In addition to the APSA awards (see full listing and citations in the Gazette, this issue) the following recognitions were announced by the APSA Organized Sections.
SECTION 1. FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
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: J. Mitchell Pickerill, Northern Illinois University (Chair); Marc Landy, Boston College; Anna O. Law, CUNY-Brooklyn College
Recipient: Donald H. Haider, Northwestern University
Title: When Governments Come to Washington: Governors, Mayors, and Intergovernmental Lobbying (1974), Free Press
Deil S. Wright Best Paper Award
Presented to the author of the best paper on federalism and intergovernmental relations presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Kathleen Hale, Auburn University (Chair); Alec Ewald, University of Vermont; Sonja Walti, American University
Recipients: Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University; Eunice Heredia-Ortiz, Development Alternatives, Inc.; Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, Georgia State University; Raul Ponce-Rodriguez, Universidad Autonoma de Ciudad Juarez
Title: “Rethinking the Political Economy of Decentralization: How Democracy and Political PartiesShape the Provision of Local Public Goods”
Distinguished Scholar Award
Recognizes a lifetime of contributions to the study of federalism and intergovernmental relations
Award Committee: J. Edwin Benton, University of South Florida (Chair); Jenna Bednar, University of Michigan; Jacob T. Levy, McGill University
Recipient: Barry R. Weingast, Stanford University
SECTION 2. LAW AND COURTS
Best Conference Paper Award
For the best paper on law and courts presented at the 2011 annual meetings of the American, International, and regional political science associations
Award Committee: Jonathan P. Kastellec, Princeton University; J. Mitchell Pickerill, Northern Illinois University; Lee D. Walker, University of South Carolina
Recipient: Quinn W. Mulroy, Syracuse University
Title: “Enforcing Rights Protections: The Regulatory Power of Private Litigation and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission”
Best Graduate Student Paper Award
For the best paper on law and courts written by a graduate student
Recipient: Maya Sen, University of Rochester
Title: “Is Justice Really Blind: Race and Appellate Review in U.S. Courts”
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: Scott A. Comparato, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale; Alison Gash, University of Oregon
Recipients: Bryan T. Calvin, Tarrant County College; Paul M. Collins, Jr., University of North Texas; Pamela C. Corley, Southern Methodist University
Title: “Lower Court Influence on U.S. Supreme Court Opinion Content” (January 2011, The Journal of Politics)
C. Herman Pritchett Award
For the best book on law and courts written by a political scientist and published the previous year
Award Committee: Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine; Joseph D. Ura, Texas A&M University; Eric Waltenburg, Purdue University
Recipient: Matthew E.K. Hall, Saint Louis University
Title: The Nature of Supreme Court Power, Cambridge University Press
Lifetime Achievement Award
Honors a distinguished career of scholarly achievement and service to the law and courts field
Award Committee: Lori J. Hausegger, Boise State University; John C. Kilwein, West Virginia University; Susan E. Lawrence, Rutgers University; Jeffrey Staton, Emory University; Mary L. Volcansek, Texas Christian University
Recipient: Robert A. Kagan, University of California, Berkeley
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: John Winkle, III (Chair); Christina L. Boyd, University at Buffalo, SUNY; Marcus E. Hendershot, University of Florida; Amy L. Steigerwalt, Georgia State University; Steven M. Teles, Johns Hopkins University; Justin J. Wert, University of Oklahoma
Recipient: R. Shep Melnick, Boston College
Title: Between the Lines: Interpreting Welfare Rights (1994), Brookings Institution Press
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: Tom Clark, Emory University; James L. Gibson, Washington University, St. Louis; David S. Law, Washington University, St. Louis; Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, University at Albany; Todd C. Peppers, Roanoke College
Recipient: Howard Gillman, University of Southern California
Teaching and Mentoring Award
Recognizes innovative teaching and instructional methods and materials in law and courts
Award Committee: Andreas Broscheid, James Madison University; Rebecca Wood Gill, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Matthew C. Ingram, SUNY, University at Albany; Timothy R. Johnson, University of Minnesota; Anna R. Kirkland, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Recipient: Wendy L. Martinek, SUNY, Binghamton University
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: Kristina Miler, University of Maryland (Chair); Gail McElroy, Trinity College, Dublin; Keith E. Hamm, Rice University
Recipient: Vineeta Yadav, Pennsylvania State University
Title: Political Parties, Business Groups, and Corruption in Developing Countries, Oxford University Press
Carl Albert Award
For the best doctoral dissertation 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: Chris Den Hartog, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (Chair); Kathryn C. Lavelle, Case Western Reserve University; Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University
Recipient: James M. Curry, University of Utah
Title: “Information Control: Leadership Power in the U.S. House of Representatives” (University of Maryland)
CQ Press Award
For the best paper on legislative studies that was presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin (Chair); Matthew Gabel, Washington University, St. Louis; Kristin Kanthak, University of Pittsburgh
Recipients: Michael C. Brady, Denison University; Eric Gonzalez Juenke, Michigan State University;
Daniel J. Lee, Michigan State University
Title: “An Indelible Imprint? Assessing the Evolution of Racial Politics in Shaping Conflict in Congress during the Civil Rights Era”
Jewell-Loewenberg Award
For best article in the Legislative Studies Quarterly in the previous year (2011)
Award Committee: Jeremy Clayne Pope, Brigham Young University (Chair); Christopher J. Kam, University of British Columbia; Steven S. Smith, Washington University
Recipients: Rene Lindstadt, University of Essex; Jonathan B. Slapin, University of Houston; Ryan J. Vander Wielen, Temple University
Title: “Balancing Competing Demands: Position Taking and Election Proximity and the European Parliament.” (Legislative Studies Quarterly 36, February 2011, 37–70)
Richard F. Fenno Prize
For the best book in legislative studies published in 2011
Award Committee: Gregory Koger, University of Miami (Chair); Brian F. Crisp, Washington University, St. Louis; Cherie Maestas, Florida State University
Recipients: Lanny W. Martin, Rice University; Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Title: Parliaments and Coalitions: The Role of Legislative Institutions in Multiparty Governance, Oxford University Press
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 20 plus years
Award Committee: Elaine B. Sharp, University of Kansas (Chair); Thomas L. Gais, SUNY, University at Albany; Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Recipient: Lester M. Salamon, Johns Hopkins University
Title: Partners in Public Service: Government-Nonprofit Relations in the Modern Welfare State (1995), Johns Hopkins University Press
Best Poster on Public Policy Award
For the best paper or poster presented at the poster session at the previous APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Michael E. Kraft, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay (Chair); Ryane McAuliffe Straus, College of Saint Rose; Linda A. White, University of Toronto
Recipient: Jake Haselswerdt, George Washington University
Title: “Death and Tax Breaks: Comparing the Survival Rates of Tax Expenditures and Direct Spending Programs”
Best Public Policy Paper
For the best paper on public policy given at the previous APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley (Chair); Scott W. Allard, University of Chicago; Neal Woods, University of South Carolina
Recipient: Daniel P. Aldrich, Purdue University
Title: “Social, Not Physical, Infrastructure: The Critical Role of Civil Society in Disaster Recovery”
Best Paper in Comparative Public Policy
Recognizes 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: Meghna Sabhar-wal, University of Texas at Dallas (Chair); Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia; David Levi-Faur, Hebrew University
Recipients: Claire Annesley, University of Manchester; Isabelle Engeli, University of Geneva; Francesca Gains, University of Manchester
Title: “The Profile of Gender Equality Issue Attention in Western Europe”
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: Doug Imig, University of Memphis (Chair); Khalilah L. Brown-Dean, Quinnipiac University; Patricia Strach, SUNY, University at Albany
Recipient: John F. Witte, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Theodore Lowi Award
Recognizes an article of particular distinction published at any time in Policy Studies Journal
Award Committee: Sarah B. Pralle, Syracuse University (Chair); Susan L. Moffitt, Brown University; Carolyn Hughes Tuohy, University of Toronto
Recipients: Ashley E. Jochim, University of Washington; Peter J. May, University of Washington; Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University
Title: “Constructing Homeland Security: An Anemic Policy Regime” (Policy Studies Journal, 2011, 39(2): 285–307)
SECTION 5. POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
Emerging Scholars Award
Awarded to a scholar who has received his or her PhD within the last 7 years and whose career to date demonstrates unusual promise
Award Committee: Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland (Chair); Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Kyle L. Saunders, Colorado State University
Recipient: Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University
Jack Walker 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: Robert G. Boatright, Clark University (Chair); Hans Noel, Georgetown University; Kathryn Pearson, University of Minnesota
Recipients: Thomas M. Carsey, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Rosalyn Cooperman, University of Mary Washington; John C. Green, University of Akron; Richard Herrera, Arizona State University; Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame
Title: “Activists and Conflict Extension in American Party Politics” (American Political Science Review, 104(2))
Leon Epstein Book Award of Political Organizations and Parties Section
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: Mark D. Brewer, University of Maine (Chair); Seth E. Masket, University of Denver; Zeynep Somer-Topcu, Vanderbilt University
Co-recipient: Daniel P. Klinghard, College of Holy Cross
Title: The Nationalization of American Political Parties, 1880–1896, Cambridge University Press
Co-recipient: Monika Nalepa, Princeton University
Title: Skeletons in the Closet: Transitional Justice in Post-Communist Europe, Cambridge University Press
POP/Party Politics Award
Honors the best paper presented on a POP panel at the preceding APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Eric S. Heberlig, University of North Carolina, Charlotte (Chair); Michael M. Franz, Bowdoin College; Richard M. Skinner, Rollins College
Recipient: William G. Mayer, Northeastern University
Title: “Theory Meets Practice: The Presidential Selection Process in the First Federal Election, 1788–89”
Samuel Eldersveld Career Achievement Lifetime Award
To honor a scholar whose lifetime professional work has made an outstanding contribution to the field
Award Committee: Marjorie R. Hershey, Indiana University, Bloomington (Chair); Bruce A. Larson, Gettysburg College; Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin
Recipient: Barbara Sinclair, University of California, Los Angeles
SECTION 6. PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Herbert Kaufman Award
For the best paper presented on a panel sponsored by the Public Administration section at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Laurence J. O'Toole, University of Georgia (Chair); Kelly M. LeRoux, University of Illinois, Chicago; Katherine C. Naff, San Francisco State University
Recipients: Anthony Michael Bertelli, University of Southern California; Jennifer Connolly, University of Southern California; David Gastwirth, University of Southern California; Dyana P. Mason, University of Southern California
Title: “The Statistical Measurement of Accountability Constructs in American Governance”
Herbert A. Simon Best Book Award
The Herbert A. Simon Book Award for the best book published in the last 3 to 5 years that has made a significant contribution to public administration scholarship
Award Committee: Kenneth J. Meier, Texas A&M University (Chair); Julie Dolan, Macalester College; Hal G. Rainey, University of Georgia
Recipient: Donald P. Moynihan, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Title: The Dynamics of Performance Management (2008), Georgetown University Press
Volcker Junior Scholar Research Grant
Awarded to a junior scholar researching public administration issues affecting governance in the United States and abroad
Award Committee: Jerrell D. Coggburn, North Carolina State University; Sharon H. Mastracci, University of Illinois, Chicago; William G. Resh, Indiana University, Bloomington
Recipient: Aroon P. Manoharan, Kent State University
Title: “Determinants of the Stages of County E-Government in the United States”
SECTION 8. REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
George H. Hallet Award
For a book, at least 10 years old, that has made a lasting contribution to the literature on representation and electoral systems
Award Committee: Kathleen Bawn, University of California, Los Angeles; Michael B. Berkman, Pennsylvania State University; Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton
Recipient: William H. Riker (deceased)
Title: Liberalism Against Populism: A Confrontation Between the Theory of Democracy and the Theory of Social Choice
Lawrence Longley Award
For the best article on representation and electoral systems published in the previous year
Award Committee: Orit Kedar, Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Chair); Marisa Abrajano, University of California, San Diego; Susan Dayton Hyde, Yale University
Recipients: Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Maryland; Timothy Hellwig, Indiana University, Bloomington
Title: “Centripetal and Centrifugal Incentives under Different Electoral Systems,” American Journal of Political Science
Leon Weaver Award
The Leon Weaver Award given for the best paper presented at a panel sponsored by the Representation and Electoral Systems Division
Award Committee: Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University (Chair); Mark P. Jones, Rice University; Heather Stoll, University of California, Santa Barbara
Recipients: Russell J. Dalton, University of California, Irvine; David M. Farrell, University College Dublin, Belfield; Ian McAllister, Australian National University
Title: “The Dynamics of Democratic Representation: How Democracy Works”
SECTION 9. PRESIDENCY RESEARCH
George C. Edwards III Best Dissertation
For the best dissertation in presidency research completed and accepted during the 2010 or 2011 calendar year
Award Committee: Katherine TenPass, University of Pennsylvania; Kenneth Mayer, University of Wisconsin; Jose Villalobos, University of Texas, El Paso
Recipient: William G. Resh, Indiana University, Bloomington
Title: “Rethinking the Administrative Presidency: Trust, Intellectual Capital, and Appointee-Careerist Relations” (American University)
Founders PhD Scholar Best Paper Award
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 2011–2012
Award Committee: Nigel Bowles, University of Oxford; Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington; Paul J. Quirk, University of British Columbia; B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University
Recipient: Brendan J. Doherty, United States Naval Academy
Title: “The President as Party-Builder-in-Chief: Presidential Fund-raising, 1977–2011”
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: Matthew J. Dickinson, Middlebury College (Chair); Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University; Lara Michelle Brown, Villanova University; Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College; James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University
Recipient: Michael J. Korzi, Towson University
Title: Presidential Term Limits in American History, Texas A&M University Press
Best Undergraduate Paper Award
The best undergraduate paper completed in the academic year 2010–2011
Award Committee: David Yalof, University of Connecticut; Larry Berman, Georgia State University; Shirley Warshaw, Gettysburg College; Richard Holtzman, Bryant University
Recipient: Andrew Keene, United States Naval Academy
Title: “Exploration of Ticket Splitting: The Battleground State Effect”
SECTION 10. POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Career Achievement Award
Honors an outstanding career of intellectual accomplishment and service to the profession in political methodology
Award Committee: Jacob Bowers, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University; Nancy Burns, University of Michigan; Tse-min Lin, University of Texas, Austin; James A. Stimson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Recipient: Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley
Emerging Scholar Award
Honors a young researcher, within 10 years of his or her degree, who is making notable contributions to the field of political methodology
Award Committee: Wendy K. Tam Cho, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University; Jeffrey B. Lewis, University of California, Los Angeles; Kevin M. Quinn, University of California, Berkeley
Recipient: Jacob Bowers, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Harold F. Gosnell Prize
For the best work in political methodology presented at any political science conference during the preceding year
Award Committee: Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Matthew Lebo, SUNY, Stony Brook University; Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago
Recipients: Thomas Gschwend, Universität Mannheim; James Lo, University of Mannheim; Sven-Oliver Proksch, University of Mannheim
Title: “A Common Left-Right Scale for Voters and Parties in Europe”
John T. Williams Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation proposal in the area of political methodology
Award Committee: Michael P. Colaresi, Michigan State University; Jonathan Nagler, New York University; Guy D. Whitten, Texas A&M University
Recipient: Adriana Crespo-Tenorio, Washington University, St. Louis
Title: “Three Papers on the Political Consequences of Oil Price Volatility”
Statistical Software Award
Recognizes individual(s) for developing statistical software that makes a significant research contribution
Award Committee: Micah Altman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Kosuke Imai, Princeton University; Andrew D. Martin, Washington University; Curtis S. Signorino, University of Rochester; Arthur Spirling, Harvard University
Recipients: Walter R. Mebane, Jr., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley
Title: “genoud: Genetic Optimization using Derivatives”
Warren Miller Article Award
For the best article in Political Analysis in the previous year
Award Committee: Kosuke Imai, Princeton University; Burt L. Monroe, Pennsylvania State University; Gregory J. Wawro, Columbia University; B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University
Recipients: Devin Caughey, University of California, Berkeley; Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley
Title: Elections and the Regression-Discontinuity Design: Lessons from Close U.S. House
Races, 1942-2008 (Political Analysis, 19(4): 385–408).
Political Methodology Poster Award
For the best poster presented at the annual summer Political Methodology Meeting
Award Committee: Patrick T. Brandt, University of Texas at Dallas; Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University; Stephen R. Haptonstahl, Institute for Physical Sciences, Inc.; Drew Linzer, Emory University; Walter R. Mebane, Jr., University of Michigan
Recipient: Brenton Kenkel, University of Rochester
Title: “Bounds for Logistic Regression Coefficients with Nonignorable Missing Outcomes”
SECTION 11. RELIGION AND POLITICS
Aaron Wildavsky Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation on religion and politics successfully defended in 2010 and 2011
Award Committee: Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, Northwestern University (Chair); Michaelle L. Browers, Wake Forest University; Andrew F. March, Yale University; Elora Shehabuddin, Rice University
Recipient: Toby Matthiesen, University of Cambridge
Title: “The Shia of Saudi Arabia: Identity Politics, Sectarianism and the Saudi State” (University of London, SOAS)
Paul J. Weber Best Paper Award
For the best paper dealing with religion and politics presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Andrew C. Gould, University of Notre Dame (Chair); Sener Akturk, Koc University; Brandon T. Kendhammer, Ohio University
Recipient: Ramazan Kilinc, University of Nebraska-Omaha
Title: “Opportunity Junctures as Catalysts: Islam, Secularism and Democratic Consolidation in Turkey”
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: Roger B. Handberg, University of Central Florida; Ann C. Keller, University of California, Berkeley; Eric Lindquist, Boise State University
Recipients: Michael B. Berkman, Pennsylvania State University; Eric Plutzer, Pennsylvania State University
Title: Evolution, Creationism, and the Battle to Control America's Classrooms
Lynton K. Caldwell Award
For the best book in environmental politics published in the past 3 years
Award Committee: Dorothy Daley, Universi-ty of Kansas; George Hoberg, University of British Columbia; David M. Shafie, Chapman University
Recipients: Troy D. Abel, Western Washington University; Michael E. Kraft, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay; Mark C. Stephan, Washington State University, Vancouver
Title: Coming Clean: Information Disclosure and Environmental Performance (2011), MIT Press
Virginia M. Walsh Dissertation Award
For the best dissertations in science, technology, and environmental politics
Award Committee: Sarah Anderson, Univer-sity of California, Santa Barbara; Jessica F. Green, Case Western Reserve University; Pamela Stricker, California State University, San Marcos
Co-recipient: Kemi Fuentes-George, Middlebury College
Title: “Scientific Knowledge, Epistemic Communities and Environmental Policy in the Developing World” (University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
Co-recipient: Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland
Title: “Contesting Climate Change: Civil Society Networks and Collective Action in the European Union” (Cornell University)
SECTION 16. WOMEN AND POLITICS RESEARCH
Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertations on women and politics completed and successfully defended in the previous calendar year
Recipient: Jennifer Marie Piscopo, Salem College
Title: “Do Women Represent Women? Gender and Policy in Argentina and Mexico” (University of California, San Diego)
Best Paper Award
For the best paper presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting on women and politics
Recipient: Eleonora Lepinard, University of Montreal
Title: “Doing Intersectionality: Varieties of Feminist Practices in France and Canada”
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: Claire E. Rasmussen, University of Delaware (Chair)
Recipient: Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University
Title: “Ismene's Forced Choice: Sacrifice and Sorority in Sophocles' Antigone” (Arethusa 44(1): 29–68)
SECTION 17. FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THOUGHT
Best Paper Award
For the best paper presented on a foundation panel at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Susan McWilliams, Pomona College (Chair); Roger Berkowitz, Bard College; Tamara Metz, Reed College
Recipient: Jane A. Gordon, Temple University
Title: “Theorizing Contemporary Practices of Slavery”
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: Mark Reinhardt, Williams College (Chair); Jennifer Ring, University of Nevada, Reno; George M. Shulman, New York University
Co-recipient: Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley
Title: Walled States, Waning Sovereignty, Zone Books
Co-recipient: Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University
Title: Emergency Politics: Paradox, Law, Democracy, Princeton University Press
First Book Award
For the best first book published by a scholar in the early stages of his or her career in the area of political theory or political philosophy
Award Committee: Judith Grant, Ohio University (Chair); Chad Lavin, Virginia Tech; Bradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University
Recipient: Stephen H. Marshall, University of Texas, Austin
Title: The City on the Hill from Below: The Crisis of Prophetic Black Politics, Temple University Press
SECTION 18. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
Best Book Award
Recognizes the best book in the area of information technology and politics published in the previous calendar year
Award Committee: Philip N. Howard, University of Washington
Recipient: J. P. Singh, Georgetown University
Title: Globalized Arts: The Entertainment Economy and Cultural Identity, Columbia University Press
Best Dissertation Award
Recognizes the best dissertation in the area of information technology and politics
Recipient: Daniel Ross, York University
Title: “The Political Economy of Free and Open Source Software” (York University)
Best Research Software Award
Recognizes the website or software, which contributes to research and/or teaching in political science
Award Committee: Bob Boynton, University of Iowa
Co-recipients: Micah Altman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Michael P. McDonald, George Mason University
Title: DistrictBuilder
Co-recipient: Derrick L. Cogburn, American University and the Institute on Disability and Public Policy
Title: IDPP Cyberinfrastructure
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
Award Committee: Kevin Jay Wallsten, California State University, Long Beach
Recipients: Sean Goggins, Drexel University; Christopher Michael Mascaro, Drexel University; Alison Novak, Drexel University
Title: “The Daily Brew: The Structural Evolution of the Coffee Party on Facebook during the 2010 United States Midterm Election Season”
SECTION 20. COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Lijphart/Przeworski/Verba Data Set Award
For a publicly available data set that has made an important contribution to the field of comparative politics
Award Committee: John Gerring, Boston University; Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University; Peter N. Wallensteen, Uppsala University
Recipients: David Backer, University of Maryland; Daniele Caramani, University of St Gallen; Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Title: Constituency-Level Elections Archive (CLEA)
Leubbert Best Article Award
For the best article in the field of comparative politics published in 2010 or 2011
Award Committee: Johanna Kristin Birnir, University of Maryland; Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University; Sara Watson, Ohio State University
Recipient: Philip Roessler, Duke University
Title: “The Enemy Within. Personal Rule, Coups, and Civil War in Africa” (World Politics, 63(2))
Leubbert Best Book Award
For the best book in the field of comparative politics published in 2010 or 2011
Award Committee: Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota; Ruth Berins Collier, University of California, Berkeley; Alexander Michael Hicks, Emory University
Co-recipient: Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia
Title: Governing for the Long Terms: Democracy and the Politics of Investment (2011), Cambridge University Press
Co-recipient: Jeffrey Winters, Northwestern University
Title: Oligarchy (2011), Cambridge University Press
Powell Graduate Mentoring Award
Awarded on a bi-annual basis to a political scientist who throughout his or her career has demonstrated a particularly outstanding commitment to the mentoring of graduate students in comparative politics
Award Committee: Nancy Bermeo, Oxford University; Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Victor C. Shih, Northwestern University
Recipient: David Collier, University of California, Berkeley
Sage Best Paper Award
For the best paper in the field of comparative politics presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California, Berkeley; Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University; Nita Rudra, University of Pittsburgh
Recipient: Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University
Title: “What Wins Votes: Why Some Politicians Opt Out of Clientelism”
SECTION 21. EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
Best Book Award
For the best book on European politics and society published in 2011
Award Committee: Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University (Chair); Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University; Nicolas Jabko, Johns Hopkins University
Recipient: David Stasavage, New York University
Title: States of Credit: Size, Power, and the Development of European Politics, Princeton
University Press
Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation on European politics and society filed in 2011
Award Committee: David Art, Tufts University (Chair); Deborah A. Boucoyannis, University of Virginia; Monika Nalepa, Prince-ton University
Recipient: Jordan Luc Gans-Morse, Northwestern University
Title: “Building Property Rights: Capitalists and the Demand for Law in Post-Soviet Russia” (University of California, Berkeley)
Best Paper Award
Given for the best paper on European politics and society presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Donna Bahry, Pennsylvania State University (Chair); Willem Maas, York University; Ben William Ansell, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Recipients: Christilla Roederer-Rynning, Syddansk Universitet; Frank Schimmel-fennig, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
Title: “Bringing Co-Decision to Agriculture: A Hard Case of Parliamentarization”
SECTION 23. POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Timothy Cook Best Graduate Student Paper Award
For the best paper on political communication presented by a graduate student at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Stephanie Burkhalter, Humboldt State University (Chair); Johanna Dunaway, Louisiana State University; C. Danielle Vinson, Furman University
Recipients: James N. Druckman, Northwestern University; Thomas J. Leeper, Northwestern University
Title: “Learning More from Political Communication Experiments: The Importance of Pretreatment Effects”
David Swanson Career Achievement
For lifetime service to the study of political communication
Award Committee: Gienpietro Mazzoleni, Università di Milano (Chair); Christina Holtz-Bacha, University of Erlangen-Nuernberg; Ann N. Crigler, University of Southern California; Kathleen Hall Jamieson, University of Pennsylvania
Recipient: David L. Paletz, Duke University
Doris Graber Award
For the best book of the year published on political communication within the last 10 years
Award Committee: Roderick Hart, University of Texas Austin (Chair); Steven Livingston, George Washington University; Ted Brader, University of Michigan
Recipients: Robert Huckfeldt, University of California, Davis; Paul Johnson, University of California, Davis; John D. Sprague, Washington University
Title: Political Disagreement: The Survival of Diverse Opinions within Communication Networks (2004), Cambridge University Press
Paul Lazarsfeld Best Paper Award
For the best paper on political communication presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington University (Chair); Craig Leonard Brians, Virginia Tech; Sean Richey, George State University
Recipients: Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University; Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University
Title: “Do Women Deliberate with a Distinctive Voice? How Decision Rules and Group Gender Composition Affect the Content of Deliberation”
SECTION 24. POLITICS AND HISTORY
J. David Greenstone Book Prize
For the best book in politics and history published in 2010 or 2011
Award Committee: Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University (Chair); Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Colin Moore, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Recipient: Julian Go, Boston University
Title: Patterns of Empire: The British and American Empires, 1688 to Present (2011), Cambridge University Press
Mary Parker Follett
For the best article or chapter in politics and history published in 2010 or 2011
Award Committee: Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia (Chair); Devin Caughey, University of California, Berkeley; Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University; Catherine Paden, Simmons College
Recipients: Diana Dumitru, Moldova State Pedagogical University; Carter R. Johnson, American Councils, Moscow
Title: “Constructing Interethnic Conflict and Cooperation: Why Some People Harmed Jews and Others Helped Them During the Holocaust in Romania” (World Politics 63, January 2011, 1-42)
Walter Dean Burnham Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation in the field of politics and history
Award Committee: Catherine Boone, University of Texas, Austin (Chair); Beth A. Rosenson, University of Florida; James Shoch, California State University, Sacramento
Recipient: Gwendoline M. Alphonso, Fairfield University
Title: “Hearth and Soul: Political Parties, Family Ideologies, and the Development of Social Policy in the 20th Century” (Cornell University)
SECTION 25. POLITICAL ECONOMY
Fiona McGillivray Prize Best Paper Award
For the best paper in Political Economy presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University (Chair); William Roberts Clark, University of Michigan; Barbara F. Walter, University of California, San Diego
Recipients: Benjamin S. Barber, IV, Duke University; Pablo Beramendi, Duke University; Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University
Title: “The Behavioral Foundations of Social Politics: Evidence from Surveys and a Laboratory Democracy”
Michael Wallerstein Award
For the best published article in Political Economy in the previous calendar year
Award Committee: Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University (Chair); Jens Hainmueller, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania
Recipients: Kenneth F. Scheve, Stanford University; David Stasavage, New York University
Title: “The Conscription of Wealth: Mass Warfare and the Demand for Progressive Taxation,” International Organization 64(4)
Honorable Mention: Yotam Margalit, Columbia University
Title: “Costly Jobs: Trade-related Layoffs, Government Compensation, and Voting in U.S. Elections.” American Political Science Review 105(1):169–88
Mancur Olson Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation completed and accepted in the previous 2 years
Award Committee: Catherine Hafer, New York University (Chair); John Stephen Ahlquist, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Stephen B. Kaplan, George Washington University
Recipient: Xiaobo Lu, Texas A&M University
Title: “The Political Causes and Consequences of Inequality of Opportunity” (Yale University)
William H. Riker Book Award
For the best book on political economy published in the past 3 years
Award Committee: Carles Boix, Princeton University (Chair); Ben William Ansell, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities; Jenna Bednar, University of Michigan
Recipient: Tom Clark, Emory University
Title: The Limits of Judicial Independence (2011), Cambridge University Press
Honorable Mention: Jonathan Bendor, Stanford University; Daniel Diermeier, Northwestern University; David A. Siegel, Florida State University; Michael M. Ting, Columbia University
Title: A Behavioral Theory of Elections
Honorable Mention: David Stasavage, New York University
Title: States of Credit: Size, Power, and the Development of European Polities
SECTION 27. NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Christian Bay Award
For the best paper presented at a New Political Science panel at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Elisabeth K. Chaves, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Chair); William L. Niemi, Western State College of Colorado; Stephen Pimpare, City University of New York
Recipient: Michael David Forrest, University of Minnesota
Title: “The Limits of Political Representation: Anti-Foreclosure Activism and Racial Injustice in the Post-Civil Rights Era”
Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven 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 relevant to the struggle for a better world,” into practice
Award Committee: Michael Forman, University of Washington, Tacoma (Chair); Michael J. Bosia, St. Michael's College; Margaret Groarke, Manhattan College; Frances Fox Piven, CUNY Graduate Center
Recipient: New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice
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: Manfred B. Steger, University of Hawaii, Manoa (Chair); Christine A. Kelly, William Paterson University; Katherine Young, University of Hawaii, Hilo
Recipient: Sanford F. Schram, Bryn Mawr College
Michael Harrington Book Award
For an outstanding book that demonstrates how scholarship can be used in the struggle for a better world
Award Committee: Bradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University (Chair); Sean Parson, University of Alaska, Fairbanks
Recipients: Richard C. Fording, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa; Sanford F. Schram, Bryn Mawr College; Joe Soss, University of Minnesota
Title: Disciplining the Poor: Neoliberal Paternalism and the Persistent Power of Race, University of Chicago Press
SECTION 28. POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation in political psychology filed during the previous year
Award Committee: Pete Hatemi, Pennsylvania State University (Chair); J. Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale; Elizabeth Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University
Recipient: Christopher T. Dawes, New York University
Title: “An Examination of Potential Causal Mechanisms Linking Genes and Political Behavior” (University of California, San Diego)
Honorable Mention: Sarah Harrison, London School of Economics and Political Science
Title: “Ideological (Mis)Match? Mapping Extreme Right Ideological Discourse and Voter Preferences”
Robert Lane Best Book Award
For the best book in political psychology published during the previous year
Award Committee: Mark Peffley, University of Kentucky (Chair); Jon Hurwitz, University of Pittsburgh; Jennifer Jerit, Florida State University
Co-recipients: James N. Druckman, Northwestern University; Donald P. Green, Columbia University; James H. Kuklin-ski, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Title: Cambridge Handbook of Experimental Political Science, Cambridge University Press
Co-recipient: Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University
Title: Americanism in the Twenty-First Century, Cambridge University Press
Best Paper Award
For the best paper in political psychology delivered at the 2011 Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Michael E. Morrell, University of Connecticut (Chair); Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota; David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame
Recipients: Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University; Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University
Title: “Do Women Deliberate with a Distinctive Voice? How Decision Rules and Group Gender Composition Affect the Content of Deliberation”
Distinguished Junior Scholars Award
The APSA Political Psychology section gives up to nine $200 grants, meant for travel to the APSA, for junior scholars (graduate students or those no more than 7 years since receiving their PhD)
Award Committee: Matt Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania (Chair); Kristen Monroe, University of California Irvine; Christopher Larimer University of Northern Iowa
Recipients:
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Erica Czaja, Princeton University
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Cengiz Erisen, TOBB University of Economics and Technology
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Kristyn Karl, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
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Mona S. Kleinberg, Rutgers University
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Ashley Muddiman, University of Texas, Austin
-
Spencer Piston, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
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Jaime E. Settle, College of William & Mary
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Rachel Anne Silbermann, Yale University
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April Strickland, SUNY, Stony Brook University
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Juan Luis Urbano, Jr., University of Kansas
SECTION 29. POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
Best Presentation Award
For the best presentation on undergraduate education at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Alison Rios Millett McCartney, Towson University (Chair)
Recipient: Rebecca Glazier, University of Arkansas, Little Rock
Title: “Satire and Efficacy in the Political Science Classroom”
SECTION 32. ELECTIONS, PUBLIC OPINION, AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Best Paper Award
For the best paper delivered at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Walter J. Stone, University of California, Davis (Chair); André Blais, Université de Montréal; Zoe M. Oxley, Union College
Recipients: James N. Druckman, Northwestern University; Thomas J. Leeper, Northwestern University; Jordan Fein, Northwestern University
Title: “Framing and Biased Information Search”
Emerging Scholar Award
Recognizes the top scholar in the field who is within 10 years of her or his PhD
Award Committee: David P. Redlawsk, Rutgers University (Chair); Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Karen M. Kaufmann, University of Maryland
Recipient: Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University
Philip E. Converse Best Book Award
For an outstanding book in the field published at least 5 years ago
Award Committee: Christopher Wlezien, Temple University (Chair); Sunshine Hillygus, Duke University; Tia Stokes-Brown, Bucknell University
Recipients: Edward G. Carmines, Indiana University, Bloomington; James A. Stimson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Title: Issue Evolution: Race and the Transformation of American Politics (1989), Princeton University Press
Warren E. Miller Award
Awarded every 2 or 3 years for an outstanding career of intellectual accomplishment and service to the profession in elections, public opinion, and voting behavior
Award Committee: Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, University of Nebraska, Lincoln (Chair); Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida; Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University
Recipient: Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
SECTION 33. RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation completed January 2011 to December 2011 on race, ethnicity, and politics
Award Committee: Christopher S. Parker, University of Washington (Chair); Regina Freer, Occidental College; John H. Mollenkopf, CUNY Graduate Center
Recipient: Chris Zepeda-Millan, University of Chicago
Title: “Dignity's Revolt: Threat, Identity, and Immigrant Mass Mobilization” (Cornell University)
SECTION 34. INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
Jervis and Schroeder Best Book Award
For the best book on international history and politics published in the previous calendar year
Award Committee: Colin Elman, Syracuse University (Chair)
Recipient: Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, George Washington University
Title: Leaders at War: How Presidents Shape Military Interventions, Cornell University Press
SECTION 35. COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
Best Book Award
For the best book in the field of comparative democratization published in 2011 (authored, co-authored, or edited)
Award Committee: Thad Dunning, Yale University; Michael L. Ross, University of California, Los Angeles; Benjamin Smith, University of Florida
Recipient: Susan Dayton Hyde, Yale University
Title: The Pseudo-Democrat's Dilemma: Why Election Monitoring Became an International Norm, Cornell University Press
Honorable Mention: Vineeta Yadav, Pennsylvania State University
Title: Political Parties, Business Groups, and Corruption in Developing Countries, Oxford University Press
Best Field Research Award
Rewards dissertation students who conduct especially innovative and difficult fieldwork
Award Committee: Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin (Chair); Claire Leslie Adida, University of California, San Diego; Lily L. Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Recipient: Simon Chauchard, Dartmouth College
Title: “From Political Power To Changing Group Relations? Tracking the Psychological Impact of Political Inclusion in Rural India”
Honorable Mention: James Long, University of California, San Diego
Title: “Ethnic Voting in Kenya and Ghana and Election Fraud in Uganda and Afghanistan”
Best Paper Award
Recognizes the best paper presented on a human rights section panel at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Marc Morjé Howard, Georgetown University (Chair); Lisa A. Blaydes, Stanford University; Christian Houle, Trinity College
Recipient: Susan C. Stokes, Yale University
Title: “What Killed Vote Buying in Britain?”
Juan Linz Best Dissertation Award
For the best dissertation in the comparative study of democracy completed and accepted in the past 2 calendar years
Award Committee: Nancy Bermeo, Oxford University (Chair); Pauline Jones Luong, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University
Recipient: Noam Lupu, Juan March Institute
Title: “Party Brands in Crisis: Partisanship, Brand Dilution and the Breakdown of Political Parties in Latin America” (Prince-ton University)
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: Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State University (Chair); Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, State University of New York, Purchase; Bethany Barratt, Roosevelt University
Recipient: Susan Stokes, Yale University
Title: What Killed Vote Buying in Britain and the United States?
SECTION 37. QUALITATIVE METHODS
David Collier Mid-Career Achievement Award
Given to a mid-career political scientist to recognize distinction in methodological publications, innovative application of qualitative and multi-method approaches in substantive research, and/or institutional contributions to this area of methodology
Award Committee: Gary Goertz, University of Arizona (Chair); Dan Carpenter, Harvard University; Rose McDermott, Brown University
Recipient: Colin Elman, Syracuse University
Giovanni Sartori Book Award
Granted to a single-authored or multi-authored book, or to an edited volume published in the previous calendar year
Award Committee: Lauren Morris MacLean, Indiana University, (Chair); Evan Lieberman, Princeton University; and Timothy Crawford, Boston College
Recipient: Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia
Title: Governing for the Long Term: Democracy and the Politics of Investment, Cambridge University Press
Alexander George Article/Book Chapter Award
Granted to the author of a journal article or a chapter in an edited volume that stands on its own as an article
Award Committee: Melani Cammett, Brown University (Chair); Hillel Soifer, Temple University; Gerardo Munck, University of Southern California
Recipient: Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan
Title: “Time Will Tell: Temporality and the Analysis of Causal Mechanisms and Processes” (Comparative Political Studies, Volume 44, September 2011).
APSR Submission Award
For the best qualitative manuscript submitted to the American Political Science Review in the previous calendar year
Recipient: Jeremy M. Menchik, Boston University
Title: “The Origins of Intolerance in Islamic Institutions”
Recipient: Paul Staniland, University of Chicago
Title: “States, Insurgents, and Wartime Political Orders”
Sage Paper Award
For the best paper presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland; Jonathan Githens-Mazer, University of Exeter; Erica Townsend-Bell, University of Iowa
Recipients: Derek Beach, University of Aarhus; Rasmus Brun Pedersen, University of Aarhus
Title: “What is Process Tracing Actually Tracing? The Three Variants of Process Tracing Methods and Their Uses and Limitations”
SECTION 38. SEXUALITY AND POLITICS
Best Conference Paper Award
For the best paper exploring sexuality and politics presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Ella Myers, University of Utah (Chair); Beth Kiyoko Jamieson, The Fund for New Jersey; Christine Keating, Ohio State University
Recipients: Abouzar Nasirzadeh, University of Toronto; Kate Korycki, University of Toronto
Title: “Desire Re-Cast: The Production of Gay Identity in Iran”
SECTION 40. CANADIAN POLITICS
Mildred Schwartz Lifetime Achievement
Recognizes scholarship and leadership in bringing the study of Canadian politics to the international political science community
Award Committee: Fred E. Cutler, University of British Columbia; Elisabeth L. Gidengil, McGill University; Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida; David Rayside, University of Toronto; Mildred A. Schwartz, New York University
Recipient: Peter H. Russell, University of Toronto
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: Cristine de Clercy, University of Western Ontario; Katherine Fierlbeck, Dalhousie University; Kenneth M. Holland, Ball State University; Michael Lusztig, Southern Methodist University; Richard Vengroff, Kennesaw State University
Co-recipient: Janet Ajzenstat, McMaster University
Title: The Canadian Founding: John Locke and Parliament, McGill-Queen's University Press
Co-recipient: Stephen Clarkson, University of Toronto
Title: Does North America Exist? Governing the Continent After NAFTA and 9/11, University of Toronto Press
SECTION 42. EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Best Book Award
For the best book published in 2011 that either uses or is about experimental research methods in the study of politics
Award Committee: Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College (Chair); Adam J. Berinsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Thad Dunning, Yale University
Recipients: James N. Druckman, Northwestern University; Donald P. Green, Columbia University; James H. Kuklin-ski, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Title: Cambridge Handbook of Experimental Political Science, Cambridge University Press
Best Paper Award
For the best paper presented at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting featuring experimental analyses
Award Committee: Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University (Chair); C. Daniel Myers, University of Michigan; Christopher R. Weber, Louisiana State University
Recipients: Jennifer Jerit, Florida State University; Jason Barabas, Florida State University; Scott Clifford, Florida State University
Title: “Comparing Treatment Effects in Parallel Experiments”