social Identity with an Application to Political Economy: Nation, Class and Redistribution,” American Political Science Review 103 (2)
SECTION 27: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Christian Bay Best Paper Award
The Christian Bay Best Paper Award is given for the best paper presented at a New Political Science panel at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Daniel O'Connor, California State University, Long Beach, chair; Stefan Heumann, University of Northern Colorado; Jocelyn Boryczka, Fairfield University
Recipients: Brooke A. Ackerly and José Miquel Cruz, Vanderbilt University
Title: “Hearing the Voice of the People: Human Rights as if People Mattered”
Francis Fox Piven and Richard Cloward Award
This award is given for 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: Joel Lefkowitz, SUNY, New Paltz, chair; Immanuel Ness, Brooklyn College; Katie Young, Colorado State University; Frances Fox Piven, Honorary
Recipient: ACORN
Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement Award
The Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement Award is given for a progressive political scientist who has had a long, successful career as a writer, teacher, and activist.
Award Committee: Laura Katz Olson, Lehigh University, chair; John Ehrenberg, Long Island University; Alethia Jones, University of Albany, SUNY
Recipient: John Berg, Suffolk University
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: Nicholas Kiersey, Ohio State University, chair; Wendy Sarvasy, California State University, East Bay; Jose R. Sanchez, Long Island University, Brooklyn Campus
Recipient: Marshall Ganz, Harvard University
Title: Why David Sometimes Wins: Leadership, Organization, and Strategy in the California Farm Worker Movement (Oxford University Press, 1980)
SECTION 28: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Best Dissertation Award
Given for the best dissertation in political psychology filed during the previous year.
Award Committee: Jason Barabas, Florida State University, chair; Paul Brewer, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee; Dona-Gene Mitchell, University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Recipients: Eric Groenendyk, University of Michigan, and Danielle Shan, Princeton University
Title: “The Motivated Partisan: A Dual Motivations Theory of Partisan Change and Stability on the Origins of Political Interest”
Robert Lane Best Book Award
The Robert E. Lane Award is given for the best book in political psychology published in the past year.
Award Committee: Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine, chair; Michael Morrell, University of Connecticut; Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
Co-Recipient: George A. Akerlof, University of California, Berkeley, and Robert J. Shiller, Yale University
Title: Animal Spirits: How Human Psychology Drives the Economy, and Why It Matters for Global Capitalism (Princeton University Press, 2009)
Co-Recipient: Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, University of Nebraska
Title: Who Counts As An American: The Boundaries of Natural Identity (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is awarded to the authors of a paper in the area of political psychology that was presented during the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Thomas Rudloph, University of Illinois, chair; Eric Groenendyck, University of Memphis; Andy Civettini, Knox College
Recipients: Jamie Druckman and Toby Bolsen, Northwestern University
Title: “Framing, Motivated Reasoning, and Opinions about Emergent Technologies”
SECTION 29: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
Best Presentation Award
The Best Presentation Award is given 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: Danny Damron, Utah Valley University, chair; Craig L. Brians, Virginia Tech; Shannon Jenkins, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
Recipients: John Ishiyama, Christine Balarezo, and Tom Miles, University of North Texas
Title: “Do Graduate Student Teacher Training Courses Affect Placement Rates?”
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: Charles T. Rubin, Duquesne University, chair; Sheena Chestnut, Harvard University; Sabeel Rahman, Harvard University
Recipient: James H. Read, College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University
Title: “The Limits of Self-Reliance”
SECTION 32: ELECTIONS, PUBLIC OPINION, AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Best Paper Award on Elections and Voting
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper delivered at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Peter Enns, Cornell University, chair; Christopher Anderson, Cornell University; Marc Hetherington, Vanderbilt University
Recipients: Deborah J. Brooks and Benjamin A. Valentino, Dartmouth College
Title: “A War of One's Own: Understanding the Gender Gap in Support for War”
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 Ph.D.
Award Committee: Helmut Norpoth, SUNY–Stony Brook, chair; R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of Technology; Cherie Maestas, Florida State University
Recipient: James Fowler, University of California, San Diego
John Sullivan Award
This award is for the best paper by a graduate student on a panel sponsored by the APSA Organized Section on Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior at the previous APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Peter Enns, Cornell University, chair; Christopher Anderson, Cornell University; Marc Hetherington, Vanderbilt University
Recipient: Elias Dinas, European University Institute
Title: “The More You Try the Less It Sticks: Parental Politicization and the Endurance of Partisan Transmission through the Family”
Philip E. Converse Best Book Award
The Philip E. Converse Book Award is given for an outstanding book in the field published five or more years ago.
Award Committee: James A. Stimson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, chair; Patricia Hurley, Texas A&M University; Casey A. Klofstad, University of Miami
Recipients: Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University; Gerald C. Wright, Indiana University; John P. McIver, University of Colorado
Title: Statehouse Democracy: Public Opinion and Policy in the American States (Cambridge University Press, 1993)
Warren 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: Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa; Paul Goren, University of Minnesota; Thomas Rudolph, University of Illinois
Recipient: James A. Stimson, University of North Carolina
SECTION 33: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS
Best Dissertation Award
Given for the best dissertation in race, ethnicity and politics filed during the previous year.
Award Committee: Louis DeSipio, University of California, Irvine, chair; Barbara L. Graham, University of Missouri–St. Louis; Cara Wong, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Recipient: Sheryl R. Lightfoot, University of British Columbia
Title: “Indigenous Global Politics” (University of Minnesota)
SECTION 34: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
Jervis and Schroeder Best Book Award
The Robert L. Jervis and Paul W. Schroeder Prize for the best book on international history and politics published in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Kimberly J. Marten, Barnard College, chair; George Gavrilis, University of Texas at Austin; Andrew H. Kydd, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Recipient: Patrick J. McDonald, University of Texas, Austin
Title: The Invisible Hand of Peace: Capitalism, The War Machine, and International Relations Theory (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
SECTION 35: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
Best Article Award
The Best Article Award is awarded to single-authored or co-authored articles focusing directly on the subject of democratization and published in 2009.
Award Committee: Evan Lieberman, Princeton University, chair; Eva Bellin, City University of New York; Steven Levitsky, Harvard University
Co-Recipient: Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Title: “Revolutions, Crackdowns, and Quiescence: Communal Elites and Democratic Mobilization in Southeast Asia,” American Journal of Sociology 115 (1): 203–54
Co-Recipient: Daniel Ziblatf, Harvard University
Title: “Shaping Democratic Practice and the Causes of Electoral Fraud: The Case of Nineteenth-Century Germany” American Political Science Review 103 (1): 1–21
Best Paper Award
The Best Paper Award is given to the best paper presented on a panel organized by the Comparative Democratization Section at the previous year's APSA annual meeting.
Award Committee: Scott Mainwaring, University of Notre Dame, chair; Henry Hale, George Washington University; Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Recipients: Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University and Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University
Title: “The Historic Turn in Democratization Studies: A New Research Program and Evidence from Europe”
Best Book Award
The Best Book Award is given for the best book in the field of comparative democratization published in 2009 (single authored, multi-authored, or edited).
Award Committee: Ann Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan, chair; Jacques Bertrand, University of Toronto; Thad Dunning, Yale University
Recipients: Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin; Tom Ginsburg, University of Chicago; James Melton, IMT–Institute for Advanced Studies
Title: The Endurance of National Constitutions (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
Juan Linz Best Dissertation Award
This award is given for the best dissertation in the field of comparative study of democracy completed and accepted in the past two calendar years. The comparative study of democracy includes analyses of individual country cases as long as they are clearly cast in a comparative perspective.
Award Committee: Catherine Boone, University of Texas, Austin, chair; Gerardo Munck, University of Southern California; Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University
Co-Recipient: Agustina Giraudy, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Title: “Subnational Undemocratic Regime Continuity After Democratization: Argentina and Mexico in Comparative Perspective”
Co-Recipient: Evangelos (Evan) Liaras, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Title: “Ballot Box and Tinderbox: Can Electoral Engineering Save Multiethnic Democracy?”
Best Field Research Award
This prize rewards dissertation students who are currently working on their dissertations or completed theirs in 2009 who conduct especially innovative and difficult fieldwork.
Award Committee: Melani Cammett, Brown University, chair; Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Alexandra Scacco, Oxford University
Recipient: Alejandra Armesto, University of Notre Dame
Title: “Territorial Control and Particularistic Spending on Local Public Goods” (University of Notre Dame)
SECTION 36: HUMAN RIGHTS
Best Dissertation Award
Given for the best dissertation focused on human rights that was completed and accepted during the previous two calendar years.
Award Committee: Michael J. Struett, North Carolina State University, chair; Richard P. Hiskes, University of Connecticut; Carolyn Shaw, Wichita State University
Recipient: Andreas von Staden, Princeton University
Title: “Shaping Human Rights Policy in Liberal Democracies: Assessing and Explaining Compliance with the Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights”
Distinguished Scholar Award
This award is intended to recognize someone who has worked in the field of human rights and made an exceptional contribution to the field through research, teaching and mentorship.
Award Committee: Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University, chair; David P. Forsythe, University of Nebraska; Jack Donnelly, University of Denver
Recipient: Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, Purchase College, SUNY
SECTION 37: QUALITATIVE AND MULTI-METHOD RESEARCH
Alexander L. George Article Award
This award honors Alexander George's prominent role in developing and teaching qualitative methodology, in particular the comparative case study method.
Award Committee: Michael Tomz, Stanford University, chair; Emilie M. Hafner-Burton, University of California, San Diego; Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota
Recipient: Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Title: “Revolutions, Crackdowns, and Quiescence: Communal Elites and Democratic Mobilization in Southeast Asia,” American Journal of Sociology 115 (1): 203–54
The Sage Paper Award
This award honors the contribution of Sara and George McCune to the field of qualitative methods, through their role in founding Sage Publications and developing it into a leading publisher in the field of social science methodology.
Award Committee: Benjamin Read, University of California Santa Cruz, chair; Mirjam Kunkler, Princeton University; Ngoni Munemo, Williams College
Recipient: Marcus Kreuzer, Villanova University
Title: “Historical Knowledge and Quantitative Analysis: The Case of the Origins of Proportional Representation”
Giovanni Sartori Book Award
This award honors Giovanni Sartori's innovative research on social science concepts and his leading role in developing the field of concept analysis as a component of political science methodology.
Award Committee: Kathleen Thelen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, chair; Taylor Boas, Boston University; Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University
Co-Recipient: Edward Schatz, University of Toronto
Title: Political Ethnography: What Immersion Contributes to the Study of Power (University of Chicago Press, 2009)
Co-Recipient: Evan S. Lieberman, Princeton University
Title: Boundaries of Contagion: How Ethnic Politics Have Shaped Government Responses to AIDS (Princeton University Press, 2009)
SECTION 38: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS
Sexuality and Politics Best Conference Paper Award
This award is given for the best paper exploring sexuality and politics presented at the previous year's APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Alesha E. Doan, University of Kansas, chair; Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University
Recipient: Maxine Eichner, University of North Carolina School of Law
Title: “Feminism, Queer Theory, and Sexual Citizenship”
SECTION 40: CANADIAN POLITICS
Mildred Schwartz Lifetime Achievement Award
This award honors Mildred Schwartz, who has been a luminary of comparative Canadian-U.S. scholarship and is well known in both countries. The award thus honors people who have been deemed to be leading scholars in bringing the study of Canadian politics to the international political science community.
Award Committee: Melissa Haussman, Carleton University; Ray Tatalovich, Loyola University Chicago; Patrick James, University of Southern California; Laura Stephenson, University of Western Ontario; Janna Ferguson, Rutgers University; Christopher Sands, Hudson Institute; Candace Johnson, University of Guelph; Louise Carbert, Dalhousie University; Pauline Rankin, Carleton University
Recipient: Jill M. Vickers, Carleton University