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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS

Division Panels
“T” indicates a Theme Panel
See Page 63 for Meetings and Receptions Details

Theme Panels 60.1 DIVERSITY OF WOMEN'S Fri 2:30 pm


Division Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill INTERESTS
Chair: Alvin B. Tillery, Northwestern University Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
23.1 30 YEARS AFTER PROTEST IS Thu 2:00 pm
88.1 DIVERSITY, THREATS, AND
NOT ENOUGH: NEITHER
Sat 10:15 am
EXCLUSION: EXPERIMENTAL
PROTEST NOR ELECTIONS ARE
INVESTIGATIONS
ENOUGH
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
RESEARCH
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS 88.2 DYNAMICS AMONG NATIONS: Sat 10:15 am
94.1 AFTER OBAMA: LEGACIES OF Sat 2:00 pm EVOLUTION OF LEGITIMACY
AMERICA'S FIRST MINORITY AND DEVELOPMENT IN
PRESIDENT MODERN STATES
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL
EXECUTIVE POLITICS POLITICAL ECONOMY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND 60.2 EMPOWERING WOMEN: Fri 2:30 pm
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND SPECIAL CHALLENGES
CITIZENSHIP GENDER POSES FOR
INCLUSION AND DIVERSITY
23.2 BACKLASH AGAINST Thu 2:00 pm
WITHIN THE PROFESSION
DIVERSITY IN EUROPE
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS 51.1 ETHICS OF FIELD RESEARCH Fri 11:30 am
AND SOCIETY Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
23.3 BEYOND (AND BACK TO) Thu 2:00 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
RESEARCH
FERGUSON: RACE AND Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
POWER(LESSNESS) IN METHODOLOGY
AMERICAN CITIES
16.1 FIFTY YEARS AFTER THE VRA: Thu 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS THE FUTURE OF VOTING AND
REPRESENTATION IN THE US
94.2 BEYOND OUR BORDERS: DOES Sat 2:00 pm Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
POLITICAL SCIENCE HAVE AN Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
IMPACT ON OTHER POLITICS
DISCIPLINES? Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF 94.3 GLOBAL DIVERSITIES OF Sat 2:00 pm
POLITICAL THEORY RESPONSES TO GENDER-BASED
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
METHODS VIOLENCE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
METHODOLOGY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS

66.1 BREAKING NEWS: BEYOND THE Fri 4:30 pm 45.1 GLOBAL GOVERNANCE AND Fri 9:30 am
CONFEDERATE FLAG: THE THE UNITED NATIONS, 70
POLITICS OF RACE AND CIVIL YEARS AFTER THE SAN
RIGHTS AFTER THE FRANCISCO CHARTER
CHARLESTON MASSACRE Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Room: Hilton, Imperial A 10.1 IS ANYBODY LISTENING? Thu 8:00 am
98.1 BREAKING NEWS: TRADE Sat 4:15 pm POLITICAL SCIENCE, THE NEW
NEGOTIATIONS, FAST TRACK MEDIA AND POLITICS
AND AMERICAN WORKERS: Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
THE POLITICS OF TPP Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 1


10.2 MARGINALIZATION, INCLUSION Thu 8:00 am 98.2 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Sat 4:15 pm
AND THE FUTURE OF IMMIGRATION,
POLITICAL SCIENCE: A PANEL REDISTRIBUTION, AND
HONORING DAVID EASTON INEQUALITY
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2 Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
66.2 MARRIAGE EQUALITY IN THE Fri 4:30 pm
US: HOW DID WE GET HERE? 108.1 THE POLITICS OF RACE AND Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 CLASS INEQUALITIES IN THE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND AMERICAS
POLITICS Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
10.3 NEW THEORIES AND EVIDENCE Thu 8:00 am
POLITICS
ON LABOR POLITICS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
23.4 THE RISE OF THE POPULIST Thu 2:00 pm
88.3 PLENARY ADDRESS: TAKING Sat 10:15 am RIGHT?: ANTI-IMMIGRATION
EMBEDDED LIBERALISM PARTIES IN WESTERN EUROPE
GLOBAL: LESSONS FROM Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS, Co-sponsored by DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS
FEATURING JOHN RUGGIE AND SOCIETY
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 66.3 WOMEN AND CHILDREN AND Fri 4:30 pm
27.1 PLENARY ADDRESS: WHY Thu 4:15 pm VIOLENT EXTREMISM:
ECONOMICS IS TOO VICTIMS TO VICTIMIZERS?
IMPORTANT TO BE LEFT TO Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
ECONOMISTS, FEATURING Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY
ROBERT REICH
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 45.2 WOMEN IN CONFLICT Fri 9:30 am
PROCESSES
16.2 RACE AND GENDER IN THE Thu 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
EARLY AMERICAN REPUBLIC Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT 98.3 WOMEN’S ENGAGEMENT IN Sat 4:15 pm
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES AFRICAN POLITICS:
83.1 REALISM MEETS Sat 8:00 am OPPORTUNITIES AND
DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY: CONSTRAINTS
DIVERSITY IN POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN
THEORY POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
60.3 RESPONSIBILITY FOR RACIAL Fri 2:30 pm
COMMUNIST AND FORMER
JUSTICE COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2 Division Rachel Epstein, University of Denver
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Chair: Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania
THEORY
11.1 CIVIL SOCIETY, PROTEST AND Thu 8:00 am
60.4 RETHINKING DEMOCRATIC Fri 2:30 pm MASS MOBILIZATION IN POST-
AGENCY: RACE, GENDER, COMMUNIST SETTINGS
SEXUALITY, AUTONOMY Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Room: Nikko, Carmel I Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL DEMOCRATIZATION
THEORY
24.1 CORRUPTION AND ANTI- Thu 2:00 pm
27.2 RETHINKING RELIGION, Thu 4:15 pm CORRUPTION CAMPAIGNS IN
DEMOCRACY, AND POST-COMMUNIST STATES
DEVELOPMENT IN SUB- Room: Parc 55, Mason
SAHARAN AFRICA Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2 POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN
18.1 ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND Thu 10:15 am
POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
IDENTITY POLITICS IN POST-
16.3 SEXUAL MINORITIES-POLICY- Thu 10:15 am COMMUNIST STATES
MAKING AND POLITICAL Room: Parc 55, Hearst
REPRESENTATION Co-sponsored by Association for the Study of Nationalities
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
POLITICS

2 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


41.1 INEQUALITY, WELFARE AND 100.1 SOURCES OF POWER AND

Division Panels
Fri 7:30 am Sat 4:15 pm
DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS IN WEAKNESS IN NON-
POST-COMMUNIST DEMOCRATIC POST-
TRANSITIONS COMMUNIST REGIMES
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
47.1 LEGITIMATION IN Fri 9:30 am
AUTOCRACIES: THE 62.1 STATE AND ECONOMY IN Fri 2:30 pm
ENDURANCE OF COMMUNISM CHINA AND THE FORMER
IN A DEMOCRATIZING WORLD SOVIET UNION
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
68.1 NEW DIRECTIONS IN Fri 4:30 pm
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND
RESEARCH ON STATES,
MARKETS, AND INSTITUTIONS PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL
IN EURASIA APPROACHES
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Division Eileen Hunt Botting, University of Notre Dame
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE Chair: Melvin Lee Rogers, University of California, Los Angeles
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by Russian Politics Group 11.2 ACROSS THE REVOLUTIONARY Thu 8:00 am
DIVIDE: RETHINKING
53.1 PARTICIPATION IN (POST- Fri 11:30 am
NINETEENTH-CENTURY
)AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES:
POLITICAL THOUGHT
CHINA, EURASIA, EASTERN
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
EUROPE
Room: Parc 55, Hearst 85.2 ALEX GOUREVITCH’S "FROM Sat 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE SLAVERY TO THE
DEMOCRATIZATION COOPERATIVE
28.11 POLITICAL STABILITY AND Thu 4:15 pm COMMONWEALTH"
ECONOMIC GROWTH IN CHINA Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 41.2 CICERONIAN RECEPTIONS Fri 7:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
89.1 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER
24.10 COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
Sat 10:15 am
Thu 2:00 pm
SESSION: THE POLITICS OF
ON "ADVICE FOR RULERS":
COMMUNIST AND FORMER
ANCIENT TO EARLY MODERN
COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
85.1 PROPERTY RIGHTS AND Sat 8:00 am POLITICAL THEORY
GOVERNANCE IN POST- 85.3 CREOLIZING LIBERTY: Sat 8:00 am
COMMUNIST STATES ROUNDTABLE ON NEIL
Room: Parc 55, Hearst ROBERTS’S "FREEDOM AS
90.1 REVISITING SOCIAL Sat 10:15 am MARRONAGE"
MOVEMENTS, CIVIL SOCIETY Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
AND PARTY CHANGE AFTER POLITICAL THEORY
COMMUNISM
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 11.3 DEMOCRATIC THEORIZING: Thu 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE PAST AND PRESENT
DEMOCRATIZATION Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
95.1 SOCIAL POLICY IN NON- Sat 2:00 pm POLITICAL THEORY
DEMOCRACIES: DYNAMICS OF Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
SOCIAL POLICY DEBATES IN THEORY
RUSSIA 18.2 EMPIRE, IMPERIALISM, AND Thu 10:15 am
Room: Parc 55, Hearst RACE
Co-sponsored by Russian Politics Group
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
113.1 SOCIAL POLICY IN NON- Sun 10:15 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
DEMOCRACIES: THE CHINESE POLITICAL THEORY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
WELFARE STATE THEORY
Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 3


24.2 FEDERATIONS AND UNIONS IN Thu 2:00 pm 95.2 REAPPRAISING NATIONAL Sat 2:00 pm
IMPERIAL AND POST- SELF-DETERMINATION
COLONIAL POLITICAL Room: Nikko, Monterey II
THOUGHT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
THEORY
POLITICAL THEORY
47.2 GENDER IN THE HISTORY OF Fri 9:30 am 11.4 REPUBLICANISM: MARKETS Thu 8:00 am
POLITICAL THOUGHT AND FREEDOM
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
THEORY
POLITICAL THEORY
28.1 HANNAH ARENDT Thu 4:15 pm 11.5 REVISITING ROUSSEAU Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18

85.4 HOBBES AND RELIGION Sat 8:00 am 24.8 ROUNDTABLE ON HANNAH Thu 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 ARENDT AND THE NEGRO
QUESTION
53.2 IMPERIALISM AND Fri 11:30 am Room: Hilton, Powell Room
COLONIALISM:
TRANSNATIONAL 47.3 ROUSSEAU’S LESSER KNOWN Fri 9:30 am
CONNECTIONS WORKS ON WOMEN
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF 24.9 TERENCE BALL'S Thu 2:00 pm
POLITICAL THEORY "REAPPRAISING POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY THEORY" TWENTY YEARS
LATER
113.3 MACHIAVELLI OUT OF Sun 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
CONTEXT
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 110.4 THE "HUMAN" AND ITS Sun 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF OTHERS
POLITICAL THEORY Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
68.2 MACHIAVELLI, THE LAWS, AND Fri 4:30 pm POLITICAL THEORY
LIBERTY
Room: Parc 55, Balboa 28.2 THE AFFECTIVE TURN IN Thu 4:15 pm
POLITICAL THOUGHT
110.1 PARADOXES AND Sun 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
POSSIBILITIES OF POLITICAL Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
ACTION POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 53.4 THE AMERICAN FOUNDING Fri 11:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY RECONSIDERED
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
53.3 POLITICS AND ETHICS IN Fri 11:30 am
NIETZSCHE'S PHILOSOPHY 113.4 THE VIEW FROM THE Sun 10:15 am
Room: Nikko, Monterey I PROVINCES: EMPIRE IN
CONTEXTS
24.7 POSTER SESSION II: POSTER Thu 2:00 pm Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
SESSION: POLITICAL THOUGHT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL POLITICAL THEORY
APPROACHES 41.3 UNIVERSALITY, SPATIAL Fri 7:30 am
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom ORDER AND EXCLUSION IN
16.2 RACE AND GENDER IN THE Thu 10:15 am THE THOUGHT OF CARL
EARLY AMERICAN REPUBLIC SCHMITT
Room: Hilton, Imperial B Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
24.12 WHAT DIFFERENCE DOES Thu 2:00 pm
100.2 RACE, REVOLUTION, AND LOVE Sat 4:15 pm DIVERSITY MAKE IN
IN AMERICAN POLITICAL COMPARATIVE POLITICAL
THOUGHT THEORY?
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY POLITICAL THEORY
113.2 READING AND RE-READING Sun 10:15 am 95.3 WOMEN AND REPUBLICANISM Sat 2:00 pm
LOCKE IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 Room: Hilton, Union Square 14

4 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF 24.13 DEBATING STRUCTURAL

Division Panels
Thu 2:00 pm
POLITICAL THEORY THEORIES OF INJUSTICE,
Division Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia
DOMINATION, AND
Chair: Jeanne Morefield, Whitman College OPPRESSION
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
68.3 A WITTGENSTEINIAN Fri 4:30 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
APPROACH TO POLITICAL THEORY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY
THEORY
Room: Hilton, Powell Room 47.7 DEMOCRACY AND THE "WHITE Fri 9:30 am
94.2 BEYOND OUR BORDERS: DOES Sat 2:00 pm PROBLEM"
POLITICAL SCIENCE HAVE AN Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
IMPACT ON OTHER THEORY
DISCIPLINES?
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I 11.3 DEMOCRATIC THEORIZING: Thu 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE PAST AND PRESENT
METHODS Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
METHODOLOGY AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY
11.6 BODY POLITICS Thu 8:00 am
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I 47.4 DIAGNOSING THE Fri 9:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS CONTEMPORARY: CRITICAL
18.3 BORDER CROSSINGS Thu 10:15 am GENEALOGIES OF THE
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero PRESENT
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
41.8 CAN THERE BE A (GOOD) Fri 7:30 am
ETHICS FOR POLITICS? 53.5 DIVERSE LEGACIES OF Fri 11:30 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 VIOLENCE: MEMORY,
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL RECOGNITION, AND
THEORY REPARATIONS
24.10 COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES Thu 2:00 pm Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
ON "ADVICE FOR RULERS": THEORY
ANCIENT TO EARLY MODERN
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D 62.2 DIVERSIFYING CINEMATIC Fri 2:30 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT POLITICS
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
95.4 CONSTITUTIONS AND Sat 2:00 pm 28.4 DIVERSITY IN FAMILIES? Thu 4:15 pm
REVOLUTIONS ECONOMIC PRECARITY AND
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I THE POLITICIZATION OF THE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL FAMILY
THEORY Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
28.3 CONSTRUCTING Thu 4:15 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY
REPRESENTATIVE
DEMOCRACY: THEORY, 85.5 DOES CRITIQUE HAVE A Sat 8:00 am
HISTORY, AND PRACTICE FUTURE? A QUESTION FOR
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 POLITICAL THEORISTS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE
85.3 CREOLIZING LIBERTY: Sat 8:00 am
ROUNDTABLE ON NEIL 41.4 DREAM, WORK, PLAY: Fri 7:30 am
ROBERTS’S "FREEDOM AS PSYCHOANALYSIS, THE
MARRONAGE" UNCONSCIOUS, AND RADICAL
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
18.2 EMPIRE, IMPERIALISM, AND Thu 10:15 am
68.4 CRISES OF POLITICS, THE Fri 4:30 pm RACE
POLITICS OF CRISES Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
Room: Parc 55, Mission I Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
SCIENCE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 5


24.2 FEDERATIONS AND UNIONS IN Thu 2:00 pm 18.4 POLICE POWER AND Thu 10:15 am
IMPERIAL AND POST- POLITICAL THEORY
COLONIAL POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
THOUGHT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT 24.11 POSSESSIVE INDIVIDUALISM Thu 2:00 pm
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES REVISITED
47.2 GENDER IN THE HISTORY OF Fri 9:30 am Room: Nikko, Carmel I
POLITICAL THOUGHT 95.6 POSTER SESSION VIII: POSTER Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room SESSION: FOUNDATIONS OF
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
90.2 IMMIGRANTS AND Sat 10:15 am
DEMOCRATIC THEORY: A 41.6 RACE AND MEMORY IN Fri 7:30 am
PROBLEM ONLY FOR AMERICAN POLITICAL
OUTSIDERS? THOUGHT
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL 28.5 RACE, AFFECT, POLITICS Thu 4:15 pm
THEORY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
53.2 IMPERIALISM AND Fri 11:30 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
COLONIALISM: THEORY
TRANSNATIONAL 100.2 RACE, REVOLUTION, AND LOVE Sat 4:15 pm
CONNECTIONS IN AMERICAN POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 THOUGHT
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
THEORY
95.2 REAPPRAISING NATIONAL Sat 2:00 pm
95.5 INTERROGATING, Sat 2:00 pm
SELF-DETERMINATION
HISTORICIZING, AND
Room: Nikko, Monterey II
DECOLONIZING MATERIALIST Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
POLITICS AND METHOD AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY
41.5 INTERSECTIONAL Fri 7:30 am
PERSPECTIVES ON THE BODY: 41.9 RECOGNITION AND ITS Fri 7:30 am
DISABILITY, RACE AND DISCONTENTS
GENDER Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY
Room: Parc 55, Davidson
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
47.5 REPRISING THE EARLY
100.3 IRIS YOUNG'S JUSTICE AND
Fri 9:30 am
Sat 4:15 pm
MODERN
THE POLITICS OF DIFFERENCE:
25 YEARS ON
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C 85.6 RESISTANCE IS FUTILE Sat 8:00 am
110.2 JUSTIFYING POLITICAL
Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Sun 8:00 am
AUTHORITY: DIVERSE 90.3 SOURCES OF SOCIAL Sat 10:15 am
TRADITIONS IN DEBATE CRITICISM FROM THE
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room MARGINS
110.3 LITERATURE OF DIMINISHED
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Sun 8:00 am
DEMOCRACY 95.11 STRUGGLES OVER THE Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 COMMON-WEALTH
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
THEORY
100.4 TELLING THE TRUTH AND Sat 4:15 pm
113.3 MACHIAVELLI OUT OF Sun 10:15 am BREAKING THE LAW
CONTEXT Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT 110.4 THE "HUMAN" AND ITS Sun 8:00 am
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES OTHERS
11.7 PLATO AND CONTEMPORARY Thu 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
POLITICAL THEORY: LEGACY, AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
POLITICS, INTERPRETATION
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room

6 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


28.2 THE AFFECTIVE TURN IN 28.7 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS:

Division Panels
Thu 4:15 pm Thu 4:15 pm
POLITICAL THOUGHT JACOB T. LEVY, RATIONALISM,
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 PLURALISM, AND FREEDOM
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
41.8 CAN THERE BE A (GOOD) Fri 7:30 am
95.12 THE POLITICS/VIOLENCE Sat 2:00 pm ETHICS FOR POLITICS?
FRONTIER Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
113.4 THE VIEW FROM THE Sun 10:15 am POLITICAL THEORY
PROVINCES: EMPIRE IN 95.4 CONSTITUTIONS AND Sat 2:00 pm
CONTEXTS REVOLUTIONS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES POLITICAL THEORY
28.6 THEORIZING POLITICAL Thu 4:15 pm 24.13 DEBATING STRUCTURAL Thu 2:00 pm
ECONOMY THEORIES OF INJUSTICE,
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 DOMINATION, AND
11.8 THEORIZING THE Thu 8:00 am OPPRESSION
ANTHROPOCENE Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 POLITICAL THEORY
28.45 TOWARDS A CRITICAL Thu 4:15 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY
POLITICAL SCIENCE 47.7 DEMOCRACY AND THE "WHITE Fri 9:30 am
Room: Nikko, Carmel II PROBLEM"
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
SCIENCE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
47.6 WARS OF RELIGION (AND Fri 9:30 am POLITICAL THEORY
SECULARISM) 62.3 DEMOCRACY AT THE MARGINS Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE 90.4 DEMOCRACY IN A Sat 10:15 am
GLOBALIZED AGE: THE ALL-
24.12 WHAT DIFFERENCE DOES
AFFECTED PRINCIPLE AND
Thu 2:00 pm
DIVERSITY MAKE IN
BEYOND
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
THEORY?
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 53.6 DEMOCRACY'S INTERNAL AND Fri 11:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT EXTERNAL BORDERS
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
95.15 WHAT IS RESISTANCE? Sat 2:00 pm
CITIZENSHIP
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL 68.5 DEMOCRATIC CITIZENSHIP Fri 4:30 pm
THEORY AND THE ETHICS OF VOTING
41.7 ‘THE STRANGEST Fri 7:30 am IN DIVERSE SOCIETIES
EXPERIENCES’: SALVAGING Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
COMPLEXITY IN POLITICAL 11.3 DEMOCRATIC THEORIZING: Thu 8:00 am
THEORIZING PAST AND PRESENT
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
THEORY POLITICAL THEORY
Division Suzanne Dovi, University of Arizona
Chair: Jack Turner, University of Washington 62.4 DIFFERENCE, DOMINATION, Fri 2:30 pm
INEQUALITY
11.9 AGENCY, RESPONSIBILITY, Thu 8:00 am Room: Parc 55, Hearst
AUTONOMY
11.10 DISABLED CITIZENSHIP Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
18.5 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS Thu 10:15 am
85.7 DIVERSE FAMILIES Sat 8:00 am
ROUNDTABLE: ALAN PATTEN'S
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
"EQUAL RECOGNITION" Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Room: Parc 55, Balboa

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 7


53.5 DIVERSE LEGACIES OF Fri 11:30 am 110.1 PARADOXES AND Sun 8:00 am
VIOLENCE: MEMORY, POSSIBILITIES OF POLITICAL
RECOGNITION, AND ACTION
REPARATIONS Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
Room: Nikko, Carmel I Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
POLITICAL THEORY 11.11 POLITICAL THEORY AND THE Thu 8:00 am
90.5 DIVERSIFYING ‘DIVERSITY’: Sat 10:15 am CORPORATION
MIGRATION, ECONOMY, Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
CULTURE AND HUMAN RIGHTS 95.7 POSTER SESSION VIII: POSTER Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 SESSION: NORMATIVE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
28.4 DIVERSITY IN FAMILIES? Thu 4:15 pm
ECONOMIC PRECARITY AND 28.5 RACE, AFFECT, POLITICS Thu 4:15 pm
THE POLITICIZATION OF THE Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
FAMILY POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF 85.8 RACE, GENDER, SEXUALITY, Sat 8:00 am
POLITICAL THEORY AND SEXUAL AND DOMESTIC
95.13 DIVERSITY, DEMOCRACY, Sat 2:00 pm VIOLENCE IN THE NBA AND
REPRESENTATION NFL
Room: Nikko, Carmel II Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
18.2 EMPIRE, IMPERIALISM, AND Thu 10:15 am POLITICS
RACE 83.1 REALISM MEETS Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY:
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES DIVERSITY IN POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF THEORY
POLITICAL THEORY Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
110.5 HISTORICAL INJUSTICE AND Sun 8:00 am
RESPONSIBILITY 95.2 REAPPRAISING NATIONAL Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6 SELF-DETERMINATION
90.2 IMMIGRANTS AND
Room: Nikko, Monterey II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
Sat 10:15 am
DEMOCRATIC THEORY: A AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
PROBLEM ONLY FOR Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
OUTSIDERS? POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 41.9 RECOGNITION AND ITS Fri 7:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF DISCONTENTS
POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
53.2 IMPERIALISM AND Fri 11:30 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
COLONIALISM: POLITICAL THEORY
TRANSNATIONAL 11.4 REPUBLICANISM: MARKETS Thu 8:00 am
CONNECTIONS AND FREEDOM
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY 60.3 RESPONSIBILITY FOR RACIAL Fri 2:30 pm
JUSTICE
110.3 LITERATURE OF DIMINISHED Sun 8:00 am
DEMOCRACY
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF 60.4 RETHINKING DEMOCRATIC Fri 2:30 pm
POLITICAL THEORY AGENCY: RACE, GENDER,
113.5 MARRIAGE, MORALS, AND Sun 10:15 am SEXUALITY, AUTONOMY
MARKETS Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND 28.8 ROUNDTABLE ON MARGARET Thu 4:15 pm
POLITICS MOORE'S "A POLITICAL
THEORY OF TERRITORY"
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP

8 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


18.6 SHOULD WE "MANAGE" 110.7 AT FACE VALUE: APPEARANCE

Division Panels
Thu 10:15 am Sun 8:00 am
DIVERSITY? EFFECTS AND CANDIDATE
Room: Nikko, Monterey II EVALUATIONS
95.14 THE GOOD REPRESENTATIVE Sat 2:00 pm Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
2.0 VOTING BEHAVIOR
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS 100.5 CLASH OF THE SOCIAL Sat 4:15 pm
IDENTITIES IN THE POLITICAL
47.8 TUCKNESS AND PARRISH’S
ARENA
Fri 9:30 am
“THE DECLINE OF MERCY IN
Room: Nikko, Monterey II
PUBLIC LIFE”
Room: Parc 55, Mason 90.23 EMOTION, PSYCHOLOGY, AND Sat 10:15 am
CONFLICT
62.5 UNPACKING COMPLICITY Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
95.15 WHAT IS RESISTANCE? Sat 2:00 pm SECURITY
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A 95.42 GENDER AND CAMPAIGN Sat 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF DYNAMICS
POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL
90.6 INFORMATION ENVIRONMENT
THEORY
Sat 10:15 am
EFFECTS
Division Bahar Leventoglu, Duke University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Chair:
58.1 POSTER SESSION V: POSTER Fri 2:00 pm
53.7 AUTHORITARIAN SYSTEMS Fri 11:30 am SESSION: POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Imperial A PSYCHOLOGY
85.9 DIFFERENT DYNAMICS OF Sat 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 95.16 RACE AND ETHNICITY: Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B EXPERIMENTAL
100.7 EMPIRICAL TESTING OF Sat 4:15 pm INVESTIGATIONS
THEORETICAL MODELS Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room 68.19 THE EFFECT OF INCLUSION Fri 4:30 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY AND EXCLUSION ON FOREIGN
POLICY ATTITUDES
24.62 EXPERIMENTAL TESTS OF Thu 2:00 pm Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
FORMAL MODELS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Room: Parc 55, Stockton
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL 85.10 THE EFFECTS OF MORAL Sat 8:00 am
RESEARCH JUDGMENTS AMONG CITIZENS
AND LEGISLATORS
110.6 FORMAL MODELS OF Sun 8:00 am
Room: Parc 55, Davidson
INTERNAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
68.6 THE MISSING (EMOTIONAL) Fri 4:30 pm
24.14 FORMAL MODELS OF Thu 2:00 pm LINK: EXPLAINING POLITICAL
POLITICAL INFORMATION AND PARTICIPATION
COMMUNICATION Room: Parc 55, Davidson
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
62.6 THE ORIGINS OF POLITICAL Fri 2:30 pm
47.9 POLITICS OF RECRUITMENT, Fri 9:30 am KNOWLEDGE AND POLITICAL
EXPERTISE & PERSONNEL ATTITUDES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Room: Parc 55, Mission II

DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY 53.8 THE POLITICAL EFFECTS OF Fri 11:30 am


Division Dona-Gene Barton, University of Nebraska PERSONALITY AMONG ELITES
Chair: AND THE PUBLIC
Room: Parc 55, Mission II
113.6 ANYTHING BUT ORDINARY: Sun 10:15 am
UNCONVENTIONAL POLITICAL 41.10 THE POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY Fri 7:30 am
PARTICIPATION AND VIOLENCE OF IMMIGRATION ATTITUDES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 Room: Parc 55, Mission II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
CITIZENSHIP
SECURITY

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 9


28.9 THE PSYCHOLOGICAL Thu 4:15 pm 90.19 DECENTRALIZATION AND Sat 10:15 am
UNDERPINNINGS OF REDISTRIBUTION
PARTISANSHIP AND GROUP Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
CUES Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Room: Parc 55, Mason
47.10 THE ROLE OF MOTIVATED Fri 9:30 am 28.10 ECONOMIC INEQUALITY AND Thu 4:15 pm
REASONING IN THE POLITICAL DEMOCRATIC RESPONSE
PROCESS Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Room: Parc 55, Mission II 85.59 ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, Sat 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL IDENTITY, AND
COMMUNICATION DEMOCRATIZATION
18.7 WHAT DO WE LEARN FROM Thu 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
DELIBERATIVE MINI-PUBLICS? Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
Room: Parc 55, Powell II DEMOCRATIZATION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS 95.17 ECONOMIC SHOCKS AND Sat 2:00 pm
24.15 YOU DISGUST ME! SOURCES OF Thu 2:00 pm DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS
SUPPORT FOR POLICIES AND Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
PARTIES
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: Parc 55, Mission I
11.59 ETHNICITY AND THE POLITICS Thu 8:00 am
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY OF RESOURCE ALLOCATION IN
Division Nahomi Ichino, University of Michigan AFRICA
Chair: Room: Parc 55, Lombard
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN
110.20 BOOK ROUNDTABLE: "THE Sun 8:00 am POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
POLITICS OF ADVANCED 53.47 EXPERIMENTS IN POLITICAL Fri 11:30 am
CAPITALISM" (2015, CUP) ECONOMY
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES RESEARCH
24.53 BUSINESS, POLITICS, AND Thu 2:00 pm 47.11 FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON Fri 9:30 am
ENVIRONMENTAL LOCAL GOVERNANCE
GOVERNANCE Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, RESEARCH
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
90.31 FISCAL POLITICS IN FEDERAL Sat 10:15 am
11.12 BUSINESSES, OFFICIALS, AND Thu 8:00 am SYSTEMS
CORRUPTION Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
11.53 CLIENTELISM AND Thu 8:00 am
CORRUPTION ACROSS 95.18 INEQUALITY AND HISTORICAL Sat 2:00 pm
DICTATORSHIP AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT IN
DEMOCRACY EUROPE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION POLITICS
85.11 CLIENTELISM, DEMOCRACY Sat 8:00 am 100.6 INEQUALITY AND Sat 4:15 pm
AND PUBLIC SPENDING REDISTRIBUTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 41.1 INEQUALITY, WELFARE AND Fri 7:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS IN
DEMOCRATIZATION POST-COMMUNIST
18.8 CONFLICT, TAXATION, AND Thu 10:15 am TRANSITIONS
STATE CAPACITY Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE COUNTRIES
POLITICS
10.3 NEW THEORIES AND EVIDENCE
24.16 CORRUPTION AND ITS
Thu 8:00 am
Thu 2:00 pm
ON LABOR POLITICS
POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS

10 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


110.8 POLITICAL COMPETITION AND 68.7 THE POLITICS OF WAGES AND

Division Panels
Sun 8:00 am Fri 4:30 pm
GOVERNMENT SPENDING LABOR REGULATION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
11.13 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE Thu 8:00 am 90.8 THE POLITICS OF WELFARE Sat 10:15 am
ORIGINS, DYNAMICS, AND STATE RETRENCHMENT
TENURE OF AUTOCRATIC RULE Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
Room: Parc 55, Davidson Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
18.9 POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, Thu 10:15 am
INSTITUTIONS, AND PUBLIC 95.19 WAR, DEVELOPMENT AND THE Sat 2:00 pm
GOODS EMERGENCE OF THE STATE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
41.11 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS AND Fri 7:30 am Division Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Chair: James Mahoney, Northwestern University
ECONOMIC GROWTH Thomas K. Ogorzalek, Northwestern University
Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE 47.12 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Fri 9:30 am
POLITICS FRANCIS FUKUYAMA'S
28.11 POLITICAL STABILITY AND Thu 4:15 pm "POLITICAL ORDER AND
ECONOMIC GROWTH IN CHINA POLITICAL DECAY"
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST 18.10 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: THE Thu 10:15 am
COUNTRIES LOVERS’ QUARREL: THE TWO
FOUNDINGS
62.24 POLITICS OF THE BUDGET Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Parc 55, Mason
PROCESS
Room: Parc 55, Mason 24.18 BUILDING THE STATE: Thu 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY HISTORICAL ANTECEDENTS OF
24.3 POSTER SESSION II: POSTER Thu 2:00 pm STABILITY AND CAPACITY
SESSION: POLITICAL ECONOMY Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom 47.13 DAVID VOGEL'S Fri 9:30 am
24.17 POWER OF POLITICAL NEWS Thu 2:00 pm CONTRIBUTIONS TO
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
53.9 RESOURCES AND Fri 11:30 am
DISTRIBUTION IN 53.10 DEMOCRACY AT THE EDGE Fri 11:30 am
DEMOCRACIES OF THE Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
DEVELOPING WORLD 90.9 ENGAGED SCHOLARS ADDRESS Sat 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Powell Room LEADING ISSUES IN US
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: Parc 55, Market Street
90.7 SOCIAL SPENDING AND Sat 10:15 am 85.12 HISTORICAL Sat 8:00 am
OUTCOMES IN NEW AND DEMOCRATIZATION: PARTIES,
PARTIAL DEMOCRACIES PARLIAMENTS, AND CRISIS
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION 90.10 IDEAS, INSTITUTIONS, AND Sat 10:15 am
62.7 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Fri 2:30 pm CITIES
ACCESS TO POLITICAL OFFICE Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
AND POLICY OUTCOMES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 95.20 INSTITUTIONAL LEGACIES AND Sat 2:00 pm
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
98.2 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Sat 4:15 pm
GROWTH
IMMIGRATION,
REDISTRIBUTION, AND
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
INEQUALITY 110.9 LONG SHADOWS OF HISTORY: Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 HOW PAST VIOLENCE SHAPES
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel PRESENT-DAY POLITICAL
OUTCOMES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 11


24.5 POSTER SESSION II: POSTER Thu 2:00 pm 90.11 DETECTING AND CONCEALING Sat 10:15 am
SESSION: POLITICS AND PATTERNS IN DATA
HISTORY Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom 100.7 EMPIRICAL TESTING OF Sat 4:15 pm
113.7 PREROGATIVE AND Sun 10:15 am THEORETICAL MODELS
CONSTRAINT IN PRESIDENTIAL Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
POLICY-MAKING Co-sponsored by DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL
THEORY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
18.11 RACE AND THE AMERICAN Thu 10:15 am 51.1 ETHICS OF FIELD RESEARCH Fri 11:30 am
STATE Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 RESEARCH
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
POLITICS
100.29 FRONTIERS IN THE Sat 4:15 pm
11.14 REGIME CHANGE AND
QUANTITATIVE STUDY OF
Thu 8:00 am
GOVERNABILITY IN INTERWAR
WOMEN IN POLITICS
EUROPE REVISITED
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
24.19 STATE-BUILDING AND THE Thu 2:00 pm 24.20 GEOGRAPHY, INFERENCE, AND Thu 2:00 pm
FAMILY SPATIAL STATISTICS
Room: Hilton, Mason Room Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
90.29 THE DEVELOPMENT AND Sat 10:15 am 113.8 IDEAL POINT ESTIMATION Sun 10:15 am
EVOLUTION OF AMERICAN Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
BUREAUCRACY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 110.10 IMPROVING BEST PRACTICES Sun 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY FOR STATISTICAL ANALYSIS
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
28.12 THE RIGHT TURN AGAINST Thu 4:15 pm
WORKERS IN THE AMERICAN 11.16 JOURNAL EDITORS & DA-RT: Thu 8:00 am
STATES NEW DATA SHARING AND
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room RESEARCH TRANSPARENCY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND REQUIREMENTS
POLICY Room: Parc 55, Mission II
110.11 MACHINE LEARNING
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
METHODOLOGY
Division Jacob M. Montgomery, Washington University in St. Louis 113.35 MAPPING AND BRIDGING Sun 10:15 am
Chair: METHODOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
IN THE DISCIPLINE
11.15 ADVANCES IN CAUSAL Thu 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
INFERENCE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room METHODS
41.12 BAYESIAN MODELS Fri 7:30 am 18.13 MEASUREMENT MODELS IN Thu 10:15 am
Room: Parc 55, Balboa COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
94.2 BEYOND OUR BORDERS: DOES Sat 2:00 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICAL SCIENCE HAVE AN POLITICS
IMPACT ON OTHER
100.44 METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN Sat 4:15 pm
DISCIPLINES?
EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
POLITICAL THEORY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
METHODS 24.21 MODELING TEXT-AS-DATA Thu 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
18.12 BRIDGING THE QUANTITATIVE-
28.13 MODELS OF SURVEY DATA
Thu 10:15 am
Thu 4:15 pm
QUALITATIVE DIVIDE: TEXT
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
ANALYSIS AND DATA Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
THRESHOLDS
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4 41.13 NETWORK MODELS Fri 7:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
METHODS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS

95.21 CAUSAL EFFECTS IN TIME- Sat 2:00 pm


VARYING DATA
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16

12 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


100.43 NETWORKED INTERNATIONAL 90.13 PEDAGOGICAL DIVERSITIES

Division Panels
Sat 4:15 pm Sat 10:15 am
POLITICS: METHODOLOGICAL RECONSIDERED: TEACHING
CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS POLITICS IN THE 21ST
Room: Parc 55, Mission I CENTURY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
41.49 NEW DIRECTIONS IN MULTI- Fri 7:30 am
EDUCATION
METHOD RESEARCH
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 58.5 POSTER SESSION V: POSTER Fri 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE SESSION: POLITICAL SCIENCE
METHODS EDUCATION
47.14 NEW SOURCES OF (BIG) DATA Fri 9:30 am Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
EDUCATION
58.2 POSTER SESSION V: POSTER
58.4 POSTER SESSION V: POSTER
Fri 2:00 pm
Fri 2:00 pm
SESSION: POLITICAL
SESSION: TEACHING AND
METHODOLOGY
LEARNING IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
85.13 PREDICTION Sat 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
EDUCATION
110.12 TRACING TEXT THROUGH Sun 8:00 am
TIME 28.14 STRATEGIES FOR PROMOTION Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Mason Room FROM ASSOCIATE TO FULL
PROFESSOR
100.8 USING TEXT AND Sat 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
COMMUNICATIONS AS DATA Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Nikko, Carmel I EDUCATION
47.15 TEACHING CIVIC EDUCATION, Fri 9:30 am
DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND ENGAGEMENT AND INCLUSION
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Division Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
Chair: Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, Pace University EDUCATION
53.11 TEACHING ABOUT DIVERSITIES
Sherri L. Wallace, University of Louisville
Fri 11:30 am
85.14 ASSESSING DIVERSITIES IN Sat 8:00 am USING UNIQUE APPROACHES
THE CLASSROOM Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
EDUCATION 85.15 TEACHING ABOUT Sat 8:00 am
18.14 DIVERSE APPROACHES TO Thu 10:15 am DIVERSITIES, POWER AND
IMPROVING ONLINE DIFFERENCE
EDUCATION Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Room: Hilton, Mason Room Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
EDUCATION
90.12 DIVERSE PERSPECTIVES ON Sat 10:15 am
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
EDUCATION Division Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Chair: Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, Pace University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Sherri L. Wallace, University of Louisville
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
EDUCATION 85.14 ASSESSING DIVERSITIES IN Sat 8:00 am
110.13 EXPLORING DIVERSITIES Sun 8:00 am THE CLASSROOM
USING CIVIC EDUCATION AND Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
ENGAGEMENT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE 18.14 DIVERSE APPROACHES TO Thu 10:15 am
EDUCATION IMPROVING ONLINE
62.8 EXPLORING DIVERSITIES Fri 2:30 pm EDUCATION
USING SIMULATIONS Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
EDUCATION

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 13


90.12 DIVERSE PERSPECTIVES ON Sat 10:15 am DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
POLITICAL SCIENCE Division Monika Nalepa, University of Chicago
EDUCATION Chair: Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND 11.17 ACCOUNTABILITY AND LOCAL Thu 8:00 am
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE POLITICS IN BRAZIL
110.13 EXPLORING DIVERSITIES Sun 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
USING CIVIC EDUCATION AND 18.15 ACCOUNTABILITY AND PUBLIC Thu 10:15 am
ENGAGEMENT GOODS PROVISION: NEW
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 EVIDENCE FROM AFRICA
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
24.22 ACCOUNTABILITY AND Thu 2:00 pm
62.8 EXPLORING DIVERSITIES Fri 2:30 pm REPRESENTATION
USING SIMULATIONS Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND 28.15 AUTHORITARIAN Thu 4:15 pm
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE INSTITUTIONS
90.13 PEDAGOGICAL DIVERSITIES Sat 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
RECONSIDERED: TEACHING 41.14 AUTHORITARIAN STABILITY Fri 7:30 am
POLITICS IN THE 21ST Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
CENTURY
47.16 AUTHORITARIAN SUCCESSOR Fri 9:30 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND PARTIES AND DEMOCRACY
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
58.5 POSTER SESSION V: POSTER Fri 2:00 pm 110.50 COMPARATIVE & MULTILEVEL Sun 8:00 am
SESSION: POLITICAL SCIENCE CITIZENSHIP 1: MULTILEVEL &
EDUCATION DIFFERENTIATED CITIZENSHIP
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE CITIZENSHIP

58.4 POSTER SESSION V: POSTER Fri 2:00 pm 53.12 COMPARATIVE APPROACHES Fri 11:30 am
SESSION: TEACHING AND TO THE STUDY OF ELECTORAL
LEARNING IN POLITICAL AND LEGISLATIVE POLITICS
SCIENCE Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND 62.9 COMPARING JUDICIAL Fri 2:30 pm
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
INDEPENDENCE: SOCIAL AND
28.14 STRATEGIES FOR PROMOTION Thu 4:15 pm INSTITUTIONAL
FROM ASSOCIATE TO FULL EXPLANATIONS
PROFESSOR Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND
18.8 CONFLICT, TAXATION, AND Thu 10:15 am
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE STATE CAPACITY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
47.15 TEACHING CIVIC EDUCATION, Fri 9:30 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
ENGAGEMENT AND INCLUSION
68.8 CONSTITUTION MAKING IN Fri 4:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND DEMOCRATIC
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE CONSTITUTIONAL ORDERS
53.11 TEACHING ABOUT DIVERSITIES Fri 11:30 am Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
USING UNIQUE APPROACHES 24.1 CORRUPTION AND ANTI- Thu 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room CORRUPTION CAMPAIGNS IN
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND POST-COMMUNIST STATES
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Room: Parc 55, Mason
85.15 TEACHING ABOUT Sat 8:00 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST
DIVERSITIES, POWER AND COUNTRIES
DIFFERENCE
Room: Hilton, Mason Room 24.16 CORRUPTION AND ITS Thu 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
85.16 DEMOCRATIC SUPPORT Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2

14 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


113.32 DETERMINANTS OF NATIONAL 41.15 INEQUALITY AND ITS

Division Panels
Sun 10:15 am Fri 7:30 am
ENVIRONMENTAL PERCEPTIONS
PERFORMANCE: CROSS- Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
NATIONAL EVIDENCE 110.15 INEQUALITY, INSTITUTIONS, Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room AND REGIME TRANSITIONS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS 53.40 ISRAEL AND PALESTINE: Fri 11:30 am
90.14 DISENTANGLING THE COIL OF Sat 10:15 am ALTERNATIVE PERSPECTIVES
RADICAL POLITICS IN EUROPE ON STATEHOOD
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Co-sponsored by Conference Group on the Middle East
95.22 DISTRIBUTIONAL CONFLICTS Sat 2:00 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
AND GOVERNANCE AT THE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SUBNATIONAL LEVEL SCIENCE
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 53.14 LEGACIES OF REVOLUTION Fri 11:30 am
100.9 DIVERSITIES IN DEMOCRACY: Sat 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY 18.13 MEASUREMENT MODELS IN Thu 10:15 am
IN 21ST CENTURY LATIN COMPARATIVE POLITICS
AMERICA Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY
110.14 DYNAMICS OF PROTEST Sun 8:00 am
MOVEMENTS 85.17 MINORITY REPRESENTATION Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A ACROSS CONTEXTS
Room: Hilton, Imperial A
113.9 ECONOMIC VOTE AND Sun 10:15 am
DEMOCRATIC 62.10 MINORITY RIGHTS AND Fri 2:30 pm
ACCOUNTABILITY IN GLOBAL REPRESSION
ECONOMIES Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C 68.1 NEW DIRECTIONS IN Fri 4:30 pm
113.10 ELITES, INFORMATION, AND Sun 10:15 am RESEARCH ON STATES,
INSTITUTIONS MARKETS, AND INSTITUTIONS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B IN EURASIA
Room: Parc 55, Hearst
11.18 ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND Thu 8:00 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
GOVERNMENT POLICY COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by Russian Politics Group
24.23 EXPERIMENTS IN Thu 2:00 pm
COMPARATIVE POLITICS 68.9 NEW FRONTIERS IN RESOURCE Fri 4:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
18.16 FISCAL POLICIES: CAUSES AND Thu 10:15 am
IMPLICATIONS 100.10 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON Sat 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
47.17 FORMAL INSTITUTIONS AND Fri 9:30 am
THE CHANNELING OF 95.23 PATTERNS OF UNEVEN Sat 2:00 pm
DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION REPRESENTATION AND
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 ECONOMIC POLICYMAKING IN
LATIN AMERICA
53.13 FRAUD, CLIENTELISM AND Fri 11:30 am Room: Hilton, Powell Room
COERCION IN ELECTIONS
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 110.8 POLITICAL COMPETITION AND Sun 8:00 am
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
28.16 FRONTIERS OF HISTORICAL Thu 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
INSTITUTIONALISM Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
41.11 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS AND Fri 7:30 am
47.18 INCUMBENTS AND ELECTIONS Fri 9:30 am ECONOMIC GROWTH
IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
95.18 INEQUALITY AND HISTORICAL Sat 2:00 pm 62.44 POLITICS IN MOVEMENT: Fri 2:30 pm
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT IN INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
EUROPE AND POLITICAL CHANGE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 15


11.19 POPULATION-BASED SURVEY Thu 8:00 am 18.38 THE PUBLIC POLICY PROCESS Thu 10:15 am
EXPERIMENTS IN THE MIDDLE IN COMPARATIVE
EAST PERSPECTIVE
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
113.36 COMPARATIVE & MULTILEVEL Sun 10:15 am
CITIZENSHIP 2: EFFECTS & 62.11 THE RESOURCE CURSE Fri 2:30 pm
EVALUATION: PRACTICING Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
TRANSNATIONAL CITIZENSHIP: 68.10 THE RISE OF CITIES: AN Fri 4:30 pm
DUAL NATIONALITY AND URBAN TURN IN THE STUDY OF
COMPARATIVE & MULTILEVEL INDIAN POLITICS
CITIZENSHIP 2: EFFECTS & Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
EVALUATION
85.19 THE STRATEGIC USE OF ISLAM Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND BY MIDDLE EASTERN REGIMES
CITIZENSHIP Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
18.17 PUBLIC GOODS, CORRUPTION, Thu 10:15 am 11.38 THE WELFARE STATE IN Thu 8:00 am
AND THE STATE COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
53.15 PUBLIC OPINION IN TIMES OF Fri 11:30 am
CRISIS: THE UKRAINE-RUSSIA 90.15 TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE AND Sat 10:15 am
CONFLICT HUMAN RIGHTS
Room: Nikko, Carmel II Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
85.18 REDUCING POLITICAL Sat 8:00 am 95.24 TRANSPARENCY IN Sat 2:00 pm
CORRUPTION DEMOCRACIES AND
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 DICTATORSHIPS: CHALLENGES
AND ENDURING QUESTIONS
41.16 REGIME TRANSITIONS Fri 7:30 am Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
100.11 UNDERSTANDING QUASI- Sat 4:15 pm
100.1 SOURCES OF POWER AND Sat 4:15 pm DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS
WEAKNESS IN NON- UNDER AUTHORITARIAN
DEMOCRATIC POST- REGIMES
COMMUNIST REGIMES Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
COUNTRIES OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
68.27 SPATIAL DYNAMICS AND Fri 4:30 pm Division Marcus J. Kurtz, Ohio State University
Chair:
POLITICAL ORDER IN Teresa Wright, California State University, Long Beach
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE 11.21 ABSENTEE STATES: Thu 8:00 am
Room: Parc 55, Stockton UNGOVERNED SPACES AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
THE LIMITS TO STATE
18.52 TAKING IT TO THE STREETS: Thu 10:15 am AUTHORITY
SOCIAL RESISTANCE & STATE Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
RESPONSES IN SOUTHEAST 18.18 AUTHORITARIANISM, Thu 10:15 am
ASIA REPRESSION AND
Room: Nikko, Carmel II MOBILIZATION IN THE MIDDLE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE EAST
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
DEMOCRATIZATION
Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics 24.35 CHINA'S FOREIGN POLICY AND Thu 2:00 pm
RELATIONS WITH THE WORLD
47.19 THE CONSEQUENCES OF Fri 9:30 am Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
REVISITED
85.11 CLIENTELISM, DEMOCRACY Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
AND PUBLIC SPENDING
11.20 THE POLITICS OF CORRUPTION Thu 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION
53.16 THE POLITICS OF PUBLIC Fri 11:30 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
EMPLOYMENT IN DEVELOPING
41.17 COMPARATIVE DIMENSIONS IN
STATES Fri 7:30 am
COLONIAL POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Room: Hilton, Imperial B

16 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


24.24 CONCEPTUALIZATION AND 110.18 EVALUATING THE ROLE OF

Division Panels
Thu 2:00 pm Sun 8:00 am
MEASUREMENT OF DIVERSITY NEW TECHNOLOGIES ON
IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS DEVELOPMENT IN POOR
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B COUNTRIES
62.12 CONFLICT AND POST- Fri 2:30 pm Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
CONFLICT DYNAMICS 11.31 FOREIGN POLICY OF MIDDLE Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 EAST STATES
95.25 CONTENTION, UNCERTAINTY Sat 2:00 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
AND REFORM AFTER THE
ARAB UPRISINGS 18.19 GENDER POLITICS AND HUMAN Thu 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D RIGHTS IN THE DEVELOPING
WORLD
95.55 CONTESTED ACCOUNTABILITY Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Nikko, Carmel I
IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 24.26 HISTORICAL PROCESSES OF Thu 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS NATIONAL IDENTITY
28.17 CORRUPTION Thu 4:15 pm FORMATION IN THE
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D DEVELOPING WORLD
Room: Nikko, Monterey II
110.16 CORRUPTION AND THE Sun 8:00 am
POLITICS OF REFORM IN 47.20 INSECURITY: CAUSES AND Fri 9:30 am
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES CONSEQUENCES
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Room: Nikko, Monterey I

113.11 DECENTRALIZATION AND Sun 10:15 am 62.13 INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC Fri 2:30 pm
SUBNATIONAL POLITICS FACTORS AND DOMESTIC
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D ECONOMY IN THE
DEVELOPING WORLD
24.25 DEVELOPMENT AMIDST Thu 2:00 pm Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
EXTRACTION: SUBVERTING
THE “RESOURCE CURSE” 113.12 NON-STATE ORGANIZATIONS Sun 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Imperial A AND DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS
IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD
90.16 DOES VOTE BUYING WORK Sat 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
AND, IF SO, WHEN?
Room: Nikko, Carmel II 100.12 OIL POLITICS AND Sat 4:15 pm
DEVELOPMENT
95.17 ECONOMIC SHOCKS AND Sat 2:00 pm Room: Nikko, Carmel II
DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 47.21 POLITICAL PREFERENCES AND Fri 9:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY BEHAVIOR IN THE BRAZILIAN
NATIONAL ELECTIONS
90.17 ELECTIONS AND Sat 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
REPRESENTATION IN THE
DEVELOPING WORLD 47.22 POLITICS AND VIOLENCE Fri 9:30 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
95.40 ELECTORAL DYNAMICS IN Sat 2:00 pm 68.11 POLITICS OF SOCIAL Fri 4:30 pm
INDIA: A MULTI-LEVEL AND PROVISION
LONGITUDINAL PERSPECTIVE Room: Nikko, Monterey II
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore 28.18 POLITICS, SOCIAL POLICIES, Thu 4:15 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND AND SUBNATIONAL DIVERSITY
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
IN LATIN AMERICA
62.38 ELECTORAL MANIPULATION Fri 2:30 pm Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE 43.1 POSTER SESSION III: POSTER Fri 8:00 am
DEMOCRATIZATION SESSION: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
110.17 ELECTORAL POLITICS IN Sun 8:00 am
COUNTRIES
AFRICA
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Parc 55, Balboa
18.20 PUBLIC OPINION AND STATE-
53.17 ETHNIC POLITICS IN THE
Thu 10:15 am
Fri 11:30 am
SOCIETY RELATIONS IN CHINA
DEVELOPING WORLD
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Room: Hilton, Mason Room
62.14 RESOURCE ALLOCATION AND Fri 2:30 pm
DISTRIBUTION IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 17


53.9 RESOURCES AND Fri 11:30 am 28.48 THE RISE OF COMPETITIVE Thu 4:15 pm
DISTRIBUTION IN ELECTORAL AUTHORITARIAN
DEMOCRACIES OF THE REGIMES
DEVELOPING WORLD Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Room: Hilton, Powell Room Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY DEMOCRATIZATION

110.19 SOCIAL POLICY NON- Sun 8:00 am 41.19 THEORIZING DIVERGENT Fri 7:30 am
DEMOCRACIES, #1:POLITICAL PATHWAYS IN THE
ECONOMY AUTHORITARIAN DEVELOPING WORLD
WELFARE STATES Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 24.27 UNDERSTANDING CLIENTELISM Thu 2:00 pm
113.1 SOCIAL POLICY IN NON- Sun 10:15 am Room: Parc 55, Mission II
DEMOCRACIES: THE CHINESE 28.19 UNDERSTANDING PUBLIC Thu 4:15 pm
WELFARE STATE GOODS PROVISION
Room: Hilton, Mason Room Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST 41.20 URBANIZATION, CLASS AND Fri 7:30 am
COUNTRIES POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN
41.18 STATE BUILDING Fri 7:30 am DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 Room: Parc 55, Mission I
85.20 STATE CAPACITY: CONCEPT, Sat 8:00 am 68.12 VIOLENCE IN CONTENTIOUS Fri 4:30 pm
MEASUREMENT, AND PROCESSES
APPLICATIONS Room: Parc 55, Lombard
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
85.21 STATE-BUSINESS RELATIONS IN
OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL
Sat 8:00 am
THE 21ST CENTURY: LESSONS
FROM LATIN AMERICA SOCIETIES
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room Division Yusaku Horiuchi
Chair: Sophie Meunier, Princeton University
100.40 STUDYING THE SEQUENCING Sat 4:15 pm
OF REGIMES 110.20 BOOK ROUNDTABLE: "THE Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 POLITICS OF ADVANCED
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE CAPITALISM" (2015, CUP)
DEMOCRATIZATION Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
100.13 THE CONSEQUENCES OF Sat 4:15 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
CLIENTELISM 100.15 COALITION GOVERNMENTS Sat 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B AND LEGISLATIVE
85.30 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF Sat 8:00 am BARGAINING
CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 Co-sponsored by French Politics Group
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
90.19 DECENTRALIZATION AND Sat 10:15 am
18.55 THE INTERNATIONAL AND Thu 10:15 am
REDISTRIBUTION
DOMESTIC SOURCES OF
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
DEMOCRATIC REFORM IN Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
TUNISIA & BEYOND
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B 68.40 FIRMS AS ACTORS IN Fri 4:30 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM:
DEMOCRATIZATION INNOVATIONS IN CONCEPT AND
90.18 THE POLITICS OF Sat 10:15 am METHOD
DEVELOPMENT Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room METHODS
113.13 THE POLITICS OF LAND AND Sun 10:15 am 95.26 PARTY STRATEGIES: Sat 2:00 pm
LABOR ELECTORAL SYSTEMS AND
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 LEGISLATIVE ORGANIZATION
100.14 THE POLITICS OF PROPERTY Sat 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
RIGHTS PROTECTION Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room 89.2 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER Sat 10:15 am
11.22 THE POLITICS OF TAXING AND Thu 8:00 am SESSION: COMPARATIVE
SPENDING POLITICS OF ADVANCED
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom

18 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


68.13 RESPONSES TO THE RISE OF 47.24 LABOR MARKET INSECURITY

Division Panels
Fri 4:30 pm Fri 9:30 am
CHINA IN ADVANCED AND PARTY POLITICS IN THE
INDUSTRIALIZED 21ST CENTURY
DEMOCRACIES Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 85.22 MIGRANTS AND MINORITIES IN Sat 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN
POLITICS
47.23 STRUCTURAL POWER IN Fri 9:30 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
POLITICAL ECONOMY: STATES,
FIRMS, AND THEORY 41.21 NEVER THE TWAIN SHALL Fri 7:30 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 MEET? PARTY POLITICS IN
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL WESTERN AND EASTERN
POLITICAL ECONOMY EUROPE
53.48 THE POLITICAL SOURCES OF Fri 11:30 am Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
SOLIDARITY IN DIVERSE 68.14 PARTY COMPETITION AND THE Fri 4:30 pm
SOCIETIES WELFARE STATE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP 100.16 PARTY STRATEGIES IN Sat 4:15 pm
ELECTIONS AND GOVERNMENT
68.7 THE POLITICS OF WAGES AND Fri 4:30 pm
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
LABOR REGULATION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 90.20 POLITICAL REVERBERATIONS Sat 10:15 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE FINANCIAL CRISIS I:
90.8 THE POLITICS OF WELFARE Sat 10:15 am DOMESTIC CONSEQUENCES
STATE RETRENCHMENT Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B 95.27 POLITICAL REVERBERATIONS Sat 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE FINANCIAL CRISIS II:
18.21 USING WITHIN-COUNTRY Thu 10:15 am CONSEQUENCES FOR THE EU
INSTITUTIONAL DIVERSITY Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
FOR CAUSAL IDENTIFICATION 89.3 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER Sat 10:15 am
IN JAPAN SESSION: EUROPEAN POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room AND SOCIETY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group 110.21 POWER, IDEAS, AND PUBLIC Sun 8:00 am
POLICY
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS Room: Hilton, Imperial A
AND SOCIETY 113.14 SOCIAL CHANGE, DIVERSITY, Sun 10:15 am
Division Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University AND REDISTRIBUTIVE
Chair:
POLITICS
18.22 AFTER THE CRISIS: SOCIAL Thu 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
POLICYMAKING IN AN ERA OF 11.23 THE CAUSES AND Thu 8:00 am
AUSTERITY CONSEQUENCES OF HEALTH
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 CARE REFORM
23.2 BACKLASH AGAINST Thu 2:00 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
DIVERSITY IN EUROPE 23.4 THE RISE OF THE POPULIST Thu 2:00 pm
Room: Nikko, Monterey I RIGHT?: ANTI-IMMIGRATION
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
PARTIES IN WESTERN EUROPE
62.15 DIRECT DEMOCRACY IN Fri 2:30 pm Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
MULTILEVEL DIVIDED Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
SOCIETIES: CURSE OR CURE?
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL
28.20 DIVERSITIES OF INTERESTS IN Thu 4:15 pm POLITICAL ECONOMY
EU POLICYMAKING Division Mark S. Manger, University of Toronto
Chair: Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
24.28 ELECTORAL POLITICS AND Thu 2:00 pm 85.23 A POTPOURRI OF PROBABLY Sat 8:00 am
THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT PUBLISHABLE PAPERS
Room: Parc 55, Market Street Room: Parc 55, Mission II

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 19


41.24 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: DALE Fri 7:30 am 68.15 NETWORKS IN THE WORLD Fri 4:30 pm
COPELAND'S "ECONOMIC ECONOMY
INTERDEPENDENCE AND WAR" Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 95.28 NEW APPROACHES TO TRADE Sat 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY POLICY ANALYSIS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
18.23 CRITICAL AND Thu 10:15 am
CONSTRUCTIVIST 90.21 POLICIES, POLITICS AND Sat 10:15 am
APPROACHES TO IPE FINANCIAL CRISES
Room: Parc 55, Davidson Room: Parc 55, Hearst
88.2 DYNAMICS AMONG NATIONS: Sat 10:15 am 85.24 POLITICAL ECONOMY IN THE Sat 8:00 am
EVOLUTION OF LEGITIMACY RISE OF CHINA AND INDIA
AND DEVELOPMENT IN Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
MODERN STATES 24.4 POSTER SESSION II: POSTER Thu 2:00 pm
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I SESSION: INTERNATIONAL
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel POLITICAL ECONOMY
62.21 ECONOMIC DIPLOMACY: THE Fri 2:30 pm Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
EFFECT OF AID, SANCTIONS, 68.13 RESPONSES TO THE RISE OF Fri 4:30 pm
AND TRADE CHINA IN ADVANCED
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 INDUSTRIALIZED
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
DEMOCRACIES
85.26 ECONOMICS AND Sat 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL 47.23 STRUCTURAL POWER IN Fri 9:30 am
SECURITY
POLITICAL ECONOMY: STATES,
24.29 ENERGY AND NATURAL Thu 2:00 pm FIRMS, AND THEORY
RESOURCE POLITICS IN NORTH Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
AND SOUTH Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES

18.59 EXPERIMENTAL APPROACHES Thu 10:15 am 110.23 THE IMF AND WORLD BANK: Sun 8:00 am
TO IPE LENDING AND
Room: Parc 55, Mission I CONDITIONALITY IN
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
RESEARCH Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
28.21 FDI, POLITICAL RISK, AND Thu 4:15 pm 11.25 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Thu 8:00 am
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS NON-TARIFF BARRIERS TO
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 TRADE
41.22 FINANCIAL CRISIS DATA AND Fri 7:30 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
POLITICS: MEASUREMENT 113.15 THE POLITICS OF CREDIT Sun 10:15 am
PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS RATING AGENCIES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
110.22 FIRMS AND POLITICS IN EAST Sun 8:00 am 24.30 THE POLITICS OF FOREIGN AID Thu 2:00 pm
ASIA IN DONOR AND RECIPIENT
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 COUNTRIES
11.24 FOREIGN AID, NATURAL Thu 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
RESOURCES, TAXATION, AND 113.16 TRADE IN INTERNATIONAL Sun 10:15 am
ACCOUNTABILITY RELATIONS
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
47.25 INDIVIDUAL PREFERENCES Fri 9:30 am 95.29 WHAT’S THE “I” IN “IPE”? Sat 2:00 pm
AND TRADE POLICY Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Room: Parc 55, Lombard
68.16 WHEN THE MUSIC'S OVER: Fri 4:30 pm
53.18 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF Fri 11:30 am FINANCIAL REGULATION IN
THE YUAN THE POST-CRISIS ERA
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore Room: Parc 55, Powell I
62.16 MARKET ACCESS AND Fri 2:30 pm 53.19 WORKERS AND PRODUCERS IN Fri 11:30 am
POLITICAL INFLUENCE: THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
EVIDENCE FROM FIRM-LEVEL Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
DATA
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room

20 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL 100.17 THE PERFORMANCE OF

Division Panels
Sat 4:15 pm
COLLABORATION INTERNATIONAL
Division Songying Fang, Rice University
ORGANIZATIONS
Chair: Christina J. Schneider, University of California, San Diego Room: Hilton, Sutter Room

110.24 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: "A Sun 8:00 am DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
THEORY OF CONTESTATION" SECURITY
BY ANTJE WIENER Division Sarah E. Kreps
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore Chair: Todd S. Sechser, University of Virginia
11.26 AUTONOMY OF
11.27 ALLIANCE POLITICS
Thu 8:00 am
Thu 8:00 am
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
18.24 BEYOND RATIFICATION: THE Thu 10:15 am 113.6 ANYTHING BUT ORDINARY: Sun 10:15 am
MANY WAYS THAT THE UNCONVENTIONAL POLITICAL
INTERNATIONAL LEGAL PARTICIPATION AND VIOLENCE
SYSTEM MATTERS Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Room: Hilton, Imperial A Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY
24.31 DELEGATION AND Thu 2:00 pm
COOPERATION IN 18.30 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Thu 10:15 am
INTERNATIONAL BARTHOLOMEW SPARROW’S
ORGANIZATIONS "THE STRATEGIST"
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
41.23 ENFORCEMENT AND Fri 7:30 am
COMPLIANCE IN 41.24 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: DALE Fri 7:30 am
INTERNATIONAL COPELAND'S "ECONOMIC
COOPERATION INTERDEPENDENCE AND WAR"
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL
28.22 INTERNATIONAL Thu 4:15 pm POLITICAL ECONOMY
ENVIRONMENTAL 24.32 BARGAINING, CRISES, AND Thu 2:00 pm
COOPERATION: ACTORS, WAR
FRAMES, AND STRATEGIES Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
47.26 INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS Fri 9:30 am 85.29 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Sat 8:00 am
AND DOMESTIC IPE POLICIES OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS
Room: Parc 55, Mission I PROLIFERATION
53.20 INTERNATIONAL Fri 11:30 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL
LEGALIZATION AND
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL
CONSTITUTIONALIZATION Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
62.17 ISSUES OF COMPLIANCE IN Fri 2:30 pm 28.23 CIRCULATORY AND CONTROL Thu 4:15 pm
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS POWER IN WORLD POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
85.25 NGOS IN INTERNATIONAL Sat 8:00 am 28.24 CIVILIAN CASUALTIES AND Thu 4:15 pm
COOPERATION SUPPORT FOR THE USE OF
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C FORCE
68.17 NEW MODES OF GLOBAL Fri 4:30 pm Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
GOVERNANCE
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 28.27 COALITIONS AT WAR Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
90.22 POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL Sat 10:15 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
COOPERATION
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 47.27 COERCION IN INTERNATIONAL Fri 9:30 am
RELATIONS
18.25 POSTER SESSION I: POSTER Thu 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Powell Room
SESSION: INTERNATIONAL Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
COLLABORATION
68.18 CONFLICT AND COOPERATION: Fri 4:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
DOMESTIC AND
95.30 THE DESIGN OF Sat 2:00 pm INTERNATIONAL
INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS PERSPECTIVES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 21


53.21 CREDIBILITY, REPUTATION, Fri 11:30 am 113.17 NEW WAYS OF WAR: DRONES, Sun 10:15 am
AND RESOLVE ROBOTS, AND UNMANNED
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I WEAPONS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
24.36 DEADLY THREATS/CHANGING Thu 2:00 pm 41.25 NUCLEAR POLITICS AND Fri 7:30 am
THE WORLD: TERRORISM & PROLIFERATION
HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
GLOBAL ARENA
28.25 NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION: Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL DIVERSE ACTORS AND
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL STRATEGIES RECONSIDERED
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
18.31 NUCLEAR STABILITY AND Thu 10:15 am
41.28 DOMESTIC POLITICS AND Fri 7:30 am DETERRENCE
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL 18.26 POSTER SESSION I: POSTER Thu 10:15 am
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL SESSION: INTERNATIONAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY SECURITY
62.18 DYNAMICS OF MILITANT Fri 2:30 pm Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
ORGANIZATIONS 41.26 POWER SHIFTS IN WAR AND Fri 7:30 am
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero PEACE: NEW THEORETICAL
85.26 ECONOMICS AND Sat 8:00 am AND EMPIRICAL INSIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I 24.33 PUBLIC OPINION AND WAR Thu 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY
Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
90.23 EMOTION, PSYCHOLOGY, AND Sat 10:15 am 100.19 RECONSIDERING RATIONALIST Sat 4:15 pm
CONFLICT APPROACHES TO WAR
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
PSYCHOLOGY
90.24 EMPIRICAL ANALYSES OF Sat 10:15 am 53.22 RETHINKING THE U.S. GRAND Fri 11:30 am
FOREIGN POLICY CRISIS STRATEGY DEBATE
BEHAVIOR Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES 47.28 STRATEGIES AND DYNAMICS Fri 9:30 am
18.50 ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS, Thu 10:15 am OF SUBNATIONAL CONFLICT
RISK, AND NATURAL Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
DISASTERS 62.19 THE CHINA PUZZLE IN Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, Room: Nikko, Monterey II
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
85.27 THE DYNAMICS OF RISE AND Sat 8:00 am
95.31 INSURGENCIES IN Sat 2:00 pm DECLINE
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE: Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
AFRICAN AND CROSS-
REGIONAL EVIDENCE 11.28 U.S. DOMESTIC POLITICS AND Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 THE USE OF FORCE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
68.20 INTERNATIONAL POLITICS AND Fri 4:30 pm
THE DOMESTIC POLITICAL 111.6 U.S.-RUSSIAN RELATIONS: IS Sun 8:00 am
BARGAIN THERE A WAY OUT OF THE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 DEAD-END?
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Co-sponsored by Russian Politics Group
100.18 INTERVENTION POLITICS Sat 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Powell Room 66.3 WOMEN AND CHILDREN AND Fri 4:30 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY VIOLENT EXTREMISM:
VICTIMS TO VICTIMIZERS?
110.25 LEARNING IN INTERNATIONAL Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
SECURITY Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D

22 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL 100.20 ROUNDTABLE ON NUNO P.

Division Panels
Sat 4:15 pm
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL MONTEIRO’S “THEORY OF
Division David H. Sacko, U.S. Air Force Academy
UNIPOLAR POLITICS”
Chair: Room: Parc 55, Powell II
110.26 THE CONTINUING BALANCE OF
11.29 A DISINTEGRATING WEST AND
Sun 8:00 am
Thu 8:00 am
POWER
THE FUTURE OF THE
INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM?
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Room: Parc 55, Balboa 100.21 THE FUTURE OF U.S. GRAND Sat 4:15 pm
STRATEGY: NEW
47.29 ASSESSING AND IMPROVING Fri 9:30 am
VULNERABILITIES, NEW
THE QUALITY OF
TOOLS, NEW THREATS?
INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
113.18 U.S.-CHINA NUCLEAR
85.29 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Sun 10:15 am
Sat 8:00 am
RELATIONS AND THE FUTURE
OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS
OF EAST ASIAN SECURITY
PROLIFERATION
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Division Brian Lai, University of Iowa
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Chair:
41.27 CHINA'S ECONOMIC Fri 7:30 am 47.30 ADVANCES IN FOREIGN POLICY Fri 9:30 am
STATECRAFT AND SECURITY ROLE THEORY
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Room: Nikko, Carmel II
24.36 DEADLY THREATS/CHANGING Thu 2:00 pm 11.30 ASSESSING UNCERTAINTY IN Thu 8:00 am
THE WORLD: TERRORISM & FOREIGN POLICY DECISION
HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE MAKING
GLOBAL ARENA Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL 18.30 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Thu 10:15 am
SECURITY BARTHOLOMEW SPARROW’S
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY "THE STRATEGIST"
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
18.32 DIVERSE APPROACHES TO Thu 10:15 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION SECURITY
Room: Parc 55, Mission II 85.29 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Sat 8:00 am
85.28 DIVERSITIES RECONSIDERED: Sat 8:00 am OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS
ARMS CONTROL IN THE 21ST PROLIFERATION
CENTURY Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY
Room: Nikko, Monterey I
41.28 DOMESTIC POLITICS AND Fri 7:30 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL 24.35 CHINA'S FOREIGN POLICY AND Thu 2:00 pm
SECURITY RELATIONS WITH THE WORLD
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
24.34 DRONES IN THEORY AND Thu 2:00 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
PRACTICE
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore 47.27 COERCION IN INTERNATIONAL Fri 9:30 am
62.20 INTERNATIONAL POLITICS AND Fri 2:30 pm RELATIONS
"UNMAKING THE BOMB: A Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
FISSILE MATERIAL APPROACH SECURITY
Room: Parc 55, Powell II
24.36 DEADLY THREATS/CHANGING Thu 2:00 pm
18.27 POSTER SESSION I: POSTER Thu 10:15 am THE WORLD: TERRORISM &
SESSION: INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE
SECURITY AND ARMS GLOBAL ARENA
CONTROL Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 23


28.26 DOMESTIC INSTITUTIONS AND Thu 4:15 pm 95.36 PRESIDENTIAL FOREIGN Sat 2:00 pm
FOREIGN POLICY POLICY LEADERSHIP: LEGAL
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 AND RHETORICAL RESOURCES
100.22 DOMESTIC POLITICS AND Sat 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY: EXECUTIVE POLITICS
SAILING THE WATER'S EDGE
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II 53.22 RETHINKING THE U.S. GRAND Fri 11:30 am
STRATEGY DEBATE
41.28 DOMESTIC POLITICS AND Fri 7:30 am Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room SECURITY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY 85.30 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF Sat 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
62.21 ECONOMIC DIPLOMACY: THE Fri 2:30 pm POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
EFFECT OF AID, SANCTIONS,
AND TRADE 68.19 THE EFFECT OF INCLUSION Fri 4:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 AND EXCLUSION ON FOREIGN
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLICY ATTITUDES
POLITICAL ECONOMY Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
53.23 ELITE FOREIGN POLICY Fri 11:30 am PSYCHOLOGY
DECISION MAKING
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
110.27 EXAMINING COUNTER- Sun 8:00 am Division Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of Maryland,
TERRORISM AND INSURGENCY Chair: College Park
POLICIES
Scott Wolford, University of Texas
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 11.32 ACCOUNTING FOR CRIMINAL Thu 8:00 am
113.19 EXAMINING PUBLIC OPINION Sun 10:15 am CIVIL WARS: NEW CONFLICTS
ON FOREIGN POLICY FOR A MULTI-POLAR WORLD?
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION 24.32 BARGAINING, CRISES, AND Thu 2:00 pm
11.31 FOREIGN POLICY OF MIDDLE Thu 8:00 am WAR
EAST STATES Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE SECURITY
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 47.31 BEYOND THE STATE: THE Fri 9:30 am
41.29 GRAND STRATEGY OF GLOBAL Fri 7:30 am MICRO-DYNAMICS OF AID AND
AND REGIONAL POWERS CONFLICT
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
100.18 INTERVENTION POLITICS Sat 4:15 pm 18.34 BORDERS, GEOGRAPHY, AND Thu 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Powell Room CONFLICT IN SPACE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
SECURITY
85.29 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Sat 8:00 am
53.40 ISRAEL AND PALESTINE: Fri 11:30 am OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS
ALTERNATIVE PERSPECTIVES PROLIFERATION
ON STATEHOOD Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
Co-sponsored by Conference Group on the Middle East SECURITY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
SCIENCE
53.24 CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS AS Fri 11:30 am
18.33 POLITICS OF FOREIGN AID Thu 10:15 am A CAUSE AND RESULT OF
Room: Nikko, Monterey I CONFLICT
18.28 POSTER SESSION I: POSTER Thu 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
SESSION: FOREIGN POLICY 24.37 CIVILIAN MOBILIZATION AND Thu 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom (NON)VIOLENCE IN CIVIL WAR
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I

24 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


28.27 COALITIONS AT WAR 110.28 LEADERSHIP SURVIVAL,

Division Panels
Thu 4:15 pm Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
SECURITY Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
53.21 CREDIBILITY, REPUTATION, Fri 11:30 am 113.20 NETWORKED INTERNATIONAL Sun 10:15 am
AND RESOLVE POLITICS: INTERDEPENDENCE
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I AND INTERNATIONAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY CONFLICT
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
24.36 DEADLY THREATS/CHANGING Thu 2:00 pm
THE WORLD: TERRORISM & 41.31 NEW EXPLANATIONS FOR THE Fri 7:30 am
HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE ONSET OF WAR
GLOBAL ARENA Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 68.21 OPPOSITION COHESION AND Fri 4:30 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL STRUCTURE
SECURITY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL Room: Hilton, Mason Room
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL 11.33 POPULAR CULTURE AND Thu 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
CONTENTIOUS POLITICS
47.32 DIVERSITY AND THE Fri 9:30 am Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 18.29 POSTER SESSION I: POSTER Thu 10:15 am
OF CIVIL WAR SESSION: CONFLICT
Room: Hilton, Imperial A PROCESSES
85.31 DIVERSITY OF CONFLICT: Sat 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
LEGAL VERSUS MILITARIZED 18.35 REBEL GROUP DYNAMICS Thu 10:15 am
DISPUTES Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
95.33 REBEL STRATEGIES AND Sat 2:00 pm
90.25 DOMESTIC AUDIENCES AND Sat 10:15 am COUNTER-STRATEGIES IN
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT CIVIL WAR
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
90.24 EMPIRICAL ANALYSES OF Sat 10:15 am 100.19 RECONSIDERING RATIONALIST Sat 4:15 pm
FOREIGN POLICY CRISIS APPROACHES TO WAR
BEHAVIOR Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Room: Hilton, Powell Room Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
SECURITY
11.34 REFUGEE AND CONFLICT Thu 8:00 am
41.38 GENDER AND CONFLICT Fri 7:30 am DYNAMICS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
41.30 GENOCIDE, POLITICIDE, AND Fri 7:30 am 90.45 SOCIAL NETWORK Sat 10:15 am
GOVERNMENT MASS KILLING APPROACHES TO VIOLENCE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 AND COERCION
62.22 INDIVIDUAL-LEVEL ATTITUDES Fri 2:30 pm Room: Nikko, Carmel I
AND BEHAVIOR IN Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
CONTENTIOUS ENVIRONMENTS 90.26 SOCIALIZATION AND Sat 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room VIOLENCE
53.25 INSIDE THE BLACK BOX OF Fri 11:30 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
WAR 95.34 STRATEGIC STATE REPRESSION Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 BETWEEN CONFLICT AND
68.20 INTERNATIONAL POLITICS AND Fri 4:30 pm POLITICAL ORDER
THE DOMESTIC POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
BARGAIN 100.23 UNITED NATIONS Sat 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 PEACEKEEPING DURING AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY
AFTER CIVIL VIOLENCE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
95.32 LEADERSHIP CHANGE AND Sat 2:00 pm
FOREIGN POLICY 45.2 WOMEN IN CONFLICT Fri 9:30 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 PROCESSES
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 25


DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES 90.27 PARTY LEADERSHIP AND Sat 10:15 am
Division Royce A. Carroll, Rice University PARTISAN COMMUNICATION
Chair: Michele L. Swers, Georgetown University Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
100.15 COALITION GOVERNMENTS Sat 4:15 pm 95.26 PARTY STRATEGIES: Sat 2:00 pm
AND LEGISLATIVE ELECTORAL SYSTEMS AND
BARGAINING LEGISLATIVE ORGANIZATION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by French Politics Group 100.24 POLARIZATION AND ITS Sat 4:15 pm
11.35 COMMITTEES IN CONGRESS: Thu 8:00 am IMPACT ON INSTITUTIONS AND
SOURCES OF POWER AND POLICYMAKING
INFLUENCE Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 85.33 POLITICS OF THE HOUSE AND Sat 8:00 am
53.12 COMPARATIVE APPROACHES Fri 11:30 am SENATE FLOOR
TO THE STUDY OF ELECTORAL Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
AND LEGISLATIVE POLITICS 49.1 POSTER SESSION IV: POSTER Fri 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C SESSION: LEGISLATIVE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS STUDIES
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
18.36 CONGRESS AND THE Thu 10:15 am
PRESIDENCY: COOPERATION 90.28 PRESIDENTIAL INFLUENCE Sat 10:15 am
AND CONFRONTATION AND CONGRESSIONAL
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND Room: Hilton, Imperial A
EXECUTIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
EXECUTIVE POLITICS
24.38 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS Thu 2:00 pm
AND COMPETITIVENESS 28.36 RECONSIDERING THE IMPACT Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6 OF GENDER DIVERSITY IN
POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
113.21 CULTIVATING THE Sun 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Mason Room
CONSTITUENCY: LEGISLATOR- Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
CONSTITUENT RELATIONS
28.28 THEORIES OF LEGISLATIVE Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
COMMITTEES REVISITED
95.35 DESCRIPTIVE Sat 2:00 pm Room: Parc 55, Hearst
REPRESENTATION AND THE
POLICY IMPACT OF WOMEN IN DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
LEGISLATURES EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I Division Lara Michelle Brown, The George Washington University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Chair:
85.32 DETERMINANTS OF ROLL-CALL Sat 8:00 am
VOTING IN CONGRESS 94.1 AFTER OBAMA: LEGACIES OF Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room AMERICA'S FIRST MINORITY
PRESIDENT
110.29 DIVERSITY WITHIN PARTIES: Sun 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
53.26 EXECUTIVE-LEGISLATIVE Fri 11:30 am CITIZENSHIP
RELATIONS IN LATIN AMERICA Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 18.36 CONGRESS AND THE Thu 10:15 am
41.32 INDIVIDUALS IN PARTISAN Fri 7:30 am PRESIDENCY: COOPERATION
CONTEXTS AND CONFRONTATION
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
62.23 INTEREST GROUPS, LOBBYISTS, Fri 2:30 pm
AND POLICYMAKING 28.29 DIVERSITIES IN PRESIDENTIAL Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A RHETORIC, MEDIA FRAMES,
AND PUBLIC REACTIONS
68.22 LOYALTY, UNITY AND Fri 4:30 pm Room: Hilton, Powell Room
PARLIAMENTARY BEHAVIOR Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 COMMUNICATION

26 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


47.33 EXECUTIVE POWERS AND 100.26 HUMAN RESOURCES IN THE

Division Panels
Fri 9:30 am Sat 4:15 pm
PRESIDENTIAL PREROGATIVES: PUBLIC SECTOR
UNDERSTANDING UNILATERAL Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
ACTIONS 68.23 INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE: Fri 4:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 PRESIDENTIAL APPOINTEES
47.37 GENDER AND EXECUTIVE Fri 9:30 am AND POLITICAL DECISIONS
LEADERSHIP Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS EXECUTIVE POLITICS

68.23 INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE: Fri 4:30 pm 41.33 MANAGING HUMAN CAPITAL Fri 7:30 am
PRESIDENTIAL APPOINTEES IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR
AND POLITICAL DECISIONS Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B 41.34 POLITICS OF GOVERNANCE Fri 7:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC
AND POLICY IMPLEMENTATION
ADMINISTRATION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
49.2 POSTER SESSION IV: POSTER Fri 10:15 am
85.35 POSTER SESSION VI: POSTER
SESSION: PRESIDENTS AND
Sat 8:00 am
SESSION: PUBLIC
EXECUTIVE POLITICS
ADMINISTRATION
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
100.25 PRESIDENTIAL Sat 4:15 pm
53.27 PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND K-
COMMUNICATION IN A
Fri 11:30 am
12 EDUCATION
POLARIZED AGE
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
11.36 THE CASE OF EDUCATION IN
95.36 PRESIDENTIAL FOREIGN
Thu 8:00 am
Sat 2:00 pm
PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
POLICY LEADERSHIP: LEGAL
RESEARCH
AND RHETORICAL RESOURCES
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY 24.39 UNDERSTANDING PUBLIC Thu 2:00 pm
90.28 PRESIDENTIAL INFLUENCE Sat 10:15 am SECTOR PERFORMANCE
AND CONGRESSIONAL Room: Parc 55, Hearst
POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Imperial A DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES Division Craig Volden, University of Virginia
Chair:
113.22 PRESIDENTIAL LEADERSHIP, Sun 10:15 am
APPROVAL AND ASSESSMENTS 11.41 BEYOND THE 'END OF Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 FEDERAL URBAN POLICY'
85.34 PRESIDENTS IN CONTEXT: Sat 8:00 am IMPASSE
POLITICAL TIME AND Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
POLARIZATION
Room: Hilton, Powell Room 11.37 BUREAUCRATIC Thu 8:00 am
POLICYMAKING
110.30 THE OBAMA PRESIDENCY AND Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room ADMINISTRATION
18.37 COMPARATIVE CRIME AND
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Thu 10:15 am
PUNISHMENT POLICY
Division Vicky Wilkins, American University
Chair:
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
24.40 COMPARATIVE PUBLIC POLICY Thu 2:00 pm
11.37 BUREAUCRATIC Thu 8:00 am IN A MULTI-LEVEL CONTEXT
POLICYMAKING Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY 113.32 DETERMINANTS OF NATIONAL Sun 10:15 am
ENVIRONMENTAL
110.31 CONTRACTING FOR PUBLIC Sun 8:00 am
PERFORMANCE: CROSS-
GOODS AND SERVICES
NATIONAL EVIDENCE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
95.37 GOVERNANCE AND SERVICE Sat 2:00 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
PROVISION POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 27


28.30 DIVERSITIES OF ADVOCACY IN Thu 4:15 pm 113.23 THE POLITICS OF EDUCATION Sun 10:15 am
THE POLICYMAKING PROCESS POLICY
Room: Nikko, Carmel I Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
47.34 ENVIRONMENTAL Fri 9:30 am 18.38 THE PUBLIC POLICY PROCESS Thu 10:15 am
POLICYMAKING IN IN COMPARATIVE
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS POLITICS
47.35 EXPLORING THE Fri 9:30 am 11.38 THE WELFARE STATE IN Thu 8:00 am
THEORETICAL NEXUS COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
BETWEEN PUBLIC POLICY AND Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
PUBLIC MANAGEMENT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
41.35 INFORMATION AND Fri 7:30 am 95.48 WATER AND MARINE POLITICS Sat 2:00 pm
MISINFORMATION IN Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
POLICYMAKING TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
53.39 NON-STATE ACTORS IN Fri 11:30 am DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS Division Mitch Pickerill, Northern Illinois University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 Chair:
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS 85.45 CREAM PUFF WAR: COURTS Sat 8:00 am
AND INTERBRANCH RELATIONS
53.28 POLICY DIFFUSION Fri 11:30 am Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
47.44 DATA AND METHODS IN THE Fri 9:30 am
85.44 POLICYMAKING IN AMERICAN Sat 8:00 am COMPARATIVE STUDY OF
FEDERALISM COURTS
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS METHODS
18.58 POLITICAL NETWORKS IN Thu 10:15 am 11.39 DON'T LET IT BRING YOU Thu 8:00 am
PUBLIC POLICY DOWN: THE CONSEQUENCES
Room: Parc 55, Lombard OF JUDICIALIZATION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
62.24 POLITICS OF THE BUDGET Fri 2:30 pm
24.41 EVERYDAY PEOPLE ARE Thu 2:00 pm
PROCESS
PEOPLE: DIVERSITY IN THE
Room: Parc 55, Mason
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY LEGAL PROFESSION AND ON
THE BENCH
85.36 POSTER SESSION VI: POSTER Sat 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
SESSION: PUBLIC POLICY
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom 24.42 I FOUGHT THE LAW: THE Thu 2:00 pm
INFLUENCE OF LAW IN
68.24 RACE, INEQUALITY, AND Fri 4:30 pm JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING
PUBLIC POLICY Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore Co-sponsored by DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND AND JURISPRUDENCE
POLITICS
28.31 LONDON CALLING OR THE Thu 4:15 pm
95.38 STAGES OF THE PUBLIC Sat 2:00 pm FINAL COUNTDOWN? JUDICIAL
POLICY PROCESS BEHAVIOR ON EUROPEAN
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 COURTS
90.29 THE DEVELOPMENT AND Sat 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
EVOLUTION OF AMERICAN Co-sponsored by European Consortium for Political
Research
BUREAUCRACY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 41.36 MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE: Fri 7:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY JUDICIAL POLITICS IN STATE
100.27 THE POLITICAL SCIENCE OF Sat 4:15 pm SUPREME COURTS
PUBLIC POLICY Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 POLICY
110.32 THE POLITICS OF EDUCATION Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2

28 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


47.36 NEVER BEEN ANY REASON: 24.42 I FOUGHT THE LAW: THE

Division Panels
Fri 9:30 am Thu 2:00 pm
MEASURING IDEOLOGY ON INFLUENCE OF LAW IN
THE U.S. SUPREME COURT JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
85.37 POSTER SESSION VI: POSTER Sat 8:00 am
SESSION: ANOTHER BRICK IN 85.38 POSTER SESSION VI: POSTER Sat 8:00 am
THE WALL SESSION: CONSTITUTIONAL
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
53.29 PRIVATE IDAHO: Fri 11:30 am
FRAGMENTATION AND 53.29 PRIVATE IDAHO: Fri 11:30 am
RETRENCHMENT IN PRIVATE FRAGMENTATION AND
ENFORCEMENT REGIMES RETRENCHMENT IN PRIVATE
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room ENFORCEMENT REGIMES
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
AND JURISPRUDENCE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
62.25 RUNNIN' ON EMPTY: Fri 2:30 pm 41.37 RACE, CAPITALISM, AND LAW Fri 7:30 am
SELECTING STATE JUDGES IN AMERICAN POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 DEVELOPMENT
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
POLICY
53.31 THE PROSPECTS FOR Fri 11:30 am
85.46 SUB-NATIONAL AND CROSS- Sat 8:00 am CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGE
REGIONAL APPROACHES TO AND REFORM IN THE U.S.
COMPARATIVE PUBLIC LAW Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
95.39 TAKIN' IT TO THE STREETS: Sat 2:00 pm DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND
LEGAL MOBILIZATION IN THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
UNITED STATES AND ABROAD Division Jenna Bednar, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room Chair:
90.30 TALK TALK: EMPIRICAL AND Sat 10:15 am 110.34 AUTHORITY MIGRATION IN Sun 8:00 am
METHODOLOGICAL INSIGHTS FEDERAL SYSTEMS
FROM INTERVIEWING JUDGES Room: Parc 55, Mason
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism
110.33 TELL ME WHY: COURTS AND Sun 8:00 am 28.33 DECENTRALIZATION AS A Thu 4:15 pm
LEGITIMACY TOOL FOR POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room CONTROL
100.28 WE JUST DISAGREE:THE Sat 4:15 pm Room: Parc 55, Stockton
DYNAMICS OF DISSENTS 11.40 DECENTRALIZATION, Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 RECENTRALIZATION,
113.24 WHAT GOES UP MUST COME Sun 10:15 am PARTICIPATION AND
DOWN: COURTS, FEDERALISM INEQUALITY
AND THE STATES Room: Parc 55, Stockton
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 95.40 ELECTORAL DYNAMICS IN Sat 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INDIA: A MULTI-LEVEL AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
LONGITUDINAL PERSPECTIVE
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
AND JURISPRUDENCE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Division Julie L. Novkov 68.25 FEDERALISM, POLICY, AND Fri 4:30 pm
Chair:
PARTISANSHIP
24.43 COMPARATIVE Thu 2:00 pm Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
CONSTITUTIONALISM Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 90.31 FISCAL POLITICS IN FEDERAL Sat 10:15 am
53.30 CONSTITUTIONAL Fri 11:30 am SYSTEMS
CONSTRUCTION OF RIGHTS, Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
NEW AND OLD
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room 113.25 INTERGOVERNMENTAL Sun 10:15 am
INTERACTION IN FEDERAL
28.32 FOUNDATIONS, REGIME
SYSTEMS
Thu 4:15 pm
STRUCTURE, AND STRUGGLE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 29


85.44 POLICYMAKING IN AMERICAN Sat 8:00 am 28.34 PARTISAN POLARIZATION IN Thu 4:15 pm
FEDERALISM THE AMERICAN STATES
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
90.32 POLICY IMPLEMENTATION AND Sat 10:15 am
18.9 POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, Thu 10:15 am CONSTITUTIONAL REFORMS IN
INSTITUTIONS, AND PUBLIC THE AMERICAN STATES
GOODS Room: Parc 55, Mason
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY 49.8 POSTER SESSION IV: POSTER Fri 10:15 am
POLITICS: STATE POLITICS
49.6 POSTER SESSION IV: POSTER Fri 10:15 am AND POLICY
SESSION: FEDERALISM AND Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS 62.25 RUNNIN' ON EMPTY: Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom SELECTING STATE JUDGES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
93.7 REFLECTIONS ON THE IMPACT Sat 12:30 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
OF MARTHA DERTHICK ON
28.12 THE RIGHT TURN AGAINST
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Thu 4:15 pm
WORKERS IN THE AMERICAN
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and STATES
Receptions Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
25.5 THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION Thu 2:00 pm
AND AMERICAN FEDERALISM 95.41 THE ROLE OF GEOGRAPHY IN Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I THE AMERICAN STATES
Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism Room: Parc 55, Mason
113.24 WHAT GOES UP MUST COME
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
Sun 10:15 am
DOWN: COURTS, FEDERALISM
Division Paul G. Lewis, Arizona State University
AND THE STATES Chair: Alison E. Post
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS 23.1 30 YEARS AFTER PROTEST IS Thu 2:00 pm
NOT ENOUGH: NEITHER
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND PROTEST NOR ELECTIONS ARE
POLICY ENOUGH
Division Seth C. McKee, Texas Tech University Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Chair: Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS
53.32 DETERMINANTS OF Fri 11:30 am Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
LEGISLATIVE PRODUCTIVITY 23.3 BEYOND (AND BACK TO) Thu 2:00 pm
IN THE AMERICAN STATES FERGUSON: RACE AND
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 POWER(LESSNESS) IN
113.26 ELECTORAL RULES AND Sun 10:15 am AMERICAN CITIES
VOTING BEHAVIOR Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Co-sponsored by Theme Panel

68.26 GOVERNOR BEHAVIOR Fri 4:30 pm 11.41 BEYOND THE 'END OF Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 FEDERAL URBAN POLICY'
IMPASSE
62.26 HEALTH AND EDUCATION Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Parc 55, Sutro
POLICY EFFECTS IN THE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
STATES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 18.39 BUILDING AND TESTING Thu 10:15 am
THEORIES OF URBAN
24.44 IMMIGRATION POLICY AND Thu 2:00 pm POLICYMAKING AND
THE IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCE GOVERNANCE
Room: Parc 55, Sutro Room: Parc 55, Stockton
41.36 MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE: Fri 7:30 am 28.35 COMPARATIVE URBAN POLICY: Thu 4:15 pm
JUDICIAL POLITICS IN STATE LAND USE, ECONOMIC
SUPREME COURTS DEVELOPMENT, AND CITY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 SERVICES
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
11.42 NEW ABORTION POLITICS Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS

30 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


110.35 DIVERSITIES / DIVERSE CITIES 60.1 DIVERSITY OF WOMEN'S

Division Panels
Sun 8:00 am Fri 2:30 pm
-- AND THEIR POLITICS INTERESTS
Room: Parc 55, Mission II Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
POLITICS
100.29 FRONTIERS IN THE Sat 4:15 pm
90.10 IDEAS, INSTITUTIONS, AND Sat 10:15 am QUANTITATIVE STUDY OF
CITIES WOMEN IN POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY
62.27 LOCAL CIVIC ENGAGEMENT IN Fri 2:30 pm
CONTEXT: NEIGHBORHOODS 85.47 GENDER QUOTAS I: ADOPTION Sat 8:00 am
AND PARTICIPATORY AND IMPLEMENTATION
INSTITUTIONS Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Room: Parc 55, Stockton Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

89.6 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER Sat 10:15 am 90.34 GENDER QUOTAS II: Sat 10:15 am
SESSION: URBAN POLITICS SUBSTANTIVE
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom REPRESENTATION
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
68.27 SPATIAL DYNAMICS AND Fri 4:30 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
POLITICAL ORDER IN ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
95.42 GENDER AND CAMPAIGN Sat 2:00 pm
DYNAMICS
Room: Parc 55, Stockton
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
90.47 THE POLITICS OF URBAN Sat 10:15 am PSYCHOLOGY
TRANSFORMATION IN AFRICA
41.38 GENDER AND CONFLICT Fri 7:30 am
Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
90.33 THE URBAN ELECTORAL Sat 10:15 am 47.37 GENDER AND EXECUTIVE Fri 9:30 am
CONNECTION: GOVERNANCE, LEADERSHIP
SERVICES, & FINANCES Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
Room: Nikko, Monterey II EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS 53.33 GENDER, EMPOWERMENT, AND Fri 11:30 am
POLITICAL ECONOMY
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Division Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder 62.28 GENDER, PERSONAL TIES, AND Fri 2:30 pm
Chair: Beth Reingold, Emory University
POLITICS: NEW PERSPECTIVES
11.6 BODY POLITICS Thu 8:00 am ON INFORMAL INSTITUTIONS
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY 94.3 GLOBAL DIVERSITIES OF Sat 2:00 pm
RESPONSES TO GENDER-BASED
113.27 COMBATING GENDER-BASED Sun 10:15 am VIOLENCE
VIOLENCE Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
37.4 HONORING WOMEN OF COLOR Thu 7:30 pm
110.36 CONSERVATISM & FEMINISM, A Sun 8:00 am RECEPTION: WOMEN & POL.
'DANGEROUS LIAISON’? SECTION, WOMEN’S CAUCUS &
CONTEMPORARY THOUGHT & COMM.
PRACTICE Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and
Receptions
95.35 DESCRIPTIVE Sat 2:00 pm Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science
REPRESENTATION AND THE
POLICY IMPACT OF WOMEN IN 41.5 INTERSECTIONAL Fri 7:30 am
LEGISLATURES PERSPECTIVES ON THE BODY:
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I DISABILITY, RACE AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES GENDER
85.7 DIVERSE FAMILIES
Room: Parc 55, Davidson
Sat 8:00 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 POLITICAL THEORY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 31


18.40 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Thu 10:15 am 23.1 30 YEARS AFTER PROTEST IS Thu 2:00 pm
DIVERSE MARGINALITIES NOT ENOUGH: NEITHER
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 PROTEST NOR ELECTIONS ARE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND ENOUGH
POLITICS Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
11.42 NEW ABORTION POLITICS Thu 8:00 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND 94.1 AFTER OBAMA: LEGACIES OF Sat 2:00 pm
POLICY
AMERICA'S FIRST MINORITY
58.6 POSTER SESSION V: POSTER Fri 2:00 pm PRESIDENT
SESSION: WOMEN AND Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
POLITICS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
68.28 RECONSIDERING GENDER, Fri 4:30 pm CITIZENSHIP
DIVERSITY, AND ACCESS TO Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
PUBLIC OFFICE 24.46 ALIENATION AND CITIZENSHIP Thu 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
28.36 RECONSIDERING THE IMPACT Thu 4:15 pm 100.30 BEYOND BLACK AND WHITE: Sat 4:15 pm
OF GENDER DIVERSITY IN THE NEW MULTIRACIAL
POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS AMERICA
Room: Hilton, Mason Room Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
113.28 CAMPAIGNS Sun 10:15 am
95.14 THE GOOD REPRESENTATIVE Sat 2:00 pm Room: Hilton, Powell Room
2.0
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C 110.35 DIVERSITIES / DIVERSE CITIES Sun 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL -- AND THEIR POLITICS
THEORY Room: Parc 55, Mission II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
77.12 WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION Fri 7:30 pm
RECEPTION: WOMEN & 85.64 DIVERSITY AND THE POLITICS Sat 8:00 am
POLITICS, WOMEN’S CAUCUS & OF IMMIGRANT SELECTION
COMMITTEE Room: Parc 55, Mason
Room: Nikko, Ballroom II Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and
Receptions 47.43 ETHNIC POLITICS ACROSS Fri 9:30 am
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science REGIMES
28.39 WOMEN'S REPRESENTATION Thu 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND DEMOCRATIZATION
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS 16.1 FIFTY YEARS AFTER THE VRA: Thu 10:15 am
24.45 WOMEN, GENDER, SEXUALITY Thu 2:00 pm THE FUTURE OF VOTING AND
AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS REPRESENTATION IN THE US
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
POLITICS
110.37 IMMIGRATION Sun 8:00 am
Division Jason P. Casellas, University of Houston
Chair: Paru Shah, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
18.40 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Thu 10:15 am
68.42 "BRIDGES AND CUL DE SACS: Fri 4:30 pm
DIVERSE MARGINALITIES
NAVIGATING MIGRATION
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
STUDIES ACROSS THE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
SUBFIELDS"
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 90.35 LATINO POLITICS Sat 10:15 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
CITIZENSHIP
100.31 NEW RESEARCH ON ASIAN AND Sat 4:15 pm
67.1 20TH ANNIVERSARY PLENARY: Fri 4:30 pm ASIAN AMERICANS
EVALUATING THE REP Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
SECTION’S IMPACT ON
53.34 PARTISANSHIP AND Fri 11:30 am
POLITICAL SCIENCE
CITIZENSHIP AMONG RACIAL
AND ETHNIC MINORITY
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and
Receptions VOTERS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B

32 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


85.48 POLITICAL PROTEST AND DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS

Division Panels
Sat 8:00 am
SOCIALIZATION IN RACIAL/ Division Carolyn M. Warner, Arizona State University
ETHNIC MINORITY Chair:
COMMUNIITIES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 18.42 ASSESSING THE ROLE OF Thu 10:15 am
RELIGION IN CONFLICT
95.9 POSTER SESSION VIII: POSTER Sat 2:00 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
SESSION: RACE, ETHNICITY,
AND POLITICS 41.40 BEYOND FREEDOM AND Fri 7:30 am
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom VIOLENCE: RELIGION,
POLITICS, AND INTERPRETIVE
62.29 RACE AND PUBLIC OPINION Fri 2:30 pm METHODS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
18.11 RACE AND THE AMERICAN Thu 10:15 am 11.44 INTERACTIONS BETWEEN AND Thu 8:00 am
STATE INFLUENCES OF RELIGIOUS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 AND ELECTORAL POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
47.38 RACE AND THE MEDIA: NEW
58.7 POSTER SESSION V: POSTER
Fri 9:30 am
Fri 2:00 pm
DIRECTIONS IN RESEARCH
SESSION: RELIGION &
POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
41.39 RACE, CLASS AND INEQUALITY Fri 7:30 am Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
18.43 RELIGION AND
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Thu 10:15 am
28.37 RACE, ETHNICITY AND Thu 4:15 pm INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
28.38 RELIGION AND PUBLIC GOODS
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Thu 4:15 pm
68.24 RACE, INEQUALITY, AND Fri 4:30 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
PUBLIC POLICY
53.35 RELIGION AND REGIMES IN Fri 11:30 am
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
24.47 RACIAL POLITICS AND PUBLIC Thu 2:00 pm
POLICY 62.30 RELIGION IN PUBLIC SPACE Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 AND IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
107.2 RECEPTION FOR REP, LATINO Sat 7:30 pm
CAUCUS, LATINO COMMITTEE, 68.29 RELIGION, LAW AND Fri 4:30 pm
AND ASIAN PACIFIC DEMOCRACY
COMMITTEE Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 85.49 THE LIMITS OF RELIGIOUS Sat 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and POLITICS
Receptions Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Co-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science
95.43 THE ORIGINS AND
18.41 THE CONSEQUENCES OF RACE
Sat 2:00 pm
Thu 10:15 am
IMPLICATIONS OF STATE
IN LOCAL POLITICS
REGULATION OF RELIGION IN
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
MUSLIM SOCIETIES
11.43 THE INTERSECTIONS OF RACE Thu 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
AND GENDER POLITICS
100.32 THE POLITICS OF RELIGIOUS Sat 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Imperial B
DIVERSITY
108.1 THE POLITICS OF RACE AND Sun 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
CLASS INEQUALITIES IN THE
AMERICAS DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
CITIZENSHIP Division Emily Beaulieu, University of Kentucky
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel Chair:

11.50 UNDERSTANDING ATTITUDES Thu 8:00 am 110.38 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Sun 8:00 am
OF AND TOWARD GROUPS BRUCE CAIN'S DEMOCRACY
Room: Parc 55, Mission I MORE OR LESS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION Room: Parc 55, Mission I
113.29 CANDIDATE CHARACTERISTICS Sun 10:15 am
Room: Parc 55, Mission I

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 33


85.50 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Sat 8:00 am 90.33 THE URBAN ELECTORAL Sat 10:15 am
OF PERSONAL CONNECTION: GOVERNANCE,
REPRESENTATION VOTING SERVICES, & FINANCES
RULES Room: Nikko, Monterey II
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS

95.44 COMPETITION, MOBILIZATION, Sat 2:00 pm 18.21 USING WITHIN-COUNTRY Thu 10:15 am
AND PARTICIPATION INSTITUTIONAL DIVERSITY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 FOR CAUSAL IDENTIFICATION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND IN JAPAN
VOTING BEHAVIOR Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
28.3 CONSTRUCTING Thu 4:15 pm
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
REPRESENTATIVE Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group
DEMOCRACY: THEORY,
HISTORY, AND PRACTICE 28.39 WOMEN'S REPRESENTATION Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL
11.54 CRITICAL EVOLUTIONS IN Thu 8:00 am
ELECTION OBSERVATION ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 Division James Adams, University of California, Davis
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE Chair:
DEMOCRATIZATION
11.45 CONCEPTUALIZING PARTIES: Thu 8:00 am
100.33 DIVERSITY AND Sat 4:15 pm PARTIES AS POLICY
REPRESENTATION DEMANDERS AND THE
CHALLENGES ALTERNATIVES
Room: Parc 55, Davidson Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
68.30 ELECTORAL SYSTEMS AND Fri 4:30 pm 18.45 CRISIS OF DEMOCRACY? Thu 10:15 am
POLICY POSITIONS PARTY POLITICS AND
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II REPRESENTATION IN TIMES OF
85.47 GENDER QUOTAS I: ADOPTION Sat 8:00 am AUSTERITY
AND IMPLEMENTATION Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III 41.42 ELECTIONS AND LEGISLATIVE Fri 7:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS VOTING IN THE UNITED STATES
90.34 GENDER QUOTAS II: Sat 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
SUBSTANTIVE 24.48 EXPLAINING PARTY AND Thu 2:00 pm
REPRESENTATION GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
28.40 MONEY IN ELECTIONS: A Thu 4:15 pm
62.31 IDEOLOGICAL CONGRUENCE Fri 2:30 pm
FRANCO-AMERICAN
AND POLICY RESPONSIVENESS
COMPARISON OF POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Powell Room
FINANCE LAWS
28.40 MONEY IN ELECTIONS: A Thu 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
FRANCO-AMERICAN Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
COMPARISON OF POLITICAL ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
FINANCE LAWS 62.32 PARTIES AND IDEOLOGIES IN Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B AMERICAN POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 35: POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
Room: Hilton, Imperial B
18.44 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Thu 10:15 am
68.31 PARTIES' ISSUE POSITION AND Fri 4:30 pm
REPRESENTATION
EMPHASIS STRATEGIES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
41.41 POLITICAL POLARIZATION IN Fri 7:30 am
53.36 PARTY POLICY POSITIONING Fri 11:30 am
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
AND CAMPAIGN STRATEGIES
Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 35: POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES 95.45 PARTY POSITIONS AND THEIR Sat 2:00 pm
49.3 POSTER SESSION IV: POSTER Fri 10:15 am PROGRAMMATIC AND
SESSION: REPRESENTATION REPRESENTATIONAL
AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS ORIENTATIONS
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Room: Hilton, Taylor Room

34 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


85.51 PARTY SYSTEM POLARIZATION 18.46 CAMPAIGNS, ISSUE SALIENCE,

Division Panels
Sat 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am
IN COMPARATIVE CANDIDATE QUALITY, AND
PERSPECTIVE DEMOCRATIC
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 ACCOUNTABILITY
110.46 POLITICAL PARTIES AND THE Sun 8:00 am Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
CHALLENGES OF DEMOCRATIC 24.49 CANDIDATE POSITIONING, Thu 2:00 pm
CONSOLIDATION REPOSITIONING, PROMISING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION 95.44 COMPETITION, MOBILIZATION, Sat 2:00 pm
AND PARTICIPATION
41.41 POLITICAL POLARIZATION IN Fri 7:30 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
Room: Parc 55, Powell II ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS 62.34 CUEING OPINIONS Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
49.4 POSTER SESSION IV: POSTER Fri 10:15 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
SESSION: POLITICAL
28.41 ELECTIONS ADMINISTRATION:
ORGANIZATION AND PARTIES
Thu 4:15 pm
EFFICACY AND INTEGRITY
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
90.36 REPRESENTATION THROUGH Sat 10:15 am
41.44 ELECTIONS AND VOTING IN
POLITICAL PARTIES
Fri 7:30 am
COMPARATIVE AND
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
110.39 THE CAUSES AND Sun 8:00 am Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
CONSEQUENCES OF PARTY
47.39 ELECTORAL RULES, VOTING,
NOMINATION RULES
Fri 9:30 am
AND TURNOUT: NEW
Room: Nikko, Carmel I
PATHWAYS FOR RESEARCH
113.30 THE DYNAMICS OF PARTY Sun 10:15 am Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
POSITIONING
85.63 EXPERIMENTS ON Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
CAMPAIGNS & ELECTIONS
18.48 THE POLARIZATION OF PUBLIC Thu 10:15 am Room: Parc 55, Powell II
OPINION Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
Room: Parc 55, Market Street RESEARCH
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION 62.33 HOLDING INCUMBENTS Fri 2:30 pm
11.46 THE ORIGINS AND EFFECTS OF Thu 8:00 am ACCOUNTABLE FOR THE
PRIMARY ELECTIONS ECONOMY?
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero Room: Parc 55, Mission I
68.32 KNOWLEDGE, INFORMATION, Fri 4:30 pm
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING AND POLITICAL ATTITUDES
BEHAVIOR Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Division Gabriel S. Lenz, University of California, Berkeley
Chair: 110.41 METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN Sun 8:00 am
PUBLIC OPINION RESEARCH
11.47 ADVANCING SALIENCY Thu 8:00 am Room: Nikko, Monterey II
THEORY: PARTIES' SALIENCE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
STRATEGIES IN MULTI-ISSUE 85.52 ONLINE AND OFFLINE Sat 8:00 am
ELECTIONS POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
Room: Hilton, Powell Room AND THEIR CONSEQUENCES
110.7 AT FACE VALUE: APPEARANCE Sun 8:00 am FOR DEMOCRACY
EFFECTS AND CANDIDATE Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
EVALUATIONS 68.33 PARTIES, PERCEPTIONS AND Fri 4:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
41.43 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS:
85.53 POLITICAL INTEREST,
Fri 7:30 am
Sat 8:00 am
"AMERICAN IDENTITY AND
ENGAGEMENT, AND
THE POLITICS OF
KNOWLEDGE
MULTICULTURALISM"
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 35


49.5 POSTER SESSION IV: POSTER Fri 10:15 am 113.19 EXAMINING PUBLIC OPINION Sun 10:15 am
SESSION: ELECTIONS AND ON FOREIGN POLICY
VOTING BEHAVIOR Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY

90.37 PRESENTING PARTIES TO Sat 10:15 am 24.51 INFLUENCES ON ATTITUDES Thu 2:00 pm
VOTERS: NEW MEDIA MEETS ABOUT IMMIGRATION
OLD MEDIA Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero 113.31 INNOVATIONS IN Sun 10:15 am
95.46 REPRESENTATION AND VOTING Sat 2:00 pm UNDERSTANDING ATTITUDES
Room: Hilton, Imperial A AND BEHAVIOUR ON SUPPORT
FOR OVERSEAS AID
110.40 REPRESENTATION, Sun 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
PARTISANSHIP, AND PARTY
DISCIPLINE 62.27 LOCAL CIVIC ENGAGEMENT IN Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 CONTEXT: NEIGHBORHOODS
AND PARTICIPATORY
24.50 RESOURCES, ENGAGEMENT,
INSTITUTIONS
Thu 2:00 pm
AND RECRUITMENT: 20 YEARS
Room: Parc 55, Stockton
OF "VOICE AND EQUALITY" Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
110.41 METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN Sun 8:00 am
11.48 THE EFFECTS OF EDUCATION, Thu 8:00 am PUBLIC OPINION RESEARCH
AGE, MASS SHOOTINGS, AND Room: Nikko, Monterey II
NATURAL DISASTERS ON Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
TURNOUT VOTING BEHAVIOR
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 28.13 MODELS OF SURVEY DATA Thu 4:15 pm
11.49 THE ELECTORAL CONNECTION Thu 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
AND DEMOCRATIC Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY
ACCOUNTABILITY
Room: Parc 55, Mason 90.39 NEW FRONTIERS IN RESEARCH Sat 10:15 am
ON PUBLIC ATTITUDES
18.47 UNDERSTANDING AND Thu 10:15 am
TOWARD IMMIGRATION
INCREASING TURNOUT
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
95.47 PARTIES, PARTISANSHIP AND Sat 2:00 pm
85.54 VOTER REFORM AND Sat 8:00 am
POLARIZATION
SUPPRESSION
Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
68.33 PARTIES, PERCEPTIONS AND Fri 4:30 pm
90.38 VOTERS AND MANDATES: Sat 10:15 am
PUBLIC OPINION
EVALUATING SPECIFIC
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
ACCOUNTABILITY PROCESSES Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
Room: Parc 55, Mission II VOTING BEHAVIOR
100.34 VOTING: RACE, IDENTITY, AND Sat 4:15 pm 53.37 PERSPECTIVES ON Fri 11:30 am
THE GREATEST GENERATION ASSESSMENTS OF DEMOCRACY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 Room: Nikko, Monterey II
85.39 POSTER SESSION VI: POSTER
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Sat 8:00 am
SESSION: PUBLIC OPINION
Division Laura Stephenson, University of Western Ontario
Chair: Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
24.33 PUBLIC OPINION AND WAR Thu 2:00 pm
100.35 ASSESSING THE ECONOMY: Sat 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Imperial B
BELIEFS, KNOWLEDGE AND Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
OPINIONS SECURITY
100.37 PUBLIC OPINION,
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Sat 4:15 pm
28.24 CIVILIAN CASUALTIES AND Thu 4:15 pm INFORMATION
SUPPORT FOR THE USE OF TECHNOLOGY, &
FORCE ENVIRONMENTAL ATTITUDES
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
SECURITY COMMUNICATION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
62.34 CUEING OPINIONS Fri 2:30 pm TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
VOTING BEHAVIOR

36 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


85.55 SOCIAL CONTEXT, POLITICAL 41.46 INNOVATIONS IN POLITICAL

Division Panels
Sat 8:00 am Fri 7:30 am
BEHAVIOR AND PUBLIC COMMUNICATION RESEARCH,
OPINION BOTH EMPIRICAL AND
Room: Parc 55, Market Street NORMATIVE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS Room: Parc 55, Mason
41.45 THE CONDITIONS OF POLICY Fri 7:30 am 10.1 IS ANYBODY LISTENING? Thu 8:00 am
RESPONSIVENESS POLITICAL SCIENCE, THE NEW
Room: Nikko, Carmel II MEDIA AND POLITICS
85.10 THE EFFECTS OF MORAL Sat 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
JUDGMENTS AMONG CITIZENS
AND LEGISLATORS 85.56 MEDIA UNDER AUTOCRACY: Sat 8:00 am
Room: Parc 55, Davidson COMPARING RUSSIA, CHINA,
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL EGYPT, SYRIA AND
PSYCHOLOGY
AZERBAIJAN
18.48 THE POLARIZATION OF PUBLIC Thu 10:15 am Room: Parc 55, Sutro
OPINION 47.40 NEW APPROACHES TO THE Fri 9:30 am
Room: Parc 55, Market Street STUDY OF SOCIAL INFLUENCE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 35: POLITICAL
ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES AND COMMUNICATION
NETWORKS
11.50 UNDERSTANDING ATTITUDES Thu 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Mason Room
OF AND TOWARD GROUPS
Room: Parc 55, Mission I 68.34 NEW DATA SOURCES (AND Fri 4:30 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND INTERESTING PAPERS!) IN
POLITICS POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
28.42 UNDERSTANDING ATTITUDES Thu 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
ABOUT SOCIAL SPENDING 100.36 NOT JUST THE FACTS… Sat 4:15 pm
Room: Parc 55, Mission I Room: Hilton, Mason Room
110.42 NOTHING CONTROVERSIAL
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
Sun 8:00 am
HERE: CLIMATE CHANGE,
COMMUNICATION VACCINES & THE AFFORDABLE
Division Philip Habel, University of Glasgow CARE ACT
Chair:
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
11.51 "TRUST ME, I DIDN'T MEAN TO Thu 8:00 am 85.57 ORGANIZATIONAL FORMS AND Sat 8:00 am
SEE POLITICAL DYNAMICS IN DIGITAL MEDIA
INFORMATION..." ENVIRONMENTS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
18.49 CAPTURING PROTEST: TEXT Thu 10:15 am 85.40 POSTER SESSION VI: POSTER Sat 8:00 am
ANALYSIS METHODS AND THE SESSION: POLITICAL
COMPARATIVE STUDY OF COMMUNICATION
POPULISM Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
100.37 PUBLIC OPINION, Sat 4:15 pm
28.43 COMMUNICATION IN Thu 4:15 pm INFORMATION
LEGISLATIVE AND EXECUTIVE TECHNOLOGY, &
ELECTIONS, BOTH STATE AND ENVIRONMENTAL ATTITUDES
NATIONAL Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
24.52 DIGITAL MEDIA AND Thu 2:00 pm TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
CAMPAIGNS BOTH DOMESTIC
AND ABROAD 47.10 THE ROLE OF MOTIVATED Fri 9:30 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 REASONING IN THE POLITICAL
PROCESS
28.29 DIVERSITIES IN PRESIDENTIAL Thu 4:15 pm Room: Parc 55, Mission II
RHETORIC, MEDIA FRAMES, Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
AND PUBLIC REACTIONS PSYCHOLOGY
Room: Hilton, Powell Room 110.43 WHY (GLOBAL) MEDIA Sun 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
EXECUTIVE POLITICS SYSTEMS MATTER
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
53.38 HOW THE MEDIA PORTRAY Fri 11:30 am
POLITICAL ISSUES AND WHY IT
MATTERS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 37


DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY DIVISION 40: INFORMATION
AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
Division Aseem Prakash, University of Washington Division Kevin Jay Wallsten, California State University, Long Beach
Chair: Chair:

24.53 BUSINESS, POLITICS, AND Thu 2:00 pm 90.40 CAMPAIGNING ONLINE: CROSS- Sat 10:15 am
ENVIRONMENTAL NATIONAL ASSESSMENTS OF
GOVERNANCE THE WEB’S ROLE IN
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 ELECTIONS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
68.35 CLIMATE POLITICS AND Fri 4:30 pm 41.48 CROWDSOURCING CASE Fri 7:30 am
PREFERENCES FOR DOMESTIC STUDIES: LESSONS FROM THE
AND INTERNATIONAL POLICY PARTICIPEDIA PROJECT
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
113.32 DETERMINANTS OF NATIONAL Sun 10:15 am
METHODS
ENVIRONMENTAL
PERFORMANCE: CROSS- 100.38 ELITES ONLINE: HOW Sat 4:15 pm
NATIONAL EVIDENCE CANDIDATES,
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room REPRESENTATIVES AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE JOURNALISTS USE THE
POLITICS INTERNET
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
110.44 DIVERSITIES IN NATURE, Sun 8:00 am 18.51 GOVERNANCE IN THE DIGITAL Thu 10:15 am
SOCIETY, AND POLICY AGE: THE PROMISE AND
Room: Parc 55, Hearst PERILS OF E-GOVERNMENT
47.34 ENVIRONMENTAL Fri 9:30 am Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
POLICYMAKING IN 28.44 ONLINE POLITICAL Thu 4:15 pm
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE PARTICIPATION: HOW DIVERSE
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II YOUTH ENGAGE WITH
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
POLITICS
18.50 ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS, Thu 10:15 am Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
RISK, AND NATURAL
113.33 PARTICIPATION AND
DISASTERS
Sun 10:15 am
ENGAGEMENT: THE ROLE OF
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL ICT'S IN TRANSFORMING
SECURITY CITIZEN POLITICS
47.41 GOVERNANCE OF NEW
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Fri 9:30 am
TECHNOLOGIES 85.42 POSTER SESSION VI: POSTER Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 SESSION: INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
53.39 NON-STATE ACTORS IN Fri 11:30 am
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 47.42 REGULATION AND Fri 9:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY REPRESSION: INTERNET
49.7 POSTER SESSION IV: POSTER Fri 10:15 am CONTROL IN DEMOCRACIES
SESSION: SCIENCE, AND DICTATORSHIPS
TECHNOLOGY AND Room: Nikko, Monterey II
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS 62.35 SOCIAL MEDIA AND POLITICAL Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom PARTICIPATION
100.37 PUBLIC OPINION, Sat 4:15 pm Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY, & DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE,
ENVIRONMENTAL ATTITUDES AND FILM
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 Division Ann Ward, University of Regina
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION Chair:
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION 24.54 ANCIENT INSIGHTS FOR Thu 2:00 pm
MODERN POLITICS AND
95.48 WATER AND MARINE POLITICS Sat 2:00 pm
ETHICS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Room: Parc 55, Powell II

38 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


11.52 DARK PLACES: CRIME AND 53.40 ISRAEL AND PALESTINE:

Division Panels
Thu 8:00 am Fri 11:30 am
POLITICS IN JAMES ELLROY’S ALTERNATIVE PERSPECTIVES
AMERICA ON STATEHOOD
Room: Parc 55, Powell II Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Co-sponsored by Conference Group on the Middle East
95.49 EXPLORING PHILOSOPHY, Sat 2:00 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
FAITH AND THE POLITICAL POLITICS
THROUGH ART: EXPLORING Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
PHILOSOPHY, FAITH AND THE 101.8 LABOR AND THE SOUTH IN Sat 4:15 pm
POLITICAL THROUGH ART AMERICAN POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 Room: Hilton, Imperial A
95.8 POSTER SESSION VIII: POSTER Sat 2:00 pm Co-sponsored by Labor Project
SESSION: POLITICS, 18.4 POLICE POWER AND Thu 10:15 am
LITERATURE, AND FILM POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
68.36 RETHINKING FREEDOM AND Fri 4:30 pm POLITICAL THEORY
DEMOCRACY IN THE MODERN
STATE 85.41 POSTER SESSION VI: POSTER Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 SESSION: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE
100.39 RETHINKING THE SCIENTIFIC Sat 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
IMPOSITION ON NATURE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 62.36 REIMAGINING RADICAL Fri 2:30 pm
POLITICS TODAY
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
SCIENCE 18.52 TAKING IT TO THE STREETS: Thu 10:15 am
Division Michael J. Bosia, St. Michael's College SOCIAL RESISTANCE & STATE
Chair: RESPONSES IN SOUTHEAST
ASIA
90.41 ANARCHISM AND RADICAL Sat 10:15 am Room: Nikko, Carmel II
DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
Room: Parc 55, Mission I POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
68.4 CRISES OF POLITICS, THE Fri 4:30 pm DEMOCRATIZATION
POLITICS OF CRISES Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics
Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF 67.4 THE ART OF ELECTIONS Fri 4:30 pm
POLITICAL THEORY Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and
100.42 DIVERSE PERSPECTIVES ON Sat 4:15 pm Receptions
LGBT RIGHTS AND POLICY
28.45 TOWARDS A CRITICAL Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE
POLITICS Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
95.50 DIVERSIFYING Sat 2:00 pm POLITICAL THEORY
INTERNATIONAL STRUGGLES:
47.6 WARS OF RELIGION (AND Fri 9:30 am
THEORY AND PRACTICE IN
SECULARISM)
GLOBAL JUSTICE
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Room: Parc 55, Mission I Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL THEORY
HISTORY AND POLITICS
85.58 WORK, WAGES & HEALTH: Sat 8:00 am
85.5 DOES CRITIQUE HAVE A Sat 8:00 am
WHAT'S THE STATE GOT TO DO
FUTURE? A QUESTION FOR
WITH IT?
POLITICAL THEORISTS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A Co-sponsored by Labor Project
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF Co-sponsored by Poverty, Inequality, and Public Policy
POLITICAL THEORY Caucus
110.45 HABITATION, HABITABILITY, Sun 8:00 am
JUSTICE 1 DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 HISTORY AND POLITICS
Co-sponsored by Green Politics and Theory Division John M. Owen, University of Virginia
114.5 HABITATION, HABITABILITY, Sun 10:15 am Chair:
JUSTICE 2 113.34 AMERICA, LIBERALISM, AND Sun 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Co-sponsored by Green Politics and Theory
EMPIRE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 39


53.41 CHINA AND ASIA, PAST AND Fri 11:30 am 85.11 CLIENTELISM, DEMOCRACY Sat 8:00 am
PRESENT AND PUBLIC SPENDING
Room: Parc 55, Mission I Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
95.50 DIVERSIFYING Sat 2:00 pm POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
INTERNATIONAL STRUGGLES: Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
THEORY AND PRACTICE IN
11.54 CRITICAL EVOLUTIONS IN Thu 8:00 am
GLOBAL JUSTICE
ELECTION OBSERVATION
Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
SCIENCE
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
41.47 IDEAS AND DOMESTIC
18.54 DEMOCRACY, INEQUALITY,
Fri 7:30 am
Thu 10:15 am
POLITICS IN AMERICA’S RISE
AND CORRUPTION
TO POWER
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Room: Parc 55, Stockton
28.47 DIFFUSION AND REGIME Thu 4:15 pm
68.37 IDEAS IN TRANSNATIONAL
CHANGE
Fri 4:30 pm
SPACE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Room: Parc 55, Mason
85.59 ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, Sat 8:00 am
18.53 INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AT
IDENTITY, AND
Thu 10:15 am
THE NEXUS OF FUNCTION AND
DEMOCRATIZATION
DYSFUNCTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
28.46 INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND Thu 4:15 pm 62.38 ELECTORAL MANIPULATION Fri 2:30 pm
THE BIG QUESTIONS Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Room: Parc 55, Davidson Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
24.6 POSTER SESSION II: POSTER Thu 2:00 pm
SESSION: INTERNATIONAL 47.43 ETHNIC POLITICS ACROSS Fri 9:30 am
HISTORY AND POLITICS REGIMES
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
53.42 SECRECY IN INTERNATIONAL Fri 11:30 am POLITICS
POLITICS
28.52 EXPLAINING PARTY-BUILDING Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
STRATEGIES IN SUB-SAHARAN
62.37 STATE AND ANTI-STATE Fri 2:30 pm AFRICA
VIOLENCE, THEN AND NOW Room: Parc 55, Lombard
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN
POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE 68.38 FORMAL APPROACHES TO Fri 4:30 pm
DEMOCRATIZATION ELECTIONS AND POWER IN
Division Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY
Chair: Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
24.55 AUTHORITARIAN LEGACIES Thu 2:00 pm 85.60 NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE Sat 8:00 am
AND CHALLENGES TO POST- STUDY OF ELECTORAL
AUTHORITARIAN AUTHORITARIANISM
DEMOCRACIES Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 53.1 PARTICIPATION IN (POST- Fri 11:30 am
Co-sponsored by Russian Politics Group
)AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES:
11.1 CIVIL SOCIETY, PROTEST AND Thu 8:00 am CHINA, EURASIA, EASTERN
MASS MOBILIZATION IN POST- EUROPE
COMMUNIST SETTINGS Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST
COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
COUNTRIES
53.49 PARTY MOBILIZATION AND Fri 11:30 am
11.53 CLIENTELISM AND Thu 8:00 am ELECTION CAMPAIGNS IN
CORRUPTION ACROSS AFRICA
DICTATORSHIP AND Room: Parc 55, Balboa
DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY

40 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


110.46 POLITICAL PARTIES AND THE 62.39 WHEN DO DICTATORS

Division Panels
Sun 8:00 am Fri 2:30 pm
CHALLENGES OF DEMOCRATIC TREMBLE? THREAT
CONSOLIDATION PERCEPTIONS UNDER
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 AUTHORITARIAN RULE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 35: POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
90.42 WHY DEMOCRATIZATION Sat 10:15 am
89.8 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER Sat 10:15 am SUCCEEDS
SESSION: COMPARATIVE Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
DEMOCARIZATION
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
90.1 REVISITING SOCIAL Sat 10:15 am Division Will H. Moore, Florida State University
MOVEMENTS, CIVIL SOCIETY Chair:
AND PARTY CHANGE AFTER
113.27 COMBATING GENDER-BASED Sun 10:15 am
COMMUNISM
VIOLENCE
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
COUNTRIES 85.61 COMPLIANCE WITH THE INT'T Sat 8:00 am
90.7 SOCIAL SPENDING AND Sat 10:15 am HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME
OUTCOMES IN NEW AND Room: Parc 55, Stockton
PARTIAL DEMOCRACIES 11.56 CRITICAL THEORIES OF Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room PEACE: PEACE, JUSTICE,
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
HUMAN RIGHTS
100.40 STUDYING THE SEQUENCING Sat 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
OF REGIMES 90.43 DOMESTIC GOVERNANCE AND Sat 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 HUMAN RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Room: Parc 55, Stockton
11.55 SUBNATIONAL VARIATIONS IN Thu 8:00 am 110.47 DOMESTIC STUFF THAT Sun 8:00 am
DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY IMPACTS RESPECT FOR HUMAN
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 RIGHTS
Room: Nikko, Carmel II
18.52 TAKING IT TO THE STREETS: Thu 10:15 am
SOCIAL RESISTANCE & STATE 18.56 HIDDEN VIOLENCE DURING Thu 10:15 am
RESPONSES IN SOUTHEAST ARMED CONFLICT:
ASIA METHODOLOGICAL
Room: Nikko, Carmel II CHALLENGES AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE INNOVATIONS
POLITICS Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE 28.49 HUMAN RIGHTS IGOS: THE Thu 4:15 pm
Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics ECTHR, ICC & UNHRC
18.55 THE INTERNATIONAL AND Thu 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
DOMESTIC SOURCES OF 24.57 HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE Thu 2:00 pm
DEMOCRATIC REFORM IN IMPACT OF INSTITUTIONS IN
TUNISIA & BEYOND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 68.39 INNOVATIONS IN HR DATA Fri 4:30 pm
COLLECTION
24.56 THE MILITARY AND Thu 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
DEMOCRATIZATION
Room: Nikko, Carmel II 62.40 IS THERE A HUMAN RIGHTS Fri 2:30 pm
TRADITION IN CHINA?
28.48 THE RISE OF COMPETITIVE Thu 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
ELECTORAL AUTHORITARIAN
REGIMES 53.43 ON HUMAN DIGNITY AND Fri 11:30 am
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room HUMAN RIGHTS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
89.7 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER Sat 10:15 am
100.46 VIOLENCE AND PATRONAGE IN Sat 4:15 pm SESSION: HUMAN RIGHTS
AFRICAN DEMOCRACIES Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN
POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 41


DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS 68.40 FIRMS AS ACTORS IN Fri 4:30 pm
Division Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM:
Chair: INNOVATIONS IN CONCEPT AND
METHOD
11.57 AFTER BOSTON COLLEGE: Thu 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
ETHICAL AND Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
METHODOLOGICAL POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
INNOVATION IN FIELDWORK 85.62 INNOVATIONS IN CROSS-CASE Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 COMPARATIVE METHODS
18.57 AUTHOR MEETS READERS: Thu 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
FREDERIC SCHAFFER'S 90.44 INNOVATIONS IN MIXED- Sat 10:15 am
"ELUCIDATING SOCIAL METHOD RESEARCH
SCIENCE CONCEPTS" Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods 95.51 IS DECEPTION JUSTIFIED? Sat 2:00 pm
COVERT FIELD RESEARCH AND
94.2 BEYOND OUR BORDERS: DOES Sat 2:00 pm
DEMOCRATIC VALUES
POLITICAL SCIENCE HAVE AN
IMPACT ON OTHER
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
DISCIPLINES? 100.41 LINKING INTERPRETATION Sat 4:15 pm
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I AND CAUSAL INFERENCE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
POLITICAL THEORY Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY 113.35 MAPPING AND BRIDGING Sun 10:15 am
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel METHODOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
18.12 BRIDGING THE QUANTITATIVE- Thu 10:15 am IN THE DISCIPLINE
QUALITATIVE DIVIDE: TEXT Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
ANALYSIS AND DATA METHODOLOGY
THRESHOLDS
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4 41.49 NEW DIRECTIONS IN MULTI- Fri 7:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHOD RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
24.58 CHALLENGES OF CONCEPT- Thu 2:00 pm METHODOLOGY
FORMATION AND
MEASUREMENT 58.3 POSTER SESSION V: POSTER Fri 2:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room SESSION: QUALITATIVE
Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee #1 (Concepts METHODS
and Methods) Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
28.50 CHALLENGES OF FIELD AND Thu 4:15 pm 47.45 ROUNDTABLE: SHAUL Fri 9:30 am
ETHNOGRAPHIC RESEARCH SHENHAV’S BOOK,
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 "ANALYZING SOCIAL
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods NARRATIVES"
41.48 CROWDSOURCING CASE Fri 7:30 am Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
STUDIES: LESSONS FROM THE Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
PARTICIPEDIA PROJECT 11.58 SHOULD THERE BE A Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room REGISTRY FOR POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION SCIENCE RESEARCH?
TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
47.44 DATA AND METHODS IN THE Fri 9:30 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RESEARCH
COURTS 20.1 THE METHODS CAFE Thu 12:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Room: Nikko, Ballroom II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
53.44 ETHNOGRAPHY, Fri 11:30 am 110.48 UNPACKING THE LOGIC OF Sun 8:00 am
INTERPRETATION, AND THE PROCESS TRACING
STUDY OF IDENTITY POLITICS Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
24.59 VARIETIES OF DESCRIPTION IN
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Thu 2:00 pm
THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
62.41 EVALUATING QUALITATIVE Fri 2:30 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
EVIDENCE Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee #1 (Concepts
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 and Methods)

42 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND

Division Panels
POLITICS HEALTH POLICY
Division Jami K. Taylor, University of Toledo Division Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark
Chair: Chair:

95.52 COMMERCIAL SEX, Sat 2:00 pm 110.49 HEALTH POLITICS: CROSS- Sun 8:00 am
COMPARATIVELY NATIONAL DIVERSITY IN
Room: Parc 55, Powell I FOCUS AND METHOD
100.42 DIVERSE PERSPECTIVES ON Sat 4:15 pm Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
LGBT RIGHTS AND POLICY 24.60 POLITICAL DIMENSIONS OF Thu 2:00 pm
Room: Parc 55, Powell I DISABILITY AND MENTAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL HEALTH
SCIENCE Room: Parc 55, Balboa
53.45 LGBT POLICY AND POLITICS- Fri 11:30 am 85.43 POSTER SESSION VI: POSTER Sat 8:00 am
COMPARATIVE AND SESSION: HEALTH POLITICS &
INTERNATIONAL HEALTH POLICY
PERSPECTIVES Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender 47.46 THE POLITICS OF HEALTH Fri 9:30 am
Caucus CARE REFORM
66.2 MARRIAGE EQUALITY IN THE Fri 4:30 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
US: HOW DID WE GET HERE? 68.41 THE POLITICS OF HEALTH Fri 4:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 KNOWLEDGE
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel Room: Parc 55, Sutro
113.5 MARRIAGE, MORALS, AND Sun 10:15 am 95.53 THE POLITICS OF OBAMACARE Sat 2:00 pm
MARKETS Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS
Division David I. Lublin, American University
95.10 POSTER SESSION VIII: POSTER Sat 2:00 pm Chair:
SESSION: SEXUALITY AND
POLITICS 53.46 CANADIAN LOCAL, Fri 11:30 am
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom PROVINCIAL AND FEDERAL
ELECTIONS
62.42 PUBLIC OPINION, POLITICAL Fri 2:30 pm Room: Parc 55, Mason
PARTICIPATION AND LGBT
RIGHTS 47.47 CANADIAN PUBLIC POLICY Fri 9:30 am
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Room: Parc 55, Davidson
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender 95.54 FRANCOPHONE MINORITIES IN Sat 2:00 pm
Caucus
MULTILINGUAL COUNTRIES
85.8 RACE, GENDER, SEXUALITY, Sat 8:00 am Room: Parc 55, Davidson
AND SEXUAL AND DOMESTIC
43.2 POSTER SESSION III: POSTER Fri 8:00 am
VIOLENCE IN THE NBA AND
SESSION: CANADIAN POLITICS
NFL
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
Division Brandon J. Kinne, University of California, Davis
77.7 RECEPTION FOR LGBT Fri 7:30 pm Chair:
COMMITTEE, LGBT CAUCUS,
AND SEXUALITY & POLITICS 11.27 ALLIANCE POLITICS Thu 8:00 am
SECTION Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Room: Nikko, Carmel II Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and SECURITY
Receptions 95.55 CONTESTED ACCOUNTABILITY Sat 2:00 pm
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
Caucus IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
16.3 SEXUAL MINORITIES-POLICY- Thu 10:15 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
MAKING AND POLITICAL POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
REPRESENTATION 41.13 NETWORK MODELS Fri 7:30 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2 Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 43


100.43 NETWORKED INTERNATIONAL Sat 4:15 pm 24.62 EXPERIMENTAL TESTS OF Thu 2:00 pm
POLITICS: METHODOLOGICAL FORMAL MODELS
CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS Room: Parc 55, Stockton
Room: Parc 55, Mission I Co-sponsored by DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL THEORY
METHODOLOGY 53.47 EXPERIMENTS IN POLITICAL Fri 11:30 am
18.58 POLITICAL NETWORKS IN Thu 10:15 am ECONOMY
PUBLIC POLICY Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Room: Parc 55, Lombard Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY 62.43 EXPERIMENTS IN VIOLENCE Fri 2:30 pm
43.3 POSTER SESSION III: POSTER Fri 8:00 am AND CONFLICT
SESSION: POLITICAL Room: Parc 55, Sutro
NETWORKS 85.63 EXPERIMENTS ON Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom CAMPAIGNS & ELECTIONS
11.34 REFUGEE AND CONFLICT Thu 8:00 am Room: Parc 55, Powell II
DYNAMICS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
VOTING BEHAVIOR
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES 47.48 FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON Fri 9:30 am
24.61 ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE Thu 2:00 pm ELITES
KNOW ABOUT POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
NETWORKS? WHAT CAN WE 47.11 FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON Fri 9:30 am
KNOW? LOCAL GOVERNANCE
Room: Parc 55, Lombard Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
85.55 SOCIAL CONTEXT, POLITICAL Sat 8:00 am
BEHAVIOR AND PUBLIC 95.56 INFORMED CONSENT IN FIELD Sat 2:00 pm
OPINION EXPERIMENTS
Room: Parc 55, Market Street Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
100.44 METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN Sat 4:15 pm
90.45 SOCIAL NETWORK Sat 10:15 am EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
APPROACHES TO VIOLENCE Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
AND COERCION Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
Room: Nikko, Carmel I METHODOLOGY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES 58.8 POSTER SESSION V: POSTERS Fri 2:00 pm
18.7 WHAT DO WE LEARN FROM Thu 10:15 am ON EXPERIMENTAL
DELIBERATIVE MINI-PUBLICS? APPROACHES TO POLITICS
Room: Parc 55, Powell II Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY 11.58 SHOULD THERE BE A Thu 8:00 am
REGISTRY FOR POLITICAL
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL SCIENCE RESEARCH?
RESEARCH Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
Division Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania METHODS
Chair:

88.1 DIVERSITY, THREATS, AND Sat 10:15 am DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
EXCLUSION: EXPERIMENTAL CITIZENSHIP
INVESTIGATIONS Division Elizabeth F. Cohen, Syracuse University
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2 Chair: Daniel Tichenor
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
68.42 "BRIDGES AND CUL DE SACS: Fri 4:30 pm
51.1 ETHICS OF FIELD RESEARCH Fri 11:30 am NAVIGATING MIGRATION
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2 STUDIES ACROSS THE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL SUBFIELDS"
METHODOLOGY
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
18.59 EXPERIMENTAL APPROACHES Thu 10:15 am POLITICS
TO IPE 94.1 AFTER OBAMA: LEGACIES OF Sat 2:00 pm
Room: Parc 55, Mission I AMERICA'S FIRST MINORITY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY PRESIDENT
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
EXECUTIVE POLITICS

44 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND 113.36 COMPARATIVE & MULTILEVEL

Division Panels
Sun 10:15 am
POLITICS CITIZENSHIP 2: EFFECTS &
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
EVALUATION: PRACTICING
110.50 COMPARATIVE & MULTILEVEL Sun 8:00 am TRANSNATIONAL CITIZENSHIP:
CITIZENSHIP 1: MULTILEVEL & DUAL NATIONALITY AND
DIFFERENTIATED CITIZENSHIP COMPARATIVE & MULTILEVEL
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 CITIZENSHIP 2: EFFECTS &
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE EVALUATION
POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
18.60 DREAMERS, MOBILIZATION, Thu 10:15 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
AND THE POLITICS OF POLITICS
DEFERRED ACTION 28.8 ROUNDTABLE ON MARGARET Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I MOORE'S "A POLITICAL
53.6 DEMOCRACY'S INTERNAL AND Fri 11:30 am THEORY OF TERRITORY"
EXTERNAL BORDERS Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
THEORY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY 47.49 THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS Fri 9:30 am
24.63 DIASPORA AND DEMOCRACY Thu 2:00 pm OF VULNERABLE MIGRANTS
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
90.5 DIVERSIFYING ‘DIVERSITY’: Sat 10:15 am 41.10 THE POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY Fri 7:30 am
MIGRATION, ECONOMY, OF IMMIGRATION ATTITUDES
CULTURE AND HUMAN RIGHTS Room: Parc 55, Mission II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
PSYCHOLOGY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY 53.48 THE POLITICAL SOURCES OF Fri 11:30 am
85.64 DIVERSITY AND THE POLITICS Sat 8:00 am SOLIDARITY IN DIVERSE
OF IMMIGRANT SELECTION SOCIETIES
Room: Parc 55, Mason Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES

16.1 FIFTY YEARS AFTER THE VRA: Thu 10:15 am 95.57 THE POLITICS OF CITIZENSHIP Sat 2:00 pm
THE FUTURE OF VOTING AND AND MIGRATION IN EAST ASIA
REPRESENTATION IN THE US Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 108.1 THE POLITICS OF RACE AND Sun 8:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND CLASS INEQUALITIES IN THE
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel AMERICAS
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
28.51 LOCALITIES OF IMMIGRANT Thu 4:15 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
INCLUSION AND POLITICS
PARTICIPATION Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore 100.45 VULNERABLE MIGRANTS IN Sat 4:15 pm
90.46 MIGRATION AND MEMBERSHIP Sat 10:15 am THE AMERICAS
IN EUROPE Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Room: Nikko, Monterey I
DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN POLITICS
41.50 NORMATIVE POLITICS OF Fri 7:30 am
CITIZENSHIP AND MIGRATION CONFERENCE GROUP
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I Division Claire Leslie Adida, UCSD
Chair: Kenneth Menkhaus, Davidson College
62.44 POLITICS IN MOVEMENT: Fri 2:30 pm
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION 11.59 ETHNICITY AND THE POLITICS Thu 8:00 am
AND POLITICAL CHANGE OF RESOURCE ALLOCATION IN
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 AFRICA
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE Room: Parc 55, Lombard
POLITICS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
89.4 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER Sat 10:15 am 28.52 EXPLAINING PARTY-BUILDING Thu 4:15 pm
SESSION: MIGRATION AND STRATEGIES IN SUB-SAHARAN
CITIZENSHIP DIVISION AFRICA
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Room: Parc 55, Lombard
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 45


53.49 PARTY MOBILIZATION AND Fri 11:30 am 24.13 DEBATING STRUCTURAL Thu 2:00 pm
ELECTION CAMPAIGNS IN THEORIES OF INJUSTICE,
AFRICA DOMINATION, AND
Room: Parc 55, Balboa OPPRESSION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
DEMOCRATIZATION Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY
47.50 POLITICAL DYNAMICS OF Fri 9:30 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
LOCAL GOVERNANCE IN THEORY
AFRICA AND BEYOND
Room: Parc 55, Powell II 100.47 INEQUALITY, PUBLIC OPINON, Sat 4:15 pm
AND POLICY
89.5 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER Sat 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
SESSION: AFRICAN POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom 89.9 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER Sat 10:15 am
SESSION: CLASS & INEQUALITY
27.2 RETHINKING RELIGION, Thu 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
DEMOCRACY, AND
DEVELOPMENT IN SUB- 11.61 VOICES OF THE UNHEAVENLY Thu 8:00 am
SAHARAN AFRICA CHORUS: INEQALITIES IN
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2 ORGANIZED INFLUENCE
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel Room: Parc 55, Hearst
90.47 THE POLITICS OF URBAN Sat 10:15 am
TRANSFORMATION IN AFRICA
Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
100.46 VIOLENCE AND PATRONAGE IN Sat 4:15 pm
AFRICAN DEMOCRACIES
Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION
98.3 WOMEN’S ENGAGEMENT IN Sat 4:15 pm
AFRICAN POLITICS:
OPPORTUNITIES AND
CONSTRAINTS
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel

DIVISION 54: POLITICAL


EPISTEMOLOGY
Division Paul M. D. Gunn, Goldsmiths, University of London
Chair: Jacob Roundtree

90.48 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Sat 10:15 am


"HOW PROPAGANDA WORKS"
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
11.60 EPISTEMIC DEMOCRACY AND Thu 8:00 am
ITS CRITICS
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
47.51 IDEATIONAL TURNS IN THE Fri 9:30 am
FOUR SUBDISCIPLINES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23

DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY


Division Nicholas Carnes, Duke University
Chair:

47.52 BUSINESS POWER IN Fri 9:30 am


AMERICAN POLITICS: NEW
EVIDENCE, MECHANISMS, AND
METHODS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24

46 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


RELATED GROUP PANELS

AGING POLICY AND POLITICS GROUP ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF


19.1 FEDERALISM AND AGING Thu 10:15 am NATIONALITIES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 18.1 ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND Thu 10:15 am
IDENTITY POLITICS IN POST-
AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE COMMUNIST STATES
Room: Parc 55, Hearst
AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST
25.1 LEGACIES OF COLONIAL Thu 2:00 pm COUNTRIES
AMERICA: DIVISIONS AND
ACCORD AT THE FOUNDING 101.1 NATION-BUILDING AND STATE- Sat 4:15 pm
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III BUILDING: UNDERSTANDING
THE DIVERSITIES OF IDENTITY,
19.2 ROUNDTABLE: THE UNITED Thu 10:15 am APPROACH, AND OUTCOME
STATES AND THE UNITED

Related Group Panels


Room: Parc 55, Stockton
NATIONS AT 70
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III
ASSOCIATION FRANÇAISE DE SCIENCE
42.1 THE CIVIC DIMENSIONS OF Fri 7:30 am POLITIQUE
AMERICAN
91.10 MAURICE DUVERGER AND Sat 10:15 am
CONSTITUTIONALISM: AUTHOR
SEMI-PRESIDENTIALISM
MEETS AUTHOR ROUNDTABLE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III Co-sponsored by French Politics Group
48.1 THE PLACE OF LITERATURE IN Fri 9:30 am
AMERICAN POLITICAL ASSOCIATION OF CHINESE POLITICAL
THOUGHT ROUNDTABLE STUDIES
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III 91.2 VARIETIES OF POLITICAL Sat 10:15 am
111.1 THE STATE OF THE STUDY OF Sun 8:00 am PARTICIPATION IN
AFRICAN-AMERICAN CONTEMPORARY CHINA
POLITICAL THOUGHT Room: Parc 55, Powell II
ROUNDTABLE
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III ASSOCIATION OF KOREAN POLITICAL
STUDIES
AMERICAN PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY INSTITUTE 91.3 CONFLICTS OF KOREA Sat 10:15 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR POLITICAL AND
LEGAL PHILOSOPHY BRAZILIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE
ASSOCIATION
ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS 91.4 THE NEW CHALLENGES OF Sat 10:15 am
114.1 ASIAN AMERICAN Sun 10:15 am DEMOCRACY IN BRAZIL
MOBILIZATION AND Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
MARGINALIZATION:
EXPLORING THE CONTEXT BRITISH POLITICS GROUP
AND THE CONSTITUENTS
29.1 PERSPECTIVES ON THE 2015 UK Thu 4:15 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
GENERAL ELECTION
ASSOCIATION FOR ISRAEL STUDIES
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero

91.1 DIVERSITIES RECONSIDERED: Sat 10:15 am CAMPAIGN FINANCE RESEARCH GROUP


POLITICS, AND POLITICAL
12.1 POLITICAL PARTIES AND Thu 8:00 am
SCIENCE, IN THE 21ST
INTEREST GROUPS AFTER
CENTURY - THE ISRAELI CASE
CITIZENS UNITED
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Room: Nikko, Monterey I
ASSOCIATION FOR POLITICS AND THE LIFE
CATO INSTITUTE
SCIENCES 42.2 WHY ISN’T THERE MORE Fri 7:30 am
25.2 BIOPOLICY Thu 2:00 pm SCHOLARLY EVALUATION OF
Room: Parc 55, Davidson U.S. WARS?
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 47


CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF THE 29.3 ROUNDTABLE ON THE Thu 4:15 pm
CONSTITUTION PROSPECTS FOR THE
CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT
54.1 TAKINGS AND THE AMERICAN Fri 11:30 am Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
REGIME: REEXAMINING KELO
V. NEW LONDON 86.1 ROUNDTABLE ON THE WORK Sat 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Imperial B AND LEGACY OF HARRY V.
JAFFA
CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
110.34 AUTHORITY MIGRATION IN Sun 8:00 am 25.3 ROUNDTABLE ON THE WORK Thu 2:00 pm
FEDERAL SYSTEMS AND LEGACY OF WALTER
Room: Parc 55, Mason BERNS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
42.3 ROUNDTABLE: NATURAL Fri 7:30 am
29.2 FEDERALISM’S DIVERSE Thu 4:15 pm RIGHTS AND THE PERMISSIVE
FORMS NATURAL LAW
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6

CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE 48.2 ROUNDTABLE: RECENT TERM Fri 9:30 am


OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT
12.2 CHRISTIAN PERSPECTIVES ON Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
IMMIGRATION POLICY
Room: Nikko, Ballroom II 54.2 ROUNDTABLE: RECENT WORKS Fri 11:30 am
ON LEO STRAUSS
THE CHURCHILL CENTRE Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
101.2 “WHAT ABOUT THE Sat 4:15 pm 63.1 WAR, JUSTICE, AND PEACE IN Fri 2:30 pm
DARDANELLES?” A HUNDRED AMERICAN POLITICAL
YEAR RETROSPECTIVE ON THOUGHT
CHURCHILL AT THE Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
ADMIRALTY IN 1915
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I COMMITTEE FOR ANALYSIS OF MILITARY
OPERATIONS AND STRATEGY
CICERONIAN SOCIETY 96.2 DIVERSITY IN SECURITY: Sat 2:00 pm
114.2 ARISTOCRATIC APOLOGETICS Sun 10:15 am PROFESSORS AND
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room PRACTITIONERS IN
UNCONVENTIONAL DISCOURSE
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF Room: Parc 55, Powell II
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY COMMITTEE FOR POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY
114.3 AMERICAN INSTITUTIONS Sun 10:15 am 101.4 HOW PARTY ORGANIZATIONS Sat 4:15 pm
FROM A CONSTITUTIONAL SHAPE DEMOCRATIC
PERSPECTIVE OUTCOMES
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
91.5 COMPASSION, CRUELTY, AND Sat 10:15 am
COMMITTEE ON THE POLITICAL ECONOMY
THE VIRTUES OF THE
ENLIGHTENMENT OF THE GOOD SOCIETY
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
COMMITTEE ON VIABLE
96.1 MEDIEVAL JEWISH POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY AND THE
Sat 2:00 pm
CONSTITUTIONALISM
QUESTION OF ROOTEDNESS
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
COMMUNITARIAN NETWORK
111.2 REPUBLICANISM, MORALITY, Sun 8:00 am COMPARATIVE URBAN POLITICS
AND THE COMMON GOOD IN 19.3 URBAN PROTESTS: THE Thu 10:15 am
MODERN POLITICAL POLITICS OF SERVICE
PHILOSOPHY PROVISION IN THE SOUTH
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
101.3 ROUNDTABLE ON THE JAFFA- Sat 4:15 pm
BERNS DEBATE COMPLEXITY AND PUBLIC POLICY GROUP
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 42.4 ROUNDTABLE ON COMPLEXITY Fri 7:30 am
IN POLICY: THE MISSING LINK
Room: Nikko, Monterey I

48 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


CONFERENCE GROUP ON ITALIAN POLITICS 42.5 CIVILIZATION IN EXTREMIS: Fri 7:30 am
AND SOCIETY FROM COLLAPSE TO A NEW
LEAP IN BEING
63.2 INSTITUTIONAL AND PARTY Fri 2:30 pm Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
CHANGE IN ITALY IN A
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE 48.3 GEOPOLITICS AND PRUDENCE Fri 9:30 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
54.3 PHILOSOPHICAL Fri 11:30 am
CONFERENCE GROUP ON JURISPRUDENCE ANTHROPOLOGY AND
AND PUBLIC LAW AUTHENTICITY
91.6 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS Sat 10:15 am Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
DENNIS PATTERSON'S MINDS, 91.9 RE-ENCOUNTERING HOMER: Sat 10:15 am
BRAINS, AND LAW : THE POETRY, TRAGEDY, AND
CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
OF LAW AND NEUROSCIENCE . Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
86.2 ROUNDTABLE ON VOEGELIN’S
Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Sat 8:00 am
LATE MEDITATIONS AND

Related Group Panels


CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES ESSAYS
63.3 TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS, Fri 2:30 pm Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
VOTING, AND MASS OPINION
Room: Hilton, Imperial A 111.4 THE PROBLEM OF MULTIPLE Sun 8:00 am
MODERNITIES
69.1 TAIWAN'S EXTERNAL POLICIES Fri 4:30 pm Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
AND CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 114.4 THE SPIRIT AND REALITY OF Sun 10:15 am
POLITICS
CONFERENCE GROUP ON THE MIDDLE EAST Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
53.40 ISRAEL AND PALESTINE: Fri 11:30 am
EUROPEAN CONSORTIUM FOR POLITICAL
ALTERNATIVE PERSPECTIVES
ON STATEHOOD RESEARCH
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 28.31 LONDON CALLING OR THE Thu 4:15 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE FINAL COUNTDOWN? JUDICIAL
POLITICS BEHAVIOR ON EUROPEAN
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY COURTS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
91.7 YOUTH POLITICS IN THE Sat 10:15 am
96.3 RESPONSES TO POLITICAL
CONTEMPORARY ARAB WORLD
Sat 2:00 pm
CORRUPTION: THE ANTI-
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
CORRUPTION RECORD
CRITICAL POLICY STUDIES Room: Parc 55, Sutro

91.8 TAKING STOCK OF NARRATIVE Sat 10:15 am FEDERALIST SOCIETY FOR LAW AND
POLICY ANALYSIS
Room: Parc 55, Davidson
PUBLIC POLICY STUDIES
42.6 REALISM, FORMALISM AND Fri 7:30 am
DISASTERS AND CRISES EMPIRICAL STUDIES OF
JUDICIAL DECISIONMAKING
111.3 FRONTIERS IN DISASTER Sun 8:00 am
ROUNDTABLE
RESEARCH
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1

ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY FRENCH POLITICS GROUP


100.15 COALITION GOVERNMENTS
19.4 "WHEREFROM DOES HISTORY
Sat 4:15 pm
Thu 10:15 am
AND LEGISLATIVE
EMERGE?"
BARGAINING
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
25.4 ARISTOCRATIC SOULS IN Thu 2:00 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIC TIMES POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
29.4 ART, POLITICS AND Thu 4:15 pm 91.10 MAURICE DUVERGER AND Sat 10:15 am
LITERATURE SEMI-PRESIDENTIALISM
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Co-sponsored by Association Française de Science Politique

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 49


GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICAL INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES AND
SCIENTISTS METHODS
69.2 CATCHING TIGERS AND FLIES: Fri 4:30 pm 18.57 AUTHOR MEETS READERS: Thu 10:15 am
XI JINPING AND THE RULE OF FREDERIC SCHAFFER'S
LAW IN CHINA "ELUCIDATING SOCIAL
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6 SCIENCE CONCEPTS"
101.5 CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY Sat 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
TODAY: CHANGES AND METHODS
CONTINUITIES
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 28.50 CHALLENGES OF FIELD AND Thu 4:15 pm
ETHNOGRAPHIC RESEARCH
GREEN POLITICS AND THEORY Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
110.45 HABITATION, HABITABILITY, Sun 8:00 am METHODS
JUSTICE 1 53.44 ETHNOGRAPHY, Fri 11:30 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
INTERPRETATION, AND THE
SCIENCE STUDY OF IDENTITY POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
114.5 HABITATION, HABITABILITY, Sun 10:15 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
JUSTICE 2 METHODS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
100.41 LINKING INTERPRETATION Sat 4:15 pm
SCIENCE AND CAUSAL INFERENCE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
69.3 NARRATIVES OF ECOLOGY: Fri 4:30 pm Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
ANIMAL, VEGETABLE, METHODS
MINERAL 47.45 ROUNDTABLE: SHAUL Fri 9:30 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 SHENHAV’S BOOK,
"ANALYZING SOCIAL
IBERIAN POLITICS NARRATIVES"
19.5 DIVERSITY AND THE Thu 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
ECONOMIC CRISIS. AN IBERIAN Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE METHODS
Room: Parc 55, Powell I 20.1 THE METHODS CAFE Thu 12:15 pm
Room: Nikko, Ballroom II
INDIGENOUS STUDIES NETWORK Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
METHODS
86.3 AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBAL Sat 8:00 am
NATIONS: SOVEREIGNTY, 101.7 VISUALIZING AND Sat 4:15 pm
POWER, AND INTERPRETING CHINA IN IR:
INTERGOVERNMENTAL NEW METHODOLOGICAL
RELATIONS DIVERSITIES
Room: Hilton, Imperial B Room: Parc 55, Mason

INSTITUTE FOR CONSTITUTIONAL STUDIES IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #1 (CONCEPTS


AND METHODS)
INTELLIGENCE STUDIES GROUP 24.58 CHALLENGES OF CONCEPT- Thu 2:00 pm
101.6 DIVERSITIES OF Sat 4:15 pm FORMATION AND
INTELLIGENCE INQUIRY IN MEASUREMENT
THE POST-SNOWDEN ERA Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
METHODS
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE 24.59 VARIETIES OF DESCRIPTION IN Thu 2:00 pm
STUDY OF GERMAN POLITICS THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
86.4 CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN Sat 8:00 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
GERMAN FOREIGN POLICY METHODS
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #12 (BIOLOGY
AND POLITICS)
54.4 CURRENT RESEARCH IN Fri 11:30 am
BIOLOGY AND POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21

50 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #36 (POWER) 63.5 ROUNDTABLE ON THE VOTING Fri 2:30 pm
114.6 POWER IN 21ST CENTURY Sun 10:15 am RIGHTS ACT AT 50
WORLD POLITICS Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Room: Hilton, Imperial A
LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, AND
JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP TRANSGENDER CAUCUS
19.6 GENDER IN CONTEMPORARY Thu 10:15 am 53.45 LGBT POLICY AND POLITICS- Fri 11:30 am
JAPANESE POLITICS COMPARATIVE AND
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 INTERNATIONAL
PERSPECTIVES
18.21 USING WITHIN-COUNTRY Thu 10:15 am
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
INSTITUTIONAL DIVERSITY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
FOR CAUSAL IDENTIFICATION POLITICS
IN JAPAN
69.4 LGBTQ POLITICS AND Fri 4:30 pm
POLITICAL SCIENCE: A
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES CRITICAL ASSESSMENT
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ROUNDTABLE

Related Group Panels


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
62.42 PUBLIC OPINION, POLITICAL
LABOR PROJECT Fri 2:30 pm
PARTICIPATION AND LGBT
101.8 LABOR AND THE SOUTH IN Sat 4:15 pm RIGHTS
AMERICAN POLITICS Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Room: Hilton, Imperial A Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL POLITICS
SCIENCE
77.7 RECEPTION FOR LGBT Fri 7:30 pm
85.58 WORK, WAGES & HEALTH: Sat 8:00 am COMMITTEE, LGBT CAUCUS,
WHAT'S THE STATE GOT TO DO AND SEXUALITY & POLITICS
WITH IT? SECTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and
SCIENCE Receptions
Co-sponsored by Poverty, Inequality, and Public Policy Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
Caucus POLITICS

LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION MCCONNELL CENTER FOR POLITICAL


63.4 DEVELOPMENT, DEMOCRACY, Fri 2:30 pm LEADERSHIP
AND SOCIOECONOMIC RIGHTS
29.5 STATESMANSHIP, CITIZENSHIP,
IN LATIN AMERICA
Thu 4:15 pm
AND CONSTITUTIONALISM:
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
ANCIENT AND MODERN
LATINO CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III

96.4 LATINAS IN AMERICAN Sat 2:00 pm NATIONAL HUMANITIES INSTITUTE


POLITICS: GETTING ELECTED
48.4 FROM THE ABSTRACT TO THE
AND EFFECTING POLICIES
Fri 9:30 am
CONCRETE: POLITICAL
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
PHILOSOPHY AND SOCIAL
107.2 RECEPTION FOR REP, LATINO Sat 7:30 pm ACTION
CAUCUS, LATINO COMMITTEE, Room: Parc 55, Sutro
AND ASIAN PACIFIC
COMMITTEE POLICY STUDIES ORGANIZATION
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and
Receptions
POLITICA: STUDY OF MEDIEVAL POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND THOUGHT
POLITICS 111.5 ROUNDTABLE ON THE Sun 8:00 am
MEANING AND LEGACY OF
LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDY THE MAGNA CARTA
GROUP Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
91.11 POLITICAL PARTIES AND Sat 10:15 am
CAMPAIGN FINANCE IN THE POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP
POST-CITIZENS UNITED WORLD 12.3 FORECASTING THE 2015 UK Thu 8:00 am
Room: Hilton, Mason Room PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION
Room: Hilton, Imperial A

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 51


POLITICAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION RUSSIAN POLITICS GROUP
77.4 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL Fri 7:30 pm 24.55 AUTHORITARIAN LEGACIES Thu 2:00 pm
THEORY RECEPTION AND CHALLENGES TO POST-
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin Foyer AUTHORITARIAN
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and DEMOCRACIES
Receptions Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
86.5 SHALE POLITICS AND POLICY Sat 8:00 am Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION
IN COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVE: UK, US, EUROPE 68.1 NEW DIRECTIONS IN Fri 4:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 RESEARCH ON STATES,
MARKETS, AND INSTITUTIONS
POLITICAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION OF IN EURASIA
IRELAND (PSAI) Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
69.5 IRELAND: WHERE ARE WE Fri 4:30 pm POLITICS
NOW? Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
Room: Hilton, Imperial B COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST
COUNTRIES
POVERTY, INEQUALITY, AND PUBLIC POLICY 95.1 SOCIAL POLICY IN NON- Sat 2:00 pm
CAUCUS DEMOCRACIES: DYNAMICS OF
85.58 WORK, WAGES & HEALTH: Sat 8:00 am SOCIAL POLICY DEBATES IN
WHAT'S THE STATE GOT TO DO RUSSIA
WITH IT? Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL COUNTRIES
SCIENCE
Co-sponsored by Labor Project 111.6 U.S.-RUSSIAN RELATIONS: IS Sun 8:00 am
THERE A WAY OUT OF THE
PRACTICING POLITICS DEAD-END?
101.9 POLITICAL SCIENTISTS AS Sat 4:15 pm Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
POLITICAL ACTORS: THE CASE SECURITY
OF SCHOOL BOARDS
Room: Hilton, Imperial B SLOVENIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE
PROJECT ON THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION ASSOCIATION
101.10 THE POLITICS OF CITIZENSHIP
63.6 LIBERALISM, ANTIQUITY, AND
Sat 4:15 pm
Fri 2:30 pm
EDUCATION IN POST-
THE AMERICAN FOUNDING
COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Room: Parc 55, Sutro
PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL OF FEDERALISM
SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT
68.25 FEDERALISM, POLICY, AND Fri 4:30 pm
101.11 HUMANITY AND DIVINITY IN
PARTISANSHIP
Sat 4:15 pm
ANCIENT POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
25.5 THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION Thu 2:00 pm SOCIETY FOR ROMANIAN STUDIES
AND AMERICAN FEDERALISM 114.7 SOCIETY FOR ROMANIAN Sun 10:15 am
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I STUDIES
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND Room: Hilton, Imperial B
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
SOCIETY OF CATHOLIC SOCIAL SCIENTISTS
RUSSIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION 42.7 REFLECTIONS ON THE Fri 7:30 am
29.6 POLITICAL SCIENCE IN RUSSIA: Thu 4:15 pm POLITICAL THOUGHT OF FR.
REFLECTIONS ON 60 YEARS OF JAMES V. SCHALL: REASON,
DEVELOPMENT REVELATION AND POLITICS
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I ROUNDTABLE
Room: Hilton, Imperial A

52 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS 82.1 DIVISION CHAIRS - PROGRAM Sat 7:00 am
91.12 DEMOCRACY & SECURITY IN Sat 10:15 am COMMITTEE MEETING: 2016
SOUTHEAST ASIA: VARIED APSA DIVISION CHAIRS -
PERSPECTIVES PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Room: Parc 55, Sutro MEETING
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlour 8
18.52 TAKING IT TO THE STREETS: Thu 10:15 am
SOCIAL RESISTANCE & STATE 67.1 20TH ANNIVERSARY PLENARY: Fri 4:30 pm
RESPONSES IN SOUTHEAST EVALUATING THE REP
ASIA SECTION’S IMPACT ON
Room: Nikko, Carmel II POLITICAL SCIENCE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
POLITICS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL POLITICS
SCIENCE 50.1 APSA ALL-MEMBER MEETING Fri 11:00 am
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
8.1 APSA AWARDS CEREMONY Wed 6:30 pm
WALTER BAGEHOT RESEARCH COUNCIL ON

Related Group Panels


Room: Hilton, Imperial B
NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY 1.1 APSA COUNCIL MEETING Wed 8:00 am
96.5 IMMIGRATION: LEGAL, Sat 2:00 pm Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
POLITICAL AND MORAL 44.1 APSA ETHICS COMMITTEE Fri 8:30 am
CONSIDERATIONS IN THE BUSINESS MEETING
UNITED STATES ROUNDTABLE Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room
Room: Hilton, Imperial B
44.2 APSA INTERNATIONAL Fri 8:30 am
WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE COMMITTEEE BUSINESS
MEETING
37.4 HONORING WOMEN OF COLOR Thu 7:30 pm
RECEPTION: WOMEN & POL.
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
SECTION, WOMEN’S CAUCUS & 30.1 APSA MENA/POMEPS Thu 6:00 pm
COMM. RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D Room: Offsite, Redford (673 Geary Street)
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and
Receptions 93.3 ETHICS ROUNDTABLE Sat 12:30 pm
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS FOLLOW-UP: APSA MEMBER
DISCUSSION: REVISING ETHICS
29.7 LATINAS IN AMERICAN Thu 4:15 pm
GUIDELINES FOR HUMAN
POLITICS: BRIDGING THE GAP
SUBJECTS RESEARCH
BETWEEN
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
INTERSECTIONALITY AND
ELECTABILITY 37.1 APSA MENTORING Thu 7:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 NETWORKING RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
77.12 WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION Fri 7:30 pm
RECEPTION: WOMEN & 38.1 APSA OPENING RECEPTION Thu 7:30 pm
POLITICS, WOMEN’S CAUCUS & Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
COMMITTEE 13.1 APSA RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER Thu 8:30 am
Room: Nikko, Ballroom II INSTITUTE (RBSI)
Co-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings and
Receptions
ORIENTATION MEETING
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
99.1 APSA-IPSA ROUNDTABLE: Sat 4:15 pm
APSA PANELS AND ALL MEETINGS PERSPECTIVES ON
AND RECEPTIONS INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH &
31.1 111TH APSA ANNUAL MEETING Thu 6:15 pm METHODS WORKSHOPS
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
AMERICAN POLITICS, AND 92.1 APSR EDITORIAL BOARD Sat 12:00 pm
POLITICAL SCIENCE, IN AN MEETING
ERA OF GROWING RACIAL Room: Hilton, Vista
DIVERSITY AND ECONOMIC
21.1 AD HOC COMMITTEE ON Thu 12:30 pm
DISPARITY
GOVERNANCE REFORM OPEN
FORUM
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 53


32.1 AFRICAN POLITICS SECTION Thu 6:30 pm 77.1 COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS Fri 7:30 pm
BUSINESS MEETING OF BLACKS AND NCOBPS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 RECEPTION
102.1 ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN Sat 6:30 pm Room: Nikko, Monterey II
CAUCUS (APAC) BUSINESS 70.2 COMPARATIVE Fri 6:30 pm
MEETING DEMOCRATIZATION SECTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 BUSINESS MEETING
32.2 ASSOCIATION OF KOREAN Thu 6:30 pm Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
POLITICAL STUDIES BUSINESS 77.2 COMPARATIVE Fri 7:30 pm
MEETING DEMOCRATIZATION SECTION
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 RECEPTION
84.1 BACKLASH AND MARRIAGE Sat 8:00 am Room: Nikko, Peninsula
EQUALITY LITIGATION 93.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICS Sat 12:30 pm
Room: Nikko, Carmel I JOURNAL BUSINESS MEETING
17.1 BEST PRACTICES TO ACHIEVE Thu 10:15 am Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room
AND SUSTAIN GENDER 102.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICS Sat 6:30 pm
EQUALITY: ARE WE THERE SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
YET? Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A 106.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS Sat 7:30 pm
87.1 BUSINESS MEETING FOR CIVIC Sat 8:30 am SECTION RECEPTION
EDUCATION AND Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
ENGAGEMENT COMMITTEE 32.4 CONFERENCE GROUP ON Thu 6:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room ITALIAN POLITICS (CONGRIPS)
106.2 CUNY GRADUATE CENTER Sat 7:30 pm BUSINESS MEETING
POLITICAL SCIENCE PROGRAM Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room
RECEPTION 70.3 CONFERENCE GROUP ON Fri 6:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 TAIWAN STUDIES BUSINESS
15.1 CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY Thu 9:00 am MEETING
PRESS - AUTHOR INTERVIEWS Room: Parc 55, Mission I
PART 1 76.1 CONFERENCE GROUP ON Fri 7:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Green Room TAIWAN STUDIES RECEPTION
26.1 CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY Thu 2:30 pm Room: Parc 55, Mission II
PRESS - AUTHOR INTERVIEWS: 37.2 CONFERENCE FOR THE STUDY Thu 7:30 pm
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT
PRESS - AUTHOR INTERVIEWS RECEPTION
PART 2 Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room
77.3 CONFLICT PROCESSES Fri 7:30 pm
65.1 CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY Fri 3:00 pm SECTION & FOREIGN POLICY
PRESS - AUTHOR INTERVIEWS SECTION RECEPTION
PART 3 Room: Hilton, East Lounge
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
70.4 CONFLICT PROCESSES Fri 6:30 pm
32.3 CANADIAN POLITICS SECTION Thu 6:30 pm SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
BUSINESS MEETING Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
73.1 CORNELL UNIVERSITY Fri 7:00 pm
38.2 CANADIAN POLITICS SECTION Thu 7:30 pm DEPARTMENT OF
RECEPTION GOVERNMENT RECEPTION
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
70.1 CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL Fri 6:30 pm 59.1 DA-RT INITIATIVE MEETING Fri 2:30 pm
SCIENCE RELATED GROUP Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 4.1 DA-RT MEETING: DA-RT Wed 11:30 am
MEETING (INVITE ONLY)
93.1 CLASS AND INEQUALITY Sat 12:30 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 99.2 DSP NON-ACADEMIC JOBS Sat 4:15 pm
ROUNDTABLE
74.1 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Fri 7:00 pm Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4

54 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


56.1 DEPARTMENT CHAIRS' Fri 12:30 pm 32.6 FEDERALISM AND Thu 6:30 pm
LUNCHEON INTERGOVERNMENTAL
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III RELATIONS SECTION BUSINESS
38.3 DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL Thu 7:30 pm MEETING
SCIENCE, UNIVERSITY OF Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
TORONTO RECEPTION 37.3 FEDERALISM/ Thu 7:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room INTERGOVERNMENTAL
52.1 DIVERSITY AND ASIAN Fri 11:30 am RELATIONS SECTION
AMERICAN COMMUNITY RECEPTION
INVOLVEMENT: PAST, PRESENT Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
AND FUTURE 9.1 FIRST-TIME ATTENDEE Thu 7:00 am
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 BREAKFAST
67.2 DO BLACKS LIVES MATTER?: Fri 4:30 pm Room: Hilton, Imperial B
ANALYZING POLICE KILLINGS 70.6 FOREIGN POLICY SECTION Fri 6:30 pm
OF UNARMED BLACK CITIZENS BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D Room: Hilton, Sutter Room

Related Group Panels


73.2 DUKE UNIVERSITY Fri 7:00 pm 77.4 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL Fri 7:30 pm
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL THEORY RECEPTION
SCIENCE RECEPTION Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin Foyer
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 Co-sponsored by Political Studies Association

40.1 EITM - EMPIRICAL Fri 7:30 am 57.1 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL Fri 1:15 pm
IMPLICATIONS OF THEORY SECTION BUSINESS
THEORETICAL MODELS MEETING
BUSINESS MEETING Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 70.7 FRENCH POLITICS GROUP & Fri 6:30 pm
76.2 ELECTIONS & VOTING Fri 7:30 pm ASSOCIATION FRANCAISE DE
BEHAVIOR, PUBLIC OPINION, SCIENCE POLITIQUE RELATED
AND POLITICAL GROUP BUSINESS MEETING
COMMUNICATION SECTIONS' Room: Parc 55, Stockton
RECEPTION 61.1 FROM HURRICANE KATRINA Fri 2:30 pm
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II TO FERGUSON:
70.5 ELECTIONS AND VOTING Fri 6:30 pm ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE,
BEHAVIOR SECTION BUSINESS THE STATE, & VIOLENCE
MEETING Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero 70.8 GAUS LECTURE Fri 6:30 pm
46.1 EMERGING SCHOLARS IN Fri 9:30 am Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
LATINO POLITICS 77.5 GAUS RECEPTION Fri 7:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
102.3 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY Sat 6:30 pm 103.1 GRADUATE STUDENT HAPPY Sat 6:30 pm
RELATED GROUP BUSINESS HOUR
MEETING Room: Nikko, Ballroom II
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
70.9 GREEN POLITICS AND THEORY Fri 6:30 pm
106.3 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY Sat 7:30 pm RELATED GROUP BUSINESS
RELATED GROUP RECEPTION MEETING
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III Room: Parc 55, Mason
84.2 ETHICS COMMITTEE Sat 8:00 am 102.4 HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY Sat 6:30 pm
ROUNDTABLE SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
21.2 EUROPEAN POLITICS & Thu 12:30 pm 106.4 HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY Sat 7:30 pm
SOCIETY SECTION BUSINESS SECTION RECEPTION
MEETING Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
37.4 HONORING WOMEN OF COLOR Thu 7:30 pm
32.5 EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH Thu 6:30 pm RECEPTION: WOMEN & POL.
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING SECTION, WOMEN’S CAUCUS &
Room: Parc 55, Market Street COMM.
21.3 FEDERAL BUDGET REFORM Thu 12:30 pm Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
PROJECT
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 55


21.4 HUMAN RIGHTS SECTION Thu 12:30 pm 65.2 JULIA CHOUCAIR VIZOSO Fri 3:00 pm
BUSINESS MEETING MEETING (INVITATION ONLY):
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room JULIA CHOUCAIR VIZOSO
105.1 HUMAN RIGHTS SECTION Sat 7:00 pm COMMITTEE MEETING
RECEPTION (INVITATION ONLY)
Room: Hilton, Powell Room Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room

57.2 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY Fri 1:15 pm 57.5 LGBT CAUCUS BUSINESS Fri 1:15 pm
AND POLITICS SECTION MEETING
BUSINESS MEETING Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 70.12 LABOR PROJECT RELATED Fri 6:30 pm
87.2 INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION Sat 8:30 am GROUP BUSINESS MEEETING
LEADERS BREAKFAST Room: Parc 55, Davidson
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room 70.13 LATINO/A CAUCUS IN Fri 6:30 pm
37.5 INTERNATIONAL ATTENDEES Thu 7:30 pm POLITICAL SCIENCE RELATED
RECEPTION GROUP BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Vista Room: Parc 55, Fillmore

57.3 INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND Fri 1:15 pm 70.14 LAW AND COURTS SECTION Fri 6:30 pm
POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS BUSINESS MEETING
MEETING Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 33.1 LAW AND COURTS SECTION Thu 6:30 pm
37.6 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Thu 7:30 pm LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT
AND ARMS CONTROL SECTION AWARD AND SPECIAL PANEL
RECEPTION HONORING DONALD SONGER
Room: Hilton, Imperial A Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3

70.10 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Fri 6:30 pm 76.3 LAW AND COURTS SECTION Fri 7:30 pm
AND ARMS CONTROL SECTION RECEPTION
BUSINESS MEETING Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 40.2 LEGISLATIVE STUDIES Fri 7:30 am
70.11 INTERPRETIVE Fri 6:30 pm QUARTERLY EDITORIAL
METHODOLOGIES AND BOARD BREAKFAST MEETING
METHODS RELATED GROUP Room: Hilton, Vista
BUSINESS MEETING 73.3 LEGISLATIVE STUDIES Fri 7:00 pm
Room: Parc 55, Hearst SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
81.1 INVITE ONLY: PRESIDENT'S Fri 9:00 pm Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
RECEPTION 79.1 LEGISLATIVE STUDIES Fri 8:00 pm
Room: Hilton, Vista SECTION RECEPTION
109.1 ITALIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE Sun 8:00 am Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
REVIEW (IPSR) EDITORIAL 107.1 MIT DEPARTMENT OF Sat 7:30 pm
BOARD MEETING POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Hilton, Green Room RECEPTION
71.1 JACK MILLER CENTER Fri 6:30 pm Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
RECEPTION 72.1 MPSA 2016 PROGRAM Fri 6:30 pm
Room: Offsite, Sir Francis Drake Franciscan Ballroom COMMITTEE MEETING &
32.7 JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES Thu 6:30 pm RECEPTION
GROUP BUSINESS MEETING Room: Parc 55, Market Street
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 84.3 MEET THE EDITORS (APSA) Sat 8:00 am
82.2 JOURNAL EDITOR'S Sat 7:00 am Room: Nikko, Monterey II
BREAKFAST 70.15 MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP Fri 6:30 pm
Room: Parc 55, Stockton SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
57.4 JOURNAL OF CONFLICT Fri 1:15 pm Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
RESOLUTION BOARD MEETING 9.2 MINORITY STUDENT Thu 7:00 am
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room RECRUITMENT PROGRAM
93.4 JOURNAL OF POLITICAL Sat 12:30 pm (MSRP) MEETING
SCIENCE EDUCATION Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING 34.1 NCOBPS EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Thu 6:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Green Room MEETING
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room

56 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


61.2 NEH@50: HUMANITIES AND Fri 2:30 pm 112.1 POLICY STUDIES Sun 9:00 am
THE COMMON GOOD ORGANIZATION EDITORS
Room: Nikko, Monterey I BUSINESS MEETING
57.6 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE Fri 1:15 pm Room: Hilton, Vista
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING 70.16 POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Fri 6:30 pm
Room: Parc 55, Sutro SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
71.2 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE Fri 6:30 pm Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
LECTURE: BEHIND THE 70.17 POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION Fri 6:30 pm
KITCHEN DOOR, FEATURING BUSINESS MEETING
SARU JAYARAMAN, DIRECTOR Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
OF THE FOOD LABOR 57.7 POLITICAL EPISTEMOLOGY Fri 1:15 pm
RESEARCH CENTER, UC SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
BERKELEY Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Room: Hilton, Imperial A
73.4 POLITICAL EPISTEMOLOGY Fri 7:00 pm
21.5 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE Thu 12:30 pm SECTION RECEPTION
PUBLICATIONS EXECUTIVE

Related Group Panels


Room: Parc 55, Balboa
COMMITTEE BUSINESS
MEETING 21.7 POLITICAL FORECASTING Thu 12:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room GROUP BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
32.8 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE Thu 6:30 pm
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING 70.18 POLITICAL METHODOLOGY Fri 6:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
80.1 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE Fri 8:00 pm
SECTION RECEPTION 70.19 POLITICAL NETWORKS Fri 6:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Imperial B DIVISION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
77.6 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY WILF Fri 7:30 pm
FAMILY DEPARTMENT OF 76.4 POLITICAL NETWORKS Fri 7:30 pm
POLITICS RECEPTION SECTION RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
39.1 ORGANIZED SECTION CHAIRS Fri 7:00 am 93.5 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS Sat 12:30 pm
BREAKFAST AND PARTIES SECTION
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlour 8 BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
104.1 OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Sat 7:00 pm
RECEPTION 21.8 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS Thu 12:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D AND PARTIES SECTION
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
39.3 PS: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND Fri 7:00 am Room: Parc 55, Mission II
POLITICS EDITORIAL BOARD
MEETING BREAKFAST 70.20 POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY Fri 6:30 pm
Room: Parc 55, Sutro SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
21.6 PARTISAN GRIDLOCK IN Thu 12:30 pm
WASHINGTON: POLITICAL 57.8 POLITICAL RESEARCH Fri 1:15 pm
THEORY IS ONE THING, BUT QUARTERLY EDITORIAL
WHAT ARE THE POLITICAL BOARD LUNCHEON
PROS SAYING? Room: Parc 55, Lombard
Room: Hilton, Powell Room 70.21 POLITICAL SCIENCE Fri 6:30 pm
5.1 PARTY PERSONNEL STRATEGY Wed 12:30 pm EDUCATION BUSINESS
WORKSHOP MEETING
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room Room: Nikko, Carmel I
17.2 PERESTROIKA AND Thu 10:15 am 70.22 POLITICAL THOUGHT IN THE Fri 6:30 pm
PERSPECTIVES: U.S. POLITICAL ANTHROPOCENE, FEAURING
SCIENCE BETWEEN PAST AND DIPESH CHAKRABARTY:
FUTURE POLITICAL THOUGHT IN THE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 ANTHROPOCENE, FEATURING
DIPESH CHAKRABARTY
55.1 PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS Fri 12:00 pm Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
LUNCH 82.3 POLITICS & GENDER JOURNAL Sat 7:00 am
Room: Hilton, Vista EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Room: Hilton, Green Room

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 57


57.9 POLITICS & POLICY Fri 1:15 pm 57.12 RBSI WORKING GROUP Fri 1:15 pm
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING COMMITTEE MEETING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room
70.23 POLITICS AND HISTORY Fri 6:30 pm 106.5 RBSI/MFP ALUMNI Sat 7:30 pm
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING NETWORKING RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 Room: Nikko, Carmel I
76.5 POLITICS AND HISTORY Fri 7:30 pm 93.8 REP BUSINESS MEETING Sat 12:30 pm
SECTION RECEPTION Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 77.8 RECEPTION HONORING Fri 7:30 pm
32.9 POLITICS, LITERATURE AND Thu 6:30 pm TEACHING
FILM SECTION BUSINESS Room: Nikko, Golden Gate
MEETING 77.7 RECEPTION FOR LGBT Fri 7:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 COMMITTEE, LGBT CAUCUS,
39.2 POLITY BUSINESS MEETING Fri 7:00 am AND SEXUALITY & POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Green Room SECTION
89.10 POSTER SESSION VII: POSTER Sat 10:15 am Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
SESSION: RBSI SCHOLARS POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
Caucus
102.5 PRACTICING POLITICS Sat 6:30 pm
WORKING GROUP MEETING 107.2 RECEPTION FOR REP, LATINO Sat 7:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Green Room CAUCUS, LATINO COMMITTEE,
AND ASIAN PACIFIC
93.6 PRESIDENTS & EXECUTIVE Sat 12:30 pm
COMMITTEE
POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
MEETING Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 POLITICS
Co-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science
37.7 PRESIDENTS & EXECUTIVE Thu 7:30 pm
POLITICS SECTION RECEPTION 93.7 REFLECTIONS ON THE IMPACT Sat 12:30 pm
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero OF MARTHA DERTHICK ON
35.1 PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE Thu 7:00 pm POLITICAL SCIENCE
POLITICS SECTION STEERING Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND
COMMITTEE MEETING INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
Room: Parc 55, Davidson
57.13 RELATED GROUPS (ALL) Fri 1:15 pm
57.10 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Fri 1:15 pm MEETING
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
32.11 RELIGION AND POLITICS Thu 6:30 pm
21.9 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Thu 12:30 pm SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
SECTION EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Room: Nikko, Monterey I
MEETING
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room 37.9 RELIGION AND POLITICS Thu 7:30 pm
SECTION RECEPTION
57.11 PUBLIC POLICY SECTION Fri 1:15 pm Room: Nikko, Monterey II
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II 57.14 REPRESENTATION AND Fri 1:15 pm
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS SECTION
82.4 PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL OF Sat 7:00 am BUSINESS MEETING
FEDERALISM EDITORIAL Room: Hilton, Green Room
BOARD & ADVISORY COUNCIL
BREAKFAST MEETING 32.12 RESEARCH & POLITICS Thu 6:30 pm
Room: Parc 55, Mission II JOURNAL/SAGE ASSOCIATE
EDITORS MEETING
37.8 QUALITATIVE AND MULTI- Thu 7:30 pm Room: Hilton, Green Room
METHOD RESEARCH &
INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND 84.4 RESEARCH SUPPORT Sat 8:00 am
POLITICS SECTIONS' SYMPOSIUM
RECEPTION Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Room: Nikko, Carmel I 70.24 RUSSIAN POLITICS GROUP Fri 6:30 pm
32.10 QUALITATIVE AND MULTI- Thu 6:30 pm BUSINESS MEETING
METHOD RESEARCH SECTION Room: Parc 55, Lombard
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Nikko, Carmel II

58 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


36.1 RUTGERS UNIVERSITY Thu 7:00 pm 6.6 SHORT COURSE: POLITICS AT Wed 1:30 pm
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL APSA - NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE RECEPTION SCIENCE, ANTI-APARTHEID
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 MOVEMENTS, AND ISRAEL/
57.15 SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND Fri 1:15 pm PALESTINE
EVIRONMENTAL POLITICS Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING 2.3 SHORT COURSE: POLITICS, Wed 9:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 MARKETS, AND ORGANIZED
70.25 SEXUALITY AND POLITICS Fri 6:30 pm INTERESTS - NEW QUESTIONS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING ABOUT POWER, POLICY, AND
Room: Parc 55, Powell I INFLUENCE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
6.1 SHORT COURSE: BUILDING Wed 1:30 pm
INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARLY 6.7 SHORT COURSE: PROCESS Wed 1:30 pm
PARTNERSHIPS TRACING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Room: Hilton, Franciscan D

3.1 SHORT COURSE: COALITION 2.4 SHORT COURSE: PUBLIC Wed 9:00 am

Related Group Panels


Wed 9:00 am
BUILDING TO ADVANCE MANAGEMENT
DIVERSE LEADERSHIP AND Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
ADDRESS DISCRIMINATION IN 2.5 SHORT COURSE: RANKED Wed 9:00 am
POLITICAL SCIENCE CHOICE VOTING IN THE U.S.A.:
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 DEVELOPMENTS AND DEBATES
6.2 SHORT COURSE: COMPARATIVE Wed 1:30 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
APPROACHES TO THE CITY 7.1 SHORT COURSE: TEACHING Wed 1:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 HUMAN RIGHTS
6.3 SHORT COURSE: DEPARTMENT Wed 1:30 pm Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
LEADERSHIP 6.8 SHORT COURSE: THE Wed 1:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 METHODS STUDIO – DATA
6.4 SHORT COURSE: DESIGNING Wed 1:30 pm ACCESS AND RESEARCH
MULTI-METHOD RESEARCH TRANSPARENCY FROM AN
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C INTERPRETIVE-QUALITATIVE
PERSPECTIVE
2.1 SHORT COURSE: DESIGNING Wed 9:00 am Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
AND CONDUCTING FIELD
RESEARCH 6.9 SHORT COURSE: THE ROLE OF Wed 1:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C SCHOLAR-ACTIVISM: HOW
POLITICAL SCIENTISTS CAN
2.2 SHORT COURSE: DIVERSITY, Wed 9:00 am BOLSTER RESISTANCE
INCLUSION, ACCESS AND MOVEMENTS
EQUALITY: STRATEGIES FOR Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
INCORPORATING DIVERSE
APPROACHES AND THEMES 6.10 SHORT COURSE: THE STATE OF Wed 1:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 THE FIELD IN FEDERALISM/IGR
RESEARCH: APPROACHES TO
6.5 SHORT COURSE: PLAYING Wed 1:30 pm DESIGN, DATA, MEASUREMENT,
GAMES WITH ( THEORIES OF ) AND ANALYSIS
POLITICAL VIOLENCE Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
6.11 SHORT COURSE: Wed 1:30 pm
3.2 SHORT COURSE: Wed 9:00 am UNDERSTANDING COMPLEXITY
POLIINFORMATICS TEXT AS - RESEARCH APPLICATIONS
DATA WORKSHOP FOR POLICY & POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 SCIENCE
3.3 SHORT COURSE: POLITICAL Wed 9:00 am Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
PSYCHOLOGY 3.5 SHORT COURSE: WHAT Wed 9:00 am
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 WORKS? STRENGTHENING
3.4 SHORT COURSE: POLITICAL Wed 9:00 am ELECTORAL INTEGRITY
SCIENCE IN THE PUBLIC Room: Hilton, Imperial A
ARENA: COMMUNICATION 38.4 SITING AND ENGAGEMENT Thu 7:30 pm
STRATEGIES FOR SCHOLARS NETWORKING RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 59


93.9 SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS Sat 12:30 pm 107.3 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, Sat 7:30 pm
RELATED GROUP BUSINESS DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL
MEETING SCIENCE RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Room: Parc 55, Mission I
57.16 SOUTHWESTERN POLITICAL Fri 1:15 pm 57.17 THEORY & EVENT JOURNAL Fri 1:15 pm
SCIENCE ASSOCIATION BUSINESS MEETING
BUSINESS MEETING Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 107.4 UCLA POLITICAL SCIENCE Sat 7:30 pm
78.1 STANFORD POLITICAL SCIENCE Fri 7:30 pm DEPARTMENT RECEPTION
RECEPTION Room: Parc 55, Market Street
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6 77.11 UW-MADISON POLITICAL Fri 7:30 pm
75.1 STATE POLITICS AND POLICY Fri 7:00 pm SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS MEETING & RECEPTION
RECEPTION Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Room: Nikko, Monterey I 74.2 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, Fri 7:00 pm
22.1 STATUS COMMITTEE FOR Thu 2:00 pm BERKELEY RECEPTION
LATINOS IN THE PROFESSION Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room 76.6 UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA Fri 7:30 pm
67.3 STRATEGIES FOR BALANCING Fri 4:30 pm DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL
YOUR TEACHING AND SCIENCE RECEPTION
RESEARCH AGENDAS Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 38.6 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Thu 7:30 pm
93.10 SURVEY RESEARCH IN THE Sat 12:30 pm RECEPTION
DEVELOPING WORLD Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Room: Parc 55, Mission II 77.9 UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER Fri 7:30 pm
87.3 TASKFORCE ON Sat 8:30 am RECEPTION
TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
IN POLITICAL SCIENCE 70.26 URBAN POLITICS SECTION Fri 6:30 pm
(INVITATION ONLY) BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
89.11 TEACHING CIVIC Sat 10:15 am 77.10 URBAN POLITICS SECTION Fri 7:30 pm
ENGAGEMENT: FROM STUDENT RECEPTION
TO ACTIVE CITIZEN Room: Nikko, Bay View
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
21.10 W.W. NORTON FOCUS GROUP Thu 12:30 pm
13.2 TEACHING AND LEARNING Thu 8:30 am Room: Hilton, Vista
COMMITTEE BUSINESS
MEETING 21.11 WESTERN POLITICAL SCIENCE Thu 12:30 pm
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL MEETING
67.4 THE ART OF ELECTIONS Fri 4:30 pm Room: Hilton, Green Room
Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL 93.11 WHAT'S NEW IN POLICY Sat 12:30 pm
SCIENCE RESEARCH? CONTEMPORARY
38.5 THE CLAREMONT INSTITUTE Thu 7:30 pm APPROACHES ON PUBLIC
RECEPTION POLICY
Room: Hilton, Imperial B Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
46.2 THE PROMISES AND PITFALLS Fri 9:30 am 70.27 WOMEN AND POLITICS Fri 6:30 pm
OF DART: CRAFTING NEW RESEARCH SECTION BUSINESS
SUBMISSIONS GUIDELINES FOR MEETING
THE APSR Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Room: Nikko, Carmel I 77.12 WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION Fri 7:30 pm
73.5 THE REVIEW OF POLITICS AT Fri 7:00 pm RECEPTION: WOMEN &
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE POLITICS, WOMEN’S CAUCUS &
DAME RECEPTION COMMITTEE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Room: Nikko, Ballroom II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
36.2 THE TEXAS RECEPTION FOR Thu 7:00 pm Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science
AFFILIATED UNIVERSITIES
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22

60 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS


14.1 WOMEN OF COLOR IN Thu 9:00 am
POLITICAL SCIENCE FOCUS
GROUPS (INVITATION ONLY)
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room
82.5 WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR Sat 7:00 am
POLITICAL SCIENCE BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Hilton, Vista
70.28 WOMEN’S CAUCUS ON Fri 6:30 pm
POLITICAL SCIENCE BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
21.12 WORKING GROUP MEETING: Thu 12:30 pm
COALITION BUILDING TO
ADVANCE DIVERSE
LEADERSHIP AND ADDRESS

Related Group Panels


DISCRIMINATION IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
64.1 WORKING GROUP MEETING: Fri 2:30 pm
NSF/SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTE/
UPENN/UMD GRANT
Room: Hilton, Green Room
21.13 WORKING GROUP MEETING: Thu 12:30 pm
SOCIAL POLICY IN NON-
DEMOCRACIES
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
21.14 WORKING GROUP MEETING: Thu 12:30 pm
THE SCHOLARS STRATEGY
NETWORK WOMEN AND
REPRESENTATION
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
76.7 YALE UNIVERSITY POLITICAL Fri 7:30 pm
SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
97.1 YALE-STANFORD-BERKELEY Sat 2:30 pm
ADVISING AND MENTORING
COMMITTEE
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room

THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 61


MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS
BUSINESS MEETINGS:
Many groups hold meetings and receptions at the APSA Annual Meeting, and most are open to all members. Business meetings are general
member meetings that are open to all Association members unless the title clearly indicates that the meeting is for a specific group (e.g. editorial board).
APSA Organized Section: All attendees regardless of membership in a section are invited to attend section business meetings and to learn more
about the work of sections.
Related Group: Independent professional groups with persistent organizational structure and minimum membership can organize a business meeting.
APSA Committee Meetings: Generally working meetings of committees are considered closed to attendees. Attendees should first consult with a
committee chair about the possibility of attending.
RECEPTIONS:
All receptions are open to all APSA members unless the title clearly indicates otherwise (e.g. editorial board reception).

APSA MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS (ALPHA) NCOBPS Reception (Monterey II)


APSA Meetings and Receptions by Alpha Comparative Democratization Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
APSA All-Member Meeting (Continental Fri 11:00 am Meeting (Mendocino II)
Ballroom 4) Comparative Democratization Section Reception Fri 7:30 pm
APSA Awards Ceremony (Imperial B) Wed 6:30 pm (Peninsula)
APSA Council Meeting (Franciscan A) Wed 8:00 am Comparative Politics Journal Business Meeting Sat 12:30 pm
(Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room)
APSA Ethics Committee Business Meeting Fri 8:30 am
(Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room) Comparative Politics Section Business Meeting Sat 6:30 pm
(Ballroom I)
APSA International Committeee Business Fri 8:30 am
Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room) Comparative Politics Section Reception Sat 7:30 pm
(Ballroom III)
APSA MENA/POMEPS Reception (Redford Thu 6:00 pm
(673 Geary Street)) Conference Group on Italian Politics (Congrips) Thu 6:30 pm
Business Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff
APSA Mentoring Networking Reception (Union Thu 7:30 pm Room)
Square 17 & 18)
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Business Fri 6:30 pm
APSA Opening Reception (Continental Thu 7:30 pm Meeting (Mission I)
Ballroom 4)
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Reception Fri 7:30 pm
APSA Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) Thu 8:30 am (Mission II)
Orientation Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr.
Presidio Room) Conference for the Study of Political Thought Thu 7:30 pm
Reception (Embarcadero)

Meetings and Receptions


APSR Editorial Board Meeting (Vista) Sat 12:00 pm
Conflict Processes Section & Foreign Policy Fri 7:30 pm
African Politics Section Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm Section Reception (East Lounge)
(Golden Gate 2)
Conflict Processes Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm
Asian Pacific American Caucus (APAC) Sat 6:30 pm (Continental Parlor 3)
Business Meeting (Union Square 15)
Cornell University Department of Government Fri 7:00 pm
Association of Korean Political Studies Business Thu 6:30 pm Reception (Golden Gate 7)
Meeting (Golden Gate 1)
DA-RT Initiative Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Fri 2:30 pm
Business Meeting for Civic Education and Sat 8:30 am Seacliff Room)
Engagement Committee (Executive Conf. Ctr.
Marina Room) DA-RT Meeting (Union Square 5 & 6) Wed 11:30 am
CUNY Graduate Center Political Science Sat 7:30 pm Department Chairs' Luncheon (Cyril Magnin III) Fri 12:30 pm
Program Reception (Union Square 14) Department of Political Science, University of Thu 7:30 pm
Cambridge University Press - Author Interviews Thu 2:30 pm Toronto Reception (Taylor Room)
(Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room) Division Chairs - Program Committee Meeting Sat 7:00 am
Cambridge University Press - Author Interviews Thu 9:00 am (Continental Parlour 8)
Part 1 (Green Room) Duke University Department of Political Science Fri 7:00 pm
Cambridge University Press - Author Interviews Fri 3:00 pm Reception (Golden Gate 5)
Part 3 (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room) EITM - Empirical Implications of Theoretical Fri 7:30 am
Canadian Politics Section Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm Models Business Meeting (Union Square 1 & 2)
(Mendocino I) Elections & Voting Behavior, Public Opinion, Fri 7:30 pm
Canadian Politics Section Reception (Mendocino Thu 7:30 pm and Political Communication Sections'
II) Reception (Cyril Magnin II)
Christians in Political Science Related Group Fri 6:30 pm Elections and Voting Behavior Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
Business Meeting (Union Square 21) Meeting (Embarcadero)
Class and Inequality Section Business Meeting Sat 12:30 pm Eric Voegelin Society Related Group Business Sat 6:30 pm
(Union Square 15) Meeting (Cyril Magnin II)
Columbia University Department of Political Fri 7:00 pm Eric Voegelin Society Related Group Reception Sat 7:30 pm
Science Reception (Golden Gate 4) (Cyril Magnin III)
Committee on the Status of Blacks and Fri 7:30 pm Ethics Roundtable Follow-up (Union Square 14) Sat 12:30 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS 63


European Politics & Society Section Business Thu 12:30 pm LGBT Caucus Business Meeting (Balboa) Fri 1:15 pm
Meeting (Union Square 22) Labor Project Related Group Business Meeeting Fri 6:30 pm
Experimental Research Section Business Thu 6:30 pm (Davidson)
Meeting (Market Street) Latino/a Caucus in Political Science Related Fri 6:30 pm
Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations Thu 6:30 pm Group Business Meeting (Fillmore)
Section Business Meeting (Union Square 15) Law and Courts Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm
Federalism/Intergovernmental Relations Section Thu 7:30 pm (Ballroom III)
Reception (Union Square 16) Law and Courts Section Lifetime Achievement Thu 6:30 pm
First-time Attendee Breakfast (Imperial B) Thu 7:00 am Award and Special Panel Honoring Donald
Foreign Policy Section Business Meeting (Sutter Fri 6:30 pm Songer (Golden Gate 3)
Room) Law and Courts Section Reception (Ballroom Fri 7:30 pm
Foundations of Political Theory Reception (Cyril Fri 7:30 pm III)
Magnin Foyer) Legislative Studies Quarterly Editorial Board Fri 7:30 am
Foundations of Political Theory Section Fri 1:15 pm Breakfast Meeting (Vista)
Business Meeting (Union Square 17 & 18) Legislative Studies Section Business Meeting Fri 7:00 pm
French Politics Group & Association Francaise Fri 6:30 pm (Ballroom I)
de Science Politique Related Group Business Legislative Studies Section Reception (Ballroom Fri 8:00 pm
Meeting (Stockton) I)
Gaus Lecture (Franciscan A) Fri 6:30 pm MIT Department of Political Science Reception Sat 7:30 pm
Gaus Reception (Franciscan B) Fri 7:30 pm (Mendocino I)
Graduate Student Happy Hour (Ballroom II) Sat 6:30 pm MPSA 2016 Program Committee Meeting & Fri 6:30 pm
Reception (Market Street)
Green Politics and Theory Related Group Fri 6:30 pm
Business Meeting (Mason) Migration and Citizenship Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
Meeting (Taylor Room)
Health Politics and Policy Section Business Sat 6:30 pm
Meeting (Union Square 1 & 2) Minority Student Recruitment Program (MSRP) Thu 7:00 am
Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
Health Politics and Policy Section Reception Sat 7:30 pm
(Union Square 13) NCOBPS Executive Council Meeting (Executive Thu 6:30 pm
Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
Honoring Women of Color Reception: Thu 7:30 pm
Women & Pol. Section, WomenĀs Caucus & New Political Science Editorial Board Meeting Fri 1:15 pm
Comm. (Franciscan D) (Sutro)
Human Rights Section Business Meeting (Sutter Thu 12:30 pm New Political Science Lecture: Behind the Fri 6:30 pm
Room) Kitchen Door, Featuring Saru Jayaraman,
Director of the Food Labor Research Center,
Human Rights Section Reception (Powell Sat 7:00 pm UC Berkeley (Imperial A)
Room)
New Political Science Publications Executive Thu 12:30 pm
Information Technology and Politics Section Fri 1:15 pm Committee Business Meeting (Executive Conf.
Business Meeting (Union Square 21) Ctr. Seacliff Room)
International Association Leaders Breakfast Sat 8:30 am New Political Science Section Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm
(Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room) (Continental Parlor 1)
International Attendees Reception (Vista) Thu 7:30 pm New Political Science Section Reception Fri 8:00 pm
International History and Politics Section Fri 1:15 pm (Imperial B)
Business Meeting (Union Square 13) New York University Wilf Family Department Fri 7:30 pm
International Security and Arms Control Section Thu 7:30 pm of Politics Reception (Continental Parlor 1)
Reception (Imperial A) Organized Section Chairs Breakfast (Continental Fri 7:00 am
International Security and Arms Control Section Fri 6:30 pm Parlour 8)
Business Meeting (Union Square 13) Oxford University Press Reception (Franciscan Sat 7:00 pm
Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Related Fri 6:30 pm D)
Group Business Meeting (Hearst) PS: Political Science and Politics Editorial Fri 7:00 am
Invite Only: President's Reception (Vista) Fri 9:00 pm Board Meeting Breakfast (Sutro)
Italian Political Science Review (IPSR) Editorial Sun 8:00 am Partisan Gridlock in Washington: Political Thu 12:30 pm
Board Meeting (Green Room) Theory is One Thing, But What are the Political
Jack Miller Center Reception (Sir Francis Drake Fri 6:30 pm Pros Saying? (Powell Room)
Franciscan Ballroom) Party Personnel Strategy Workshop (Executive Wed 12:30 pm
Japan Political Studies Group Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room)
(Union Square 23) Perspectives on Politics Editorial Board Meeting Fri 12:00 pm
Journal Editor's Breakfast (Stockton) Sat 7:00 am Lunch (Vista)
Journal of Conflict Resolution Board Meeting Fri 1:15 pm Policy Studies Organization Editors Business Sun 9:00 am
(Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room) Meeting (Vista)
Journal of Political Science Education Editorial Sat 12:30 pm Political Communication Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
Board Meeting (Green Room) Meeting (Golden Gate 2)
Julia Choucair Vizoso Meeting (Invitation Only) Fri 3:00 pm Political Economy Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm
(Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room) (Union Square 16)

64 MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS


Political Epistemology Section Business Meeting Fri 1:15 pm Reception Honoring Teaching (Golden Gate) Fri 7:30 pm
(Lombard Room) Reception for LGBT Committee, LGBT Caucus, Fri 7:30 pm
Political Epistemology Section Reception Fri 7:00 pm and Sexuality & Politics Section (Carmel II)
(Balboa) Reception for REP, Latino Caucus, Latino Sat 7:30 pm
Political Forecasting Group Business Meeting Thu 12:30 pm Committee, and Asian Pacific Committee
(Divisadero) (Continental Ballroom 6)
Political Methodology Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Related Groups (All) Meeting (Ballroom III) Fri 1:15 pm
(Continental Parlor 2) Religion and Politics Section Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm
Political Networks Division Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm (Monterey I)
(Union Square 15) Religion and Politics Section Reception Thu 7:30 pm
Political Networks Section Reception (Union Fri 7:30 pm (Monterey II)
Square 14) Representation and Electoral Systems Section Fri 1:15 pm
Political Organizations and Parties Section Sat 12:30 pm Business Meeting (Green Room)
Business Meeting (Union Square 3 & 4) Research & Politics Journal/SAGE Associate Thu 6:30 pm
Political Organizations and Parties Section Thu 12:30 pm Editors Meeting (Green Room)
Executive Council Meeting (Mission II) Russian Politics Group Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm
Political Psychology Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm (Lombard)
(Union Square 23) Rutgers University Department of Political Thu 7:00 pm
Political Research Quarterly Editorial Board Fri 1:15 pm Science Reception (Union Square 21)
Luncheon (Lombard) Science, Technology, and Evironmental Politics Fri 1:15 pm
Political Science Education Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Section Business Meeting (Union Square 14)
(Carmel I) Sexuality and Politics Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm
Political Thought in the Anthropocene, Feauring Fri 6:30 pm (Powell I)
Dipesh Chakrabarty (Cyril Magnin I) Short Course: Teaching Human Rights (Union Wed 1:30 pm
Politics & Gender Journal Editorial Board Sat 7:00 am Square 21)
Meeting (Green Room) Siting and Engagement Networking Reception Thu 7:30 pm
Politics & Policy Editorial Board Meeting Fri 1:15 pm (Union Square 19 & 20)
(Union Square 15) Southeast Asian Politics Related Group Business Sat 12:30 pm
Politics and History Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Meeting (Union Square 13)
(Union Square 24) Southwestern Political Science Association Fri 1:15 pm
Politics and History Section Reception (Union Fri 7:30 pm Business Meeting (Union Square 16)
Square 25) Stanford Political Science Reception (Golden Fri 7:30 pm
Politics, Literature and Film Section Business Thu 6:30 pm Gate 6)
Meeting (Union Square 14) State Politics and Policy Business Meeting & Fri 7:00 pm

Meetings and Receptions


Polity Business Meeting (Green Room) Fri 7:00 am Reception (Monterey I)
Practicing Politics Working Group Meeting Sat 6:30 pm Status Committee for Latinos in the Profession Thu 2:00 pm
(Green Room) (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
Presidents & Executive Politics Section Business Sat 12:30 pm Survey Research in the Developing World Sat 12:30 pm
Meeting (Union Square 17 & 18) (Mission II)
Presidents & Executive Politics Section Thu 7:30 pm Taskforce on Technological Innovation in Sat 8:30 am
Reception (Divisadero) Political Science (Invitation Only) (Executive
Presidents and Executive Politics Section Thu 7:00 pm Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
Steering Committee Meeting (Davidson) Teaching and Learning Committee Business Thu 8:30 am
Public Administration Section Business Meeting Fri 1:15 pm Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room)
(Sutter Room) The Claremont Institute Reception (Imperial B) Thu 7:30 pm
Public Administration Section Executive Council Thu 12:30 pm The Review of Politics at The University of Fri 7:00 pm
Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room) Notre Dame Reception (Golden Gate 8)
Public Policy Section Business Meeting (Cyril Fri 1:15 pm The Texas Reception for Affiliated Universities Thu 7:00 pm
Magnin II) (Union Square 22)
Publius: The Journal of Federalism Editorial Sat 7:00 am The University of Chicago, Department of Sat 7:30 pm
Board & Advisory Council Breakfast Meeting Political Science Reception (Mission I)
(Mission II) Theory & Event Journal Business Meeting Fri 1:15 pm
Qualitative and Multi-Method Research & Thu 7:30 pm (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
International History and Politics Sections' UCLA Political Science Department Reception Sat 7:30 pm
Reception (Carmel I) (Market Street)
Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Section Thu 6:30 pm UW-Madison Political Science Department Fri 7:30 pm
Business Meeting (Carmel II) Reception (Continental Parlor 9)
RBSI Working Group Committee Meeting Fri 1:15 pm University of California, Berkeley Reception Fri 7:00 pm
(Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room) (Continental Ballroom 4)
RBSI/MFP Alumni Networking Reception Sat 7:30 pm University of Florida Department of Political Fri 7:30 pm
(Carmel I) Science Reception (Mason Room)
REP Business Meeting (Powell I) Sat 12:30 pm University of Michigan Reception (Sutro) Thu 7:30 pm

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS 65


University of Rochester Reception (Continental Fri 7:30 pm Room)
Parlor 7) New Political Science Publications Executive Thu 12:30 pm
Urban Politics Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Committee Business Meeting (Executive Conf.
(Mendocino I) Ctr. Seacliff Room)
Urban Politics Section Reception (Bay View) Fri 7:30 pm Partisan Gridlock in Washington: Political Thu 12:30 pm
W.W. Norton Focus Group (Vista) Thu 12:30 pm Theory is One Thing, But What are the Political
Pros Saying? (Powell Room)
Western Political Science Association Executive Thu 12:30 pm
Council Meeting (Green Room) Political Forecasting Group Business Meeting Thu 12:30 pm
(Divisadero)
Women and Politics Research Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
Meeting (Van Ness Room) Political Organizations and Parties Section Thu 12:30 pm
Executive Council Meeting (Mission II)
Women in the Profession Reception: Women & Fri 7:30 pm
Politics, WomenĀs Caucus & Committee Public Administration Section Executive Council Thu 12:30 pm
(Ballroom II) Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
Women of Color in Political Science Focus Thu 9:00 am W.W. Norton Focus Group (Vista) Thu 12:30 pm
Groups (Invitation Only) (Executive Conf. Ctr. Western Political Science Association Executive Thu 12:30 pm
Seacliff Room) Council Meeting (Green Room)
Women's Caucus for Political Science Business Sat 7:00 am Working Group Meeting: Coalition Building to Thu 12:30 pm
Meeting (Vista) Advance Diverse Leadership and Address
WomenĀs Caucus on Political Science Business Fri 6:30 pm Discrimination in Political Science (Golden Gate
Meeting (Golden Gate 1) 1)
Working Group Meeting: Coalition Building to Thu 12:30 pm Working Group Meeting: Social Policy in Non- Thu 12:30 pm
Advance Diverse Leadership and Address Democracies (Golden Gate 8)
Discrimination in Political Science (Golden Gate Working Group Meeting: The Scholars Strategy Thu 12:30 pm
1) Network Women and Representation (Golden
Working Group Meeting: NSF/Smithsonian Fri 2:30 pm Gate 2)
Institute/UPenn/UMD Grant (Green Room) Status Committee for Latinos in the Profession Thu 2:00 pm
Working Group Meeting: Social Policy in Non- Thu 12:30 pm (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
Democracies (Golden Gate 8) Cambridge University Press - Author Interviews Thu 2:30 pm
Working Group Meeting: The Scholars Strategy Thu 12:30 pm (Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room)
Network Women and Representation (Golden APSA MENA/POMEPS Reception (Redford Thu 6:00 pm
Gate 2) (673 Geary Street))
Yale University Political Science Department Fri 7:30 pm African Politics Section Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm
Reception (Lombard Room) (Golden Gate 2)
Yale-Stanford-Berkeley Advising and Mentoring Sat 2:30 pm Association of Korean Political Studies Business Thu 6:30 pm
Committee (Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room) Meeting (Golden Gate 1)
Canadian Politics Section Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm
APSA MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS (BY (Mendocino I)
TIME) Conference Group on Italian Politics (Congrips) Thu 6:30 pm
APSA Meetings and Receptions by Time Business Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff
APSA Council Meeting (Franciscan A) Wed 8:00 am Room)
DA-RT Meeting (Union Square 5 & 6) Wed 11:30 am Experimental Research Section Business Thu 6:30 pm
Meeting (Market Street)
Party Personnel Strategy Workshop (Executive Wed 12:30 pm
Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room) Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations Thu 6:30 pm
Section Business Meeting (Union Square 15)
Short Course: Teaching Human Rights (Union Wed 1:30 pm
Square 21) Japan Political Studies Group Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm
(Union Square 23)
APSA Awards Ceremony (Imperial B) Wed 6:30 pm
New Political Science Section Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm
First-time Attendee Breakfast (Imperial B) Thu 7:00 am (Continental Parlor 1)
Minority Student Recruitment Program (MSRP) Thu 7:00 am Politics, Literature and Film Section Business Thu 6:30 pm
Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room) Meeting (Union Square 14)
APSA Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) Thu 8:30 am Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Section Thu 6:30 pm
Orientation Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Business Meeting (Carmel II)
Presidio Room)
Religion and Politics Section Business Meeting Thu 6:30 pm
Teaching and Learning Committee Business Thu 8:30 am (Monterey I)
Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room)
Research & Politics Journal/SAGE Associate Thu 6:30 pm
Women of Color in Political Science Focus Thu 9:00 am Editors Meeting (Green Room)
Groups (Invitation Only) (Executive Conf. Ctr.
Seacliff Room) Law and Courts Section Lifetime Achievement Thu 6:30 pm
Award and Special Panel Honoring Donald
Cambridge University Press - Author Interviews Thu 9:00 am Songer (Golden Gate 3)
Part 1 (Green Room)
NCOBPS Executive Council Meeting (Executive Thu 6:30 pm
European Politics & Society Section Business Thu 12:30 pm Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
Meeting (Union Square 22)
Presidents and Executive Politics Section Thu 7:00 pm
Human Rights Section Business Meeting (Sutter Thu 12:30 pm Steering Committee Meeting (Davidson)

66 MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS


Rutgers University Department of Political Thu 7:00 pm (Sutro)
Science Reception (Union Square 21) Political Epistemology Section Business Meeting Fri 1:15 pm
The Texas Reception for Affiliated Universities Thu 7:00 pm (Lombard Room)
(Union Square 22) Political Research Quarterly Editorial Board Fri 1:15 pm
APSA Mentoring Networking Reception (Union Thu 7:30 pm Luncheon (Lombard)
Square 17 & 18) Politics & Policy Editorial Board Meeting Fri 1:15 pm
Conference for the Study of Political Thought Thu 7:30 pm (Union Square 15)
Reception (Embarcadero) Public Administration Section Business Meeting Fri 1:15 pm
Federalism/Intergovernmental Relations Section Thu 7:30 pm (Sutter Room)
Reception (Union Square 16) Public Policy Section Business Meeting (Cyril Fri 1:15 pm
Honoring Women of Color Reception: Thu 7:30 pm Magnin II)
Women & Pol. Section, WomenĀs Caucus & RBSI Working Group Committee Meeting Fri 1:15 pm
Comm. (Franciscan D) (Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room)
International Attendees Reception (Vista) Thu 7:30 pm Related Groups (All) Meeting (Ballroom III) Fri 1:15 pm
International Security and Arms Control Section Thu 7:30 pm Representation and Electoral Systems Section Fri 1:15 pm
Reception (Imperial A) Business Meeting (Green Room)
Presidents & Executive Politics Section Thu 7:30 pm Science, Technology, and Evironmental Politics Fri 1:15 pm
Reception (Divisadero) Section Business Meeting (Union Square 14)
Qualitative and Multi-Method Research & Thu 7:30 pm Southwestern Political Science Association Fri 1:15 pm
International History and Politics Sections' Business Meeting (Union Square 16)
Reception (Carmel I)
Theory & Event Journal Business Meeting Fri 1:15 pm
Religion and Politics Section Reception Thu 7:30 pm (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
(Monterey II)
DA-RT Initiative Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Fri 2:30 pm
APSA Opening Reception (Continental Thu 7:30 pm Seacliff Room)
Ballroom 4)
Working Group Meeting: NSF/Smithsonian Fri 2:30 pm
Canadian Politics Section Reception (Mendocino Thu 7:30 pm Institute/UPenn/UMD Grant (Green Room)
II)
Cambridge University Press - Author Interviews Fri 3:00 pm
Department of Political Science, University of Thu 7:30 pm Part 3 (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
Toronto Reception (Taylor Room)
Julia Choucair Vizoso Meeting (Invitation Only) Fri 3:00 pm
Siting and Engagement Networking Reception Thu 7:30 pm (Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room)
(Union Square 19 & 20)
Christians in Political Science Related Group Fri 6:30 pm
The Claremont Institute Reception (Imperial B) Thu 7:30 pm Business Meeting (Union Square 21)
University of Michigan Reception (Sutro) Thu 7:30 pm Comparative Democratization Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
Organized Section Chairs Breakfast (Continental Fri 7:00 am Meeting (Mendocino II)

Meetings and Receptions


Parlour 8) Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Business Fri 6:30 pm
Polity Business Meeting (Green Room) Fri 7:00 am Meeting (Mission I)
PS: Political Science and Politics Editorial Fri 7:00 am Conflict Processes Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm
Board Meeting Breakfast (Sutro) (Continental Parlor 3)
EITM - Empirical Implications of Theoretical Fri 7:30 am Elections and Voting Behavior Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
Models Business Meeting (Union Square 1 & 2) Meeting (Embarcadero)
Legislative Studies Quarterly Editorial Board Fri 7:30 am Foreign Policy Section Business Meeting (Sutter Fri 6:30 pm
Breakfast Meeting (Vista) Room)
APSA Ethics Committee Business Meeting Fri 8:30 am French Politics Group & Association Francaise Fri 6:30 pm
(Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room) de Science Politique Related Group Business
APSA International Committeee Business Fri 8:30 am Meeting (Stockton)
Meeting (Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room) Gaus Lecture (Franciscan A) Fri 6:30 pm
APSA All-Member Meeting (Continental Fri 11:00 am Green Politics and Theory Related Group Fri 6:30 pm
Ballroom 4) Business Meeting (Mason)
Perspectives on Politics Editorial Board Meeting Fri 12:00 pm International Security and Arms Control Section Fri 6:30 pm
Lunch (Vista) Business Meeting (Union Square 13)
Department Chairs' Luncheon (Cyril Magnin III) Fri 12:30 pm Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Related Fri 6:30 pm
Foundations of Political Theory Section Fri 1:15 pm Group Business Meeting (Hearst)
Business Meeting (Union Square 17 & 18) Labor Project Related Group Business Meeeting Fri 6:30 pm
Information Technology and Politics Section Fri 1:15 pm (Davidson)
Business Meeting (Union Square 21) Latino/a Caucus in Political Science Related Fri 6:30 pm
International History and Politics Section Fri 1:15 pm Group Business Meeting (Fillmore)
Business Meeting (Union Square 13) Law and Courts Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm
Journal of Conflict Resolution Board Meeting Fri 1:15 pm (Ballroom III)
(Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room) Migration and Citizenship Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
LGBT Caucus Business Meeting (Balboa) Fri 1:15 pm Meeting (Taylor Room)
New Political Science Editorial Board Meeting Fri 1:15 pm Political Communication Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
Meeting (Golden Gate 2)

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS 67


Political Economy Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Reception (Lombard Room)
(Union Square 16) Committee on the Status of Blacks and Fri 7:30 pm
Political Methodology Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm NCOBPS Reception (Monterey II)
(Continental Parlor 2) Comparative Democratization Section Reception Fri 7:30 pm
Political Networks Division Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm (Peninsula)
(Union Square 15) Conflict Processes Section & Foreign Policy Fri 7:30 pm
Political Psychology Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Section Reception (East Lounge)
(Union Square 23) Foundations of Political Theory Reception (Cyril Fri 7:30 pm
Political Science Education Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Magnin Foyer)
(Carmel I) Gaus Reception (Franciscan B) Fri 7:30 pm
Political Thought in the Anthropocene, Feauring Fri 6:30 pm New York University Wilf Family Department Fri 7:30 pm
Dipesh Chakrabarty (Cyril Magnin I) of Politics Reception (Continental Parlor 1)
Politics and History Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Reception for LGBT Committee, LGBT Caucus, Fri 7:30 pm
(Union Square 24) and Sexuality & Politics Section (Carmel II)
Russian Politics Group Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Reception Honoring Teaching (Golden Gate) Fri 7:30 pm
(Lombard)
University of Rochester Reception (Continental Fri 7:30 pm
Sexuality and Politics Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm Parlor 7)
(Powell I)
Urban Politics Section Reception (Bay View) Fri 7:30 pm
Urban Politics Section Business Meeting Fri 6:30 pm
(Mendocino I) UW-Madison Political Science Department Fri 7:30 pm
Reception (Continental Parlor 9)
Women and Politics Research Section Business Fri 6:30 pm
Meeting (Van Ness Room) Women in the Profession Reception: Women & Fri 7:30 pm
Politics, WomenĀs Caucus & Committee
WomenĀs Caucus on Political Science Business Fri 6:30 pm (Ballroom II)
Meeting (Golden Gate 1)
Stanford Political Science Reception (Golden Fri 7:30 pm
Jack Miller Center Reception (Sir Francis Drake Fri 6:30 pm Gate 6)
Franciscan Ballroom)
Legislative Studies Section Reception (Ballroom Fri 8:00 pm
New Political Science Lecture: Behind the Fri 6:30 pm I)
Kitchen Door, Featuring Saru Jayaraman,
Director of the Food Labor Research Center, New Political Science Section Reception Fri 8:00 pm
UC Berkeley (Imperial A) (Imperial B)
MPSA 2016 Program Committee Meeting & Fri 6:30 pm Invite Only: President's Reception (Vista) Fri 9:00 pm
Reception (Market Street) Division Chairs - Program Committee Meeting Sat 7:00 am
Cornell University Department of Government Fri 7:00 pm (Continental Parlour 8)
Reception (Golden Gate 7) Journal Editor's Breakfast (Stockton) Sat 7:00 am
Duke University Department of Political Science Fri 7:00 pm Politics & Gender Journal Editorial Board Sat 7:00 am
Reception (Golden Gate 5) Meeting (Green Room)
Legislative Studies Section Business Meeting Fri 7:00 pm Publius: The Journal of Federalism Editorial Sat 7:00 am
(Ballroom I) Board & Advisory Council Breakfast Meeting
Political Epistemology Section Reception Fri 7:00 pm (Mission II)
(Balboa) Women's Caucus for Political Science Business Sat 7:00 am
The Review of Politics at The University of Fri 7:00 pm Meeting (Vista)
Notre Dame Reception (Golden Gate 8) Business Meeting for Civic Education and Sat 8:30 am
Columbia University Department of Political Fri 7:00 pm Engagement Committee (Executive Conf. Ctr.
Science Reception (Golden Gate 4) Marina Room)
University of California, Berkeley Reception Fri 7:00 pm International Association Leaders Breakfast Sat 8:30 am
(Continental Ballroom 4) (Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room)
State Politics and Policy Business Meeting & Fri 7:00 pm Taskforce on Technological Innovation in Sat 8:30 am
Reception (Monterey I) Political Science (Invitation Only) (Executive
Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room)
Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Reception Fri 7:30 pm
(Mission II) APSR Editorial Board Meeting (Vista) Sat 12:00 pm
Elections & Voting Behavior, Public Opinion, Fri 7:30 pm Class and Inequality Section Business Meeting Sat 12:30 pm
and Political Communication Sections' (Union Square 15)
Reception (Cyril Magnin II) Comparative Politics Journal Business Meeting Sat 12:30 pm
Law and Courts Section Reception (Ballroom Fri 7:30 pm (Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room)
III) Ethics Roundtable Follow-up (Union Square 14) Sat 12:30 pm
Political Networks Section Reception (Union Fri 7:30 pm Journal of Political Science Education Editorial Sat 12:30 pm
Square 14) Board Meeting (Green Room)
Politics and History Section Reception (Union Fri 7:30 pm Political Organizations and Parties Section Sat 12:30 pm
Square 25) Business Meeting (Union Square 3 & 4)
University of Florida Department of Political Fri 7:30 pm Presidents & Executive Politics Section Business Sat 12:30 pm
Science Reception (Mason Room) Meeting (Union Square 17 & 18)
Yale University Political Science Department Fri 7:30 pm REP Business Meeting (Powell I) Sat 12:30 pm

68 MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS


Southeast Asian Politics Related Group Business Sat 12:30 pm Approaches and Themes (Union Square 13)
Meeting (Union Square 13) Short Course: Playing Games with ( theories of Wed 1:30 pm
Survey Research in the Developing World Sat 12:30 pm ) Political Violence (Union Square 13)
(Mission II) Short Course: PoliInformatics Text as Data Wed 9:00 am
Yale-Stanford-Berkeley Advising and Mentoring Sat 2:30 pm Workshop (Union Square 16)
Committee (Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room) Short Course: Political Psychology (Union Wed 9:00 am
Asian Pacific American Caucus (APAC) Sat 6:30 pm Square 19 & 20)
Business Meeting (Union Square 15) Short Course: Political Science in the Public Wed 9:00 am
Comparative Politics Section Business Meeting Sat 6:30 pm Arena: Communication Strategies for Scholars
(Ballroom I) (Union Square 14)
Eric Voegelin Society Related Group Business Sat 6:30 pm Short Course: Politics at APSA - New Political Wed 1:30 pm
Meeting (Cyril Magnin II) Science, Anti-Apartheid Movements, and Israel/
Health Politics and Policy Section Business Sat 6:30 pm Palestine (Union Square 24)
Meeting (Union Square 1 & 2) Short Course: Politics, Markets, and Organized Wed 9:00 am
Practicing Politics Working Group Meeting Sat 6:30 pm Interests - New Questions about Power, Policy,
(Green Room) and Influence (Union Square 25)
Graduate Student Happy Hour (Ballroom II) Sat 6:30 pm Short Course: Process Tracing (Franciscan D) Wed 1:30 pm
Oxford University Press Reception (Franciscan Sat 7:00 pm Short Course: Public Management (Union Wed 9:00 am
D) Square 17 & 18)
Human Rights Section Reception (Powell Sat 7:00 pm Short Course: Ranked Choice Voting in the Wed 9:00 am
Room) U.S.A.: Developments and Debates (Union
Square 3 & 4)
Comparative Politics Section Reception Sat 7:30 pm
(Ballroom III) Short Course: The Methods Studio ĉ Data Wed 1:30 pm
Access and Research Transparency from an
CUNY Graduate Center Political Science Sat 7:30 pm Interpretive-Qualitative Perspective (Franciscan
Program Reception (Union Square 14) B)
Eric Voegelin Society Related Group Reception Sat 7:30 pm Short Course: The Role of Scholar-Activism: Wed 1:30 pm
(Cyril Magnin III) How Political Scientists Can Bolster Resistance
Health Politics and Policy Section Reception Sat 7:30 pm Movements (Union Square 23)
(Union Square 13) Short Course: The State of the Field in Wed 1:30 pm
RBSI/MFP Alumni Networking Reception Sat 7:30 pm Federalism/IGR Research: Approaches to
(Carmel I) Design, Data, Measurement, and Analysis
MIT Department of Political Science Reception Sat 7:30 pm (Union Square 25)
(Mendocino I) Short Course: Understanding Complexity - Wed 1:30 pm
Reception for REP, Latino Caucus, Latino Sat 7:30 pm Research Applications for Policy & Political

Meetings and Receptions


Committee, and Asian Pacific Committee Science (Union Square 1 & 2)
(Continental Ballroom 6) Short Course: What Works? Strengthening Wed 9:00 am
The University of Chicago, Department of Sat 7:30 pm Electoral Integrity (Imperial A)
Political Science Reception (Mission I)
UCLA Political Science Department Reception Sat 7:30 pm APSA SHORT COURSES (BY TIME)
(Market Street) APSA Short Courses by Time
Italian Political Science Review (IPSR) Editorial Sun 8:00 am Short Course: Designing and Conducting Field Wed 9:00 am
Board Meeting (Green Room) Research (Franciscan C)
Policy Studies Organization Editors Business Sun 9:00 am Short Course: Diversity, Inclusion, Access and Wed 9:00 am
Meeting (Vista) Equality: Strategies for Incorporating Diverse
Approaches and Themes (Union Square 13)
APSA SHORT COURSES (ALPHA) Short Course: Politics, Markets, and Organized Wed 9:00 am
Interests - New Questions about Power, Policy,
APSA Short Courses by Alpha and Influence (Union Square 25)
Short Course: Building International Scholarly Wed 1:30 pm
Partnerships (Union Square 3 & 4) Short Course: Public Management (Union Wed 9:00 am
Square 17 & 18)
Short Course: Coalition Building to Advance Wed 9:00 am
Diverse Leadership and Address Discrimination Short Course: Ranked Choice Voting in the Wed 9:00 am
in Political Science (Union Square 22) U.S.A.: Developments and Debates (Union
Square 3 & 4)
Short Course: Comparative Approaches to the Wed 1:30 pm
City (Union Square 17 & 18) Short Course: Coalition Building to Advance Wed 9:00 am
Diverse Leadership and Address Discrimination
Short Course: Department Leadership (Union Wed 1:30 pm in Political Science (Union Square 22)
Square 15)
Short Course: PoliInformatics Text as Data Wed 9:00 am
Short Course: Designing Multi-Method Research Wed 1:30 pm Workshop (Union Square 16)
(Franciscan C)
Short Course: Political Psychology (Union Wed 9:00 am
Short Course: Designing and Conducting Field Wed 9:00 am Square 19 & 20)
Research (Franciscan C)
Short Course: Political Science in the Public Wed 9:00 am
Short Course: Diversity, Inclusion, Access and Wed 9:00 am Arena: Communication Strategies for Scholars
Equality: Strategies for Incorporating Diverse (Union Square 14)

MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS 69


Short Course: What Works? Strengthening Wed 9:00 am
Electoral Integrity (Imperial A)
Short Course: Building International Scholarly Wed 1:30 pm
Partnerships (Union Square 3 & 4)
Short Course: Comparative Approaches to the Wed 1:30 pm
City (Union Square 17 & 18)
Short Course: Department Leadership (Union Wed 1:30 pm
Square 15)
Short Course: Designing Multi-Method Research Wed 1:30 pm
(Franciscan C)
Short Course: Playing Games with ( theories of Wed 1:30 pm
) Political Violence (Union Square 13)
Short Course: Politics at APSA - New Political Wed 1:30 pm
Science, Anti-Apartheid Movements, and Israel/
Palestine (Union Square 24)
Short Course: Process Tracing (Franciscan D) Wed 1:30 pm
Short Course: The Methods Studio ĉ Data Wed 1:30 pm
Access and Research Transparency from an
Interpretive-Qualitative Perspective (Franciscan
B)
Short Course: The Role of Scholar-Activism: Wed 1:30 pm
How Political Scientists Can Bolster Resistance
Movements (Union Square 23)
Short Course: The State of the Field in Wed 1:30 pm
Federalism/IGR Research: Approaches to
Design, Data, Measurement, and Analysis
(Union Square 25)
Short Course: Understanding Complexity - Wed 1:30 pm
Research Applications for Policy & Political
Science (Union Square 1 & 2)

70 MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS


DAILY SCHEDULE

3.5 SHORT COURSE: WHAT WORKS?


Wednesday, September 2, 2015 STRENGTHENING ELECTORAL INTEGRITY
Room:
Wednesday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Hilton, Imperial A
APSA Events Part: Pippa Pippa Norris, Harvard University
1.1 APSA COUNCIL MEETING Wednesday, 11:30 AM to 6:30 PM
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A APSA Events
Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM 4.1 DA-RT MEETING (INVITE ONLY)
APSA Short Course Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
2.1 SHORT COURSE: DESIGNING AND Wednesday, 12:30 PM to 4:30 PM
CONDUCTING FIELD RESEARCH APSA Events
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
5.1 PARTY PERSONNEL STRATEGY WORKSHOP
Part:
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room
Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa Cruz
Naazneen Barma, Naval Postgraduate School
2.2 SHORT COURSE: DIVERSITY, INCLUSION, Wednesday, 1:30 PM to 5:30 PM
ACCESS AND EQUALITY: STRATEGIES FOR APSA Short Course
INCORPORATING DIVERSE APPROACHES AND
THEMES 6.1 SHORT COURSE: BUILDING INTERNATIONAL
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 SCHOLARLY PARTNERSHIPS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Part: Kimberly A. Mealy, American Political Science
Association Part: M. Anne Pitcher, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Derrick L. Cogburn, American University Mark Tessler, University of Michigan
Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame Rod Alence, University of the Witwatersrand
Boris E. Ricks 6.2 SHORT COURSE: COMPARATIVE APPROACHES
Kira Sanbonmatsu, Rutgers University, New Brunswick TO THE CITY
Charles Smith, University of California, Irvine Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
2.3 SHORT COURSE: POLITICS, MARKETS, AND Part: Jeffrey W. Paller, Columbia University
ORGANIZED INTERESTS - NEW QUESTIONS Alisha Caroline Holland, Harvard University
ABOUT POWER, POLICY, AND INFLUENCE Yanilda Maria Gonzalez, The Harvard Kennedy School
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Loren B Landau, University of the Witwatersrand
Part: Edward T. Walker, University of California, Los Tariq Thachil, Yale University
Angeles Jacqueline Klopp
Nicholas Rush Smith, City College of New York
2.4 SHORT COURSE: PUBLIC MANAGEMENT Shelby Grossman, Harvard University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 Sarah El-Kazaz, Oberlin College
Part: Kelly LeRoux Christopher Gore, Ryerson University
2.5 SHORT COURSE: RANKED CHOICE VOTING IN 6.3 SHORT COURSE: DEPARTMENT LEADERSHIP
THE U.S.A.: DEVELOPMENTS AND DEBATES Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Part: Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
Part: Sarah E. John 6.4 SHORT COURSE: DESIGNING MULTI-METHOD
RESEARCH
Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
APSA Short Course
Part: Jason Seawright, Northwestern University
3.1 SHORT COURSE: COALITION BUILDING TO
6.5 SHORT COURSE: PLAYING GAMES WITH (
ADVANCE DIVERSE LEADERSHIP AND
THEORIES OF ) POLITICAL VIOLENCE
ADDRESS DISCRIMINATION IN POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
SCIENCE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 Part: Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Part: Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia Ora Beach Szekely, Clark University
Denise Marie Walsh, University of Virginia Lewis K. Griffith, University of Denver
3.2 SHORT COURSE: POLIINFORMATICS TEXT AS 6.6 SHORT COURSE: POLITICS AT APSA - NEW
DATA WORKSHOP POLITICAL SCIENCE, ANTI-APARTHEID
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 MOVEMENTS, AND ISRAEL/PALESTINE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Daily Schedule

Part: John D. Wilkerson, University of Washington


Part: C. Heike Schotten, University of Massachusetts Boston
3.3 SHORT COURSE: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY Leila Farsakh, --University of Massachusetts Boston
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
6.7 SHORT COURSE: PROCESS TRACING
Part: Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
3.4 SHORT COURSE: POLITICAL SCIENCE IN THE Part: Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University
PUBLIC ARENA: COMMUNICATION Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University
STRATEGIES FOR SCHOLARS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14

DAILY SCHEDULE 71
Wednesday, 1:30 PM to 5:30 PM

6.8 SHORT COURSE: THE METHODS STUDIO – 10.2 MARGINALIZATION, INCLUSION AND THE
DATA ACCESS AND RESEARCH FUTURE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE: A PANEL
TRANSPARENCY FROM AN INTERPRETIVE- HONORING DAVID EASTON
QUALITATIVE PERSPECTIVE Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Chair: Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California,
Part: Sarah E. Parkinson, University of Minnesota Irvine
Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University Part: John H. Aldrich, Duke University
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah Matthew Holden, University of Illinois, Springfield
Katherine J Cramer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Rodney E. Hero, University of California, Berkeley
Jeffrey C. Isaac, Indiana University, Bloomington Juan Carlos Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University-
Samantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay College Corpus Christi
6.9 SHORT COURSE: THE ROLE OF SCHOLAR- Valerie Lehr, St. Lawrence University
ACTIVISM: HOW POLITICAL SCIENTISTS CAN Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame
BOLSTER RESISTANCE MOVEMENTS Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Eastern Michigan University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 Laura E Sjoberg
Part: Sekou M. Franklin, Middle Tennessee State University 10.3 NEW THEORIES AND EVIDENCE ON LABOR
6.10 SHORT COURSE: THE STATE OF THE FIELD IN POLITICS
FEDERALISM/IGR RESEARCH: APPROACHES Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
TO DESIGN, DATA, MEASUREMENT, AND Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
ANALYSIS Chair: Clayton M. Nall, Stanford University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Disc: John Stephen Ahlquist, University of California, San
Part: Kathleen Hale, Auburn University Diego
Paul Manna, College of William & Mary Paul Frymer, Princeton University
6.11 SHORT COURSE: UNDERSTANDING Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University
COMPLEXITY - RESEARCH APPLICATIONS
FOR POLICY & POLITICAL SCIENCE Papers: Endogenous Institutions: Evidence from Public Sector
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 Collective Bargaining Laws
Part: Liz Johnson, Complex Systems Institute Agustina S Paglayan, Stanford University
APSA Events Demography is Destiny: Revisiting the Decline of
7.1 SHORT COURSE: TEACHING HUMAN RIGHTS Organized Labor
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 Frances Zlotnick, Stanford University
Strong Unions, Strong Welfare State? Evidence across
Wednesday, 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM Sectors and States
APSA Events Olivia Meeks, UC Berkeley
8.1 APSA AWARDS CEREMONY Informality, Enforcement Traps, and the WorkersĀ Party
Room: Hilton, Imperial B in Brazil
German Feierherd, Yale University
Thursday, September 3, 2015 Partisanship, Interest Groups, and Labor Market Policy
in Latin America
Thursday, 7:00 AM to 8:00 AM Federico Fuchs, University of North Carolina at
APSA Events Chapel Hill
9.1 FIRST-TIME ATTENDEE BREAKFAST Division Panels
Room: Hilton, Imperial B DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
9.2 MINORITY STUDENT RECRUITMENT FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
PROGRAM (MSRP) MEETING 11.1 CIVIL SOCIETY, PROTEST AND MASS
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room MOBILIZATION IN POST-COMMUNIST
SETTINGS
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Theme Panels Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION
10.1 IS ANYBODY LISTENING? POLITICAL
SCIENCE, THE NEW MEDIA AND POLITICS Chair: Valerie Sperling, Clark University
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 Disc: Suzanne E. Scoggins, University of California, Berkeley
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION Papers: At the Parliament or in the Streets? Issue Composition
Chair: Alvin B. Tillery, Northwestern University of Protest in V4
Part: E.J. Dionne Katerina Vrablikova, University of Mannheim
Christina M. Greer, Fordham University Ondrej Cisar, Czech Academy of Sciences
Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California Revolutionaries beyond borders: Eastern European
Riverside Transnational Activism
Jeffrey Ryan Smith, The New School Tsveta Petrova, Columbia University
Joshua A. Tucker, New York University Diversity in Demobilization
Virginie Lasnier, McGill University

72 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Civil Society Organizations under Authoritarian Rule DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Taiyi Sun, Boston University HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Politics of the Absurd: Humor as a Mobilizing Tool in 11.5 REVISITING ROUSSEAU
Russia Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Ellen Carnaghan, Saint Louis University Disc: Joseph R. Reisert, Colby College
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES Papers: Economic Inequality and Rousseau's General Will
11.2 ACROSS THE REVOLUTIONARY DIVIDE: David Lay Williams, DePaul University
RETHINKING NINETEENTH-CENTURY Kant, Rousseau, and the Arts and Sciences
POLITICAL THOUGHT Sidney Simpson, University of Notre Dame
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II Rousseau and Madame de Staël: A Fascinating
Chair: Jacob T. Levy, McGill University Intellectual Dialogue
Papers: The Turn to Positivism in International Law Aurelian Craiutu, Indiana University
Jennifer Pitts, University of Chicago Rousseau's Amour-Propre: A Neo-Augustinian
Toleration and Freedom of Discussion across the Deconstruction of Liberal Democracy
Centuries Michael L. McLendon, California State University,
Greg Conti, Harvard University Los Angeles
Between Justice and Gratitude: Thomas Paine and the DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Dilemmas of Private Property 11.6 BODY POLITICS
Alexander H. Gourevitch, Brown University Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
Francois Guizot and the Challenge of Creating French Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Parliamentary Government Chair: Kristy King, Arizona State University
William Selinger Disc: Rachel Sanders, Portland State University Division of
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: Political Science
HISTORICAL APPROACHES Kristy King, Arizona State University
11.3 DEMOCRATIC THEORIZING: PAST AND
PRESENT Papers: An Ethnography of Embodiment: Diversifying Method
Room: Nikko, Carmel II Anita Chari
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF BeauvoirĀs Political Fictions - Linking Embodied Affect
POLITICAL THEORY to Commitment
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Elaine Stavro, Trent University
THEORY
Materiality and "The Marxism Question" in the Work of
Disc: Lars Toender, University of Copenhagen
Simone de Beauvoir
Sonia Kruks, Oberlin College
Papers: Acting Out: A Performative Perspective on Democracy
Liron Lavi, Tel Aviv University Suffering the Word: Agonistic Fellowship in the Divine
Missive
Choosing to Burn the Trojan Horse: Theorizing Elizabeth R. Wingrove, University of Michigan, Ann
ĄMilitant Democracyď Arbor
Benjamin A. Schupmann, National University of
Singapore Mill's Biopolitics
Stephen Engelmann, University of Illinois, Chicago
Encountering the Masses: Two Liberal Responses to
Democracy DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Kyong-Min Son, University of Delaware 11.7 PLATO AND CONTEMPORARY POLITICAL
THEORY: LEGACY, POLITICS,
Populism, Demagogical Representation and the Crisis of INTERPRETATION
European Democracy Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Nico De Federicis, University of Pisa
Chair: Melissa Lane, Princeton University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: Disc: Samuel A. Chambers, Johns Hopkins University
HISTORICAL APPROACHES Jill Frank, Cornell University
11.4 REPUBLICANISM: MARKETS AND FREEDOM
Room: Nikko, Carmel I Papers: Plato on Political Idealism
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Jonathan Peter Robert Thakkar
THEORY
Thoughtful Reverence for Law?
Disc: Richard K. Dagger, University of Richmond
Shalini Pradeepa Satkunanandan
Papers: The French Model of Republican Democracy Recovering a Theory of Performativity in Plato's
Daily Schedule

Genevieve Rousseliere, The University of Wisconsin- Mimesis


Madison Demetra Fannie Kasimis, University of Chicago
Exit Left: Markets and Mobility in Republican Thought ĄReason Too Hides Its Origins:ď Philosophic Inspiration
Robert S. Taylor, University of California, Davis in PlatoĀs Dialogues
Susan Bickford, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Unfree Agents: Domination, Freedom, and Hill
Responsibility
William Clare Roberts, McGill University

DAILY SCHEDULE 73
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY


11.8 THEORIZING THE ANTHROPOCENE 11.12 BUSINESSES, OFFICIALS, AND CORRUPTION
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Chair: Elisabeth Robin Anker, George Washington University Chair: Pierre F. Landry
Disc: Elisabeth Robin Anker, George Washington University Disc: Hiroki Takeuchi, Southern Methodist University
Pierre F. Landry
Papers: Cautionary Tales from the Front Lines of the Climate
Crisis Papers: Access for Sale: An Empirical Analysis
Willy Blomme, Johns Hopkins University Hye Young You, Vanderbilt University
Being at Home in the Anthropocene Measuring Corruption: Challenges and Approaches
Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College Vineeta Yadav, Pennsylvania State University
Pan-experientialism and African Animism Officials' Rotation, Policy Instability and Corruption:
Anatoli Ignatov, Appalachian State University Evidence from China
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY Feng Yang, University of California, Los Angeles
11.9 AGENCY, RESPONSIBILITY, AUTONOMY Legacy of Communist Rule: Local Elite Composition
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 and GDP Data Manipulation
Chair: Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University Fengming Lu, Duke University
Papers: Ethical Autonomy Political Economy of Crony Capitalism
Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College Armando Razo, Indiana University
Political Responsibility: Realism and Political Agency DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Farid Abdel-Nour, San Diego State University 11.13 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE ORIGINS,
The Contributions of Victims to Justice DYNAMICS, AND TENURE OF AUTOCRATIC
Chris Tenove, University of Toronto RULE
Room: Parc 55, Davidson
The Agency Game: Who is Responsible for Resolving
Chair: Bryan R. Daves, Yeshiva University
Global Challenges?
Ilari Aula, London School of Economics and Political Disc: Andrew Little, Cornell University
Science
Papers: Veto Players and Presidential Term Limits in
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
Dictatorship
11.10 DISABLED CITIZENSHIP
Eric C.C. Chang, Michigan State University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Masaaki Higashijima, European University Institute/
Chair: Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania Waseda University
Disc: Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania Into the Abyss or Feet of Clay? Varied responses by
Autocrats to Protests
Papers: Reconsidering the Disability Rights Movement Bryan R. Daves, Yeshiva University
Claire C. McKinney, Washington University in St.
Louis
Repression Backfire
Mehdi Shadmehr, University of Miami School of
Disability and the Production of Scientific Knowledge Business
Kristin Bumiller, Amherst College
Coercive Force and the Political Foundations of
The Worth of Disability and the Question of Disabled Centralized Authority
Citizenship Scott Tyson, University of Chicago
Ann Kathleen Heffernan, The University of Chicago
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
Why Rights are Still Right: Citizens' Rights and 11.14 REGIME CHANGE AND GOVERNABILITY IN
Disability Rights INTERWAR EUROPE REVISITED
Anita Silvers, San Francisco State University Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY Chair: Steffen Kailitz, Hannah Arendt Institute
11.11 POLITICAL THEORY AND THE CORPORATION Disc: Dirk Berg-Schlosser
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Chair: Luke Gabriel Mayville, Columbia University Papers: Rethinking Backsliding: Insights from the Historical
Disc: Emma Saunders-Hastings, University of Chicago Turn
Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts,
Papers: The Contradictions of the Neoliberal Corporation Amherst
David Ciepley, University of Denver What Do We Know about Interwar Regime Changes?
Defending the Associational Conception of Corporations Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University
Prithviraj Datta, Brown University The Pre-Political Origins of European Politics: The
Constitutionalizing Corporate Law Interwar Era
Elizabeth Pollman, Loyola Law School, Los Angeles Jeffrey Kopstein, University of California, Irvine
Private Power, Public Purpose: Regulating Corporations What Makes Democracies Endure? Findings from the
as Quasi-Sovereigns Interwar Period
K. Sabeel Rahman, Brooklyn Law School Steffen Kailitz, Hannah Arendt Institute

74 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY Government Policies and Ethnic Diversity


11.15 ADVANCES IN CAUSAL INFERENCE Albana Shehaj, University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room Ronald Franklin Inglehart, University of Michigan,
Chair: Marc Meredith, University of Pennsylvania Ann Arbor
Disc: Marc Meredith, University of Pennsylvania How Different Approaches to Education Shape Ethnic
Marc T. Ratkovic, Princeton University and National Identities
Kai Ostwald, University of British Columbia
Papers: Estimating Effect Sizes in Survey Experiments Neighbourhood Ethnic Diversity and Support for
Michael Peress, SUNY - Stony Brook Universal Health Care in the UK
Randomization Based Instrumental Variables Methods Anja Neundorf, University of Nottingham
for Binary Outcomes Charlotte Cavaille, Institute for Advanced Study in
Luke Keele, Pennsylvania State University Toulouse
Robustness: An Approach for Exploring the Stability of DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Effects and Inferences 11.19 POPULATION-BASED SURVEY EXPERIMENTS
Eric Neumayer, London School of Economics IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Thomas Pluemper, University of Essex Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Blinded by the Past?: A Competing Risk, Split Chair: Amaney Jamal, Princeton University
Population Approach to Dynamics Disc: Daniel Corstange, Columbia University
Shawna K. Metzger, National University of Singapore
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY Papers: Corruption at the Courthouse? Results from a List
11.16 JOURNAL EDITORS & DA-RT: NEW DATA Experiment in Morocco
SHARING AND RESEARCH TRANSPARENCY Matt J. Buehler, University of Tennessee
REQUIREMENTS Measuring Preference Falsification: Results from a List
Room: Parc 55, Mission II Experiment in Egypt
Chair: Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Steven Brooke, John F. Kennedy School of
Part: Colin Elman, Syracuse University Government, Harvard University
John Ishiyama, University of North Texas Jason Brownlee, University of Texas, Austin
Sean M. Lynn-Jones, Harvard Univerrsity International Recognition and Attitudes Towards the Use
Deborah Yashar, Princeton University of Violence
Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Yael Zeira, University of Mississippi
11.17 ACCOUNTABILITY AND LOCAL POLITICS IN
BRAZIL Comparability within Culture? Intra-group Differential
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4 Item Functioning in Survey Response.
Papers: Blame and Credit Attribution: Welfare Provision and Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, Northwestern University in
Accountability in Brazil Qatar
Natalia Salgado Bueno, Yale University Justin Gengler, SESRI, Qatar University
Bringing Government Closer to Citizens? Local DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Electoral Accountability in Brazil 11.20 THE POLITICS OF CORRUPTION
Peter G. Johannessen, Princeton University Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
The Effect of Independent Monitoring on Levels of Chair: Miriam A. Golden, University of California, Los
Municipal Corruption Angeles
Leonardo Antenangeli, The University of Houston Disc: Junyan Jiang, University of Chicago
The Logic of Politically-Targeted Health Goods in Local
Campaigns in Brazil Papers: Corruption Accountability: Political Responses to
Marika Danielle Csapo, University of California, Los Corruption Scandals
Angeles Milena Ang Collan Granillo, University of Chicago
The Motivation and Implication of Participatory Corruption Prosecutions, Politicization, & Public
Budgeting: Lesson from Brazil Attitudes: An RDD Analysis
Maggie Shum, University of Notre Dame Nan Zhang, European University Institute
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Multinational Corporations and Corruption: The Case of
11.18 ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND GOVERNMENT Siemens
POLICY Carolyn M. Warner, Arizona State University
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Jennifer Kartner, Arizona State University
Chair: John F. McCauley, University of Maryland, College The Impact of Overall Economic Freedom on Corruption
Park Lana Mobydeen, Kent State University
Daily Schedule

Disc: Gal Ariely, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Papers: An Experimental Test of Social Contact Theory in 11.21 ABSENTEE STATES: UNGOVERNED SPACES
Nigeria AND THE LIMITS TO STATE AUTHORITY
Alexandra Scacco, New York University Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
Shana Warren, New York University Chair: David Stasavage, New York University
Disc: David Stasavage, New York University
Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University

DAILY SCHEDULE 75
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Papers: Origins of the State: A Mechanism Design Approach Kristin Grace Michelitch, Vanderbilt University
Scott Abramson, University of Rochester
Jee Seon Jeon, Florida State University Papers: Perceptions of the Resource Curse and Aid:
Living in Ungoverned Space: Pakistan's Frontier Crimes Experimental Evidence from Uganda
Regulation Brandon Miller-de la Cuesta
Michael Callen, University of California, Los Angeles Helen V. Milner, Princeton University
Saad Ahmad Gulzar, New York University Daniel L. Nielson
Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University Oil, Information, and Political Action: Experimental
Foreign Interference in Domestic Sovereignty: Evidence Evidence from Uganda
from the Philippines Laura B. Paler, University of Pittsburgh
Melissa M. Lee, Princeton University Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania
Governance Providers in Areas of Mixed Authority Jan Henryk Pierskalla, The Ohio State University
Ben Oppenheim Budgets, Bargains, and Coercion: Equilibrium Levels of
Strong States and Strategic Governance: Territorial Taxation and Public Goods
Variation in State Presence Lucy E. S. Martin, UNC - Chapel Hill
Jessica Steinberg, Indiana University Foreign Aid and Civic Participation: Experimental
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Evidence from the Philippines
Gabriella R. Montinola, University of California,
COUNTRIES Davis
11.22 THE POLITICS OF TAXING AND SPENDING Timothy W. Taylor, University of California, Davis
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Evaluating Foreign Aid Branding: Survey Experimental
Chair: Aaron Schneider, University of Denver
Evidence from Bangladesh
Disc: Aaron Schneider, University of Denver Simone Dietrich, University of Missouri
Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Papers: Ideology and Taxation Champaign
David Doyle, University of Oxford
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Nestor Castaneda, University College London
11.25 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF NON-TARIFF
Money or Management? Explaining the Political Impact BARRIERS TO TRADE
of Budget Support Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Susan Dodsworth, McGill University Chair: Joe Weinberg, University of Southern Mississippi
Parties, Legislators and Mayors: Electoral Connection in Disc: Sean D. Ehrlich, Florida State University
Brazil
Leonardo Sangali Barone, Fundacao Getulio Vargas
Papers: Of Mangoes and Deodorant: How Regulations Became
George Avelino, FGV-SP
the Crux of Trade Politics
Ciro Biderman
Gary Winslett, Boston College
Rigging Democracy: Managing Political Allies Through
Commerce and Credence: Why Government Regulations
Redistribution
Proliferate and Promote Trade
Kristen Kao
Jason Kuo, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY Patriotic Boycotts: International Tensions and Private
11.23 THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF Trade
HEALTH CARE REFORM Tyson Chatagnier, Vanderbilt University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 Kerim Can Kavakli, Sabanci University
Chair: Paulette Kurzer, University of Arizona
Tax or Spend? Determining Protectionist Policy
Disc: Ellen M. Immergut, Humboldt University Berlin Preferences
Joe Weinberg, University of Southern Mississippi
Papers: The Politics of Regulated Competition in the The Power of Language: Convergence and Competition
Netherlands in the Texts of PTAs
Karen M. Anderson, University of Southampton Soo Yeon Kim, National University of Singapore
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
Health Inequalities in England and France
Julia Lynch, University of Pennsylvania
11.26 AUTONOMY OF INTERNATIONAL
Claiming Authority over the NHS INSTITUTIONS
Scott L. Greer, University of Michigan Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Re-conceptualizing Mental Health Care in France and Chair: Randall W. Stone, University of Rochester
the US Papers: The Consequences of International Rules on Domestic
Isabel Maria Perera, University of Pennsylvania Attitudes and Compliance
Social Insurance in the 21st Century Julia Gray, University of Pennsylvania
Margitta Maetzke, Johannes-Kepler University Linz Allison Carnegie, Columbia University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Jonathan B. Slapin, University of Essex
11.24 FOREIGN AID, NATURAL RESOURCES, Financing Rules and IO Staff Autonomy: The Case of
TAXATION, AND ACCOUNTABILITY the United Nations
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Erin R. Graham, Drexel University
Chair: David H. Bearce, University of Colorado, Boulder
Disc: David H. Bearce, University of Colorado, Boulder

76 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Purchasing Power? The Relation Between Staff and Papers: Recycling the Unlearned Lessons of the Past in the Fight
Donors at the United Nations Against ISIL
Svanhildur Thorvaldsdottir, University of Rochester Steve Grenier, King's College London
Expressing Displeasure by Withdrawing from Russia and the Eurasian Union: Offering an Alternative
Intergovernmental Organizations Model?
Felicity Vabulas, University of Chicago, Harris Tracey German
School of Public Policy Studies Angela Merkel and the Re-emergence of Germany on
Informational and Distributive Theories of International the World Scene
Institutions Gale A. Mattox, US Naval Academy
Erik Voeten, Georgetown University The Lion Roars No More: The Retirement of the United
Depth, Participation, and International Human Rights Kingdom?
Agreements Andrew M. Dorman
Xinyuan Dai, University of Illinois, Urbana- DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Champaign 11.30 ASSESSING UNCERTAINTY IN FOREIGN
Alexandros Tokhi, WZB Berlin Social Science Center POLICY DECISION MAKING
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
11.27 ALLIANCE POLITICS Chair: David Holloway, Stanford University
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D Disc: Kai He, Griffith University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
Papers: Outcome Unclear: The Effects of Untested Alliances on Papers: Assessing the Probability of Success in Afghanistan and
State Reputations Vietnam
Thomas Richard Cook, University of Colorado Jeffrey A. Friedman, Dartmouth College
Boulder
U.S. Assessments of Oil Supply and Price Disruptions in
Bilateral Defense Cooperation and the New Global the 1970s
Security Network Victor Robert McFarland, University of Missouri
Brandon J. Kinne, University of California, Davis
How China Ends Wars (1950-1979): Implications for
Domestic Sources of Alliance Formation Contemporary Flashpoints
Carrie A Lee, Stanford University Oriana Skylar Mastro, Georgetown University
The Unforeseen Consequences of Extended Deterrence Mission Impossible?: When Will Covert Regime Change
Rupal Mehta, Harvard Kennedy School Operations Succeed?
Neil Narang, University of California, Santa Barbara Lindsey O'Rourke, Boston College
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
11.28 U.S. DOMESTIC POLITICS AND THE USE OF 11.31 FOREIGN POLICY OF MIDDLE EAST STATES
FORCE Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
Chair: Jordan Tama, American University-SIS POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Disc: Christopher F. Gelpi, The Ohio State University Chair: Ivan Sascha Sheehan, University of Baltimore College
of Public Affairs
Papers: Life and Limb: New Estimates of Casualty Aversion in Disc: Kamran Bokhari, University of Westminster
the U.S.
Tanisha Fazal, University of Notre Dame Papers: Obama, the Iran Narrative, and US Foreign Policy
Analyzing U.S. Public Perceptions of Manned versus Christopher Ferrero, Syracuse University
Unmanned Weaponry State Identities, Institutions and Continuity and Change
Julia M. Macdonald in Iran'sNuclear Policy
Jacquelyn Schneider, George Washington University Abolghasem Bayyenat
Lame Duck Foreign Policy Surviving the Spring: Foreign Policy and Regime
Philip B. K. Potter, University of Virginia Security in the Arab Uprisings
The Political Origins of Elite Support for War Debra Shushan, College of William & Mary
Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, George Washington US Democracy Promotion in Kuwait: From Liberation
University To Stagnation (1991-2011)
Just War Doctrine and the U.S. Public Dionysis Markakis, Center for International and
Scott D. Sagan, Stanford University Regional Studies, Georgetown's School of Foreign
Benjamin A. Valentino, Dartmouth College Service in Qatar
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS Israel and the Arab Spring: Isolation as a Geopolitical
CONTROL
Daily Schedule

Reasoning
11.29 A DISINTEGRATING WEST AND THE FUTURE PINAR AKPINAR, Istanbul Policy Center/Sabanci
OF THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM? University
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Bulent ARAS
Chair: Chris C. Demchak, US Naval War College DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Disc: Andrew M. Dorman 11.32 ACCOUNTING FOR CRIMINAL CIVIL WARS:
NEW CONFLICTS FOR A MULTI-POLAR
WORLD?
Room: Hilton, Mason Room

DAILY SCHEDULE 77
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Chair: Luis De la Calle, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Welcoming the Unwelcome: Refugee Flows, Integration,
Económicas (CIDE) and Political Stability
Disc: Sandra Jessica Ley Gutierrez, CIDE Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh
Christian Gineste
Papers: Dynamics of Civil Wars and Organized Crime: DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Convergence and Divergence 11.35 COMMITTEES IN CONGRESS: SOURCES OF
Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University POWER AND INFLUENCE
The Logic of Violent Corruption in Criminal War Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
Benjamin Lessing, University of Chicago Chair: Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University
When Do Drug Trafficking Organizations Enter Disc: Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University
Electoral Politics? Timothy P. Nokken, Texas Tech University
Guillermo Trejo, University of Notre Dame
Boundless Violence: The Logic of Economic Civil Wars Papers: Conditional Committee Assignment Bias in Light of
Luis De la Calle, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Institutional Norms
Económicas (CIDE) Sam Glaser
Andreas Schedler, CIDE, Mexico City Congressional Agenda Setting in an Centralized Era
Jonathan Lewallen, University of Texas at Austin
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
11.33 POPULAR CULTURE AND CONTENTIOUS Information and Committee Power in Congress: Cues
POLITICS and Floor Amendment Votes
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III James M. Curry, University of Utah
Chair: Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago Staffing Priorities in Congress: From Collective to
Disc: James D. Fearon, Stanford University Individualized Activities
R. Eric Petersen, Congressional Research Service,
Papers: Gender Strategy in Massive Multiplayer Online Role- Library of Congress
playing Games Lara Chausow, Congressional Research Service
Johanna Kristin Birnir, University of Maryland, Protecting the Vulnerable? The $tate of House
College Park Committee Assignments
David Waguespack, University of Maryland- College Scott Adler, University of Colorado, Boulder
Park Adam Cayton, University of Colorado Boulder
Pop Struggle: Repression and Dissent in Film, Graphic DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Novels and Comics 11.36 THE CASE OF EDUCATION IN PUBLIC
Christian Davenport, University of Michigan MANAGEMENT RESEARCH
Approaching ABM Virtualizations as Complex Games Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania Disc: Vicky Wilkins, American University
Miguel Garces, Lustick Consulting
Patrick N. O'Mahen, Lustick Consulting Papers: Branding, Signaling, and Institutional Identity in Public
Thomas McCauley, Lustick Consulting Higher Education
The Virtualization of Real War Alisa Hicklin Fryar, University of Oklahoma
Marcus Schulzke, University of Leeds Christopher Birdsall, American University
Tom Rabovsky, Indiana University, Bloomington
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
11.34 REFUGEE AND CONFLICT DYNAMICS Exploring the Impact of Social Construction on
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 Stakeholder Engagement
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS Thaddieus W. Conner, New Mexico State University
Chair: Aysegul Aydin, University of Colorado, Boulder Person Environment-Fit and Choice of College Major
Field for Freshman Students
Disc:
Raymond Zuniga, American University
Yao-Yuan Yeh, University of California, Merced
Aysegul Aydin, University of Colorado, Boulder
The Network Approach to Post-9/11 Education Benefits:
Papers: Conflict, Refugee Influxes, and Health Outcomes The Profit Incentive
Tracy Kuo Lin, University of California, San Daniel L. Fay, Mississippi State University
Francisco Corri Zoli, Syracuse University
Rosalinda Maury, Institute for Veterans and Military
Guilt by Association: Questioning Refugee Camps as Families | Syracuse University
Sites of Conflict Diffusion
Andrew C Shaver, Princeton University DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Yang-Yang Zhou, Princeton University 11.37 BUREAUCRATIC POLICYMAKING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Out of the Frying Pan and Into the Fire? One-Sided Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC
Violence in Refugee Locations ADMINISTRATION
Kerstin Fisk, Loyola Marymount University
Chair: Gary E. Hollibaugh, University of Notre Dame
Third Party Intervention in Civil War: Refugee Policy Disc: Rachel Augustine Potter, University of Virginia
and Interstate Disputes Miranda Yaver, Washington University in St. Louis
Kara Ross Camarena

78 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Papers: Analyzing Agency Choice with Text Analysis: The Case Latin American Recentralization in Cross-Regional
of the NLRB Perspective
Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester J. Tyler Dickovick, Washington & Lee University
Matthew James Sweeten Regional Self-Rule and Voting Participation in Latin
Prioritization by Litigation? Deadlines and Resource America
Limits in Agency Rulemaking Sara Niedzwiecki, University of New Mexico
Christopher Michael Carrigan, George Washington Alissandra T. Stoyan, Kansas State University
University The Causes of Recentralization in Colombia (2007-2011)
Laurence Tai, NYU School of Law Julian Daniel Lopez-Murcia, University of Oxford
The Politics of Administrative Rulemaking in the Subnational Inequality in Social Development: Colombia
American States. as a Case Study
Graeme Boushey, University of California, Irvine Silvia Otero-Bahamon, Northwestern University
Robert J. McGrath, George Mason University
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
Does Industry Persuade or Purchase the Regulators? 11.41 BEYOND THE 'END OF FEDERAL URBAN
Srinivas Parinandi, University of Michigan, Ann POLICY' IMPASSE
Arbor Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Matthew P. Hitt, Louisiana State University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Chair: Susan E. Clarke
11.38 THE WELFARE STATE IN COMPARATIVE
Disc: Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri-St. Louis
PERSPECTIVE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE Papers: Rethinking Federal Urban Policy in an Age of Austerity
POLITICS Robert P. Stoker, George Washington University
Michael J. Rich, Emory University
Chair: Rosemary CR Taylor, Tufts University
Disc: Marwa Shalaby, Rice University 'Collective Impact' Initiatives in the Education Sector
Charlotte Fridolfsson, Link�ping University Jeffrey R. Henig, Columbia University
Constance Margarete Clark, Teachers College,
Columbia University
Papers: Age, Period and Cohort Effects: Differences in Attitudes David M. Houston, Teachers College, Columbia
Towards Spending University
Roula Nezi, University of Konstanz
Multilevel Governance and Immigrant Integration Policy
Social Protection in Asia: Coverage, Generosity and in the US and Canada
Stratification Mara Sidney, Rutgers University, Newark
Xian Huang, University of Pennsylvania
The Federal Policy/Local Capacity Nexus in National
The Paradox of Redistribution: Explaining development Labor Market Policies
over time? Allison Bramwell, University of North Carolina at
Anders Lindbom, Uppsala University Greensboro
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
The New American Welfare State: Consumer
11.42 NEW ABORTION POLITICS
Bankruptcy as Case Study
Serena Laws
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND
11.39 DON'T LET IT BRING YOU DOWN: THE POLICY
CONSEQUENCES OF JUDICIALIZATION Chair: Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Disc: Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina
Chair: Gordon Silverstein, Yale University Karen L. Baird, Purchase College, SUNY
Part: Jeb Barnes, University of Southern California
Sarah Staszak, Harvard University Papers: Governing Reproduction: Race, Nation, and Abortion in
Ran Hirschl, University of Toronto the United States
Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University Jennifer Denbow
Charles R. Epp, University of Kansas
Mitch Pickerill, Northern Illinois University Misinformed Consent: State Indices on Abortion
George I. Lovell, University of Washington Cynthia R. Daniels, Rutgers University, New
Brunswick
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL Amanda M. Roberti
RELATIONS Grace Elizabeth Howard, Rutgers University
11.40 DECENTRALIZATION, RECENTRALIZATION, The New Abortion Politics: Expanding Conflict Through
PARTICIPATION AND INEQUALITY
Policy Diffusion
Room: Parc 55, Stockton
Daily Schedule

Anna Calasanti, University of New Mexico


Chair: Jean-Paul Faguet, London School of Economics
Descriptive versus Substantive Representation: Women
Disc: Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University Want Substance
Danielle Martin, California State University,
Papers: Scale, Community, and Regional Government Sacramento
Gary Marks, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam
Protecting Women as Women: Strategic Framing of
Liesbet Hooghe, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU
Abortion Regulations
Amsterdam
Amanda M. Roberti

DAILY SCHEDULE 79
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS Papers: Did the Direct Primary Lead to Polarization?
11.43 THE INTERSECTIONS OF RACE AND GENDER Seth E. Masket, University of Denver
POLITICS Direct Primaries under Presidential Systems: Evidence
Room: Hilton, Imperial B from South Korea
Disc: Jeanette Yih Harvie, University of California, Santa Shinhye Choi, University of California, Berkeley
Barbara Endorsements and Elite Signaling in the 2012
Republican Primaries
Papers: Gender Differences in Political Ambition of Elite Young Nitya Rao, University of Texas, Austin
People of Color
Median Activists or Median Voters: The Contingent
Shauna L Shames
Effect of Primary Elections
Gender Gaps and Immigrant Incorporation: The Asian Daniel Max Kselman, IE Business School; School of
American Women's Vote IR
Christian Dyogi Phillips, University of California -
No Polarization in spite of Primaries? A Median Voter
Berkeley
Theorem with Nominations
Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
Gilles Serra, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia
Gendered & Racialized Reentry: Negotiating the Economicas
Criminal Justice System
Keesha M. Middlemass, Trinity University DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
11.47 ADVANCING SALIENCY THEORY: PARTIES'
Better For All Women? The Impact of Race and Gender SALIENCE STRATEGIES IN MULTI-ISSUE
on Negative Campaigns ELECTIONS
Liz Lebron, Louisiana State University Room: Hilton, Powell Room
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS Chair: James Adams, University of California, Davis
11.44 INTERACTIONS BETWEEN AND INFLUENCES Disc: Sergio Jesus Ascencio Bonfil, University of Rochester
OF RELIGIOUS AND ELECTORAL POLITICS James Adams, University of California, Davis
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Chair: Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Papers: Valence Campaigning in the 2008 US Congressional
Disc: Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Elections
Matthew L. Jacobsmeier, West Virginia University Thomas Gschwend, University of Mannheim
Stoetzer Frederik Lukas, Univeristy of Mannheim
Papers: Candidate Evaluation, Corruption and Religiosity: Steffen Zittlau, University of Mannheim, MZES
Evidence from Pakistan Party Competition and the Mobilization of Social
Michael Kalin, Yale University Groups
Niloufer Siddiqui, Yale University Lorenzo De Sio, LUISS Guido Carli
Does Religion āDistractĀ Voters? How Religion Affects Till Weber, Baruch College, CUNY
Economic and Values Voting The Salience of the 2nd Dimension: Heresthetics in 18
Ben Gaskins, Lewis & Clark College Parliamentary Democracies
The Political Ecology of Religious Presence: Interest Francesc Amat, Institute for Political Economy and
Group Agenda Control Governance
Paul A. Djupe, Denison University Salience Strategies and Policy Bundling in Multi-Issue
Andrew R. Lewis, University of Cincinnati Elections
Islamist Party Strategies After the Arab Uprisings Chitralekha Basu, University of Rochester
Quinn Mecham, Brigham Young University PartiesĀ Issue Emphasis as Determinants of Associative
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND Issue Ownership
PARTIES Stefaan Walgrave
11.45 CONCEPTUALIZING PARTIES: PARTIES AS Jonas Lefevere
POLICY DEMANDERS AND THE DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
ALTERNATIVES 11.48 THE EFFECTS OF EDUCATION, AGE, MASS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 SHOOTINGS, AND NATURAL DISASTERS ON
Chair: Christopher Baylor, College of the Holy Cross TURNOUT
Part: Kathleen Bawn, University of California, Los Angeles Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Daniel R. DiSalvo, CUNY-City College of New York Chair: John E. McNulty, Univ. Alabama-Birmingham (UAB)
Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University Disc: Holly Ann Garnett, McGill University
Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND Papers: Hundred Years of Educational Expansion: Did it Affect
PARTIES Political Participation?
11.46 THE ORIGINS AND EFFECTS OF PRIMARY Sven Oskarsson, Uppsala University
ELECTIONS Karl-Oskar Lindgren, Uppsala University
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero Mikael Persson, University of Gothenburg
Chair: Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin
Disc: Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University
Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin

80 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Issue Salience & Campaign Contributions: Evidence Perceptions of In-Group Voting Preferences: Race-
from Mass Shootings in the US Ethnicity, Gender, and Party
Valentino Larcinese, Universita' Bocconi, Milan David C. Wilson, University of Delaware
Francesco Maria Esposito, Catholic University of the Darren Davis, University of Notre Dame
Sacred Heart - Via Necchi 5 - 20123 - Milan The Structure of Racial Attitudes Among White
Francesco Sobbrio, Catholic University of Milan Americans
Natural Disasters And Political Participation: Evidence Stanley Feldman, Stony Brook University
from Reoccurring Floods Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook
Lukas Rudolph, University of Munich Perception, Self-Interest and the Principle-Policy Gap in
Patrick Michael Kuhn, Princeton University Racial Attitudes
Voting Without Your Feet: Mandatory Mail Ballot Andrew J. Taylor, North Carolina State University
Elections in California DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Sean Freeder, University of California Berkeley 11.51 "TRUST ME, I DIDN'T MEAN TO SEE
Gabrielle Elul, UC Berkeley POLITICAL INFORMATION..."
Jake M Grumbach, UC Berkeley Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
The Decline of Political Participation in Old Age Chair: Emily Sydnor, Southwestern University
Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin Disc: Ken Mulligan, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR Nathaniel Swigger, Ohio State University
11.49 THE ELECTORAL CONNECTION AND
DEMOCRATIC ACCOUNTABILITY Papers: Passive Learning and Incidental Exposure to News
Room: Parc 55, Mason Natalie Jomini Stroud, University of Texas, Austin
Chair: Anthony Fowler, University of Chicago Joshua M. Scacco, Purdue University
Disc: Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago Accidental Exposure to Politics on Social Media as a
Anthony Fowler, University of Chicago Participation Equalizer
augusto valeriani, Università di Bologna
Papers: Representational Strategies in Fragmented Electoral Cristian Vaccari, Royal Holloway, University of
Markets London
Travis Johnston, University of California, Berkeley What Drives Conspiratorial Beliefs? The Role of
Party-Candidate Linkages and Electoral Instability Informational Cues
Francesca Refsum Jensenius, Norwegian Institute of Joseph E. Uscinski, University of Miami
International Affairs Casey A. Klofstad, University of Miami
Pavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins University Why is Satire so Liberal: Psychology, Ideology, and
Descriptive Representation and Legislative Influence Humor Appreciation
Matthew J. Hayes, Indiana University, Bloomington Dannagal G. Young, University of Delaware
William Kindred Winecoff, Indiana University Abigail Goldring
Business Experience Required? Analyzing Mayors and Shannon Poulsen
Fiscal Outcomes in US Cities DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
Patricia Kirkland, Columbia University 11.52 DARK PLACES: CRIME AND POLITICS IN
How Legislator Identities Matter for Substantive JAMES ELLROY’S AMERICA
Minority Representation Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Albert Fang, Yale University Chair: Darrell A. Hamlin, Fort Hays State University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION Disc: Darrell A. Hamlin, Fort Hays State University
11.50 UNDERSTANDING ATTITUDES OF AND
TOWARD GROUPS Papers: Title: ĄJames Ellroy, Don DeLillo and the tragic 60s,ď
Room: Parc 55, Mission I Joseph Romance, FHSU
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND Joseph Romance, Fort Hays State University
POLITICS Policing, Corruption, and Criminality: Force and the
Chair: Jennifer L. Merolla Rule of Law
Disc: Jennifer L. Merolla Jeffrey A. Becker, University of the Pacific
Ashley E. Jardina, Duke University James Ellroy's California
Susan McWilliams, Pomona College
Papers: Contextual Ethnic Diversity and Ethnicized Crime Seeking Dimension: Women in the Body of James
Attitudes Ellroy
Frederik Hjorth, University of Copenhagen Deirdre M. Condit, Virginia Commonwealth
Inter-Group Attitudes Among Multiple Populations: University
Daily Schedule

Competition and Context DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION


Matt A. Barreto, University of California, Los 11.53 CLIENTELISM AND CORRUPTION ACROSS
Angeles DICTATORSHIP AND DEMOCRACY
Benjamin Fontaine Gonzalez, Highline College Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Gabriel Sanchez, University of New Mexico Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Kiku Huckle
Chair: Sarah Hummel, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign
Disc: Simeon C. Nichter, UC San Diego

DAILY SCHEDULE 81
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Sarah Hummel, University of Illinois at Urbana- Paths toward Subnational Democratization: L. America
Champaign in a Comparative Framework
Jacqueline Behrend, Universidad Nacional de San
Papers: Clientelism on the Ground: Lessons from the Argentine Martin / CONICET
Case Reciprocal Retaliation and the Federal Basis of Party
Mariela Szwarcberg, Reed College Competition in Nigeria
Lustration and clientelism: transitional justice in shaping Carl LeVan, American University-SIS
party-voter linkages DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
Monika Nalepa, University of Chicago 11.56 CRITICAL THEORIES OF PEACE: PEACE,
Patronage and Permanent Giveaways: Party JUSTICE, HUMAN RIGHTS
Institutionalization in Dictatorships Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Anne Meng, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Douglas Irvin-Erickson, George Mason University, The
Explaining AKP Support in Turkey School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution
Melissa J. Marschall, Rice University Disc: Stephen Eric Bronner, -university-
Abdullah Aydogan
Alper Tolga Bulut Papers: Partisan Moralism to System Transformation in Conflict
Corruption as a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy: Evidence from Analysis and Resolution
a Survey Experiment Douglas S. Irvin, George Mason University, School
Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia for Conflict Analysis and Resolution
Virginia Oliveros, Tulane University A Critical Theoretical Approach to Human Rights for
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Social Transformation
11.54 CRITICAL EVOLUTIONS IN ELECTION Micheline Ishay, University of Denver
OBSERVATION Genocide, Human Rights & Crimes Against Humanity:
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 The Eclipse of Justice
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND Douglas Irvin-Erickson, George Mason University,
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS The School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution
Chair: Shelley McConnell, St. Lawrence University Freedom from Fear?: The Global Human Rights
Disc: Harold A. Trinkunas, The Brookings Institution Response to Gender-Based Violence
Alison Brysk, UCSB
Papers: Randomization and International Election Observation DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
Susan D. Hyde, Yale University 11.57 AFTER BOSTON COLLEGE: ETHICAL AND
David Carroll, Carter Center METHODOLOGICAL INNOVATION IN
Do Governments Counteract International Pressure for FIELDWORK
democracy? Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
Judith Kelley, Duke University Chair: Tariq Thachil, Yale University
Conceptualizing Electoral Accompaniment Disc: Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Jennifer McCoy, Georgia State University Adam Michael Auerbach, American University
Shelley McConnell, St. Lawrence University
Domestic Election Monitors, Electoral Institutions and Papers: Understanding Autocrats: Challenges of Micro-level
Integrity in the Americas Research on Iraq
Sharon F. Lean, Wayne State University Julia Choucair-Vizoso, Stanford University
Toward a Process-Based Evaluation of International Researching Violence under Authoritarianism: How
Electoral Observation Ethics Shapes Methodology
Betilde Virginia Muñoz-Pogossian, Organization of Sheena Chestnut Greitens, University of Missouri,
American States Columbia
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Rethinking Field Methods and Ethics in Fragile States
11.55 SUBNATIONAL VARIATIONS IN DEMOCRACY Milli Lake, Arizona State University
AND AUTOCRACY Kate Cronin-Furman
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 Whose Evidence? How US Law and the ĄWar on
Chair: Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University Terrorď Affect Violence Research
Disc: Agustina Giraudy, American University Sarah E. Parkinson, University of Minnesota
Interviewing Civil War Perpetrators: Fear, Empathy, and
Papers: Local Protest and Election Fraud: A New Test of Research Ethics
Authoritarian Regime Uncertainty Anastasia Shesterinina, Yale University
Tomila Lankina DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
Electoral Freeness and Fairness: The Impact of Local 11.58 SHOULD THERE BE A REGISTRY FOR
Elections on National Ones POLITICAL SCIENCE RESEARCH?
Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Sub-national Variations in Election Quality- Lessons Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
RESEARCH
from Malawi
Michael Wahman, University of Missouri Chair: Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia
Part: Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University
Jacob Bowers, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

82 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

John Gerring, Department of Political Science, Boston Who Listens to Whom? Assessing Inequalities in
University Representation
Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University Justin Phillips, Columbia University
Jonathan Nagler, New York University Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University
DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN POLITICS CONFERENCE Adam Zelizer
GROUP Related Groups
11.59 ETHNICITY AND THE POLITICS OF RESOURCE 12.1 CAMPAIGN FINANCE RESEARCH GROUP:
ALLOCATION IN AFRICA POLITICAL PARTIES AND INTEREST GROUPS
Room: Parc 55, Lombard AFTER CITIZENS UNITED
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Disc: Adam Harris, New York University Chair: Ruth S. Jones, Arizona State University
Disc: Michael J. Malbin, University at Albany, SUNY
Papers: The Politics of Allocation: Ethnicity and KenyaĀs
Constituency Development Fund Papers: Political Parties and Interest Groups after Citizens
Kirk Andrew Harris, Indiana University United ĉ Convergence or Divergence? Do Parties and
Local Logics of Development in Decentralized West Outside Groups Spend on the Same Candidates, and
Africa Does It Matter?
Martha Wilfahrt, Northwestern University Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico
Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University
Relationship between Trust and Approval: Results of a
Panel Survey in Ghana Interest Group Issue Strategies: Advertising in the 2014
Kevin S. Fridy, University of Tampa Congressional Elections
Mary R. Anderson, University of Tampa Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University
Michael M. Franz, Bowdoin College
Travis N. Ridout, Washington State University
What Determines Levels of Patronage? ĉ Sub-National
Evidence From Kenya
Agnes Cornell, Aarhus University How Purists Dominate Money in Politics
Michelle D'Arcy, Trinity College Dublin Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
DIVISION 54: POLITICAL EPISTEMOLOGY Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts,
11.60 EPISTEMIC DEMOCRACY AND ITS CRITICS Amherst
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
What Would a $1.5 Million Contribution ĄLimitď Mean
Chair: Alfred Moore
for the Parties?
Part: Helene E. Landemore Michael J. Malbin, University at Albany, SUNY
Jack Knight, Duke University
Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University 12.2 CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:
Daniel Viehoff, Yale University/University of Sheffield CHRISTIAN PERSPECTIVES ON IMMIGRATION
POLICY
DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY Room: Nikko, Ballroom II
11.61 VOICES OF THE UNHEAVENLY CHORUS: Chair: Kimberly H. Conger, University of Cincinnati
INEQALITIES IN ORGANIZED INFLUENCE
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Disc: Kimberly H. Conger, University of Cincinnati
Chair: Joseph M. Schwartz, Temple University
Papers: White Evangelicals and Immigration
Disc: David Broockman, Stanford GSB Ruth Melkonian-Hoover, Gordon College
Lyman Kellstedt, Wheaton College
Papers: Advocacy by Organizations: What Would an Unbiased
Immigration and the Southern Baptist Convention:
Pressure System Look Like?
Moving the Republican Majority
Kay Lehman Schlozman, Boston College
Stuart Warren, University of Cincinnati
Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill Challenging Sovereignty: Theologically Qualifying
Federal United States Immigration Law
Robert W Heimburger, Blackfriars Hall, University
Congressional Inattention to Inequality: Speech, Money,
of Oxford
and Organized Interests
Christopher M. Witko, The University of South
Carolina 12.3 POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP:
Jana Morgan, University of Tennessee, Knoxville FORECASTING THE 2015 UK PARLIAMENTARY
Nathan J. Kelly, University of Tennessee, Knoxville ELECTION
Peter Enns, Cornell University Room: Hilton, Imperial A
Protests and Legislative Bias Favoring Racial and Ethnic Chair: Mary Stegmaier, University of Missouri
Minorities and the Poor Disc: Bruno JEROME, University of Paris II Pantheon Assas
Daily Schedule

LaGina Gause, University of Michigan Ross E. Burkhart


Class Norms on College Campuses
Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University Papers: ElectionForecast.co.uk: Combining National, Local and
Katherine McCabe, Princeton University Historical Information to Forecast the 2015 General
Adam Thal, Princeton University Election
Chris Hanretty, University of East Anglia
Benjamin E Lauderdale, London School of
Economics
Nick Vivyan, Durham University

DAILY SCHEDULE 83
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Victory without Power: The Tories in the 2015 Election Papers: Gender and the Politics of Place in Hannah Mather
Matthew Lebo, Stony Brook University CrockerĀs Reminiscences
Helmut Norpoth, Stony Brook University Sarah Loretto Houser, American University
Using a Synthetic Model for Forecasting the Next ĄHumankind is But One Familyď Frances Wright on
British General Election Race and Gender in America
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, university of iowa Lisa Pace Vetter, University of Maryland, Baltimore
Eric Belanger, McGill University County
Richard Nadeau, University of Montreal The Moral Imagination of an Informed Citizenry:
The Party Leadership Model: An Early Forecast of the Crocker, Hall and Freemasonry
2015 British General Election John Slifko, Roosevelt Center for the Study of Civil
Andreas Erwin Murr, University of Oxford Society and Freemasonry
From Polls to Votes to Seats: Forecasting the 2015 David Walker and the Political Theology of Slave
British General Election Resistance
Robert Ford, University of Manchester Michael Gorup, Cornell University
Will Jennings, University of Southampton New Jersey WomenĀs Suffrage in 1776-1807 and in
Mark A. Pickup, Simon Fraser University Historical Memory
Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin Kirsten Nussbaumer, Stanford University
Thursday, 8:30 AM to 9:30 AM 16.3 SEXUAL MINORITIES-POLICY-MAKING AND
POLITICAL REPRESENTATION
APSA Events
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
13.1 APSA RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER INSTITUTE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
(RBSI) ORIENTATION MEETING POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room Chair: Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University
13.2 TEACHING AND LEARNING COMMITTEE Disc: Susan Mezey, Loyola University Chicago
BUSINESS MEETING Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room

Thursday, 9:00 AM to 10:30 AM Papers: A Queer Family Resemblance: Identity Politics without
the Identity
APSA Events
Paul Martorelli, University of California, Berkeley
14.1 WOMEN OF COLOR IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
FOCUS GROUPS (INVITATION ONLY)
Intersectionality & Surrogate Representation: Women of
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room Color and LGBT Policy
Megan Elizabeth Osterbur, Xavier University of
Thursday, 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM Louisiana
APSA Events Unity or Diversity: Examining the Formation of the
15.1 CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS - AUTHOR
LGBT Coalition in US Politics
Zein Murib, University of Minnesota
INTERVIEWS PART 1
Room: Hilton, Green Room The ĄWar on Solicitation:ď A Tool for Controlling
Transgender Populations
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Courtenay W. Daum, Colorado State University
Theme Panels Transgender Marginalization: Political Articulations of
16.1 FIFTY YEARS AFTER THE VRA: THE FUTURE Inclusion
OF VOTING AND REPRESENTATION IN THE US Ana P. Morgenstern
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 APSA Events
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND 17.1 BEST PRACTICES TO ACHIEVE AND SUSTAIN
POLITICS GENDER EQUALITY: ARE WE THERE YET?
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
CITIZENSHIP
Chair: Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University
Chair: Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California Part: Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy School
Part: Nathaniel Persily, Stanford University Melanie Frances Manion, Duke University
David T. Canon, University of Wisconsin, Madison Kathleen Thelen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Sophia Jordan Wallace, Rutgers University, New Dawn L. Teele, University of Pennsylvania
Brunswick Barbara F. Walter, University of California, San Diego
Stephen D. Ansolabehere, Harvard University Mala Htun, University of New Mexico
Kareem Crayton, Crimcard Consulting Services Vesla Mae Weaver, Yale University
16.2 RACE AND GENDER IN THE EARLY Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University
AMERICAN REPUBLIC 17.2 PERESTROIKA AND PERSPECTIVES: U.S.
Room: Hilton, Imperial B POLITICAL SCIENCE BETWEEN PAST AND
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT FUTURE
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Chair: Eileen Hunt Botting, University of Notre Dame Chair: Jeffrey C. Isaac, Indiana University, Bloomington
Disc: Eileen Hunt Botting, University of Notre Dame Part: John G. Gunnell, University of California, Davis
Chernoh Sesay, DePaul University Ange-Marie Hancock, University of Southern California
Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University

84 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Robert O. Keohane, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton Jane Addams and Possibilities for Political Friendships
University Wynne Walker Moskop, Saint Louis University
David D. Laitin, Stanford University Critiques of Chrono-normativity: Queer, Evangelical,
Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, and Messianic Temporalities
Irvine John McMahon, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania Joanna Tice, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Division Panels
18.4 POLICE POWER AND POLITICAL THEORY
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
18.1 ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND IDENTITY POLITICS SCIENCE
IN POST-COMMUNIST STATES Chair: Leonard C. Feldman, CUNY-Hunter College
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Disc: George Ciccariello-Maher, Drexel University
Co-sponsored by Association for the Study of Nationalities
Chair: Arolda Elbasani, EUI Papers: Unlawful Police Governance in Democracies
Disc: Sherrill Stroschein, University College London Guillermina Seri, Union College
Policing and Violence: Theorizing the Postcolonial
Papers: Extra-territorial Citizens and Voters: Moldovan Voters in Interventions
Romanian Elections Jinee Lokaneeta
Eleanor Knott, Department of Government, London
School of Economics
Policing, Torture, and Justice: Police Responses to
Human Rights Norm Diffusion
Natives, Locals, Diasporans: Armenian Identity Rachel Lee Wahl, University of Virginia
Categories in Russia and Georgia
Kristin Cavoukian, University of Toronto
The Self-Defense Justification for Police Violence and
State Sovereignty
Pre-Communist Legacies and Contemporary Russian Leonard C. Feldman, CUNY-Hunter College
Irredentism in Ukraine
Scott G. Feinstein, University of Florida DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
18.5 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS ROUNDTABLE:
Socialization, Ethnic Saliency, and Identity in Bosnia ALAN PATTEN'S "EQUAL RECOGNITION"
Matthew T. Becker, University of Mississippi Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Testing Theories about Ethnic Diversity and the Break- Chair: Lucas Stanczyk, MIT
up of the Soviet Union Part: Joseph H. Carens, University of Toronto
Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley Chiara Cordelli, The University of Chicago
Cynthia S. Kaplan, University of California, Santa Steven Wall, University of Arizona
Barbara W. James Booth, Vanderbilt University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: Alan Patten, Princeton University
HISTORICAL APPROACHES DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
18.2 EMPIRE, IMPERIALISM, AND RACE 18.6 SHOULD WE "MANAGE" DIVERSITY?
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 Room: Nikko, Monterey II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF Chair: Hollie Sue Mann, University of North Carolina at
POLITICAL THEORY
Chapel Hill
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY Disc: Hollie Sue Mann, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Disc: Inder Singh Marwah, McMaster University
Papers: Managing Diversity in Normative Political Theory: A
Papers: MontesquieuĀs Teaching International Relations:
Typology
Avery Elias Plaw, University of Massachusetts,
Between Liberty and Empire
Andrea Radasanu
Dartmouth
Burke and Paine on the Origins of British Imperialism
Beyond Diversity: Managing the Identity Crises of the
in India
21st Century
Dan I. O'Neill, University of Florida
Michael R. Clifford, Mississippi State University
A Cautionary Radical: John Stuart Mill and the Tensions
On the Value of Diversity: Kang Youwei's Great Unity
of Empire
and Mill's Individuality
Menaka Philips, Tulane University
Fernando Romero, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY The Difficulty of Diversity: Free Speech and
18.3 BORDER CROSSINGS
Daily Schedule

Psychological Distress
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero Malte Froeslee Ibsen, Goethe University Frankfurt
Chair: Mina Suk, Arizona State University Jeffrey Howard, University of Essex
Disc: P.J. Brendese, Johns Hopkins University DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
18.7 WHAT DO WE LEARN FROM DELIBERATIVE
Papers: Engaged Cosmopolitanism: Edward Said and Giorgio MINI-PUBLICS?
Agamben's universalisms Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Manu Samnotra, University of Florida Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
Chair: Lynn M. Sanders, University of Virginia

DAILY SCHEDULE 85
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Disc: Genevieve Fuji Johnson, Simon Fraser University DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
Patrick Fournier, Universite de Montreal 18.10 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: THE LOVERS’
QUARREL: THE TWO FOUNDINGS
Papers: What Kind of Opinions Do Deliberative Mini-Publics Room: Parc 55, Mason
Represent? Chair: Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth College
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University Part: John Dinan, Wake Forest University
The Value of Opinion Change: Theoretical and Sidney M. Milkis, University of Virginia
Empirical Considerations James A. Morone, Brown University
Andre Bächtiger, Universitat Luzern Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University
Deliberation, Homogenization, and Polarization* Stephen Skowronek, Yale University
Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
Kyu S. Hahn, Seoul National University 18.11 RACE AND THE AMERICAN STATE
James S. Fishkin, Stanford University Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Does Deliberation in Like-minded Groups Lead to More Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
Extreme Opinions? POLITICS
Kimmo Gronlund, Abo Akademi University Chair: Thomas K. Ogorzalek, Northwestern University
Evaluating Inequality and Argument Reasoning in Disc: Paul Frymer, Princeton University
Deliberation
Alice Siu, Stanford University Papers: Conceptualizing and Explaining Anti-Civil Rights
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY Enforcement in the US South
18.8 CONFLICT, TAXATION, AND STATE CAPACITY Daniel Kryder, Brandeis University
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 Reflections on the Weakness of Restorative Justice in
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE American Politics
POLITICS Robert Mickey, University of Michigan
Chair: Robert H. Bates, Harvard University Rick Valelly, Swarthmore College
Disc: Robert H. Bates, Harvard University The Even Newer JIm Crow
Daniel H. Kato
Papers: A Simple Model of State Building For Democracy and a Caste System? Theorizing World
Maxim Ananyev, UCLA War II and Civil Rights
Elite Conflict and the Expansion of State Capacity in Steven White, Lafayette College
Post-Revolutionary Mexico TodayĀs Runaway Slaves: Unauthorized Immigrants in a
Francisco Garfias, Stanford University Federalist Framework
Security in the Absence of a State: Clans, Goats and Allan Colbern
Pirates in Northern Somalia DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Avidit R. Acharya 18.12 BRIDGING THE QUANTITATIVE-QUALITATIVE
Robin Harding, University of Rochester DIVIDE: TEXT ANALYSIS AND DATA
Jonathan Andrew Harris THRESHOLDS
Partial State Formation and Local Fiscal Performance in Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
the West Bank Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
Diana Greenwald, University of Michigan METHODS
Chair:
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Adam Ramey, New York University Abu Dhabi
18.9 POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, INSTITUTIONS, AND Disc: Amy Semet
PUBLIC GOODS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Papers: A New Frontier Thesis: Estimating Data Thresholds in
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND fsQCA
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS Andrew S Rosenberg, Ohio State University
Chair: Pablo Beramendi, Duke University Austin Knuppe, Ohio State University
Bear F. Braumoeller, Ohio State University
Disc: Pablo Beramendi, Duke University
Automated Text Analysis in the Study of IR: Why
Papers: Decentralized Taxation and Redistribution: Evidence Current Approaches Fail
from Europe Richard McAlexander, Columbia University
Jeremy Ferwerda, MIT Measuring Discursive Institutions in South Korean
Fail-Safe Federalism Newspaper Articles
Sanford C. Gordon, New York University Oul Han, Freie Universitaet Berlin
Dimitri Landa, NYU DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Who Speaks for the Poor? 18.13 MEASUREMENT MODELS IN COMPARATIVE
Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Redistribution and Progressivity
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
Matthew Dimick, SUNY Buffalo Law School POLITICS
Daniel Stegmueller, University of Mannheim
Chair: Betul Demirkaya, Washington University in St. Louis
Disc: Fang-Yi Chiou, Academia Sinica
Daniel Pemstein, North Dakota State University

86 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Papers: An Empirical Typology of Political Regimes DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


Sebastian Ziaja, Heidelberg University 18.16 FISCAL POLICIES: CAUSES AND
Martin Elff, Zeppelin University IMPLICATIONS
Estimating the Number of Latent Classes Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Shawn Treier, Australian National University Chair: Marc P. Berenson, King's College London
Non-parametric Scaling of Political Parties Disc: Florian Max Benjamin Hollenbach, Texas A&M
Tasos Kalandrakis, University of Rochester University
Measuring Policy Positions Through the Aggregation of
Survey Responses Papers: Holding on to a Shaking Throne? Fiscal Profligacy and
Rene Lindstadt, University of Essex Democratic Governance
Sven-Oliver Proksch, McGill University Christian Ruiz-Palmero, University of Lausanne
Philipp Trein, University of Lausanne
Common Space for Citizens and Legislators in Latin
America: A Bayesian Approach Taxation and Government Quality in Democracies and
Constanza F. Schibber, Washington University in St. Autocracies
Louis Rasmus Broms, Quality of Government Institute,
University of Gothenburg
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
18.14 DIVERSE APPROACHES TO IMPROVING The How and Why of Regulating Political Finance
ONLINE EDUCATION Andrea Abel van Es, University of Sydney
Room: Hilton, Mason Room Trust, Fear and Diverse Paths to the Post-Communist
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND Modern Tax State
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Marc P. Berenson, King's College London
Chair: Richard A. Barrett, University of Southern California DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Disc: Scott Abernathy, University of Minnesota 18.17 PUBLIC GOODS, CORRUPTION, AND THE
Joel R. Campbell, Troy University STATE
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Papers: Improving Enrollment and Retention in Online Classes Chair: Marko Klasnja, Georgetown University
through Rapport-building Disc: Marko Klasnja, Georgetown University
Rebecca A. Glazier, University of Arkansas, Little
Rock Papers: A 'Systemic' Understanding of Public Goods Provision
Scripting in an Online Environment Neeraj Vimal Prasad, The Fletcher School, Tufts
Renee B. Van Vechten, University of Redlands University
Tyson D. King-Meadows, University of Maryland, Colonialism in Europe: Imperial Legacies in the Balkans
Baltimore County Bogdan Gabriel Popescu, Political Science at
Assessing Diversity in Non-Western Comparative UChicago
Politics Online Mind the Electoral Gap: How Investment in Public
Andrew Levin, Harper College Infrastructure Helps Autocrats
Teaching about Disability Access: Identifying Barriers Joan E. Cho, Harvard University
and Assessing Solutions Jae Seung Lee
Arthur Blaser, Chapman University Byung Kwon Song
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Rethinking Corruption: Integrity and Anti-Corruption
18.15 ACCOUNTABILITY AND PUBLIC GOODS Policy in Bolivia
PROVISION: NEW EVIDENCE FROM AFRICA Paul M. Heywood, University of Nottingham
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 Nieves Zuniga, University of Nottingham
Chair: Evan S. Lieberman, Massachusetts Institute of The Effects of Nomenklatura on Local Public Goods
Technology Distribution
Disc: Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University Zeyang Arthur Yu, The Hong Kong University of
Science and Technology
Papers: The Political Consequences of NGOs: Experimental DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Evidence from Ghana COUNTRIES
Katharine A. Baldwin, Yale University 18.18 AUTHORITARIANISM, REPRESSION AND
Is the Long Route of Accountability Too Long? MOBILIZATION IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Evidence from South Africa Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Daniel Nicolas Jacques de Kadt Chair: Jillian M. Schwedler, Hunter College
Evan S. Lieberman, Massachusetts Institute of Disc: Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University
Technology
Daily Schedule

Contingent Prize Allocation in One Clientelist Papers: When Regimes Attack: Repression and Anti-Coup
Democracy: Evidence from Senegal Mobilization in Egypt
Jessica Gottlieb, Texas A&M University Neil Ketchley, University of Oxford
Horacio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard University Neoliberalism, Authoritarian Learning and the Police
Participatory Research and Accountability: Experimental State in Egypt
Evidence from Kenya Michael Farquhar, Department of Politics and
Ryan M. Sheely, Harvard University International Studies, School of Oriental and African
Studies

DAILY SCHEDULE 87
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Systemic Crisis, Economic Ideas, and Military Rule in DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
Post-WWII Syria INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Daniel Neep, Georgetown University 18.21 USING WITHIN-COUNTRY INSTITUTIONAL
Judiciary-Police Relations and the Egyptian Uprisings DIVERSITY FOR CAUSAL IDENTIFICATION IN
Dina I. Rashed JAPAN
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
COUNTRIES ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
18.19 GENDER POLITICS AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group
THE DEVELOPING WORLD
Room: Nikko, Carmel I Chair: Joel A. Middleton, UC Berkeley
Papers: Gender Politics, Regime Resilience and Civil Society: Disc: Faisal Z. Ahmed, Princeton University
Algeria and Mozambique
Jasmin Lorch, GIGA German Institute of Global and Papers: The Unspoken Role of Public Works Projects in Public
Area Studies Safety: An IV Approach
Bettina Bunk, German Institute of Global and Area Masataka Harada
Studies (GIGA) Etsuhiro Nakamura, Ehime University
HUMAN RIGHTS DISCOURSE IN TURKEY: An Strategic Allocation of Party Leader Visits under an
Inductive Approach to Theory Uneven Electoral System
Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, University of Connecticut- Michio Umeda, Ehime University
Storrs When Do Voters Rely on Familiarity Cues?
Political Power, NGO initiative and Dalit Human Rights Experimental Evidence from Japan
in Rural India Justin Reeves, UCSD Political Science
Suparna Soni, State University of New York at Decomposing Voter Preferences for Personal Attributes:
Buffalo A Conjoint Analysis
The State Duty to Protect Human Rights: Corporate Yusaku Horiuchi
Complicity in the Modern Era Daniel M. Smith, Harvard University
Tricia Olsen, University of Denver Teppei Yamamoto, Massachusetts Institute of
When Quotas Fail: Electoral Rules and Gender Bias in Technology
BrazilĀs House Elections A Framing Experiment with MPs under Alternative
Frederico Batista Pereira, Vanderbilt University Electoral Systems
Megumi Naoi, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
18.20 PUBLIC OPINION AND STATE-SOCIETY 18.22 AFTER THE CRISIS: SOCIAL POLICYMAKING
RELATIONS IN CHINA IN AN ERA OF AUSTERITY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Chair: Peter L. Lorentzen, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Lucy Barnes, University of Kent
Disc: Teresa Wright, California State University, Long Beach Disc: Paulette Kurzer, University of Arizona

Papers: Patriots of Diverse Characteristics: Deconstructing Papers: Social Policy Preferences in Mature Welfare States
ChinaĀs Anti-Japan Protests Charlotte Cavaille, Institute for Advanced Study in
Ketian Zhang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Toulouse
Public Opinion and Fiscal Decision-making in China: How the Great Recession reconfigures power in
Based on a Survey Experiment advanced capitalism.
Tianguang Meng, Tsinghua University Desmond King, University of Oxford
David Rueda, University of Oxford
The Effect of NGOs' Lobbying Activities on
Government Policy Making in China Burdens of Bankruptcy: Consumer Insolvency and Well-
Qiang (Jason) Guo, New York University Being during the Eurocrisis
Changdong Zhang, Peking University Alexander J. Jakubow, New Mexico State University
Nationalism, Media Bias, and Radicalization: Who DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Supports Repression and Why 18.23 CRITICAL AND CONSTRUCTIVIST
Kai Quek, University of Hong Kong APPROACHES TO IPE
Yue Hou, MIT Room: Parc 55, Davidson
Poverty Reduction, State-building, and Regime Chair: Stefanie Hiss, University of Jena
Resilience in Xinjiang and Tibet Disc: Stefanie Hiss, University of Jena
Chao-yo Cheng
Title: Adoption or Dismissal? Explaining Policy Papers: Authoritative Practices in the OTC Derivatives Market
Consequences of CPPCC Proposals Pre- and Post-Crisis
Bin Yu, Xavier University Erin Lockwood, Northwestern University
Capitalists of the World, Unite?
Kevin Funk, University of Florida
Rising Power's State-Business Collaboration in PTA
Policy: India-Sri Lanka FTA
Wei-Lun Huang, SOAS, University of London

88 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION Papers: Audience Costs or Superpower Patrons? Sources of
18.24 BEYOND RATIFICATION: THE MANY WAYS Restraint in Crisis Bargaining
THAT THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM Dani Nedal, Georgetown University
MATTERS Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University
Room: Hilton, Imperial A Conflict, Rivalries and the Duration of Authoritarian
Chair: Karen J. Alter, Northwestern University Regimes
Disc: Karen J. Alter, Northwestern University Joonbum Bae
Desirable Punishments: Organizational Sanctions and
Papers: Partners in Compliance: The Political Cover of WTO Terrorist Behavior
Rulings Jeremy Matthew Berkowitz, Binghamton University
Cosette D Creamer, Harvard University Examining Military Training and Civilian Targeting: an
Deciding to Defer: Fairness and Efforts against Parental Experiment from Iraq
Child-Abduction Andrew Bell
Asif Efrat, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya Fight or Flight in Civil War? Evidence from Rebel-
Abraham Newman, Georgetown University Controlled Syria
International Criminal Accountability and the Mechanics Vera Mironova
of Deterrence Sam Whitt
Courtney Hillebrecht, University of Nebraska, Leader Survival, Natural Disasters, and International
Lincoln Conflict
Mea Culpa? The International Politics of Violation and Matthew DiLorenzo, Vanderbilt University
Exception Lessons from Syria: The Political and Military Utility of
Tonya L. Putnam Chemical Weapons
Domestic Courts and International Relations: Case of Hassan Elbahtimy, Centre for Science and Security
Foreign Sovereign Immunity Studies
Adam Chilton, University of Chicago Law School Looking for Trouble: Analyzing Search Engine Data
Christopher A. Whytock, University of California, During International Crises
Irvine Eric Min, Stanford University
Interstate Naming and Shaming in Human Rights Lizhi Liu, Stanford University
Mi Hwa Hong, University of Michigan Military Humanitarian Intervention and Selectivity
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION Miku Matsunaga
18.25 POSTER SESSION: INTERNATIONAL Status and Shadenfreude
COLLABORATION Thomas M. Dolan
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
The Effects of Humanitarian Aid on Rivalry after
Disc: Tobias Hofmann, University of Utah Exogenous Shocks
Thomas Jamieson, University of Southern California
Papers: Delayed Ratification? Domestic Barriers and Multilateral To Constrain or Not To Constrain? Opinions about
Human Rights Treaties Executive Authority to Wage War
Audrey Lynn Comstock, Cornell University Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University
Holding Hands while Parting Ways: Examining Masaru Kohno, Waseda University
Interstate Alliance Renegotiation Trading Arms and the Demand for Military
Ping-Kuei Chen, University of Maryland, College Expenditures: A Panel-Data Analysis
Park Oliver Pamp, University of Munich
On the Brink: When International Criminal Tribunals Paul W. Thurner, University of Munich
Influence Elite Combatants United Nations Effectiveness in Addressing Wartime
Jacqueline R. McAllister, Kenyon College Sexual Violence
Regions and Environmental Cooperation: The Role of Mehwish Sarwari, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Identity Driven Diffusion Water-Related Events and Civil Conflict
Colin Kuehl, University of California - Santa Sojeong Lee, University of Iowa
Barbara
Why Kill Mussolini? Regime Types and LeadersĀ Post-
Teaming Up: The Interplay of UN and Regional IGO Tenure Fates
Sanctions Mitchell Radtke, Texas A&M University
Inken von Borzyskowski, FSU
Terrorist Threat Indicators & Warnings: Information-
The Strategic Use of Norms: The U.S. and the UN Theoretic Analysis of Cases
Security Council in Iraq Katya Drozdova, Seattle Pacific University
Clayton J. Cleveland, Ohio University
Daily Schedule

DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS


The Legislative Influence of the Elected 10
Susan H. Allen, University of Mississippi CONTROL
Amy Yuen, Middlebury College 18.27 POSTER SESSION: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
AND ARMS CONTROL
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
18.26 POSTER SESSION: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Disc: Joel R. Campbell, Troy University
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom

DAILY SCHEDULE 89
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Papers: Consequences of drone strikes on insurgent violence: Do Commercial Interests Keep the Peace In Latin
Evidence from Pakistan America?
Asfandyar Ali Mir, University of Chicago Anita R Kellogg, University of California, Los
Losing History In Conceptual Chaos: Foreign Rule and Angeles
Relational Structures Internal Divisions, Territorial Autonomy, and Ethnic
Ben Denison, University of Notre Dame Rebellion
Explaining Outside Options for the US to Address ISIS Fanglu Sun, Rice University
Clayton J. Cleveland, Ohio University Political Competition, International Conflict Initiation,
'Divide and Deter': An American Strategy for the 21st and Democratic Peace
Century Benjamin E. Goldsmith, University of Sydney
Mathias Ormestad Frendem, University of Oxford/ Dimitri Semenovich, University of New South Wales
Harvard University The Dynamic Nature of Interventions and International
Constrained Rationality: Modeling ChinaĀs Nuclear Conflict
Nonproliferation Policy-making Ezra Schricker, Ohio State University
Hongyu Zhang, University of Georgia The Varieties and Sources of Military Power in Non-
The Evolution of Norms? American Policy Towards Democracies
Revolution in Iran and Egypt John Joseph Chin, Princeton University
Chad Nelson, Brigham Young University Do Expectations on Benefits from Oil Affect Conflict
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Risks? Evidence from Mali
18.28 POSTER SESSION: FOREIGN POLICY Matthias Basedau, GIGA German Institute of Global
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom and Area Studies
Siri Aas Rustad
Papers: Appeasing Your Neighbors? Leadership Travel and
China's Alignment Behaviors Election Violence in the Aftermath of Civil War: The
Chong Chen, Duke University Case of Nepal
Richard W. Frank, Australian National University
Diplomatic Relations in Global Politics: Political Shift in
Diplomatic Strategy Money for Nothin' and Your Guns for Free? The
Kelly Matush, University of California, San Diego Political Costs of War Finance
Shuhei Kurizaki, Waseda University Jeff Carter, University of Mississippi
The Availability of Security Guarantees and the Need DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
for WMD 18.30 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: BARTHOLOMEW
Christopher McKallagat SPARROW’S "THE STRATEGIST"
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
The Economy of Military Engagement
Thomas Nathaniel Garner, USMA Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Chair: Michael Desch, University of Notre Dame
The Effectiveness of Public and Private Threats: A
Document-Based Approach Part: Bartholomew H. Sparrow, The University of Texas at
Eric Min, Stanford University Austin
Azusa Katagiri, Stanford University Amy Zegart
Meena Bose, Hofstra University
What Big Data Shows about North Korean Nuclear Patrick J. McDonald, University of Texas, Austin
Provocations G. Jesus Velasco, Tarleton State University
Hyung-Min Joo, Korea University
Taehee Whang, Texas A&M University DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
18.31 NUCLEAR STABILITY AND DETERRENCE
Devil is in the Details: Dilemma of Foreign Aid in anti- Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Americanism
Ihsan Efe Tokdemir, Binghamton University Chair: David T Burbach, Naval War College
Disc: Daniel S. Geller, Wayne State University
Sifting Through Sand: Revenge and Proportionality in
the Middle East
Kayce Mobley, Wabash College Papers: Tempting Fate: Interests, Red-Lines, and Conflict in
Nuclear Monopoly
Humanitarian Intervention and US Decisionmaking Paul C. Avey, Virginia Tech
Process
Jieyeon Kim, Purdue University Mutual Caution or Reckless Gambling? Nuclear
Dynamics in a U.S.-China Conflict
Market Expectations of Interstate Wars: An Analysis of Joshua Rovner, Southern Methodist University
the Effect of War on Yields of Government Bonds
Kyu Young Lee, University of Iowa Unresolved Questions: Brinkmanship, the Nuclear
Balance, and Crisis Bargaining
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Steven Ward, Cornell University
18.29 POSTER SESSION: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Understanding the Behavior of Second-generation States
as Nuclear Status Changes
Disc:
Patty Zakaria, Wayne State University
Emily Hencken Ritter, University of Cailfornia, Merced
Toby J. Rider, Texas Tech University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
Papers: Carrots or Sticks? CONTROL
Su-Mi Lee, University of Hawaii-Hilo 18.32 DIVERSE APPROACHES TO NUCLEAR
PROLIFERATION
Room: Parc 55, Mission II

90 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Chair: John Schuessler, Air War College DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Disc: John Schuessler, Air War College 18.35 REBEL GROUP DYNAMICS
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Papers: Assessing Intentions Under Uncertainty: Nuclear Chair: Brian J. Phillips, CIDE
Programs and Military Conflict Disc: Brian J. Phillips, CIDE
Matthew Fuhrmann, Texas A&M University
Comparing Conventional and Nuclear Worlds Papers: Civil War as Statebuilding: Determinants of Insurgent
Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin, Madison Public Goods Provision
International Cooperation on WMD Nonproliferation Megan Stewart, Georgetown University
Jeffrey W. Knopf, Middlebury Institute of Conceptualizing Militant Groups' Leaderships with
International Studies at Monterey Social Network Analysis
The Instability of a Post-Nuclear World Jerome Drevon
David Blagden, University of Exeter Consequences of Collective Side Switching on Civil
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY War Dynamics
18.33 POLITICS OF FOREIGN AID Sabine Otto
Room: Nikko, Monterey I Collective Action, Insurgency, and Sustained Escalation
Chair: Douglas A. VanBelle, Victoria University of Wellington Jacob Aronson, University of Maryland, College Park
Paul K. Huth, University of Maryland, College Park
Disc:
Mark I. Lichbach, University of Maryland, College
Desha Girod, Georgetown University
Park
Brian Lai, University of Iowa
Kiyoung Chang, University of Notre Dame
Papers: Explaining a New Foreign Aid Recipient: The EU's
Provision of Aid to RTAs The Quest for Sovereignty: A New Dataset on Self-
Brandy Jolliff, Midwestern State University determination Movements
Nicholas Sambanis, Yale University
Reevaluating Donor Motivations in Bilateral Foreign Aid Andreas Schädel
Gina Martinez, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
18.36 CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENCY:
Strings Unattached: Chinese Foreign Aid and Regime COOPERATION AND CONFRONTATION
Stability in Rentier States Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Huan-Kai Tseng, George Washington University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
The Determinants of United StatesĀ Military Aid vs. EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Foreign Military Sales Chair: Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America
Richard Johnson, University of Strathclyde Disc: Jon C. Rogowski, Washington University in St. Louis
US Human Rights Policy and Foreign Aid: The Bush Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America
and Obama Administrations
Clair Apodaca, Virginia Tech Papers: Information Asymmetry and Bureaucratic
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Responsiveness to Congress
18.34 BORDERS, GEOGRAPHY, AND CONFLICT IN Kenneth Lowande, University of Virginia
SPACE Congressional & Presidential Action on US Tariff &
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Monetary Policy, 1865 ĉ 1934
Chair: Scott Cook, Texas A&M University Timothy P. Nokken, Texas Tech University
Disc: Scott Cook, Texas A&M University Congressional Responses to Presidential Requests
Mark E. Owens, University of Texas at Tyler
Papers: A Study of Riparian Conflict in West Africa Using Policy Making Under the Shadow of Executive Action
Spatial-Dyadic Analysis Ashley Moraguez
Steven Tyler Landis, Arizona State University
SeyedBabak RezaeeDaryakenari, Arizona State Stimulating Support: Presidential Pork and Vote-Buying
University in Congress
Jacob R. Neiheisel, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Accommodation and separatist conflict diffusion: The Michael C. Brady, Denison University
role of state capacity
Andreas Schädel DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
18.37 COMPARATIVE CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
Big Data for the Dark Side: Mapping the Rebel Alliance POLICY
Shahryar Minhas, Duke University Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Benjamin J Radford
Disc: Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania
Regional Rivalry Density and Interstate Conflict
Daily Schedule

Kentaro Sakuwa Papers: Violence Matters: the political salience of crime in


Unstable Ground: Why Do States Close Borders? comparative perspective
Katrina Browne Lisa L. Miller, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
An Analysis of Border Settlement and Leadership Policy Feedback and Crime: A Time Series Analysis in
Turnover Britain
Andrew Owsiak, University of Georgia Colin Hay, University of Sheffield
Krista E. Wiegand, University of Tennessee Will Jennings, University of Southampton
Thorin Martin Wright, Arizona State University

DAILY SCHEDULE 91
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Reluctant Warriors: Reagan, Crime Policy, and the The Limits of Rights: Muslim Women and the European
Contingent Carceral State Court of Human Rights
David Dagan, Johns Hopkins University Denise Marie Walsh, University of Virginia
Policy transfer and policy change: Promoting Justice Incorporating Difference: Hausa WomenĀs NGOs in
Reinvestment in Australia Kano, Nigeria & Tamale, Ghana
Michael Mintrom, Monash University Adryan Wallace, University of Hartford
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Toward an Intersectional Reconsideration of "The
18.38 THE PUBLIC POLICY PROCESS IN Personal is Political"
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Keisha Njeri Lindsay, University of Wisconsin,
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6 Madison
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
POLITICS 18.41 THE CONSEQUENCES OF RACE IN LOCAL
Chair: Karen L. Baird, Purchase College, SUNY POLITICS
Disc: Christian Breunig, University of Konstanz Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Carolina Johnson, University of Washington Chair: Ravi Kumar Perry, Virginia Commonwealth University
Disc: Ravi Kumar Perry, Virginia Commonwealth University
Papers: Mobilizing or Demobilizing Political Participation
Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan Papers: Black Votes, White Mayor: Economic Crisis and
Arun Agrawal Deracialization in Detroit
Jurisdictional Complexity and Legislative Agenda: The Stephen Bloom, Southern Illinois University,
Case of South Korea Carbondale
Doo-Rae Kim, Korea University Christopher T. Stout, Southern Illinois University,
Policy as Therapy: How Governments Attempt to Carbondale
Govern Emotion Invisible Neighbors: Context, Group Identity, and the
Christopher Lee Neff, University of Sydney Politics of Place
Regulating the Regulators: Revisiting EU Public Bryan Wilcox-Archuleta, UCLA
Consultations Representing African-American Constituencies through
Adriana Bunea, University College London Local Issues
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS Maricella Foster-Molina, University of Rochester
18.39 BUILDING AND TESTING THEORIES OF URBAN The Consequences of Education Reform for Citizen
POLICYMAKING AND GOVERNANCE Attitudes Towards' Government
Room: Parc 55, Stockton Sally Nuamah
Chair: Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri-St. Louis DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
Disc: Herman L. Boschken 18.42 ASSESSING THE ROLE OF RELIGION IN
Theresa Enright, University of Toronto CONFLICT
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Papers: Policy, Polity, and Political Ecosystems Chair: Quinn Mecham, Brigham Young University
Robert P. Stoker, George Washington University Disc: John F. McCauley, University of Maryland, College
Clarence N. Stone, George Washington University Park
Interest Groups in City Politics
Sarah F. Anzia, University of California, Berkeley Papers: Faith in Contention: Examining the Salience of Religion
Institutions, Markets, or Culture? Analyzing French and in Ethnic Conflict
US Urban Governance Matthew Isaacs, Brandeis University
Marc E. Smyrl, University of Montpellier Fighting the Faithful: State Response to Religious
Urban Regimes and Exchanges of Policy Resources in Insurgent Organizations
Swiss Metropolises Jason A. Klocek, Travers Department of Political
Sebastien Lambelet, University of Geneva Science, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Identity on the March: Contentious Rituals in Post-
18.40 INTERSECTIONALITY AND DIVERSE Conflict Northern Ireland
MARGINALITIES Jonathan Blake, Columbia University
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Religious Groups, Varieties of Social Capital and
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND Contentious Politics
POLITICS Yu Tao, University of Central Lancashire
Chair: Sharon Gramby-Sobukwe DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
Disc: Amy Cabrera Rasmussen 18.43 RELIGION AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Sharon Gramby-Sobukwe Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Chair: Rina Verma Williams, University of Cincinnati
Papers: Intersectionality and the Diverse Politics of Resistance Disc: Sigrun Kahl, Yale University
among Domestic Workers
Ethel Tungohan, University of Alberta Papers: Contested Recognition: Quantitative Evidence from
The Emotional Politics of Care: Negotiating Migrant Cases of Disputed Sovereignty
CaregiversĀ Rights in Israel David S. Siroky, Arizona State University
Rachel Brown, CUNY Graduate Center Nikola Mirilovic, University of Central Florida

92 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

The International Politics of the UmmaĀs Leadership Papers: How Issue Ownership Shapes Priming Effects: A
Turan Kayaoglu, University of Washington, Tacoma Randomized Campaign Experiment.
The Call to Prayer: Examining the Ethics of Religious Florian Foos, University of Zurich
Practice for FBOs Kevin Cunningham
Tanya Brooke Schwarz Peter C. John, University College London
Islamic Humanitarianism and Transnational Action Persuasion is Possible: The Case of 600,000 Voters in
Fiona B. Adamson, University of London, SOAS the Big Four Senate States
Alexander James Oliver
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL Adam Schaeffer
SYSTEMS
18.44 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF REPRESENTATION
Minding Payoffs & Cues: Measuring Voter Accuracy in
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Evaluating Elected Officials
Kristin Kanthak, University of Pittsburgh
Chair: Irfan Nooruddin, Georgetown University Jarrod Kelly, University of Pittsburgh
Disc: Abby B. Cordova, University of Kentucky Rebecca B. Morton, New York University
Challenger Quality and Democratic Accountability
Papers: Does Centralization Reduce the Quality of Phil Jones, University of Delaware
Representation? The Costa Rican Case
Bethany Shockley, Qatar University
Party Issue Salience Strategies in Multiparty Elections
James Adams, University of California, Davis
How Do the Poor Contact Politicians? Evidence from Samuel Merrill, Wilkes University
Niger Roi Zur, UC Davis
Lisa Mueller, Macalester College
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Middle Class and Redistribution: do Governments 18.47 UNDERSTANDING AND INCREASING TURNOUT
represent Middle Class Interests Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Ursula Dallinger, University of Trier
Chair: Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin
The Politics of Minority Redistribution: a Causal Disc: Michael P. McDonald, University of Florida
Inference Design
Maoz Rosenthal, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)
Herzliya Papers: @ The Vote: 4 Field Experiments Using Facebook &
David Nachmias, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Email To Increase Voter Turnout
Herzliya Katherine Haenschen, University of Texas at Austin
Does the Composition of Government Better Reflect the Does the Canvasser Matter? A Field Experiment on
Preferences of the Rich? Canvassing and Voter Turnout
Eric Guntermann, Universite de Montreal Michael Binder, University of North Florida
André Blais, University of Montreal Duty versus Choice? Searching for the Moral Dimension
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
of Voting
Michael Barber, Brigham Young University
PARTIES Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University
18.45 CRISIS OF DEMOCRACY? PARTY POLITICS Quin Monson, Brigham Young University
AND REPRESENTATION IN TIMES OF Kelly D. Patterson, Brigham Young University
AUSTERITY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 Representation and Turnout in On-Year, Off-Year, and
Chair: Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin Varied Political Contexts
Jonathan Nagler, New York University
Disc: Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin Jan E. Leighley, American University
Increasing Turnout with SMS: Field Experimental
Papers: Issue Attention and Responsiveness in Times of
Evidence on Phrasing and Timing
Yosef Bhatti, KORA - Danish Institute for Local and
Austerity
Silja Haeusermann, University of Zurich
Regional Government Research
Denise Traber, University of Zurich
Jens Olav Dahlgaard, University of Copenhagen
The Impact of Party System Responsiveness on Jonas Hedegaard Hansen, University of Copenhagen
Successful Populist Mobilization Strategies in Western Kasper M. Hansen
Europe and Latin America
Simon C. J. Bornschier, University of Zurich DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
18.48 THE POLARIZATION OF PUBLIC OPINION
Critical Parties: Party Stances on the Performance of Room: Parc 55, Market Street
Democracies in Europe Co-sponsored by DIVISION 35: POLITICAL
Robert Rohrschneider, University of Kansas ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
Stephen Whitefield, University of Oxford Chair: Jeff R. DeWitt, Kennesaw State University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Daily Schedule

Disc: Jonathan M. Ladd, Georgetown University


18.46 CAMPAIGNS, ISSUE SALIENCE, CANDIDATE
QUALITY, AND DEMOCRATIC
Papers: The Geographical Dimension of Partisan Polarization
ACCOUNTABILITY
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
over Immigration Reform
Ines Levin, University of Georgia
Chair: Conor M. Dowling, University of Mississippi
Disc: Peter W. Wielhouwer, Western Michigan University

DAILY SCHEDULE 93
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

The Polarization in Perceptions of Presidential Candidate Salience of Wildfire Risk and the Management of Public
Traits, 1980-2012 Lands
Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa
Meri Long, Vanderbilt University Barbara
Thomas J. Rudolph, University of Illinois at Urbana- Heather Elina Hodges, Reed College
Champaign (Un)natural Disasters: Drought and Distributive Politics
The Polarization of Public Opinion about Party in Brazil
Competence Alicia Dailey Cooperman, Columbia University
Jane Green, University of Manchester DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
Will Jennings, University of Southampton
POLITICS
Does Deliberation Reduce Partisan Gap in Healthcare 18.51 GOVERNANCE IN THE DIGITAL AGE: THE
Policy Opinions? PROMISE AND PERILS OF E-GOVERNMENT
Jin Woo Kim, University of Pennsylvania Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Michael X. Delli Carpini, University of Pennsylvania Chair: Steven L. Livingston, George Washington University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Disc: Louise K. Comfort
18.49 CAPTURING PROTEST: TEXT ANALYSIS Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
METHODS AND THE COMPARATIVE STUDY OF
POPULISM Papers: Essentially Digital Governance
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 Helen Zerlina Margetts, University of Oxford
Chair: Erin K. Jenne, Central European University Patrick John Dunleavy, London School of Economics
Disc: David Doyle, University of Oxford Let Them Eat Cake! E-Rulemaking and Competitive
Foods in Schools
Papers: How and Why Populist Governments Rewrite National Lauren M Dinour, Montclair State University
History Antoinette Pole, Montclair State University
Erin K. Jenne, Central European University Leveraging Social Media: The Community Policing Case
A Comparison of Content Analysis Techniques to the Christine B. Williams, Bentley University
Study of Populism in Europe Jane Fedorowicz, Bentley University
Kirk A. Hawkins, Brigham Young University Andrea Kavanaugh, Virginia Tech
Bruno de Paula Castanho e Silva, Central European Jason Thatcher, Clemson University
University Dominique Haughton, Bentley University
Textual Analysis of Populist Discourse in Croatian The Promise of E-Gov? City Hall's Responsiveness to
Presidential Elections Neighborhood Interests
Berto Salaj, Faculty of Political Science Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University
Marijana Grbesa, Faculty of Political Science, E-Government Services in U.S. Cities: What Citizens
University of Zagreb Want and What Cities Offer
Holistic and Non-Holistic Textual Analysis to Determine Ben Epstein, DePaul University
Populist Discourse Jennifer M Connolly, University of Miami
Bojana Kocijan Leticia Bode, Georgetown University
Media Analysis of the Process of Changing the Higher DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Education Law in Macedonia 18.52 TAKING IT TO THE STREETS: SOCIAL
Senka Anastasova, Institute for Social Sciences and RESISTANCE & STATE RESPONSES IN
Humanities Skopje SOUTHEAST ASIA
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND Room: Nikko, Carmel II
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
18.50 ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS, RISK, AND POLITICS
NATURAL DISASTERS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 DEMOCRATIZATION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics
SECURITY Chair: Shane J Barter, Soka University of America
Chair: Prakash Kashwan, University of Connecticut Disc: William Ascher, Claremiont McKenna College
Disc: Joshua C. Eastin, Portland State University
Papers: Resistance and Resilience: Coping with/against the State
Papers: Climate Change and Political Survival: Effects of Meredith L. Weiss, University at Albany, SUNY
Extreme Drought Institutions and Social Mobilization: The Chinese
Martin C. Steinwand, Stony Brook University Education Movement in Malaysia
Local Climate Adaptation: Federalism, Risk Ming Chee Ang, Independent Researcher
Management and Politics of Action Online Discourse Analysis of the Anti-Election
Saatvika Rai, University of Kansas Movement in Thailand
Dorothy Daley, University of Kansas Aim Sinpeng, University of Sydney
Responses to Tropical Cyclones & Rising Seas: The Under a Rebel Flag: Social Resistance to Insurgent Rule
Role of Information & Politics in Aceh
Debra Javeline Shane J Barter, Soka University of America

94 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Spaces of Discontent: Protests & New Political Spheres International Election Monitors & Perceptions of
in Vietnam Election Credibility in Tunisia
Eva Louise Hansson, Stockholm University Sarah S. Bush, Temple University
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS Economic Globalization & Political Change: A Micro-
18.53 INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AT THE NEXUS OF Level Analysis of Tunisia
FUNCTION AND DYSFUNCTION Amaney Jamal, Princeton University
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Helen V. Milner, Princeton University
Chair: Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University Security Sector Reform and Democratization in Tunisia
Disc: Henry Farrell, George Washington University Nicholas John Lotito, Columbia University
Legacies of Authoritarian Electoral Institutions:
Papers: Institutions, Integration, and The Role of Power in Evidence from Egypt & Tunisia
Global Order Elizabeth R. Nugent, Princeton University
Michael Sampson, University of Oxford DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
Mimicking Legitimacy: Why Regional Organisations 18.56 HIDDEN VIOLENCE DURING ARMED
Have Parliaments CONFLICT: METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES
Densua Mumford, University of Oxford AND INNOVATIONS
European Integration and the Evolving Subnational Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Litigation of EU Law Chair: Christian Davenport, University of Michigan
Tommaso Pavone, Princeton University Disc: Jule Krueger, University of Michigan/HRDAG
R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New
Brunswick Papers: Filling In The Blanks: Data Problems And Solutions In
Beyond Institutional Design: Explaining the Performance The Study Of Violence
of IOs Jule Krueger, University of Michigan/HRDAG
Ranjit Lall Robert J. Carroll, Florida State University
The Dissolution of International Monetary Systems in Fight or Flight in Civil War? Evidence from Rebel-
Historical Perspective Controlled Syria
Jack Seddon Vera Mironova
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Sam Whitt
18.54 DEMOCRACY, INEQUALITY, AND CORRUPTION The Legacy of War: Domestic Violence in Post-Conflict
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 Peru
Chair: Alina Mungiu-Pippidi Michele Leiby, College of Wooster
Gudrun Ostby, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)
Disc: Philip Keefer, Inter-American Development Bank
Ragnhild Nordaas, PRIO
Papers: Historical Roots of Corruption: State Building, A Method For Extracting Information From Narratives
Inequality, and Mass Education Of Sexual Violence Victims
Eric M. Uslaner, University of Maryland Priyamvada Trivedi, University of Michigan
Ragnhild Nordaas, PRIO
Income Inequality and Patterns of Democratic Transition
in New Democracies Eliciting Truthful Responses to Sensitive Questions
Eric C.C. Chang, Michigan State University Alexandra Scacco, New York University
Executive Power and the Misuse of Foreign Aid in DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
Developing Democracies 18.57 AUTHOR MEETS READERS: FREDERIC
Josephine T. Andrews, University of California, Davis SCHAFFER'S "ELUCIDATING SOCIAL SCIENCE
Gabriella R. Montinola, University of California, CONCEPTS"
Davis Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Inequality, Corruption, and Development in East Asia
Jong-sung You, The Australian National University Chair: Timothy Pachirat
Part: Douglas C. Dow, University of Texas at Dallas
Overseeing Oversight: The Logic of Appointments to
Ahmed Khanani, Department of Politics, Earlham
Brazilian State Audit Courts
Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University
College
Ido Oren, University of Florida
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Joe Soss, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
18.55 THE INTERNATIONAL AND DOMESTIC Frederic C. Schaffer, University of Massachusetts
SOURCES OF DEMOCRATIC REFORM IN Amherst
TUNISIA & BEYOND
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
18.58 POLITICAL NETWORKS IN PUBLIC POLICY
Daily Schedule

Room: Parc 55, Lombard


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Chair: Mark Tessler, University of Michigan
Chair: Christopher K. Ansell, University of California,
Disc: Mark Tessler, University of Michigan
Berkeley
Disc: Susan Mason, Boise State University
Papers: Parliamentary Service Provision to Women: The Paradox
of Tribe
Lindsay J. Benstead, Portland State University

DAILY SCHEDULE 95
Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Papers: Multiple Networks and Leadership inside Lobbying Pushing for Inclusion: Assessing Mobilization into the
Coalitions Immigrant Rights Movement
Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan, Ann James A. McCann, Purdue University
Arbor Katsuo A. Nishikawa, Trinity University
Climate Change Adaptation Policy Networks in the Lake Marisa Plasencia, University of California, San Diego
Victoria Region Harper Otawka
Matthew Hamilton, UC Davis Related Groups
Emilinah Namaganda, Makerere University 19.1 AGING POLICY AND POLITICS GROUP:
Integration Policies and Diversity in Immigrants' FEDERALISM AND AGING
Networks of Acquaintances Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Sara Pavan Chair: William G. Weissert, Florida State University
Operationalizing and Testing Echo Chambers in Disc: Laura Katz Olson, Lehigh University
American Policy Networks
Lorien Jasny Papers: State Regulation and the Use of Nurse Practitioners and
Playing by the rules: Institutional arrangements in an Physician Assistants in Nursing Homes
Ecology of Policy Games Edward A. Miller, University of Massachusetts,
Tomas Olivier, University of Arizona Boston
Ramiro Berardo, The Ohio State University Orna Intrator, University of Rochester
Emily Gadbois, University of Massachusetts, Boston
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH Denise Tyler, Brown University
18.59 EXPERIMENTAL APPROACHES TO IPE Joseph Kofi Acquah, Brown University
Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL Medicaid, Education Waivers and Negotiated Federalism
POLITICAL ECONOMY William G. Weissert, Florida State University
Chair: Soo Yeon Kim, National University of Singapore Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University
Papers: An Experimental Analysis of Distributional Equity Adaptation of State Dementia-Protective Assisted Living
Norms in Climate Negotiations Policies
Reuben Kline, SUNY, Stony Brook University Brian Kaskie, University of Iowa
Dustin Halliday Tingley, Harvard University Matt Nattinger, University of Iowa
Andrew Potter, University of Iowa
Does Corruption Kill Investors? Firm-Level
Experimental Evidence from China Work-and-Family, Round Two: The Political
Boliang Zhu, Pennsylvania State University Construction of EldersĀ Working Daughters
Sandra J. Tanenbaum, Ohio State University
Down the Rathole? Public Opinion and Support for US
Foreign Aid 19.2 AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT:
Darren G. Hawkins, Brigham Young University ROUNDTABLE: THE UNITED STATES AND THE
William Reuben Hurst, The London School of UNITED NATIONS AT 70
Economics and Political Science Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III
Chair: James R. Stoner, Louisiana State University
Explaining Individual Trade Policy Preferences: A
Neuroscientific Investigation Part: Jeremy A Rabkin, George Mason School of Law
Hans Hanpu Tung, National Taiwan University John Yoo, University of California
Beth Van Schaack, Stanford Law School
Misperceptions of Global Income and International Ruth Wedgwood, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced
Redistribution Preferences International Studies
Gautam Nair, Yale University Ian Johnstone, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP Tufts University
18.60 DREAMERS, MOBILIZATION, AND THE 19.3 COMPARATIVE URBAN POLITICS: URBAN
POLITICS OF DEFERRED ACTION PROTESTS: THE POLITICS OF SERVICE
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I PROVISION IN THE SOUTH
Chair: Daniel Tichenor Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
Disc: Daniel Tichenor Chair: Richard Stren, University of Toronto
Disc: Richard Stren, University of Toronto
Papers: An Institutional Examination of Varying Local Yue Zhang, University of Illinois - Chicago
Approaches to Implementing DACA
Els de Graauw, Baruch College Papers: Urban Policy, Social Movements and the Right to the
Shannon Gleeson, Cornell University/ILR City in Brazil
Deferred Status as a New Form of Difference Abigail Friendly, University of Toronto
Mary McThomas, CSU Channel Islands The Politics of Water in Mumbai
Diversity and its Challenges in the DREAMersĀ Bharat Khushal Punjabi, UNiversity of Toronto
Movement Local Politics and Service Protests in Sao Paulo
Fanny Lauby, William Paterson University Osmany Porto de Oliveira, University of Sao Paulo
The Legitimacy of Executive Action in Immigration What Drives People to Protest in China? Urban vs.
Law Post-DACA Rural Areas
Ming Hsu Chen, University of Colorado, Boulder Lynette H. Ong, University of Toronto

96 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 12:15 PM to 1:45 PM

19.4 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: "WHEREFROM JapanĀs ĄWomenomicsď Diplomacy: From Laggard to
DOES HISTORY EMERGE?" Leader on Gender Equality
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II Liv Coleman, University of Tampa
Chair: Tilo Schabert, University Erlagen, Germany
Disc: Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College Thursday, 12:15 PM to 1:45 PM
Ron Srigley, University of Prince Edward Island Related Groups
20.1 INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES AND
Papers: Did` Historý change its Meaning in Order and History? METHODS: THE METHODS CAFE
Barry Cooper, University of Calgary Room: Nikko, Ballroom II
Two Sources of Voegeliǹs Vision of History: Platonism Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
METHODS
and Augustinism
Thierry Gontier Chair: Jennifer Seelig
Malori A. Musselman, University of Oregon
History Brought Into Form: Political Storytelling
John F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge Disc: Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
A Continuing Strife Towards Cosmogony: History
Tilo Schabert, University Erlagen, Germany
Papers: Analyzing Social Narratives
Polis and Philosophy in the VI century B.C.: the novelty Shaul Rafael Shenhav, Hebrew University of
of VoegelinĀs reading in āThe World of the PolisĀ Jerusalem
Nicoletta Scotti Muth, Catholic University of Sacro
Analyzing Visual Materials: Paintings, Photographs,
Cuore, Milan
Posters, Đ
19.5 IBERIAN POLITICS: DIVERSITY AND THE Mary L. Bellhouse, Providence College
ECONOMIC CRISIS. AN IBERIAN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Archival Research
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Emily Hauptmann, Western Michigan University
Kenneth Kato, Office of the House Historian
Chair: Kevin Costa, Radio France Internationale
Critical Approaches to Immigration and Intersectionality
Disc:
Anna Sampaio, Santa Clara University
Felix E. Martin, Florida International University
Ronald J Schmidt, California State University, Long
Papers: The Rise and Fall of the Irish Tiger and the Spanish Beach
Bull
Sebastian Royo, Suffolk University Discourse Analysis
Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon
The New Politics of Austerity: The Case of Portugal
Catherine Moury, NOVA University of Lisbon Elucidating Social Science Concepts
Frederic C. Schaffer, University of Massachusetts
Podemos: A New Party Raises in Spain Amherst
Omar G. Encarnacion, Bard College
Ethics [including Review Committees] and Field
After Austerity: What's Left of Democracy? Research (Interviewing, Participant Observer
Klaus Armingeon, University of Berne Ethnography, and Research Design)
Stefano Sacchi, University of Milan Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University
General Strikes and Austerity Policies in Southern Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Europe Field Research I (Participant Observation, Political
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida Ethnography, etc.): US
Alison L. Johnston, Oregon State University Katherine J Cramer, University of Wisconsin,
John E. Kelly, University of London, Birkbeck Madison
College Timothy Pachirat, University of Massachusetts,
19.6 JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP: GENDER Amherst
IN CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE POLITICS Field Research II (Political Ethnography, Participant
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Observation, etc.): āOverseasĀ
Chair: Yoshitaka Nishizawa, Doshisha University Christian Bueger, Cardiff University
Disc: Gill Steel, Doshisha University Nicholas Rush Smith, City College of New York
Michael Strausz, Texas Christian University Interpreting International Politics
Cecelia Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Papers: All the Japanese State Wants is āShiningĀ Women (and Interpretive Methods in Political Theory
Their Families): Floating Rhetoric and the Neglected Sean Noah Walsh, Capital University
Realities of Abe-Womenomics
Hiroko Takeda, University of Tokyo Interviewing: Interpretive Approaches
Lee Ann Fujii, University of Toronto
Daily Schedule

The Crisis of Intimate-Relationship Formation in Samantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay College
Contemporary Japan
Yuko Ogasawara, Nihon University Law, Courts, and Judging: Interpretive Approaches
Sarah Marusek, University of Hawaii, Hilo
WomenĀs Empowerment and Activism in Japan: Beyond Pamela Brandwein, University of Michigan, Ann
the Womenomics Agenda Arbor
Linda Choi Hasunuma, Franklin and Marshall
College Post-colonial Analysis
Edmund Fong, University of Utah

DAILY SCHEDULE 97
Thursday, 12:15 PM to 1:45 PM

Teaching Qualitative-Interpretive Methods 21.11 WESTERN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION


Laura J. Hatcher, Southeast Missouri State EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
University Room: Hilton, Green Room
Ido Oren, University of Florida 21.12 WORKING GROUP MEETING: COALITION
BUILDING TO ADVANCE DIVERSE
Thursday, 12:30 PM to 1:30 PM LEADERSHIP AND ADDRESS DISCRIMINATION
APSA Events IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
21.1 AD HOC COMMITTEE ON GOVERNANCE Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
REFORM OPEN FORUM 21.13 WORKING GROUP MEETING: SOCIAL POLICY
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 IN NON-DEMOCRACIES
Chair: David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
Part: Jeffrey M. Berry, Tufts University 21.14 WORKING GROUP MEETING: THE SCHOLARS
Terri E Givens, Menlo College STRATEGY NETWORK WOMEN AND
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida REPRESENTATION
Jonathan GS Koppell, Arizona State University Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
Brett Ashley Leeds, Rice University
Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Jeffrey A. Segal, SUNY, Stony Brook University APSA Events
Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton University 22.1 STATUS COMMITTEE FOR LATINOS IN THE
21.2 EUROPEAN POLITICS & SOCIETY SECTION PROFESSION
BUSINESS MEETING Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
21.3 FEDERAL BUDGET REFORM PROJECT Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Theme Panels
Chair: Paul L. Posner, George Mason University 23.1 30 YEARS AFTER PROTEST IS NOT ENOUGH:
Disc: Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland, College Park NEITHER PROTEST NOR ELECTIONS ARE
ENOUGH
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Papers: The Political Feasibility of Doing What is Almost
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
Impossible: Reforming the Federal Budget Process
Roy T. Meyers, UMBC Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS
Fiscal Frames: How Political Arguments Affect Public Chair: Dale Rogers Marshall, Wheaton College
Opinion about Fiscal Policies Rufus P. Browning, Retired
John M. Sides, George Washington University
Part: Richard E. DeLeon, San Francisco State University
Restoring the Regular Order in Congressional Zoltan L. Hajnal, University of California, San Diego
Appropriations Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University
Peter Hanson, University of Denver Raphael J. Sonenshein, California State University, Los
Portfolio Budgeting: A New Pathway for Federal Budget Angeles
Reform Jessica Luce Trounstine, University of California,
Paul L. Posner, George Mason University Merced
Federal Budget Reform: A Behavioral Perspective Marion Orr, Brown University
Marvin Phaup, George Washington University 23.2 BACKLASH AGAINST DIVERSITY IN EUROPE
21.4 HUMAN RIGHTS SECTION BUSINESS MEETING Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room Co-sponsored by DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS
AND SOCIETY
21.5 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE PUBLICATIONS
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE BUSINESS MEETING Chair: David Art, Tufts University
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room Papers: The AfD's Facebook Wall as a Hub for Right-Wing
21.6 PARTISAN GRIDLOCK IN WASHINGTON: Mobilisation in Germany
POLITICAL THEORY IS ONE THING, BUT Kai Arzheimer, University of Mainz
WHAT ARE THE POLITICAL PROS SAYING? The Evolution of Extremism: Insights from Text Mining
Room: Hilton, Powell Room of Big Data
21.7 POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP BUSINESS Lenka Bustikova, Arizona State University
MEETING Hasan Davulcu, Arizona State University
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero David S. Siroky, Arizona State University
21.8 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES Backlash to Diversity in Europe
SECTION EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING Terri E Givens, Menlo College
Room: Parc 55, Mission II Far Right in Eastern Europe: Ethnic Nationalists or
21.9 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION SECTION Economic Malcontents?
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING Sean Kates, New York University
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room Joshua A. Tucker, New York University
21.10 W.W. NORTON FOCUS GROUP 23.3 BEYOND (AND BACK TO) FERGUSON: RACE
Room: Hilton, Vista AND POWER(LESSNESS) IN AMERICAN CITIES
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS

98 DAILY SCHEDULE
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Chair: Michael Leo Owens, Emory University DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Part: Clarissa Rile Hayward, Washington University in St. HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Louis 24.2 FEDERATIONS AND UNIONS IN IMPERIAL AND
Kimberley S. Johnson, Barnard College POST-COLONIAL POLITICAL THOUGHT
Jeffrey Ryan Smith, The New School Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Fredrick C. Harris, Columbia University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri-St. Louis POLITICAL THEORY
23.4 THE RISE OF THE POPULIST RIGHT?: ANTI- Chair: Joshua Simon, Columbia University
IMMIGRATION PARTIES IN WESTERN EUROPE Disc: Karuna Mantena, Yale University
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS Papers: The Fate of Federation at the Ends of Empire: India and
AND SOCIETY Britain
Chair: Jack Citrin, University of California, Berkeley Anurag Sinha, Yale University
Disc: Eric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University of José MartíĀs Immanent Critique of American
London Imperialism
Joshua Simon, Columbia University
Papers: The Evolution of the Far-Right Voter in Western Europe Securing Post-Colonial Autonomy: Regional Federations
Kimberly Twist, University of California, Berkeley in the Black Atlantic
Inside the Radical Right: Results from a Full Adom Getachew, University of Chicago
Membership Survey GandhiĀs Failure: Decentralization and Social and
Paul F. Whiteley, University of Essex Political Power
Harold D. Clarke, University of Texas at Dallas Sandipto Dasgupta, King's College London
Matthew J. Goodwin, University of Nottingham
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
'Contact Not White Flight': contextual diversity and the 24.3 POSTER SESSION: POLITICAL ECONOMY
UKIP vote in Britain Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Eric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University of
London Papers: The Political Economy of Aid Allocation in Africa:
Evidence from Zambia
Supporting the Sweden Democrats: Networks, Takaaki Masaki, Cornell University
Neighborhoods, or Individual Factors
Jen Rydgren, Stockholm University "Empowered" Leader
Suhjin Lee, London School of Economics and
Predictors of UKIP support in the 2014 European and Political Science
2015 General Elections
Caitlin Milazzo, University of Nottingham Vote Buying Strategies in the Aftermath of Natural
Matthew J. Goodwin, University of Nottingham Disasters
Massimo Mannino, Stanford University
Division Panels
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND 24.4 POSTER SESSION: INTERNATIONAL
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES POLITICAL ECONOMY
24.1 CORRUPTION AND ANTI-CORRUPTION Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
CAMPAIGNS IN POST-COMMUNIST STATES
Disc: Merih Angin, The Graduate Institute of International and
Room: Parc 55, Mason
Development Studies
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE Tyson Chatagnier, Vanderbilt University
POLITICS
Chair: Harley D. Balzer, Georgetown University
Papers: Patronage by Credit: International Sources of Patronage
Disc: Harley D. Balzer, Georgetown University Spending
Eric Braian Arias, New York University
Papers: Fighting Corruption in the Post-communist World: The An Agent-Based Model of Politics, Fertility and
Role of the EU Economic Development Dynamics
Sabina Gueorguieva Pavlovska-Hilaiel, University of Zining Yang, Claremont Graduate University
Denver, Josef Korbel School of International Studies
Buying Access: Host Country Corruption and
Poland and Hungary: Different Paths in Anti-Corruption International Investment
Performance Andrey Tomashevskiy, UC Davis
Cristina Gherasimov, Rutgers University
Constraints under Constraints: Veto Points, FDI, and
What is behind Anti-Corruption?: A Comparison of Institutional Contexts
Russia and China Gyu Sang Shim, Purdue University
Cheng Chen, SUNY, Albany
Daily Schedule

Design, Disparity, and Disuse of Dispute Settlement


The Centralization of Anticorruption Control in China Mechanisms
Qingjie (Eddie) Zeng Yoo-Sun Jung, Texas A&M University
A Network Analysis of Corruption in China National Leadership and Foreign Direct Investments
Andrea E. Jones-Rooy, New York University Jana Grittersova, University of California, Riverside
Shanghai
Alexander Von Hagen-Jamar, Lund University The Strategic Timing of Expropriation
Richard James Anderson, University of Michigan Fouad Pervez, Georgetown University

DAILY SCHEDULE 99
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

The Votes of Fools and Knaves: Issue Linkage Across Common Goods and Political Realism
International Organizations Mark Hoipkemier, University of Notre Dame
Jonathan R. Strand, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Constitutional Interpretation and Abolition in the 1836
Explaining Changes in the Taxation of Foreign Source Presidential Election
Income in OECD countries Simon Gilhooley, Bard College
Mi Jeong Shin, Washington University in St. Louis Dialectic and Diversity: Conversations that Harmonize
Factor Mobility, Party Unity, and the Distribution of without Homoginizing
Trade Protection Richard A. Barrett, University of Southern California
Su-Hyun Lee, Nanyang Technological University, Doux Commerce and the ĄCommercial Jewď: Intolerance
Singapore in Voltaire and Montesquieu
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY Rob Goodman, Columbia University
24.5 POSTER SESSION: POLITICS AND HISTORY Identity and Immigration in PlatoĀs Crito
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Guillaume Bogiaris, Texas A&M University
Papers: The State as Risk-Manager, 1929, 2008: Lessons from a Making the World Productive: Liberal Political
Historical Comparison Economy and Imperialism
Roni Hirsch, University of California, Los Angeles Kavi J. Abraham, Johns Hopkins University
Personalizing & Privatizing: Political Consequences of Neither Ruling Nor Being Ruled: A Persian Model of
the Credit-Welfare State Citizenship
Mallory SoRelle, Cornell University Cameron Blevins O' Bannon, University of Notre
The Emergence of Private Commercial Rule-Making Dame
Swati Srivastava, Northwestern University Political Obligation in Imperial Confucianism: the
Two-Party Charter Reform and the Single Transferable Gratitude Argument
Vote in U.S. Cities Shu-Shan Lee, University of Virginia
Jack Santucci, Georgetown University Politics in This World: Three Cases of the Nation-State
Explaining the Deep Divisions over Religion and Public in ArendtĀs Thought
Life in Turkey and Israel Shinkyu Lee, University of Notre Dame
Gozde Erdeniz, Northwestern University The Defects of the Burkean Thesis and Locke et
The Ideology of Local Control in American Education Praeterea Nihil
Policy Gregory Collins, The Catholic University of America
Trevor Patrick Latimer, University of Georgia DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
New York's Sunbelt Politics: Mario Cuomo's Three HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Progressive Campaigns 24.8 ROUNDTABLE ON HANNAH ARENDT AND THE
Saladin Malik Ambar, Lehigh University NEGRO QUESTION
The Strategic Logic of External Support to Combatants Room: Hilton, Powell Room
in Intrastate Conflict Chair: Jane A. Gordon, University of Connecticut, Storrs
Jacob Aronson, University of Maryland, College Park Part: Fred Lee, University of Connecticut
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS Keisha Njeri Lindsay, University of Wisconsin, Madison
24.6 POSTER SESSION: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY Marilyn Nissim-Sabat, Lewis University
AND POLITICS Tama Weisman, Dominican University
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Kathryn Gines, Penn State University
Papers: International Relations Theory with Chinese DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Characteristic HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Hun Joon Kim, Korea University 24.9 TERENCE BALL'S "REAPPRAISING POLITICAL
Norms and Torture in the Philippine-American War, THEORY" TWENTY YEARS LATER
1899-1902 Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
William d'Ambruoso, University of Washington Chair: James Farr, Northwestern University
The Failure of "Failed States" and the Promise of the Part: Sheryl Demorest Breen, University of Minnesota, Morris
State Capacity Concept Michaelle L. Browers, Wake Forest University
Sarah Elizabeth Peters, University of Notre Dame Russell L. Hanson, Indiana University, Bloomington
Who Speaks for the Local?: The Contested Role of Civil Stephen T. Leonard, University of North Carolina,
Society in Central Africa Chapel Hill
Joshua Shurley, University of Manchester DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: 24.10 COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON "ADVICE
FOR RULERS": ANCIENT TO EARLY MODERN
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
24.7 POSTER SESSION: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND
PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Papers: A Rejection of Diversity through Shifting Methods of Chair: Melissa Lane, Princeton University
Political Inquiry Disc: Michelle Tolman Clarke, Dartmouth College
Emily A. Zerndt
Aesthetic Disinterest, Commodities, and Perception Papers: Mirrors for Citizens: The Political Thought of MiltonĀs
Tim Hanafin, Johns Hopkins University ĄOf Educationď
Teresa M. Bejan, University of Oxford

100 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Advice to Rulers in Early China: Between State and What Is Structural Injustice?
Empire Anja Karnein, Philosophy Department, Binghamton
Loubna El Amine, Georgetown University University (SUNY)
Al-FarabiĀs Politics: Between Ruler, Advisor, and Ruled DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
Murad Idris, University of Virginia 24.14 FORMAL MODELS OF POLITICAL
Addressing the Friendly Prince: Inequality & Counsel in INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION
Roman Political Thought Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
Daniel J. Kapust, University of Wisconsin, Madison Chair: Livio Di Lonardo, New York University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY Disc: James R. Hollyer, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
24.11 POSSESSIVE INDIVIDUALISM REVISITED
Room: Nikko, Carmel I Papers: Organizing Experts
Chair: Barbara Arneil, University of British Columbia Torun Dewan, London School of Economics
Disc: Barbara Arneil, University of British Columbia Francesco Squintani
The Dynamics of Information Sharing in Groups
Papers: Self-Possession Beyond Ownership: Property, Desire, John W. Patty, University of Chicago
and Power Elizabeth Maggie Penn, Washington University in St.
Torrey J. Shanks, SUNY, University at Albany Louis
John Locke and Colonial Capitalism: Money, Strategic Communication of Uncertainty
Possession, and Dispossession Andrew Little, Cornell University
Onur Ulas Ince, Koc University Matt Backus
John Locke and the Emergence of Capitalism: Undisclosed Contributions in Electoral Campaigns
Macpherson, Strauss, and Arendt Keith E. Schnakenberg, University of Kentucky
Patchen Markell, University of Chicago DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Dispossession and Capitalist Compulsions 24.15 YOU DISGUST ME! SOURCES OF SUPPORT FOR
Robert Nichols, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities POLICIES AND PARTIES
Room: Parc 55, Mission I
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Chair: Brian J. Gaines, University of Illinois at Urbana-
24.12 WHAT DIFFERENCE DOES DIVERSITY MAKE
IN COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY? Champaign
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Disc: Matthew J. Hayes, Indiana University, Bloomington
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES Papers: The Behavioral Immune System Shapes Support for
Chair: Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University Social Conservative Parties
Disc: Roxanne L. Euben, Wellesley College Lene Aarøe, Aarhus University
Michael Bang Petersen, Aarhus University
Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University
Papers: Diversity in IndiaĀs Constitutional Imaginary
Rochana Bajpai, University of London, SOAS Disgust Motivates Support for Punitive Policies Towards
Outgroups
Explaining Disbelief: On the Enduring Puzzle of Scott Clifford, University of Houston
Religious Pluralism
Andrew F. March, Yale University (DonĀt) Bring Me Your Sick: The Effects of Disease on
Foreign Aid Support
DeliberationĀs Diversity Frank John Gonzalez, University of Nebraska -
Melissa S. Williams, University of Toronto Lincoln
Loving after Gandhi: Mixed Matrimony as Non-Brahmin Johnathan Caleb Peterson, University of Nebraska-
Critique Lincoln
Matthew H. Baxter, Harvard University Stephen Schneider, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY Nathan Munier
24.13 DEBATING STRUCTURAL THEORIES OF Katelyn Abraham
INJUSTICE, DOMINATION, AND OPPRESSION Outgroup Anxiety and Support for Rights Restrictions
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II Bradford S. Jones, University of California, Davis
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF Trust, Legitimacy, and Public Support for Political
POLITICAL THEORY Compromise
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY Jennifer Wolak, University of Colorado, Boulder
Chair: Anja Karnein, Philosophy Department, Binghamton DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
University (SUNY) 24.16 CORRUPTION AND ITS POLITICAL
Disc: Courtney Miller, Binghamton University IMPLICATIONS
Daily Schedule

Room: Hilton, Franciscan A


Papers: The Global Compact: Business and Human Rights Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
between Agency and Structures POLITICS
Ayelet Banai, The University of Haifa Chair: Vineeta Yadav, Pennsylvania State University
The Site of Justice between Agents, Institutions and Disc: Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia
Structure
Eszter Kollar, Goethe University Frankfurt

DAILY SCHEDULE 101


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Papers: Extortion in the Oil States: How Nationalization From the Family to the State: Whose Responsible for
Increases Corruption Vulnerabilities?
Paasha Mahdavi, Georgetown University Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University
The Effects of Revealed Corruption on Public Finances DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Joaquin Artes, Universidad Complutense 24.20 GEOGRAPHY, INFERENCE, AND SPATIAL
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY STATISTICS
24.17 POWER OF POLITICAL NEWS Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room Chair: Martin C. Steinwand, Stony Brook University
Chair: Ana Lorena De La O Torres, Yale University Disc: Iris Hui, Stanford University
Disc: Ana Lorena De La O Torres, Yale University
Papers: Can "Big Brother" Reunite the Family? State
Papers: How Newspapers Reveal Political Power Propaganda in Post-Partition India
Pamela Ban, Harvard University Kirsten Dawn Powers, University of California-
James M. Snyder, Harvard University Berkeley
Andrew B Hall, Stanford University Model Selection for Spatial Analysis: The spatial
Crime in the Media: When are Politicians Punished for Hausman test?
Drug-related Violence? Scott Cook, Texas A&M University
John Louis Marshall, Harvard University Robert J. Franzese, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Information and Crime Perceptions: Evidence from a Jude C. Hays, University of Pittsburgh
Natural Experiment
Nicola Mastrorocco, London School of Economics Spatial Differences-in-Differences: The School Quality
Effect on Land Prices
Political News and Financial Markets Kentaro Fukumoto, Gakushuin University
Michael Courtney
Gemma Mc Nulty, Dublin City University DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
24.21 MODELING TEXT-AS-DATA
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
24.18 BUILDING THE STATE: HISTORICAL
ANTECEDENTS OF STABILITY AND CAPACITY Chair: Kenneth R. Benoit, London School of Economics
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Disc: Christopher J. Fariss, Penn State University
Disc: Didac Queralt, Juan March Institute
Reo Matsuzaki, Trinity College Papers: Creating More Persuasive Text through Response
Surface Optimization
Papers: Explaining Long Term Patterns of Bureaucratic Nicholas Beauchamp, Northeastern University
Development in Latin America Scaling Votes and Words Over Time: Estimating
Juan Fernando Ibarra del Cueto, CIDE Ideological Positions at the Fed
Precolonial Origins of State Capacity: Evidence from Gabriel Lopez-Moctezuma, Princeton University
Indian Districts Marc T. Ratkovic, Princeton University
Roberto Stefan Foa, Harvard University Who's Laughing Now? Applying Text Analysis to
Size and Survival of States Humor in Federal Reserve Meetings
Christopher Paik, New York University-Abu Dhabi Amber Ellen Boydstun, University of California,
Davis
The Great Divergence? Explaining State Consol. and Dannagal G. Young, University of Delaware
Decline in Prewar Afghanistan
Khalid Homayun Nadiri An Evaluation of Measures of Textual Similarity
Robert Shaffer, University of Texas, Austin
War and State Formation in East Asia, 1870-1945 Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin
Ji Hye Shin, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY 24.22 ACCOUNTABILITY AND REPRESENTATION
24.19 STATE-BUILDING AND THE FAMILY Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Chair: Jason Alan Eichorst, University of Mannheim
Chair: Jack Jackson, Whitman College
Disc: Alexandra Cirone, London School of Economics;
Disc: Jack Jackson, Whitman College Columbia University, New York
Dorit Geva, Central European University
Papers: Perceptual Biases of Responsibility Attributions in
Papers: Market-cautious Feminism: Re-theorizing the Home and Multi-level Contexts
Market Guillem Rico, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Maxine Eichner, University of North Carolina, Robert Lineira, University of Edinburgh
Chapel Hill
Books, Goods and Guns: The Colonial Origins of
American Housing Policies: Public Clashes over Private Representation
Claims of Familyhood Joan Ricart-Huguet, Princeton University
Priscilla Yamin, University of Oregon
Alison Gash, University of Oregon International Constraints versus Domestic Pressures:
Government Subsidies
The Role of American Indian Families in State-Building Stephanie J. Rickard, London School of Economics
Projects, 1870s-1920s
Carol Nackenoff, Swarthmore College

102 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

The Cost of Electoral Coalitions: Party Fragmentation in DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Brazil COUNTRIES
Gisela Sin, University of Illinois at U-C 24.25 DEVELOPMENT AMIDST EXTRACTION:
Jose Antonio Cheibub, University of Illinois, Urbana- SUBVERTING THE “RESOURCE CURSE”
Champaign Room: Hilton, Imperial A
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Chair: Pauline Jones Luong, University of Michigan
24.23 EXPERIMENTS IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS Papers: Who Extracts What out of Extractives? Distributional
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 Politics of Bolivian Mining
Chair: Donald P. Green, Columbia University Matthew Amengual, Massachusetts Institute of
Disc: Donald P. Green, Columbia University Technology
Eric J. Kramon, George Washington University Local Content Requirements in the Oil and Gas
F. Daniel Hidalgo, Massachusetts Institute of Industry: The Return of ISI?
Technology Renato Lima De Oliveira, MIT
Digging Deep: Explaining Progressive Regulatory
Papers: Human Trafficking Vulnerability: An Experiment Using Reforms in the Mining Sector
Mass Media in Nepal Kendra E Dupuy, University of Washington
Margaret Boittin, Stanford University
Corporations and Economic Development in IndiaĀs
Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, Vanderbilt University
Extractive Economies
The Unintended Consequences of Election Observers on Sunila S. Kale, University of Washington
Political Violence
Dissent, Discrimination, and Public Service Provision in
Eric J. Kramon, George Washington University
Oil-Rich Nations
Sarah Brierley, UCLA
Nimah Mazaheri, Tufts University
Joseph Asunka, UCLA
George Ofosu DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Can Politicians Police Themselves? An Experiment COUNTRIES
using BrazilĀs Audit Courts 24.26 HISTORICAL PROCESSES OF NATIONAL
Julio Canello, State University of Rio de Janeiro IDENTITY FORMATION IN THE DEVELOPING
F. Daniel Hidalgo, Massachusetts Institute of WORLD
Technology Room: Nikko, Monterey II
Chair: Michael Hechter, Arizona State University/ University of
The Impact of a Radio Campaign against Vote-Buying:
Copenhagen
An Experiment in India
Donald P. Green, Columbia University Disc: Matthew Cebul, Yale University
Srinivasan Vasudevan
Papers: Iraqi National Identity and the Iran-Iraq War
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Lisa Blaydes, Stanford University
COUNTRIES
24.24 CONCEPTUALIZATION AND MEASUREMENT Direct and Indirect Rule in European Empires
OF DIVERSITY IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS Adria Lawrence, Yale University
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Geopolitical Competition, Mass Schooling, and Ethnic
Chair: Brian Min, University of Michigan Diversity
Disc: Brian Min, University of Michigan Keith A. Darden, American University
Harris Mylonas, George Washington University
Papers: Measuring Ethnic Diversity: Categorical, Temporal, and Belonging to the Body Politic: The nation form in the
Spatial Dimensions early modern English world
Rachel M. Gisselquist, United Nations University Daragh J. Grant, University of Chicago
Omar Shahabudin McDoom, London School of Lines in the sand? Border dynamics in the Middle East
Economics David Siddhartha Patel, Crown Center for Middle
Ethnic Diversity, Segregation, and Ethnocentric Trust in East Studies
Africa DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Amanda Lea Robinson, The Ohio State University COUNTRIES
Beyond Co-Ethnic Politics: Conceptualizing and 24.27 UNDERSTANDING CLIENTELISM
Measuring Ethnic Proximity Room: Parc 55, Mission II
Adam Harris, New York University Chair: Ryan Saylor, University of Tulsa
A New Method for Measuring Fractionalization Using Disc: Ryan Saylor, University of Tulsa
Sampled Survey Data
Avital Livny, University of Illinois, Urbana- Papers: Does Clientelism Work? A Test of Guessability in India
Champaign Mark Allan Schneider, Swarthmore College
Daily Schedule

Mitchell Goist, Pennsylvania State University


The Changing Rationale for Electoral Gifts in AfricaĀs
Linguistic Diversity and Conflict: Evidence from the Patronage Democracies
Soviet Union Elena Gadjanova, Max Planck Institute
Kyle L. Marquardt, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Politically Coopting Bureaucrats for the Pursuit of
Electoral Clientelism
Sarah Andrews, University of Virginia

DAILY SCHEDULE 103


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

The Role of Political Institutions and Party Competition Values at the Water's Edge: Social Welfare Values and
in Vote-Buying Foreign Aid
Matthew Kearney Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY Multilateral Aid, Agency Autonomy, and Economic
24.28 ELECTORAL POLITICS AND THE EUROPEAN Growth
PARLIAMENT Katherine Vera Bryant, Texas A&M University
Room: Parc 55, Market Street The Effects of Aid on Recipients' Reputations: Evidence
Disc: Roger Scully, Cardiff University from Natural Disasters
Allison Carnegie, Columbia University
Papers: A Populist Era? Legislative Discourse in the European Lindsay Dolan, Columbia University
Parliament, 1999-2014 Demand-Side Politics in U.S. Emergency Aid: Man-
Bart Bonikowski, Harvard University made vs. Natural Disasters
Noam Gidron, Harvard University Andrea L. Everett, University of California-Santa
Ist die Zeit reif? 2014 as the first (truly) European Cruz
elections DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
Alexander H. Trechsel, European University Institute 24.31 DELEGATION AND COOPERATION IN
Lorenzo De Sio, LUISS Guido Carli INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
Diego Garzia, European University Institute Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
MEPs in the 2014-19 European Parliament: the rise of Disc: Robert Thomson, University of Strathclyde
Euroscepticism?
Richard Whitaker, University of Leicester Papers: Binding International Law without Ratification:
Simon Hix, London School of Economics Delegation and Tacit Acceptance
Galina M. Zapryanova, University of Mannheim Ronald B. Mitchell, University of Oregon
Patterns of Far Right and Far Left Support during the Controlling the Controller. A Coalition Perspective on
2014 EP Elections IOs
Daphne Halikiopoulou, University of Reading Mareike O. Kleine, London School of Economics
Protect This House? Transnational Party Groups and EP Issue Linkage, Bargaining Power, and Concessions in
Candidate Selection Trade Negotiations
William Thomas Daniel, Francis Marion University Heather Elko McKibben, University of California,
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Davis
24.29 ENERGY AND NATURAL RESOURCE POLITICS Signals to Parliaments: GovernmentsĀ Legislative
IN NORTH AND SOUTH Behaviour in the EU Council
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Sara Hagemann, London School of Economics
Chair: Aslaug Asgeirsdottir, Bates College Stefanie Bailer, ETH Zurich
Disc: Aslaug Asgeirsdottir, Bates College Alexander Herzog, Clemson University
Issue linkage across IOs: Does a UN Security Council
Papers: Anchors Away? External Policy Anchors and the seat increase EU grants?
Resource Curse Christoph Mikulaschek, Princeton University
Cullen S. Hendrix, University of Denver DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Diffusion in the Periphery: Production Sharing 24.32 BARGAINING, CRISES, AND WAR
Agreements in the Oil Industry Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Nicole Weygandt, Cornell University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
The Timing of Extracting Natural Resources Disc: Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania
Chia-yi Lee, Nanyang Technological University
The International Political Economy of Renewable Papers: Are You Certain? Leaders, Overprecision, and War
Energy in Emerging Economies Robert Schub, Harvard University
Tabitha Marie Benney, University of Utah Commitment Credibility in Crisis
Following the Money: Resource Nationalism in Rare Azusa Katagiri, Stanford University
Earth Commodity Markets Status Quo Bias in Crisis Bargaining: An Experimental
Kristin Vekasi, University of Maine Approach
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Xiaoli Guo, Flordia State University
24.30 THE POLITICS OF FOREIGN AID IN DONOR Mixed Signals: The Limits of Reassurance in
AND RECIPIENT COUNTRIES International Relations
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Kyle M. Lascurettes, Lewis & Clark College
Chair: Daniel L. Nielson Brandon Yoder, National University of Singapore
Disc: Daniel L. Nielson Indivisibility Rhetoric and Bargaining Leverage across
Saori N. Katada, University of Southern California the Taiwan Strait
Olivier Henripin, Loyola University, Chicago
Papers: Channelling Efficiency: Examining Foreign Aid's DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Achieivement of Donor Goals 24.33 PUBLIC OPINION AND WAR
Gina Yannitell Reinhardt, University of Essex Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION

104 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Chair: Marina Elisabeth Henke, Northwestern University Chair: John A. Vasquez, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Papers: Imaginary Wars Aren't Really Real: Evidence From The Champaign
South Caucasus Disc: Mark J.C. Crescenzi, University of North Carolina,
Jesse Driscoll, University of California, San Diego Chapel Hill
Daniel Maliniak, College of William and Mary
Issue Indivisibility and Territorial Disputes: A Survey Papers: The Reciprocal Effects of Terrorism and U.S.
Experiment Democracy Assistance, 1975-2010
Songying Fang, Rice University James M. Scott, Texas Christian University
Xiaojun Li, University of British Columbia U.S. Foreign Aid and International Human Rights and
Bombing for Ballots: Electoral Politics and the Vietnam Counterterrorism Regimes
Air Campaign Jessie G Rumsey, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Carrie A Lee, Stanford University Champaign
Civilian Casualties and American Public Support for Leader Security, Foreign Aid, and Terrorism
Military Interventions Andrew Boutton, University of Central Florida
Won Steinbach, Duke University Human Rights INGO Branding and Issue Acceptance
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS Ana Bracic, The University of Oklahoma
CONTROL Amanda Marie Murdie, University
24.34 DRONES IN THEORY AND PRACTICE Delivering Violence?: Aid Allocation and the Risks of
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore Terrorism
Chair: Jennifer M. Ramos, Loyola Marymount University Stephen C. Nemeth, Oklahoma State University
Disc: Kerstin Fisk, Loyola Marymount University Jacob A. Mauslein, Oklahoma State University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Papers: Drones and Dirty Hands 24.37 CIVILIAN MOBILIZATION AND
John M. Parrish, Loyola Marymount University (NON)VIOLENCE IN CIVIL WAR
Benjamin Taylor Jones, Yale University, Political Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Science Department Chair: Zachariah Cherian Mampilly
Drones, Last Resort and Restricting Escalation Disc: Zachariah Cherian Mampilly
John Emery, University of California Irvine
Why Drones Are Different Papers: Converging on Civilian Protection
Stephan Peter Sonnenberg Oliver Kaplan, University of Denver
The Drone - It's in the Way That You Use It Peasant Resistance to Insurgent Violence during
David Glazier, Loyola Law School, Los Angeles MozambiqueĀs Civil War
Corinna Jentzsch, Leiden University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
24.35 CHINA'S FOREIGN POLICY AND RELATIONS ĄWith neither God nor the Devilď: Explaining Civilian
WITH THE WORLD Resistance in Peru
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 Steven Zech, University of Denver
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE De-Escalating Civil War Violence: Civilian Preferences,
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Beliefs, and Decisions
Chair: Sheng Ding, Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania Meghan Foster Lynch, Temple University
Disc: Sheng Ding, Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania Theorizing Civilian Agency for Violence Prevention
Lina Benabdallah, University of Florida Jana Krause, Geneva Graduate Institute / King's
College London
Papers: China-ROK-DPRK Relations in the post-Cold War Religion and Strategy in Civil War
World and Alliance Theory Reyko Huang, Texas A&M University
Min-hyung Kim, Illinois Wesleyan University Rebel Diplomacy: The Essential, Yet Overlooked Factor
ChinaĀs Military Diplomacy in Africa: A Training in Civil War
Paradigm Bridget Coggins, University of California, Santa
Lina Benabdallah, University of Florida Barbara
Is China a Normative Power in the Asia Pacific? DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Sheng Ding, Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania 24.38 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS AND
The Paradox of China's leverage over North Korea COMPETITIVENESS
Hyon Joo Yoo, Trinity University Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Chair: Michael Crespin, University of Oklahoma
24.36 DEADLY THREATS/CHANGING THE WORLD: Disc: Michael Crespin, University of Oklahoma
Daily Schedule

TERRORISM & HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE Andrew B Hall, Stanford University


GLOBAL ARENA
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 Papers: Assessing the Rise and Development of the Incumbency
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL Advantage in Congress
SECURITY Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL Joel Sievert
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL Ryan Dane Williamson, University of Georgia
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES

DAILY SCHEDULE 105


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Campaign Finance Law and the Growth in U.S. Senate DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
Retirements 24.41 EVERYDAY PEOPLE ARE PEOPLE: DIVERSITY
David Karol, University of Maryland IN THE LEGAL PROFESSION AND ON THE
Reading the Tea Leaves: Victory Margin and Electoral BENCH
Security in the U.S. House Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
John Cuffe, University of California, Irvine Chair: Michelle D. Deardorff, University of Tennessee at
The Electoral Fate of Moderates in Contemporary Chattanooga
American Politics Disc: Michelle D. Deardorff, University of Tennessee at
Danielle Thomsen, Syracuse University Chattanooga
Allison P. Harris, University of Chicago
When to Retire? Cognitive Inconsistency and Ideological
Drift in Congress
Michael K. Romano, Shenandoah University Papers: Diversity and Attorney Perceptions of Professional
Relationships
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Todd A. Collins, Western Carolina University
24.39 UNDERSTANDING PUBLIC SECTOR Tao L. Dumas, The College of New Jersey
PERFORMANCE
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Do African Americans Care about Descriptive
Representation on the Bench?
Chair: Christopher Birdsall, American University
Nancy Scherer, Wellesley College
Disc: Thaddieus W. Conner, New Mexico State University Banks P. Miller, University of Texas at Dallas
Gender Diversity on the World's Peak Courts
Papers: Diversity in the Interpretations of and Responses to Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
Performance Information Nancy Bays Arrington
Martin Baekgaard, Aarhus University
Soren Serritzlew, Aarhus University The Effect of Appointment Diversity on Decisions in
Canadian Courts of Appeal
Experiments on Counterfactual Thinking about Public Lori J. Hausegger, Boise State University
Sector Performance Troy Riddell, University of Guelph
Asmus Leth Olsen, University of Copenhagen
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
24.42 I FOUGHT THE LAW: THE INFLUENCE OF LAW
Is āOpen GovernmentĀ More Accountable Government?
Lessons from the UK IN JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING
Elizabeth David-Barrett, University of Sussex Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Paul M. Heywood, University of Nottingham
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Performance Data and the Politics of Bureaucratic AND JURISPRUDENCE
Autonomy Chair: Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown University
Poul A. Nielsen, Dept. of Political Science, University
Disc:
of Southern Denmark
Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown University
Lisa Hager, Kent State University
Political Insulation and Bureaucratic Investment in
Policy Expertise Papers: A Network Analysis of Influence within the Supreme
Mark D. Richardson, Vanderbilt University Court
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Paul J. Wahlbeck, George Washington University
24.40 COMPARATIVE PUBLIC POLICY IN A MULTI- The Dynamics of Legal Rules
LEVEL CONTEXT Marion Dumas, Columbia University
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
The Impact of Supreme Court Precedent in a Judicial
Chair: Brendan John Carroll, Leiden University
Hierarchy
Disc: Bernard Steunenberg, Leiden University Ali Shiraz Masood, University of South Carolina
Thomas König, University of Mannheim
The Influence of Legal Argument on the Development
of Law in the Supreme Court
Papers: European Integration and Legislative Patterns of Ryan Krog, George Washington University
Democracy
Thomas König, University of Mannheim The Rules of Law and Supreme Court Statutory
Interpretation
The Multi-level Sanction Paradox: Economic Coercion Jeb Barnes, University of Southern California
by the EU and the US Adam Feldman, University of Southern California
Gerald Schneider, University of Konstanz
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND
European Integration in a Time of Crisis
Gerda Falkner, University of Vienna, Austria JURISPRUDENCE
24.43 COMPARATIVE CONSTITUTIONALISM
Compliance and Enforcement of EU law: Who Wins, Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Who Loses and Who Settles Chair: Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University
Dimiter Toshkov, Leiden University
Papers: Constitutional Norms in a Weak State: the Case of
Between Autonomy and Control: The Dynamics of EU Pakistan
Policy Implementation Anas Malik, Xavier University
Brendan John Carroll, Leiden University
Bernard Steunenberg, Leiden University Constitutionalism and Struggle for Autonomy: Kurds in
Turkey, Syria, and Iraq
Erin Colleen McGrath, University of Maryland

106 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Hannah Arendt vs. Hugo Chávez: The Creation of the Papers: The Racial Modifier: Non-Default Category Status and
1999 Venezuelan Constitution American Citizenship
Joshua Braver, Yale Department of Political Science Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California
Public Rights: Petition, Protest, and Privacy in Liberal A Mobilized Custodial Citizenry?: Criminal Justice and
Democracy Linked Fate
Kevin J. Mc Gravey, Brown University Amy E. Lerman, UC Berkeley
Shifting the Burden: The Paradox of Militant Democracy Vesla Mae Weaver, Yale University
Sung Wook Paik, York College of Pennsylvania Is Arab the New Black? Revisiting Domestic
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY Surveillance and Terrorism
24.44 IMMIGRATION POLICY AND THE IMMIGRANT Megan Ming Francis, University of Washington
EXPERIENCE #BlackLifeMatters as a Challenge to Black Rule
Room: Parc 55, Sutro Lester Kenyatta Spence, Johns Hopkins University
Chair: Alexandra Filindra, University of Illinois at Chicago On Self-Governance: Participation in Prisons, Asylums,
Papers: Cryptic Positives: Why Republican States Pass Pro- and Boarding Schools
Immigrant Polices Christopher Dimitri Berk, University of Chicago
Michael Rivera, The University of Texas at Austin DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
Direct Democracy and ImmigrantsĀ Civic Engagement 24.47 RACIAL POLITICS AND PUBLIC POLICY
Anita Manatschal, University of California, Berkeley Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Hate Crimes: Nativist Reactions to Hispanics in the 50 Chair: Henry Flores, St. Mary's University
States Disc: Henry Flores, St. Mary's University
Sylvia Gonzalez-Gorman, Indiana State University
Immigration Reform: The Partisan Divide in the Papers: Bureaucratic Rulemaking: Door for Minority Interests to
American States and Congress Impact Public Policy
Michelle Helene Belco, University of Houston Camillia Redding, Columbia University
Jennifer Hayes Clark, University of Houston Election Systems and Policy Responsiveness in Latino
Savannah Sipole, University of Houston Education Policy
Policy Trajectories in Bilingual Education: California v. Angel Luis Molina, Texas A&M University
Texas, 1965-2010 Kenneth J. Meier, Texas A&M University
Girma Elyot Alifeyo Parris, Rockefeller College of Helping the Homeless: Empathy, Race, and Perceptions
Public Affairs & Policy at the University at Albany, of Homelessness in America
(SUNY) Julie Wronski, George Washington University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington University
24.45 WOMEN, GENDER, SEXUALITY AND SOCIAL Robert M. Entman, George Washington University
MOVEMENTS Race, Religion, and Redistribution
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 Tony E. Carey, University of North Texas
Chair: Alice Kang, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas
Disc: Alice Kang, University of Nebraska-Lincoln DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
Alana S. Jeydel PARTIES
24.48 EXPLAINING PARTY AND GOVERNMENT
Papers: The Political Geography of WomenĀs Suffrage SUPPORT
Petitioning, 1870-1920 Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Daniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University Disc: Debra Lynn Leiter, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Benjamin Schneer
Tobias Resch, Harvard University Papers: Competing for Loyalty: The Dynamics of Political
Push Back, Move Forward: Coalition Work in the Support
American Women's Movement Santiago Oliveros, University of Essex
Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina Experiments on Responsibility Attribution: Guilt,
Women's Collective Action Frame in the 2011 Egyptian Innocence and Shirking
Uprising Raymond M. Duch, University of Oxford
Nermin Allam, University of Alberta Akitaka Matsuo, Centre for Experimental Social
Lesbian Groups' Confrontation in Contemporary China Sciences
Weiting Wu Parties and Elections: Do emphasizing Issue Reputation
Black womenĀs political voice in the Black Lives Matter Win Votes?
movement Henrik Bech Seeberg, University of Aarhus
Sharon Gramby-Sobukwe
Daily Schedule

Portfolio Allocation and Junior Coalition PartnersĀ


DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS Electoral Performance
24.46 ALIENATION AND CITIZENSHIP Christoph Arndt, Department of Political Science and
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 Government, Aarhus University
Chair: Cathy J. Cohen, University of Chicago Florence So, Aarhus University
Disc: Ainsley Nicole LeSure, University of Chicago Resilience Beyond Rebellion: Adaptation in Rebel to
Party Transformations
Sherry Zaks, University of California, Berkeley

DAILY SCHEDULE 107


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR Papers: Text Analyses of Campaign Emails: Partisan
24.49 CANDIDATE POSITIONING, REPOSITIONING, Polarization in Campaign Rhetoric?
PROMISING Taewoo Kang, Washington State University
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero Televised Debates in Parliamentary Democracies
Chair: Steven Rogers, Saint Louis University Nick Anstead, London School of Economics
Papers: A Mixed Model of Candidate Positions Stability of Selective Exposure - Evidence from the
Chris Tausanovitch, University of California, Los 2008 Presidential Campaign
Angeles Tobias Benjamin Konitzer
The Electoral Consequences of Ambiguity for U.S. Matthew Tyler, Stanford University
House Candidates A New Look at Agenda-Setting: Biobehavioral Measures
Christine Cahill and Social Media Responses
Walter J. Stone, University of California, Davis Erik P. Bucy, Texas Tech University
The Strategic Use of Campaign Promises Bryce Dietrich, University of Missouri, Columbia
Tabitha Bonilla, University of Southern California Measuring the Political Agenda by Analyzing Twitter
Two-Stage Elections and Strategic Candidates Messages
Kevin K. Banda, University of Nevada, Reno Andreas Jungherr, University of Mannheim
Thomas M. Carsey, University of North Carolina, Harald Schoen, University of Mannheim
Chapel Hill Oliver Posegga, University of Bamberg
VotersĀ Reactions to CandidatesĀ Flip-Flopping on the Pascal Juergens, University of Mainz
Issue of Global Warming DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
Bo MacInnis, Stanford University ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University 24.53 BUSINESS, POLITICS, AND ENVIRONMENTAL
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR GOVERNANCE
24.50 RESOURCES, ENGAGEMENT, AND Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
RECRUITMENT: 20 YEARS OF "VOICE AND Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
EQUALITY" Chair: David A. Deese, Boston College
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I Disc: Jana von Stein, Victoria University of Wellington
Chair: Casey A. Klofstad, University of Miami
Part: John A. Henderson, Yale University Papers: A Seat on the Policy Table?: Membership in the ISO,
Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley 1950-2005
David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame Sijeong Lim, University of Amsterdam
Zoltan Fazekas, University of Southern Denmark Aseem Prakash, University of Washington
Kay Lehman Schlozman, Boston College How Corruption Drives Support for Fossil Fuel
Allison Penelope Anoll, Stanford University Subsidies: Evidence from Indonesia
Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College Jordan Kyle, Columbia University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION The Comparative Politics of Carbon Taxes:
24.51 INFLUENCES ON ATTITUDES ABOUT Opportunities and Obstacles
IMMIGRATION Kathryn Harrison, University of British Columbia
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
The Effects of Environmental Corporate Social
Chair: Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Responsibility
Disc: Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
Christopher P. Muste, University of Montana Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University
Why the Golden State Became Green: Environmental
Papers: Elite Behaviors, Partisan Biases, and Immigration Politics in California
Reform David Vogel, University of California, Berkeley
Michele Margolis, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
Testing Opinion Backlash: Do Policy Advances 24.54 ANCIENT INSIGHTS FOR MODERN POLITICS
Engender Toward Immigrants AND ETHICS
Benjamin Bishin, University of California, Riverside Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Matthew Incantalupo, Haverford College
Chair: Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University
Thomas J. Hayes, University of Connecticut
Charles Smith, University of California, Irvine Disc: Lisa Pace Vetter, University of Maryland, Baltimore
County
Skin Tone, Education, and Support for Policies toward Peter Daniel Haworth, Ciceronian Society
Black Immigrants
Abby B. Cordova, University of Kentucky
Diana Orces, Oakland University Papers: CreonĀs Politics
Ron Srigley, University of Prince Edward Island
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
24.52 DIGITAL MEDIA AND CAMPAIGNS BOTH
Arendt and Homer on the Potential for Human
DOMESTIC AND ABROAD
Excellence in Private Life
Michelle M. Kundmueller
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Chair: stonegarden grindlife, UCLA ItĀs All in the Argument: The Agn in Euripides and
Deliberative Democracy
Disc: Kate M. Kenski, University of Arizona Marlene K. Sokolon, Concordia University
Pablo Barbera, New York University

108 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Institutional Heroics: Fictional Critique of the 'Warrior Disc: Christian Davenport, University of Michigan
Ethos'
James G. Beneda, University of California, Santa Papers: The Corporate Influence in US Human Rights Policy:
Cruz An Analysis of Lobbying
"Save our City": Aeschylus to the Rescue Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of
Arlene W. Saxonhouse, University of Michigan, Ann California, San Diego
Arbor Heidi Mae Hall, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Who Lobbies: Analyzing the Drivers of Foreign
24.55 AUTHORITARIAN LEGACIES AND Lobbying in the U.S.
CHALLENGES TO POST-AUTHORITARIAN Jon C. W. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin,
DEMOCRACIES Madison
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 Felicity Vabulas, University of Chicago, Harris
Co-sponsored by Russian Politics Group School of Public Policy Studies
Chair: Monika Nalepa, University of Chicago The Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the ICC
Disc: Monika Nalepa, University of Chicago in Colombia
Sandra Borda
Courtney Hillebrecht, University of Nebraska,
Papers: Lustration and Support for Democracy: Evidence from
Lincoln
Post-War Germany
Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford From Self-Reporting to ĄConstructive Dialogueď:
Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University Evidence from CAT and CEDAW
Cosette D Creamer, Harvard University
Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University
State Capture, Corruption and Party Competition under
Post-communism
Milada Anna Vachudova, University of North Provocation or Deterrence? Human Rights Abuses and
Carolina, Chapel Hill Terrorism
David B. Carter, Princeton University
Yonatan Lupu, George Washington University
Russia, Ukraine, and the Borders of Europe
Stephen E. Hanson, College of William and Mary
Lessons of the Past? Fidesz and Hungary's Conservative DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
Revolution 24.58 CHALLENGES OF CONCEPT-FORMATION AND
MEASUREMENT
Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Transition Generations: Brief Zeitgeists or Enduring Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee #1 (Concepts
Effects? and Methods)
Chad Kiewiet de Jonge, Langer Research Associates Chair: Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Disc: Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University
24.56 THE MILITARY AND DEMOCRATIZATION
Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Papers: The Consequences of Ignoring Kind-differences When
Chair: Aurel S. Croissant, University Heidelberg Measuring Concepts
Disc: David Kuehn, Heidelberg University Derek Beach, University of Aarhus
Analyzing National Meta-narratives: The Cases of
Papers: Establishing Civilian Control of the Military in New Egypt, Syria and Iraq
Democracies Yael Rivka Kaplan, Hebrew University
David Kuehn, Heidelberg University Shaul Rafael Shenhav, Hebrew University of
Aurel S. Croissant, University Heidelberg Jerusalem
Coups, Impeachments, and the Stability of Latin Clarifying Multi-level Governance
American Democracy Pier Domenico Tortola, University of Milan
John Polga-Hecimovich
Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
24.59 VARIETIES OF DESCRIPTION IN THE SOCIAL
Which Way Forward?: Economic Interdependence, SCIENCES
Coups, and Democratization Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Jonathan M. Powell, University of Central Florida Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee #1 (Concepts
Mwita Chacha, Nazarbayev University and Methods)
Re-evaluating the Impact of Populism on Democratic Chair: Vivekinan Ashok
Civil-Military Relations Disc: Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Harold A. Trinkunas, The Brookings Institution
Military Power vs. People Power: Repression and Papers: What Before Why: Taking Quantitative Descriptive
Daily Schedule

Authoritarian Survival Inference Seriously


John Joseph Chin, Princeton University Amelia Hoover Green, Drexel University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS Sequence Analytic Techniques for Visualizing Discrete
24.57 HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE IMPACT OF Patterns
INSTITUTIONS IN INTERNATIONAL Matthew Charles Wilson, West Virginia University
RELATIONS Philippe Blanchard, University of Warwick
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Chair: Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of California,
San Diego

DAILY SCHEDULE 109


Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Visual Inference for Comparative Research Disc: Ethel Tungohan, University of Alberta
Richard Traunmuller, Goethe University Frankfurt Mahama Tawat, --Higher School of Economics, Moscow
am Main
Measuring Social Capital at the Intersection of Papers: Diaspora and its Discontents: Indian Americans in the
Individuals and Society U.S.
Vasabjit Banerjee, Mississippi State University Sangay K. Mishra, Drew University, New Jersey
Carolyn Ethel Holmes, Indiana University, Immigration, Administrative Discretion, and Democratic
Bloomington Theory
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY David Watkins, University of Dayton
24.60 POLITICAL DIMENSIONS OF DISABILITY AND Scott Lemieux
MENTAL HEALTH MoroccoĀs Diaspora Policies for the Post-migrant
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Generations.
Chair: Susan Mezey, Loyola University Chicago Rilke Mahieu
Disc: Steven Rathgeb Smith, American Political Science What is the Scope of the Right of Return?
Association Megan Bradley, McGill University
Related Groups
Papers: Are Agency Advisory Councils Independent? Federal 25.1 AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT: LEGACIES
Mental Health Policy 1946-1967 OF COLONIAL AMERICA: DIVISIONS AND
Herschel Nachlis, Dartmouth College ACCORD AT THE FOUNDING
Means-testing, Complexity, and Disparity in Provision of Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III
I/DD Services Chair: Jack Rakove, Stanford University
Harold Pollack, University of Chicago Disc: Steven Kautz, Michigan State University
Rebecca Feinstein, Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social
Welfare Papers: Not "Born Free": Class and Servitude at the Founding
Tonie Sadler, University of Chicago Bartholomew H. Sparrow, The University of Texas at
Austin
Medicaid's Changing Approach to Complex Conditions Shannon Bow O' Brien, The University of Texas at
and Disabilities 1965-2014 Austin
Colleen M. Grogan, University of Chicago
Harold Pollack, University of Chicago The Political Theology of America's Founding
Documents
Post-Conflict Suffering: Shaped by and Shaper of Gregg L. Frazer, The Master's College
Attitudes Toward War
Ali Bond, University of California, Berkeley The Constitution of American Environmental
Governance
The New Politics of Peer Provision David B. Robertson, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Lynn M. Sanders, University of Virginia
Publius and the Antifederalists: "A Satisfactory Answer
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS to All of the Objections"
24.61 ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT David Siemers, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
POLITICAL NETWORKS? WHAT CAN WE
25.2 ASSOCIATION FOR POLITICS AND THE LIFE
KNOW?
SCIENCES: BIOPOLICY
Room: Parc 55, Lombard
Room: Parc 55, Davidson
Chair: Jennifer Nicoll Victor, George Mason University
Chair: A. Tannenbaum, Gettysburg College
Part: Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis
Disc: A. Tannenbaum, Gettysburg College
Alexander Montgomery, Reed College
Daniel Skinner, Ohio University
David Lazer
Michael D. Ward, Duke University
Dino P. Christenson, Boston University Papers: Life in the "Fast Lanes:" Policy Impacts on Fast and
Slow Reproductive Strategies
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH Laurette T. Liesen, Lewis University
24.62 EXPERIMENTAL TESTS OF FORMAL MODELS
Room: Parc 55, Stockton Fracking Women's Bodies
Kristen Abatsis McHenry, University of
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL
THEORY Massachusetts Dartmouth
Papers: Contests, Shocks,and the Search for Optimal Strategies: The FDA, Contraceptive Drug Research, and the Grady
A Laboratory Experiment Hospital Study
Stephen Chaudoin, University of Illinois at Urbana- William C. Green
Champaign The Alpha and Omega of Health Care: Medicalization of
Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh American Birth and Death
When to Stack the Deck: Strategic Decisions over Lauren K. Hall, Rochester Institute of Technology
Hearings and Witness Selection Standing Medical Panels in the Case of Psychologically
Ju Yeon Park, New York University Dysfunctional Presidents
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP Robert E. Gilbert, Northeastern University
24.63 DIASPORA AND DEMOCRACY
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
Chair: Mahama Tawat, --Higher School of Economics, Moscow

110 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

25.3 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF Chair: Rodney E. Hero, University of California, Berkeley
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL 27.2 RETHINKING RELIGION, DEMOCRACY, AND
PHILOSOPHY: ROUNDTABLE ON THE WORK DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
AND LEGACY OF WALTER BERNS Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN
Chair: Jules Gleicher, Rockford University POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
Part: Joseph M. Bessette, Claremont McKenna College Chair: Katharine A. Baldwin, Yale University
Rainer Knopff, University of Calgary Disc: Katharine A. Baldwin, Yale University
Jeffry H. Morrison, Regent University
Michael M. Uhlmann, Claremont Graduate University
Papers: Credible Conversion? Religious Conversion and Identity
Bradley C.S. Watson, Saint Vincent College
Change
25.4 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: ARISTOCRATIC Elizabeth S. Sperber, New York University
SOULS IN DEMOCRATIC TIMES
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II Substituting for the State: Religion and State building in
the Congo
Chair: Ethan Alexander-Davey, University of Virginia Laura Seay, Colby College
Disc: Ethan Alexander-Davey, University of Virginia
Political Religion and Transnational Mobilisation in the
Andreas A.M. Kinneging, University of Leiden
Congolese Diaspora
Willy Kalala Kankonde, University of Kinshasa
Papers: Tocqueville and the Shame of Economic Life
Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin, Religion and Development in Sub-Sarahan Africa:
Madison Muslim Disadvantage in Education
Melina Raquel Platas Izama, Stanford University
Edmund BurkeĀs Peerage
Division Panels
Ian Crowe, Belmont Abbey College
Friedrich Nietzsche on the Social Function of DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Aristocracy HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Jeffrey Church, University of Houston 28.1 HANNAH ARENDT
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Richard M. Weaver on Chivalry and Aristocracy in the
Disc: Sonali Chakravarti, Wesleyan University
American South
Steven Ealy, Liberty Fund, Inc.
Papers: Between Banality and Radicality. Arendt and Kant on
25.5 PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL OF FEDERALISM:
Evil and Responsibility
THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION AND
Javier Burdman, Northwestern Universty
AMERICAN FEDERALISM
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I Freedom between Philosophy and Politics ĉArendt and
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND de Beauvoir in Conversation
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS Veronica Zebadua-Yanez, New School for Social
Chair: John Dinan, Wake Forest University Research
Disc: Cynthia J. Bowling, Auburn University Natality and Mortality: Arendt, Tocqueville, and the
Shanna Rose, Claremont McKenna College Politics of Birth and Death
David Golemboski, Georgetown University
Papers: American Federalism in an Era of Partisan Polarization Arendt, Scholem and the Given: Prologue to a Politics
Tim J. Conlan, George Mason University John Wolfe Ackerman, Birkbeck, University of
Paul L. Posner, George Mason University London
Back to the Future? Evolving Interpretations of Voting DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Rights and Election Administration Issues HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Kathleen Hale, Auburn University 28.2 THE AFFECTIVE TURN IN POLITICAL
Implementing Obamacare Health Insurance Exchanges: THOUGHT
State Government Choices and Policy Outcomes Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Dale A. Krane Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
Shihyun Noh, University of Nebraska at Omaha POLITICAL THEORY
Federalism in the Roberts Court Chair: James R. Martel, San Francisco State University
Ilya Somin, George Mason University Disc: Charles Devellennes, University of Kent

Thursday, 2:30 PM to 5:30 PM Papers: Affect and Understanding in Hermeneutical Solidarity


APSA Events Darren R. Walhof, Grand Valley State University
26.1 CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS - AUTHOR Moral Sentimentalism: How to Feel Properly
Michael L. Frazer, Harvard University
Daily Schedule

INTERVIEWS PART 2
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room Recognition between Strangers
Heikki Antero Ossian Ikaheimo, UNSW Australia
Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Love as a Political Concept? Hannah ArendtĀs Amor
Theme Panels
Mundi and HegelĀs Recognition
27.1 PLENARY ADDRESS: WHY ECONOMICS IS TOO Stavroula Soukara, University of Kent
IMPORTANT TO BE LEFT TO ECONOMISTS,
FEATURING ROBERT REICH
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5

DAILY SCHEDULE 111


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Political Theory of the Flesh? Affect, the Canon, and an The (Neo)Liberalism of Horror
Ethics of Embodiment Elisabeth Robin Anker, George Washington
John McMahon, The Graduate Center, CUNY University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY Assembling Counter-Racism: Twain Contra Tocqueville
28.3 CONSTRUCTING REPRESENTATIVE Kam Shapiro, Illinois State University
DEMOCRACY: THEORY, HISTORY, AND Richard Wright and Prison Abolitionism: The Refusal to
PRACTICE Compromise with Reality
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 Laura Grattan, Wellesley College
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
28.6 THEORIZING POLITICAL ECONOMY
Chair: Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Disc: Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Chair: Paul C. Apostolidis, Whitman College
Disc: Anita Chari
Papers: The Rise and Fall of Conservative Populism
Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon
Papers: Democratic Impatience: Democracy in a Fast Age
Founders and Re-Founders: The Struggles of Self- Mario Feit, Georgia State University
Authorized Representation
Monica Brito Vieira, University of York From Nation to Plurination: Resignifying State, Family,
and Economy in Ecuador
Aesthetics and Ethics in an Age of Distrust Christine Keating
Eline M. Severs, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Hayek contra Neoliberalism: Towards a Left
Democratic Doxa: Towards a Critical Theory of Public Hayekianism
Opinion Robert Reamer, University of Chicago
Adam J. Dahl, Sewanee: The University of the South
Sovereignty and Other Neoliberal Fantasies
ItĀs Time to Get Over the Pluralist Heaven Timothy Fisken, University of Birmingham
M. David Forrest, Arizona State University
Matthew Dean Hindman, University of Tulsa DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
28.7 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JACOB T. LEVY,
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY RATIONALISM, PLURALISM, AND FREEDOM
28.4 DIVERSITY IN FAMILIES? ECONOMIC Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
PRECARITY AND THE POLITICIZATION OF
Chair: Richard Boyd, Georgetown University
THE FAMILY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 Part: Richard Boyd, Georgetown University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Sarah Burns, Rochester Institute of Technology
THEORY Paul Dragos Aligica, George Mason University
Chair: Ashleigh Campi, University of Chicago Avigail Eisenberg, University of Victoria
Jacob T. Levy, McGill University
Disc: Tamara Metz, Reed College Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College

Papers: Enacting Caring Democracy: Contemporary Realities DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
28.8 ROUNDTABLE ON MARGARET MOORE'S "A
and Proposals for Support
POLITICAL THEORY OF TERRITORY"
Joan C. Tronto, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
The Mobilization of Family in the Breast Cancer Non- Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
Profit-Corporate Alliance CITIZENSHIP
Claire C. McKinney, Washington University in St. Chair: David Miller, University of Oxford
Louis
Part: Jeff Spinner-Halev, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Health Care, Political Freedom, and (Re)Productive Hill
Normality Joseph H. Carens, University of Toronto
Jack Jackson, Whitman College Margaret Moore, Queens University
Parental Autonomy and Market Freedom: Evangelical Burke Hendrix, University of Oregon
Anti-Welfare Rhetoric Paulina Ochoa Espejo, Haverford College
Ashleigh Campi, University of Chicago DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY 28.9 THE PSYCHOLOGICAL UNDERPINNINGS OF
28.5 RACE, AFFECT, POLITICS PARTISANSHIP AND GROUP CUES
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Room: Parc 55, Mason
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Disc: Hans J.G. Hassell, Cornell College
THEORY Toby Bolsen, Georgia State University
Disc: Melvin Lee Rogers, University of California, Los
Angeles Papers: Partisan and Group Cues in Political Decision Making
Shatema Threadcraft, Rutgers University Dennis Chong, University of Southern California
Kevin J. Mullinix, Appalachian State University
Papers: The Musicality of Radical Democracy: SNCC, Victor Party Cues as Coalitional Cues: Coalitional Psychology
Wooten, and Shock Resistance and Party Cue Effects
Romand Coles, Australian Catholic University David J. Hendry, Aarhus Universitet
"The Passional Dynamics of the Communist Party" Lene Aarøe, Aarhus University
Jodi Dean, Hobart & William Smith Colleges Michael Bang Petersen, Aarhus University

112 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

The Political Psychology of Coordination Games Disc: Janice R Fine, Rutgers University-New Brunswick
Brad L. LeVeck, University of California, Merced
Tomorrow is a New Day? Partisanship, Retrospection, Papers: Cutting off Public Union Dues Income: A Strategy to
and Changing Governments Defund Political Opponents
Martin Bisgaard, Aarhus University Gordon Lafer, University of Oregon
A New Partisan Voter? The Epistemic Origins of The Role of Concentration of Union Membership on
Partisan Resurgence and Rigidity Public Unions' Influence
Matt Luttig, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities Christina M. Kinane, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
28.10 ECONOMIC INEQUALITY AND DEMOCRATIC Wage Theft and the Political Construction of WorkersĀ
RESPONSE Rights
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University
Disc: Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina, WhoĀs Minding the Gap? Public Pension Underfunding
Chapel Hill among the States
Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley Robert Mickey, University of Michigan
Alton Boyd Hale Worthington, University of
Papers: Activated Publics and Business Power in the US and the Michigan
UK Fractured Union: Divided Labor Law and Public and
Pepper D. Culpepper, European University Institute Private Sector Union Conflict
Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley Alexis Walker, Stetson University
Political Context and Representational Inequality DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Martin Gilens, Princeton University 28.13 MODELS OF SURVEY DATA
Labor Market Redistribution as a Response to Inequality Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Leslie McCall, Northwestern University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Stealth Politics by US Billionaires Chair: Betsy Sinclair, Washington University in St Louis
Benjamin I. Page, Northwestern University Disc: Michelle Torres, Washington University in St. Louis
Jason Seawright, Northwestern University
Matthew Lacombe, Northwestern University Papers: Do All Roads Lead To Rome? Four Measures Of Voter
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY Cohesion
28.11 POLITICAL STABILITY AND ECONOMIC Peter M. Li, UCLA
GROWTH IN CHINA Modeling Guessing Properties of Political Knowledge
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 Items
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF Tsung-han Tsai, Department of Political Science,
COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST National Chengchi University
COUNTRIES
Beyond the Visible: Latent Modeling of Muslims' Social
Chair: Lily L. Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Attitudes in 26 Countries
Disc: Yuhua Wang, Harvard University Nathanael Gratias Sumaktoyo, University of Notre
Xiaobo Lu, University of Texas at Austin Dame
Revisiting the Measurement of Partisanship: An Item
Papers: What is a One-Party State? Response Theory Analysis
Zhaotian Luo, New York University Alexa Bankert, SUNY, Stony Brook
Who Believes the People's Daily? Bias and Credibility Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook
in Authoritarian Media Martin Rosema, University of Twente
Rory Truex, Princeton University DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL
Do Government OfficialsĀ Visits to Firms Bring Firms SCIENCE
More Loans? 28.14 STRATEGIES FOR PROMOTION FROM
Yiqing Xu, MIT ASSOCIATE TO FULL PROFESSOR
Rice, State, and Income Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Yuhua Wang, Harvard University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE
Ji Yeon (Jean) Hong, Hong Kong University of EDUCATION
Science and Technology Chair: Gretchen M. Bauer, University of Delaware
Incentive versus Competence of Chinese Bureaucrats Part: Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa
Tianyang Xi, Peking University Karen M. Hult, Virginia Tech
Yang Yao Julie L. Novkov
Muyang Zhang, School of Public Economics and Susan M. Sterett, Virginia Tech
Daily Schedule

Administration DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY 28.15 AUTHORITARIAN INSTITUTIONS
28.12 THE RIGHT TURN AGAINST WORKERS IN THE Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
AMERICAN STATES Chair: Emmanuel Teitelbaum, George Washington University
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room Disc: Luz Marina Arias, CIDE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND
POLICY
Chair: Gordon Lafer, University of Oregon

DAILY SCHEDULE 113


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Papers: Afraid of Graffiti? Soft Protest and Threat Perceptions in Disc: Eduardo Moncada, Barnard College - Columbia
Authoritarian States University
Alexis Monique Zimberg, University of Toronto
Electoral Competition Under Authoritarianism Papers: Pathways out of Poverty: Improving Social Well-Being
Navid Hassanpour, Columbia University in Brazil
Institutional Underpinnings of Power: State Capacity and Natasha Borges Sugiyama, University of Wisconsin,
Authoritarian Stability Milwaukee
Jonathan Hanson, University of Michigan Michael Touchton, Boise State University
Brian Wampler, Boise State University
Lessons in Authoritarian Accountability
Cindy Cheng, Duke University Politics, Gender, and Health: Insight from Argentina's
Provinces
Resource Reliance and Military Spending in Autocratic James W. McGuire, Wesleyan University
Regimes
Wonjun Song, Pennsylvania State University Social Policies and Partisan Alignments in Argentina
Christopher Boylan, Pennsylvania State University and Brazil
Sara Niedzwiecki, University of New Mexico
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
28.16 FRONTIERS OF HISTORICAL
Subnational Politics, Stateness, and Social Policy
INSTITUTIONALISM
Provision in Chile
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 Jennifer Pribble, University of Richmond
Chair: Karl Orfeo Fioretos DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Disc: Karl Orfeo Fioretos COUNTRIES
28.19 UNDERSTANDING PUBLIC GOODS PROVISION
Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Papers: Historical Institutionalism and the Politics of
Institutional Change Chair: Michelle L. Dion, McMaster University
Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford Disc: Michelle L. Dion, McMaster University
Beyond Positive and Negative Feedback: Institutions and
Public Attitudes Papers: Is Federalism a Determinant of Food Security?
Marius R. Busemeyer, University of Konstanz Catherine Schmitt-Sands, Wayne State University
Altered States: Negotiation and the Micro-Foundations Fiscal Transfer and Poverty Alleviation: Evidence from
of Institutional Change a Quasi-Experiment
Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University Fubing Su, Vassar College
Taking Historical Institutionalism Global Democratizing Water: Public-public Partnerships and the
Abraham Newman, Georgetown University Human Right to Water
Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown University Madeline Baer, San Diego State University
Historical Institutionalism, State Building and The Political Determinants of Health in South Africa:
Supranational Integration Diversities Reconsidered
R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia
Brunswick DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING 28.20 DIVERSITIES OF INTERESTS IN EU
COUNTRIES POLICYMAKING
28.17 CORRUPTION Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D Chair: Cathy Lisa Schneider, American University-SIS
Papers: Campaign Finance, Corruption and Reelection in the Disc: Alexandra-Maria Bocse, University of Cambridge
Brazilian Chamber of Deputies
Marcus Andre Melo, University of Pernambuco Papers: European Lawyers in Combating Money Laundering and
Ivan Juca the Financing of Terrorism.
Lucio R. Renno Ulrika Morth, Stockholm University
Does Ejecting Corrupt Mayors Reduce Corruption in Karin Svedberg Helgesson, Stockholm School of
Neighboring Municipalities? Economics
Manoel Ryff Gehrke Ryff Moreira, UCLA The Fights over the EU Sustainability Reporting
Do Officials Extort More During Elections? Evidence Directive: A Fuzzy-Sets Analysis
from Micro-Data on Corruption in West Africa Daniel Phillip Kinderman, University of Delaware
Jasper Jack Cooper The Politics of Privacy: Framing Cyberspace Regulation
Money Matters: Wages in Corruption Prevention in the European Union
Anders Sundell, University of Gothenburg Adam William Chalmers, Leiden University
Agnes Cornell, Aarhus University Ece Ozlem Atikcan, Laval University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING The Puzzling Power of European Farmers: Agricultural
COUNTRIES
Policy and Austerity
Alice Ciciora, University of California, Berkeley
28.18 POLITICS, SOCIAL POLICIES, AND
SUBNATIONAL DIVERSITY IN LATIN AMERICA DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 28.21 FDI, POLITICAL RISK, AND INTERNATIONAL
Chair: Jennifer Pribble, University of Richmond INSTITUTIONS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13

114 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Disc: Andrew Kerner, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia 28.24 CIVILIAN CASUALTIES AND SUPPORT FOR
THE USE OF FORCE
Papers: Does Arbitration Reduce Diplomatic Pressure in Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Investment Disputes? Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Lauge Skovgaard Poulsen, University College London Chair: Kathleen Powers, Dartmouth College
Geoffrey Gertz, University of Oxford Disc: C. Peter Kim, Harvard University
Srividya Jandhyala, ESSEC Business School Mary Layton Atkinson, University of North Carolina,
International Law and FDI: Can Compliance Bring Charlotte
Investment Back?
Terrence Chapman, University of Texas, Austin Papers: Human or Not? Political Rhetoric and Foreign Policy
Rachel Wellhausen, University of Texas at Austin Attitudes
Riitta-Ilona Koivumaeki, University of Texas, Austin Stephen Michael Utych, Boise State University
Who Needs Rules? Explaining Participation in the Picturing War: How Communication Mediums impact
International Investment Regime Force Employment Decisions
Taylor St John, University of Oxford Julia M. Macdonald
Noel Pereyra Johnston Jacquelyn Schneider, George Washington University
Relative Perceptions of Political Risk in International James Kajdasz, United States Air Force Academy
Business Responsibility Attribution and Lethal Autonomous
Quintin H. Beazer, Florida State University Weapons
Daniel J. Blake, IE Business School James Igoe Walsh, University of North Carolina,
Standing Rights, Compliance, Efficiency and Stability of Charlotte
Investment Agreements Killing at a Distance: A Construal-Level Approach to
Pedro Roberto Nunes da Silva, New York University the Psychology of Drones
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION Kathleen Powers, Dartmouth College
28.22 INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL Mechanisms of Morality: Sources of Public Support for
COOPERATION: ACTORS, FRAMES, AND Humanitarian Intervention
STRATEGIES Sarah E. Kreps
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Sarah Maxey, Cornell University
Chair: Alexander Thompson, Ohio State University DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Disc: Alexander Thompson, Ohio State University 28.25 NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION: DIVERSE ACTORS
Nicole Rae Baerg, University of Mannheim AND STRATEGIES RECONSIDERED
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Papers: Environmental NGOs and Private Certification in Chair: Nuno P. Monteiro, Yale University
Eastern Europe and Central Asia Disc: Vipin Narang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Daniel Berliner, Arizona State University
Elizabeth Chrun, University of Washington
Papers: The Varieties of Nuclear Hedging: Capabilities,
Deliberative Inclusiveness, Environmental Policies, and Intentions, and Proliferation
Environmental Outcomes Gene Gerzhoy, Harvard University
Tobias Friedrich Karl Boehmelt, University of Essex Rachel Elizabeth Whitlark
Hugh Ward, University of Essex
Two Warheads Passing in the Night: Modeling Nuclear
Pollution and Transparency in China: NGOs, Industry, Statecraft in Social Science
and Local Officials Alexander Lanoszka, Massachusetts Institute of
Xun Cao, Penn State University Technology
Genia Kostka Rex Douglass, University of California San Diego
Mobilization in a Time of Mitigation: Framing the The Effect of US Domestic Actors and Discourses on
Agenda for the Public US Anti-Proliferation Policy
Jana von Stein, Victoria University of Wellington Eleonora Mattiacci, Amherst College
International Collaboration and the Climate Crisis: The Limits of Pax Pretoriana: Explaining South AfricaĀs
Assessing the Role of the EU Cold War Strategy
Charles F. Parker Noel Anderson, MIT
Christer Karlsson Mark S. Bell
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Nuclear Bazaar: Commerce and Assistance in Mass
28.23 CIRCULATORY AND CONTROL POWER IN Destruction
WORLD POLITICS Erik Gartzke, University of California, San Diego
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I Rupal Mehta, Harvard Kennedy School
Daily Schedule

Chair: Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY


Part: Noelle K. Brigden, Marquette University 28.26 DOMESTIC INSTITUTIONS AND FOREIGN
Rawi Abdelal, Harvard University POLICY
Christian Reus-Smit, University of Queensland Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Jennifer L. Erickson, Boston College Chair: Glenn P. Hastedt, James Madison University
Barak Mendelsohn, Haverford College
Erin Lockwood, Northwestern University Disc: Dorle Hellmuth, The Catholic University of America

DAILY SCHEDULE 115


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Papers: Checking Preferences: The Impact of Federalism on DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
BrazilĀs Foreign Trade Policy 28.29 DIVERSITIES IN PRESIDENTIAL RHETORIC,
Vinicius G. Rodrigues Vieira, University of Oxford MEDIA FRAMES, AND PUBLIC REACTIONS
Is Japan Shifting to the Right? Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Amy Louise Catalinac, New York University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION
Mischiefs of Section: Provincial Interest, Statebuilding,
and the US-Mexican War Chair: Justin S. Vaughn, Boise State University
Christopher Darnton, Catholic University of America Disc: Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University
Diane J. Heith, St. John's University
The Power of the Purse and Foreign Policy-making in
the U.S. Congress
Gyung-Ho Jeong, University of British Columbia Papers: Obama's Rhetoric: Confronting Race in the Age of Post-
racialism
How Do Institutional Rules Affect Foreign Policy? Natasha V. Christie, University of North Florida
Evidence from Foreign Aid Data Shannon Bow O' Brien, The University of Texas at
Shannon Carcelli, University of California, San Diego Austin
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES WhatĀs Hope Got to Do with It? Examining Presidential
28.27 COALITIONS AT WAR Campaign Rhetoric
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 Anne Cizmar, Eastern Kentucky University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY The Diversity of American Dream Rhetoric: LBJ to
Obama
Chair:
Donna R. Hoffman, University of Northern Iowa
James D. Morrow, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Disc: Zachary Coleman Shirkey, Hunter College, CUNY Alison Howard, Dominican University of California
Scott Wolford, University of Texas
ĄSocialized Medicine,ď Presidential Responses, & the
News from Truman to Obama
Papers: War is K-adic: Explaining War Expansion Jennifer Hopper, Washington College
Gary Uzonyi, Duke University
Presidential Leadership, the News Media, and Income
Coalition Formation, Diversity, and Crisis Outcomes Inequality
Daina Chiba, University of Essex Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North Texas
Jesse C. Johnson, University of Kentucky Ronald J McGauvran, University of North Texas
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
UN Peacekeeping Coalitions and Peacekeeper Fatalities
Michael A. Morgan, Marietta College
28.30 DIVERSITIES OF ADVOCACY IN THE
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES POLICYMAKING PROCESS
28.28 THEORIES OF LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEES Room: Nikko, Carmel I
REVISITED Chair: Thomas F. Burke, Wellesley College
Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Disc: Thomas F. Burke, Wellesley College
Chair: Michael L. Mezey, DePaul University Jeffrey M. Berry, Tufts University
Disc: Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston
Christopher J. Kam, University of British Columbia Papers: Why groups use cooperative market-based strategies for
change
Papers: A Comparative Approach to Committee Powers: Patricia Strach, University at Albany, SUNY
Explaining Legislative Organization Targeting Decisions In Digital Petition-Based Advocacy
Audrey André, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Campaigns
Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel David A. Karpf, George Washington University
Shane Martin, University of Leicester
Rethinking Participation in the Advocacy Process
Congruence, Symmetry, and Committee Systems in Through the Lens of Power
Bicameral Legislatures Hahrie C. Han, University of California, Santa
Constanza F. Schibber, Washington University in St. Barbara
Louis
Elizabeth Maggie Penn, Washington University in St. Employer Mobilization of Workers in U.S. Politics
Louis Alexander Warren Hertel-Fernandez, Harvard
John W. Patty, University of Chicago University
Brian F. Crisp, Washington University in St. Louis The Rise of Education Issue Advocates and Their
Party System Fragmentation, Committee Autonomy and Effects on Policy Implementation
Legislative Output Paul Manna, College of William & Mary
Pedro Riera, Carlos III University of Madrid Susan L. Moffitt, Brown University
Elias Dinas, University of Oxford DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
(Self)-Organizing the Legislature: Committees and 28.31 LONDON CALLING OR THE FINAL
LMOs in EP and Congress COUNTDOWN? JUDICIAL BEHAVIOR ON
Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, Madison EUROPEAN COURTS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
The Selection of Legislative Authorities in Subnational
Co-sponsored by European Consortium for Political
Committee Systems Research
Marina Lacalle, University of Houston
Chair: Christoph Hoennige, University of Hannover
Disc: Christoph Hoennige, University of Hannover

116 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Roger Michalski DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY


28.34 PARTISAN POLARIZATION IN THE AMERICAN
Papers: Does Appointment Reform Depoliticize a Supreme STATES
Court? The Case of Norway Room: Parc 55, Sutro
William R. Shaffer, Purdue University (Retired) Chair: Carl E. Klarner, KlarnerPolitics
Gunnar Grendstad, University of Bergen Disc: Seth C McKee, Texas Tech University
Eric Waltenburg, Purdue University
Political Bias in Asylum Appeals? Lay Judges in the Papers: "State Legislative Polarization: An Institutional
Swedish Migration Courts Perspective"
Linna Marten, Uppsala University Zachary Auter, University of Pittsburgh
Judicial Behavior on the European Court of Human Partisan Polarization in the U.S. States: Causes and
Rights Consequences
Jurij Toplak Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona
Djordje Gardasevic, Faculty of Law, University of Who Influences State Policy in Polarized America?
Zagreb Jake M Grumbach, UC Berkeley
Rationales of the Judicial and Legislative Branches in The Spoils of Partisan War: Power and Polarization in
Swedish Refugee Policy State Legislatures
Livia Johannesson, Stockholm University Phillip J. Ardoin, Appalachian State University
Refugee Roulette Revisited: Judicial Preferences on the William D. Hicks
Swiss Federal Court National Policies and the Polarization of American State
Benjamin E Lauderdale, London School of Legislatures
Economics Alex Garlick, University of Pennsylvania
Judith Spirig, University of Zurich
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND 28.35 COMPARATIVE URBAN POLICY: LAND USE,
JURISPRUDENCE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND CITY
28.32 FOUNDATIONS, REGIME STRUCTURE, AND SERVICES
STRUGGLE Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Chair: Sara Hughes, University of Toronto
Chair: Nina M. Moore, Colgate University
Disc: Veronica Herrera, University of Connecticut
Disc: Simon Gilhooley, Bard College Hongtao Yi, The Ohio State University

Papers: "Hegemonic Preservation: The English and American Papers: Governing Informality: Street Vendors in Chicago and
Stories" Mumbai
Mark A. Graber Amy Schoenecker, University of Illinois-Chicago
Changing National Interest and the Defeat of the Dyer Not In My Backyard But LetĀs Talk: When
Anti-Lynching Bill Environmentalism meets Developmentalism
Jamila Smith-Loud Zhilin Liu, Tsinghua University
New Jersey WomenĀs Suffrage in 1776-1807 and in lu liao, Cornell University
Historical Memory Ciqi Mei, Tsinghua University
Kirsten Nussbaumer, Stanford University The Politics of Transferring Land Development Rights
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL in China
RELATIONS Meina Cai, University of Connecticut
28.33 DECENTRALIZATION AS A TOOL FOR Service Sharing Agreements: Evidence from Europe,
POLITICAL CONTROL Latin America, and the US
Room: Parc 55, Stockton Jered B. Carr, University of Illinois at Chicago
Chair: Scott E Page, University of Michigan Antonio F. Tavares, University of Minho
Disc: Olga V. Shvetsova, SUNY, Binghamton University DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Scott E Page, University of Michigan 28.36 RECONSIDERING THE IMPACT OF GENDER
DIVERSITY IN POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
Papers: Compliance and Middle Managers Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Deborah Beim, Yale University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Do Politicians Decentralize to Insure Against Electoral Chair: Beth Reingold, Emory University
Defeat? Disc: Beth Reingold, Emory University
Ana Sofia Collignon Delmar Kira Sanbonmatsu, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Daily Schedule

Does Decentralization Alleviate Malcontent?


Amuitz Garmendia Madariaga, Binghamton Papers: The Impact of WomenĀs Legislative Caucus Variation
University on WomenĀs Representation
Graig R. Klein, Binghamton University Anna M. Mahoney, Tulane University
Overcoming Biased Local Policies with Centralization Women on the Hill: Evaluating Gender Power and
Garrett Darl Lewis, Princeton University Influence of Congressional Staff
Structures of Power: Patronage Networks and Kelly Dittmar, Rutgers University - Camden
Decentralization
Meghan McConaughey, Georgetown University

DAILY SCHEDULE 117


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

The Sum of Its Parts? : Gender Composition and DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
Institutional Assessments SYSTEMS
Katelyn E. Stauffer, Indiana University 28.39 WOMEN'S REPRESENTATION
The Symbolic Impact of WomenĀs Representation on Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
CitizensĀ Political Attitudes Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Tània Verge Chair: Christina Xydias
Nina Wiesehomeier, Swansea University Disc: Emily Beaulieu, University of Kentucky
Ana Espirito-Santo, Institute of Social Sciences (ICS)
Theorizing Pitkin: Representation and Diversity Beyond Papers: WomenĀs Electoral Success under OLPR
the Legislature Asa von Schoultz, Mid Sweden University
Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary
Jennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental College Accounting for Variation in Female Representation in
the Muslim World
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS Danielle M. Higgins, American University
28.37 RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICAL
PSYCHOLOGY
Delivering WomenĀs Representation: Comparable
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Institutional Effectiveness
Heather Stoll, University of California, Santa
Chair: Jason P. Casellas, University of Houston Barbara
Disc: Jeronimo Cortina, University of Houston Geoff Allen, University of California Santa Barbara
The Causal Effects of PR on Women's Political
Papers: Isolating the Racial Component of Racial Resentment Representation
L.J Zigerell, Illinois State University Oyvind Skorge, London School of Economics
The Color of Our Skin & the Content of Our Politics The role of incumbency and gender in candidate list
Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan, Ann placement in closed list PR
Arbor Mihail Chiru, Central European University Budapest
Hakeem Jefferson Marina Popescu, University of Essex
Nicole Yadon, University of Michigan
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
Stopping Medicaid Expansion: How Acting on OneĀs PARTIES
Prejudice Feels Good 28.40 MONEY IN ELECTIONS: A FRANCO-AMERICAN
Antoine J. Banks, University of Maryland COMPARISON OF POLITICAL FINANCE LAWS
Heather Hicks, University of Maryland, College Park Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
Racial Attitudes and Emotional Responses to 2014 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
Congressional Candidates ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
David P. Redlawsk, Rutgers University, New Chair: Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts,
Brunswick Amherst
Natasha Altema McNeely, University of Texas - Pan
Part: Vincent Jerome Michelot, IEP de Lyon
American
Bruce E. Cain
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
Eric Kerrouche, Sciences Po, Bordeaux
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS Alix Meyer, Universite de Bourgogne
28.38 RELIGION AND PUBLIC GOODS Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Chair: Yu Tao, University of Central Lancashire 28.41 ELECTIONS ADMINISTRATION: EFFICACY
Disc: Ramazan Kilinc, University of Nebraska-Omaha AND INTEGRITY
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Papers: Ecological Inference and Religious Diversity: Studying Chair: R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of Technology
Public Goods in Brazil Papers: Barriers to Voter Confidence ĉ Volunteerism and Poll
Alicia Dailey Cooperman, Columbia University Workers
Tara L Slough, Columbia University Thad E. Hall, Fors Marsh Group
Public Goods, Prosociality, and Institutional Stress, Efficacy and Poll Workers
Decentralization Lonna Rae Atkeson, University of New Mexico
Christopher Hale
Assessing the Independence of Electoral Management
Religious Markets, Religious Social Behavior and Boards: A Network Approach
Protest Toby S. James, University of East Anglia
Gizem Arikan, Yasar University
Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom, Hebrew University of
Identifying the Determinants of Electoral Integrity in
Jerusalem
Advanced Democracies
Alistair Clark, Newcastle University
Islam, Social Networks, and Collective Mobilization in
the Post-Soviet Space DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Dilshod Achilov, East Tennessee State University 28.42 UNDERSTANDING ATTITUDES ABOUT SOCIAL
Renat Shaykhutdinov, Florida Atlantic University SPENDING
Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Chair: Michael J. Donnelly, University of Toronto
Disc: Emily Thorson, Boston College
Michael J. Donnelly, University of Toronto

118 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Papers: (Un)Deserving Welfare Claimants: the Role of Ethnicity Papers: Political Activism Online: Exploring the Millennial
and Migration Status Divide
Anouk Kootstra, University of Manchester Valerie-Anne Maheo, McGill University
Foundations of Public Opinion on Government Spending Allison Harell, Université du Québec à Montréal
Katherine Krimmel, Boston University Dietlind Stolle, McGill
Kelly T. Rader, Yale University Maria Surilas, McGill University
Philippe Duguay, Université du Québec à Montréal
Social Policy Preferences, the Great Recession and
Political Awareness Indigenous Digital Art as Politics: Young Neomads in
Ann-Kristin Koelln, University of Gothenburg Australia
Judith Bessant, RMIT University
The Dynamics of Racialization: How Welfare Opinion Robert William Watts, RMIT University
Reinforces Racial Animosities
Paul Goren, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Diversifying Communication: Party Youth Wings and
Social Media in Elections
Inequality Frames, Interests, and Support for Sarah PICKARD, UNIVERSITE SORBONNE
Redistribution NOUVELLE
Luis Antonio Camacho, German Development
Institute The Political Use of Internet and Social Media among
Different Young Activists
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Mariona Ferrer-Fons, Department of Political and
28.43 COMMUNICATION IN LEGISLATIVE AND Social Sciences (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
EXECUTIVE ELECTIONS, BOTH STATE AND Roger Soler-i-Martí, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
NATIONAL
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 The Political Digital Divide: Norms, Social Media and
Political Socialization
Chair: Paul Franz Testa, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Nicole Gallant, INRS Urbanisation Culture Société
Madeleine Pastinelli, Sociologie, Universite Laval
Champaign
Disc: Dannagal G. Young, University of Delaware Guillaume Latzko-Toth
Philippe J. Maarek, University Paris East
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
28.45 TOWARDS A CRITICAL POLITICAL SCIENCE
Papers: Personalization, Social Media, and Gubernatorial Room: Nikko, Carmel II
CandidatesĀ Strategies
Regina G. Lawrence, Turnbull Center, University of
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY
Oregon
Shannon C McGregor, University of Texas Chair: William L. Niemi, Western State Colorado University
Disc: William L. Niemi, Western State Colorado University
The Documented Voter: Voter ID Messaging in the
Dan J. O' Connor, CSU, Long Beach
2014 Texas Midterm Elections
Joshua M. Scacco, Purdue University
Regina G. Lawrence, Turnbull Center, University of Papers: The Politics of Comedy: Comedy as a Form of Critical
Oregon Political Education
Ori Tenenboim, School of Journalism, The University Nichole Marie Shippen, CUNY-Laguardia
of Texas at Austin Why Should Political Science Care About Animals?
(In)effective Television Advertising: Persuasion in Katherine Young, University of Hawaii at Hilo
Congressional Elections Toward a Critical Cosmopolitanism
David Mordecai Searle, University of California, San Michael Forman, University of Washington, Tacoma
Diego The Caucus for a New Political Science: Transition,
Presence to Press: How Campaign Investment Generates 1980-1992
Local Earned Media Clyde W. Barrow, University of Texas - Rio Grande
Joshua P. Darr, Louisiana State University Valley
Campaign Media Congruence: Issues in 2012 The Virtuous Vagina? An Anatomy of Sexism
Presidential Election Tweets and Ads Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University
Kate M. Kenski, University of Arizona DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
Bethany Anne Conway, California Polytechnic State 28.46 INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND THE BIG
University QUESTIONS
Christine R. Filer Room: Parc 55, Davidson
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND Chair: Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California
POLITICS Disc: Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California
28.44 ONLINE POLITICAL PARTICIPATION: HOW
DIVERSE YOUTH ENGAGE WITH POLITICS
Papers: ĄProfiles in Statesmanship: Bringing Leaders Back into
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Daily Schedule

the Analysisď
Chair: Ellen Claes, University of Leuven Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University
Disc: Michael Xenos, University of Wisconsin, Madison Contagion Processes in the First World War: A
Karen Mossberger, Arizona State University Theoretical and Empirical Analysis
John A. Vasquez, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign

DAILY SCHEDULE 119


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Covert Communication: Signals, Inferences and Secrecy Chair: Shareen Hertel, University of Connecticut
in World Politics Disc: Jillienne Haglund, University of Kentucky
Austin Carson, University of Chicago
Keren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton University Papers: Between Justice and Impunity: Quasi-Compliant
Realism, Imperialism, and the Expansion of Overseas Accountability Behavior
U.S. Military Bases Kate Cronin-Furman
Andrew Yeo, Catholic University of America Defending the Indefensible: Analysis of Violators of
Stacie Pettyjohn, RAND Corporation Human Rights at the UN UPR
Maritime Piracy Across Time: Recurring Patterns from Noam Schimmel, McGill Centre for Human Rights
the Bronze Age to Today and Legal Pluralism
Samuel R. Rohrer, University of North Georgia - The Procedural Justice and Human Rights
Military College of Georgia Tiberiu C. Dragu, New York University
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Arturas Rozenas, New York University
28.47 DIFFUSION AND REGIME CHANGE Sincere Commitment or Deflecting? Thematic Voting in
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 the Human Rights Council
Chair: Seva Gunitsky, University of Toronto Michael Joel Voss, University of Toledo
Disc: Seva Gunitsky, University of Toronto Whose Universality? State and NGO Testimony in the
Universal Periodic Review
Papers: Who is my Neighbor? Cultural Proximity and the Michael Beckstrand, University of Minnesota
Diffusion of Democracy DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
David De-Wei Wong 28.50 CHALLENGES OF FIELD AND ETHNOGRAPHIC
Robert D. Woodberry, University of Notre Dame RESEARCH
Diffusion or Growth? Simulating Patterns of Regime Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Change Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
Gavril K. Bilev, Merrimack College Chair: Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa Cruz
Natural Resource Pipelines as Catalysts of Regional Disc: Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University
Regime Diffusion Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa Cruz
Ruchan Kaya, Caspian Strategy Institute
Trading Faces: How Trading Partners Affect Changes in Papers: A Response to Fenno: The Political Scientist as an
Governing Institutions Engaged Participant Observer
Nicholas R. Davis, University of Wisconsin - David CW Parker, Montana State University,
Milwaukee Bozeman
A New Data Set on Political Regimes 1800-2014 Ethics, Methodology, and āDifficultĀ Narratives in
Carsten Anckar, Abo Akademi University Feminist Politics Research
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Akanksha Mehta, SOAS, University of London
28.48 THE RISE OF COMPETITIVE ELECTORAL Navigating Fieldwork as an Outsider
AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES Suzanne E. Scoggins, University of California,
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Berkeley
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE "Who Can Conduct Field Research on African Politics?:
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
The Political Economy of Higher Education and
Chair: Samuel A. Greene, King's College London Fieldwork for Generations of African and non-African
Disc: Samuel A. Greene, King's College London Africanists"
Andreas Schedler, CIDE, Mexico City Lauren M. MacLean, Indiana University,
Bloomington
Papers: Economic Development, Autocratization & Notions of DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Democracy in Ecuador & Turkey 28.51 LOCALITIES OF IMMIGRANT INCLUSION AND
Alper Yildiz, City University of New York - Graduate PARTICIPATION
Center Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
On the emergence of electoral authoritarian regimes Papers: A Relational Approach to Local Immigration Policy:
Nam Kyu Kim, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Lessons from Baltimore City
Our Brand is Crisis: Systemic Crises and the Rise of Felipe A Filomeno, University of Maryland,
Electoral Autocracies Baltimore County
Aleksandar Matovski Stating Noncitizen Benefits: Expanding State-Level
Political Economy of Rising Competitive Social Citizenship Since 1994
Authoritarianism in Turkey Jacqueline Vimo
Berk Esen, Sabanci University Policy Evolution in German Islamic Rel Instr. v US
Sebnem Gumuscu, Middlebury College Bilingual Ed., 1965-2010
Violent Struggle and Revolutionary Regime Durability Girma Elyot Alifeyo Parris, Rockefeller College of
Kai Massey Thaler, Harvard University Public Affairs & Policy at the University at Albany,
(SUNY)
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
28.49 HUMAN RIGHTS IGOS: THE ECTHR, ICC &
UNHRC
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25

120 DAILY SCHEDULE


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

On the Citizenship Policies of Latin American States Territorial Restructuring in the EU: Europe of Regions
towards their Emigrants Through the Back Door?
Luicy Pedroza, GIGA Dietmar Schirmer, Zeppelin University
Pau Palop Garcia, German Institute of Global Area Varieties of Federalism in 7 Advanced Federations
Studies Okyeon Hong Yi, Seoul National University
DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN POLITICS CONFERENCE 29.3 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
GROUP STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
28.52 EXPLAINING PARTY-BUILDING STRATEGIES IN PHILOSOPHY: ROUNDTABLE ON THE
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA PROSPECTS FOR THE CONSERVATIVE
Room: Parc 55, Lombard MOVEMENT
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
DEMOCRATIZATION Chair: John B. Kienker, Claremont Review of Books
Chair: Lise Rakner, University of Bergen Part: Matthew Spalding, Hillsdale College
Disc: Catherine Lena Kelly, Washington University in St. William Voegeli, The Claremont Institute
Louis Henry Olsen, Ethics and Public Policy Center
Lars Svasand, University of Bergen Charles R. Kesler, Claremont McKenna College
James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia
Papers: Reconceptualizing Variation in African Party Systems 29.4 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: ART, POLITICS AND
Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California, LITERATURE
Berkeley Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
Lise Rakner, University of Bergen Chair: Charles R. Embry
The Impact of Subnational Competition on the Structure Disc: Alan I. Baily, Stephen F. Austin State University
of National Politics Paul E. Kidder, Seattle University
Carrie Manning, Georgia State University
The Historical Roots of Coherent Parties in Africa: The Papers: The Philosopher and the Storyteller: Eric Voegelin and
Cases of Ghana and Mali Flannery O'Connor
Jonathan van Eerd, University of Zurich David Palmieri
No Threat, No Party: Party Strength in Electoral Pseudoreality Returns: Reading The Man Without
Authoritarian Regimes Qualities in ĄLiquid Modernď Times
Svein-Erik Helle, University of Bergen Paul Corey, Humber College
The credibility of campaign promises: experimental St. AugustineĀs Confessio and the Possibility of Reason
evidence from Ghana Enrique Pallares, Catholic University of America
Mascha Rauschenbach, University of Mannheim Art as a Symbolic Form: From Paleolithic Murals to
Related Groups Modernity
29.1 BRITISH POLITICS GROUP: PERSPECTIVES ON Wolfgang Leidhold, University of Cologne
THE 2015 UK GENERAL ELECTION Lila's Destiny: Marilynne Robinson's Gilead Trilogy
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero Paulette W. Kidder, Seattle University
Chair: Donley T. Studlar, University of Strathclyde 29.5 MCCONNELL CENTER FOR POLITICAL
Papers: The Election in Scotland LEADERSHIP: STATESMANSHIP, CITIZENSHIP,
Mark P. Shephard, University of Strathclyde AND CONSTITUTIONALISM: ANCIENT AND
The Election in England MODERN
Jane Green, University of Manchester Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III
The Election in Wales Chair: Lee Trepanier, Saginaw Valley State University
Roger Scully, Cardiff University Disc: Andrew Bibby
The Election in Northern Ireland Matthew D. Wright, Biola University
Jonathan Tonge, University of Liverpool
Jocelyn Evans, University of Leeds Papers: Statesmanship and the Constitution in Aristotle's
Political Science
29.2 CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM:
James R. Stoner, Louisiana State University
FEDERALISM’S DIVERSE FORMS
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Crisis of the American Empire: The 1787 Constitution in
Chair: Troy E. Smith, Brigham Young University, Hawaii Imperial History
Campus Michael S. Kochin, Tel Aviv University
Disc: Alan Fenna, Curtin University FDR's Destroyers-for-Bases Deal: Law and
André Lecours, University of Ottawa Statesmanship
Thomas Karako
Daily Schedule

Papers: Dis-United Kingdom: The Multi-National State and the Regime, Culture and Citizenship
Prospects for a Federal UK Leah Bradshaw, Brock University
Malcolm Harvey, University of Aberdeen 29.6 RUSSIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION:
Hybrid Federalization in Asia POLITICAL SCIENCE IN RUSSIA:
He Baogan, Nanyang Technological University REFLECTIONS ON 60 YEARS OF
DEVELOPMENT
Native American Reservations as Autonomies: The Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Shoshone-Bannock Reservation
Sherrill Stroschein, University College London

DAILY SCHEDULE 121


Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Chair: Olga Yurievna Malinova, Institute of Scientific 32.2 ASSOCIATION OF KOREAN POLITICAL
Information for Social Sciences, Russian Academy of STUDIES BUSINESS MEETING
Sciences Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Papers: Political Science in Russia: The State of Art and 32.3 CANADIAN POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
Prospective MEETING
Oxana Gaman-Golutvina, Moscow Institute for Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Foreign Relations 32.4 CONFERENCE GROUP ON ITALIAN POLITICS
Russian IR Theory Today and Tomorrow (CONGRIPS) BUSINESS MEETING
Andrei Tsygankov, San Francisco State University Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room
Criticism of Political Reality and Development of 32.5 EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH SECTION
Political Science in Russia BUSINESS MEETING
Leonid V. Smorgunov, St. Petersburg State University Room: Parc 55, Market Street
Who makes a āPublic FaceĀ of Political Science in 32.6 FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
Russia? RELATIONS SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Olga Yurievna Malinova, Institute of Scientific Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Information for Social Sciences, Russian Academy of 32.7 JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP BUSINESS
Sciences MEETING
Political Science in Russia: Academicians and Experts Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Alexander Sungurov 32.8 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE SECTION BUSINESS
29.7 WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE: MEETING
LATINAS IN AMERICAN POLITICS: BRIDGING Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
THE GAP BETWEEN INTERSECTIONALITY 32.9 POLITICS, LITERATURE AND FILM SECTION
AND ELECTABILITY BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Chair: Leslie Navarro, Dallas County Community College 32.10 QUALITATIVE AND MULTI-METHOD
Disc: Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College RESEARCH SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Papers: Voter Stereotypes of Latino and Latina Candidates 32.11 RELIGION AND POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
Ivy A.M. Cargile, St. Norbert College MEETING
Jennifer L. Merolla Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Jean Reith Schroedel, Claremont Graduate 32.12 RESEARCH & POLITICS JOURNAL/SAGE
University ASSOCIATE EDITORS MEETING
Virtually Shaking Hands and Kissing Babies: Room: Hilton, Green Room
Congressional Candidates and Social Media Campaigns
Samantha Hernandez, Arizona State University Thursday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM
Advantages and Disadvantages for Latina Officeholders: APSA Events
The Case of New Mexico 33.1 LAW AND COURTS SECTION LIFETIME
Julia Marin Hellwege, University of New Mexico ACHIEVEMENT AWARD AND SPECIAL PANEL
Christine Marie Sierra, University of New Mexico HONORING DONALD SONGER
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
The Sleeping Latina Giant: Leticia Van de Putte and the
Race for Texas Lt.
Sharon Ann Navarro, University of Texas at San
Thursday, 6:30 PM to 9:00 PM
Antonio APSA Events
34.1 NCOBPS EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
Thursday, 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
APSA Events
30.1 APSA MENA/POMEPS RECEPTION
Thursday, 7:00 PM to 7:30 PM
Room: Offsite, Redford (673 Geary Street) APSA Events
35.1 PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Thursday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM SECTION STEERING COMMITTEE MEETING
APSA Events Room: Parc 55, Davidson
31.1 111TH APSA ANNUAL MEETING PRESIDENTIAL Thursday, 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM
ADDRESS: AMERICAN POLITICS, AND
POLITICAL SCIENCE, IN AN ERA OF APSA Events
GROWING RACIAL DIVERSITY AND 36.1 RUTGERS UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF
ECONOMIC DISPARITY POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Chair: Rodney E. Hero, University of California, Berkeley 36.2 THE TEXAS RECEPTION FOR AFFILIATED
UNIVERSITIES
Thursday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
APSA Events
32.1 AFRICAN POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2

122 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

Thursday, 7:30 PM to 8:30 PM Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM


APSA Events APSA Events
37.1 APSA MENTORING NETWORKING RECEPTION 40.1 EITM - EMPIRICAL IMPLICATIONS OF
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 THEORETICAL MODELS BUSINESS MEETING
37.2 CONFERENCE FOR THE STUDY OF POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
THOUGHT RECEPTION 40.2 LEGISLATIVE STUDIES QUARTERLY
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero EDITORIAL BOARD BREAKFAST MEETING
37.3 FEDERALISM/INTERGOVERNMENTAL Room: Hilton, Vista
RELATIONS SECTION RECEPTION Division Panels
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
37.4 HONORING WOMEN OF COLOR RECEPTION: FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
WOMEN & POL. SECTION, WOMEN’S 41.1 INEQUALITY, WELFARE AND DISTRIBUTIVE
CAUCUS & COMM. POLITICS IN POST-COMMUNIST TRANSITIONS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science Chair: Bilyana Petrova, University of North Carolina, Chapel
37.5 INTERNATIONAL ATTENDEES RECEPTION Hill
Room: Hilton, Vista Disc: Marc P. Berenson, King's College London
37.6 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS Katelyn Finley, University of California, Irvine
CONTROL SECTION RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Imperial A Papers: Are Inequality Aversion and Demand for Welfare
37.7 PRESIDENTS & EXECUTIVE POLITICS Growing in Russia and China?
SECTION RECEPTION Neil Munro, University of Glasgow
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero Left is Right, Right is Left: Electoral Rules,
37.8 QUALITATIVE AND MULTI-METHOD Partisanship, and Redistribution
RESEARCH & INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND Stephen Bloom, Southern Illinois University,
POLITICS SECTIONS' RECEPTION Carbondale
Room: Nikko, Carmel I Simonas Cepenas, Southern Illinois University
37.9 RELIGION AND POLITICS SECTION Carbondale
RECEPTION Redistribution and the Quality of Governance: Evidence
Room: Nikko, Monterey II from East Central Europe
Bilyana Petrova, University of North Carolina,
Thursday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM Chapel Hill
APSA Events Post-Soviet Health Benefit Provision: the Role of Soviet
38.1 APSA OPENING RECEPTION Legacies & Veto Players
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4 Brittany Holom, Princeton University
38.2 CANADIAN POLITICS SECTION RECEPTION Political Effects of the Great Financial Crisis
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II Roger Schoenman, University of California, Santa
38.3 DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, Cruz
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO RECEPTION DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room HISTORICAL APPROACHES
38.4 SITING AND ENGAGEMENT NETWORKING 41.2 CICERONIAN RECEPTIONS
RECEPTION Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 Chair: Daniel J. Kapust, University of Wisconsin, Madison
38.5 THE CLAREMONT INSTITUTE RECEPTION Disc: Christina S. Kraus, Yale University
Room: Hilton, Imperial B
38.6 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN RECEPTION Papers: Smith and Cicero on Anger, Resentment and Retributive
Room: Parc 55, Sutro Justice
Michelle A. Schwarze, Department of Political
Science, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Friday, September 4, 2015
Cicero Speaks French: Ciceronian Themes in Latini,
Friday, 7:00 AM to 8:00 AM Oresme and Pizan
APSA Events Cary J. Nederman, Texas A&M University
39.1 ORGANIZED SECTION CHAIRS BREAKFAST Justus Lipsius, Acceptable Deceit, and Prudence in the
Daily Schedule

Room: Hilton, Continental Parlour 8 Ciceronian Tradition


Gary Remer, Tulane University
39.2 POLITY BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Green Room Law as a Source of Moral Norms in Cicero and
39.3 PS: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND POLITICS
Augustine
Sarah Byers, --Department of Philosophy at Boston
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING BREAKFAST
Room: Parc 55, Sutro College

DAILY SCHEDULE 123


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


HISTORICAL APPROACHES 41.6 RACE AND MEMORY IN AMERICAN
41.3 UNIVERSALITY, SPATIAL ORDER AND POLITICAL THOUGHT
EXCLUSION IN THE THOUGHT OF CARL Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
SCHMITT Chair: Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 Disc: Kirstine S. Taylor, University of Washington
Chair: ELLEN KENNEDY, UNIV OF PENNSYLVANIA Annie Menzel, Vassar College
Disc: Lars Vinx, Bilkent University, Department of Philosophy
Papers: The Pasts We Deny: James BaldwinĀs Archaeology of
Papers: On Carl SchmittĀs Interpretation of Hobbes (1932-1938) the Present
Eva Odzuck, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Joseph Grant, Northwestern University
Erlangen-Nürnberg Booker T. Washington and the Use of Biography in
Technicity, Mortality, and Sovereignty in Heidegger and Afro-American Political Thought
Schmitt Desmond Jagmohan, Princeton University
David Ragazzoni Neoliberal Time to Kill
Of Jews and the Republic: Carl Schmitt in Weimar P.J. Brendese, Johns Hopkins University
Aaron B. Roberts, Duke University For Love of Countrymen: James BaldwinĀs Biopolitical
Propaganda and Critique in Carl SchmittĀs Land and Sea Communitarianism
(1942/1954/1981) Bryan Brentus Carter, Johns Hopkins University
Samuel G. Zeitlin, University of California, Berkeley DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY 41.7 ‘THE STRANGEST EXPERIENCES’: SALVAGING
41.4 DREAM, WORK, PLAY: PSYCHOANALYSIS, THE COMPLEXITY IN POLITICAL THEORIZING
UNCONSCIOUS, AND RADICAL POLITICS Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 Chair: Adam Sitze, Amherst College
Chair: Robyn Marasco Disc: Yves Winter, McGill University
Disc: Robyn Marasco
Papers: Reading Plato
Papers: Dream as Political Object Jill Frank, Cornell University
Sharon Sliwinski, Western University Wollstonecraft and the Paradoxes of Political
Occupying Aggression: A Psychoanalytic Defense of Community
Radical Politics Angela Maione, Harvard University
George M. Shulman, New York University Between Text and Context: Disrupting Practices in
Thing Theory and Playthings: (In)operativity in French North Africa
Agamben, Arendt, and Winnicott Nancy Luxon, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities.
Bonnie Honig, Brown University ĄHome:" on Longing, Belonging, and the Possibility of a
VisionĀs Unseen: On Sovereignty, Race, and the Optical Universal Lexicon
Unconscious Hagar Kotef, SOAS, University of Lobdon
Mark Reinhardt, Williams College DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY 41.8 CAN THERE BE A (GOOD) ETHICS FOR
41.5 INTERSECTIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE POLITICS?
BODY: DISABILITY, RACE AND GENDER Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Room: Parc 55, Davidson Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS POLITICAL THEORY
Chair: Shatema Threadcraft, Rutgers University Chair: John R. Wallach
Disc: Julie Mostov, Drexel University Part: Ella Myers, University of Utah
Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University
Papers: Feminism, Disability, and the Body/Mind Duality Rainer Forst, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University
Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
The Body Between Institutional and Descriptive 41.9 RECOGNITION AND ITS DISCONTENTS
Representation Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Paula Diehl, Penn Arts & Sciences Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY
Body Matters: Black Women Elected Officials and Body
Politics Chair: Anita Chari
Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University Disc: Anita Chari
How to Write on Kinky Haired Feminine Bodies:
Phenomenology and Necropower Papers: Recognition and the Consensus Horizon in Democratic
Shatema Threadcraft, Rutgers University Politics
Laura Back, University of Washington
Connecting the Disconnect: Mental Disorder and
Political Disorder Self-Definition and Difference in the Politics of
Theresa Man Ling Lee, University of Guelph Recognition
Caitlin Tom, University of California, Berkeley

124 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

The Limits of the Politics of Recognition: The Case of Papers: A Discrete Choice Model for the Analysis of an
British Foxhunters Aggregate Voting Record
Katherine Curchin Moritz Marbach, University of Mannheim
Microaggressions, Recognition Theory and Racial Recovering Household Income From Survey Data: A
Inequality Bayesian Approach
Greta Fowler Snyder, Victoria University of Maxim Ananyev, UCLA
Wellington Michael Poyker, UCLA Anderson school of
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY management
41.10 THE POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY OF A Bayesian Changepoint Model of Electoral
IMMIGRATION ATTITUDES Realignments
Room: Parc 55, Mission II Arjun Wilkins, Stanford University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND Dealing with Separation in Logistic Regression Models
CITIZENSHIP Carlisle Rainey, Texas A&M University
Disc:
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Pete Mohanty, Stanford University
41.13 NETWORK MODELS
Papers: Framed by the Media: The Impact of Threat Frames in Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
TV News on Ethnic Prejudice Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
Laura Jacobs, University of Leuven
Chair:
Meta van der Linden, University of Leuven
Erin Hartman, Princeton University
Disc: Erin Hartman, Princeton University
Immigrant Exposure and NativesĀ Attitudes: Which Michael D. Ward, Duke University
Contexts and which Immigrants?
Kim Mannemar Soenderskov
Peter Thisted Dinesen Papers: Changepoint Analysis of Multilayer Network Using
Bayesian Inference
Openness Moderates the Impact of Interethnic Jong Hee Park, Seoul National University
Encounters on Immigration Attitudes Yunkyu Sohn
Peter Thisted Dinesen
Kim Mannemar Soenderskov Diffusion Invariant Reduction Scheme for Field
Experimental Design
Nationalism and Anti-immigrant Prejudice: What Role Yunkyu Sohn
Do Institutions Play?
Carolin Rapp, University of Bern Extracting ideological proximity in the UN system:
Topological Analysis approach
A Tale of Two Countries: Mexican ImmigrantsĀ Slava Mikhaylov, University College London
Perceptions of Politics in the U.S.
Sergio C. Wals, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Modeling Path-assigned Treatments: Colonial Roads in
Africa
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY Dean Knox, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
41.11 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS AND ECONOMIC Daniel Nicolas Jacques de Kadt
GROWTH
Room: Nikko, Carmel I DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
41.14 AUTHORITARIAN STABILITY
POLITICS Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Chair: Nicholas Weller, University of Southern California Chair: Maya Jessica Tudor
Disc: Desha Girod, Georgetown University Disc: Payam Mohseni, Harvard University
Sarah Hummel, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign
Papers: Modern Economic Democracy
Andrew J. Coe, University of Southern California
Papers: Autocratic Powers and Authoritarian Resilience in the
Authoritarian Institutions and Fiscal Policy: A Cross Post-Cold War Era
National Analysis Samuel Handlin, University of Utah
Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University Luis Alain Oquendo
John F. Walson
Sohini Mookherjee, Georgia State University Labor Unrest and the Dual Transformation of the
Chinese State
Economic Growth and Gender Equality under Manfred Elfstrom, Cornell University
Authoritarian Regimes
Adrian J. Shin, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Public Monuments as Loyalty Signals in Authoritarian
Regimes
The Effect of Government PartiesĀ Outside Options on Cole Harvey, University of North Carolina Chapel
the Budget Composition Hill
Maiko Isabelle Heller, University of Michigan Ali Sanaei, UC Berkeley
Daily Schedule

DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY Share It or Lose It? Ethnic Politics and Authoritarian
41.12 BAYESIAN MODELS Stability.
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Ilyas Saliba, WZB Social Science Center Berlin
Chair: Jacob M. Montgomery, Washington University in St. Yannick Immanuel Pengl, ETH Zurich
Louis The Geography of Power Elites in Authoritarian
Disc: James Edward Monogan, University of Georgia Regimes: Evidence from China
Titi Zhou, Hong Kong University of Science and
Technology

DAILY SCHEDULE 125


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS The Effects of Missionaries on Political Development


41.15 INEQUALITY AND ITS PERCEPTIONS Katharine A. Baldwin, Yale University
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 Where Do Economic Institutions Come From?
Chair: Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Robert D. Woodberry, University of Notre Dame
Disc: Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University Redistributive Colonialism
Alexander Lee, University of Rochester
Papers: Government Intervention and Subjective Well-Being: A DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Global Appraisal COUNTRIES
Patrick Flavin, Baylor University 41.18 STATE BUILDING
Alexander C. Pacek Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
Benjamin Radcliff, University of Notre Dame
Papers: Bridging United States and Latin American Public
Inequality and Representation with Regressive Taxation Administration Scholarship
Junko Kato, The University of Tokyo Adam J. Cohon, University of Rochester
Seiki Tanaka, University of Amsterdam
Diverse Approaches to State-Building in Laos and
Magnifying Insecurities: How Contexts Temper Worries Cambodia
and Policy Preferences Naazneen Barma, Naval Postgraduate School
Mallory Compton, Texas A&M University
Land Reform as an Origin of the Korean Developmental
Perception and Misperception of Inequality: A Cross- State
National Investigation Jong-sung You, The Australian National University
Daniel S. Treisman, University of California, Los
Angeles Land, State-Building, and Political Authority in Africa
Lauren Honig, Cornell University
Wealth Inequality and Democratic Politics
David Stasavage, New York University Pre-Colonial Governance and Contemporary State
Kenneth F. Scheve, Stanford University Capacity in Africa
Anna Schultz, Duke University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
41.16 REGIME TRANSITIONS DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 COUNTRIES
41.19 THEORIZING DIVERGENT PATHWAYS IN THE
Chair: Sofia Fenner
DEVELOPING WORLD
Disc: Manal A. Jamal, James Madison University Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Chair: Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Montana
Papers: Pop Culture and Pro-Military Propaganda in Post-
Disc: Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Montana
Mubarak Egypt
Meir R. Walters, Georgetown University
Papers: Geography is not Destiny: Trade Coalitions and Post-
Social Movements and Their Regional Diffusion Colonial Development
Arash Reisinezhad Don Leonard, Tulane University
Can Post WWI Military Disarmament explain the Governing Diversity: Explaining Divergent Pathways for
Growth of Interwar Fascism? India and Pakistan
Kare Vernby, Uppsala University Wilfried Swenden, University of Edinburgh
Unions and Transitions: A Comparative Analysis of Political Geography, Decision-making, and
Egypt and Tunisia Accountability in Latin America
Dina Bishara, Harvard University Katherine Bersch, Stanford University
Urbanization and Civil Wars Political Institutions, Social Contexts and Economic
Kerim Can Kavakli, Sabanci University Growth
Arzu Kibris, Sabanci University Peter F. Nardulli, University of Illinois at Urbana-
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING Champaign
COUNTRIES The Political Roots of the Mobile Revolution
41.17 COMPARATIVE DIMENSIONS IN COLONIAL Naunihal Singh, Air War College
POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Imperial B DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Chair: Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University
41.20 URBANIZATION, CLASS AND POLITICAL
Disc: Alexander Lee, University of Rochester PARTICIPATION IN DEVELOPING
DEMOCRACIES
Papers: What's Endogenous and Exogenous to Colonial Rule Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Philip Roessler, College of William & Mary Chair: Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Nicolas van de Walle, Cornell University Hill
The Territorial Dynamics of Colonial State-Building in Disc: Adam Michael Auerbach, American University
German East-Africa
Jan Henryk Pierskalla, The Ohio State University Papers: Growth and Withdrawal: Clientelism, Poverty, and
Alexander De Juan, GIGA German Institute of Participation in Urban Ghana
Global and Area Studies Noah L Nathan
Max Montgomery, German Institute of Global and
Area Studies

126 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

Citizen-State Relations in Urban India: Class Differences What Is a Capital Event? Measuring Surges, Sudden
in Water Politics Stops, and Flight
Tanu Kumar, University of California, Berkeley William Kindred Winecoff, Indiana University
Alison E. Post Measuring Vulnerabilities to Different Crisis Resolution
The Forbearance Trap: Squatting and Housing Policy in Strategies
Urban Latin America Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich
Alisha Caroline Holland, Harvard University Raphael Reinke
Rural Networks, Urban Migration, and Wellbeing in DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
Slums 41.23 ENFORCEMENT AND COMPLIANCE IN
Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
Anirudh Krishna, Duke University Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Including the Other Half: How Economic Formality Disc: Songying Fang, Rice University
Disrupts Clientelism in Manila
Nancy Hite-Rubin, Tufts University Papers: ĄDiagonalď Enforcement Mechanisms in International
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY Trade Politics
41.21 NEVER THE TWAIN SHALL MEET? PARTY William Phelan, Trinity College, Dublin
POLITICS IN WESTERN AND EASTERN Do PTAs Increase Trade? Evidence from a Network
EUROPE Analysis
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Lauren Peritz, University of California, Davis
Chair: Liesbet Hooghe, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Disc: Liesbet Hooghe, UNC - Chapel Hill & VU Amsterdam 41.24 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: DALE COPELAND'S
Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina, Chapel "ECONOMIC INTERDEPENDENCE AND WAR"
Hill Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL
Papers: Issue Salience East and West POLITICAL ECONOMY
Robert Rohrschneider, University of Kansas Chair: Randall Schweller, Ohio State University
Stephen Whitefield, University of Oxford Part: Dale Copeland, University of Virginia
Skewed Reality: Citizen (Mis)Perceptions of Parties Joanne Gowa, Princeton University
Margit Tavits, Washington University in St. Louis Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University
Dalston G Ward, Washington University in St. Louis Christopher F. Gelpi, The Ohio State University
Fluid Parties, Fickle Voters, Fixed Spaces: Party Jessica L. P. Weeks, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Competition in Europe Colin Elman, Syracuse University
Jan Rovny, Sciences Po, Paris DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Jonathan Polk, University of Gothenburg 41.25 NUCLEAR POLITICS AND PROLIFERATION
"Back to the Future?" Government Formation and Party Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
System Stability in Europe Disc: Lawrence P. Rubin, Georgia Institute of Technology
Fernando Casal Bertoa, University of Nottingham
Zsolt Enyedi, Central European University Papers: Predicting Nuclear Proliferation
The Future Lies East? Systems, Sub-Systems and the Jeffrey Kaplow, College of William & Mary
Dynamics of Party Politics Erik Gartzke, University of California, San Diego
Tim Haughton, University of Birmingham Explaining the Path and Pace of Nuclear Weapons
Kevin Deegan-Krause, Wayne State University Programs
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Lisa Langdon Koch, Arizona State University
41.22 FINANCIAL CRISIS DATA AND POLITICS: Alliance Restraint and Nuclear Proliferation
MEASUREMENT PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS Dong Sun Lee, Korea University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 Perception, Prioritization, and Proliferation
Chair: Mark Hallerberg, Hertie School of Governance Alison Logan Mintz, University of Georgia
Disc: David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Realism, Idealism, and American Public Opinion on
Technology Nuclear Disarmament
Kai Quek, University of Hong Kong
Papers: Measuring Economic Institutions and Financial Crises
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Puspa D Amri, Ithaca College
41.26 POWER SHIFTS IN WAR AND PEACE: NEW
Thomas D. Willett, Claremont Graduate University THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL INSIGHTS
A Text Based Measure of Banking Crises Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Sahil Deo Chair: David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University
Daily Schedule

Christian Bernhard Franz


Disc:
Christopher Gandrud, Hertie School of Governance
David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University
Mark Hallerberg, Hertie School of Governance
Papers: When Power Shifts Promote Peace
Exogenous and Objective Indicators of Endogenous and Joseph M. Parent, University of Miami
Subjective Crises Paul K. MacDonald, Wellesley College
Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University
Falling Giants: Rising States and the Fate of Declining
Great Powers
Joshua Itzkowitz Shifrinson, Texas A&M University

DAILY SCHEDULE 127


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

Explaining Accommodation Failure China, India, and the United States in the New Global
Steven Ward, Cornell University Order
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS John Echeverri-Gent, Department of Politics,
University of Virginia
CONTROL
April A Herlevi, University of Virginia
41.27 CHINA'S ECONOMIC STATECRAFT AND
SECURITY Immoderate Greatness: Is Restraint a Viable Strategy for
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Great Powers?
Chair: Daniel W. Drezner, Tufts University Tudor Andrei Onea, National University of Singapore
Disc: Daniel W. Drezner, Tufts University Policy Evolution of Regional Hegemons in Comparative
Perspective
Papers: Measuring Key Concepts in Sanctions Research: China, Steven F. Jackson, Indiana University of
Japan, and Rare-Earths Pennsylvania
Charles Eugene Gholz, University of Texas at Austin Strategic Recalibration: Framework for a 21st Century
Llewelyn Hughes, Australian National University National Security Strategy
The Compellence and Deterrence of Economic Statecraft Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University
in ChinaĀs Near Abroad DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
William J. Norris, Texas A&M University 41.30 GENOCIDE, POLITICIDE, AND GOVERNMENT
Great Power Engagement and the Use of Economic MASS KILLING
Statecraft Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Steven E. Lobell, University of Utah Chair: Gary Uzonyi, Duke University
ChinaĀs Economic Integration Strategies in Central Asia Disc: Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University
Vitaly Kozyrev, Endicott College
Papers: The Onset of Repressive Spells, 1976-2007
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Christian Davenport, University of Michigan
41.28 DOMESTIC POLITICS AND INTERNATIONAL
CONFLICT Polarities of the ĄOtherď: Battlefield Mass Slaughter in
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Interstate War
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL Manus I. Midlarsky, Rutgers University, New
SECURITY Brunswick
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL Opposing the Call to Kill: Responses to Government-
SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL Sponsored Mass Killing
Chair: Daniel S. Geller, Wayne State University Taylor B. Seybolt, University of Pittsburgh
Disc: Amanda A. Licht, Binghamton University What Drives Escalation in Atrocity Violence? Evidence
Kyle Haynes, Webster University from Guatemala
Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: An Opportunity for Backing Down: Elections and Rachel Schwartz, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Audience Costs The Divergent Logics of Genocide and Politicide: The
Kiyotaka Yasui, Waseda University Duration of Mass Killing
Ryo Nakai, Rikkyo University Gary Uzonyi, Duke University
Does Economic Inequality Make States More Likely to DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Fight Other States? 41.31 NEW EXPLANATIONS FOR THE ONSET OF
Bruce M. Russett, yale university WAR
David Kinsella, Portland State University Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Socialization and State Behavior in Interstate Territorial Chair: Toby J. Rider, Texas Tech University
Disputes Disc: Daniel McCormack, University of Pennsylvania
James Lee, Princeton University
Bella Wang, Princeton University
Papers: Economic Sanctions: Compelling Concessions or a Path
Why Do Military Regimes Initiate More Militarized to War?
Interstate Disputes? Ahmer Tarar, Texas A&M University
Sophie Panel, Heidelberg University
Beyond Conventional Deterrence: A New Model of
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY WMD Escalation Dynamics
41.29 GRAND STRATEGY OF GLOBAL AND Kyungkook Kang, University of Central Florida
REGIONAL POWERS Jacek Kugler, Claremont Graduate University
Room: Nikko, Monterey II
Inadvertent War: A Provocation Model and the Sino-
Chair: John Schuessler, Air War College India War of 1962
Disc: John Schuessler, Air War College Hyun-Binn Cho, University of Pennsylvania
Christopher Darnton, Catholic University of America Peaceful Uncertainty: When Power Shocks Do Not
Create Commitment Problems
Papers: Asymmetric Statecraft: Alliances, Structures, and Muhammet Bas, Harvard University
Regional Dominance in Asia Robert Schub, Harvard University
Yuxing Huang, Boston College
Responding to Provocations: Modeling and Testing
Strategic Conflict Avoidance
Ho Youn Koh, University of Maryland

128 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

Territory and Time in Subnational Claims for Self- Voices from the Frontline: Hospital Networks and
Determination Support to the ACA
Friederike Luise Kelle Ling Zhu, University of Houston
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES Service Diversity and Quality Variation in Third-Party
41.32 INDIVIDUALS IN PARTISAN CONTEXTS Regulatory Administration
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 David P. Carter, University of Colorado Denver
Chair: Eric Magar, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Disc: Audrey André, Vrije Universiteit Brussel 41.35 INFORMATION AND MISINFORMATION IN
Eric Magar, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico POLICYMAKING
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Papers: The Incumbency Advantage in Brazilian Elections Chair: Frank R. Baumgartner, University of North Carolina,
Scott W. Desposato, UZH and UCSD Chapel Hill
George Avelino, FGV-SP Disc: Kenneth S. Rogerson, Duke University
Ciro Biderman Krista Loose, MIT
Campaign Localization and Personalization Effects on
Constituency Service Papers: Extreme Events and Policy Learning: How Communities
Mihail Chiru, Central European University Budapest Recover, Adapt, and Learn
Electoral Incentives and Individual Parliament Members' Deserai Anderson Crow, University of Colorado
Rights Boulder
Yael Shomer, Tel Aviv University Elizabeth Ann Albright, Duke University
How is the Personality of MPs Important in Party Congressional Bureaucracy: What Leads Legislators to
Dominated Political Systems? Seek Out Policy Analysis
Helene Helboe Pedersen, Department of Political Samuel Workman
Science, Aarhus University Jonathan Lewallen, University of Texas at Austin
Strategic versus Ideological Party Switching in the Things Unspoken: The Politics of Forbidden Discourse
European Parliament Brandon Yoder, National University of Singapore
Simon Hix, London School of Economics Kurt Taylor Taylor Gaubatz, Old Dominion
Abdul G. Noury, New York University Abu Dhabi University
Rachel A. Schutte, Hunter College - CUNY
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
41.33 MANAGING HUMAN CAPITAL IN THE PUBLIC Experts, Ideologues and the Dissemination of
SECTOR Misinformation in Abortion Policy
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Alesha E. Doan, University of Kansas
Carolina Costa Candal, University of Kansas
Chair: Gregory B. Lewis, Georgia State University Steven M. Sylvester, The University of Kansas
Disc: Alisa Hicklin Fryar, University of Oklahoma
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
41.36 MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE: JUDICIAL POLITICS
Papers: Explaining the Implementation of Merit System: the case IN STATE SUPREME COURTS
of Mexico Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Claudia N. Avellaneda, Indiana University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND
Gender & Federal Turnover Intent: Exploring Future Job POLICY
Preference & Environments Chair: Michael Salamone, Washington State University
Susannah Bruns Ali, Florida International University
Disc: Michael Salamone, Washington State University
The Effects of Non-competitive Hiring on US Federal John J. Szmer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Service Quality
Gregory B. Lewis, Georgia State University Papers: Effect of State Supreme Court JusticesĀ Interpersonal
Tim Johnson, Willamette University Relationships on Rulings
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Salmon A. Shomade, University of New Orleans
41.34 POLITICS OF GOVERNANCE AND POLICY Expanding Regime Politics to State Supreme Courts
IMPLEMENTATION Richard S. Price, Weber State University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Ideological Drift on State Supreme Courts:
Chair: Vicky Wilkins, American University Institutionalism versus Saliency
Disc: Lael R. Keiser, University of Missouri, Columbia David A. Hughes, University of Georgia
Influential Interests: Amicus Curiae Influence on State
Papers: Diffusion versus Need: The Case of State Parental High Court Opinions
Involvement Requirements Allison Trochesset, University of Georgia
Daniel L. Fay, Mississippi State University
Daily Schedule

Danielle N. Atkins Lobbying Justice(s)? Amicus Influence in State High


Vicky Wilkins, American University Court Decision Making
Jenna Becker Kane, West Chester University of
Governance and the Welfare State: An Unlikely Pennsylvania
Comparison of the US and Denmark
Evelyn Z. Brodkin, University of Chicago
Unpacking the Indian State: Bureaucratic Norms and
Policy Implementation
Akshay Mangla, Harvard University

DAILY SCHEDULE 129


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND Discrimination Finds a Home: Salient Race-Related
JURISPRUDENCE Events and Mortgage Lending
41.37 RACE, CAPITALISM, AND LAW IN AMERICAN Rakeen Sayeeda Mabud
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT The Effect of Immigrant Welfare Inclusion on Asian and
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Latino Turnout
Chair: Ken I. Kersch, Boston College Meghan Condon, DePaul University
Disc: Ken I. Kersch, Boston College Alexandra Filindra, University of Illinois at Chicago
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
Papers: Antislavery & Capitalism in the American Political 41.40 BEYOND FREEDOM AND VIOLENCE:
Tradition, Revisited RELIGION, POLITICS, AND INTERPRETIVE
Pamela Brandwein, University of Michigan, Ann METHODS
Arbor Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
The Crimes of Capitalism Chair: Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, Northwestern University
Megan Ming Francis, University of Washington Part: Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago
Bankruptcy, Race, and the American Welfare State Cecelia Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Emily Zackin Atalia Omer, --University of Notre Dame
Brent Steele, University of Utah
It Takes Framing To Weaken A Statute: Obsolescence Ruth Marshall, University of Toronto - Political Science/
and the Crisis of the VRA, 2006-2013 Study of Religion
Rick Valelly, Swarthmore College
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
SYSTEMS
41.38 GENDER AND CONFLICT
41.41 POLITICAL POLARIZATION IN COMPARATIVE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
PERSPECTIVE
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Chair: Laura E Sjoberg Co-sponsored by DIVISION 35: POLITICAL
Disc: Laura E Sjoberg ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
Sara Angevine, Whittier College Chair: James Adams, University of California, Davis
Disc: Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside
Papers: Being Woman and Kurd: Double Fight Against Double James Adams, University of California, Davis
Oppression
MAYA ARAKON, SÜLEYMAN SAH UNIVERSITY Papers: Economic Shocks, Perceptions of Competence, and Party
Female Operated Terrorist Websites: A Case for Social System Performance
Network Analysis Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Maryland
Victoria Elizabeth Tait Kiyoung Chang, University of Notre Dame
Joshua Clark Timothy Hellwig, Indiana University, Bloomington
Lena Omar Saleh, Carleton University - Department Party Policy Diffusion
of Political Science Lawrence Ezrow, University of Essex
Gender Narratives and Media: Analyzing Women Hugh Ward, University of Essex
Terrorists and Emotions Measuring Party System Polarization: Strategies and
Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa Performance
Candice D. Ortbals, Pepperdine University Robin E. Best, Binghamton University (SUNY)
Lori Poloni-Staudinger, Northern Arizona University Jay K. Dow, University of Missouri, Columbia
Jeanette Morehouse Mendez, Oklahoma State
University Electoral Proportionality and Issue Constraint in
European Elections
Women CanĀt Fight: Comparing the Impacts of Nathan Rexford, University of California, Davis
Removing the Combat Exclusion
Megan MACKENZIE Party System Polarization, Political Attitudes and
Engagement
Gender and Differences in Security Threat Perceptions Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter
Susan A. Banducci, University of Exeter
Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS 41.42 ELECTIONS AND LEGISLATIVE VOTING IN
41.39 RACE, CLASS AND INEQUALITY THE UNITED STATES
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Disc: Paru Shah, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Chair: Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis
Disc: Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis
Papers: Axes of Inequality: the Causes of Black-Latino Political
Commonality
Mackenzie Leigh Israel-Trummel, University of Papers: How to Measure Partisan Gerrymandering (and ground it
Oklahoma in the US Constitution)
Ariela Schachter, Stanford University Anthony J. McGann, University of Strathclyde
Charles Smith, University of California, Irvine
Democracy Divided: Race and Class in American Michael Latner, California Polytechnic State
Politics University, San Luis Obispo
Zoltan L. Hajnal, University of California, San Diego Alex Keena, University of California, Irvine

130 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

Median and Supermajoritarian Pivots in Congress and Diversity in Information: Public Responsiveness during
Conditional Party Government the Economic Crisis
Thomas L. Brunell, University of Texas at Dallas Ann-Kristin Koelln, University of Gothenburg
Samuel Merrill, Wilkes University Issue Characteristics and Political Responsiveness: The
Interest Group Lobbying and Congressional Committee Case of Germany
Agenda-Setting Lars Kai Maeder, University of Copenhagen
Geoffrey M. Lorenz, University of Michigan Anne Rasmussen, Copenhagen University & Leiden
Political Career Histories and Maverick Voting in the University
U.S. Senate, 1983 - 2012 Government Responsiveness in the Council of the
Misty Knight-Rini, University of California, Irvine European Union
Alex Keena, University of California, Irvine Sara Hagemann, London School of Economics
The JournalistĀs Dilemma: Asymmetric Partisan Conflict Sara Binzer Hobolt, London Scool of Economics
vs. Neutrality Christopher Wratil, London School of Economics
Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University and Political Science
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR Contextual Determinants of Opinion-Policy Congruence
41.43 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: "AMERICAN in Europe
IDENTITY AND THE POLITICS OF Anne Rasmussen, Copenhagen University & Leiden
MULTICULTURALISM" University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 Stefanie Reher, European University Institute
Dimiter Toshkov, Leiden University
Chair: Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California
Part: Jack Citrin, University of California, Berkeley DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
David O. Sears, University of California, Los Angeles 41.46 INNOVATIONS IN POLITICAL
Ricardo Ramirez, University of Notre Dame COMMUNICATION RESEARCH, BOTH
Peter N. Skerry, Boston College EMPIRICAL AND NORMATIVE
Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan, Ann Room: Parc 55, Mason
Arbor Chair: Amanda Beth Cronkhite, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
41.44 ELECTIONS AND VOTING IN COMPARATIVE Disc: Nicholas Beauchamp, Northeastern University
AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Nick Anstead, London School of Economics
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
Chair: Yuki Takagi, Department of Political Science, Stanford Papers: Framing Citizenship: A Text Analysis Approach to
University Measuring Political Culture
Carolina Johnson, University of Washington
Disc: Jeffrey W. Koch, SUNY, Geneseo
WhatĀs Social Media Got to Do With It? Homophily and
Papers: Candidate's Regional Ties and Vote Choice in the Perceptions of the Parties
European Parliament Election Jeffrey A. Gottfried, Pew Research Center
André Blais, University of Montreal Katerina Eva Matsa, Pew Research Center
Damien Bol Circle of Doom: How the Public Amplifies Negative
Jean-Francois Laslier, Paris School of Economics News
Laura Stephenson, University of Western Ontario Trevor Thrall
Electoral Coalitions, The Personal Vote, and Andrew Armstrong, George Mason University
Mobilization in Two-Round Elections An Empiricist Framework for Normative Analysis in
Daniel M. Smith, Harvard University Political Communication
The Consequences of the Eurozone Crisis for the Eike Mark Rinke, University of Mannheim
Structure of Party Competition DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
Pablo Fernandez-Vazquez, Carlos III - Juan March 41.47 IDEAS AND DOMESTIC POLITICS IN
Institute AMERICA’S RISE TO POWER
With Ballots & Bullets: Partisan Voting & Violence in Room: Parc 55, Stockton
the American Civil War Chair: Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University
Nathan P. Kalmoe, Monmouth College Disc: Henry R. Nau, George Washington University
Wealth, Officeholding, and Elite Ideology in Antebellum
Georgia Papers: Republican Empire: Partisanship and U.S. Foreign
Jason V Poulos, University of California, Berkeley Policy, 1866-1898
Paul Musgrave, Georgetown University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
41.45 THE CONDITIONS OF POLICY Thinking about Expansion: Ideas and AmericaĀs
Daily Schedule

RESPONSIVENESS Emergence as a World Power


Room: Nikko, Carmel II Kyle M. Lascurettes, Lewis & Clark College
Chair: Stefanie Reher, European University Institute To Hop or to Hold: Island Territories and U.S.
Disc: Will Jennings, University of Southampton Annexation
Richard W. Maass, University of Evansville
Papers: On the Sources of Public Responsiveness to Policy Recognition and Rapprochement: AmericaĀs Peaceful
Stuart N. Soroka, University of Michigan Rise
Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin Michelle Murray, Bard College

DAILY SCHEDULE 131


Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM

DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS Chair: Christopher Preble, The Cato Institute
41.48 CROWDSOURCING CASE STUDIES: LESSONS Part: Stephen D. Biddle, George Washington University
FROM THE PARTICIPEDIA PROJECT Risa A. Brooks, Marquette University
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room Benjamin H. Friedman
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 40: INFORMATION Alan J. Kuperman, University of Texas, Austin
TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS Jon R. Lindsay, University of California, San Diego
Chair: Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia 42.3 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
Part: Leonardo Avritzer, Universidade Federal de Minas STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
Gerais PHILOSOPHY: ROUNDTABLE: NATURAL
Marjorie Correa Marona, Universidade Federal de Minas RIGHTS AND THE PERMISSIVE NATURAL LAW
Gerais Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
Sule Yaylaci, University of British Columbia Chair: Lindsay Eberhardt, The Claremont Institute
Paolo Spada, University of British Columbia Part: Noah Dauber, Colgate University
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS Gladden J. Pappin, University of Notre Dame
41.49 NEW DIRECTIONS IN MULTI-METHOD Kenneth Pennington, Catholic University of America
RESEARCH Brian Tierney, Cornell University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 42.4 COMPLEXITY AND PUBLIC POLICY GROUP:
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL ROUNDTABLE ON COMPLEXITY IN POLICY:
METHODOLOGY THE MISSING LINK
Chair: David Collier, UC Berkeley Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Part: Evan S. Lieberman, Massachusetts Institute of Part: Liz Johnson, Complex Systems Institute
Technology Michael Steven Givel, University of Oklahoma
Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia Lucas da Silva Almeida, University of SÃo Paulo
Sherry Zaks, University of California, Berkeley Laura Pereira
Ron E. Hassner, University of California, Berkeley Robert Geyer, County South Lancaster University
David Collier, UC Berkeley 42.5 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: CIVILIZATION IN
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP EXTREMIS: FROM COLLAPSE TO A NEW LEAP
41.50 NORMATIVE POLITICS OF CITIZENSHIP AND IN BEING
MIGRATION Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I Chair: Manfred Henningsen, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Chair: Elizabeth F. Cohen, Syracuse University Disc: Klaus von Dung, University of Siegen
Disc: Barbara Buckinx, Princeton University Ralph C. Hancock, Brigham Young University
Cyril Ghosh, Wagner College
Papers: The Disintegration of Traditional Civilizations
Papers: Changes to Voter Registration: an Example of Contested Manfred Henningsen, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Citizenship VoegelinĀs Understanding of the Leap in Being.
Ana Henderson, University of California, Berkeley Andrew Hoffman, Independent Scholar
Consequences versus Rights? A Contribution to Hip-Hop Culture and the Primary Community of Being
Migration Politics Masahide Teale Kato, University of Hawaii at West
Charlotte Fiala, Humboldt-Universitaet zu Berlin Oahu
Liberal Neutrality and Immigrant Integration Transcending Civilizational Collapse in a New Leap of
Caleb Yong, Harvard University Being
Including 'Outsiders': the Boundary Problem, Louis Gershon Herman, University of Hawaii
Emigration, and Citizenship Is There a New Spiritual Axial Age?
Ashwini Vasanthakumar, University College, Jerry L. Martin, University of Colorado at Boulder
University of Oxford
42.6 FEDERALIST SOCIETY FOR LAW AND PUBLIC
Defending Family Unity as an Immigration Policy POLICY STUDIES: REALISM, FORMALISM AND
Priority EMPIRICAL STUDIES OF JUDICIAL
Michael J. Sullivan, St. Mary's University DECISIONMAKING ROUNDTABLE
Related Groups Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
42.1 AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT: THE CIVIC Chair: Lee Liberman Otis, The Federalist Society for Law and
DIMENSIONS OF AMERICAN Public Policy Studies
CONSTITUTIONALISM: AUTHOR MEETS Part: Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown University
AUTHOR ROUNDTABLE Keith E. Whittington, Princeton University
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III Lawrence Solum, Georgetown University
Chair: George Thomas, Claremont McKenna College Joshua Fischman, Northwestern University Law School
Part: Sotirios A. Barber, University of Notre Dame Anup Malani, University of Chicago Law School
Elizabeth Beaumont, University of California, Santa 42.7 SOCIETY OF CATHOLIC SOCIAL SCIENTISTS:
Cruz REFLECTIONS ON THE POLITICAL THOUGHT
John E. Finn, Wesleyan University OF FR. JAMES V. SCHALL: REASON,
George Thomas, Claremont McKenna College REVELATION AND POLITICS ROUNDTABLE
42.2 CATO INSTITUTE: WHY ISN’T THERE MORE Room: Hilton, Imperial A
SCHOLARLY EVALUATION OF U.S. WARS? Chair: Steven J. Brust, Eastern New Mexico Univeristy
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I

132 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

Part: Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College Friday, 8:30 AM to 9:30 AM


Marc Dante Guerra, Assumption College
APSA Events
James V. Schall, Georgetown University
Hadley Arkes, Amherst College 44.1 APSA ETHICS COMMITTEE BUSINESS
MEETING
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room
Division Panels 44.2 APSA INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEEE
BUSINESS MEETING
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
COUNTRIES
43.1 POSTER SESSION: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM
OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Theme Panels
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Disc: Angel Maria Casas Gragea, Universidad Autonoma 45.1 GLOBAL GOVERNANCE AND THE UNITED
Metropolitana NATIONS, 70 YEARS AFTER THE SAN
FRANCISCO CHARTER
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Papers: Candidate De-selection and the Weakness of African
Chair: Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Legislatures
Shana Warren, New York University
Hill
Part: Michael N. Barnett, George Washington University
Explaining the Patterns of Ministerial Instability in Megan Shannon, University of Colorado
Presidential Democracies Tana Johnson, Duke University
Don S. Lee Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University
Devesh Tiwari, UCSD
45.2 WOMEN IN CONFLICT PROCESSES
Listen to Rubber Stamp's Voice: Information Gathering Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
in Authoritarian Congress
Zeren Li, Hong Kong University of Science and
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Technology Chair: Vanessa Lefler, Middle Tennessee State University
Party Representatives, Polling Stations, and Electoral Disc: Tavishi Bhasin, Kennesaw State University
Manipulation
Sergio Jesus Ascencio Bonfil, University of Rochester Papers: Are Female Peacekeeping Units More Effective?
Miguel R. Rueda Neil Narang, University of California, Santa Barbara
Reading Bharat; The People that Help Connect Leaders Female Rebel Leadership, Conflict Termination, and
with their Nation Peace Following Civil War
Daniel Kushner, Brown University Cara Eugenia Jones, Mary Baldwin College
Michael Christopher Marshall, University of North
Texas
The Primary Reason for the Primary Bonus: Evidence
from Mexico
Sergio Jesus Ascencio Bonfil, University of Rochester How Women End Wars: Leadership Diversity and the
Termination of Civil Conflict
DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS Reed M. Wood, Arizona State University
43.2 POSTER SESSION: CANADIAN POLITICS Sarah Shair-Rosenfield, Arizona State University
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Women Fighters: Explaining Female Participation in a
Papers: Cultural Scenes and Contextual Effects on Political
Violent Insurgency
Ideology
Günes Murat Tezcur, University of Central Florida
Diana Miller, University of Toronto
Daniel Silver APSA Events
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS 46.1 EMERGING SCHOLARS IN LATINO POLITICS
43.3 POSTER SESSION: POLITICAL NETWORKS Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Chair: Christina Elizabeth Bejarano, University of Kansas
Disc: Navid Hassanpour, Columbia University Disc: Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley

Papers: Digame: Social networks used to coordinate vote choice Papers: Insights on State-level Immigration Policies
in Honduras Alexandra Filindra, University of Illinois at Chicago
Douglas Alexander Hughes, University of California, Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz, University of Rhode
San Diego Island
FreedomWorks versus the Grassroots: Social Networks Partners or Rivals? Power & Latino, Black & White
in the Tea Party Relations in the 21st Century
Rachel Blum Betina Cutaia Wilkinson, Wake Forest University
Daily Schedule

How Social Media and Public Transportation Shape Blood and Oil: Mexican Migrants' Views of the Peña
Modern Social Movements Nieto Administration
Lefteris Jason Anastasopoulos, University of Adrian Felix, University of California-Santa Cruz
California, Berkeley Impact of Protests on Latino/a Identity, Attitudes &
Participation
Sophia Jordan Wallace, Rutgers University, New
Brunswick

DAILY SCHEDULE 133


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

Acculturation Bargain: DACA and 2012 Latino Sarah GrimkeĀs Quaker Liberalism
presidential candidate preference Lisa Pace Vetter, University of Maryland, Baltimore
Francisco I. Pedraza, Texas A&M University County
46.2 THE PROMISES AND PITFALLS OF DART: DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
CRAFTING NEW SUBMISSIONS GUIDELINES HISTORICAL APPROACHES
FOR THE APSR 47.3 ROUSSEAU’S LESSER KNOWN WORKS ON
Room: Nikko, Carmel I WOMEN
Chair: John Ishiyama, University of North Texas Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Part: Colin Elman, Syracuse University Chair: Denise Schaeffer, College of the Holy Cross
Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University Part: Eileen Hunt Botting, University of Notre Dame
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Christopher Kelly, Boston College
Sarah E. Parkinson, University of Minnesota Heather Pangle, Boston College
Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah Jordan Dorney, University of Notre Dame
Joe Soss, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
47.4 DIAGNOSING THE CONTEMPORARY:
Division Panels CRITICAL GENEALOGIES OF THE PRESENT
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES Chair: Kevin Olson, University of California, Irvine
47.1 LEGITIMATION IN AUTOCRACIES: THE Disc: Andrew Dilts, Loyola Marymount University
ENDURANCE OF COMMUNISM IN A
DEMOCRATIZING WORLD
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Papers: Anthropological Ratios: Heroic Ironization/Restive
Recalcitrance
Chair: A. James McAdams, University of Notre Dame Paul Rabinow
Disc: Martin Dimitrov, Tulane University
On Being Judge-able: A Genealogy of Legal Personhood
Ladelle McWhorter, University of Richmond
Papers: Communist Rule in a Post-Communist World:
Ideological Rigidity and Flexibility The Informational Person in the Politics of Information
Alexander Dukalskis, University College Dublin Colin Koopman, University of Oregon
Johannes Gerschewski, Berlin Social Science Center Imagined Sovereignties and Fragmentary Universalisms:
(WZB), Germany A Genealogy of the Present
Xi Jinping and the Art of Chrono-ideological Kevin Olson, University of California, Irvine
Engineering Colonialism and Terrorism: Lessons from the Algerian
Heike Holbig, GIGA German Institute of Global and War of Independence
Area Studies Verena Erlenbusch, University of Memphis
Legitimation and Soviet Socialism DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Graeme Joseph Gill, University of Sydney 47.5 REPRISING THE EARLY MODERN
Authoritarianism and Inductive Research Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Marie-Eve Reny, Université de Montréal Chair: Jason Frank, Cornell University
From Party to Progeny: The Roots of North Korean Disc: Joshua Foa Dienstag, University of California, Los
Regime Resiliency Angeles
James Frederick Person, Woodrow Wilson Douglas C. Dow, University of Texas at Dallas
International Center for Scholars
Joseph Torigian, MIT Papers: Sacrifice in HobbesĀs Leviathan: War and Military
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Obligations in a Liberal State
Pinar Kemerli, Washington and Lee University
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
47.2 GENDER IN THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL The Politics of Science Reconsidered: Descartes and
THOUGHT Democracy
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room Laura Ephraim, Williams College
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF Inclement Prospero: Restoration ShakespeareĀs Lessons
POLITICAL THEORY Contra SchmittĀs Sovereign
Chair: Naomi Choi, University of Houston Ted H. Miller, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
Disc: Dan I. O'Neill, University of Florida The Automaton, Actor, and Sea Serpent: Leviathan and
the Politics of Metaphor
Papers: Rousseau on the Value of Women Rebecca Aili Ploof, University of Chicago
Genevieve Rousseliere, The University of Wisconsin- DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Madison 47.6 WARS OF RELIGION (AND SECULARISM)
Gender and the Rhetoric of Emotions in BurkeĀs Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Reflections Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
Megan Gallagher, Whitman College SCIENCE
Marriage as Friendship: Wollstonecraft and the Chair: Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania
Reconception of Gender Roles Disc: Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania
Matthew Harrison Hartman, University of Notre
Dame

134 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

Papers: ĀBuddhist SecularismĀ in Thailand? Notes on DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY


Provincializing Political Theory 47.10 THE ROLE OF MOTIVATED REASONING IN
Ruth Streicher, University of California at Berkeley THE POLITICAL PROCESS
Reading Qutb through Contemporary Qutbians in Turkey Room: Parc 55, Mission II
Dunya Cakir, National University of Singapore Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL
COMMUNICATION
Civic Peace in a Secular Age: Reconsidering
Augustinian Pluralism Chair: Milton Lodge, SUNY, Stony Brook University
Michael Lamb, University of Oxford Disc: Spencer Piston, Syracuse University
Lilliana Hall Mason, University of Maryland, College
WhatĀs Wrong With Militant Democracy?
Ian R. Zuckerman, Stanford University
Park
Carlo Invernizzi Accetti
Papers: Competition Over the Politicization of Science on
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY Energy and Climate Change
47.7 DEMOCRACY AND THE "WHITE PROBLEM" Toby Bolsen, Georgia State University
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C James N. Druckman, Northwestern University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY Motivated Reasoning in the Evaluation of Social Cues
About Politicians
Chair:
David P. Redlawsk, Rutgers University, New
Benjamin McKean, Ohio State University
Disc: Benjamin McKean, Ohio State University Brunswick
Doug Pierce, American University
Papers: Unconscious Maintenance of White Supremacy: White The Information Environment and Consistency in
Identity & Motivated Cognition CitizensĀ Policy Opinions
Kathleen Cole, Metropolitan State University Thomas J. Leeper, London School of Economics and
Racial Innocence, Racial Rebellion, and the Politics of Political Science
Risk Rune Slothuus, Aarhus University
Kirstine S. Taylor, University of Washington Instance-Based Learning and Political Choice
Eric WilliamsĀs Vision of Transnational Caribbean Christopher David Johnston, Duke University
Identity Howard Lavine, University of Minnesota
Anand Bertrand Commissiong, West Texas A&M Milton Lodge, SUNY, Stony Brook University
University The Effect of Changing Motivations on Responses to
Who is Interrupting Whom? Politics and Aesthetics in Incongruent Information
the Ferguson Protests Eric Groenendyk, University of Memphis
Glenn Mackin, Eastman School of Music Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
47.8 TUCKNESS AND PARRISH’S “THE DECLINE OF 47.11 FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON LOCAL
MERCY IN PUBLIC LIFE” GOVERNANCE
Room: Parc 55, Mason Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Chair: Richard K. Dagger, University of Richmond Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
Part: Linda Ross Meyer, Quinnipiac University RESEARCH
Mary Sigler, Arizona State University College of Law Chair: Nahomi Ichino, University of Michigan
Jill E. Stauffer, Haverford College Disc: Claire Leslie Adida, UCSD
Alex Tuckness, Iowa State University
John M. Parrish, Loyola Marymount University Papers: Nudging Good Politicians: Evidence from a Field
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY Experiment in the Philippines
47.9 POLITICS OF RECRUITMENT, EXPERTISE & Nico Ravanilla, University of Michigan
PERSONNEL Fault Lines: Blame, Accountability, and Service
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Provision in Uganda
Chair: Soenke Ehret, New York University Lucy E. S. Martin, UNC - Chapel Hill
Disc: Soenke Ehret, New York University The Optimal Degree of Bureaucratic Insulation:
Anna Bassi, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Experimental Evidence from Uganda
Pia Raffler, Yale University
Papers: Accuracy vs. Precision: Oversight and the Development DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
of Administrative Capacity 47.12 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: FRANCIS
Ian R. Turner, Texas A&M University FUKUYAMA'S "POLITICAL ORDER AND
Outside Expertise POLITICAL DECAY"
Janna Rezaee Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Daily Schedule

Politics and Personnel Chair: Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg


John D. Huber, Columbia University Part: Sheri Berman, Barnard College
Michael M. Ting, Columbia University Margaret Levi, Stanford University
Policy Innovations and Personnel in a Decentralized Mick Moore, Institute of Development Studies
Organization Luigi Zingales, The Chicago University Booth School of
Tinghua Yu, Columbia University Business
Francis Fukuyama, Stanford University

DAILY SCHEDULE 135


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS


47.13 DAVID VOGEL'S CONTRIBUTIONS TO 47.16 AUTHORITARIAN SUCCESSOR PARTIES AND
POLITICAL SCIENCE DEMOCRACY
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
Chair: Graham K. Wilson, Boston University Chair: James Loxton, University of Sydney
Part: Peter A. Hall, Harvard University Disc: Benjamin Smith, University of Florida
R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
David Vogel, University of California, Berkeley Papers: The Paradoxical Fate of the Communist Successor
Robert A. Kagan, University of California, Berkeley Parties in East Central Europe
David Levi-Faur, Hebrew University Anna M. Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan,
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY Ann Arbor
47.14 NEW SOURCES OF (BIG) DATA Personalistic Authoritarian Successor Parties in Latin
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 America
Chair: Jacob M. Montgomery, Washington University in St. James Loxton, University of Sydney
Louis Thriving after Democratizing: Holdover Parties and
Disc: Ryan T. Moore, American University Moderate Politics in Asia
Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Papers: Recruiting Subjects for Online Surveys: Facebook versus Joseph Wong, University of Toronto
Mechanical Turk Old Regime Parties and Democratization: Lessons from
Taylor C. Boas, Boston University EuropeĀs First Wave
Dino P. Christenson, Boston University Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University
David Glick, Boston University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Why and How to Create a Panel of Twitter Users 47.17 FORMAL INSTITUTIONS AND THE
Julien Boyadjian, Université de Montpellier CHANNELING OF DEMOCRATIC
Marie Neihouser PARTICIPATION
Using the Internet Archive to Study Government : Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Challenges and Prospects Chair: Gabriel L. Negretto, Centro de Investigación y Docencia
John D. Wilkerson, University of Washington Económicas
Emily K. Gade, University of Washington Disc: Donald L. Horowitz, Duke University
The TwoRavens Platform for Automated Statistical Andrew S. Reynolds, University of North Carolina,
Analysis and Meta-Analysis Chapel Hill
James Honaker, Harvard University
Vito D' Orazio, University of Texas at Dallas Papers: Participation, Deliberation, and Representation in
Gary King, Harvard University Constitution-Making Processes
Mortgage Discrimination in the Boston Housing Market Todd A. Eisenstadt, American University
Kevin A. Clarke, University of Rochester Carl LeVan, American University-SIS
Tofigh Maboudi, American University
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
47.15 TEACHING CIVIC EDUCATION, ENGAGEMENT Technology: A Tool to Enhance Effective Participation
AND INCLUSION in Constitution Making?
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A Jason Gluck, U.S. Institute of Peace
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND Susan M Stigant, United States Institute of Peace
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Incorporating Citizen Participation in National-Level
Chair: Michelle D. Deardorff, University of Tennessee at Decision-making
Chattanooga Brian Wampler, Boise State University
Disc: Mark E. Rush, Washington and Lee DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Sharon F. Lean, Wayne State University 47.18 INCUMBENTS AND ELECTIONS IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Papers: Civic Learning That Persists: Political Identity and Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
Engagement After College Chair: Chad Kiewiet de Jonge, Langer Research Associates
Richard M. Battistoni, Providence College Disc: Marko Klasnja, Georgetown University
Teaching WomenĀs Leadership as a Platform for
Advancing Civic Engagement Papers: Electoral Information and Night Lights in Authoritarian
Sara Angevine, Whittier College Regimes
The National Survey of Student Leaders: Political Fabien Cottier, University of Geneva
Socialization and Campus Life Incumbent Advantage, Voter Information and Vote
J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University Buying in the Philippines
Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University Cesi Cruz, University of British Columbia
Voice, Equality and Education Philip Keefer, Inter-American Development Bank
James Sloam, University of London, Royal Holloway IncumbentsĀ Re-election in Russia: What Determines
Ben Kisby, University of Lincoln GovernorsĀ Runaway Victory?
Svetlana Karandashova
Elena Sirotkina, National Research University Higher
School of Economics

136 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

Multi-Office Incumbency Advantage: Political Careers in Criminal Activities by Insurgent Groups: What do they
Brazil gain?
Leandro M. De Magalhaes, University of Bristol Asfandyar Ali Mir, University of Chicago
With Friends Like These Who Needs Enemies: Electoral DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Reverse Coattails in Brazil COUNTRIES
German Feierherd, Yale University 47.21 POLITICAL PREFERENCES AND BEHAVIOR IN
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS THE BRAZILIAN NATIONAL ELECTIONS
47.19 THE CONSEQUENCES OF DEMOCRATIC Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
INSTITUTIONS REVISITED Chair: Cesar Zucco, Fundacao Getulio Vargas
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 Disc: Noam Lupu, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Chair: Jonathan Krieckhaus, University of Missouri, Columbia Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin
Disc: Victor Lapuente, Goteburg University
Papers: Petismo and Anti-Petismo in BrazilĀs 2014 Elections
Papers: Party Institutionalization and Economic Growth David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota, Twin
John Gerring, Department of Political Science, Cities
Boston University Cesar Zucco, Fundacao Getulio Vargas
Carl Henrik Knutsen The Culture Wars in Another America: Religious
Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University Leaders and Public Opinion
Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Amy Erica Erica Smith, Iowa State University
Varieties of Democratic Diffusion Women, Men, and Political Discussion in BrazilĀs 2014
Michael J. Coppedge, University of Notre Dame Presidential Election
David Altman, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Barry Ames, University of Pittsburgh
Chile Amy Erica Erica Smith, Iowa State University
Lucia Tiscornia, University of Notre Dame The effect of Debates on Vote Intention in Brazilian
Megan E. Reif, University of Gothenburg Presidential Elections
Varieties of Governance: Consequences for Lucio R. Renno
Socioeconomic Development Elections and Redistribution: Revisiting the left-right
Carl Henrik Knutsen divide
John Gerring, Department of Political Science, Fabiana Machado, Inter-American Development
Boston University Bank
Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University
Jan Teorell, Lund University DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
LegislaturesĀ Powers and Executive Corruption COUNTRIES
Katherine E Michel, UC Berkeley 47.22 POLITICS AND VIOLENCE
Steve Fish, University of California, Berkeley Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Chair: Navid Hassanpour, Columbia University
The Determinants of Human Development: Dimensions
of Democracy and Governance Disc: Navid Hassanpour, Columbia University
Fernando Bizzarro Neto, University of Notre Dame
Papers: Bullets to Ballots: Maoists and the Lure of Democracy
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
in India
COUNTRIES Rumela Sen
47.20 INSECURITY: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Room: Nikko, Monterey I Coffins and Castles: How Wartime Militia Control
Shapes Post-War Elections
Chair: James A. McCann, Purdue University
Amanda Rizkallah, University of California Los
Disc: James A. McCann, Purdue University Angeles
Do Parties Matter for Ethnic Violence? Evidence from
Papers: Economic Security, Inequality and Support for Same- India
Sex Marriage in Latin America Gareth Nellis, Yale University
Michelle L. Dion, McMaster University Michael Weaver, Yale University
Jordi Diez Steven Rosenzweig, Yale University
Is Communal Organization an Effective Deterrent to The Marikana Massacre in South Africa's platinum belt
Crime and to Violence? Thomas Albert Koelble, University of Cape Town
Vidal Romero, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de
Mexico Why Resistance Organizations Adopt Political Violence
Carlos A. Mendoza Benjamin Acosta
Predictability, Ambiguity, Institutions and Development: DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Daily Schedule

A Chinese Divergence?
Shaun Francis Goldfinch, University of the South 47.23 STRUCTURAL POWER IN POLITICAL
Pacific ECONOMY: STATES, FIRMS, AND THEORY
Karl DeRouen, The University of Alabama Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
The Anonymity Paradox: Survey Behaviors In Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY
Conditions of Acute Insecurity
Elaine Denny, UCSD Chair: Rawi Abdelal, Harvard University
Jesse Driscoll, University of California, San Diego Papers: Structural Power as Reciprocal Dependence
Pepper D. Culpepper, European University Institute

DAILY SCHEDULE 137


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

Structural Power in Political Economy: Perspectives Disc: Irfan Nooruddin, Georgetown University
from Policy in Latin America Jennifer L Tobin, Georgetown University
Tasha A. Fairfield, London School of Economics
Structuring Power: Business and Authority beyond the Papers: Political Contestation and Firm Behavior in Response to
Nation State WTO Disputes
Henry Farrell, George Washington University Stephen Chaudoin, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Abraham Newman, Georgetown University Champaign
Structural PowerĀs Empirical Footprint: Evidence and Developing Countries, Liberalization, and Revenue: Can
Inference from Finance IOs Make a Difference?
Kevin Young, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Ida Bastiaens, Fordham University
Nita Rudra, Georgetown University
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
47.24 LABOR MARKET INSECURITY AND PARTY Private Politics in World Bank Lending
POLITICS IN THE 21ST CENTURY Rabia Malik, University of Rochester
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 Randall W. Stone, University of Rochester
Chair: Ben William Ansell, Nuffield College, University of The International Politics of Austerity: The Case of
Oxford Public Sector Reforms
Disc: Desmond King, University of Oxford Stephanie J. Rickard, London School of Economics
Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota, Twin
Papers: Welfare state institutions and far right support in Cities
European elections Funding IOs: Mixed-Method Evidence of Donor
Daphne Halikiopoulou, University of Reading Financing Patterns
Timothee Vlandas, University of Reading A. Burcu Bayram, University of Texas Arlington
Union membership and voting choice in a time of Erin R. Graham, Drexel University
economic insecurity The Political Economy of Aid and Security in the New
Line Rennwald, University of Amsterdam Middle East
Christoph Arndt, Department of Political Science and Erin Snider, Texas A&M University
Government, Aarhus University DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Political Parties and Non-Standard Employment: France, 47.27 COERCION IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Germany, Italy, and Spain Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Georg Picot, University of Bergen Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Irene Menendez, Department Political Science, Chair: Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford University
University of Zürich Disc: Robert J. Art, Brandeis University
Labor Market Policy Conflicts and Coalitions in Five
Western European Countries Papers: Coercion Provocation and Reputation Concerns
Flavia Fossati, University of Lausanne Allan Dafoe, Yale University
The Politics of Labor Market Policy in Post-industrial Step Aside or Face the Consequences: Compellent
Democracies Threats and Removal of Leaders
Takeshi Hieda, Osaka City University Alexander B. Downes, George Washington University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Relocation Strategies: Internal Displacement as an
47.25 INDIVIDUAL PREFERENCES AND TRADE Instrument of Coercion
POLICY Kelly M. M. Greenhill, Tufts and Harvard
Room: Parc 55, Lombard Universities
Chair: Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania The Impact of Context on the Ability to Signal Resolve
Disc: Daniel Y. Kono, University of California, Davis in International Conflict
Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania Roseanne McManus, Baruch College, CUNY
With Friends Like These: Compellent Targets,
Papers: A Dynamic Theory of Mass Trade Preferences Democratic Allies, and Concessions
Ryan M. Powers Matt Koji Scroggs, University of Virginia
Local, Organic and Fair Trade: Progressive Food DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Movement & Individual Attitudes 47.28 STRATEGIES AND DYNAMICS OF
Moonhawk Kim, University of Colorado, Boulder SUBNATIONAL CONFLICT
Political Preferences, Leaders, and Trade Policymaking Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
in Democracies Chair: Nicholas Miller, Brown University
Jason Kuo, University of California, San Diego Disc: Nicholas Miller, Brown University
Aditya Ranganath
When Is Trade Policy Politically Salient? Papers: Competitive Intervention and its Consequences for Civil
Timothy W. Taylor, University of California, Davis Wars
Daniel Y. Kono, University of California, Davis Noel Anderson, MIT
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION Criminals, Warlords and Statesmen: Organized Crime
47.26 INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND and Political Order
DOMESTIC IPE POLICIES Louis-Alexandre Berg, Harvard University
Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Chair: Jennifer L Tobin, Georgetown University

138 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

The Battle for Algeria: Explaining Fratricidal Violence Effect of Foreign Aid on Implementation of Peace
among Non-State Actors Agreements
Barak Mendelsohn, Haverford College Deniz Cil, University of Maryland, College Park
The Consequences of Terrorist Organizational Paul K. Huth, University of Maryland, College Park
Fragmentation DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Evan Perkoski, Harvard Kennedy School 47.32 DIVERSITY AND THE INTERNATIONAL
Fighting Well: Insurgent Military Effectiveness and the RELATIONS OF CIVIL WAR
First Indochina War Room: Hilton, Imperial A
Alec Worsnop, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chair: Andreas Wimmer, Princeton University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS Papers: Mobilizing Diasporas: Understanding When Kin Act On
CONTROL Behalf of the Homeland
47.29 ASSESSING AND IMPROVING THE QUALITY Stephen M. Saideman, Carleton University
OF INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS Erin K. Jenne, Central European University
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of
Maryland, College Park
Chair: Joshua Rovner, Southern Methodist University
Disc: Stephen Marrin The Dynamics of Ethnic Violence: 1998-2012
R. Karl Rethemeyer, University at Albany, SUNY
Corina Simonelli, University at Albany, SUNY
Papers: Framing Acts, Outcomes, and Contingencies in the Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Intelligence Process
William A. Boettcher, North Carolina State How Terrorism Spreads: Information, Emulation, and the
University Spatial Diffusion of Ethnic and Ethnoreligious Terrorism
Michael D. Cobb, North Carolina State University Sara Polo
Empirical Foundations for Expressing Probability in The Diffusion of Ethnic Inclusion?
Intelligence Analysis Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex
Jeffrey A. Friedman, Dartmouth College Julian Wucherpfennig, University College London
Lars-Erik Cederman, ETH Zurich
Tracking the Dragon: Evaluating Claims about U.S.
Intelligence Analysis on China Diaspora and Ethnic Conflict
Peter L Mattis, Jamestown Foundation Yossi Shain, Tel Aviv University
IARPAĀs Aggregative Contingent Estimation Program Sequencing Peace: Civil War Termination as a Path
Steven Rieber, IARPA Dependent Process
Benjamin Thomas Jones, The University of
Creation of Multidisciplinary Teams for Improving Mississippi
Intelligence Analysis
Kathleen Vogel, North Carolina State University DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
47.33 EXECUTIVE POWERS AND PRESIDENTIAL
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY PREROGATIVES: UNDERSTANDING
47.30 ADVANCES IN FOREIGN POLICY ROLE UNILATERAL ACTIONS
THEORY Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Chair: Carlos E. Diaz-Rosillo, Harvard
Chair: Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University
Disc: Robert A. Cooper
Part: Stephen G. Walker, Arizona State University David Gray Adler, Boise State University
Amy M. Below, Oregon State University
Spencer L Willardson, Nazarbayev University
Thorsten Spehn, University of Colorado, Denver Papers: The Legacy and Importance of Magna Carta
James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
47.31 BEYOND THE STATE: THE MICRO-DYNAMICS
Enumerated Powers, Prerogative, and Federalism: A
OF AID AND CONFLICT
Trifocal Conspectus
Elvin T. Lim, National University of Singapore
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Chair: Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh The President as the Roman Dictator: The Use of
Executive Orders to Set Policies
Disc: Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh Kris Aaron Beck, Gordon State College
David Backer
Presidential Unilateralism, Executive Branch
Management, and Bureaucratic Sway
Papers: Foreign Aid and the Intensity of Violent Armed Conflict
Andrew C. Rudalevige, Bowdoin College
Daniel Strandow
Michael Findley, University of Texas, Austin Loud Bark, Little Bite: PresidentĀs ObamaĀs Recent
Joseph K. Young, American University Unilateral Directives.
Graham G. Dodds, Concordia University
Daily Schedule

Aiding War or Peace: The Micro-dynamics of Aid in


Nepal, Sudan, and DRC DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Susanna Campbell, The Graduate Institute, Geneva 47.34 ENVIRONMENTAL POLICYMAKING IN
Michael Findley, University of Texas, Austin COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
From Success to Sustainability? Insights from Schools in Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Afghanistan Co-sponsored by DIVISION 39: SCIENCE,
Dana Burde, New York University TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Joel A. Middleton, UC Berkeley Chair: Alicia Dailey Cooperman, Columbia University
Cyrus Dara Samii Disc: Louise K. Comfort

DAILY SCHEDULE 139


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

Hongtao Yi, The Ohio State University Papers: Conservative Feminists? Feminist Policy Adoption under
MerkelĀs Leadership.
Papers: Fracking policy in the UK and Switzerland Malliga Och, University of Denver
Manuel Fischer, Eawag Gender and Political Executives: A Comparative
Keep on Framing : A Comparative Study of Media Analysis of Post-Communist Europe
Coverage on the Shale gas Issue Ingrid Bego, Hastings College
Camille Dagenais, University of Montreal Interrogating the Substance of Women Executives
Money Flows, Water Trickles: Value for Money in Representation of Women in SSA
Tanzania's Water Sector Chiedo Nwankwor, University of Delaware
Ruth Carlitz, University of California, Los Angeles Where Do You Go from Here? Post-cabinet Careers of
Mitigating Global Warming: Effective Policies and Their Women and Men
Enabling Politics Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University
David A. Deese, Boston College ĄThe Snow Princess and Election Queen: President Park
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY of South Koreaď
47.35 EXPLORING THE THEORETICAL NEXUS Farida Jalalzai, Oklahoma State University
BETWEEN PUBLIC POLICY AND PUBLIC Young-Im Lee, University of Missouri-St.Louis
MANAGEMENT DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore 47.38 RACE AND THE MEDIA: NEW DIRECTIONS IN
Chair: Edella C. Schlager, University of Arizona RESEARCH
Part: Craig W. Thomas, University of Washington Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Scott E. Robinson, University of Oklahoma Disc: Tony E. Carey, University of North Texas
Gene A. A. Brewer, The University of Georgia Jeronimo Cortina, University of Houston
Michael Mintrom, Monash University
Brenda K. Bushouse, University of Massachusetts Papers: Black Like Me: How Political Communication Changes
Chris Weible, University of Colorado-Denver Racial Group Identification
Tyler A Scott, University of Washington Chryl Laird, Saint Louis University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS New Media for the New Electorate? U.S.
47.36 NEVER BEEN ANY REASON: MEASURING Representatives' Use of Spanish in Tweets
IDEOLOGY ON THE U.S. SUPREME COURT Bryan Gervais, University of Texas at San Antonio
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 Walter Wilson, University of Texas, San Antonio
Chair: Jeffrey A. Segal, SUNY, Stony Brook University Spanish-language News Coverage of Congressional
Disc: Jeffrey A. Segal, SUNY, Stony Brook University Elections
Ryan Krog, George Washington University Nicole Kalaf-Hughes, Bowling Green State University
Regina P. Branton, University of North Texas
Papers: A Cultural Theory of Judicial Behavior Tested on the Translating Partisan Cues into Spanish-Language
Rehnquist Court Political Communication
Robert Reif Robinson, California State University, Alejandro Flores, University of Chicago
Fullerton Racialized Campaigns in the States: New Questions and
Brendon Swedlow, Northern Illinois University New Evidence
In the Court's Interest: Measuring Ideology with Amicus Newly Paul, Louisiana State University
Curiae Briefs Johanna Dunaway, Louisiana State University
Lucia Manzi Paru Shah, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Estimating the Ideal Points of Organized Interests in DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Legal Policy Space 47.39 ELECTORAL RULES, VOTING, AND TURNOUT:
Thomas G. Hansford, University of California, NEW PATHWAYS FOR RESEARCH
Merced Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Measuring Jurisprudential Ideology on the U.S. Supreme Chair: Lorraine C. Minnite, Rutgers University-Camden
Court Disc: Christopher S. Elmendorf, UC Davis
Amanda Bryan, Loyola University Chicago Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University
Scaling the Joins: Justice and Opinion Ideal Points in
Doctrine Space Papers: An Examination of the Impact of Changes to FloridaĀs
Ben Johnson, Princeton University Early Voting Statutes
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS M. V. Hood, University of Georgia
47.37 GENDER AND EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIP Explaining the Blue Shift in Election Canvassing
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Charles Stewart, Massachusetts Institute of
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND Technology
EXECUTIVE POLITICS Edward B. Foley, Ohio State University
Chair: Jennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental College The Dynamics of Voting Rights Implementation in a
Disc: Meg Eileen Rincker, Purdue University Calumet Federal System: Case Studies on Compliance with the
Jennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental College National Voter Registration Act in Two States
Douglas R. Hess, Grinnell College

140 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

The Impact of State Party Traditions on the Voting DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
Experience POLITICS
Paul S. Herrnson, University of Connecticut 47.42 REGULATION AND REPRESSION: INTERNET
Richard G. Niemi, University of Rochester CONTROL IN DEMOCRACIES AND
Kelly D. Patterson, Brigham Young University DICTATORSHIPS
Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young University Room: Nikko, Monterey II
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Chair: Kirsten L. Rodine-Hardy, Northeastern University
47.40 NEW APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF SOCIAL Disc: Kenneth S. Rogerson, Duke University
INFLUENCE AND COMMUNICATION Kevin Wagner, Florida Atlantic University
NETWORKS
Room: Hilton, Mason Room Papers: Big Data, Privacy, and Federal Agency Accountability
Chair: Casey A. Klofstad, University of Miami Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
Disc: David A. Siegel, Duke University Can You Hear Me Now? How Communication
Matthew Pietryka, Florida State University Technology Affects Protest and Repression
Darin Christensen, Stanford University
Papers: Interpersonal Disagreement, Issues, and Uncertainty Francisco Garfias, Stanford University
Anand Edward Sokhey, University of Colorado, Defamation or Dirty Laundry? Clientelism and Internet
Boulder Censorship
Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University, Daniel Pemstein, North Dakota State University
Carbondale Stephen August Meserve, Texas Tech University
The Role of Parents, Presidents, & Peers in Shaping Internet Content Regulation in Liberal Democracies: A
Young Adult Partisanship Comparative Analysis
David Lazer Andreas Busch, University of Goettingen
Michael Neblo, Ohio State University
William Minozzi, Ohio State University The Digital DictatorĀs Dilemma: Internet Regulation and
Political Control
Exploring the Psychophysiological Underpinnings of Jaclyn Kerr
Political Discussion
Jaime E. Settle, College of William & Mary DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
Taylor Nicole Feenstra, University of California, San 47.43 ETHNIC POLITICS ACROSS REGIMES
Diego Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
How Geographic Sorting Can Aid Voters
POLITICS
John Barry Ryan, Stony Brook University
Chair: Karen E. Ferree, University of California, San Diego
The Effect of Network Structure on Public Opinion
Samara Klar Disc: Karen E. Ferree, University of California, San Diego
Yotam Shmargad, University of Arizona Amy H. Liu, University of Texas at Austin

DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND Papers: Autonomy in Autocracy: Explaining Ethnic Policies
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS under Dictatorships
47.41 GOVERNANCE OF NEW TECHNOLOGIES Chao-yo Cheng
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Does Political Competition Increase Ethnic Voting in
Chair: Malcolm L. Goggin, University of Colorado Denver Developing Countries?
Disc: J.P. Singh, George Mason University Elena Gadjanova, Max Planck Institute
Institutional Incentives for Inclusive Electoral
Papers: A Republican Case for the Space Exploration Program Mobilization
David Alejandro Llanos-Paez Geoffrey Macdonald, Grinnell College
Alan Steinberg, Rice University
Party Institutionalization and Ethnic Politics in African
Commons-based Peer Production, Open Science and Election Campaigns
ĄSmall Dataď Charles Taylor, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Charles Schweik, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst Does Authoritarian Participatory Governance Facilitate
Political Domination?
GMOs and the Defense of "Sound Science" in the Allyson L. Benton, CIDE
Public Sphere
Kelly Clancy DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
47.44 DATA AND METHODS IN THE COMPARATIVE
Global Governance for Nanotech? An Analysis of STUDY OF COURTS
Institutional Risk Factors Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
David Cristian Morar, George Mason University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
Alexander Smith, Georgia Institute of Technology
Daily Schedule

Jonah Bea-Taylor Chair: Raul Alberto Sanchez Urribarri, La Trobe University


Disc: Rachel A. Cichowski, University of Washington
Partisan Politics & the Fragile Consensus on Federally
Raul Alberto Sanchez Urribarri, La Trobe University
Funded Science for Policy
Ann C. Keller, University of California-Berkeley

DAILY SCHEDULE 141


Friday, 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

Papers: Judicial Autonomy, Authority: Theory & Measures in IR Theory and the Study of Intergovernmental Relations
Comparative Judicial Politics in Federations
Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas at Austin Christopher Carlos Leite, University of Ottawa
Abby Blass, University of Texas at Austin, Luc Turgeon, University of Ottawa
Government Dept. Jennifer M. Wallner, University of Ottawa
De Jure and De Facto Judicial Independence Charter implications of Americanizing Canada's Counter-
Andrea Pozas-Loyo terrorism Initiatives
Julio Rios-Figueroa, CIDE Jamie Gillies, St. Thomas University
Interviewing African Judges: Fieldwork in Comparative Amanda DiPaolo, St. Thomas University
Judicial Politics DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Rachel L Ellett, Beloit College 47.48 FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON ELITES
Building Comparative Judicial Behavior Databases Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Lee Epstein, Washington University in St. Louis Disc: Nicholas Weller, University of Southern California
Data Collection Practices to Facilitate Qualitative and
Multi-Method Research on Constitutional Courts Papers: How Do Citizens React When Politicians Support
Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University Policies They Oppose?
Daniel M. Butler, Washington University in St. Louis
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
47.45 ROUNDTABLE: SHAUL SHENHAV’S BOOK, How to Elect More Women: Gender and Candidate
"ANALYZING SOCIAL NARRATIVES" Success in a Field Experiment
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Jessica Robinson Preece, Brigham Young University
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Quin Monson, Brigham Young University
Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University
Chair: Myron J. Aronoff, Rutgers University
Part: Yael Rivka Kaplan, Hebrew University Persuading Legislative Allies: A Theory and Field
Elizabeth Ann Shanahan, Montana State University Experiment
Michael D. Jones, Oregon State University Christian R. Grose, University of Southern California
Jennifer M. Dixon, Villanova University Sara Sadhwani, University of Southern California
Shaul Rafael Shenhav, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Please Recuse Yourself: A Field Experiment Exploring
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
Judicial Recusal
Donald P. Green, Columbia University
47.46 THE POLITICS OF HEALTH CARE REFORM
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 Jonathan S. Krasno, SUNY, Binghamton University
Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University
Chair: David M. Frankford, Rutgers University Michael Schwam-Baird, Columbia University
Disc: Mark A. Peterson, University of California, Los Angeles Dane Thorley
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Papers: Can Intersectoral Partnerships Improve Population 47.49 THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF
Health and Health Equity? VULNERABLE MIGRANTS
Thomas R. Oliver, University of Wisconsin, Madison Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Side Effects: The Unintended Consequences of Health Chair: Mary McThomas, CSU Channel Islands
Reform on Public Hospitals Disc: Mary McThomas, CSU Channel Islands
Simon F. Haeder, University of Wisconsin-Madison Willem Maas, York University
State Regulation of Nurse Practitioners and Physician
Assistants, 2001-2010 Papers: Caught Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Where Do
Edward A. Miller, University of Massachusetts, Refugees Go?
Boston Robert Thuan Brathwaite, Michigan State University
The Future of Health Care Reform: What is Driving Shweta Moorthy, Northern Illinois University
Enrollment? Linking Domestic Politics and Asylum Policies: Turkey
Timothy Herbert Callaghan, University of Minnesota and Syrian Refugees
Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota, Twin Juliette Tolay, Penn State Harrisburg
Cities
Lives on Hold: The Effect of Asylum Policies on
Competition, Diversity, and the Decline of Malaria in RefugeesĀ Economic Integration
the United States Jens Hainmueller, Stanford University
Micah Gell-Redman Dominik Hangartner, London School of Economics
DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS Nomads and Criminals Construction of Criminality of
47.47 CANADIAN PUBLIC POLICY Roma/ Gypsy
Room: Parc 55, Davidson Cristina I Dragomir
Disc: Alexandre Couture Gagnon, The University of Texas DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN POLITICS CONFERENCE
GROUP
Rio Grande Valley
47.50 POLITICAL DYNAMICS OF LOCAL
Papers: Systemic Corruption in an Advanced Welfare State GOVERNANCE IN AFRICA AND BEYOND
Denis Saint-Martin, University de Montreal Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Chair: Catherine Boone, London School of Economics and
Political Science (LSE)
Disc: Nicolas van de Walle, Cornell University

142 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

James Wunsch, Creighton University 48.2 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
Papers: Decentralization in Africa: Regime Origins, Institutions, PHILOSOPHY: ROUNDTABLE: RECENT TERM
and Governance OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT
J. Tyler Dickovick, Washington & Lee University Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
Does the Territorial Organization of States Affect Social Chair: Ryan P. Williams
Services? Part: Jesse Choper, University of California
Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania John C. Eastman, Chapman University
Jan Henryk Pierskalla, The Ohio State University Anthony A. Peacock, Utah State University
Nathaniel Persily, Stanford University
Urban Institutions and Opposition Mayors in AfricaĀs
John Yoo, University of California
Dominant Party Systems
Danielle Elise Resnick, International Food Policy 48.3 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: GEOPOLITICS AND
Research Institute PRUDENCE
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
Coalition Building and Ethnic Movements for New
Administrative Units Chair: Greg Russell, University of Oklahoma
Ryan Saylor, University of Tulsa Disc: Timothy Fuller, Colorado College
Martin Palous, Florida International University
Devolution and Associated Changes in Political Violence
Across Kenya
Michelle D'Arcy, Trinity College Dublin Papers: Geopolitics And Prudence: Realism In A Twenty-First
Clionadh Raleigh, Trinity College Dublin Century World
Greg Russell, University of Oklahoma
DIVISION 54: POLITICAL EPISTEMOLOGY
47.51 IDEATIONAL TURNS IN THE FOUR The Formation of Prudence Within the City
SUBDISCIPLINES Stephen Patrick Sims
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 Prudence, National Interest and Counter-Terrorism
Chair: Jeffrey Friedman, University of Texas, Austin Eric Andrew Fleury
Part: Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University Prudence Abroad in an Era of Regime Instability at
Vivien A. Schmidt, Boston University Home: Francois Guizot and the Direction of French
Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania Foreign Policy in the 1840s
David Clinton, Baylor University
DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY
47.52 BUSINESS POWER IN AMERICAN POLITICS: Barack Obama, Prudence and Presidential War Powers
NEW EVIDENCE, MECHANISMS, AND Daniel G. Lang, Lynchburg College
METHODS 48.4 NATIONAL HUMANITIES INSTITUTE: FROM
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 THE ABSTRACT TO THE CONCRETE:
Chair: Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY AND SOCIAL
Disc: Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University ACTION
Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Papers: Internal Influence: Money and Policymaking Chair: Emily Catherine Butler
Eleanor Neff Powell, University of Wisconsin - Disc: Lorraine Krall McCrary, Villanova University
Madison
The Corporate Boardroom's Revolving Door Papers: The Unity of the City: The Political Realism of PlatoĀs
Maxwell B. Palmer, Boston University Republic
Benjamin Schneer Michael Forrest Hickman, The University of Mary
Business and Environmental Policy: Comparing Divorcing the Good from History: KantĀs Democratic
Influence in Congress and the EPA Theory of the State
Chase Michael Foster, Harvard University Ryan Robert Holston, Virginia Military Institute
Capturing Business Power Across the States with Text he Individualism, the State and the In-Between: Robert
Reuse, 1995-2013 NisbetĀs Historical Argument for the Demise of
Alexander Warren Hertel-Fernandez, Harvard Community and Association in the Age of the Modern
University State
Konstantin D. Kashin Luke Sheahan
Related Groups Avoiding Relativism: Conditioning Thought in the
48.1 AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT: THE PLACE Kingdom of God
OF LITERATURE IN AMERICAN POLITICAL Jeffrey Polet, Hope College
THOUGHT ROUNDTABLE
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Daily Schedule

Chair: John E. Seery, Pomona College Division Panels


Part: Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Joel Alden Schlosser, Bryn Mawr College 49.1 POSTER SESSION: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Simon A. Stow, College of William & Mary Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame Disc: Laurel Harbridge, Northwestern University
Nancy Martorano Miller, University of Dayton
Vineeta Yadav, Pennsylvania State University

DAILY SCHEDULE 143


Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Papers: Charging the Committees: Budget Reconciliation Political Machines, Endogenous Loyalty and the
Instructions in the U.S. Senate Electoral Connection
Molly Reynolds, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Mona M. Lyne, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Latino Member Influence in the House of Parties as Teams: Strategic Voting and Moral Hazard in
Representatives the U.S. Senate
Lisa Pringle Jorg L Spenkuch, Kellogg School of Management
The Dynamics of Congressional Rhetoric Brendan Pablo Montagnes, University of Chicago
Andrew Ojala Ballard Daniel Blyth Magleby, Binghamton University
Joshua Yoshio Lerner, Duke University Party Cohesion, Concentration of Votes and Party
Shahryar Minhas, Duke University Nationalization
The Effect of a Polarized Congress on the Federal Shih-Hao Huang, Michigan State University
Reserve The International Criminal Court and A Siege Mentality
Anne C Pluta, Rowan University among KenyaĀs Oligarchy
Electoral Commitment and Coalition Policymaking in Westen K Shilaho, University of Johannesburg
Latin American Legislatures DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Jason Alan Eichorst, University of Mannheim 49.5 POSTER SESSION: ELECTIONS AND VOTING
John Polga-Hecimovich BEHAVIOR
Reliable Service: The Legislative Behavior of Dynastic Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Politicians Disc: Larry M. Bartels, Vanderbilt University
Christopher Boylan, Pennsylvania State University John M. Sides, George Washington University
Staffing and Professionalization, inside the Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles
Congressional Committee System Gabriel S. Lenz, University of California, Berkeley
Seulhan Lee, University of Missouri
Papers: A National Look at Crossover Primary Voters
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS Lindsay Nielson, Bucknell University
49.2 POSTER SESSION: PRESIDENTS AND
EXECUTIVE POLITICS Buying the Center: Campaign Spending and Voter
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Perceptions of Candidate Ideology
Papers: Cooperation or Conflict:When Do Presidents Get What David Stack, Stony Brook Univeristy
They Want? Party Guessed? Assessing Party Ownership with a
Michelle Helene Belco, University of Houston Conjoint Classification Task
Location, Location, Location: The Oval Office & Stephen N Goggin, University of California, Berkeley
Primetime Presidential Speeches John A. Henderson, Yale University
Wendy Whitman-Cobb, Cameron University Alexander George Theodoridis
Presidential Policymaking at the State Level Persuasion Swamps Mobilization in the Jungle
Elizabeth Mann, University of Michigan Alexander James Oliver
Adam Schaeffer
The Keys to the White House: Forecast for 2016
Allan J. Lichtman, American University Political Advertising: The Role of Persuasion in
Congressional Elections
The Rhetoric of War: George W. Bush and the David Mordecai Searle, University of California, San
Afghanistan and Iraq Wars Diego
Raul Madrid, Claremont Graduate University
Jeanine Kraybill Ripping Good Yarn: How Elites use Emotional Stories
to Shape Political Attitudes
Does Gender Still Matter? Dilma Rousseff's 2014 Andrew Gooch, Yale University
Presidential Campaign in Brazil
Farida Jalalzai, Oklahoma State University The PeopleĀs Party and Tea Party: Political Organization
Pedro G. dos Santos, Luther College and Political Strategy
Stephanie Stanley, University of Washington
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
Lexicographic Voting and Party Positioning Across
SYSTEMS Multiple Elections
49.3 POSTER SESSION: REPRESENTATION AND Todd Davies, Stanford University
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Stuck in the Middle; Explaining the Empty Center
Roi Zur, UC Davis
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
PARTIES Solidarity over Self-Interest: Perceived Co-Partisan
49.4 POSTER SESSION: POLITICAL ORGANIZATION Preferences Affect Votes
AND PARTIES Douglas Ahler, University of California, Berkeley
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
Papers: Fringe Party Recruitment Strategies at the National and RELATIONS
European Levels 49.6 POSTER SESSION: FEDERALISM AND
William Thomas Daniel, Francis Marion University INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
Reshuffling the Pie: Local Presence and the Success of Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Clientelistic Parties Papers: Decentralization and The Logic of Strategic Starvation
Lucas Novaes, University of California, Berkeley Jane Lawrence Sumner, Emory University

144 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

Fracking Policy and American Federalism: the Case of Kenneth Sherrill, Hunter College, CUNY
New York State Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University
Anthony D. Dell'Aera, Union College Scott W. Desposato, UZH and UCSD
I Spend it You Collect it! Fences, Foxes and the APSA Events
Political Economy of Federalism 52.1 DIVERSITY AND ASIAN AMERICAN
Philipp Trein, University of Lausanne COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT: PAST, PRESENT
The Dynamics of Decentralization and National Unity AND FUTURE
Michael Gibilisco, University of Rochester Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND Chair: Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Riverside
49.7 POSTER SESSION: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY Part: Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay
AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS Danvy Le, California State University, East Bay
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Amado Uno, Asian Pacific Environmental Network
Papers: NGOs and Participation in Voluntary Environmental (APEN)
Programs Thu Quach, Asian Health Services
Krisztina Pusok, University of Missouri-Columbia Vincent Pan, Chinese for Affirmative Action
Division Panels
Environmental Change and Migration
Vally Koubi, ETH Zurich DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
Lena M. Schaffer, ETH Zürich FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
Reactors and Renewables: Legitimacy, Status and 53.1 PARTICIPATION IN (POST-)AUTHORITARIAN
Energy Politics in East Asia REGIMES: CHINA, EURASIA, EASTERN
Il Hyun Cho, Lafayette College EUROPE
Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Violence, Crime, and Climate Change in Indonesia Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
Joshua C. Eastin, Portland State University DEMOCRATIZATION
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY Chair: Katherine P. Kaup, Furman University
49.8 POSTER POLITICS: STATE POLITICS AND Disc: Ellen Carnaghan, Saint Louis University
POLICY Fengshi Wu, Nanyang Technological University
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Papers: Electing Legislative Leaders When Newcomers Flock to Papers: Accommodating the Green Participation: China's Local
the Chamber Environmental Governance
Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State Lili LIU, School of Oriental and African Studies,
University University of London
Measuring the Macro- and Micro- Competitiveness of Authoritarian.Law: Rule of Law, Legal Mobilization,
State Governments and the Internet in China
Carl E. Klarner, KlarnerPolitics John Wagner Givens, University of Pittsburgh
Andrew Karch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Participation and Regime Legitimacy after a Colored
Virtual Home Style Revolution
Lynda W. Powell, University of Rochester Kevan William Hudson, University of Iowa
Ian Sulam, University of Rochester Vicki Hesli Claypool, University of Iowa
Racial Resentment and the Tea Party: Taking Regional Why are Post-communist Citizens Less Politically
Differences Seriously Active than Western Europeans?
M. V. Hood, University of Georgia Teodora Gaidyte
Quentin Kidd, Christopher Newport University Jasper Camiel Muis
Irwin L. Morris, University of Maryland, College
Park Voting in Russia, What Meaning in a Meaningless
Context?
Friday, 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM Simeon Mitropolitski
APSA Events DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
50.1 APSA ALL-MEMBER MEETING HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4 53.2 IMPERIALISM AND COLONIALISM:
TRANSNATIONAL CONNECTIONS
Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Theme Panels Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY
51.1 ETHICS OF FIELD RESEARCH
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Daily Schedule

THEORY
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
METHODOLOGY Chair: Margaret Kohn, University of Toronto
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL Disc: Margaret Kohn, University of Toronto
RESEARCH
Chair: Scott W. Desposato, UZH and UCSD Papers: Colonial Governance and Rule of Law: Sierra Leone and
Part: Archon Fung, Harvard University ĄLaw for a Lawless Place
Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University Keally DeAnne McBride, University of San Francisco
Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College

DAILY SCHEDULE 145


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

Cacophonies of Colonialism: the Komagata Maru across LincolnĀs Politics of Elimination: Sovereignty,
Colonial Place and Time Resistance, and Race
Rita Dhamoon, University of Victoria Steven Johnston, University of Utah
Intersecting Colonialisms: Settler, Domestic and Radical Politics of Life: Individual Suffering and Collective
Barbara Arneil, University of British Columbia Survival
Transcontinental Chains: Domination and Resistance in Althea Rani Sircar, UCLA
Quobna CugoanoĀs Thought DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
Sankar Muthu, University of Chicago 53.6 DEMOCRACY'S INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: BORDERS
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
53.3 POLITICS AND ETHICS IN NIETZSCHE'S Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
PHILOSOPHY CITIZENSHIP
Room: Nikko, Monterey I Chair: Arash Abizadeh, McGill University
Disc: Matthew Scherer, George Mason University Disc: Michael Blake, University of Washington

Papers: An Unlikely Moderate: Self-Restraint and Self- Papers: Making and Breaking Political Communities: What Does
Reflection in Nietzsche's Thought Democracy Require?
Thomas Randall Meredith, University of Toronto David Miller, University of Oxford
Between Unaccountability and Sovereignty-Nietzsche, Democratic Self-determination and the StateĀs Right to
Politics, and Responsibility Control Immigration
Michael Christopher Sardo, Northwestern University Sarah Song, University of California, Berkeley
Disability in Nietzsche: A Critique of BrownĀs Democratic and Territorial Boundaries
Deontological Identity Politics Margaret Moore, Queens University
Lucas G. Pinheiro, University of Chicago Democracy's Internal Borders
Nietzschean Contest and RancièreĀs Democracy Christopher Dimitri Berk, University of Chicago
Paul E. Kirkland, Kenyon College Corruption, Representation & Campaign Finance
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: Ryan Pevnick, New York University
HISTORICAL APPROACHES DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
53.4 THE AMERICAN FOUNDING RECONSIDERED 53.7 AUTHORITARIAN SYSTEMS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 Room: Hilton, Imperial A
Chair: Barry Alan Shain, Colgate University Chair: Arturas Rozenas, New York University
Disc: Robert W.T. Martin, Hamilton College Disc: Arturas Rozenas, New York University
Russell L. Hanson, Indiana University, Bloomington
Papers: Media, Protest Diffusion, and Authoritarian Resilience
Papers: The American FoundersĀ New Science of Politics: A Haifeng Huang, University of California, Merced
Reconsideration Serra Boranbay, University of Mannheim
Terence Ball, 602-431-9364 Optimal Purge
James Madison and the Origins of Liberal Impartiality Brendan Pablo Montagnes, University of Chicago
Reconsidered Stephane Wolton, London School of Economics
Alan Ray Gibson, California State University, Chico The Strategies of Authoritarian Control
Reconsidering Virtue at the Founding in Mercy Otis Tiberiu C. Dragu, New York University
Warren's Political Thought Xiaochen Fan, New York University
Tracy F. Munsil, Arizona Christian University The Torn Revolutionaries: Overlapping Identity
John Quincy AdamsĀ 1791 āLetters of PublicolaĀ: Dimensions and Democratization
Reconsidering the Founding Akos Lada
Greg Weiner, Assumption College DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY 53.8 THE POLITICAL EFFECTS OF PERSONALITY
53.5 DIVERSE LEGACIES OF VIOLENCE: MEMORY, AMONG ELITES AND THE PUBLIC
RECOGNITION, AND REPARATIONS Room: Parc 55, Mission II
Room: Nikko, Carmel I Papers: Party Elites and Personality: Dispositional Traits and
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Political Attitudes
THEORY Gail McElroy, Trinity College, Dublin
Chair: Michaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado, Boulder Personality, Beliefs, and the Use of Violence in Ethno-
Disc: Andrew Valls, Oregon State University Political Organizations
Clayton Besaw, University of Central Florida
Papers: Political Memory: King Ashoka, Flawed Pasts, and Jeffrey Payne
Political Wisdom Jonathan Williams
Heather N. Pool, Denison University Unexpected Combination: Personality and Ideology for
Strange Orders: Reparations, Repugnance, and Colonial Protest Participation
Memories Hyunjin Cha, Korea University
Vicki Hsueh, Western Washington University

146 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

The Effect of Direct Democracy and Personality Traits Framed Fables: Teaching the Presidency through Art
on Political Participation Claudia Franziska Bruehwiler Haeusermann,
Kathrin Ackermann, University of Bern University of St.Gallen
Personality, Issue Positions and the Susceptibility to Empowering students through the Politics of Alice
Media Persuasion Walker
David Johann, University of Vienna Terri R. Jett, Butler University
Kathrin Thomas, University of Vienna Sketching an Understanding of Politics through
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY Drawings
53.9 RESOURCES AND DISTRIBUTION IN Sharon Mary Feeney, Dublin Institute of Technology
DEMOCRACIES OF THE DEVELOPING WORLD John W. Hogan, Dublin Institute of Technology
Room: Hilton, Powell Room DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE 53.12 COMPARATIVE APPROACHES TO THE STUDY
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES OF ELECTORAL AND LEGISLATIVE POLITICS
Chair: Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Disc: Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Chair: Tiffany D. Barnes, University of Kentucky
Papers: Rethinking Democracy and Economic Reforms:The Disc: Hyeok Yong Kwon, Korea University
Politics of Privatization in India
Varun Piplani, George Washington University Papers: Agenda-Setting under Authoritarian Regimes: Evidence
The Ethnic Origins of Capital Flight from Developing from China
Countries Steven Matthew Oliver, Yale-NUS College
Subhasish Ray, National University of Singapore Party Duration: Examining the Effects of Party Duration
When Democracy Fails to Deliver the Goods: on Election outcomes.
Explaining the Redistribution Deficit Jason Thomas, Syracuse University
Michael Albertus, University of Chicago The Comparative Macropolity: Public Opinion & Policy
Victor Menaldo in FPTP & PR Democracies
Resource Shocks and Local Public Goods: A Tale of Anthony J. McGann, University of Strathclyde
Two Districts Using Joint Scaling Methods to Study Ideology and
Sebastian Dettman Representation
Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY Diego
53.10 DEMOCRACY AT THE EDGE Why does Electoral Administration Fail? Comparing
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 Structure, Capacity, and Ethos
Chair: Zachary A. Callen, Allegheny College Pippa Pippa Norris, Harvard University
Papers: Administering the Interior: Expansion and Consolidation DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
in the Early Republic 53.13 FRAUD, CLIENTELISM AND COERCION IN
Christina McElderry, New School for Social Research ELECTIONS
Executive Action in an Age of Congressional Power Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Colin D. Moore, University of Hawaii, Manoa Chair: Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Representing Indigeneity: Patterns of Iroquois Complaint Disc: Nahomi Ichino, University of Michigan
and Request, 1680-1770
Daniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University Papers: Clientelism and Coercion: Strategies of Electoral
Violence and Fraud as Strategic Substitutes in the Mobilization in Hungary
Reconstruction Era US South Isabela Mares, Columbia University
William Terry, University of Oregon Lauren E Young, Columbia University
Francisco Cantu, University of Houston Electoral Fraud and Partisan Competition in Less
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION Developed Democracies
53.11 TEACHING ABOUT DIVERSITIES USING Miriam A. Golden, University of California, Los
UNIQUE APPROACHES Angeles
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Where Does Intimidation Work? State Repression and
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND Citizen Behavior in Zimbabwe
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Lauren E Young, Columbia University
Chair: Sherri L. Wallace, University of Louisville Labor Unions as Political Machines: The Case of the
Disc: Carol Ann Traut Mexican Teachers' Union
William E. Hudson, Providence College Pablo Querubin, New York University
Daily Schedule

Horacio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard University


Papers: Analyzing Political Documentaries DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Gary Bugh, Texas A&M University 53.14 LEGACIES OF REVOLUTION
Baby Steps: Teaching Reliability and Validity to Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
Undergraduates Disc: Jane Curry, Santa Clara University
John W. Williams, Principia College Sebastian Elischer, University of Florida

DAILY SCHEDULE 147


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

Papers: Revolutionary Coalitions: Causes, Patterns, Papers: Diversity and Divergence: Women and Indigenous
Consequences -- Portugal, 1974-75 PeoplesĀ Representation in Peru
Tiago Fernandes, Nova University - Lisbon Christina Ewig, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Revolutionary Violence and the Prospects for Ethnic Voting: Testing the Ethnic Cues Hypothesis in
Democracy Bolivia
Michael Bernhard, University of Florida Anaid Flesken, University of Bristol
Jeffrey Kopstein, University of California, Irvine Globalization, Transnationalism, Migration and Chinese
The Longest Revolutionary Outcome: State and War in National Identities
France James DeShaw Rae, California State University
Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University Sacramento
The Durability of Third World Revolutions Isolation or Competition? Ethnic Electoral Geography
Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto and Ethnic Parties
Armed Conflict and Ruling Party Durability in Manuel Vogt, ETH Zurich
Authoritarian Regimes Thomas Koblet
Anne Meng, University of California, Berkeley State Services and Identity Formation: Evidence from
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS KenyaĀs Hunger Safety Net
53.15 PUBLIC OPINION IN TIMES OF CRISIS: THE Brenton Peterson, University of Virginia
UKRAINE-RUSSIA CONFLICT DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Room: Nikko, Carmel II 53.18 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE YUAN
Chair: Mark Beissinger, Princeton University Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
Disc: Josephine T. Andrews, University of California, Davis Chair: Louis Pauly, University of Toronto
Part: Benjamin J. Cohen, University of California, Santa
Papers: Electing Poroshenko: Panel Data Analysis of Vote Barbara
Choice in A Crisis Context C. Randall Henning
Henry E. Hale, George Washington University Gregory T. Chin, York University
Olga Onuch, University of Manchester Daniel McDowell, Syracuse University
Hongying Wang, University of Waterloo
Explaining Shifting Attitudes of Ukrainians on Foreign
Policy Orientations in 2014: Ukraine Crisis Election DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Panel Survey Data Analysis 53.19 WORKERS AND PRODUCERS IN THE GLOBAL
Timothy J. Colton ECONOMY
Nadiya Kravets, Harvard University Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Serving Two Masters: Professionalized Bureaucracies Chair: Lloyd Gruber, London School of Economics
Vs. the "Investment Market" in Ukraine' Election Disc: Lloyd Gruber, London School of Economics
Administration" Noel Pereyra Johnston
Erik S. Herron, West Virginia University
Nazar Boyko Papers: IMF = I'M Fired?: IMF Program Participation and
Nationalism and Support for Democracy: Are Russia and Workers' Rights
Ukraine Contrasting Cases? Byungwon Woo, Oakland University
Stephen Whitefield, University of Oxford Su-Hyun Lee, Nanyang Technological University,
Paul Chaisty, Oxford University Singapore
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Liberalizing Labor: How the New Deal Enabled
53.16 THE POLITICS OF PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT IN American Free Trade
DEVELOPING STATES Adam Dean
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 The Impact of Globalization on Workers: Micro-level
Chair: Rory Truex, Princeton University Evidence from Brazil
Disc: Rory Truex, Princeton University Erica Owen, Texas A&M University
Visa Regulations and Firm-Level Productivity Effects of
Papers: Control Over Bureaucracy under Hybrid High-Skilled Mobility
Authoritarianism Steven Liao, Princeton University
Noah Buckley, Columbia University Globalizing the Supply Chain: FDI, Intermediates and
How Do Political Boundaries Shape Development? Firm Support for Trade
India's Employment Guarantee Iain Osgood
Saad Ahmad Gulzar, New York University DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
Benjamin Pasquale, University of Southern 53.20 INTERNATIONAL LEGALIZATION AND
California CONSTITUTIONALIZATION
Who Chooses Public Employment? Political Values and Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Career Choice in Russia Chair: Duncan Snidal, Nuffield College, Oxford
Bryn Rosenfeld, Princeton University Disc: Robert O. Keohane, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING University
COUNTRIES
53.17 ETHNIC POLITICS IN THE DEVELOPING Papers: If and How Power is Legalized in International Law
WORLD Barbara Koremenos, University of Michigan, Ann
Room: Hilton, Mason Room Arbor

148 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

Power-Politics and International Law Jacquelyn Schneider, George Washington University


Ian F. Hurd, Northwestern University
What is Intl. Constitutionalization? Using Insights from Papers: Anti-China Legislation on Capital Hill: Who Voted
IL for IR Scholarship ĄYeaď and Who Voted ĄNayď
Jeffrey L. Dunoff Fanglu Sun, Rice University
Mark A. Pollack, Temple University Foreign Education of Political Leaders and Voting
A Convention Theory of Global Constitutionalism Behavior in the UNGA
Erik Voeten, Georgetown University Shu Yu, University of Rochester
Constitutionalizing World Politics Military Experience and Congressional Oversight of the
Karolina M. Milewicz, University of Oxford Iraq War
Danielle Lupton, Colgate University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
53.21 CREDIBILITY, REPUTATION, AND RESOLVE Persuasive Hawks & Foreign Policy Decision Making
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I Brent Strathman
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Leadership Preferences in International Conflicts:
Chair: Andrea L. Everett, University of California-Santa Cruz Experimental Evidence
Disc: Kathryn McNabb Cochran, American University Min Ye, Coastal Carolina University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Papers: Advancing without Attacking: Red Lines, the Non-Use 53.24 CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS AS A CAUSE AND
of Force and Crisis Strategy RESULT OF CONFLICT
Daniel Altman, Dickey Center, Dartmouth College Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Divided Priorities: Why Allies Reject Interventions for Chair: Risa A. Brooks, Marquette University
Reputation Disc: Risa A. Brooks, Marquette University
Ronald R. Krebs, University of Minnesota, Twin Jessica L. P. Weeks, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Cities
Jennifer Spindel, University of Minnesota Papers: How Coups Escalate into Civil War
Can States Signal Their Motives? : Survey Experiments Erica Susanne De Bruin, Hamilton College
on the PublicĀs Attitude U.S. Military Assistance and Democratization in the
Seok Joon Kim Shadow of Coups
Diplomacy Through Agents Jonathan M. Powell, University of Central Florida
David Lindsey, University of California, San Diego Rebecca Eileen Schiel, University of Central Florida
Experimental Micofoundations of Reputations for Civil-Military Relations and Conflict Behavior: Initial
Resolve Tests Using New Data
Jonathan Renshon, University of Wisconsin-Madison Caitlin Talmadge, George Washington University
Keren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton University Vipin Narang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Circling the Wagons: Civil-Military Relations and
53.22 RETHINKING THE U.S. GRAND STRATEGY International Disputes
DEBATE Blake McMahon
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 International Conflict and Military Political Power
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Peter White, University of Maryland-College Park
Chair: Michael Desch, University of Notre Dame DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Disc: Andrew L. Ross, Texas A&M University 53.25 INSIDE THE BLACK BOX OF WAR
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Papers: Two Logics of American Alliances Chair: Jeff Carter, University of Mississippi
Jennifer M. Lind, Dartmouth College Disc: Jeff Carter, University of Mississippi
Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College Idean Salehyan, University of Texas at Dallas
Overstretched: Why Great Powers Militarize Beyond
Their Means Papers: Commitment Problems and the Spread of Interstate War
Michael Beckley, Tufts University Zachary Coleman Shirkey, Hunter College, CUNY
Limited Liabilities or Suppurating Sores? Allies, Time Territorial War Aim Expansion: Potential Occupiers and
Horizons, and Conflict Risking the Future
Joshua Itzkowitz Shifrinson, Texas A&M University Karen E Farrell
Disentangling Grand Strategy Fighting over Objects that Influence Future Bargaining
Paul C. Avey, Virginia Tech and Fighting Power
Jonathan Markowitz, University of Southern Kyle Mackey, Binghamton University
Daily Schedule

California Making Migrations: Population Displacement as a Tool


Robert J. Reardon, North Carolina State University of Statecraft
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Adam G. Lichtenheld, University of California-
53.23 ELITE FOREIGN POLICY DECISION MAKING Berkeley
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 The Origins of Military Effectiveness
Chair: Deborah Welch Larson, UCLA Political Science Robert J. Carroll, Florida State University
Department
Disc: Julia M. Macdonald

DAILY SCHEDULE 149


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

Ending War, but Losing Power: How Mediation Affects Disc: Graeme Boushey, University of California, Irvine
Leadership Survival Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma
Christina Kiel, Tulane University Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
53.26 EXECUTIVE-LEGISLATIVE RELATIONS IN Papers: Assessing Event History Analysis (EHA) Techniques for
LATIN AMERICA Studing Policy Diffusion
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 William D. Berry, Florida State University
Chair: Peter M. Siavelis, Wake Forest University Craig Volden, University of Virginia
Adam Gregory Hughes, University of Virginia
Disc:
Scott Liebertz, University of South Alabama
Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Maryland
Joy Langston, CIDE
Be Like the Cool Kids: A Spatio-Ideological Gravity
Papers: Legislative Process in Two Arenas: coalition bargain in Model of Policy Diffusion
presidential systems Manny P. Teodoro, Texas A&M University
Mariana Batista, Federal University of Pernambuco Professional Associations, Policy Diffusion, and
Magna Inácio, Federal University of Minas Gerais Program Content
Line Item Vetoes and Presidential-Congressional Andrew Karch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Relations in Brazil Adam Olson, University of Minnesota
Valeria Palanza, Universidad Católica de Chile The Lifecycle of an Innovative Policy: Contemplating
Gisela Sin, University of Illinois at U-C the Birth, Life, and Death
Analyzing the Meaning of Time in the Legislative Samantha Mosier, Missouri State University
Process DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
Taeko Hiroi, University of Texas at El Paso 53.29 PRIVATE IDAHO: FRAGMENTATION AND
Lucio R. Renno RETRENCHMENT IN PRIVATE ENFORCEMENT
Congress Skips Turn Again: Agenda Obstruction & REGIMES
Interbranch Bargaining in Chile Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Eric Magar, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Co-sponsored by DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Mexico AND JURISPRUDENCE
Chair: Jeb Barnes, University of Southern California
Do Coalitions Matter? Legislative success in the
Brazilian Congress Disc: Sarah Staszak, Harvard University
Ricardo Ceneviva, Rio de Janeiro State University Quinn W. Mulroy, Northwestern University
Andrea Marcondes de Freitas, Unicamp
Mauricio Yoshida Izumi, University of São Paulo Papers: The Subterranean Counterrevolution
Danilo Buscatto Medeiros, University of Virginia Sean Farhang, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION The Rights Revolution in the Age of Obama
53.27 PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND K-12 EDUCATION Lynda G. Dodd, City College of New York (CUNY)
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 Appointing Private Enforcers: Can the Government
Chair: Stephen Holt, American University Create Litigation?
Disc: John Marvel, George Mason University Paul J. Gardner, Syracuse University
Déjà vu All Over Again: Federal Regulation of
Papers: Encouraging Political Voices of Underrepresented Education for English Learners
Citizens through Coproduction R. Shep Melnick
Morten Hjortskov, Aarhus University DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND
Simon Calmar Andersen JURISPRUDENCE
Morten Jakobsen 53.30 CONSTITUTIONAL CONSTRUCTION OF
For Better or Worse? Teaching in CMO, EMO and RIGHTS, NEW AND OLD
Stand-alone Charter Schools Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Christine H. Roch, Georgia State University Disc: Mark E. Rush, Washington and Lee
Na Sai, Georgia State University Stephen G. Bragaw, Washington & Lee University
How Do External Resources Influence Teachers' Out-of-
Pocket Spending? Papers: Civil Legal Aid as a Basic Human Right
William G. Resh, University of Southern California Christopher P. Banks, Kent State University
Race, Gender and Symbolic Representation in American Lisa Hager, Kent State University
Schools Elsa Barletta Gonzalez, Kent State University
Lael R. Keiser, University of Missouri, Columbia Situating Groups in American Constitutional
Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas Development
Rajeev Darolia, University of Missouri Stuart L Chinn, University of Oregon
Teachers Like Us: Representation, Teachers, and Public Rights and Same Sex Marriage: Formalism, Realism,
Support and Social Change in Lawrence (2003), Windsor (2013),
Stephen Holt, American University and Obergefell (2015)
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Ronald Kahn, Oberlin College
53.28 POLICY DIFFUSION The Hollow Hope of Habeas: Impact of Supreme Court
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Decisions on GITMO Detainees
Chair: Graeme Boushey, University of California, Irvine Stuart Streichler, University of Washington

150 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

The Human Right to Legal Identity: The Regulation of Disc: Bernard L. Fraga, Indiana University
Personal Names
Alison Dundes Renteln, University of Southern Papers: Policy Feedback and Cross-State Variation in Latino
California American Partisanship
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND Matthew L. Jacobsmeier, West Virginia University
JURISPRUDENCE Political Effects of Having Undocumented Parents
53.31 THE PROSPECTS FOR CONSTITUTIONAL Chris Zepeda-Millan, UC Berkeley
CHANGE AND REFORM IN THE U.S. Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A Alex Street, Carroll College
Chair: Stephen M. Griffin, Tulane Law School The Contours of Contemporary Black Republicanism
Part: John R. Vile, Middle Tennessee State University Andra Gillespie, Emory University
Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin Niambi M. Carter, Temple University
Richard L. Hasen, UC Irvine School of Law Tyson D. King-Meadows, University of Maryland,
Melissa A. Schwartzberg, New York University Baltimore County
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY Shayla C. Nunnally, University of Connecticut
53.32 DETERMINANTS OF LEGISLATIVE Which Group Consciousness? Examining Identity and
PRODUCTIVITY IN THE AMERICAN STATES Political Incorproration
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 Cory Charles Gooding, Bowdoin College
Chair: Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
Disc: William D. Hicks 53.35 RELIGION AND REGIMES IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Papers: Does Divided Government Cause Legislative Gridlock? Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Justin Phillips, Columbia University Chair: Frances Hagopian, Harvard University
Patricia Kirkland, Columbia University Disc: Frances Hagopian, Harvard University
Institutions and Legislative Output in U.S. State
Assemblies Papers: The Catholic Church and Democratization in the
Elliott Ash, Columbia University Philippines
Policymaking: Gridlock and Change in U.S. State Erik Martinez Kuhonta, McGill University
Legislatures Perverse Outcomes Through Strategic Interaction in
Jesse T. Richman, Old Dominion University IndonesiaĀs Democracy
Preferences, Professionalism and Powers Eunsook Jung, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Mona Vakilifathi, University of California, San Diego Religious Freedom Between Democracy and
Stalemate in the States: Agenda Control, Veto Players Dictatorship
and Gridlock in the States Karrie J. Koesel, University of Oregon
Jesse M. Crosson Ani Sarkissian, Michigan State University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
53.33 GENDER, EMPOWERMENT, AND POLITICAL PARTIES
ECONOMY 53.36 PARTY POLICY POSITIONING AND CAMPAIGN
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 STRATEGIES
Chair: Adryan Wallace, University of Hartford Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Disc: Adryan Wallace, University of Hartford Chair: Lawrence Ezrow, University of Essex
Amy C. Alexander, Quality of Government Institute, Disc: Lawrence Ezrow, University of Essex
University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Papers: Balancing the Competition? Niche Parties vs. Major
Papers: Funding Empowerment: Private and Government Aid to Parties Campaigning Online
Gender Equality Initiatives Javier Lorenzo Rodríguez, Universidad Carlos III de
Jill A. Irvine, University of Oklahoma Madrid
Patrice McMahon, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Do Perceptions Matter? Party Programmatic Clarity and
How Does the Rise of the BRICs Affect Global Gender Voter Perceptions
Norms? Onawa Promise Lacewell, Social Science Research
Melinda J Adams, James Madison University Center, Berlin
Aiko Wagner
Microfinance: A Vehicle for Women's Empowerment
and Political Participation Party Constrained Responsiveness to Citizen-Initiated
Lindsey Richardson, University of Colorado at Contacts
Boulder Elin Naurin, Univeristy of Gothenburg
Daily Schedule

Patrik Ohberg, The Department of Political Science


at the University of Gothenburg
Turning Away from the State? Market Feminism,
Expertise and Feminist success
Season Hoard, Washington State University The Effects of Election News Coverage on Voter
Perception of Party Policy Shifts
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS Nicolas Merz, WZB Berlin Social Science Center
53.34 PARTISANSHIP AND CITIZENSHIP AMONG
RACIAL AND ETHNIC MINORITY VOTERS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
Chair: Bernard L. Fraga, Indiana University

DAILY SCHEDULE 151


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION Papers: Imagining the Ocean: Changing Global Norms About
53.37 PERSPECTIVES ON ASSESSMENTS OF How the Ocean Absorbs CO2
DEMOCRACY Kemi Fuentes-George
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Framing Effects and Mobilization Along the Marcellus
Chair: Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa Shale
Disc: Rodolfo Sarsfield, Autonomous University of Queretaro Elizabeth Plantan, Cornell University
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa Learning the TENGO: Transnational NGOs in
Environmental Politics
Papers: Critical or Disaffected? Assessing CitizensĀ Support for Gregory Thaler, Cornell University
Democracy Targeting Big Polluters: Understanding Activism against
Lea Heyne, University of Zurich the Fossil Fuel Industry
How Do Citizens Conceptualize āDemocracyĀ? A Pilot Johannes Urpelainen, Columbia University
Study Andrew Sungmin Cheon, Johns Hopkins University
Stephen K. Medvic, Franklin & Marshall College Tools for Transparency? Institutional Barriers to
Minding the Gap between Expectations and Perceptions Effective Civic Technology
of Democracy Rebecca Rumbul, mySociety
Todd Donovan, Western Washington University DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter 53.40 ISRAEL AND PALESTINE: ALTERNATIVE
Winner-loser Status between Elections and Satisfaction PERSPECTIVES ON STATEHOOD
with Democracy Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Wen-Chin Wu, Academia Sinica Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
Targeted Government Transfers and Democratic POLITICS
Attitudes Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Gregory Schober, Duke University Co-sponsored by Conference Group on the Middle East
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Chair: John Ehrenberg, Long Island University, Brooklyn
53.38 HOW THE MEDIA PORTRAY POLITICAL Part: Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University
ISSUES AND WHY IT MATTERS Stephen Eric Bronner, -university-
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Alberto Spektorowski, Tel Aviv University
Chair: Markus Prior, Princeton University Leila Farsakh, --University of Massachusetts Boston
Disc: Markus Prior, Princeton University DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
Ryan D. Enos, Harvard University 53.41 CHINA AND ASIA, PAST AND PRESENT
Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Papers: How Emotional Triggers in News Coverage affect Chair: Brantly Womack, University of Virginia
Public Opinion Disc: Hyon Joo Yoo, Trinity University
Scott Clifford, University of Houston
Jennifer Jerit, Stony Brook University Papers: Carrots and Sticks: The Domestic Political Determinants
Dane G. Wendell of American Strategy toward China
The Causal Effect of Media Coverage of the Economy Jungkun Seo, Kyung Hee University
on Presidential Approval Peter Trubowitz, London School of Economics
Amber Ellen Boydstun, University of California, Great Power Politics and Postwar Regional Security
Davis Architectures
Ben Highton, University of California, Davis Ji Hye Shin, University of Notre Dame
Suzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State University
Internationalization and Hegemonic Authority: Korea
Why Media Coverage of Income Inequality Makes under Chinese Hegemony
People Less Concerned about It In Young Min, University of Southern California
Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University
Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University Realism Revisited: Why Tributary System Matters in
ChinaĀs Wars against Koguryo
Fiscal Frames: How Political Arguments Affect Christina Jun-Yao Lai, Georgetown University
Opinions about Fiscal Policies
John M. Sides, George Washington University Status Insecurity and Temporality in World Politics
Joshua Meir Freedman, Northwestern University
Does Media Selectivity Help Campaigns Find
Persuadable Voters? DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University 53.42 SECRECY IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Martin Johnson, Louisiana State University Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Chair: Dan Reiter, Emory University
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS Disc: Joshua Rovner, Southern Methodist University
53.39 NON-STATE ACTORS IN ENVIRONMENTAL
POLITICS Papers: Secrets in the Secretariat: Intelligence Disclosures and
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 Power in IOs
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Allison Carnegie, Columbia University
Austin Carson, University of Chicago
Chair: Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin
Disc: Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin

152 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

Extraordinary Rendition Flight Paths and Oversight of Papers: The Impact of Marriage Equality on the LGBTQ
National Security Policy Movement
Michael P. Colaresi, Michigan State University Helma G. E. de Vries-Jordan, University of
Lora DiBlasi, Michigan State University Pittsburgh, Bradford
Why Do States Launch Regime Changes? U.S.-backed When the Best are the Worst: Implementing LGBT
Regime Change in the Cold War Rights in the EU
Lindsey O'Rourke, Boston College Scott Nicholas Siegel, San Francisco State University
The Seen and the Unseen: Secrecy, Deception, and the "Keep your Gay England:ď Examining ZimbabweĀs
Conduct of Intervention Response to LGBT Advocacy
Michael Poznansky, Harvard Kennedy School Erin Aylward
The Security Effects of Enemy Collusion When Secrecy Framing LGBT Politics in Turkey
Takes Two Bihter Tomen, southern illinois university
Shawn L. Ramirez, Emory University Same-Sex Marriage in Korea? Hurdles and Opportunities
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS Youngshik Daniel Bong, Asan Institute for Policy
53.43 ON HUMAN DIGNITY AND HUMAN RIGHTS Studies
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Jiyoon Kim, The Asan Institute for Policy Studies
Chair: Carol C. Gould, City University of New York DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS
Disc: Nick Bromell, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 53.46 CANADIAN LOCAL, PROVINCIAL AND
FEDERAL ELECTIONS
Papers: Dignity as a Gathering Room: Parc 55, Mason
Nick Bromell, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Chair: Shelley Boulianne, MacEwan University
Dignity: Political not Metaphysical Disc: William J. Crotty, Northeastern University
Michael Goodhart, University of Pittsburgh
Refiguring Dignity as Relational and Embodied Papers: The Gender Gap in Local Politics. Electing More
Carol C. Gould, City University of New York Women in a Non-partisan Context
Karen Bird, McMaster University
Human Dignity, Intergenerational Justice, and the Samantha Jackson
Promise of Human Rights
Richard P. Hiskes, Grand Valley State University Portrait of Municipal Voter Turnout in Canadian
Municipalities
The Gender of Dignity Sandra BREUX
Karen Zivi, Grand Valley State University Jérôme Couture, Université Laval
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS Royce Koop, University of Manitoba
53.44 ETHNOGRAPHY, INTERPRETATION, AND THE Heterogeneity in Voting Behavior
STUDY OF IDENTITY POLITICS Maxime Héroux-Legault, University of Toronto
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
To Fight Another Battle: The Impact of Electoral Laws
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods
on Marginal Candidates
Chair: Joel R. Campbell, Troy University Charles Tessier, Université Laval
Disc: Khalid Madhi, The University of Illinois at Chicago Marc A. Bodet, Universite Laval
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Papers: 'Visualizing' Democracy:mapping identity and 53.47 EXPERIMENTS IN POLITICAL ECONOMY
subjectivity in India Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Sruthi Muraleedharan, SOAS, Department of Politics Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
and international Studies
Papers: Elections and Embezzlement: An Experiment in 118
Resurgence of Identity Politics in the UK? Ethnographic Municipalities in Burkina Faso
Evidence from 2010-2014 Malte Lierl
Victor M Olivieri, University of Florida
Isolating the Causal Effect of Legitimacy: An
Social Justice Activism among Asian Pacific Americans Experimental Approach
in Two Cities Gregory Huber, Yale University
Nicole Filler, University of California, Santa Barbara Sanford C. Gordon, New York University
Veterans' Narratives of ĄBeing a Manď in the MilitaryĀs Eric Dickson, New York University
Community of Practice Property Rights and Trust
Jon Ross Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS Peter John Loewen
53.45 LGBT POLICY AND POLITICS-COMPARATIVE The Federal Democracy in the Laboratory
AND INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES Rodolpho Bernabel, New York University
Daily Schedule

Room: Parc 55, Powell I


Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Caucus 53.48 THE POLITICAL SOURCES OF SOLIDARITY IN
DIVERSE SOCIETIES
Chair: Charles W. Gossett Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Disc: Nina Simeonova Barzachka Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Chair: Keith Gordon Banting, Queen's University
Disc: Sheri Berman, Barnard College

DAILY SCHEDULE 153


Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, University of Nebraska-Lincoln 54.2 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
Papers: Strains of Commitment: Solidarity in Diverse Societies PHILOSOPHY: ROUNDTABLE: RECENT WORKS
Keith Gordon Banting, Queen's University ON LEO STRAUSS
Will Kymlicka, Queens University Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
The Political Sources of Solidarity Chair: David Oliver Davies, University of Dallas
Peter A. Hall, Harvard University Part: Grant Neil Havers, Trinity Western University
Robert Howse, New York University
Diversity and Solidarity: New Evidence from Canada
Michael S. Kochin, Tel Aviv University
and the US
Richard G.C. Johnston, University of British
Richard L. Velkley, Tulane University
Columbia
Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame
Matthew Wright, American University 54.3 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: PHILOSOPHICAL
Stuart N. Soroka, University of Michigan ANTHROPOLOGY AND AUTHENTICITY
Jack Citrin, University of California, Berkeley Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
Solidarity, Diversity and the Quality of Government Chair: David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America
Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg Disc: Michael Forrest Hickman, The University of Mary
Eduardo Schmidt Passos, The Catholic University of
Solidarity and Conflict: Citizenship, Integration and
America
Multiculturalism Policies
Irene Bloemraad, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Immanuel Kant and Eric Voegelin on the Immortality of
DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN POLITICS CONFERENCE the Soul
GROUP Steven McGuire, Eastern University
53.49 PARTY MOBILIZATION AND ELECTION
CAMPAIGNS IN AFRICA The Dignity of Human Personality: Martin Luther King,
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Jr. on Human Nature
Sarah Beth Vosburg Kitch, Louisiana State
University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION
Chair: Catherine Boone, London School of Economics and Under the Primacy of the Practical: Habermas's
Political Science (LSE) Communicative Rationality and Rawlsian
Reasonableness in Light of Kant's Practical Reason
Disc:
Gustavo A. Santos, Oficina Municipal
Amanda Pinkston

Papers: Captured Countryside? Sub-national Support for African Moral Debt: Liberty and What We Live Within
Incumbent Parties James Greenaway, St. Mary's University
Catherine Boone, London School of Economics and Totalitarian Elements in Environmentalism
Political Science (LSE) Amanda Nicole Marilyn Achtman
Mobilization and Persuasion: Evidence of Diverse 54.4 IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #12 (BIOLOGY
Campaign Strategies AND POLITICS): CURRENT RESEARCH IN
Sarah Brierley, UCLA BIOLOGY AND POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
How Campaigns Matter in Divided Societies: Theory
and Evidence from Kenya Chair: Michael Latner, California Polytechnic State University,
Jeremy Horowitz, Dartmouth College San Luis Obispo
Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of
The Role of Local Councillors in Electoral Mobilization Pennsylvania
in Zambia
Daniel Paget, University of Oxford Disc: Laurette T. Liesen, Lewis University
Opposition Candidacy and Campaigns in Electoral
Papers: The Biopolitical Philosophy of Smithian Liberalism
Authoritarian Regimes
Larry Arnhart
Keith R. Weghorst, Vanderbilt University
Related Groups Tea Party Logic and an AnarchistĀs Evolutionary Theory
William Dibrell, Alfred University
54.1 CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF THE
CONSTITUTION: TAKINGS AND THE What Medical Ethics have to Offer Both Moral and
AMERICAN REGIME: REEXAMINING KELO V. Political Philosophy
NEW LONDON James H. Rutherford
Room: Hilton, Imperial B The Evolution of Constitutional Democracy
Chair: Guy Fred Burnett, Hampden-Sydney College Michael Latner, California Polytechnic State
Disc: Scott Bullock, Institute for Justice University, San Luis Obispo
Wesley Horton, Horton, Shields & Knox, P.C. Biology and Politics: A Perspective
Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University,
Papers: The Impact of the Kelo Decision Harrisburg
Ilya Somin, George Mason University Albert Somit, Southern Illinois University
The Uselessness of the Public Use Requirement
Abraham Bell, Bar Ilan University
Kelo v. New London
John C. Eastman, Chapman University

154 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Friday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM


APSA Events Division Panels
55.1 PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS EDITORIAL DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
BOARD MEETING LUNCH 58.1 POSTER SESSION: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Room: Hilton, Vista Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Friday, 12:30 PM to 2:30 PM Papers: Don't Know What You Got: Neuroticism and
Ideological Uncertainty
APSA Events Jonathan David Klingler, Toulouse School of
56.1 DEPARTMENT CHAIRS' LUNCHEON Economics
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III Gary E. Hollibaugh, University of Notre Dame
Adam Ramey, New York University Abu Dhabi
Friday, 1:15 PM to 2:15 PM Downstream Consequences of Partisan Bias in Factual
APSA Events Information Processing
57.1 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY Kabir Khanna, Princeton University
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING Insecurity, Affect Appraisal, and Economic Voting
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 Christoph Giang Nguyen, Northwestern University
57.2 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS Meet Me Halfway: How Voters Narrow Policy Gaps
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING between Themselves and Candidates
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 Benjamin Kantack, University of Illinois at Urbana-
57.3 INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS Champaign
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING Psychological Appeals in Terrorist Recruitment:
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Examining White Supremacists
57.4 JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION BOARD Pip Marie Sherwood, Washington State University
MEETING Rationalizing Conflict: The Role of Accountability in
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room Ideological Decisionmaking
57.5 LGBT CAUCUS BUSINESS MEETING Carly Nicole Wayne
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Eran Halperin, Interdisciplinary Center
57.6 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE EDITORIAL BOARD The Justification for the Use of Force & Public Support
MEETING for War over Time
Room: Parc 55, Sutro Erin Elizabeth Hurley, University of Sydney
57.7 POLITICAL EPISTEMOLOGY SECTION Valuing Politics: Personal ValuesĀ Influence on
BUSINESS MEETING Citizenship Norms and Engagement
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room Joshua Robison, Aarhus University, Department of
57.8 POLITICAL RESEARCH QUARTERLY Political Science
EDITORIAL BOARD LUNCHEON We Can Work It Out: Measuring IndividualsĀ
Room: Parc 55, Lombard Willingness to Compromise
57.9 POLITICS & POLICY EDITORIAL BOARD Emily Sydnor, Southwestern University
MEETING
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
58.2 POSTER SESSION: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
57.10 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION SECTION BUSINESS Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
MEETING Disc: Marc T. Ratkovic, Princeton University
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room Jonathan Kropko
57.11 PUBLIC POLICY SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II Papers: The Partial Observability Logit: A Two-Sided Model of
57.12 RBSI WORKING GROUP COMMITTEE Multilateral Negotiations
MEETING Marius Radean, University of Essex
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room The Limits of Causal Inference
57.13 RELATED GROUPS (ALL) MEETING Tess Wise, Harvard University
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Policy Preferences, Political Knowledge and Voting
57.14 REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS Behavior
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING Melis G�lboy Laebens, Yale University
Room: Hilton, Green Room Deniz Selman, Bogazici University
57.15 SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND A Spatial Statistical Analysis of Renewable Power in the
EVIRONMENTAL POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS Western US
MEETING
Daily Schedule

Nicholas Cain, Claremont Graduate University


Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
What Can Discourse Analysis Contribute to the Studies
57.16 SOUTHWESTERN POLITICAL SCIENCE of Women's Political Representation?
ASSOCIATION BUSINESS MEETING Christina Alnevall, Stockholm University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
A Co-Authorship Network of Political Science
57.17 THEORY & EVENT JOURNAL BUSINESS Thomas Metz
MEETING
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room

DAILY SCHEDULE 155


Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS Inspiring American Politics Students with a Town Hall
58.3 POSTER SESSION: QUALITATIVE METHODS Meeting Program
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Lori M Weber, California State University, Chico
Papers: Employing cognitive mapping to measure political brand Scott Spitzer, California State University, Fullerton
equity in Ireland DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
John W. Hogan, Dublin Institute of Technology 58.6 POSTER SESSION: WOMEN AND POLITICS
Opening up Bodies for Harvest: Embodiment and Global Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Capitalism Disc: Jill A. Irvine, University of Oklahoma
Florentina C. Andreescu, University of North Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder
Carolina Wilmington Kathryn Pearson, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Power Rivalries and Patronage Politics Cindy Simon Rosenthal, University of Oklahoma
Dalton Lin, Princeton University
Time and the Comparative Analysis of Critical Junctures Papers: The Gendered Bounds of Racial Solidarity
Graham Odell Mackenzie Leigh Israel-Trummel, University of
Oklahoma
Unconventional Methods for Novices: New, Powerful,
and Simple Perspectives Feminist institutionalism and methodological pluralism
Steve Wallis, Capella University; Meaningful Peter Allen, Queen Mary University of London
Evidence, LLC Sarah Childs, University of Bristol
Quantitative Methods in Critical and Constructivist IR What's the Difference? Explaining Cross-Sectional
Theory Variation in the Gender Gap
Samuel J Barkin, University of Massachusetts Boston Christopher P. Donnelly, University of California,
Laura E Sjoberg Davis
Kristina M. Victor, UC Davis
Between Ideas, Interests and Institutions toward
Decentralisation in East Asia Donor Networks and the Influence of Female Candidates
Eunkyung Shin, University of York in Political Parties
Jaclyn J. Kettler, Boise State University
Different Faces of Islamism and Collective Mobilization
in the Muslim World Avoiding Adversariness? The Effects of Gender on
Dilshod Achilov, East Tennessee State University Litigation Strategies
Adrienne Smith, University of Tennessee
DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL Claire B. Wofford, College of Charleston
SCIENCE Gendered Analysis of Collective Action: Experimental
58.4 POSTER SESSION: TEACHING AND LEARNING Evidence from Russia
IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Olga A. Avdeyeva
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE Those Left Behind: Gendered Consequences of Enforced
EDUCATION Disappearances
Disc: Anthony Caito, Corban University Jessica Mecellem, Loyola University Chicago
Understanding Gender politics in the PKK
Papers: Assessing Diverse Teaching Tools: Do Project Ora Beach Szekely, Clark University
Pedagogies Make a Difference?ď Women's Movements and Policy Impact: Reconsidering
James Simeone, Illinois Wesleyan University Feminist Success
Greg M. Shaw, Illinois Wesleyan University Season Hoard, Washington State University
Current Affairs: Using Twitter to Facilitate Class Richard Elgar, Washington State University
Discussion Online Layers of Subordination: The Effect of Affirmative
Allison Clark Pingley, University of South Carolina, Action in Rural India
Upstate Triveni Gandhi, Cornell University
The Democracy & Leadership Lab: Experiential DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
Learning for Information Literacy 58.7 POSTER SESSION: RELIGION & POLITICS
Peter A. Ferguson, University of Western Ontario Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION Papers: Influencing Policy Decisions: The Case of Protestantism
58.5 POSTER SESSION: POLITICAL SCIENCE in West Germany
EDUCATION Andreas Busch, University of Goettingen
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Sectarian Conflict and Political Alignments in Late 19th
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND Century Utah
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Mark Edward Denninghoff, Purdue University
Papers: Assessing Diversity Education in the Classroom Through Policy Advocacy and the Performance of Muslim
Experience Sampling American Identity
Andrew Levin, Harper College Emily Cury, Northeastern University
Experiential Learning Activities ĉ Are all Created Old-Time (Civil) Religion: Recasting the Townsend
Equal? Movement
Mary A. McHugh, Merrimack College Aaron Quinn Weinstein, Brown University
Terrorist Ties: Organization and Links between Militant
Religious Groups
Christopher Rhodes, College of the Holy Cross

156 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH Papers: Changing University Cultures


58.8 POSTERS ON EXPERIMENTAL APPROACHES S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University
TO POLITICS Cynthia R. Daniels, Rutgers University, New
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Brunswick
Papers: Does the Bureaucracy Move the Needle on Trust: Women of Color, Intersectionality and WomenĀs
Evidence from a Survey Experiment Advancement in the Discipline and Across the Academy
Louis Fucilla, Indiana University, Bloomington Wendy G. Smooth, The Ohio State University
Effect of Premium Tax Credits on Marketplace Changing the Masculinization of the Discipline
Enrollment Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia
Neil O' Brian, University of California, Berkeley Denise Marie Walsh, University of Virginia
Emotional Attribution: The Role of Emotions in 60.3 RESPONSIBILITY FOR RACIAL JUSTICE
Attribution and Redistribution Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Kristina M. Victor, UC Davis Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
Get Up, Stand Up: Experimental Evidence on the THEORY
Effects of Protest Activity Chair: Sharon R. Krause, Brown University
Cassilde Schwartz, University of Pittsburgh Disc: Traci Burch, Northwestern University
When do Voters Take into Account Post-Election
Bargaining Processes? Papers: Repairing the Carceral Polity
Patrick Kraft, SUNY, Stony Brook University Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia
Stoetzer Frederik Lukas, Univeristy of Mannheim Shrill: Responsibility for Racial Justice and the
Friday, 2:30 PM to 3:00 PM Epistemology of Ignorance
Clarissa Rile Hayward, Washington University in St.
APSA Events Louis
59.1 DA-RT INITIATIVE MEETING Racial (In)Justice from Ferguson to the Favelas
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room Juliet Hooker, University of Texas, Austin
Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM Racial Realism and the Responsibility for Racial Justice
Desmond Jagmohan, Princeton University
Theme Panels
60.1 DIVERSITY OF WOMEN'S INTERESTS
Dismantling Racism through a Democratic Practice of
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
Interpretation
Ainsley Nicole LeSure, University of Chicago
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
60.4 RETHINKING DEMOCRATIC AGENCY: RACE,
Chair:
GENDER, SEXUALITY, AUTONOMY
Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University
Disc: Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
Papers: Anti-feminism and WomenĀs Representation in the THEORY
States Chair: Jennifer Einspahr, Kalamazoo College
Beth Reingold, Emory University
Disc: Jennifer Einspahr, Kalamazoo College
Rebecca J. Kreitzer, University of North Carolina-
Chapel Hill
Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa Papers: Agency without Optimism: Afro-Pessimism and Queer
Michele L. Swers, Georgetown University Negativity
Annie Menzel, Vassar College
Comparing Conservative Women Across Divergent
Political Systems Audre Lorde: The Politics of Self-Actualization
Christina Xydias Jack Turner, University of Washington
Conceptualizing Women's Interests: A Look at the U.S. Angela Y Davis: Abolitionism, Democracy, Freedom
Congress Neil Roberts, Williams College
Regina Wagner, University of Wisconsin, Madison Agency and Democracy
Strategically Constituting Women's Interests in the Samuel Ely Bagg, Duke University
Rulemaking Process APSA Events
Ashley English, University of Minnesota 61.1 FROM HURRICANE KATRINA TO FERGUSON:
Toward a Feminist Measure of Gender Equality: Lessons ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE, THE STATE, &
from GEPP VIOLENCE
Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
Isabelle Engeli, University of Ottawa Chair: Andra Gillespie, Emory University
Joni Lovenduski, University of London, Birkbeck Part: Tyson D. King-Meadows, University of Maryland,
College
Daily Schedule

Baltimore County
Rosie Campbell, Birkbeck, University of London Lester Kenyatta Spence, Johns Hopkins University
60.2 EMPOWERING WOMEN: SPECIAL Shayla C. Nunnally, University of Connecticut
CHALLENGES GENDER POSES FOR INCLUSION Melanye Tarea Price, Rutgers University
AND DIVERSITY WITHIN THE PROFESSION Monique L. Lyle, University of South Carolina
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 61.2 NEH@50: HUMANITIES AND THE COMMON
Chair: Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, GOOD
Irvine Room: Nikko, Monterey I

DAILY SCHEDULE 157


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

Chair: Joseph R. Phelan, National Endowment for Humanities Structural and agential domination: A Kantian
Part: Kathleen Hall Jamieson, University of Pennsylvania Framework for Diversity
Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame Tamara Jugov, Free University Berlin /KFG "Justitia
Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame Amplificata"
Alan Wolfe, Boston College The Insufficiency of Non-Domination: The Case of
Division Panels Gender Oppression
Mara Marin, Frankfurt University
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES Back to Class: A Dialogue with Post-Structuralist and
62.1 STATE AND ECONOMY IN CHINA AND THE Difference Theory
FORMER SOVIET UNION Joseph M. Schwartz, Temple University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
Chair: Neil Munro, University of Glasgow 62.5 UNPACKING COMPLICITY
Disc: Igor Logvinenko, Wellesley College Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Chair: Mihaela Mihai, University of Edinburgh
Papers: Foreign Capital Liberalization and Development: China Disc: Alexander Keller Hirsch, University of Alaska
and Russia Compared
Roselyn Hsueh, Temple University Papers: The Art of Complicity
RussiaĀs Rural Transformation: How the State Shaped Mihaela Mihai, University of Edinburgh
the Post-Soviet Food System It was Like Artificial Respiration: Documenting
Susanne A. Wengle, University of Notre Dame Goodness, Rescue, Complicity
Patterns for the Rise of State Ownership in the Oil Bronwyn Anne Leebaw, University of California,
Sector: The Post-Soviet Case Riverside
Adnan Vatansever, King's College London From Compassion to Political Responsibility
The Political Mobility of State-Owned Company Leaders Stephen L. Esquith, Michigan State University
in China DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Wendy Leutert 62.6 THE ORIGINS OF POLITICAL KNOWLEDGE
Explaining Russian State Behavior in the European AND POLITICAL ATTITUDES
Energy Market Room: Parc 55, Mission II
Emily Holland Chair: Scott L. Althaus, University of Illinois at Urbana-
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY Champaign
62.2 DIVERSIFYING CINEMATIC POLITICS Disc: Joshua Robison, Aarhus University, Department of
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Political Science
Chair: Torrey J. Shanks, SUNY, University at Albany
Part: Morton Schoolman, SUNY, University at Albany Papers: The Nature of Political Knowledge in Mass Publics
Michael J. Shapiro, University of Hawaii, Manoa Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan, Ann
Lori Marso Arbor
Davide Panagia, UCLA Stability and Change of YouthsĀ Political Interest
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY Silvia Russo
62.3 DEMOCRACY AT THE MARGINS Håkan Stattin
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 Charity Begins at Home: Parenting Styles and Youth
Chair: Mark E. Button, University of Utah Civic Efficacy
Disc: Mark E. Button, University of Utah David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame
Political Attitudes and Associations: Socialization or
Papers: Democratizing Global Supply Chains Self-selection?
Benjamin McKean, Ohio State University Ali Abdelzadeh
Disenfranchisement: The Democratic Complaint Rethinking Political Socialization: Evidence from the US
Colin Kielty, University of Virginia Department of and Australia
Politics Christopher Ojeda, Stanford University
Pete Hatemi, Pennsylvania State University
Towards a Neuropolitical Theory of Exclusion
Liya Yu, Columbia University DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
62.7 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ACCESS TO
Against Diversity in the Parochial Square: Religious POLITICAL OFFICE AND POLICY OUTCOMES
Control of Women in Israel Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Judith Lynn Failer, Indiana University, Bloomington
Chair: Mark Dincecco, University of Michigan
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY Disc: Mark Dincecco, University of Michigan
62.4 DIFFERENCE, DOMINATION, INEQUALITY Saumitra Jha, Stanford University
Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Chair: Julie Elizabeth Dowsett, York University Papers: Parties, Dynasts, and the Selection of Candidates:
Disc: Julie Elizabeth Dowsett, York University Evidence from India
Carlos Velasco Rivera, Princeton University
Papers: Resisting Domination Accross Borders
Ian Shapiro, Yale University

158 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

Ethnic Politics and Economic Policy: Theory and Disc: Paolo Dardanelli, University of Kent
Evidence from India
Nikhar Gaikwad, Yale University Papers: Do Minority Rights Make a Difference? Citizenship &
Monitoring and the Value of Public Office in the Conflict in Divided Societies
Spanish Empire Bonnie Weir, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Jenny Guardado, Georgetown University Champaign
Shadow Parties: Dual Mandates and Democracy in Milan Svolik, Yale University
France Explaining the Distribution of Monoethnic and
Alexandra Cirone, London School of Economics; Multiethnic Regimes Worldwide
Columbia University, New York Sener Akturk, Koc University
DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL Ethnic Cleansing as Military Strategy: Lessons from
SCIENCE Lebanon, 1975-1990
62.8 EXPLORING DIVERSITIES USING Nils Hagerdal, Harvard University
SIMULATIONS Redefining the Nation: Center-Right Party Outreach
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 toward Ethnic Minorities
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE Jennifer Miller-Gonzalez
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
EDUCATION
Disc: Megan Elizabeth Osterbur, Xavier University of 62.11 THE RESOURCE CURSE
Louisiana Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Joseph E. Campbell, Rose State College Chair: Pauline Jones Luong, University of Michigan
Disc: Graeme Blair, Columbia University
Papers: Bespoke Simulations: Pedagogical Advantages and
Practical Considerations
Christopher D. Moore, Bethel University Papers: Resource Rich and Democratic? Rent-Sharing Regimes
in Argentine Provinces
Model United Nations and Experiential Learning: An Diego Diaz Rioseco, Brown University
Assessment
David K. Jesuit, Central Michigan University Anything but Anarchy? Territorial Control, Gold
J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University Mining, and Welfare in Colombia
Melis G�lboy Laebens, Yale University
Political Theory for Our Dark Times: Learning
Ideologies Plus with Harry Potter Competition and Reform of National Oil Companies in
John S. Nelson, University of Iowa Russia and Brazil
Amanda Leigh Zadorian, New School for Social
PrisonerĀs Dilemma: A Leitmotif for Intro IR Research
Thomas C. Walker, Grand Valley State University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Using the ACA to Teach American Government: How
62.12 CONFLICT AND POST-CONFLICT DYNAMICS
Does Knowledge Affect Attitudes?
Liz Norell, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Papers: Public opinion and legitimacy in ColombiaĀs peace talks:
62.9 COMPARING JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE: An experimental study
SOCIAL AND INSTITUTIONAL EXPLANATIONS Jennifer McCoy, Georgia State University
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University
Chair: Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh Structure, Institutions, and Conflict: Environmental
Disc: Lydia Brashear Tiede, University of Houston Licensing in Latin America
Maiah Jaskoski, Northern Arizona University
Papers: Social Structure, Attitudes, and Law: Co-Evolution of The Geography of Civil War Violence and Electoral
Judicial Network in Mexico Competition
Matthew C. Ingram, University at Albany, SUNY Jennifer Raymond Dresden, Georgetown University
Weak Review, Strong Courts: Judicial Influence The Legacy of Violence on Development: Evidence
Reconsidered from Post-Khmer Rouge Cambodia
Abby Blass, University of Texas at Austin, Erin Lin, Princeton University
Government Dept.
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Helping or Hurting Hybrid Regimes: Judicial Politics in
Russia and Kazakhstan
62.13 INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC FACTORS AND
Alexei Trochev, Nazarbayev University
DOMESTIC ECONOMY IN THE DEVELOPING
The Puzzle of Purges: A New Theory of Judicial WORLD
Manipulation Latin America Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Daily Schedule

Gretchen Helmke, University of Rochester Chair: Naunihal Singh, Air War College
Does Political Fragmentation Produce More Stable Papers: Concession Stands: The Consequences of Foreign
Judiciaries? Investment for Protest in Africa
Andrea Castagnola, University of Bergen Darin Christensen, Stanford University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Return Migration, Negative Social Remittances, and
62.10 MINORITY RIGHTS AND REPRESSION ĄGray Zones of Politicsď
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D Clarisa Perez-Armendariz, Bates College
Chair: Ahmet T. Kuru, San Diego State University

DAILY SCHEDULE 159


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

The Political Economy of Unfinished Infrastructure: Chair: Robert Gulotty, The University of Chicago
Evidence from Ghana Disc: B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University
Martin J. Williams, London School of Economics and Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich
Political Science
The Changing Political Economy of Development Papers: Escape Through Exports? Women-Owned Firms,
Assistance: The Ghanaian Case Discrimination and Global Markets
Alexandra Olivia Zeitz, University of Oxford Iain Osgood
Why Export Promotion is No Silver Bullet: Linkage, Margaret E. Peters, Yale University
Orientation and Development State Capitalism and Tax Revenue: Assessing Vietnam
Mona M. Lyne, University of Missouri, Kansas City Accession to the WTO
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING Leonardo Baccini
COUNTRIES Employment in Globally Engaged Firms and U.S.
62.14 RESOURCE ALLOCATION AND DISTRIBUTION Presidential Voting
IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Dennis P. Quinn, Georgetown University
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Stephen J. Weymouth, Georgetown University
Chair: Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University Intra-industry Trade and Trade Liberalization: Evidence
Disc: Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University from Dyad-level Tariffs
In Song Kim, MIT
Papers: Degrees of Clientelism in the WorldĀs Largest Cheap Dollars: The Political Economy of Overvaluation
Democracy Robert Gulotty, The University of Chicago
Adam Michael Auerbach, American University Dorothy Kronick, Stanford University
Aseema Sinha, Claremont Mckenna College DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
Public Resource Distribution, Security Provision and 62.17 ISSUES OF COMPLIANCE IN INTERNATIONAL
Migration in India POLITICS
Rikhil R Bhavnani, University of Wisconsin, Madison Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Bethany Lacina, University of Rochester Chair: Amy Yuen, Middlebury College
Elections and Local Public Goods in Rural Democracies: Disc: Stephen Chaudoin, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Evidence from Botswana Champaign
Robin Harding, University of Rochester Amy Yuen, Middlebury College
Pork in Pakistan? The Politics of Resource Allocation in
PakistanĀs Legislature Papers: The Dynamics of Anti-Torture Norm Expression and
Rabia Malik, University of Rochester Internalization
Audits From Space Jonathan Ring, University of Michigan
Brian Min, University of Michigan International Crimes in Domestic Courts: Universal
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY Jurisdiction over War Crimes
62.15 DIRECT DEMOCRACY IN MULTILEVEL Jessica Stanton, University of Pennsylvania
DIVIDED SOCIETIES: CURSE OR CURE? Ayodeji Kamau Perrin, University of Pennslyvania
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Compliance with United Nations Peacekeeping
Chair: Lawrence Le Duc, University of Toronto Personnel Requests
Disc: Nenad Stojanovic, University of Lucerne Timothy James Alexander Passmore
Andrew F Hart, University of Colorado-Boulder
Megan Shannon, University of Colorado
Papers: Voices of the People: Contested Sovereignty in divided
societies Negotiated Settlements and Respect for Rights in the
Fernando Mendez Wake of Civil War
Micha Germann, ETH Zurich Lindsay Reid, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
European Union and Direct Democracy: A Possible
Combination? In the Market: Economic Interdependence, Competition,
Francis André Cheneval, University of Zurich, and Compliance
Switzerland Mark J.C. Crescenzi, University of North Carolina,
Monica Ferrin Chapel Hill
Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina,
Referendums, Federalism and Supply-Side Democracy Chapel Hill
Matt Haunstrup Qvortrup, Coventry University
The Promise of Peacekeeping: Human Rights,
A Deliberative Case for Direct Democracy in Multilevel Democracy & Intervention in Civil War
Divided Societies Allison Carnegie, Columbia University
Joseph Lacey, European University Institute Christoph Mikulaschek, Princeton University
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Direct Democracy and the Eurozone Crisis
Ece Ozlem Atikcan, Laval University 62.18 DYNAMICS OF MILITANT ORGANIZATIONS
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
62.16 MARKET ACCESS AND POLITICAL Disc: Cara Eugenia Jones, Mary Baldwin College
INFLUENCE: EVIDENCE FROM FIRM-LEVEL
DATA
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room

160 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

Papers: Rebel Funding Sources and the Use of Terrorism in The Domestic Politics of Human Rights Enforcement via
Civil Wars Trade Agreements
Page Fortna, Columbia University Patrick Kearney, University of Wisconsin Madison
Michael A. Rubin, Columbia University DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Nicholas John Lotito, Columbia University 62.22 INDIVIDUAL-LEVEL ATTITUDES AND
LibyaĀs Disastrous Rebellion: Moral Hazard Redux? BEHAVIOR IN CONTENTIOUS ENVIRONMENTS
Alan J. Kuperman, University of Texas, Austin Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Why Insurgents Win: The Rising Tide of External Chair: Shivaji Mukherjee, University of Toronto
Support Disc: Reed M. Wood, Arizona State University
Dominic Tierney, Swarthmore College
Ryan D. Grauer, University of Pittsburgh Papers: Threatening News: External Threats, Media Freedom
Elite Targeting and Network Fragmentation in Islamic and Political Trust
Insurgencies Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, University of
Aisha S. Ahmad, University of Toronto Massachusetts, Lowell
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Marc L. Hutchison, University of Rhode Island
62.19 THE CHINA PUZZLE IN INTERNATIONAL Communicating Control: A Spatio-Temporal Assessment
SECURITY in Afghanistan
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Camber Warren, Naval Postgraduate School
Disc: Oriana Skylar Mastro, Georgetown University Michael Sieber
Truc Pham
Papers: Better Now Than Later: Explaining ChinaĀs Perceptions of Victims in Irregular War: Evidence from
Assertiveness in Maritime Disputes Aceh and Colombia
Jing Tao, NYU School of Law Michael Weintraub, Binghamton University (SUNY)
ChinaĀs Rhetorical Strategy in the South China Sea Collective Action without Leaders: Protest and the Arab
Territorial Disputes Spring
Christina Jun-Yao Lai, Georgetown University Zachary Steinert-Threlkeld, University of California -
Soldier Socialization? Explaining Patterns in U.S.-China San Diego
Military Relations Digital Disruptions: A Global Analysis of Internet
Austin Michael Strange Outages and Violence
Tyler Carl jost Anita R. Gohdes, Harvard University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS Forcing GovernmentĀs Hand: Ethnic Terrorism and
CONTROL Improvement in Minority Rights
62.20 INTERNATIONAL POLITICS AND "UNMAKING Seden Akcinaroglu
THE BOMB: A FISSILE MATERIAL APPROACH Ihsan Efe Tokdemir, Binghamton University
Room: Parc 55, Powell II DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Chair: Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University 62.23 INTEREST GROUPS, LOBBYISTS, AND
Part: John E. Mueller, Ohio State/Cato Institute POLICYMAKING
Shampa Biswas, Whitman College Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
T.V. Paul, McGill University Chair: Lara Chausow, Congressional Research Service
James H. Lebovic, George Washington University Disc: Jennifer Nicoll Victor, George Mason University
Frank Niels von Hippel, Program on Science and Global Lara Chausow, Congressional Research Service
Security, Princeton University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Papers: A Multiple Representation Theory of Congressional
62.21 ECONOMIC DIPLOMACY: THE EFFECT OF AID, Politics
SANCTIONS, AND TRADE Ruoxi Li, California State University, San Marcos
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 District Benefits Revisited
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL Andrew James McCall, University of California-
POLITICAL ECONOMY Berkeley
Chair: David Blagden, University of Exeter Industry Complexity and the Demand for Lobbyist
Disc: Timothy M. Peterson, University of South Carolina Expertise in the Congress
Maurice B. Champagne
Papers: Armed with Good Intentions? Explaining Arms Interest Group Influence on "Subordinate" Policies
Embargo Compliance Richard L. Hall, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Kathrin Kranz, University of Notre Dame
Measuring Think Tank Influence on Legislation: A
Death from Above? Testing Realist Theories of Arms Topic Modeling Approach
Daily Schedule

Sales using Aircraft Sales Joshua Yoshio Lerner, Duke University


Spencer L Willardson, Nazarbayev University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
How Economic Sanctions Compel an Autocrat to 62.24 POLITICS OF THE BUDGET PROCESS
Oblige: The Case of Iran Room: Parc 55, Mason
SeyedBabak RezaeeDaryakenari, Arizona State Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
University
Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University Chair: Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas at Dallas
Disc: Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas at Dallas

DAILY SCHEDULE 161


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

Joseph White, Case Western Reserve University The Haves and the Have Nots: Nonprofits and Parcel
Taxes in California Schools
Papers: Party, Elect. Cycles, Governor & Legislative Liberalism Shelly R. Arsneault, California State University,
on Tax Changes Fullerton
Richard F. Winters, Dartmouth College Sarah A. Hill, California State University, Fullerton
Carlisle Rainey, Texas A&M University DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
Drift, Layering, and Conversion? The Budget Process in 62.27 LOCAL CIVIC ENGAGEMENT IN CONTEXT:
Alberta, 2011-15 NEIGHBORHOODS AND PARTICIPATORY
Keith Douglas Brownsey, Mount Royal University INSTITUTIONS
Room: Parc 55, Stockton
Economic Interests and Congressional Voting on
Corporate Tax Issues in the US Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Mi Jeong Shin, Washington University in St. Louis Chair: Neil Kraus, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
Economic Policy: Where We've Been, Where We're Disc: Genie Stowers, San Francisco State Public Admin
Going Program
Brian Scholl, IZA Neil Kraus, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
Papers: Active Voices: Social Capital, Social Media, and Urban
62.25 RUNNIN' ON EMPTY: SELECTING STATE
JUDGES Neighborhoods
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Todd C. Shaw, University of South Carolina
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND Evaluating the Impact of Social Capital on
POLICY Neighborhood Stability
Chair: Salmon A. Shomade, University of New Orleans Michael C. Craw, University of Arkansas at Little
Rock
Disc: Salmon A. Shomade, University of New Orleans
Lawrence Baum, Ohio State University āEyesĀ on the Street: What Public Camera Feeds Can
Teach Us about Civic Behavior
Papers: Designing Merit Selection Commissions Melissa Sands, Harvard University
Greg Goelzhauser, Utah State University Can CitizensĀ Assemblies Deepen Urban Democracy?
Electoral Responsiveness in Judicial Selection Edana Beauvais, University of British Columbia
Alton Boyd Hale Worthington, University of Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia
Michigan Democratic Innovations and Legitimacy of Local
Shaun McGirr, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Governments
Ideology and Television Advertising in Judicial Races Maija Karjalainen, University of Turku
Michael Salamone, Washington State University DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Orion A Yoesle, Washington State University 62.28 GENDER, PERSONAL TIES, AND POLITICS:
The Effect of Judicial Campaigns on Judicial NEW PERSPECTIVES ON INFORMAL
Decisionmaking INSTITUTIONS
Michael J. Nelson, The Pennsylvania State University Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Chair: Kimberley Manning, Concordia University
War Chests as Entry Deterrence with Strategic Delay
Chris "Delicious" W. Bonneau, University of Disc: Melinda J Adams, James Madison University
Pittsburgh, @Bonneau_Says
Damon M. Cann, Utah State University Papers: Masculine Privilege: The Tie that Binds
Kira Pronin, Univ of Pittsburgh Natalie Galea, University of New South Wales
Louise Annette Chappell, University of New South
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
Wales
62.26 HEALTH AND EDUCATION POLICY EFFECTS
IN THE STATES Female Politicians and Family Ties - Gender and
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 Informal Networks in Asia
Chair: John Portz, Northeastern University Elin Bjarnegard, Uppsala University
Disc: Sara E. Dahill-Brown, Wake Forest University The Party Family in Revolutionary China: A
Comparative Framework of Analysis
Papers: Diversity in American Social Welfare Policy: Medicaid Kimberley Manning, Concordia University
Eligibility across States Internal Criticism: Islamic WomenĀs Rights Activism in
Eunju Kang, SUNY Geneseo Iran and Turkey
Expertise and State Health Department Rulemaking Mona Tajali, Oxford University
Activity, 1998-2012 DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
Denise Lillvis, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 62.29 RACE AND PUBLIC OPINION
School Finance Reform, Social Capital, and Education Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
Spending in California Chair: David L. Leal, University of Texas at Austin
Jonathan Collins Disc: David L. Leal, University of Texas at Austin
Testing Local School Boards: District Accountability
and Performance in the U.S. Papers: Alternating Arrangements: How Institutions Shape Black
Julia Payson, Stanford University Elite Immigration Opinion
Casey Radostitz, Cornell University

162 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

How Race, Ethnicity, and Party Shape Policy Views and Chair: Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania
Engagement with MC's Disc: Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland, College Park
Jason P. Casellas, University of Houston
Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania Papers: Nanny State, Left and Right: The Ideological Roots of
Sophia Jordan Wallace, Rutgers University, New Bipartisan Prohibition
Brunswick Hans Noel, Georgetown University
Demographic Structure and the Political Economy of Partisan vs. Institutional Policy Conflict in American
Anti-Immigrant Legislation Political Development
Qinping Feng David Karol, University of Maryland
Dehumanization and the New Role of Biological Racism Ideas of Power: The Politics of American Party Ideology
in Politics Development
Ashley E. Jardina, Duke University Verlan Lewis, Stanford University
Spencer Piston, Syracuse University
What's the Big Idea? Ideological Framing and the Battle
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS over Public Narratives
62.30 RELIGION IN PUBLIC SPACE AND IN THE Justin H. Gross, University of Massachusetts-
PUBLIC SECTOR Amherst
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Chair: John R. Pottenger, University of Alabama in Huntsville DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
62.33 HOLDING INCUMBENTS ACCOUNTABLE FOR
Disc: John R. Pottenger, University of Alabama in Huntsville THE ECONOMY?
Laura R. Olson, Clemson University Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Chair: David Dreyer Lassen, University of Copenhagen
Papers: God and Caesar in Motion.Boundary Shifts between
Disc: Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern Denmark
Religion and Politics in Europe
Michael Minkenberg, European University Viadrina
Zeynep Yanasmayan, European University Viadrina Papers: Economic Spillovers of Partisan Polarization
Neil Malhotra, Stanford University
How Public Institutions Change: Religiosity Trends in Yotam Margalit, Tel Aviv University
Israeli Public Services Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania
Amos Zehavi, Tel Aviv University
Economic Voting and Time in Office
Divide within the Faithful: Rivalry among Islamic Martin Vinæs Larsen, University of Copenhagen
Groups and Democracy in Turkey
Ramazan Kilinc, University of Nebraska-Omaha Electoral Accountability in Multiparty Contests
Andrew C. Eggers, Nuffield College, Oxford
The Elusive Structure of State Secularism and its Nick Vivyan, Durham University
Disguised Critics Markus Wagner, University of Vienna
Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois at Chicago
Grievance Asymmetry in Economic Voting and Voter
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL Sophistication
SYSTEMS Ju Yeon Park, New York University
62.31 IDEOLOGICAL CONGRUENCE AND POLICY
RESPONSIVENESS DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Room: Hilton, Powell Room 62.34 CUEING OPINIONS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Chair: Royce A. Carroll, Rice University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
Disc: Royce A. Carroll, Rice University VOTING BEHAVIOR
Chair: Todd Davies, Stanford University
Papers: Congruence Astray: When and Why Ideological Disc: Carl L. Palmer, Illinois State University
Congruence Fails Elizabeth Suhay, Government, American University
G. Bingham Powell, University of Rochester
Congruence, Institutions and Citizens' Attitudes: A Papers: How Media Reports about Opinion Polls Influence
Multi-level Analysis Future Survey Respondents
Mirjam Dageförde, Sciences Po Paris Benjamin Toff
How Information Shapes Responsiveness: Evidence from The Dynamics of Public Opinion - Results from A Time
Elite Experiments Series Survey Experiment
D.J. Flynn, Northwestern University Stefan Dahlberg, Goteborg University
Is the Congruence a Product of a Representation or a Sveinung Arnesen, Department of Comparative
Persuasion? Politics, University of Bergen
Helen H Lee, Michigan State University Jonas Linde, Department of Comparative Politics,
University of Bergen
Daily Schedule

Policy Representation: Is Pulling the Lever All That


Matters? The Effects of Representations of Local Public Opinion
Jan E. Leighley, American University on Political Outcomes
Jennifer Oser, Ben-Gurion University David L Vannette, Stanford University
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND Sean Westwood, Princeton University
PARTIES When Does Information Enhance Opinion Quality?
62.32 PARTIES AND IDEOLOGIES IN AMERICAN Matt Luttig, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT Philip Gordon Chen, Macalester College
Room: Hilton, Imperial B

DAILY SCHEDULE 163


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND Papers: Vote Buying and Illegal Finance in Mexico: Persistence
POLITICS of Electoral Manipulation
62.35 SOCIAL MEDIA AND POLITICAL Gilles Serra, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia
PARTICIPATION Economicas
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I Incumbent Election Fraud: Observational and
Chair: Jaime E. Settle, College of William & Mary Experimental Evidence from Uganda
Disc: ariadne vromen, University of Sydney Danielle F. Jung, Emory University
James D. Long
Papers: How Social Media Reduces Mass Political Polarization Laura Maxwell, Emory University
Pablo Barbera, New York University Methods of Electoral Manipulation and Post-Electoral
Does Social Media Promote Civic Activism? Evidence Protest
from a Field Experiment Cole Harvey, UNC-Chapel Hill
Frank Schimmelfennig, ETH Zürich Paula Mukherjee, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
How Exposure to News via Social Media Increases
Civic Engagement Opposition Parties in Authoritarian Regimes: the Cases
Solomon Messing of Turkey and Mexico
Berk Esen, Sabanci University
A Theory of Informative Exchange: Social Media and Jose Antonio Hernandez Company, Instituto
Affective Polarization Tecnológico de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey
Jaime E. Settle, College of William & Mary
Why Electoral Manipulation Prevails: Evidence from
Does Social Media Usage Increase Political Knowledge? ChinaĀs Village Elections
Joshua A. Tucker, New York University Ting Luo, Leiden University
Patrick J. Egan, New York University
Jonathan Nagler, New York University DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
Kevin Munger, NYU 62.39 WHEN DO DICTATORS TREMBLE? THREAT
PERCEPTIONS UNDER AUTHORITARIAN RULE
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
62.36 REIMAGINING RADICAL POLITICS TODAY Chair: Andreas Schedler, CIDE, Mexico City
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Disc: Martin Dimitrov, Tulane University
Chair: Manfred B. Steger, University of Hawai'i-Manoa
Part: Bradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University Papers: Facing Contentious Waves: The Threat Perceptions of
Isaac Kamola, Trinity College Autocrats
Kathi Weeks, Duke University Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin
Nancy Sue Love, Appalachian State University
Katherine Young, University of Hawaii at Hilo Contextual Threat Perceptions: Protest in Southeast Asia
and the Middle East
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS Sofia Fenner, University of Chicago
62.37 STATE AND ANTI-STATE VIOLENCE, THEN Dan Slater, University of Chicago
AND NOW
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 Threat Perceptions, Coups, and State Violence: A
Comparison of Egypt and Chile
Chair: Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Montana
Jean Lachapelle, University of Toronto
Disc: Cullen S. Hendrix, University of Denver
Authoritarian Inferences about Societal Threats under
Preference Falsification
Papers: The Logic of Violence in State Building: Modern and Andreas Schedler, CIDE, Mexico City
Medieval Parallels
Deborah A. Boucoyannis, University of Virginia DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
62.40 IS THERE A HUMAN RIGHTS TRADITION IN
CHINA?
Comparing Post-Feudal Actors to Current Violent Non-
State Actors Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Ana Alves, Lee University
Abby Attia, Lee University Chair: Stephen Siu Kay On
Disc: Titus C. Chen, Institute of China and Asia-Pacific
Violence at the Margins: Propaganda of the Deed and
Studies, National Sun Yat-sen University
State Formation in Europe
Mark Alexander Shirk, University of Maryland
Papers: Treaties, INGOs, and the ĄThird Legď of Human Rights
Imperial Reforms and Early Nationalism in the Promotion
Habsburg and Ottoman Empires Ray Wang, National Chengchi University
Margarita H. Petrova, Institut Barcelona d'Estudis
Internacionals (IBEI) Bureaucratic Co-operation on Human Rights Policies in
the Chinese Party-state
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Gloria C. Yu
62.38 ELECTORAL MANIPULATION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 ChinaĀs Official ĄHuman Rightsď Discourse during the
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE Reform Era (1979-2012)
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Titus C. Chen, Institute of China and Asia-Pacific
Studies, National Sun Yat-sen University
Chair: Victor C. Shih, UCSD
Disc: Victor C. Shih, UCSD Human Rights and Labor Standards in FTAs between
China and Europe
Pawel Frankowski, Jagiellonian University

164 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

Is There a Human Right to Development in China? DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Stephen Siu Kay On 62.44 POLITICS IN MOVEMENT: INTERNATIONAL
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS MIGRATION AND POLITICAL CHANGE
62.41 EVALUATING QUALITATIVE EVIDENCE Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Chair: Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon
Chair: Ruxandra Paul, Harvard University
Disc: Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon
Disc: Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Papers: ĄTruth Is All I Want for History:ď Standards for
Evaluating Historical Research Papers: Voice after Exit: Patterns of Expatriate Voting in Post-
Amanda Joan Rothschild, Massachusetts Institute of 1980 Democracies
Technology and Harvard University Katrina Burgess, Tufts University
Determining the Weight of Evidence when Making Meeting Others - Accepting Others?
Inferences in Case Study Research Romana Careja, University of Southern Denmark
Derek Beach, University of Aarhus All Politics is (Trans)local: Redefining Constituencies in
The Structure of Description: the Elements of Historical an Age of Migration
Analysis Erica Dobbs, Swarthmore College
Marcus Kreuzer, Villanova University Intersectionalizing Supply and Demand: Ethnic Minority
Taking DA-RT to Heart: Bringing Data from the Field Political Representation
to Active Citation Liza Mugge, University of Amsterdam
Dessislava Kirilova, Syracuse University Citizens of the Market: High-Mobility Migration and its
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS Political Effects
62.42 PUBLIC OPINION, POLITICAL PARTICIPATION Ruxandra Paul, Harvard University
AND LGBT RIGHTS Related Groups
Room: Parc 55, Powell I 63.1 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
Caucus PHILOSOPHY: WAR, JUSTICE, AND PEACE IN
Chair: Kenneth Sherrill, Hunter College, CUNY AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Disc: Gary Mucciaroni, Temple University Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
Chair: Brian T. Kennedy, Claremont Institute
Papers: Direct and Secondary Interpersonal Contact, Disc: Paul O. Carrese, U.S. Air Force Academy
Ambivalence, and Transgender Rights Ryan P. Williams
Andrew R. Flores, UCLA School of Law
Disgust and LGBT Politics: Emotions, Subgroups, and Papers: The Unrealistic Realism of Richard Nixon and Henry
Public Opinion Kissinger
Logan S. Casey, University of Michigan Robert G. Kaufman, Pepperdine University
Identifying and Explaining the Participation Gap among Alexander Hamilton on War and Peace
LGBT Republicans Peter McNamara, Utah State University
Katherine McCabe, Princeton University The Peculiar Development of WilsonĀs Internationalism
Policy Biteback: Normalcy Frames, Public Opinion, and Ronald J. Pestritto, Hillsdale College
Same-Sex Marriage William Atto, University of Dallas
Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University Fighting in the Swamps: Jackson, Adams, and the
Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton University Principles and Practice of Republican Foreign Policy
Andrew Thomas Proctor, Princeton University David Tucker, Ashbrook Center
ĄGayď or ĄHomosexualď: The Policy Implications of 63.2 CONFERENCE GROUP ON ITALIAN POLITICS
Question Wording Effects AND SOCIETY: INSTITUTIONAL AND PARTY
Brianna A. Smith, University of Minnesota, Twin CHANGE IN ITALY IN A COMPARATIVE
Cities PERSPECTIVE
Matthew P. Motta, University of Minnesota, Twin Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Cities Chair: Laura Polverari, University of Strathclyde
Zein Murib, University of Minnesota Disc: John A. Agnew, University of California-Los Angeles
Marissa E Theys, University of Minnesota
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH Papers: The Emergence of New Forms of Populisms? Evidence
62.43 EXPERIMENTS IN VIOLENCE AND CONFLICT from Southern Europe
Room: Parc 55, Sutro Nuria Font, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona
Daily Schedule

Chair: A. Burcu Bayram, University of Texas Arlington Paolo Graziano, Bocconi University, Milan
Papers: Civilian Mobilization for Violence: Evidence from Myrto Tsakatika, University of Glasgow
Ukraine Are They in or Are They out: The Diversity of Forms of
Vera Mironova Political Participation and its Regulation Across Party
Sam Whitt Organisations
Giulia Sandri, Université Catholique de Lille
Felix-Christopher von Nostitz, University of Exeter

DAILY SCHEDULE 165


Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

The Political Outcomes of Candidate Selection Methods. Chair: Wilfred McClay, Center for the History of Liberty
The āParlamentarieĀ and their Impact on Italian MPs. Disc: David Lay Williams, DePaul University
Stefano Rombi, University of Cagliari Wilfred McClay, Center for the History of Liberty
Antonella Seddone, University of Cagliari
Matteo Renzi and the Long Road to Constitutional Papers: The Consistency of Rawlsian Liberalism with the Public
Reform in Italy Philosophy of the Founders
Martin J Bull, University of Salford Michael Pakaluk, Ave Maria University
63.3 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES: Reframing the Founding: Covenant and Natural Law
TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS, VOTING, AND rather than Covenant versus Natural Law
MASS OPINION Paul R. DeHart, Texas State University
Room: Hilton, Imperial A
Staunch Holism and the Declaration of Independence
Chair: Hans J. Stockton, University of Saint Thomas Kody Wayne Cooper, University of Missouri
Disc: Kharis Ali Templeman, Stanford University
Charles Chong-Han Wu, Hong Kong Baptist University- Friday, 2:30 PM to 4:30 PM
UIC APSA Events
64.1 WORKING GROUP MEETING: NSF/
Papers: Voter Turnout in Concurrent Elections: Does the SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTE/UPENN/UMD GRANT
Number of Ballots Matter? Room: Hilton, Green Room
Chi Huang, National Chengchi University
Kah-yew Lim, National Chengchi University Friday, 3:00 PM to 4:30 PM
Change and Continuity of National Identity and APSA Events
Partisanship in Taiwan, 1996-2014 65.1 CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS - AUTHOR
Eric Chen-hua Yu, National Chengchi University INTERVIEWS PART 3
(Taipei) Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
Jean Yu-chen Tseng, I-Shou University
65.2 JULIA CHOUCAIR VIZOSO COMMITTEE
Taiwan, Still as a Baseline Case Supporting for the MEETING (INVITATION ONLY)
Differing Mandate Hypothesis: An Analysis of Bill Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room
Sponsorship in the Legislative Yuan (1992-2012)
Jinhyeok Jang, University of Louisville Friday, 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM
Information Heterogeneity and Economic Voting in Theme Panels
Taiwan 66.1 BREAKING NEWS: BEYOND THE
Chia-yin Judy Wei, University of South Carolina CONFEDERATE FLAG: THE POLITICS OF RACE
Expansion of Education, Gender, and Political AND CIVIL RIGHTS AFTER THE CHARLESTON
Knowledge in Taiwan: 1993-2012 MASSACRE
Ya-Hui Luo Room: Hilton, Imperial A
63.4 LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION: Chair: Fredrick C. Harris, Columbia University
DEVELOPMENT, DEMOCRACY, AND Rick Valelly, Swarthmore College
SOCIOECONOMIC RIGHTS IN LATIN AMERICA Part: Robert Mickey, University of Michigan
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 Christopher S. Parker
Chair: Pablo Gonzalez Ulloa, Universidad Nacional Autonoma Vesla Mae Weaver, Yale University
de Mexico 66.2 MARRIAGE EQUALITY IN THE US: HOW DID
Papers: From Structural Violence to Emancipatory Migration: A WE GET HERE?
Critical Security Approach to Latin American Migration Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Peter Cruttenden, University of Nottingham Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
POLITICS
Civil Society in Mexico: A View from Civil Society
Organizations (CSO), Chair: Andrew S. Reynolds, University of North Carolina,
Pablo Gonzalez Ulloa, Universidad Nacional Chapel Hill
Autonoma de Mexico Part: Kenneth Sherrill, Hunter College, CUNY
Mapuche Rebellion in Chile since 1997: Land Andrew R. Flores, UCLA School of Law
Recoveries and Autonomy under a Centralized State Marc Solomon, Freedom to Marry
Esteban Valenzuela Van Treek Lee Badgett, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Kate Kendell, National Center for Lesbian Rights
63.5 LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDY
GROUP: ROUNDTABLE ON THE VOTING 66.3 WOMEN AND CHILDREN AND VIOLENT
RIGHTS ACT AT 50 EXTREMISM: VICTIMS TO VICTIMIZERS?
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Chair: Bernard N. Grofman, University of California, Irvine Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY
Part: Matt A. Barreto, University of California, Los Angeles
Chair: Mia M. Bloom, Georgia State University
Kareem Crayton, Crimcard Consulting Services
Pamela S. Karlan, Stanford Law School Disc: Scott Gates, PRIO
Derek Muller, Pepperdine University School of Law
63.6 PROJECT ON THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION: Papers: Suffer the little Children: Recruitment into Violent
LIBERALISM, ANTIQUITY, AND THE Extremist Groups
AMERICAN FOUNDING Mia M. Bloom, Georgia State University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20

166 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM

Rape and Marriage Inside Rebellion: Lessons from the Stanislav Markus, University of Chicago
RUF of Sierra Leone Henry E. Hale, George Washington University
Zoe Marks, University of Edinburgh Stephen E. Hanson, College of William and Mary
Governance and Disobedience: Sexual Violence in the Juliet Johnson, McGill University
LordĀs Resistance Army Thomas F. Remington, Emory University
Erin Baines, Liu Insitute for Global Issues Regine A. Spector, University of Massachusetts
Does Armed Conflict Undermine WomenĀs Health in DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Sub Saharan Africa? HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Henrik Urdal, Peace Research Institute Oslo 68.2 MACHIAVELLI, THE LAWS, AND LIBERTY
Gudrun Ostby, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) Room: Parc 55, Balboa
APSA Events Disc: Michelle Tolman Clarke, Dartmouth College
67.1 20TH ANNIVERSARY PLENARY: EVALUATING
THE REP SECTION’S IMPACT ON POLITICAL Papers: Machiavelli's Criticism of Venice and the Necessity of
SCIENCE Strong Laws and Spacesv
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 Alexandra E. Hoerl, Wabash College
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND MachiavelliĀs Nuovi Modi di Governi: His 1520-22
POLITICS Texts on Constitutional Reform
Chair: Ange-Marie Hancock, University of Southern California Mauricio Suchowlansky, University of Toronto
John Armando Garcia, University of Michigan The End of Politics: Machiavelli, Virtù, and Liberty as
Part: Tony Affigne, Providence College Mantenere lo Stato
Andy L. Aoki, Augsburg College Aaron Benjamin Cotkin, University of California,
Rodney E. Hero, University of California, Berkeley San Diego
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
Paula D. McClain, Duke University 68.3 A WITTGENSTEINIAN APPROACH TO
Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame POLITICAL THEORY
67.2 DO BLACKS LIVES MATTER?: ANALYZING Room: Hilton, Powell Room
POLICE KILLINGS OF UNARMED BLACK Chair: Tracy B. Strong, University of Southhampton
CITIZENS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D Disc: Tracy B. Strong, University of Southhampton
Chair: David C. Wilson, University of Delaware
Papers: Presenting and Representing
Part: Melina Abdullah, California State University, Los John G. Gunnell, University of California, Davis
Angeles
Juliet Hooker, University of Texas, Austin What on Earth is a āForm of LifeĀ?
Michael Leo Owens, Emory University Linda M.G. Zerilli, University of Chicago
Lateefah Simon, Rosenberg Foundation Wittgensteinian Paths around the Fact-Value Gap
E.J. Dionne, Washington Post and The Brookings Andrius Galisanka, Wake Forest University
Institution (Moderator) Seeing-Aspects and Concepts as Historical Institutions:
67.3 STRATEGIES FOR BALANCING YOUR The Case of Freedom
TEACHING AND RESEARCH AGENDAS David Owen, University of Southampton
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 Jonathan Havercroft, University of Southampton
Chair: Cameron G. Thies, Arizona State University DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Part: Maria Chavez, Pacific Lutheran University 68.4 CRISES OF POLITICS, THE POLITICS OF
Christina Elizabeth Bejarano, University of Kansas CRISES
67.4 THE ART OF ELECTIONS Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Room: Nikko, Carmel I Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
SCIENCE Chair: Jeanne Morefield, Whitman College
Chair: Nancy Sue Love, Appalachian State University Part: Hagar Kotef, SOAS, University of Lobdon
Part: Paul A. Passavant, Hobart & William Smith Colleges George M. Shulman, New York University
Benjamin Schoening, University of North Georgia Jodi Dean, Hobart & William Smith Colleges
Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles Jennifer C. Rubenstein, University of Virginia
Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
Division Panels 68.5 DEMOCRATIC CITIZENSHIP AND THE ETHICS
OF VOTING IN DIVERSE SOCIETIES
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
68.1 NEW DIRECTIONS IN RESEARCH ON STATES, Chair: Melissa A. Schwartzberg, New York University
Daily Schedule

MARKETS, AND INSTITUTIONS IN EURASIA Disc: Joseph Lacey, European University Institute
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Alan Patten, Princeton University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS Papers: Optional Citizenship for All
Co-sponsored by Russian Politics Group Helder De Schutter
Chair: Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania Lea Ypi, London School of Economics and Political
Science
Part: Susanne A. Wengle, University of Notre Dame

DAILY SCHEDULE 167


Friday, 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM

Must We Vote for the Common Good? Papers: Mapping the Constituent Power Doctrine in Latin
Annabelle Lever, University of Geneva America
Democracism David E. Landau, Florida State University
Nenad Stojanovic, University of Lucerne The Demise of the Icelandic Crowd-Sourced
Ethics of Polarization Constitutional Draft
Eric Beerbohm, Harvard University Anne Meuwese, Tilburg University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY The Problem of Citizen Participation in Democratic
68.6 THE MISSING (EMOTIONAL) LINK: Constitutional Change
EXPLAINING POLITICAL PARTICIPATION Gabriel L. Negretto, Centro de Investigación y
Room: Parc 55, Davidson Docencia Económicas
Chair: George E. Marcus, Williams College Restoration Constitution-Making
Disc: Johnathan Caleb Peterson, University of Nebraska- William Edmund Partlett, The Chinese University of
Lincoln Hong Kong
Constitution on Ice
Papers: Attack Politics and the Emotions of Participation and Thorvaldur Gylfason, University of Iceland
Disaffection DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Paul DeBell, Ohio State University 68.9 NEW FRONTIERS IN RESOURCE POLITICS
The Numbing Effect of Anxiety in Contemporary Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Societies Chair: Benjamin Smith, University of Florida
Lena Wangnerud, University of Gothenburg Disc: Kevin M. Morrison, University of Pittsburgh
Monika Djerf-Pierre, JMG, University of Gothenburg
Maria Solevid, University of Gothenburg Papers: The Politics of Gasoline Prices
Life Satisfaction and System Support ĉ Why Happy Michael L. Ross, University of California, Los
Citizens Are Good for Democracy Angeles
Peter Esaiasson, University of Gothenburg Of Desperate States and Oil Plays: Azerbaijan's
Andrej Kokkonen, University of Gothenburg Endogenous Oil Sector
Mikael Gilljam, University of Gothenburg Victor Menaldo
Stefan Dahlberg, Goteborg University Nora Webb Williams, University of Washington
The psychology of repression: Emotions, risk attitudes, Oil Wealth, Order and Conflict: Evidence from New
and collective action Data
Lauren E Young, Columbia University Benjamin Smith, University of Florida
Explaining Political Participation: Israelis and Pipelines and Regime Stability in Transit Countries: A
Palestinians Curse or a Benefit?
Shani Fachter, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Ruchan Kaya, Caspian Strategy Institute
Amal Jamal, Tel-Aviv University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY 68.10 THE RISE OF CITIES: AN URBAN TURN IN THE
68.7 THE POLITICS OF WAGES AND LABOR STUDY OF INDIAN POLITICS
REGULATION Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Chair: Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES Disc: Atul Kohli, Princeton University
James A. Morone, Brown University
Chair: Alexander Kuo, Cornell University
Disc: Alexander Kuo, Cornell University
Papers: Does Citizenship Abate Class in Urban India?
Siddharth Swaminathan, Azim Premji University
Papers: Business Preferences over Labor Market Policies. Firm- Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
level evidence
Jose Fernandez-Albertos, CSIC Does Ethnicity Undercut Class in the City? Urban
Dulce Manzano, Complutense University of Madrid Migrants in India
Tariq Thachil, Yale University
The Politics of Low-Wage Work in the Wealthy West
Matthew Dimick, SUNY Buffalo Law School Being Middle Class in India
Brett Meyer, Columbia University Devesh Kapur, University of Pennsylvania
Neelanjan Sircar, Columbia University
The Politics of Time Milan Vaishnav, Carnegie Endowment for
Magnus Bergli Rasmussen, Aarhus University International Peace
The Politics of Welfare Retrenchment in the Context of DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Fiscal Consolidation
Patrick Donnelly, University of California, Berkeley
68.11 POLITICS OF SOCIAL PROVISION
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Room: Nikko, Monterey II
68.8 CONSTITUTION MAKING IN DEMOCRATIC Chair: Veronica Herrera, University of Connecticut
CONSTITUTIONAL ORDERS
Disc:
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Veronica Herrera, University of Connecticut
Chair: Todd A. Eisenstadt, American University
Disc: Julio Rios-Figueroa, CIDE

168 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM

Papers: Political Networks, Local Democracy and India's Rural DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
Employment Guarantee 68.14 PARTY COMPETITION AND THE WELFARE
Aditya Dasgupta STATE
Social Policy, Survey Design, and Spillovers: CCTs and Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Confidence In Brazil Chair: Christoffer Green-Pedersen, University of Aarhus
Elizabeth Kaknes, University of Virginia Disc: Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
Spilling Over Every Side: An Analysis of Transfers and
Elections in Brazil Papers: Electoral realignment and the Position of Social
Andrew Philips, Texas A&M University Democratic Parties
Guy D. Whitten, Texas A&M University Silja Haeusermann, University of Zurich
The Pension-Finance Nexus in Latin America Politicized Welfare. When Do Cutbacks become an
Giselle Datz, Virginia Tech Election Theme?
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING Christoffer Green-Pedersen, University of Aarhus
Carsten Jensen, Aarhus University
COUNTRIES
68.12 VIOLENCE IN CONTENTIOUS PROCESSES New Wine in Old Bottles
Room: Parc 55, Lombard Jonathan Polk, University of Gothenburg
Chair: Adria Lawrence, Yale University Jan Rovny, Sciences Po, Paris
Disc: Christian Davenport, University of Michigan Party Competition and Welfare State Calibration
Tarik Abou-Chadi, Humboldt University Berlin
Papers: The Dynamics of Escalation in Syria Ellen M. Immergut, Humboldt University Berlin
Laia Balcells, Duke University The Politics of Delivering Welfare Services at the Local
Jonah Schulhofer-Wohl, University of Virginia Level: The British Case
Lionel Beehner Melodie Chika Ogawa, Harvard University
Violence within Revolutionary Episodes, 1900-2012 DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Mark Beissinger, Princeton University 68.15 NETWORKS IN THE WORLD ECONOMY
Resources, Mobilization, and Repression Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex Chair: Sarah Bauerle Danzman, Indiana University -
Roman-Gabriel Olar, University of Essex Bloomington
Local power relations and violence in the Syrian Disc: Kevin Young, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
uprising
Kevin Mazur, Princeton University Papers: A Network Approach to explaining Credit Rationing
Beyond Civil War and Peace: Armed Politics and the Jonas Bunte, University of Texas at Dallas
Study of Conflict Brandon J. Kinne, University of California, Davis
Paul Staniland, University of Chicago A System of Crises: Financial Crises and Structural
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
Change
Tristin Beckman, University of California, Santa
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES Barbara
68.13 RESPONSES TO THE RISE OF CHINA IN
ADVANCED INDUSTRIALIZED DEMOCRACIES Dyadic Trade Disputes: Network Analysis of the WTO
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 Dispute Settlement Body
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL Nathan Slater, Old Dominion University
POLITICAL ECONOMY David C. Earnest, Old Dominion University
Disc: Benjamin I. Page, Northwestern University Network Externalities, Power Asymmetry, and the
Taxation of Multinationals
Papers: Domestic Politics of U.S. Pressure over ChinaĀs Vincent Arel-Bundock, Université de Montréal
Currency Manipulation Networked Production and Political Influence
Jessica Chen Weiss, Yale University Sarah Bauerle Danzman, Indiana University -
Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University Bloomington
Spontaneous or Organized Backlash? The Politics of DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
FDI Screening in the U.S. 68.16 WHEN THE MUSIC'S OVER: FINANCIAL
Brandice Canes-Wrone, Princeton University REGULATION IN THE POST-CRISIS ERA
Lauren Mattioli, Princeton University Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Sophie Meunier, Princeton University Chair: Philip G. Cerny, Manchester/Rutgers
Rising Import Competition and Congressional Voting Disc: Ranjit Lall
Towards China
John Seungmin Kuk, UCSD
Daily Schedule

Papers: International Institutions, Information and Financial


Deborah Seligsohn Markets
Jiakun Jack Zhang, UC San Diego Michael Breen, Dublin City University
Who Fears the Dragon? Australian and Japanese Views Iain McMenamin, Dublin City University
of China The Causes and Consequences of International Financial
Charles Miller Regulatory Transparency
Power Transitions and the Perception of Threat: ChinaĀs Mark Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Rise and American Angst
Peter Hays Gries, University of Oklahoma

DAILY SCHEDULE 169


Friday, 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM

Financial Market Regulation and the Debt Economy: Disc: Nicholas Martini, University of Iowa
The Case of Derivatives
Philip G. Cerny, Manchester/Rutgers Papers: A Prelude to Violence? : The Impact of Nationalism on
Institutions and Credit Rating Agencies: Does Foreign Policy Preference
Regulatory Quality Matter? Jiyoung Ko, Yale University
Sean D. Ehrlich, Florida State University A Unifying Model of the Media as a Political Tool
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION Andrea E. Jones-Rooy, New York University
68.17 NEW MODES OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Shanghai
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 Attitudes toward Homosexuality and Perceptions of the
Chair: Tobias Hofmann, University of Utah U.S. Abroad
Disc: Moonhawk Kim, University of Colorado, Boulder Myunghee Kim, University of Central Florida
Nikola Mirilovic, University of Central Florida
Papers: "Groupification" of Governance: Actor Diversity and Beyond Community: Does Internal Equality Reduce
Institutional Fragmentation External Conflict?
Lora Anne Viola, Free University of Berlin Kathleen Powers, Dartmouth College
BRICS NGOs and Global Governance: Ascendance or Mediated Dehumanization as a Necessary Condition for
Absence? War
Laura A. Henry, Bowdoin College Douglas A. VanBelle, Victoria University of
Lisa McIntosh Sundstrom, University of British Wellington
Columbia DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Priya Bala-Miller, University of British Columbia 68.20 INTERNATIONAL POLITICS AND THE
Varieties of Indirect Governance DOMESTIC POLITICAL BARGAIN
Kenneth W. Abbott, Arizona State University Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
Philipp Genschel, Jacobs University Bremen Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
Duncan Snidal, Nuffield College, Oxford SECURITY
Bernhard Zangl Chair: Amanda A. Licht, Binghamton University
Clubs of Clubs: A Networks Approach to the Logic of Disc: Amanda A. Licht, Binghamton University
Membership in IGOs
Brian D. Greenhill, Dartmouth College Papers: Presence and Promise: Strategic Aid and Foreign-
Equality Among Whom?: State-based Representation in Induced Regime Change
an Era of Global Governance Daniel McCormack, University of Pennsylvania
Dane K. Imerman, Denison University Leader Incentives for Conflict Selection and
Theorizing and Assessing post-2008 IMF-World Bank Mobilization
Collaboration Jeff Carter, University of Mississippi
Bessma Momani, University of Waterloo The Missing Military: International Conflict and
Mark Hibben, Saint Joseph's College Domestic Political Bargaining
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Douglas M. Gibler, University of Alabama,
68.18 CONFLICT AND COOPERATION: DOMESTIC Tuscaloosa
AND INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES Does Statebuilding Work? Military Intervention & the
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 Lifespan of Reformed States
Disc: Karen Ruth Adams, University of Montana David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Kelly Matush, University of California, San Diego
Papers: Conflict and Cooperation under Anarchy International Politics by Other Means: External Sources
James D. Fearon, Stanford University of Civil War Escalation
Useful Ignorance: The Benefits of Uncertainty During Mark Toukan, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Power Shifts Strategic Differentiation: The Use of Nonviolence and
Kyle Haynes, Webster University Violence in Conflict
Complementary Commitment Problems, War, and Victoria McGroary, Brandeis University
International Political Structure DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Patrick J. McDonald, University of Texas, Austin 68.21 OPPOSITION COHESION AND STRUCTURE
Taking Women Seriously: A Gendered Understanding of Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Crisis Bargaining Chair: Christopher K. Butler, University of New Mexico
Abby Post, University of Virginia Disc: Christopher K. Butler, University of New Mexico
Paromita Sen, University of Virginia
Status, Humiliation and Territorial Conquest Papers: Cooperation Failure: Rebel Fragmentation and
Joslyn N. Barnhart, Wesleyan University Splintering
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Adrian Arellano, University of Michigan
68.19 THE EFFECT OF INCLUSION AND EXCLUSION Explaining the Origins of Army-Splinter Wars
ON FOREIGN POLICY ATTITUDES Theodore D. McLauchlin, Université de
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 Montréal
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL How State Sponsors Affect Insurgent Cohesion and
PSYCHOLOGY Fragmentation
Chair: Nicholas Martini, University of Iowa Henning Tamm, University of Oxford

170 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM

Size, Diversity, and Overlap: Social Structures of Civil Disc: Drew Thomas Halfmann, UC Davis Sociology
Resistance Sally Friedman, SUNY, Albany
Ches Thurber, University of Chicago
The Enemy Within: Causes of Fragmentation in Papers: Learning Where We Stand: How School Experiences
Separatist Movements Matter for Political Inequality
Feike Elizabeth Maria Fliervoet, European University Sarah Bruch
Institute Joe Soss, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES Policy Tools, Policy Targets, and Racial Stereotypes
68.22 LOYALTY, UNITY AND PARLIAMENTARY Jake Haselswerdt, University of Michigan
BEHAVIOR Social Policy and Local Political Activism
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 Jamila D. Michener, Cornell University
Chair: Taeko Hiroi, University of Texas at El Paso DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
Disc: Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel RELATIONS
Yael Shomer, Tel Aviv University 68.25 FEDERALISM, POLICY, AND PARTISANSHIP
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Papers: Governing Coalition Agreement and Party Unity in the Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism
British House of Commons Chair: Pamela Clouser McCann, University of Southern
Brian Donald Williams, University of California, California
Riverside
Disc: Pamela Clouser McCann, University of Southern
Legislative Dissent in Congressional Votes California
Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston Scott L. Greer, University of Michigan
Playing Truant in Pairs? Parliamentary Vote Pairing
Zoltan Fazekas, University of Southern Denmark Papers: Due Process and Intergovernmental Waivers: The Case
Martin Ejnar Hansen, Brunel University London of No Child Left Behind
To Vote or Not to Vote: How Salience Makes a James C. Clinger, Murray State University
Difference. Federalism and Representation in the United States
Carmen Le Foulon, Pontifica Universidad Católica de Senate
Chile Michael W. Hail, Morehead State University
The Role of District in Partisan Legislatures Federalism, Agency Survival, and the NEA in the 1990s
Thomas Zittel, Goethe-University Frankfurt Gordon E. Shockley, Arizona State University
Annika Hennl, Goethe University Frankfurt The Contingencies of Medicaid Coverage: Partisanship
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS and the Use of Waivers
68.23 INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE: PRESIDENTIAL Mark C. Hines, Georgetown University
APPOINTEES AND POLITICAL DECISIONS The Limits of Partisan Federalism in the New Deal Era
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Adam Myers, Providence College
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 24: PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
Chair: Karen M. Hult, Virginia Tech 68.26 GOVERNOR BEHAVIOR
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
Disc: Thomas R. Boudrot, Delta College
Chair: Nelson C. Dometrius, Texas Tech University
Papers: (No?) Experience Required: Explaining GovernorsĀ Uses
Papers: How Do You Know? The Epistemology of White House
of Executive Power
Expertise
Mitchell Dylan Sellers
Kenneth R. Mayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Charles G. Shields, University of Florida
The Dynamics of Appointee Characteristics over Intra-
Appealing Politics: Governors āGoing PublicĀ
Presidential Time
Timothy Herbert Callaghan, University of Minnesota
Evan Haglund, US Coast Guard Academy
Do Outsiders Have It Harder? GovernorsĀ Background
Inside the Oval Office: Decision-Making in the Modern
and Success in Office
Presidency
Rafael Jacob, Temple University
Matthew N. Beckmann, University of California,
Irvine Just Ambitious as the Next Guy: Career Decisions of
State Executive
Decision Making in the Obama White House: Structures,
Emily O Wanless, Augustana College
Staff, Internal Mobility
Shirley Anne Warshaw, Gettysburg College Too Little Time to Lose?: The Effect of Professionalism
on Gubernatorial Success
A Political Clearinghouse: Organizational & Presidential
Samantha Guthrie, American University
Effects in OIRA Review
Daily Schedule

Daniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS


Jesse Gubb, Harvard University 68.27 SPATIAL DYNAMICS AND POLITICAL ORDER
IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Room: Parc 55, Stockton
68.24 RACE, INEQUALITY, AND PUBLIC POLICY
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS Chair: Meg E. Rithmire, Harvard Business School
Chair: Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania Disc: Meg E. Rithmire, Harvard Business School

DAILY SCHEDULE 171


Friday, 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM

Papers: Governing the Informal? Pacification and Slum Neoliberalism, Secularism, and Religious Freedom
Redevelopment in Rio de Janeiro Matthew Scherer, George Mason University
Yue Zhang, University of Illinois - Chicago DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
The Political Topology of The Global City SYSTEMS
Theresa Enright, University of Toronto 68.30 ELECTORAL SYSTEMS AND POLICY
Metrics of Exceptionality in Mao's China POSITIONS
Christian Phillip Sorace, Hobart and William Smith Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Colleges Chair: Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University
Neighborhoods against the State: Urban Policy and Disc: Ko Maeda, University of North Texas
Violent Protest in France
Michalis Moutselos, Princeton University Papers: Analyzing the Effect of Electoral Systems on the Policy
Building Rights: Urban Renewal and Contested Appeals of Green Parties
Citizenship in Cairo and Istanbul Cory Belden, UC Davis
Sarah El-Kazaz, Oberlin College Candidate Positioning Under Proportional and
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Majoritarian Electoral Systems
68.28 RECONSIDERING GENDER, DIVERSITY, AND Amy Louise Catalinac, New York University
ACCESS TO PUBLIC OFFICE On Observing the Variety of Party Policy Offerings in
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 Left-Right Policy Space
Chair: Zoe M. Oxley, Union College Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton University
Disc: Zoe M. Oxley, Union College Mert Moral, Binghamton University
Jaclyn J. Kettler, Boise State University The Ideological Personal Vote: Candidate Position-
taking in Open List PR
Papers: Diversity and Access to Statewide Executive Office in Mathias Tromborg, Rice University
the United States Royce A. Carroll, Rice University
Kira Sanbonmatsu, Rutgers University, New DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
Brunswick PARTIES
Diversity on High Courts: International Influences on 68.31 PARTIES' ISSUE POSITION AND EMPHASIS
Women's Appointments STRATEGIES
Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Valerie J. Hoekstra, Arizona State University Papers: Issue Ownership ĉ More than Party Identification?
Alice Kang, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Alexandra Feddersen, Department of Political
Miki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State University Science and International Relations - University of
WomenĀs Emergence and Success in U.S. State Geneva
Legislative Elections Simon Lanz, Department of Political Science and
Adrienne Smith, University of Tennessee International Relations, University of Geneva
Jason H. Windett, Saint Louis University Multiculturalism in Europe: Issue Evolution, Parties and
Jonathan Winburn, University of Mississippi Party Systems
"Navigating the Pipeline: The Path of Latinas in Elected Constanza Sanhueza Petrarca, University of
Office" Mannheim
Ricardo Ramirez, University of Notre Dame The Mass-elite Linkage and Issue Ownership: When Do
Carmen Burlingame, University of Notre Dame Voters Respond to Parties?
Gendered Political Experience and the Success of Henrik Bech Seeberg, University of Aarhus
Female Gubernatorial Candidates What is the Issue about? Party Competition over
Stephen J. Stambough, California State University, Framing
Fullerton Alexandra Feddersen, Department of Political
Valerie R. O'Regan, California State University, Science and International Relations - University of
Fullerton Geneva
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS To Adapt or To Disregard? PartiesĀ Reactions to
68.29 RELIGION, LAW AND DEMOCRACY External Shocks
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23 Patricia Calca, Mannheim University
Chair: Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina, Chapel Martin Gross, University of Mannheim
Hill DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Disc: Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina, Chapel 68.32 KNOWLEDGE, INFORMATION, AND POLITICAL
Hill ATTITUDES
Ahmet T. Kuru, San Diego State University Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Chair: Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Muslims' Commitment to Democracy after Communism Disc: Scott Matthews, Memorial University
Arolda Elbasani, EUI
Islamic Law and the Struggle for Justice in Somalia Papers: A Simple, Informational Explanation for the Incumbency
Mark Fathi Massoud, UC Santa Cruz Advantage
Religion, Politics and Law: Lessons from the Kenya Anthony Fowler, University of Chicago
2010 Referendum
Christopher Rhodes, College of the Holy Cross

172 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM

On the Stability and Consequences of Political Attitudes DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
Patrick Fournier, Universite de Montreal ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Peter John Loewen 68.35 CLIMATE POLITICS AND PREFERENCES FOR
The Correlates of Correct Party Placement on Issues by DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL POLICY
Voters Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Yves Dejaeghere, Universiteit Antwerpen Chair: Leah Stokes, UCSB
The People's Court? Incorrect Voting in State Supreme Disc: Megan Mullin, Duke University
Court Elections
Conor M. Dowling, University of Mississippi Papers: CitizensĀ, ScientistsĀ, and Policy AdvisorsĀ Beliefs about
Michael G. Miller, Barnard College Global Warming
Voter Knowledge of State Legislatures Toby Bolsen, Georgia State University
Steven Rogers, Saint Louis University Fay Lomax Cook, National Science Foundation
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION Cost-Effectiveness and Preferences for International
68.33 PARTIES, PERCEPTIONS AND PUBLIC OPINION Climate Transfers
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I Mark Buntaine, University of California, Santa
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND Barbara
VOTING BEHAVIOR Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
Chair: Heather L. Ondercin, University of Mississippi Business Preferences Over Climate Regulations and
Disc: Heather L. Ondercin, University of Mississippi Carbon Pricing
Federica Genovese, University of Essex
Endre M. Tvinnereim, Uni Research Rokkan Center
Papers: Data for Some, Values for Others: Individual
Differences in Political Persuasion The Use of Moral Frames and International Support for
Vittorio Merola, Ohio State University Climate Change Action
Matthew P. Hitt, Louisiana State University Jeffry Miles Burnam, Georgetown University
Partisanship, Policy, and Public Opinion Toward Torture Government structures & Policy Output: Organizing for
Paul Gronke, Reed College Climate Change
Peter Miller, University of Pennsylvania Thurid Hustedt
Party Cues and VotersĀ Policy Stances. A Natural DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
Experiment 68.36 RETHINKING FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY IN
Stefaan Walgrave THE MODERN STATE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Party and Perception: Connecting Opinions on Guns &
Violence to Actual Violence Chair: Lee Ward, Campion College, University of Regina
Joshua J. Dyck, University of Massachusetts Lowell Disc: Anthony D. Bartl, Angelo State University
Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz, University of Rhode Michael A. Mosher, University of Tulsa
Island
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Papers: Privacy and the Postmodern: Literary Representations of
68.34 NEW DATA SOURCES (AND INTERESTING Privacy
PAPERS!) IN POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Robert Michael Pallitto, Seton Hall University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 The Aliens Among Us: The Anti-Jim Crow Literature of
Chair: Matthew Bergbower, Indiana State University George Washington Cable
Disc: Johanna Dunaway, Louisiana State University James M. Patterson, Gettysburg College
Stephen J. Farnsworth, University of Mary Washington Unlikely Bedfellows?: Women and the National Security
State
Papers: Publicity and the De-legitimation of Lynching Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University
Michael Weaver, Yale University Linda Beail, Point Loma Nazarene University
The Mechanisms of Twitter Audience Reach Machiavelli, The Hunger Games, and the Art of
Jean-Yves Dormagen, Universite de Montpellier Dictatorship
Julien Boyadjian, Université de Montpellier Michael J. Faber, Texas State University
Marie Neihouser Good Kill? A Study of Air War in American Film
Social Networks, Big Data, and Intermedia Agenda Cora Sol Goldstein, California State University, Long
Setting Beach
Philip Habel, University of Glasgow DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
Anjie Fang 68.37 IDEAS IN TRANSNATIONAL SPACE
Crowd-sourced Journalism: Digital Participation Under Room: Parc 55, Mason
Chair: Eric Grynaviski, George Washington University
Daily Schedule

the Threat of Violence


Tara Buss, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Eric Grynaviski, George Washington University
Using Open Source News Collections for Political
Science Research Papers: Norm Strength and the Norm Life Cycle
Paul Franz Testa, University of Illinois at Urbana- Michal Ben-Josef Hirsch, Wellesley College
Champaign Jennifer M. Dixon, Villanova University
Scott L. Althaus, University of Illinois at Urbana- Political Dimensions of 9/11 Narratives in History
Champaign Textbooks Worldwide
Leslie Caughell, Virginia Wesleyan College Elizabeth Danielle Herman, UC Berkeley

DAILY SCHEDULE 173


Friday, 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM

Revolutionary Waves: The International Effects of Papers: Measuring the International Economy: Quantitative,
Threatened Domestic Order Qualitative & Big Data
Chad Nelson, Brigham Young University Mark Peter Dallas, Union College
Reaching Across the Border: Internationalizing Integrating Social Network and Institutional Analysis to
Citizenship as Domestic Strategy Study Firm Performance
Hadas Aron, Columbia University Gerald A. McDermott, University of South Carolina
Emily Holland Value Chain Analysis and the Politics of Institutional
Diffusion or Modernization? The Sources of Death Change in East Asia
Penalty Abolition Since 1945 Douglas B. Fuller, Zhejiang University
Seva Gunitsky, University of Toronto Multiple Sources & Levels of Analysis in Firm-Centered
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Comparative Research
68.38 FORMAL APPROACHES TO ELECTIONS AND Caroline E. Arnold, CUNY-Brooklyn College
POWER IN DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY How Globally Interconnected Businesses Transform
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 National Political Economies
Chair: Alberto Simpser, ITAM Gary Herrigel, University of Chicago
Disc: Avidit R. Acharya DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
Peter L. Lorentzen, University of California, Berkeley 68.41 THE POLITICS OF HEALTH KNOWLEDGE
Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Papers: The Propagandist's Curse Chair: Joseph White, Case Western Reserve University
Andrew Little, Cornell University Disc: Mark Schlesinger, Yale University
Strategic Election Monitoring
Arturas Rozenas, New York University Papers: An Analysis of the Use of Health Knowledge in Roberts
Foreign Support and Electability Court Decisions
Milan Svolik, Yale University Daniel Skinner, Ohio University
Nikolay V. Marinov, University of Mannheim Leah Sheridan, Ohio University
Shocks, Skills, and Political Stability in Authoritarian Impossible Politics? PCORI and the Search for
Regimes Comparative Effectiveness Research
Victor C. Shih, UCSD Ann C. Keller, University of California-Berkeley
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS Partisan Processing of Public Health Messages:
68.39 INNOVATIONS IN HR DATA COLLECTION Motivated Reasoning and Big Soda
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Sarah E. Gollust, University of Minnesota, Twin
Chair: Audrey Lynn Comstock, Cornell University Cities
Disc: Jeannette Money, University of California, Davis Colleen L. Barry, Johns Hopkins University
Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell University
Papers: A New Dataset on State Practices towards Refugees: Medicare Coverage for Beta Amyloid PET Imaging: The
1991-2009 Battle Over Evidence
Katherine Felt, Binghamton University (SUNY) Karen Maschke, The Hastings Center
Michael K. Gusmano, The Hastings Center
Amplification Advocacy: The Media Potential of HROs
David R. Davis, Emory University Judicial Interventions in Health Policy: Epistemic
Baekkwan Park, Emory Competence and the Courts
Amanda Marie Murdie, University Leticia Morales, McGill Institute for Health and
Social Policy
Coding and Classifying Rendition Flights: Foreign
Complicity Post-9/11 DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Rebecca Elizabeth Cordell, University of Essex 68.42 "BRIDGES AND CUL DE SACS: NAVIGATING
MIGRATION STUDIES ACROSS THE
Dying for the Story: An Analysis of the Killings of SUBFIELDS"
Journalists, 1992-2012 Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Geoffrey P.R. Wallace, Rutgers University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
Variations in Shame: An Automated Text Analysis of POLITICS
Human Rights Reporting Chair: Sara Wallace Goodman, University of California, Irvine
Rochelle Layla Terman, University of California
Part: Louis DeSipio
Berkeley
Matthew Wright, American University
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS Erin Aeran Chung, Johns Hopkins University
68.40 FIRMS AS ACTORS IN CONTEMPORARY Maarten P. Vink, Maastricht University
CAPITALISM: INNOVATIONS IN CONCEPT AND Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University
METHOD Irene Bloemraad, University of California, Berkeley
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Related Groups
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES 69.1 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:
TAIWAN'S EXTERNAL POLICIES AND CROSS-
Chair: John Zysman, UC Berkeley STRAIT RELATIONS
Disc: Kenji Kushida Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Chair: Shelley Rigger, Davidson College
Disc: Dennis Hickey, Missouri State University

174 DAILY SCHEDULE


Friday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM

Yuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan University 69.4 LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, AND TRANSGENDER
CAUCUS: LGBTQ POLITICS AND POLITICAL
Papers: Assessing the US Pivot to Asia: Implications for US- SCIENCE: A CRITICAL ASSESSMENT
China-Taiwan Trilateral Relations and TaiwanĀs ROUNDTABLE
Strategic Choices Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Elizabeth Freund Larus, University of Mary Chair: Susan R. Burgess, Ohio University
Washington Part: Martha A. Ackelsberg, Smith College
The Meaning of Taiwan Independence: Generational Marla Brettschneider, University of New Hampshire
Differences Christine Keating
T.Y. Wang, Illinois State University Charles Smith, University of California, Irvine
Su-Feng Cheng, National Chengchi University Jami K. Taylor, University of Toledo
Julie Elizabeth Moreau, Northern Arizona University
Friend or Foe? The Image of China in Taiwan
Chung-li Wu, Academia Sinica
Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas
Ted Chen, Pennsylvania State University
Jerry D. Thomas, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Hsiao-Chien Tsui
Melissa Meade, Colby-Sawyer College
69.5 POLITICAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION OF
IRELAND (PSAI): IRELAND: WHERE ARE WE
Mass Media and National Identity
Chia-Yu Tsai, Mannheim University NOW?
How Do Chinese Citizens Perceive the Cross-Strait Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Relations: Survey Results from 10 Major Cities in China Chair: Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside
Hsin-Hsin Pan, Michigan State University
Disc:
Wen-Chin Wu, Academia Sinica
Shane Martin, University of Leicester
Yu-tzung Chang, National Taiwan University
Gail McElroy, Trinity College, Dublin
69.2 GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICAL Papers: Historicizing an Understanding of IrelandĀs
SCIENTISTS: CATCHING TIGERS AND FLIES:
Contemporary Identity
XI JINPING AND THE RULE OF LAW IN CHINA
Timothy Jerome White, Xavier University
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Chair: Larry Diamond, Stanford University The Evolution of CitizensĀ Attitudes Towards Questions
of Reform: A Study of Attitudinal Shifts among
Disc: Fei-Ling Wang, Georgia Institute of Technology Members of the Irish Constitutional Convention
David M. Farrell, University College Dublin, Belfield
Papers: Contentious Veterans: ChinaĀs Retired Officers Speak Clodagh Harris, University College Cork
Out Eoin O'Malley, Dublin City University
Kevin J. O' Brien, UC-Berkeley Jane Suiter, Dublin City University
Neil Diamant, Dickinson College
Class, Clientelism and Machines in Pre- and Post-
Reemergence of Neo-authoritarianism and Reforms Austerity Ireland: To What Extent is Declining Turnout
under Xi Jinping Uniform and What Explains It? Evidence from Four
He Li, Merrimack College Second Order Elections in Ireland
Building a Rule by Law or Sinking into Neotraditional Gary Murphy, Dublin City University
Sclerosis: Reform Politics of Chinese Civil and Criminal Eoin O'Malley, Dublin City University
Law Where Stands the Republic: Economic Crisis and
William Hurst, Northwestern University Democratic Malaise in Ireland
Anti-corruption Campaign or Political Purge?: Xi Theresa Reidy, University College Cork
JinpingĀs Tiger
Andrew Wedeman, Georgia State University Friday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM
69.3 GREEN POLITICS AND THEORY: NARRATIVES APSA Events
OF ECOLOGY: ANIMAL, VEGETABLE, 70.1 CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE RELATED
MINERAL GROUP BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Chair: Tony Affigne, Providence College 70.2 COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION SECTION
Disc: Michael Lipscomb, Winthrop University BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Papers: Thinking Like a Swampthing: The Tension in Creating a 70.3 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES
Deep Ecological Superhero BUSINESS MEETING
Sean Parson, Northern Arizona University Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Green Political Thought and the Pastoral 70.4 CONFLICT PROCESSES SECTION BUSINESS
Matthew Lepori, National University of Singapore MEETING
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Daily Schedule

Value and Growth: Rethinking Basic Concepts


Jennifer L. Bailey, Norwegian University of Science 70.5 ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR SECTION
and Technology BUSINESS MEETING
May Thorseth, Norwegian University of science and Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
technology, NTNU 70.6 FOREIGN POLICY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room

DAILY SCHEDULE 175


Friday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM

70.7 FRENCH POLITICS GROUP & ASSOCIATION 70.27 WOMEN AND POLITICS RESEARCH SECTION
FRANCAISE DE SCIENCE POLITIQUE RELATED BUSINESS MEETING
GROUP BUSINESS MEETING Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Room: Parc 55, Stockton 70.28 WOMEN’S CAUCUS ON POLITICAL SCIENCE
70.8 GAUS LECTURE BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
70.9 GREEN POLITICS AND THEORY RELATED
GROUP BUSINESS MEETING Friday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM
Room: Parc 55, Mason APSA Events
70.10 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS 71.1 JACK MILLER CENTER RECEPTION
CONTROL SECTION BUSINESS MEETING Room: Offsite, Sir Francis Drake Franciscan Ballroom
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 71.2 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE LECTURE: BEHIND
70.11 INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES AND THE KITCHEN DOOR, FEATURING SARU
METHODS RELATED GROUP BUSINESS JAYARAMAN, DIRECTOR OF THE FOOD
MEETING LABOR RESEARCH CENTER, UC BERKELEY
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Room: Hilton, Imperial A
70.12 LABOR PROJECT RELATED GROUP BUSINESS
MEEETING
Friday, 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM
Room: Parc 55, Davidson APSA Events
70.13 LATINO/A CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE 72.1 MPSA 2016 PROGRAM COMMITTEE
RELATED GROUP BUSINESS MEETING MEETING & RECEPTION
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore Room: Parc 55, Market Street
70.14 LAW AND COURTS SECTION BUSINESS Friday, 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM
MEETING
APSA Events
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
73.1 CORNELL UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF
70.15 MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP SECTION
GOVERNMENT RECEPTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
73.2 DUKE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF
70.16 POLITICAL COMMUNICATION SECTION
POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
73.3 LEGISLATIVE STUDIES SECTION BUSINESS
70.17 POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
MEETING
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
73.4 POLITICAL EPISTEMOLOGY SECTION
70.18 POLITICAL METHODOLOGY SECTION
RECEPTION
BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
73.5 THE REVIEW OF POLITICS AT THE
70.19 POLITICAL NETWORKS DIVISION BUSINESS
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME RECEPTION
MEETING
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
70.20 POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY SECTION BUSINESS Friday, 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM
MEETING APSA Events
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
74.1 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF
70.21 POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION BUSINESS POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
MEETING Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
Room: Nikko, Carmel I
74.2 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
70.22 POLITICAL THOUGHT IN THE RECEPTION
ANTHROPOCENE, FEATURING DIPESH Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 4
CHAKRABARTY
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I Friday, 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM
70.23 POLITICS AND HISTORY SECTION BUSINESS APSA Events
MEETING
75.1 STATE POLITICS AND POLICY BUSINESS
Room:
MEETING & RECEPTION
Hilton, Union Square 24
70.24 RUSSIAN POLITICS GROUP BUSINESS Room: Nikko, Monterey I
MEETING
Room: Parc 55, Lombard Friday, 7:30 PM to 8:30 PM
70.25 SEXUALITY AND POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS APSA Events
MEETING 76.1 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES
Room: Parc 55, Powell I RECEPTION
70.26 URBAN POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS Room: Parc 55, Mission II
MEETING
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I

176 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

76.2 ELECTIONS & VOTING BEHAVIOR, PUBLIC Friday, 7:30 PM to 9:30 PM


OPINION, AND POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
APSA Events
SECTIONS' RECEPTION
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II 78.1 STANFORD POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
76.3 LAW AND COURTS SECTION RECEPTION
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Friday, 8:00 PM to 9:00 PM
76.4 POLITICAL NETWORKS SECTION RECEPTION APSA Events
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
79.1 LEGISLATIVE STUDIES SECTION RECEPTION
76.5 POLITICS AND HISTORY SECTION RECEPTION Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
76.6 UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF Friday, 8:00 PM to 9:30 PM
POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION APSA Events
Room:
80.1 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE SECTION
Hilton, Mason Room
76.7 YALE UNIVERSITY POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
DEPARTMENT RECEPTION Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Friday, 9:00 PM to 10:30 PM
Friday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM APSA Events
APSA Events
81.1 INVITE ONLY: PRESIDENT'S RECEPTION
77.1 COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF BLACKS AND Room: Hilton, Vista
NCOBPS RECEPTION
Room: Nikko, Monterey II
77.2 COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION SECTION Saturday, September 5, 2015
RECEPTION
Room: Nikko, Peninsula
Saturday, 7:00 AM to 8:00 AM
APSA Events
77.3 CONFLICT PROCESSES SECTION & FOREIGN
POLICY SECTION RECEPTION 82.1 2016 APSA DIVISION CHAIRS - PROGRAM
Room: Hilton, East Lounge COMMITTEE MEETING
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlour 8
77.4 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
RECEPTION 82.2 JOURNAL EDITOR'S BREAKFAST
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin Foyer Room: Parc 55, Stockton
Co-sponsored by Political Studies Association 82.3 POLITICS & GENDER JOURNAL EDITORIAL
77.5 GAUS RECEPTION BOARD MEETING
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Room: Hilton, Green Room
77.6 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY WILF FAMILY 82.4 PUBLIUS: THE JOURNAL OF FEDERALISM
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICS RECEPTION EDITORIAL BOARD & ADVISORY COUNCIL
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 BREAKFAST MEETING
Room: Parc 55, Mission II
77.7 RECEPTION FOR LGBT COMMITTEE, LGBT
CAUCUS, AND SEXUALITY & POLITICS 82.5 WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING
Room: Nikko, Carmel II Room: Hilton, Vista
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
POLITICS
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
Theme Panels
Caucus 83.1 REALISM MEETS DELIBERATIVE
77.8 RECEPTION HONORING TEACHING DEMOCRACY: DIVERSITY IN POLITICAL
Room: Nikko, Golden Gate THEORY
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
77.9 UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER RECEPTION Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 THEORY
77.10 URBAN POLITICS SECTION RECEPTION Chair: Simone Chambers, University of California, Irvine
Room: Nikko, Bay View
Part: Andrew Sabl, Yale University
77.11 UW-MADISON POLITICAL SCIENCE Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy School
DEPARTMENT RECEPTION John S. Dryzek, University of Canberra
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 John N. Medearis, University of California, Riverside
77.12 WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION RECEPTION: Rahul Sagar, NYU Abu Dhabi
Daily Schedule

WOMEN & POLITICS, WOMEN’S CAUCUS & APSA Events


COMMITTEE
84.1 BACKLASH AND MARRIAGE EQUALITY
Room:
LITIGATION
Nikko, Ballroom II
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Co-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science
Chair: Charles Smith, University of California, Irvine
Part: Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University
Scott Barclay, Drexel University
Benjamin Bishin, University of California, Riverside

DAILY SCHEDULE 177


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Andrew R. Flores, UCLA School of Law DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont HISTORICAL APPROACHES
84.2 ETHICS COMMITTEE ROUNDTABLE 85.3 CREOLIZING LIBERTY: ROUNDTABLE ON NEIL
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 ROBERTS’S "FREEDOM AS MARRONAGE"
Chair: Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Part: Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
POLITICAL THEORY
Darren Davis, University of Notre Dame
Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University Chair: Jane A. Gordon, University of Connecticut, Storrs
Brookes Brown, University of Virginia Part: Charles W. Mills, Northwestern University
Theda Skocpol, Harvard University Juliet Hooker, University of Texas, Austin
84.3 MEET THE EDITORS (APSA) George Ciccariello-Maher, Drexel University
Room: Nikko, Monterey II James R. Martel, San Francisco State University
Neil Roberts, Williams College
Chair: John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Part: Barbara Walthall, APSA DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
84.4 RESEARCH SUPPORT SYMPOSIUM 85.4 HOBBES AND RELIGION
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5 Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Chair: Kimberly A. Mealy, American Political Science Chair: Arthur Harold Williamson
Association
Disc: Arlene W. Saxonhouse, University of Michigan, Ann
Part: Elizabeth Super, American Political Science Association Arbor
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley Arthur Harold Williamson
Brian D. Humes, National Science Foundation
Frank Kuhn, European Research Council
Monica Clark Papers: Making the Future Safe from Prophecy
Kinch Hoekstra, University of California, Berkeley
Division Panels
Hobbes's Scriptural Strategies
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND Alison McQueen, Stanford University
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
85.1 PROPERTY RIGHTS AND GOVERNANCE IN Hobbes's Strategy in Leviathan of Co-Opting
POST-COMMUNIST STATES Apocalyptic Rhetoric
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Benjamin Taylor Jones, Yale University, Political
Science Department
Chair: Alexei Trochev, Nazarbayev University
Hobbes and Faith in Context
Disc:
Monicka B. Patterson-Tutschka, California State
Pauline Jones Luong, University of Michigan
University, Sacramento
Roger Schoenman, University of California, Santa Cruz

Papers: The Myth of ĄDepoliticized Ownershipď in Post- DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
communist Political Economies 85.5 DOES CRITIQUE HAVE A FUTURE? A
Andrew S. Barnes, Kent State University QUESTION FOR POLITICAL THEORISTS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Big business and the politics of wealth defense: The Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
case of Ukrainian oligarchs SCIENCE
Stanislav Markus, University of Chicago
Chair:
Volha Charnysh, Harvard University
Nikolas Kompridis, Australian Catholic University
Part: James Bohman, St. Louis University
Ambiguities of Property: Contestation and āProtracted Robert Nichols, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
LawfareĀ in Kyrgyzstan Nikolas Kompridis, Australian Catholic University
Regine A. Spector, University of Massachusetts Kevin Olson, University of California, Irvine
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
The Triple Threat to Property Rights Security
Jordan Luc Gans-Morse, Northwestern University
85.6 RESISTANCE IS FUTILE
Land Rights and Local Governance Under Post- Room: Nikko, Carmel II
communism Chair: Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College
Margaret Hanson, The Ohio State University
Disc: Thomas L. Dumm, Amherst College
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
HISTORICAL APPROACHES Papers: Losing the Revolutionary Tradition?: Liberal Authority
85.2 ALEX GOUREVITCH’S "FROM SLAVERY TO and Everday Resistance
THE COOPERATIVE COMMONWEALTH" Alisa Kessel, University of Puget Sound
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
Working Through the Past with Arendt and Adorno
Chair: William Clare Roberts, McGill University
Claudia Leeb, Washington State University
Part: Alexander H. Gourevitch, Brown University
Jason Frank, Cornell University The Political Failures of Freedom
Bryan Garsten, Yale University Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin,
John P. McCormick, University of Chicago Milwaukee
From Ferguson to Copenhagen: Rage and the Politics of
Mourning
Shirin S. Deylami, Western Washington University

178 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY The Effects of Moral Judgment on Political Attitudes
85.7 DIVERSE FAMILIES and Ideology
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 Scott Clifford, University of Houston
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Unthinkable! How Citizens with Moralized Attitudes
Chair: Patrick Peel, University of Montana Process Political Arguments
Disc: Patrick Peel, University of Montana Timothy J. Ryan, UNC Chapel Hill
"Knowing" Right from Wrong: The Role of Moral
Papers: A Liberal Defense of Work-Family Balance Policies Confidence in Public Opinion
Julie L. Rose, Dartmouth College Christopher L. Weaver, University of Notre Dame
Behind the Veil - Justifying Burdens and Benefits in Preferring Sacrifice to Compromise: The Effects of
Islamic Sexual Contracts Absolutism on Attitudes
Helen Lindberg, Linnaeus University Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University
Can Exit Rights Respond to the Diversity within DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Household? 85.11 CLIENTELISM, DEMOCRACY AND PUBLIC
Fumio Iida, Kobe University SPENDING
Donating, Democracy, and Intimate Politics Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Jennifer C. Rubenstein, University of Virginia Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
85.8 RACE, GENDER, SEXUALITY, AND SEXUAL DEMOCRATIZATION
AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN THE NBA AND Disc: Cesi Cruz, University of British Columbia
NFL
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
Papers: Can Local Democracy Break the`Clientelism Cursé?
POLITICS Victoria Paniagua, Duke University
Chair: Rachel Sanders, Portland State University Division of Friends with Benefits: Patronage Networks and Fiscal
Political Science Transfers in China
Part: Ange-Marie Hancock, University of Southern California Junyan Jiang, University of Chicago
Lester Kenyatta Spence, Johns Hopkins University Heterogenous Political Budget Cycles? Evidence from
Shatema Threadcraft, Rutgers University Indonesia
Mark Golub Jan Henryk Pierskalla, The Ohio State University
Elizabeth A. Sharrow, University of Massachusetts DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY 85.12 HISTORICAL DEMOCRATIZATION: PARTIES,
85.9 DIFFERENT DYNAMICS OF INTERNATIONAL PARLIAMENTS, AND CRISIS
RELATIONS Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Disc: Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Chair: Vanessa Lefler, Middle Tennessee State University
Disc: Max Blau Gallop Papers: Cabinet, Committees and Careers in 19th Century
Vanessa Lefler, Middle Tennessee State University France
Alexandra Cirone, London School of Economics;
Papers: A Sheep in Wolf's Clothing: Intragroup Politics and Columbia University, New York
International Intervention Brenda Van Coppenolle, London School of
Scott Tyson, University of Chicago Economics
Livio Di Lonardo, New York University Decide Early, Regret Later: A Path Dependent Approach
Alliance Formation in a Dynamic Security Enviornment to Party Survivability
Emerson M. S. Niou, Duke University Matthias Dilling, University of Oxford
Sean M. Zeigler, RAND Corp. Succession orders and the development of representative
The Dynamics of the Diplomatic System institutions
Brenton Kenkel, Vanderbilt University Jorgen Moller, University of Aarhus
Andrej Kokkonen, University of Gothenburg
War and Stability in Dynamic International Systems
Colin Krainin, University of Mannheim The Growth of Electoral Accountability in Victorian
Thomas Wiseman Britain
Christopher J. Kam, University of British Columbia
The Spiral Model and the Shadow of the Future
Allan Anders Balsgaard Weimar Constitutionalism, American Progressivism and
the Timing of Crisis
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY David Lebow
85.10 THE EFFECTS OF MORAL JUDGMENTS
Daily Schedule

AMONG CITIZENS AND LEGISLATORS DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY


Room: Parc 55, Davidson 85.13 PREDICTION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Disc: Paul Goren, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Chair: Michael D. Ward, Duke University
Disc: Michael D. Ward, Duke University
Papers: Moral Representation: Legislative Responsiveness to Benjamin J Radford
ConstituentsĀ Moral Concerns
Bradley Jones

DAILY SCHEDULE 179


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Papers: Improving Ecological Inference by Predicting Race from Teaching Opinion Writing to Undergraduates: Writing
Voter Registration Files Before the Curriculum
Kosuke Imai, Princeton University Tom Rozinski, Touro College
Kabir Khanna, Princeton University The Problem of Student Resistance in Discussions of
Predicting Civil Wars with Higher Order Interactions Racism and Other Injustices
Adeline Lo Matt S. Whitt, Thompson Writing Program, Duke
Predicting Turnout from State Files: Overcoming Big University
Data and Missing Histories DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Corwin D. Smidt, Michigan State University 85.16 DEMOCRATIC SUPPORT
Question Content, Uncertainty, and Forecasting in Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
International Relations Chair: Milena Ang Collan Granillo, University of Chicago
Kathryn McNabb Cochran, American University Disc: Milena Ang Collan Granillo, University of Chicago
Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania Bryn Rosenfeld, Princeton University
Philip Tetlock, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL Papers: Determinants of Support for Democracy in East Central
SCIENCE Europe: A SEM Approach
85.14 ASSESSING DIVERSITIES IN THE CLASSROOM Bilyana Petrova, University of North Carolina,
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Chapel Hill
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE Kiran Auerbach, University of North Carolina,
EDUCATION Chapel Hill
Chair: Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, Pace University Heeding the Call? Muslim Support for Democracy and
Disc: Michael Strausz, Texas Christian University the Caliphate System
Jeff R. DeWitt, Kennesaw State University Mujtaba Isani
Daniel Silverman, Ohio State University
Papers: High-Impact Practices in the Political Science Making Democratic Citizens: Pseudo-experimental Case
Major:Effects on Student Learning of North Korean Defectors
Fletcher McClellan, Elizabethtown College Aram Hur, Princeton University
Kyle Casimir Kopko, Elizabethtown College DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
How to Lose a Class in Ten Days: The Link between 85.17 MINORITY REPRESENTATION ACROSS
Pedagogy and Student Retention CONTEXTS
Eric Michael French, Oklahoma State University Room: Hilton, Imperial A
Brendon Westler, Indiana University Chair: Simon Chauchard, Dartmouth College
Peer InstructionĀs Impact on Student Learning: Evidence Disc: Simon Chauchard, Dartmouth College
from Five Large Courses
Maureen C. Feeley, University of California, San Papers: The Leaky Pipeline in Female Political Representation in
Diego the U.S.
Promoting Voice: Motivating Student Participation in Joshua L Kalla, University of California, Berkeley
Diverse Classrooms Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University
Edana Beauvais, University of British Columbia Rachel Anne Silbermann, Yale University
Sule Yaylaci, University of British Columbia Dawn L. Teele, University of Pennsylvania
News of the World: Teaching Media and Politics to the Gender and Political Dynasties
Mass Millennials Olle Folke, Columbia University
Lori Cox Han, Chapman University Defending the Realm: The Appointment of Female
Brian R. Calfano, Missouri State University Defense Ministers Worldwide
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION Tiffany D. Barnes, University of Kentucky
85.15 TEACHING ABOUT DIVERSITIES, POWER AND Diana Z. O' Brien, Indiana University
DIFFERENCE Religious Parity, Gender Parity, and Muslim
Room: Hilton, Mason Room Representation in Europe
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
Do Politicians Discriminate against Migrants? A Field
Chair: Yao-Yuan Yeh, University of California, Merced Experiment in India
Disc: Andra Olivia Miljanic, University of Houston Nikhar Gaikwad, Yale University
Arthur Sanders, Drake University Gareth Nellis, Yale University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Papers: Librarians in the Midst: Improving Students Through 85.18 REDUCING POLITICAL CORRUPTION
Collaborative Instruction Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Vaughn P. Shannon
Chair: Daniel S. Treisman, University of California, Los
Amanda Shannon, Wright State University
Angeles
Narrative, Visibility, and Invisibility in American Disc: Daniel S. Treisman, University of California, Los
Government Textbooks Angeles
Scott Abernathy, University of Minnesota

180 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Papers: Mobilizing the Middle: Will IndiaĀs Growing Class DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Foster or Oppose Corruption? COUNTRIES
Jennifer L. Bussell, University of California, Berkeley 85.21 STATE-BUSINESS RELATIONS IN THE 21ST
Risky Ventures: Corruption and Risk-Taking among CENTURY: LESSONS FROM LATIN AMERICA
Government Officials in Malawi Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Brigitte Zimmerman, University of North Carolina- Chair: Riitta-Ilona Koivumaeki, University of Texas, Austin
Chapel Hill Disc: Alison E. Post
Meritocratic Recruitment and High-level Corruption
Risks in Europe Papers: Political Regimes and Performance Standards: Auto
Nicholas Charron, Goteburg University Industry in Comp. Perspective
Carl Dahlstrom, University of Gothenburg Andrew Schrank, Brown University
Mihaly Fazekas, University of Cambridge The Constraints of Radicalism: Politics of Expropriation
Victor Lapuente, Goteburg University in Latin America
Does Democracy Kill Corruption? A Global Time-Series Riitta-Ilona Koivumaeki, University of Texas, Austin
Analysis with V-Dem Data Partners at Home and Abroad? The Brazilian
Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University Development Bank and Domestic MNCs
Jan Teorell, Lund University Jazmin Sierra, University of Oxford
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Ideological and Territorial Conflict in Post-Neoliberal
85.19 THE STRATEGIC USE OF ISLAM BY MIDDLE Latin America
EASTERN REGIMES Kent Eaton, University of California, Santa Cruz
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
Foreign Capital, Domestic Capital, and Elections in the
Chair: Kristin E. Fabbe, Harvard Business School
Developing World
Disc: David Siddhartha Patel, Crown Center for Middle East Raphael Cunha, The Ohio State University
Studies
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
85.22 MIGRANTS AND MINORITIES IN
Papers: The Tenacity of Islamism: Authoritarianism and State
CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN POLITICS
Support for Illiberal Islam Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Scott W. Hibbard, DePaul University
Chair: Cristina I Dragomir
The Failure of Political IslamĐ Reloaded?
Disc:
Massimo Ramaioli, Syracuse University
Sofia A. Perez
Islam and Political Capital: The Muslim Brotherhood Papers: Easy Concession or Meaningful Representation?
and the State in Egypt Minority Women in French Politics
Ahmed Morsy, American Political Science Amanda Garrett, New York University
Association
Marching to the party? Anti-Islamic sentiment and
Religion, Sectarianism, and Democracy: Evidence from mobilization in Britain
Lebanon Catherine Warrick, Villanova University
Michael Thomas Hoffman, Princeton University
Media Portrayals of Minorities: Muslims in British
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING Newspapers
COUNTRIES A. Maurits van der Veen, College of William & Mary
85.20 STATE CAPACITY: CONCEPT, MEASUREMENT, Erik J. Bleich, Middlebury College
AND APPLICATIONS
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Migrants in Search of a Machine: Immigrant Candidates
in Local Elections
Chair: Gustavo A. Flores-Macias, Cornell University Erica Dobbs, Swarthmore College
Disc: Matthew A. Kocher, Yale University
Policing Violent Actors: Hungary and Organized
Reo Matsuzaki, Trinity College
Violence against Roma
Hadas Aron, Columbia University
Papers: Surveying State Capacity: A new Approach to Assessing
Subnational Variation DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Juan Pablo Luna, Instituto de Ciencia PolÃtica, 85.23 A POTPOURRI OF PROBABLY PUBLISHABLE
PUC-Chile PAPERS
Hillel David Soifer, Temple University Room: Parc 55, Mission II
Chair: Rachel Wellhausen, University of Texas at Austin
Neither Dwarf nor Leviathan: Within-Country Variation
in State Capacity Disc: Rachel Wellhausen, University of Texas at Austin
Imke Harbers, University of Amsterdam
Infrastructure, Autonomy and a New Geography of State Papers: Economic Responses to War: Casualties and Consumer
Daily Schedule

Power: The Case of China Behavior


Daniel Koss, Harvard University Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia
Adam Gregory Hughes, University of Virginia
State Unevenness and Political Order in Colombia and
Mexico The Political Compliance Cycle: Electoral Politics and
Mariano Sanchez-Talanquer, Cornell University International Commitments
Tobias Hofmann, University of Utah
Wars on Drugs and State Capacity in Latin America:
Evidence from Mexico
Gustavo A. Flores-Macias, Cornell University

DAILY SCHEDULE 181


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Immigration Policy Interdependence and the Geography The Conflict-Trade Relationship: An Economic Stability-
of Citizenship Regimes Instability Paradox?
Sarah J. Cormack-Patton, Stanford University Jonathan D. Caverley
Jude C. Hays, University of Pittsburgh Katrin Fraser Katz, Northwestern University,
Remittances are a Political Blessing and not a Curse Department of Political Science
David H. Bearce, University of Colorado, Boulder The Economic Costs of Interstate Rivalry
Seungbin Park, University of Colorado Boulder Christopher Clary, MIT
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY International Institutions as Tools of Influence
85.24 POLITICAL ECONOMY IN THE RISE OF CHINA Jane Vaynman, George Washington University
AND INDIA Central Bank Independence, Social Welfare Spending
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D and Diversionary Conflicts
Chair: Etel L. Solingen, University of California Irvine Zhiyuan (Sebastian) Wang, Binghamton University
Disc: Etel L. Solingen, University of California Irvine (SUNY)
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Papers: China versus India: Two Paths to Global Economic 85.27 THE DYNAMICS OF RISE AND DECLINE
Integration Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Roselyn Hsueh, Temple University Papers: Modeling Reassurance under Shifting Power: Post-Cold
Inventing with the Enemy? U.S. policy toward Chinese War Sino-Russian Relations
and Indian human capital Michael A. Glosny
Andrew Bingham Kennedy, Australian National Rising Power, Creeping Jurisdiction: China, the US &
University the EEZ
A Theory of Chinese Economic Statecraft Isaac B. Kardon, Cornell University
William J. Norris, Texas A&M University Coercive diplomacy of a rising power: The PeopleĀs
Cooptation and the Returnees in China, with Republic of China, 1978-2012
Comparison to India Jeehye Kim, Harvard University
Min Ye, Boston University Retrenchment as a Screening Mechanism: Eliciting
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION Credible Signals during Decline
85.25 NGOS IN INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION Brandon Yoder, National University of Singapore
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
Chair: Brett Ashley Leeds, Rice University CONTROL
Disc: Geoffrey P.R. Wallace, Rutgers University 85.28 DIVERSITIES RECONSIDERED: ARMS
CONTROL IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Papers: The Business of Human Rights: NGO Targeting of Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Corporations Chair: Gary J. Schaub, University of Copenhagen
Laura Seago, University of Michigan Disc: Stephen F. Burgess, U.S. Air War College
The Civil Society Crackdown: Explaining Legal
Restrictions Against NGOs Papers: Conditional and Multiple Pathways of Interdependence
Suparna Chaudhry, Yale University Between Military Budgets
The Perfect Storm: Mass Media Influence on INGO Alexander Von Hagen-Jamar, Lund University
Responses to Natural Disasters Engineering ĄNorm Cascadesď in International
Anna Schrimpf, Princeton University Humanitarian Law and Arms Control
An Emerging Agenda: The World Bank and Roma Margarita H. Petrova, Institut Barcelona d'Estudis
Melanie H. Ram, California State University, Fresno Internacionals (IBEI)
INGO Centralization and Survival in IR Fueling the Fight?: Reexamining the Link between
Elizabeth Bloodgood, Concordia University Arming and War
Alex Antony, Indiana University
International Aid NGOs: between Economic
Development and Human Rights Multinational Arms Procurement: Principals, Agents,
Junhyup Kim, Purdue University Collective Action, and Scale
Gary J. Schaub, University of Copenhagen
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
85.26 ECONOMICS AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Arming for Respect: How Status Inconsistency Affects
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I Arms Buildups
Aaron Shreve, UC-Davis
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Chair: Spencer D. Bakich, University of Richmond 85.29 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF NUCLEAR
Disc: Charles Eugene Gholz, University of Texas at Austin WEAPONS PROLIFERATION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
Papers: Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap: The Global Arms Market SECURITY
for Computer Hackers
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL
Joseph Brown SECURITY AND ARMS CONTROL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Chair: Scott D. Sagan, Stanford University

182 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Disc: Scott D. Sagan, Stanford University Diplomacy and Military Coercion in International
Disputes
Papers: Perceptions of Nuclear Use and U.S. Non-Proliferation Shuhei Kurizaki, Waseda University
Efforts Conceptualizing and Analyzing Stable Interstate Peace:
Nicholas Anderson, Yale University A Quantitative Approach
Alexandre Debs, Yale University Lukas Kasten, Tuebingen University, Germany
Nuno P. Monteiro, Yale University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
What Do Nuclear Weapons Offer States? 85.32 DETERMINANTS OF ROLL-CALL VOTING IN
Mark S. Bell CONGRESS
Measuring the Strength of the NPT Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Jacques E.C. Hymans Chair: Boris Shor, Georgetown University
Yoshiko M. Herrera, University of Wisconsin, Disc: Boris Shor, Georgetown University
Madison Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Virginia
U.S. Nonproliferation Policy and the Origins of Nuclear
Sharing, 1956-60 Papers: Senate Elections and Taming the 'Mischievous Effects of
Nicholas Miller, Brown University a Mutable Government'
Preventing Nuclear Escalation in Conventional Wars Benjamin Marshall Gruenbaum, Harvard University
Caitlin Talmadge, George Washington University Strategic Voting and Electorally Threatened Legislators
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Justin Kirkland, University of Houston
85.30 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF CHINESE Jeffrey J. Harden, University of Colorado Boulder
FOREIGN POLICY Legislative Holdouts
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 Daniel M. Butler, Washington University in St. Louis
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Barbara
Chair: Thomas J. Christensen, Princeton University Laurel Harbridge, Northwestern University
Disc: Xiaoyu Pu, University of Nevada, Reno Did Tea Party change the Republican Party in the U.S.
Congress?
Papers: Authoritarian Audiences in Intl Crises:A Real-history Hong Min Park, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Survey Experiment in China Joseph L. Smith, University of Alabama
Jessica Chen Weiss, Yale University Richard C. Fording, University of Alabama
Allan Dafoe, Yale University Social Welfare, Civil Rights, and Political Parties in the
Shifting Balance of Power and The Domestic Politics of 20th Century Congress
Foreign Threat Perception Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis
George Yin Robert Huckfeldt, University of California, Davis
Fan Lu, University of California, Davis
Michael D Nash, UC Davis
Negotiating with China on its ĄCore Interestsď:
Bargaining and Persuasion During Rapprochement
Patricia M. Kim, Princeton University DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Taming The Mekong: A Frontier in China's`Selective 85.33 POLITICS OF THE HOUSE AND SENATE FLOOR
Sovereignty' Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Andrew S. Erickson, Naval War College Chair: Gregory Koger
Austin Michael Strange Disc: Gregory Koger
The Dangers of Recurrent Tensions Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia
Ja Ian Chong, National University of Singapore
Todd H. Hall, University of Oxford Papers: Amending Activity and the Shifting Dimensions of
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Partisan Conflict in Congress
Nicole Asmussen, Oakland University
85.31 DIVERSITY OF CONFLICT: LEGAL VERSUS
MILITARIZED DISPUTES Minority Party Influence on Issue Attention in the U.S.
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 House of Representatives
Chair: Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford University Tyler Hughes, California State University, Northridge
Disc: Lauren Peritz, University of California, Davis Mostly Unanimous Consent? Complex UCAs in the U.S.
Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford University Senate
Nicholas Howard, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Papers: Conflict Resolution and the Law of the Sea
Aslaug Asgeirsdottir, Bates College The Silenced Senate: the House Amending Advantage in
Appropriations
Daily Schedule

Bargaining in the Shadow of Maritime Law Adjudicators


Peter Hanson, University of Denver
Emilia Justyna Powell, University of Notre Dame
The Public Buildings Boom: Distributive & Partisan
Protecting Trade By Legalizing Political Disputes
Christina Davis, Princeton University
Politics in Congress
Charles J. Finocchiaro, University of South Carolina
Julia C. Morse, Princeton University
Historical Boundaries and Economic Exchange DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
David B. Carter, Princeton University 85.34 PRESIDENTS IN CONTEXT: POLITICAL TIME
Scott Abramson, University of Rochester AND POLARIZATION
Room: Hilton, Powell Room

DAILY SCHEDULE 183


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Chair: Lara Michelle Brown, The George Washington Keys to Success in Implementing the ACAĀs Health
University Insurance Marketplaces
Disc: Bruce Buchanan, University of Texas, Austin Amber Joy Joiner
Stephen Weatherford, University of California - Santa Learning from Success? Contextual Diffusion of Active
Barbara Labor Market Policies
Jan Helmdag, University of Greifswald
Papers: Restoration Politics in the 20th Century: The Case of Policy Diffusion in Brazil and the USA: Process, Actors
Warren G. Harding and Institutions
David A. Crockett, Trinity University Denilson Bandeira Coelho, Universidade de Brasilia
Assessing President ObamaĀs Place in Political Time Shaping the Agenda: A Text Analysis Approach to
Curt Nichols, Baylor University Measuring Group Influence
Presidents and the Politics of Polarization Travis Johnston, University of California, Berkeley
B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University The Polarizing Power of Information on Public Pensions
Soren Jordan John Edward Brooks, UC Berkeley
Kelly Arndt, Texas A&M
Differential Strategies: Lobbying in the Agriculture
Polarized Public Opinion and Presidential Success in Subsystem
Congress Clare Brock, University of Texas, Austin
Jon R. Bond, Texas A&M University, College Station
Jeffrey E. Cohen, Fordham University DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
85.37 POSTER SESSION: ANOTHER BRICK IN THE
Presidential Party Fundraising and Polarized Politics, WALL
1977-2014 Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Brendan J. Doherty, U.S. Naval Academy Papers: Advice & Consent: Semi-Automated Text Analysis of
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Judicial Confirmation Hearings
85.35 POSTER SESSION: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Ryan Hubert, University of California, Berkeley
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom James Hicks, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Assessing the PresidentĀs OMB Review of Government Comparing Judiciaries Cross Nationally: The
Regulations Opportunity/Willingness Framework
Simon F. Haeder, University of Wisconsin-Madison Monica Lineberger, University of South Carolina
Institutional Racism, Social Justice and Public Policy Elections, Public Awareness, and Judicial
James D. Ward, Mississippi University for Women Decisionmaking
Is Diversity Management effective?ĉComparing Jay Krehbiel, Washington University in St. Louis
Difference among Ethnic Groups Mapping Legislators' Time Variant Preferences for
Roger Qiyuan Jin Judicial Independence
Administrative Structure, Financial Sustainability of Amanda Driscoll
Local Capital Markets Chris Hanretty, University of East Anglia
Heidi Jane M. Smith, George Mason University Limits on Justice: Executive Influence on State Court
Sanghee Park Criminal Decision
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Thomas Gray, University of Virginia
85.36 POSTER SESSION: PUBLIC POLICY DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom JURISPRUDENCE
Disc: Hongtao Yi, The Ohio State University 85.38 POSTER SESSION: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
AND JURISPRUDENCE
Papers: A Million Monkeys at a Million Keyboards? Big Data Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
and Salient Rulemakings Disc: Kenneth L. Manning, University of Massachusetts,
Gabriel J. Michael Dartmouth
Alyx Mark
Congressional Cues: Singaling Policy and Political Papers: Avoiding the Choice: Institutional Realism and
Information in 140 Characters Formalism in Public Law
Annelise Russell, University of Texas, Austin Jonathan Sidney Gould
How do policy memes spread? A contagion analysis of Jeffersonian Reconstitution in the American States
the UK House of Commons Robinson Woodward-Burns, University of
Stefano Gurciullo Pennsylvania
Ideological Diversity and Policymaking in the United Life Atop the Wall: Strict-Separationism and the
States Regulatory State
Alexander Bolton, Princeton University Robert Burton
Information v Ideology: Recognizing (Government) Testing Supreme Court Oral Arguments for Bias Using
Benefits in the Submerged State Linguistics-Based Cues
Mallory SoRelle, Cornell University James ben-Aaron
Delphia Shanks-Booth, Cornell University DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Innovation, Cooperation, and the Structure of 85.39 POSTER SESSION: PUBLIC OPINION
Agricultural Information Networks Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Michael A. Levy, UC Davis
Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis

184 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Papers: Authoritarianism and Public Opinion on Church and All About the Right: American Christians' Expression of
State the Hostile Media Effect
Jeremiah Castle, University of Notre Dame Michael W. Wagner, University of Wisconsin,
Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame Madison
Bridging the Offline-online Gap in Social Media Amanda Friesen, Indiana University-Purdue
Research University at Indianapolis
Gonzalo Rivero, YouGov The Effects of Social Media and Mobile Apps on
Can Citizens Care Too Much? Investment and Electoral Political Participation in Taiwan
Legitimacy Yi-Ning Katherine Chen, National Chengchi
Andrew M. Daniller, University of Pennsylvania University
Compassionate Rhetoric and Public Opinion on Health DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Care 85.41 POSTER SESSION: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Meri Long, Vanderbilt University Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Inequality, the Culture War, and the Urban-Rural Disc: Sean Parson, Northern Arizona University
Cleavage in America
Marcos Menchaca, University of California, Los Papers: Queer(ing) Marx: A Queer Reading of Marx's ĄOn the
Angeles Jewish Questionď
Measuring Biblical Interpretation and Its Influence on Matt James Evans, Northwest Arkansas Community
Political Attitudes College
Andrew R. Lewis, University of Cincinnati Hydraulic Fracking, Masculinity, and Domestic Violence
Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati in South Texas
Tolerating Europe: An Experimental Study Brooke H. Mascagni, Texas A&M University,
Amanda Marziliano, Rutgers University Kingsville
When in Rome: The Need for Better Localization in Back to the Medina: Gentrification, Citizenship and
Cross-national Survey Research Capital in Marrakesh
Wenshuo Zhang, University of Illinois at Urbana- Khalid Madhi, The University of Illinois at Chicago
Champaign Political Science in the world of Politics: Do we matter?
Exploring Putin's Approval Ratings During the Phillip J. Ardoin, Appalachian State University
Ukrainian Crisis 2014 DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
Kirill Kalinin, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor POLITICS
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION 85.42 POSTER SESSION: INFORMATION
85.40 POSTER SESSION: POLITICAL TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
COMMUNICATION Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Papers: Cascading Activation Model in the Digital Sphere; The
Papers: Communicative Governance: Integrate Reason and case of Twitter and #ISIS
Democracy under Power ĚĚLessons from Citizen Javier Lesaca
Participatory Budgeting in local China Cyber-Diffusion and Perceptions of Female Political
Kaiping Chen, Stanford University Leadership in the MENA
Power & Counter-Power in the 2014 Hong Kong Ammar Shamaileh, Florida State University
Protests Overtime Relation between Online and Offline Political
Colin Agur, Yale University Participation among Youth
Nick Frisch, Yale University Yunhwan Kim
A Time Series Analysis of Blacks in Prime Time TV & Silvia Russo
Public Opinion on Race Erik Amnå
Ken Mulligan, Southern Illinois University, WebStyle: Congress, Religion, and the Web
Carbondale Marija Bekafigo, University of Southern Mississippi
ItĀs Not Just a Joke: How Sitcoms Affect Support for Molly Jaye McGuffee
WomenĀs Rights DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
Nathaniel Swigger, Ohio State University 85.43 POSTER SESSION: HEALTH POLITICS &
The Consistency of U.S. Senate Campaign Messages HEALTH POLICY
Matthew Bergbower, Indiana State University Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Electoral Effects on Expressive Polarization in Political Papers: Catholics, Liberal Protestants, and American Health Care
Rhetoric Policy
stonegarden grindlife, UCLA Skylar Covich, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Daily Schedule

Tolerance for Political Incivility: The Role of Gender,


Ideology, and Media Use Federal Pressure and the Politics of State Price
Robin Stryker, University of Arizona Transparency Innovations
J. Taylor Danielson, University of Arizona Philip B. Rocco, University of Pittsburgh Schools of
Bethany Anne Conway, California Polytechnic State Health Sciences
University Alex Waddan, University of Leicester
No Use Saying "We are Doing our Best": Women's
representation via health policy
Justine G.M. Ross, University of California, Riverside

DAILY SCHEDULE 185


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Who are Judicial Decisions for? The āGlobal
85.44 POLICYMAKING IN AMERICAN FEDERALISM Community of LawĀ in Southern Africa
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Peter Brett
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND The Structure of Global Constitutionalism
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS David S. Law, Washington University, St. Louis
Chair: Jameson W. Doig, Dartmouth College DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Disc: Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University 85.47 GENDER QUOTAS I: ADOPTION AND
Tim J. Conlan, George Mason University IMPLEMENTATION
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Papers: Intergovernmental Delegations and Roll-Call Voting on Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND
Federal Grant Programs ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
Pamela Clouser McCann, University of Southern Chair: Farida Jalalzai, Oklahoma State University
California Disc: Farida Jalalzai, Oklahoma State University
Anthony Michael Bertelli, New York University Christina Xydias
Where She Lives: Federalism and Gender Equality in
the United States Papers: Gender Quotas & Women's Candidacies
Wendy J. Schiller, Brown University Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami
Kaitlin Sidorsky, Brown University Dept. of Political Science
Organizing for Education in Philadelphia Gender Quotas in Single-Member District Electoral
Marissa Martino Golden, Bryn Mawr College Systems
Rand Quinn, University of Pennsyvlania Gabrielle Bardall, Université de Montreal
Win Win: Balancing Merit and Equity in a Politicized Skye Sinclair Christensen, UNDP
Federal Grant Competition Legislating for Gender Quotas in Ireland
Sara E. Dahill-Brown, Wake Forest University Fiona May Buckley, University College Cork
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS Yvonne Galligan, Queen's University Belfast
85.45 CREAM PUFF WAR: COURTS AND Claire McGing, Maynooth University
INTERBRANCH RELATIONS Quota and Non-quota Strategies in Local Parliaments in
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 Japan and Korea
Chair: Dennis J. Coyle, Catholic University of America Jiso Yoon, University of Kansas
Disc: Miranda Yaver, Washington University in St. Louis Relying on Men: On Gender Quotas and Candidate
Lori J. Hausegger, Boise State University Selection Processes in Pakistan
Mariam Mufti, University of Waterloo
Papers: Courts, Deference, and Bureaucratic Decisionmaking DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
Rachel Augustine Potter, University of Virginia 85.48 POLITICAL PROTEST AND SOCIALIZATION IN
Mr. Synar Goes to Court: Members of Congress Before RACIAL/ETHNIC MINORITY COMMUNIITIES
the Supreme Court Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Christopher B. Brough, Northern Illinois University Disc: Loan K. Le, Institute for Good Government and
Separation of Powers Dysfunction on Trial Inclusion
Jasmine Farrier, University of Louisville
Mitch Pickerill, Northern Illinois University Papers: Minority Communities and Law Enforcement Political
The Motivating and Constraining Factors of Socialization
Congressional Court-Curbing Marcela Garcia-Castanon, San Francisco State
Lisa Hager, Kent State University University
Hannah Walker, University of Washington
ĄGoing Publicď To Influence Judicial Decisions
Paul M. Collins, University of Massachusetts, The Uncredibles: Radical Groups, Respectability, and
Amherst Identity-based Activism
Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North Texas Tamar Malloy, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS Mallory SoRelle, Cornell University
85.46 SUB-NATIONAL AND CROSS-REGIONAL
APPROACHES TO COMPARATIVE PUBLIC LAW ĄFelon Powerď: Mass Incarceration, Prison
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room Gerrymanders, and Imprisoned Democracy
Christina Rivers, DePaul University
Chair: Martin Shapiro, University of California, Berkeley
Disc: Martin Shapiro, University of California, Berkeley DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS
85.49 THE LIMITS OF RELIGIOUS POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Papers: Under Their Own Laws: Judicial Decentralization in
Lebanon and Malawi Chair: David T. Buckley, University of Louisville
Emma Hayward, University of Pennsylvania Disc: Anna M. Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan, Ann
Bringing Home Rome: Explaining the Domestication of Arbor
the Rome Statute of the ICC
Michael Patrick Broache, University of Tampa Papers: Temptation and Transformation: Religious Parties in
Power in Mexico and Turkey
Luis Felipe Mantilla, University of South Florida St
The Origins and Development of Affirmative Action in
Petersburg
Comparative Perspective
Stephan Stohler, SUNY, University at Albany

186 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Sacred or Strategic? State Regulation of Religion Across Papers: Substitution v Expansion: Contrasts between Offline and
Religious and Secular Regimes Online Participation
Ani Sarkissian, Michigan State University Russell J. Dalton
Mr. MorsiĀs Machine: Mobilizing the Vote in EgyptĀs Internet Use and Campaign Participation Among Young
2012 Presidential Election People
Steven Brooke, John F. Kennedy School of Ian McAllister, Australian National University
Government, Harvard University Back to Democracy: the 4th Phase of Political
State Capacity and Resistance to Religious Mobilization Campaigning
David T. Buckley, University of Louisville Andrea Roemmele, Hertie School of Governance
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL Dirk von Schneidemesser, Hertie School of
Governance
SYSTEMS
85.50 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF PERSONAL Internet, Participation and Democratic Support: An
REPRESENTATION VOTING RULES Analysis of Panel Data
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Jill Sheppard, The Australian National University
Chair: Josep M. Colomer, Georgetown University Conceptualizing Digitally Networked Political
Disc: Josep M. Colomer, Georgetown University Participation
Yannis Theocharis, University of Mannheim
Papers: Two-Party Electoral Rolls: Municipal STV Adoption by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
American Cities, 1900-50 85.53 POLITICAL INTEREST, ENGAGEMENT, AND
Jack Santucci, Georgetown University KNOWLEDGE
How Were They Chosen & Did They Matter? Electoral Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
Systems in the Arab Spring Chair: Adam J. Berinsky, Massachusetts Institute of
John M. Carey, Dartmouth College Technology
Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University Disc: Michael X. Delli Carpini, University of Pennsylvania
Andrew S. Reynolds, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill Papers: Do Elections Raise Political Interest?
Electoral Systems, The Personal Vote and The Provision Markus Prior, Princeton University
of Local Goods Silenced and Ignored: How Voter Lists Keep People and
Juan Munoz-Portillo, University of Cambridge Opinions out of Politics
How Preferential Voting Affects Minority Bradley T Spahn, Stanford University, Department of
Representation in local govt. Political Science
Richard E. Matland, Loyola University, Chicago Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND How to Move Beyond the Fatal Flaws of Common
PARTIES Political Knowledge Measures
85.51 PARTY SYSTEM POLARIZATION IN Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE The Nitty Gritty: The Unexplored Role of Motivation
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 and Grit in Civic Engagement
Disc: Jay K. Dow, University of Missouri, Columbia Sunshine Hillygus, Duke University
John Boschen Holbein, Duke University
Papers: Campaign Finance Regulations and Party System Steven Andrew Snell, Duke University
Polarization in Global Context Macrointerest and Politics
Joshua D Potter, Louisiana State University David A. M. Peterson, Iowa State University,
Political Polarization: Assessing Concepts and #Chafee2016
Measurements Kyle L. Saunders, Colorado State University
Charla S Waeiss, University of Illinois at Urbana- Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University,
Champaign Carbondale
Kelly Senters Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota
Putting Polarization in Historical Perspective DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Jeff Selinger, Bowdoin College 85.54 VOTER REFORM AND SUPPRESSION
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
The Median Voter and Non-Centrist Parties: The
Foundations of Party Polarization Chair: Ben Highton, University of California, Davis
James E. Campbell, University at Buffalo, SUNY Disc: Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University
Policy Convergence? Party Competition in the Context
of the Financial Crisis Papers: A Reassessment of the Turnout Effects of Election
Denise Traber, University of Zurich Reforms in the American States
Daily Schedule

Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida


DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR Michael P. McDonald, University of Florida
85.52 ONLINE AND OFFLINE POLITICAL
PARTICIPATION AND THEIR CONSEQUENCES The Negative Effect of Voter ID Laws on Hispanic (and
FOR DEMOCRACY Democratic) Turnout
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 Zoltan L. Hajnal, University of California, San Diego
Nazita Lajevardi, UCSD
Chair: Carole Jean Uhlaner, University of California, Irvine
Disc: Rachel K. Gibson, University of Manchester The Two Income-Participation Gaps
Christopher Ojeda, Stanford University

DAILY SCHEDULE 187


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Voter Suppression or Voter Fraud in the 2014 US Social Media and Political Opposition in Azerbaijan
Elections Katy Pearce, University of Washington, Department
Pippa Pippa Norris, Harvard University of Communications
Holly Ann Garnett, McGill University Farid Guliyev, Jacobs University Bremen
Why the Sky didnĀt Fall: Voter ID Laws and DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Participation 85.57 ORGANIZATIONAL FORMS AND DYNAMICS IN
Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, Ann DIGITAL MEDIA ENVIRONMENTS
Arbor Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Fabian Guy Neuner, University of Michigan, Ann Chair: Bruce Bimber, University of California, Santa Barbara
Arbor Disc: David A. Karpf, George Washington University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
85.55 SOCIAL CONTEXT, POLITICAL BEHAVIOR AND Papers: Digital Formations of the Powerful and the Powerless?
PUBLIC OPINION Saskia Sassen, Columbia University
Room: Parc 55, Market Street
From Boots to Bytes: Offline and Online Political
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
Repression around the Globe
Chair: Joshua Robison, Aarhus University, Department of Jennifer Earl, University of Arizona
Political Science
Digital Activists Without Borders
Disc: Betsy Sinclair, Washington University in St Louis Steven L. Livingston, George Washington University
Patrick Tucker, Washington University in St Louis Patrick Meier, Qatar Computing Research Institute
Information Activism in Contemporary Protest Politics
Papers: Online Paths to Politics: Digital Social Capital & Youth
Max Halupka, ANZSIG Institute for Governance
Michael J. Jensen, University of Canberra
Political Participation
Joseph Kahne, Mills College
Benjamin T. Bowyer, Mills College DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Political Talk, Socio-Political Contexts and Political 85.58 WORK, WAGES & HEALTH: WHAT'S THE
Mobilization STATE GOT TO DO WITH IT?
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Anne Schaefer, University of Mannheim
Rudiger Schmitt-Beck, University of Mannheim Co-sponsored by Labor Project
Co-sponsored by Poverty, Inequality, and Public Policy
Putting Politics in Place: Defining the Neighborhood in Caucus
Public Opinion Research
Chair:
Todd Makse, Florida International University
Maggie Gray, Adelphi University
Scott Louis Minkoff, SUNY, New Paltz Disc: Maggie Gray, Adelphi University
Anand Edward Sokhey, University of Colorado, Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay
Boulder
Would You Like to Know More? Selection, Papers: Gender Inequality in the State: Women and Access to
Socialization, and Veterans' Preferences Skills
Tyson Chatagnier, Vanderbilt University Isabella Alcaniz, GVPT, University of Maryland
Jonathan David Klingler, Toulouse School of Maxing Out the Minimum Wage in Indonesia
Economics Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
85.56 MEDIA UNDER AUTOCRACY: COMPARING Michele Ford
RUSSIA, CHINA, EGYPT, SYRIA AND Toward a New Theory of Deterrence: Co-production of
AZERBAIJAN Labor Standards in the US
Room: Parc 55, Sutro Janice R Fine, Rutgers University-New Brunswick
Chair: Margaret E Roberts, University of California, San Diego The Health of the Immigrant Communities in the United
Disc: Martin Dimitrov, Tulane University States: Current Challenges
Anne-Marie S Brady, University of Canterbury Richard Huizar, William Paterson University
How Does Policy Affect Mass Politics? Evidence from
Papers: Different Modes of Authoritarianism: Critical Journalists Community Action Agencies
in China and Russia Ryan LaRochelle, Brandeis University
Maria Repnikova, University of Pennsylvania DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
Authoritarian Internet Policy: Reigning in the Networks 85.59 ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, IDENTITY, AND
in PutinĀs Russia DEMOCRATIZATION
Jaclyn Kerr Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Authoritarianism2.0: Social Media and Political Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Discussion in China Chair: Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University
Daniela Stockmann, Leiden University Disc: Emmanuel Teitelbaum, George Washington University
Ting Luo, Leiden University Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University
The Media Ecosystem of the Arab Uprisings
Marc Lynch, George Washington University Papers: Patrimonialism, Democracy, Economic Well-being in
Deen G. Freelon, American University Contemporary Latin America
Sean Aday, George Washington University Agustina Giraudy, American University
Jonathan Hartlyn, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill

188 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Economic Inequality and Democracy: A Micro-Level DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS


Analysis of Preferences 85.62 INNOVATIONS IN CROSS-CASE COMPARATIVE
Martha Wilfahrt, Northwestern University METHODS
Natalie Wenzell Letsa, Cornell University Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
Inequality, Democratization and the Arab Spring: A Chair: Sean Tanner, University of California, Berkeley
Mixture Model Approach Disc: Sean Tanner, University of California, Berkeley
Robert Kubinec, University of Virginia
Patron Saints? Religious Change and Democratization in Papers: The Demand for Social Welfare: Employer or Employee
Sub-Saharan Africa Driven? A Natural Experiment
Elizabeth S. Sperber, New York University Christian Rudolf Thauer, The Hebrew University of
The Three Democratic Waves in Latin America during Jerusalem
the XX and XXI Centuries Transnational Comparison and the Problem of Nested
Jesus Tovar, Asociación Mexicana de Ciencias Spatial Variation
Políticas (AMECIP) Jefferey M. Sellers
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Willing to Pay? Tax Compliance in Britain and Italy: An
85.60 NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF Experimental Analysis
ELECTORAL AUTHORITARIANISM Sven Steinmo, European University Institute
Room: Parc 55, Mission I Assessing Secession in Eurasia through Qualitative
Chair: Paul J. Schuler, University of Arizona Comparative Analysis
Disc: Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg Scott G. Feinstein, University of Florida
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Papers: Political Participation and the Survival of Electoral 85.63 EXPERIMENTS ON CAMPAIGNS & ELECTIONS
Authoritarian Regimes Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Ora John Reuter, University of Wisconsin, Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
Milwaukee VOTING BEHAVIOR
Autocratic Ruling Parties and Strategic Democratization Chair: Jacob M. Montgomery, Washington University in St.
Michael K. Miller, George Washington University Louis
Sources of Authoritarian Durability in the 20th and 21st Papers: Can Republican African Americans win African
Centuries American Votes? A Field Experiment
Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto David Niven, University of Cincinnati
Jean Lachapelle, University of Toronto Mobilizing for Medicaid: Pocketbook v. Socio-tropic
Equilibrium Party Hegemony Appeals
Milan Svolik, Yale University Florian Foos, University of Zurich
The Cross- and Sub-national Effect of Oil on Elections Policy Deliberation and Voting Behavior
in Multiparty Autocracies Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University
Michael Wahman, University of Missouri Leonard Wantchekon
Matthias Basedau, GIGA German Institute of Global Gabriel Lopez-Moctezuma, Princeton University
and Area Studies Cecilia Pe Lero, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS When Trust Drowned: Waves of Blame in the 2006
85.61 COMPLIANCE WITH THE INT'T HUMAN Swedish Parliamentary Election
RIGHTS REGIME Lina Monica Eriksson, Uppsala University
Room: Parc 55, Stockton The Media Effects of RomneyĀs 47% Comment:
Chair: Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University Evidence From a Natural Experiment
Disc: Mark P. Gibney, University of North Carolina-Asheville Eunji Kim, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Papers: The Implementation of Human Rights Treaties 85.64 DIVERSITY AND THE POLITICS OF
Rosa Aloisi, Trinity University IMMIGRANT SELECTION
Civil Society Mobilization and International Human Room: Parc 55, Mason
Rights Court Effectiveness Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
Jillienne Haglund, University of Kentucky POLITICS
Chair: Cybelle Fox, University of California, Berkeley
Complexity and Compliance in the Inter-American
Human Rights System Disc: Caleb Yong, Harvard University
Cristiane Carneiro, University of Sao Paulo Cybelle Fox, University of California, Berkeley
Simone Wegmann, University of Geneva
Papers: Race, Gender, Class, Disability and the Ethics of
Daily Schedule

The Trials of Peace: Prosecutions & Conflict Recurrence


in Post-Conflict States Immigrant Selection
Geoff Dancy, Tulane University Antje Ellermann, University of British Columbia
Eric Wiebelhaus-Brahm, University of Arkansas at Agustin Alonso Goenaga Orrego, Lund University
Little Rock Can You Become One of Us? Legal Selection of
ĄFriends as Advocates:ď Explaining NGO Participation ĄAssimilableď Immigrants
at International Tribunals David Scott Fitz Gerald, UC San Diego
Paul Strauch, Yale Law School David Cook-MartÃn, Grinnell College
Brian D. Greenhill, Dartmouth College

DAILY SCHEDULE 189


Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Securitizing Immigration Policy and Race-Based The Process and Politics of German Military
Exclusion Intervention: Explaining Foreign Policy Decision
Patti Tamara Lenard, University of Ottawa Making in German Out-of-Area Operations
The Politics of Immigration Control Policy in Western Karin L. Johnston, American University
Europe 86.5 POLITICAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION: SHALE
Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University POLITICS AND POLICY IN COMPARATIVE
Ties that Bind: Families, Skills, and the Politics of Legal PERSPECTIVE: UK, US, EUROPE
Immigration Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Daniel Tichenor Disc: Christopher P. Borick, Muhlenberg College
Related Groups
86.1 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF Papers: Belief Change and Reinforcement in Contentious
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL Politics: Analyzing Policy Actor Positions on Hydraulic
PHILOSOPHY: ROUNDTABLE ON THE WORK Fracturing in the U.S.
AND LEGACY OF HARRY V. JAFFA Chris Weible, University of Colorado-Denver
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 Tanya Heikkila, University of Colorado-Denver
Chair: Elizabeth E. Spalding, Claremont McKenna College Fracking Policy in the UK and Switzerland: Coalition
and Cooperation in the Face of Uncertainty and
Part: Edward J. Erler
Ambiguity
Matthew J. Franck, Witherspoon Institute
Paul Cairney, University of Stirling
John Marini, University of Nevada, Reno
Karin Ingold, University of Bern
Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame
Manuel Fischer, Eawag
86.2 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: ROUNDTABLE ON
VOEGELIN’S LATE MEDITATIONS AND ESSAYS Analyzing the Role of Social Networks in Municipal
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II Decision-Making about High-Volume Hydraulic
Fracturing
Chair: Michael Franz, Loyola University Maryland Gwen Arnold, University of California, Davis
Part: Glenn Hughes, St. Mary's University Le Anh Nguyen-Long, University of Munster
Barry Cooper, University of Calgary
David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America Saturday, 8:30 AM to 9:30 AM
William Petropulos, Voegelin - Archiv Munich APSA Events
Paul E. Kidder, Seattle University
87.1 BUSINESS MEETING FOR CIVIC EDUCATION
86.3 INDIGENOUS STUDIES NETWORK: AMERICAN AND ENGAGEMENT COMMITTEE
INDIAN TRIBAL NATIONS: SOVEREIGNTY, Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room
POWER, AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS 87.2 INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION LEADERS
Room: Hilton, Imperial B BREAKFAST
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Seacliff Room
Chair: Laura E. Evans, University of Washington
87.3 TASKFORCE ON TECHNOLOGICAL
Papers: Turning the Tables: Tribal Nations Coopting the INNOVATION IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
Powerful (INVITATION ONLY)
Moroni Benally, University of Washington Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Presidio Room
American Indian Voter Turnout
Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
Disclaiming Sovereigns in the Forced Federalism Era Theme Panels
Joshua Johnson, Washington University in St. Louis 88.1 DIVERSITY, THREATS, AND EXCLUSION:
Richard C. Witmer, Creighton University EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS
Chief Wilma Mankiller: Rebuilding the Cherokee Nation Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Donna Langston Martinez, university of colorado Co-sponsored by DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL
denver RESEARCH
86.4 INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE Chair: Claire Leslie Adida, UCSD
STUDY OF GERMAN POLITICS: Disc: Matt A. Barreto, University of California, Los Angeles
CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN GERMAN
FOREIGN POLICY Papers: Health, threats, & political frames: Lessons from the
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I 2014 Ebola outbreak
Chair: Kevin Costa, Radio France Internationale Claire Leslie Adida, UCSD
Disc: Beverly Crawford Kim Yi Dionne, Smith College
Melina Raquel Platas Izama, Stanford University
Papers: Does Collective Memory Still Influence German Foreign Experimentally Assigning Segregation
Policy?" Ryan D. Enos, Harvard University
Eric Langenbacher Contextualizing Group Threat: Evidence from a Natural
The Petersburg Dialogue as a Barometer of German- Experiment in Ferguson, MO
Russian Relations Omar Wasow, Princeton University
Jennifer A. Yoder, Colby College A Survey Experiment of the "Chilling Effect" on Latino
Political Behavior
Francisco I. Pedraza, Texas A&M University

190 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

88.2 DYNAMICS AMONG NATIONS: EVOLUTION OF Responsiveness or Consistency? Position Change


LEGITIMACY AND DEVELOPMENT IN Strategies for Candidates
MODERN STATES Hiroto Katsumata, The University of Tokyo
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I Value Fragmentation
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL Maria Sofia Jonsson, Gothenburg University, Political
POLITICAL ECONOMY Science Dep
Chair: Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University Richard Svensson, University of Gothenburg
Part: Robert H. Bates, Harvard University 89.3 POSTER SESSION: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND
Peter Trubowitz, London School of Economics SOCIETY
Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Hill Disc: Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Hilton L. Root, George Mason University
88.3 PLENARY ADDRESS: TAKING EMBEDDED Papers: The Logic of Democratic Extremism: Reexamining voter
LIBERALISM GLOBAL: LESSONS FROM distribution within the EU
BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS, FEATURING Nathan William Henceroth, University of Nevada-Las
JOHN RUGGIE Vegas
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
The Quest for a "Legitimate" Enemy - Populist Radical
Chair: Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Parties in Europe
Hill
Alberto Spektorowski, Tel Aviv University
Alvin B. Tillery, Northwestern University
Karen Umansky, Tel Aviv University
APSA Events
From Pariahs to Policy-Makers: Radical Right in
89.1 POSTER SESSION: THE POLITICS OF Government Coalitions
COMMUNIST AND FORMER COMMUNIST Viktoryia Schnose, Washington University in St.
COUNTRIES Louis
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Public Knowledge of and (Dis-)Satisfaction with
Papers: The ĄSnipersĀ Massacreď on the Maidan in Ukraine
Ivan Katchanovski, University of Ottawa
European Governance
A. Maurits van der Veen, College of William & Mary
Bringing Ideology Back in: An Alternative View of
Rural Advocacy Group Success During the EUĀs Natura
ChinaĀs Political Succession
Cheng Chen, SUNY, Albany
2000 Implementation Process
Emily Olivia Matthews Luxon, University of
Mark Wenyi Lai, Wenzao Ursuline College
Michigan-Dearborn
Yi-Hao Su, University at Albany, SUNY
89.4 POSTER SESSION: MIGRATION AND
CITIZENSHIP DIVISION
Putin the Sex Back in Politics: Gender Norms and
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Political Legitimacy in Russia
Valerie Sperling, Clark University
Papers: The Impact of Pre- and Post-Migration Voting Contexts
A Tale of Two Cities: Ethnic Riots in Post-Communist on ImmigrantsĀ Turnout
Estonia Eline A. de Rooij, Simon Fraser University
Aleksander Lust, Appalachian State University
The Limits of Solidarity and Cohesion: Discourses from
Black Citizenship in Eastern Europe the Extreme-Right
Crystal H. Brown Anna Kyriazi, European University Institute
Formation of New Ideologies of Administration in The Need for Diverse Approaches to the North Korean
American and Russian Reform Refugee Issue
Boris Bruk, Institute of Modern Russia Kyungmook Kim
The Failure of Charismatic Cadres in Single-Party There Goes the Neighbourhood: Social Attitudes towards
Regimes Race in Australia.
Paul J. Schuler, University of Arizona Luke John Mansillo, University of Sydney
Dimitar D Gueorguiev, Syracuse University
Origins of Citizenship Policy: Sub Saharan Africa in
Devising a European Identity on a Platform of Diversity: Comparative Perspective
Influences and Outcomes Jeannette Money, University of California, Davis
Albana Shehaj, University of Michigan Ann Arbor Shaina Western, University of Oxford
DemocracyĀs Effect on Perceptions of Inequality across Migration & Authoritarian Regime Cooperation: Egypt
Transition Countries in the Arab Regional System
Katelyn Finley, University of California, Irvine Gerasimos Tsourapas, SOAS, University of London
Russia's Double Standards of Civilization 89.5 POSTER SESSION: AFRICAN POLITICS
Sergei Akopov, National Research University Higher Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
School of Economics
Daily Schedule

Papers: Diverse Understandings: Localizing Human Rights in


Iain Ferguson
Southern Africa
89.2 POSTER SESSION: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Kristi Heather Kenyon, Dalhousie University
OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Framing Universal Health Coverage in Kenya: An
Interpretive Analysis
Papers: Liberalization of Highly-Skilled Immigration Policies in Adam Koon, London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Europe Medicine
Melanie Kolbe

DAILY SCHEDULE 191


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Patterns of Defection in Peace Processes Familiar Names: The Cost of Family Ties in Local
Chelsea Johnson Elections
89.6 POSTER SESSION: URBAN POLITICS Sara M Kerosky, University of California, San Diego
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Michael Davidson, University of California, San
Diego
Disc: Paul G. Lewis, Arizona State University
Dietmar Schirmer, Zeppelin University Participatory Populism: Participatory Institutions in
Bolivarian Venezuela
Papers: Urban Market Reforms and Citizen Trust: School Choice Matthew Rhodes-Purdy, University of Texas, Austin
and Parent Social Capital Voting for Left Parties in the Middle East: Evidence
Katharine Elizabeth Neem Destler, George Mason from Tunisia
University Ekrem Karakoc, SUNY, Binghamton University
Ashley E. Jochim Talha Kose, Istanbul Sehir University
Agency or Structure? Variations of Local Governance in Ege Ozen, Binghamton University, SUNY
a Federalist Setting When Do Electoral Losers Accept Democracy? Evidence
Lineo Umberto Devecchi, University of Zurich / from Egypt and Tunisia
Sciences Po, Paris Sharan Grewal, Princeton University
Multiculturalism at the local level in Bradford (England) Steve Louis-Andre Monroe, Department of Politics,
and Sarcelles (France) Princeton University
Paul May, Queen's University Exclusion, Polarization, and Coups
Local Low-carbon Transitions in ChinaĀs Environmental Taeko Hiroi, University of Texas at El Paso
Governance Sawa Omori, International Christian University
Weila Gong, Free University of Berlin When Cooptation Fails: The Spatial Dynamics of Protest
Neighborhood Associations and Disaster Recovery in and Repression in Bahrain
Indonesia Trevor Johnston, University of Michigan
Seth Nathan Soderborg, Harvard University The Diffusion of Opposition Parties in Authoritarian
89.7 POSTER SESSION: HUMAN RIGHTS Regimes: Mexico 1984-2000
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Adrian Lucardi, Washington University in St. Louis
Papers: Non-state Actors and Labor Rights: Evidence from Organizing Security Under Dictatorship
Colombia Gonzalo Rivero, YouGov
Laura Seago, University of Michigan Organized Crime: How Democratization Gets Trapped in
US Human Rights Policy and Foreign Aid: The Bush Transition
and Obama Administrations Maria Sofia Jonsson, Gothenburg University, Political
Clair Apodaca, Virginia Tech Science Dep
Human Rights Violations and the Complexity of Civil 89.9 POSTER SESSION: CLASS & INEQUALITY
Conflicts Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
David Bowden, University of Illinois, Urbana- Papers: Fleecing the Poor to Educate the Middle Class: The
Champaign Georgia Lottery and the HOPE
Autocratic Regime Duration and State Repression Masako Rachel Okura, Columbus State University
Lasse Lykke Roerbaek, Aarhus University 89.10 POSTER SESSION: RBSI SCHOLARS
Jakob Tolstrup, Department of Political Science, Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Aarhus University Papers: Red Equal Sign: Social Connections and Political
Interactive Compliance: CEDAW, WomenĀs Ministries Support for Marriage Equality
and Treaty Effects Alexis Schramm, University of Cincinnati
Neil A. Englehart, Bowling Green State University Traffic Stops and Court Fees: How Local Municipalities
Melissa K. Miller, Bowling Green State University Balance Their Budget
89.8 POSTER SESSION: COMPARATIVE Marty Davidson, University of North Carolina
DEMOCARIZATION Chapel Hill
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Contextual Punishment: Influences on Prison Entries in
Papers: Comparative Continuismo: Explaining Executive Term North Carolina
Limit Adherence across Regions Kaneesha Johnson, University of North Carolina at
Kristin McKie, University of Notre Dame & St. Chapel Hill
Lawrence University The Limitations of Health-Specific ODA: Revisiting
Democratization and Central Bank Independence in Plans to Save the World
electoral authoritarian regimes Michelle Ikelau Ngirbabul, Cornell College
Huan-Kai Tseng, George Washington University The Effect of Constitutional Amendments over Diverse
Economic Crisis, Patrimonial States, and Democratic Aspects of Governance
Stability Jesiel Diaz Colon, Universidad de Puerto Rico
David Andersen American Views on Immigration Policy: Do we Really
Suthan Krishnarajan, Aarhus University Support the American Dream?
Isaura Pena, Willamette University
89.11 TEACHING CIVIC ENGAGEMENT: FROM
STUDENT TO ACTIVE CITIZEN
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I

192 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Chair: Dick W. Simpson, University of Illinois, Chicago DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Part: Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University 90.3 SOURCES OF SOCIAL CRITICISM FROM THE
Elizabeth C. Matto, Rutgers University MARGINS
Alison Rios Millett McCartney, Towson University Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Anne Colby, Carnegie Foundation Chair: Joy James, Williams College
Elizabeth Beaumont, University of California, Santa Disc: Joy James, Williams College
Cruz
Division Panels Papers: Critique from the Margins: Public Housing Residency
DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND and Political Priorities
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES Alexandra Moffett-Bateau, CUNY-John Jay College
90.1 REVISITING SOCIAL MOVEMENTS, CIVIL Desperate Rationality
SOCIETY AND PARTY CHANGE AFTER Shay Welch, Spelman College
COMMUNISM W. E. B. Du Bois and the Critique of Capital
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 Andrew J. Douglas, Morehouse College
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION Outkast with a K: A Critique from the Margins of Hip-
Hop
Chair: Joshua A. Tucker, New York University
Justin Rose
Disc: Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University
Tsveta Petrova, Columbia University DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
90.4 DEMOCRACY IN A GLOBALIZED AGE: THE
ALL-AFFECTED PRINCIPLE AND BEYOND
Papers: Online Communities and the Politics of Abeyance in
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Hybrid Authoritarianism
Samuel A. Greene, King's College London Chair: Archon Fung, Harvard University
Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina, Disc: Archon Fung, Harvard University
Chapel Hill
Explaining Civil Society Mobilization in the EU Papers: Affected-Interests and their Institutions
Accession Process Amit Ron, Arizona State University, West Campus
Natasha Wunsch, University College London A Nested Hierarchy: Global Democracy and the All-
CommunismĀs Legacy and EuropeĀs Pull: Social Affected Principle
Movements and Gay-Rights Activism Tomer Perry, Stanford University
Conor O' Dwyer, University of Florida Economic Democracy, the Commons, and the Principle
Between Social Movements & External Actors: When of All-Affected Interests
Do Parties Change Position? Daniel Murray, Stanford University
Milada Anna Vachudova, University of North Democracy in a Globalized Age: The All-Affected
Carolina, Chapel Hill Principle and Beyond
Marko Zilovic, George Washington University Robert E. Goodin, Australian National University
The Rise of Politicized Homophobia: SlovakiaĀs DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
Traditionalist Turn 90.5 DIVERSIFYING ‘DIVERSITY’: MIGRATION,
John A. Gould, Colorado College ECONOMY, CULTURE AND HUMAN RIGHTS
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
90.2 IMMIGRANTS AND DEMOCRATIC THEORY: A Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
PROBLEM ONLY FOR OUTSIDERS? CITIZENSHIP
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 Chair: Paulina Ochoa Espejo, Haverford College
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Disc: Sarah Song, University of California, Berkeley
THEORY
Chair: David Owen, University of Southampton Papers: Migration, Biopolitics, Nomadism: Toward a Theory of
Disc: David Owen, University of Southampton Diversity as Freedom
James Chamberlain, Mississippi State University
Papers: Polity-specific Citizenship Theorizing Gender Based Refugee Claims: Can Realist
Rainer Baubock, European University Institute Theory Account for Diversity
The Political Economy of Immigrant Time: Rights, Kathleen R. Arnold, DePaul University
Citizenship and Temporariness Multiculturalism, Internal Borders and the Liberal State:
Elizabeth F. Cohen, Syracuse University Archipelago or Isthmus
Politics and Police at the Border: Critical Reflections on Richard T. Ashcroft, University of California,
Rancière Berkeley
Daily Schedule

Ayten Gundogdu, Barnard College-Columbia Towards the Rehabilitation of Perfectionist Agency


University Andrew Fagan, University of Essex
Boundaries of Egalitarian Citizenship; Dahl and the DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Realism of Full Inclusion 90.6 INFORMATION ENVIRONMENT EFFECTS
Peter D. Breiner, SUNY, University at Albany Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Chair: Kathleen Searles, Louisiana State University
Disc: Thomas J. Leeper, London School of Economics and
Political Science

DAILY SCHEDULE 193


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Yanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook University Quasi-experimental Evidence on the Effects of Welfare
State Retrenchment
Papers: When do People Pay Attention and Seek More Christopher Krogslund, University of California,
Information? Berkeley
George E. Marcus, Williams College Party Competition and the Electoral Bases of Austere
Michael B. MacKuen, University of North Carolina, Adjustments
Chapel Hill Nobuhiro Hiwatari, University of Tokyo
W. Russell Neuman, University of Michigan Redistribution in One Class? Progressive Taxation and
More is Not Always Better: Political Information the Welfare State
Overload & Decision Confidence Lucy Barnes, University of Kent
Dona-Gene Barton, University of Nebraska
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
Political Advantage, Disadvantage and Media 90.9 ENGAGED SCHOLARS ADDRESS LEADING
Consumption ISSUES IN US POLITICS
Allison Michelle Archer, Vanderbilt University Room: Parc 55, Market Street
Incongruent Information and Political Thinking Chair: Theda Skocpol, Harvard University
David P. Redlawsk, Rutgers University, New Part: Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of
Brunswick Technology
Cengiz Erisen, TOBB University of Economics and Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University
Technology Katherine J Cramer, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Elif Erisen, Hacettepe University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
Climate Change, Political Appeals and Motivated 90.10 IDEAS, INSTITUTIONS, AND CITIES
Reasoning Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
Andrew Owen, University of British Columbia Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
Paul J. Quirk, University of British Columbia
Kathryn Harrison, University of British Columbia Chair: Timothy Weaver, University of Louisville
Nancy Olewiler, Simon Fraser University Disc: Richardson Dilworth, Drexel University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
90.7 SOCIAL SPENDING AND OUTCOMES IN NEW Papers: Antiracism without Antiracists: Race, Party and Urban
AND PARTIAL DEMOCRACIES Political Change
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room Thomas K. Ogorzalek, Northwestern University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE The Politics of Diversity and Local Immigrant
DEMOCRATIZATION Integration in the US and Canada
Chair: Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University Mara Sidney, Rutgers University, Newark
Disc: Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University "Trying out our ideas": Ideology, Institutions, and Urban
Neoliberalization
Papers: Diversity and Development: Political Institutions and Timothy Weaver, University of Louisville
Social Context Re-examining the Community Reinvestment Act:
Jonathan Hanson, University of Michigan Intercurrence and Urban Policy
Local Capture Revisited Amy Widestrom, Arcadia University
Xiaoyang Ye, University of Michigan Trash: A Political History of Municipal Governance,
Fengming Lu, Duke University 1880-1930
Poverty, Inequality and Social Spending: Preferences for Patricia Strach, University at Albany, SUNY
what redistribution? Kathleen S. Sullivan, Ohio University
Fabiana Machado, Inter-American Development DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Bank 90.11 DETECTING AND CONCEALING PATTERNS IN
Target in Motion: The Micro-foundations of Social DATA
Policy in Latin America Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Soledad Artiz Prillaman, Harvard University Chair: Ines Levin, University of Georgia
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY Disc: James Lo, Princeton University
90.8 THE POLITICS OF WELFARE STATE
RETRENCHMENT Papers: Detecting Data Falsification in Survey Research
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B Noble Lawton Kuriakose, SurveyMonkey
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE Michael Robbins, Princeton University
POLITICS OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES Election Frauds, Postelection Legal Challenges and
Chair: Alexander C. Pacek Geography in Mexico
Disc: Alexander C. Pacek Walter R. Mebane, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor
Papers: Immigration, Globalization, and Welfare Privatization in Jonathan Wall, University of Michigan
EU Member States Statistical Exploration of Private Data Via Differentially
Ling Zhu, University of Houston Private Interfaces
Scott Joseph Hofer James Honaker, Harvard University
Vito D' Orazio, University of Texas at Dallas

194 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Election Fraud, Digit Tests and How Humans Fabricate DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Vote Counts 90.14 DISENTANGLING THE COIL OF RADICAL
Verena Mack, University of Konstanz POLITICS IN EUROPE
DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
SCIENCE Chair: Andrea L. P. Pirro, Centre for the Study of Political
90.12 DIVERSE PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICAL Change (CIRCaP), University of Siena
SCIENCE EDUCATION Papers: Radical Parties in Government during the Economic
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Crisis
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE Dan Keith, University of York
EDUCATION Stijn Theodoor van Kessel, Duesseldorf University
Chair: Thomas C. Walker, Grand Valley State University and Loughborough University
Disc: Jonathan R. Strand, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Anti-Racism Legal Action against Political Parties and
Sally Friedman, SUNY, Albany Their Members in Europe
Joost van Spanje, University of Amsterdam
Papers: A Bibliographic Analysis of Recent Political Science Populist Radical Right Voting, Dissonance Reduction
Education Journal Papers and Attitude Radicalization
John Craig, Leeds Beckett University Matthijs Rooduijn
Leo Strauss's Liberal Education and the New Bert Bakker
Enlightened Statesman Gijs Schumacher, VU University Amsterdam
Brandon Garcia, University of Dallas Populism 2.0: Mobilising on the Left, the Right, and the
What Is the "Canon" in American Politics? Analyses of Internet
Core Graduate Syllabi Simona Guerra, University of Leicester
Sean Diament, Northwestern University Andrea L. P. Pirro, Centre for the Study of Political
Adam Howat, Northwestern University Change (CIRCaP), University of Siena
Matthew Lacombe, Northwestern University DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Teaching Global (International) Relations: A Theoretical 90.15 TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS
and Pedagogical Review Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Tanu Kohli Chair: Kristine Eck, Uppsala University
Tim Wedig Disc: Geoff Dancy, Tulane University
Where Do Doctorates Work and Why? Career Paths for
TodayĀs Political Scientists Papers: Disentangling the Political Violence Puzzle in China
Brian David Janssen Kristin Johnson, University of Rhode Island
Vicki Hesli Claypool, University of Iowa Ping Xu, University of Rhode Island
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION Endorsing Repression: Nonviolent Movements and
90.13 PEDAGOGICAL DIVERSITIES RECONSIDERED: Regime Violence in Autocracies
TEACHING POLITICS IN THE 21ST CENTURY Alexander Dukalskis, University College Dublin
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 The Legacy of State Repression Across Generations:
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND Evidence from Crimean Tatars
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Leonid V. Peisakhin, New York University - Abu
Chair: Dave Bridge, Baylor University Dhabi
Disc: Nina A. Kollars, Franklin & Marshall College Noam Lupu, University of Wisconsin-Madison
What Motivates Governments to Pay Reparations After
Papers: The Running Game: Modeling Diversity of Inequality in Human Rights Abuses
the Classroom Claire Greenstein, University of North Carolina,
Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY Chapel Hill
Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY Women in Protest: New Evidence from South African
Joshua Caldon, University of Albany Archives
The Concerning Lack of Diversity in the Simulations Gwyneth McClendon, Harvard University
Literature DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Dave Bridge, Baylor University
COUNTRIES
Amending the Syllabus: A New Approach to Teaching 90.16 DOES VOTE BUYING WORK AND, IF SO,
American Constitutional Law WHEN?
Rebecca McCumbers Flavin, Baylor University Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Using Technology to Teach Political Science: Evaluating Chair: Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin
New Approaches Disc: Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder
Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
Daily Schedule

Mark Allan Schneider, Swarthmore College


Philip H. Pollock, University of Central Florida
Gary Edward Smith, University of Central Florida
Papers: Do Electoral Handouts Affect Voting Behavior?
A Novel Approach: Using Fiction to Explore Political Jenny Guardado, Georgetown University
Culture in State Politics Leonard Wantchekon
Parker Read Hevron, Texas Woman's University
Why Vote Buying Fails: Campaign Effects, Brokers, and
the Elusive Swing Voter
Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin

DAILY SCHEDULE 195


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Rhetoric v. Reality: Brokers Networks and Vote Buying DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
in Indonesia INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Edward Aspinall, Australian National University 90.19 DECENTRALIZATION AND REDISTRIBUTION
Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
Meredith L. Weiss, University at Albany, SUNY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Declared Support: Citizen Strategies of Clientelism in Chair: Linda Choi Hasunuma, Franklin and Marshall College
Brazil Disc: Linda Choi Hasunuma, Franklin and Marshall College
Simeon C. Nichter, UC San Diego Francesc Amat, Institute for Political Economy and
Salvatore Nunnari, Columbia University Governance
Vote Buying and Ethnic Voting
Eric J. Kramon, George Washington University Papers: Decentralization and Preferences for Redistribution
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING Jeremy Ferwerda, MIT
COUNTRIES Intra-party Conflict, The Welfare State, and The Politics
90.17 ELECTIONS AND REPRESENTATION IN THE of (De)centralization
DEVELOPING WORLD Melodie Chika Ogawa, Harvard University
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9 Political Knowledge and Support for Redistribution
Chair: Kai Ostwald, University of British Columbia Jason Jordan, Drew University
Disc: Ji Yeon (Jean) Hong, Hong Kong University of Science The Political Economy of Social Policy Implementation:
and Technology Evidence from France
Johannes Hemker, Columbia University
Papers: How Does Minority Representation Shape Development?
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
90.20 POLITICAL REVERBERATIONS OF THE
Village Evidence from India
Benjamin Pasquale, University of Southern
FINANCIAL CRISIS I: DOMESTIC
California
CONSEQUENCES
Indonesia's 2014 Election: Referendum on Democracy? Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Kai Ostwald, University of British Columbia Chair: James Sloam, University of London, Royal Holloway
Institutions and Incumbency Advantage in African Disc: Aina Gallego, Institut de Barcelona d'Estudis
Elections Internacionals
Ken Ochieng' Opalo, Georgetown University
Local Incumbency Advantage and Performance in Papers: Extreme Right Support and Mainstream Party Failure
Federal Elections in Mexico After the Financial Crisis
Alejandra Armesto Trevor J Allen, University of California, Irvine
Negative Party Identification: The cases of Anti- Great Recession, Austerity, and Political Extremism in
Fujimorismo and Anti-Aprismo Europe
Carlos Melendez, Universidad Diego Portales Jana Grittersova, University of California, Riverside
Jennifer Marie Cyr, University of Arizona Indridi Haukur Indridason, University of California,
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING Riverside
COUNTRIES Christina Gregory, University of California, Riverside
90.18 THE POLITICS OF DEVELOPMENT Ricardo Crespo, Univeristy of California, Riverside
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room One Family, Diverse Strategies ĉ The Impact of the
Chair: Jeremy L. Wallace, Cornell University Euro-Crisis on Party Policies
Disc: Jeremy L. Wallace, Cornell University Sebastian U. Bukow, Heinrich-Heine-University
Duesseldorf
Niko Switek, University Duisburg-Essen
Papers: Crops, Community, and Commitment: the Social
Foundation of Economic Development Technocratic Shift During the Eurocrisis: What Impact
Xiao Ma, University of Washington on European Democracies?
Eri E Bertsou, University of Zurich
Emerging MarketsĀ Central Banks in the ĄNew Normalď Giulia Pastorella
Giselle Datz, Virginia Tech
Maria Antonieta Del Tedesco Lins, University of Sao Political Ramifications of the Eurozone Crisis: Evidence
Paulo from Spain
Alexander Kuo, Cornell University
Capital Flight and Southeast Asia: A Political Economy Jose Fernandez-Albertos, CSIC
Approach
Kenneth Faulve-Montojo, Santa Clara University DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
90.21 POLICIES, POLITICS AND FINANCIAL CRISES
Whose Goals, Who Benefits and How: Politics of the Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Share Merger Reform in China
Jinjie Liu Chair: Ben William Ansell, Nuffield College, University of
Oxford
From Rule-Taker to Rule-Maker? The Transformation of
Disc: Ben William Ansell, Nuffield College, University of
Kenya's Competition Policy
Tim Buthe, Duke University
Oxford
Sophia Staal, Duke University
Lucy M. Goodhart, Brandeis University

196 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Papers: After the Rain Comes the Sun? The Political Economy Emotional Turnabout and the Communication of Resolve
of Credit Recoveries in Face-to-face Diplomacy
Puspa D Amri, Ithaca College Seanon Wong, University of Southern California
Andreas Kern, Georgetown University DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Policy Responses to Banking Crises Over the Very Long 90.24 EMPIRICAL ANALYSES OF FOREIGN POLICY
Run CRISIS BEHAVIOR
Jeffrey M. Chwieroth, London School of Economics Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Andrew Walter, Melbourne School of Government, Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
University of Melbourne Chair: Joshua Su-Ya Wu, The Ohio State University
Capital Inflows, Financial Competition, and Banking Disc: Jason A. Reifler, University of Exeter
Crises Roseanne McManus, Baruch College, CUNY
David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology Papers: Circumventing Audience Costs? An Experiment on
Mark Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison Alliance Loopholes & Compliance
Interest Groups and Currency Crises: Argentina in Joshua Camden Fjelstul, Emory University
Comparative Perspective Dan Reiter, Emory University
David A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins University Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION Jessica L. P. Weeks, University of Wisconsin-Madison
90.22 POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION Restraining Gulliver: Competency Costs, Public Opinion,
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 and Intervention
Disc: Leslie Johns, University of California, Los Angeles Christopher F. Gelpi, The Ohio State University
Joseph M. Grieco, Duke University
Papers: Behave, or Else? Aid and Voting on the UN Security Politics Beyond the Border: Civil-Military Relations and
Council the Use of Force Abroad
Svanhildur Thorvaldsdottir, University of Rochester Anne E. Sartori, MIT
The First Image Reversed: Do IGOs Provide Information Hand-Tying versus Muscle-Flexing in Crisis Bargaining
to the Mass Public? Todd S. Sechser, University of Virginia
David H. Bearce, University of Colorado, Boulder God is on Our Side: Use of Religious Rhetoric during
Thomas Richard Cook, University of Colorado Foreign Policy Crises
Boulder Joshua Su-Ya Wu, The Ohio State University
Autocratic Ratification of International Human Rights DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Agreements 90.25 DOMESTIC AUDIENCES AND INTERNATIONAL
Mi Hwa Hong, University of Michigan CONFLICT
ChinaĀs Socialization into International Legal Regimes: Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Evidence from Hard Law Chair: Jonathan D. Caverley
Jing Tao, NYU School of Law Disc: Jonathan D. Caverley
Funding Aid Agencies: The Political Determinants of
Core v. Non-Core Funding Papers: Promise and Preference: Leader and Domestic
Katherine Vera Bryant, Texas A&M University Audiences in Crisis Bargaining
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Cathy Xuanxuan Wu, University of Texas, Austin
90.23 EMOTION, PSYCHOLOGY, AND CONFLICT An Experimental Analysis of Alliance Commitments and
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 Audience Costs
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL Brian Lai, University of Iowa
PSYCHOLOGY Nicholas Martini, University of Iowa
Chair: Deborah Welch Larson, UCLA Political Science Militarized Disputes, Partisanship, and Electoral Support
Department for the Incumbent
Disc: Deborah Welch Larson, UCLA Political Science Shane Paul Singh, University of Georgia
Department
Doves make Hawks: Missing Link between Public
Opinion and Audience Costs
Papers: The Cognitive Sources of Falling Dominoes: Kennedy, Kiyotaka Yasui, Waseda University
Johnson and the Vietnam War
Michael D. Cohen, University of Southern Denmark The Effect of War on Political Attitudes
Anna Getmansky, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)
Rethinking Deterrence: Toward a Neuropolitical Model Herzliya
of Nuclear Security
John Michael Friend, University of Hawaii at Manoa To Whom Do Reputations Adhere?
Jonathan Renshon, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Daily Schedule

Bradley A. Thayer, University of Iceland


Allan Dafoe, Yale University
The Psychology of Revenge and Deterrence in Paul K. Huth, University of Maryland, College Park
International Relations
Pete Hatemi, Pennsylvania State University DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
90.26 SOCIALIZATION AND VIOLENCE
Terrorist Mindsets: Insights from Social and Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
Evolutionary Psychology
Chair: Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University
Zoey Reeve, University of Edinburgh
Disc: Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University

DAILY SCHEDULE 197


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison Powering Down the Presidency: Congress and Recess
Appointments
Papers: Rethinking Socialization: The Case of GuatemalaĀs Civil Ian Ostrander, Texas Tech University
Patrols DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Regina A. Bateson, MIT 90.29 THE DEVELOPMENT AND EVOLUTION OF
Enacting Collective Violence: Meaning Making and AMERICAN BUREAUCRACY
Socialization Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
Lee Ann Fujii, University of Toronto Co-sponsored by DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
Membership Matters: Socialization and the Dynamics of Chair: Daniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University
Group Allegiance Disc: Chloe Thurston, Northwestern University
Scott Gates, PRIO Carlos E. Diaz-Rosillo, Harvard
Socialization Processes in State and Non-State Armed
Organizations Papers: Private Civil Rights Litigation and the American
Amelia Hoover Green, Drexel University Bureaucracy
The Underproduction of Military Violence and the Quinn W. Mulroy, Northwestern University
Limits of Socialization The Intergovernmental and Interest Group Roots of the
Devorah S. Manekin, Arizona State University American Bureaucracy
Kimberley S. Johnson, Barnard College
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
90.27 PARTY LEADERSHIP AND PARTISAN Private Enforcement Regimes, Policy Impact, and
COMMUNICATION Citizen Participation
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 Ann-Marie E. Szymanski, University of Oklahoma
Chair: Kathryn Pearson, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Beyond Deregulation: Explaining the Dynamics of
Disc: Kathryn Pearson, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Contemporary Regulatory Change
Hong Min Park, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Marc Allen Eisner, Wesleyan University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
Papers: Choosing the Leader: Explaining Leadership Elections in 90.30 TALK TALK: EMPIRICAL AND
the U.S. House METHODOLOGICAL INSIGHTS FROM
Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America INTERVIEWING JUDGES
Douglas B. Harris, Loyola University Maryland Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Legislative Institutions and the Power of Majority-Party Chair: Lee Epstein, Washington University in St. Louis
Leaders Part: Jeffrey L. Dunoff
Alexander Fouirnaies, Nuffield College Mark A. Pollack, Temple University
Andrew B Hall, Stanford University Rebecca D. Gill, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
When Bipartisanship is Partisan Jennifer Barnes Bowie, University of Richmond
Sean Westwood, Princeton University Todd Tucker
Partisan Payoffs: Distributive Politics and Party DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
Participation in the US House RELATIONS
Scott R. Meinke, Bucknell University 90.31 FISCAL POLITICS IN FEDERAL SYSTEMS
CĀMon, LetĀs Tweet Again, Like We Did Last Summer Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Osnat Akirav, Western Galilee College Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Chair:
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Heidi Jane M. Smith, George Mason University
90.28 PRESIDENTIAL INFLUENCE AND Disc: Jonathan Rodden, Stanford University
CONGRESSIONAL POLITICS Heidi Jane M. Smith, George Mason University
Room: Hilton, Imperial A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES Papers: An Analysis of State-Municipal Interactions in Brazil
Chair: Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University Alice Z Xu, Harvard University
Disc: Matthew N. Beckmann, University of California, Irvine Corruption and Preferences for Inter-regional
Terry Sullivan, University of North Carolina at Chapel Redistribution
Hill Sergi Pardos, University of Oxford, Merton College
Theresa Kuhn, University of Amsterdam
Papers: Presidential Influence in an Age of Congressional Disputes for Oil Rents in Federations: A Comparative
Dominance Study
Jon C. Rogowski, Washington University in St. Louis Beni Trojbicz, EAESP-FGV, Brazil
Rise of the Informal Presidency: Understanding New Politics of Federal Transfers in Putin's Russia
Levers of Presidential Power Gulnaz Sharafutdinova, King's College London
Saul P. Jackman, Vanderbilt University Rostislav Turovsky, Higher School of Economics
Executive Discretion and Legislative Appropriations The Brazilian Barons of Excise Tax: ICMS Disputes
Sharece Thrower, University of Pittsburgh between 1998 and 2011
Alexander Bolton, Princeton University Rodrigo dos Santos, UNIFAFIBE
Presidential Lobbying and Legislative Success
Kenneth Lowande, University of Virginia
Andrew Clarke, University of Virginia

198 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY Papers: Electoral Systems, Gender Quotas, and WomenĀs
90.32 POLICY IMPLEMENTATION AND Substantive Representation
CONSTITUTIONAL REFORMS IN THE Amanda Clayton
AMERICAN STATES Par Zetterberg, Uppsala University
Room: Parc 55, Mason Gender Quotas, WomenĀs Representation, and
Disc: Jeff Yates, SUNY, Binghamton University Cosponsorship Activity in Argentina
Jennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental College
Papers: Democratic Responsiveness in State Policy Juan Pablo Micozzi, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo
Implementation de Mexico
Douglas Spencer Marina Lacalle, University of Houston
Miranda Yaver, Washington University in St. Louis The Impact of Gender Quota Laws on Political Party
Federalism, Sovereignty, and Constitutional Revision in Positions
the South, 1860-1902 Ana Catalano Weeks, Harvard University
Paul Emerson Herron, Brandeis University Women's Legislative Representation and Corruption
The Evolution of Constitutional Restrictiveness in State Reduction in Tanzania
Legislatures Mi Yung Yoon, Hanover College
Nancy Martorano Miller, University of Dayton Testing the Politics of Feminist Awareness. A study of
Keith E. Hamm, Rice University the Swedish Riksdag
Ronald D. Hedlund Lena Wangnerud, University of Gothenburg
The Political Origins of Whistleblower Legislation DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
Abby K. Wood 90.35 LATINO POLITICS
When Do States Amend their Constitutions? Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Adam R. Brown, Brigham Young University Chair: Tony Affigne, Providence College
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS Disc: Tony Affigne, Providence College
90.33 THE URBAN ELECTORAL CONNECTION:
GOVERNANCE, SERVICES, & FINANCES Papers: Emerging Dimensions of Latino Politics: The Case of
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Religion and the "Nones"
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND Alvaro Corral, University of Texas, Austin
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS David L. Leal, University of Texas at Austin
Chair: Min Hee Go, CUNY - Brooklyn College Joe Tafoya, The University of Texas at Austin
Disc: Min Hee Go, CUNY - Brooklyn College Mobilized by Injustice: Latina/o Communities and
Criminal Justice Contact
Papers: The Politics of Potholes Hannah Walker, University of Washington
Craig M. Burnett, University of North Carolina Mobilizing Latinos: How White Candidates Can Increase
Wilmington Turnout and Support
Vladimir Kogan Loren Collingwood, UC Riverside
The Homevoter Hypothesis and Competing Concepts of Rudy Alamillo, University of California, Riverside
Home Value: Toronto 2014 Open Congressional Primaries in Majority-Latino
Aaron A. Moore, University of Winnipeg Districts
Michael McGregor Angela Ximena Ocampo, University of California,
Laura Stephenson, University of Western Ontario Los Angeles
Public Services and Policy Feedback in the Urban DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
Environment PARTIES
Justin de Benedictis-Kessner, MIT 90.36 REPRESENTATION THROUGH POLITICAL
City Credit RatingsĀ Conditional Effect on Leadership PARTIES
Survival Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Markie McBrayer, University of Houston Disc: Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Maryland
Programmatic Policy Competition in Small-scale
Democracies: Evidence from Japan Papers: Are Parties Representation Specialists? Evaluations of
Hiroka MITA, Utsunomiya University German Political Parties
Kuniaki Nemoto, Musashi University Debra Lynn Leiter, University of Missouri, Kansas
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS City
90.34 GENDER QUOTAS II: SUBSTANTIVE Democratic Accountability: Clientelism and Issue
REPRESENTATION Congruence in Latin America
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III Zoila Ponce de Leon Seijas, University of North
Daily Schedule

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND Carolina, Chapel Hill


ELECTORAL SYSTEMS Electoral Systems, Interparty Dynamics, and Public
Chair: Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami Opinion Shifts on Issues
Dept. of Political Science Florence So, Aarhus University
Disc: Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami Marriage of Love or Marriage of Convenience
Dept. of Political Science Zsuzsanna Blanka Magyar, UCLA
Mariam Mufti, University of Waterloo

DAILY SCHEDULE 199


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR Papers: Is there a ĄDisconnectď between Public Opinion and
90.37 PRESENTING PARTIES TO VOTERS: NEW U.S. Admissions Policy?
MEDIA MEETS OLD MEDIA Morris E Levy, University of Southern California
Room: Parc 55, Divisadero Matthew Wright, American University
Chair: Aaron Martin, University of Melbourne Jack Citrin, University of California, Berkeley
Disc: Andrea Carson, University of Melbourne Opposition to Immigration in Comparative Perspective
Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, Ann
Papers: Normative and Methodological Issues and Arbor
Advancements in VAA Design Stuart N. Soroka, University of Michigan
Clifton van der Linden, University of Toronto Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
Gregory Eady Toril Aalberg, NTNU Trondheim
Yannick Dufresne Raymond M. Duch, University of Oxford
Thorsten Faas
Vote Compass in British Columbia: Insight into Poll Kyu S. Hahn, Seoul National University
Prediction Failure? Kasper M. Hansen
Richard G.C. Johnston, University of British Allison Harell, Université du Québec à Montréal
Columbia Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center WZB
Do Quebeckers Follow the Leader? Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University
Francois Gelineau Tetsuro Kobayashi, National Institute of Informatics
Yannick Dufresne Does Service Warrant Citizenship, and For Whom?
Marc A. Bodet, Universite Laval Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Vote Compass: Does it Really Encourage Positional Champaign
Voting? Imagined (Immigrant) Communities
Jack Vowles, Victoria University of Wellington Tom K. Wong, University of California, San Diego
Jennifer Lees-Marshment, University of Auckland
Danny Osborne Broken Promise: Effects of Local Deportations on
Validated Turnout and Attitudes
Priorities of the Young: Vote Compass and the 2013 Adam Thal, Princeton University
Australian Federal Election Vladimir Enrique Medenica, Princeton University
Aaron Martin, University of Melbourne Ali A. Valenzuela, Princeton University
Andrea Carson, University of Melbourne
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
POLITICS
90.38 VOTERS AND MANDATES: EVALUATING
90.40 CAMPAIGNING ONLINE: CROSS-NATIONAL
SPECIFIC ACCOUNTABILITY PROCESSES
ASSESSMENTS OF THE WEB’S ROLE IN
Room: Parc 55, Mission II
ELECTIONS
Chair: Elin Naurin, Univeristy of Gothenburg Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
Disc: Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton University Chair: Antoinette Pole, Montclair State University
Disc: Jason Gainous, University of Louisville
Papers: Does Promise Breaking Lose Votes?
Robert Thomson, University of Strathclyde Papers: A Tale of the 2014 Brazilian Election through the Web
Heinz Brandenburg, University of Aberdeen MARCO AURELIO RUEDIGER
How Accurate are VotersĀ Evaluation of Pledge Amaro Silveira Grassi
Fulfillment? Pedro Lenhard, Fundação Getulio Vargas
Francois Petry, Laval University An Assessment of Candidate Online Campaigns at the
Dominic Duval, Université Laval 2015 UK General Election
Negativity Biases in Specific Accountability Processes Rosalynd Victoria Southern, Manchester
Niels Markwat, University of Gothenburg Benjamin John Lee, The University of Leicester
Election Pledge Rhetoric: Selling Policy with Words New Information Dynamics in Political Campaigning
Elina Anna Marit Lindgren, University of Michael J. Jensen, University of Canberra
Gothenburg Social Media Campaigns & Election Outcomes: Is There
Elin Naurin, Univeristy of Gothenburg a Real Relationship?
Election Promises in Bulgaria, 1990-2013: Numbers, Seyedreza Mousavi
Issues, and Voter Choice Bin Gu, Arizona State University
Petia A. Kostadinova, University of Illinois at Using Volume and Tone on Twitter for Electoral
Chicago Prediction: Not so Simple
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION Shannon C McGregor, University of Texas
90.39 NEW FRONTIERS IN RESEARCH ON PUBLIC Rachel Mourao, The University of Texas at Austin
ATTITUDES TOWARD IMMIGRATION Logan Molyneux, University of Texas at Austin
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
Chair: Jack Citrin, University of California, Berkeley 90.41 ANARCHISM AND RADICAL DEMOCRACY
Disc: Benjamin J. Newman, University of Connecticut Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Chair: Laurence Davis, University College Cork
Papers: Anarchism and Democracy: Classical and Contemporary
Approaches
Nathan Jun, Midwestern State University

200 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Anarchism and Radical Democracy in the German Non- Rival Institutional Dependencies on Pharmaceutical
dogmatic Left Policy: A Bayesian analysis
Darcy K. Leach, Bradley University Cyril BENOIT, Sciences Po Bordeaux - The
Daniel Guérin and the Idea of āTotal RevolutionĀ University of Sheffield
Dave Berry, Loughborough University Supplementary Power: Mixed-Method Research Beyond
Anarchism and the Democratization of Democracy Nested Analysis
Laurence Davis, University College Cork Vinicius G. Rodrigues Vieira, University of Oxford
(How) Does Politics Matter Anymore? Rare Events: A Mixed Methods Approach
Martha A. Ackelsberg, Smith College Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego
Sharon Crasnow, Norco College
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
90.42 WHY DEMOCRATIZATION SUCCEEDS DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D 90.45 SOCIAL NETWORK APPROACHES TO
VIOLENCE AND COERCION
Disc:
Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Candelaria Garay, Harvard University
Christian Houle, Michigan State University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Papers: The Social Origins of Democracy Reconsidered Chair: Daniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University
Michael Albertus, University of Chicago Disc: Christopher K. Ansell, University of California,
Berkeley
Autonomous Institutions: Why Democratization Failed in
Egypt but not Tunisia
Sharan Grewal, Princeton University Papers: Violence and Organizational Evolution in Lebanon's
Palestinian Camps
All for One and One for All? Democratization through Sarah E. Parkinson, University of Minnesota
ĄInclusiveď Transition
Katherine E Michel, UC Berkeley Innovation as Disobedience: Transgression against
Prescribed Approaches in War
Business and Political Transitions Eric Hundman, University of Chicago
Ian Shapiro, Yale University
Itumeleng Makgetla, Yale University The Ties that Bind: Elite Networks and Stability in Iraq
and Syria
Elite Mobilization and Social Policymaking in Julia Choucair-Vizoso, Stanford University
Authoritarian Regime: Evidence from China's National
Assemblies (1983-2007) The Vigilant Eye: Elite Control, Private Enforcement,
Xiaobo Lu, University of Texas at Austin and the American State
Jonathan Obert, Amherst College
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
90.43 DOMESTIC GOVERNANCE AND HUMAN Caught in the SpiderĀs Web? Networks and Purges in
RIGHTS ChinaĀs Cultural Revolution
Room: Parc 55, Stockton Franziska Barbara Keller, Columbia University
Chair: Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State University DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Disc: Wendy Wong, University of Toronto 90.46 MIGRATION AND MEMBERSHIP IN EUROPE
Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Papers: Human Rights Governance and Global Patterns of State Chair: Cristina I Dragomir
Behavior Disc: Cristina I Dragomir
Corina Lacatus Ion Marandici, Rutgers University
Delegating Accountability: Analysis of National Human
Rights Institution Design Papers: Diffusion, Policy & Impact: Including the Religious
Ryan Merrill Welch, Arizona State University 'Other' in Turkey & Germany
Ayse Ezgi Gurcan, Istanbul Policy Center / Sabanci
The Unintended Consequences of National Human University
Rights Commissions Ayca Arkilic, University of Texas, Austin
Thania Sanchez, Yale University
Competing Policy Preferences: EUĀs Eastern Neighbours
Diversities, Not Dichotomies: Human Rights Beyond and Cross-border Mobility
ĄGlobalď Vs. ĄLocalď Norms Canan Ezel Tabur
Rachel Lee Wahl, University of Virginia
Irregular Migration, Europeanization, and Insecurity on
Backlash in the International Human Rights Regime? EuropeĀs Peripheries
Oskar N.T. Thoms, Princeton University Craig Damian Smith, University of Toronto
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS Diversity among ĄUsď: Migrant Residence Patterns &
90.44 INNOVATIONS IN MIXED-METHOD RESEARCH Anti-Migrant Political Action
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6 Jennifer J. White, University of Georgia
Daily Schedule

Chair: Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University


DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN POLITICS CONFERENCE
Disc: Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University GROUP
90.47 THE POLITICS OF URBAN TRANSFORMATION
Papers: Nested Analysis with Spatially Dependent Data IN AFRICA
Imke Harbers, University of Amsterdam Room: Parc 55, Balboa
Matthew C. Ingram, University at Albany, SUNY Co-sponsored by DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS
Chair: Jeffrey W. Paller, Columbia University

DAILY SCHEDULE 201


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Disc: Sean Fox, University of Bristol Factors Affecting the Result of HomeownersĀ Collective
Action in Contemporary Urban China
Papers: Transformation without Taxation? Real Estate, Rent, and Zhiming Sheng, Shanghai University
Urban Change Listen to Rubber Stamp's Voice: Information Gathering
Tom Ashton Goodfellow in Authoritarian Congress
Whose City is it Anyway? Evidence from a Survey Zeren Li, Hong Kong University of Science and
Experiment in Urban Ghana Technology
Jeffrey W. Paller, Columbia University 91.3 ASSOCIATION OF KOREAN POLITICAL
Urban Governance as Mode of Party Building: African STUDIES: CONFLICTS OF KOREA
Mayors and Service Delivery Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Danielle Elise Resnick, International Food Policy Chair: Jae-Jung Suh
Research Institute Disc: Mikyoung Kim, Hiroshima Peace Institute
National Policy Change from Below? Understanding
conditions when cities lead Papers: Individuals and Culture in KoreaĀs Democratic
Christopher Gore, Ryerson University Movement in the 1970s and 1980s
Nonstate Security and State Legitimacy in Urban South Youngtae Shin, University of Central Oklahoma
Africa South Korean Protests during the Park Geun-hye Regime
Danielle S. Carter Kushner, St. Mary's College of Taehyun Nam, Salisbury University
Maryland Partisan Politics and Redistributive Policies in South
DIVISION 54: POLITICAL EPISTEMOLOGY Korea: Evidence from National and Subnational Level
90.48 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: "HOW Data Analysis
PROPAGANDA WORKS" Eunyoung Ha, Claremont Graduate University
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II Christopher Hwang
Chair: Helene E. Landemore Island Disputes and Diversionary Politics: AGame-
Part: Eric Beerbohm, Harvard University Theoretic Analysis with an Application to Japan and
Jeffrey Friedman, University of Texas, Austin Korea
JASON STANLEY, Yale University Shale Horowitz, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Charles W. Mills, Northwestern University Sunwoong Kim, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Related Groups 91.4 BRAZILIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE
91.1 ASSOCIATION FOR ISRAEL STUDIES: ASSOCIATION: THE NEW CHALLENGES OF
DIVERSITIES RECONSIDERED: POLITICS, AND DEMOCRACY IN BRAZIL
POLITICAL SCIENCE, IN THE 21ST CENTURY - Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero
THE ISRAELI CASE Chair: Leonardo Avritzer, Universidade Federal de Minas
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 Gerais
Chair: Fany Yuval, Ben-Gurion University Disc: Brian Wampler, Boise State University
Disc: Maoz Rosenthal, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya
Papers: Inverting Lampedusa: Governmental Coalitions and
Papers: Diversity in Local Management - Municipal Policies and Political Crisis during the PTĀs Era in Brazil
Gender Equality in Culturally Diverse Democracies Claudio Goncalves Couto, FGV-EAESP
Rebecca Kook, Ben-Gurion University Ascension and Stagnation of Participatory Policies at the
Fany Yuval, Ben-Gurion University National Level in Brazil
Ayelet Harel-Shalev, Ben-Gurion University of the Leonardo Avritzer, Universidade Federal de Minas
Negev Gerais
Getting Their Signals Crossed: Explaining Why The Big Media Coverage of Presidential Elections in
Politicians See Uniformity of Views Among Jews and Brazil: Watchdog or Opposition Party
Evangelical Christians on Israel Despite the Actual Joao Feres, IESP-UERJ/CNPq
Diversity 91.5 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
Bryan R. Daves, Yeshiva University STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
Deafening Diversity: Grappling with Hegemony PHILOSOPHY: COMPASSION, CRUELTY, AND
Boaz Ahad Ha'am, Haifa University THE VIRTUES OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT
91.2 ASSOCIATION OF CHINESE POLITICAL Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
STUDIES: VARIETIES OF POLITICAL Chair: Matthew D. Mendham, Hillsdale College
PARTICIPATION IN CONTEMPORARY CHINA Disc: Khalil Habib
Room: Parc 55, Powell II Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College
Chair: John James Kennedy
Disc: John James Kennedy Papers: Compassion and Natural Disasters: Voltaire, Rousseau,
Jessica C. Teets, Middlebury College and Smith on Sympathy Across Borders
Richard Boyd, Georgetown University
Papers: Pollution, Institutions, and Street Protest in Urban China The Elusive Center: Moderation in the Writings of the
Yang Zhong, Shanghai Jiao Tong University Coppet Group
Can Consultation Replace Election in Generating Aurelian Craiutu, Indiana University
Authoritarian Legitimacy?
Szu-chien Hsu

202 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

It's a Very Peculiar Citizen Who's a Hermit: The Chair: Oona Eisenstadt, Pomona College
Question of Rousseau's Civic Devotion Disc: Michelle M. Kundmueller
Matthew D. Mendham, Hillsdale College Oona Eisenstadt, Pomona College
Montesquieu on the Most Atrocious Punishments
Vickie B. Sullivan, Tufts University Papers: The Three Songs of Demodokus and the Blind Eye of
Nathaniel Gilmore, University of Toronto the Odyssey
91.6 CONFERENCE GROUP ON JURISPRUDENCE Nalin Ranasinghe, Assumption College
AND PUBLIC LAW: AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS Music, Memory, and the Politics of Cultural Diversity in
DENNIS PATTERSON'S MINDS, BRAINS, AND HomerĀs Odyssey
LAW : THE CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS OF Rebecca LeMoine, Florida Atlantic University
LAW AND NEUROSCIENCE .
Room:
āExpel the Barbarian from Your HeartĀ: Intimations of
Hilton, Imperial B
the Cyclops in EuripidesĀ Hecuba
Chair: David Fagelson, American University Zdravko Planinc, McMaster University
Part: J. Donald Moon, Wesleyan University The Uses of Homer in PlatoĀs Philebus
Alan Ryan, Stanford University Bernat Torres Morales
David Fagelson, American University
Dennis Patterson, European University 91.10 FRENCH POLITICS GROUP: MAURICE
Michael Pardo, University of Alabama School of Law DUVERGER AND SEMI-PRESIDENTIALISM
Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
91.7 CONFERENCE GROUP ON THE MIDDLE EAST:
YOUTH POLITICS IN THE CONTEMPORARY
Co-sponsored by Association Française de Science Politique
ARAB WORLD Chair: Jennifer Fredette, Ohio University
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Part: Robert Elgie, Dublin City University
Chair: Augustus Richard Norton, Boston University Martial Foucault, Sciences Po Paris
Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan, Ann
Disc: Denis J. Sullivan, Northeastern University
Arbor
Emily Cury, Northeastern University
Annie Laurent, Université de Lille
André Blais, University of Montreal
Papers: In Continued Denial: Youth Dissatisfaction in the Post-
Arab Awakening World 91.11 LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDY
Mary Chloe Mulderig GROUP: POLITICAL PARTIES AND CAMPAIGN
FINANCE IN THE POST-CITIZENS UNITED
A Crisis of National Identity: How Youth Fuel Political WORLD
Entropy in Libya Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Ayman Grada MD, Boston University School of Chair: Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los
Medicine Angeles
Unusual Suspects: Soccer Fans as Key Political Actors Disc: Yasmin Dawood, University of Toronto
James Dorsey, Nanyang Technological University
Youth and the Allure of the Islamic State: Identity, Papers: Ideological Donors, Contribution Limits, and the
Recruitment, Political Economy Polarization of American Legislatures
Eric M. Davis, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Michael Barber, Brigham Young University
91.8 CRITICAL POLICY STUDIES: TAKING STOCK The Federalist Safeguards of Politics
OF NARRATIVE POLICY ANALYSIS Anthony Johnstone, University of Montana
Room: Parc 55, Davidson
Legislators as Party Elites: Intraparty Factionalism and
Chair: Selen A. Ercan Presidential Politics in the New Hampshire State House
Disc: Frank Fischer, Rutgers University Seth E. Masket, University of Denver
Democratic Romanticism
Papers: A Changing Purpose of the Public Administration?: The Richard Pildes, New York University
Purpose of the Public Administration as a Foundational
Narrative or Metanarrative 91.12 SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS: DEMOCRACY &
Lars Mikael Karlsson, University of Gothenburg SECURITY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA: VARIED
PERSPECTIVES
Vanja Carlsson, University of Gothenburg
Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Angelica Borjesson, University of Gothenburg
Chair: Donald K. Emmerson, Stanford University
Narrative Cognition and Cultural Networks: How
Groups inform Campaign Finance Reform Preferences Disc: Shane J Barter, Soka University of America
Michael D. Jones, Oregon State University Donald K. Emmerson, Stanford University
Elizabeth Ann Shanahan, Montana State University
Holly Peterson, Oregon State University Papers: Big Promises Being Kept: the Politics of President
Aaron Smith-Walter, Virginia Tech SBYĀS Public Sector Reform and Anti-Corruption
Daily Schedule

Agenda in 2004 ĉ 2009


Narratives of Professional Control. How the Medical
Vishnu Juwono, University of Indonesia
Profession Constitutes Itself as Health Policy Authority
Lars Thorup Larsen, Aarhus University Migration Curse? The Impact of International Migration
91.9 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: RE-
on Democratic Accountability in the Philippines
ENCOUNTERING HOMER: POETRY, TRAGEDY, Yoon Ah Oh, Korea Institute for International
AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Economic Policy
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II

DAILY SCHEDULE 203


Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

History, Education, and Political Violence: Evidence Eduardo Araral


from South Thailand Annelise Russell, University of Texas, Austin
Harish S.P.
Non-traditional Security in the ASEAN Community: A Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM
Discourse Analysis Theme Panels
Stephanie Martel 94.1 AFTER OBAMA: LEGACIES OF AMERICA'S
FIRST MINORITY PRESIDENT
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
APSA Events Co-sponsored by DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND
92.1 APSR EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Room: Hilton, Vista Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
POLITICS
Saturday, 12:30 PM to 1:30 PM Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
APSA Events CITIZENSHIP
Chair:
93.1 CLASS AND INEQUALITY SECTION BUSINESS
Andrew C. Rudalevige, Bowdoin College
MEETING Part: George C. Edwards, Texas A&M University, College
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Station
Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania
93.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICS JOURNAL BUSINESS
MEETING
Matt A. Barreto, University of California, Los Angeles
Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room
Pearl K. Ford Dowe, University of Arkansas,
Fayetteville
93.3 APSA MEMBER DISCUSSION: REVISING
94.2 BEYOND OUR BORDERS: DOES POLITICAL
ETHICS GUIDELINES FOR HUMAN SUBJECTS
SCIENCE HAVE AN IMPACT ON OTHER
RESEARCH
DISCIPLINES?
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
93.4 JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
EDUCATION EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Green Room Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
93.5 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES METHODOLOGY
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING Co-sponsored by DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 METHODS
93.6 PRESIDENTS & EXECUTIVE POLITICS Chair: Alvin B. Tillery, Northwestern University
SECTION BUSINESS MEETING Part: Daniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 John H. Aldrich, Duke University
93.7 REFLECTIONS ON THE IMPACT OF MARTHA Margaret Levi, Stanford University
DERTHICK ON POLITICAL SCIENCE Ian Shapiro, Yale University
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND Chris Zepeda-Millan, UC Berkeley
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS 94.3 GLOBAL DIVERSITIES OF RESPONSES TO
Chair: Steven Rathgeb Smith, American Political Science GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE
Association Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Part: Beryl A. Radin, McCourt School of Public Policy Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Georgetown University Chair: Shannon Drysdale Walsh, University of Minnesota
R. Kent Weaver, Georgetown University Duluth
Paul J. Quirk, University of British Columbia Disc: Hannah E. Britton, University of Kansas
Joshua M. Dunn, University of Colorado, Colorado S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University
Springs
93.8 REP BUSINESS MEETING Papers: Police Responses to Gender-Based Violence in South
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Africa
93.9 SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS RELATED Hannah E. Britton, University of Kansas
GROUP BUSINESS MEETING Enforcing Gender-Based Violence Laws in Cote dĀIvoire
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 and Liberia
93.10 SURVEY RESEARCH IN THE DEVELOPING Peace A. Medie, University of Ghana
WORLD Exclusion and Collusion: Dismantling the Nicaraguan
Room: Parc 55, Mission II Violence Against Women Law
93.11 WHAT'S NEW IN POLICY RESEARCH? Shannon Drysdale Walsh, University of Minnesota
CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES ON PUBLIC Duluth
POLICY Obstetric Violence: Indigenous Women, Activism and
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 Medicine in Latin America
Chair: Philippe Zittoun, University of Lyon Cheryl O'Brien, San Diego State University
Part: B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh Safe Spaces? Addressing Gender-Based Violence in the
Helen Zerlina Margetts, University of Oxford Occupy/Decolonize Movements
Chris Weible, University of Colorado-Denver Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder
Peter C. John, University College London
Hank C. Jenkins-Smith, University of Oklahoma

204 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Division Panels Disc: Sandrine Berges


DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES Papers: Catharine Macaulay and Mary Wollstonecraft: Two
95.1 SOCIAL POLICY IN NON-DEMOCRACIES: Concepts of Neo-Roman Liberty
DYNAMICS OF SOCIAL POLICY DEBATES IN Alan Coffee
RUSSIA Reassessing the impact of the āRepublican ViragoĀ
Room: Parc 55, Hearst Karen Green
Co-sponsored by Russian Politics Group From Republican Housewife to French Macaulay: The
Chair: Erica J. Johnson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Paradox of Phlippon Roland.
Hill Sandrine Berges
Disc: Thomas F. Remington, Emory University The Politics of Taste in Mary WollstonecraftĀs
Egalitarian Educational Ideal
Papers: Institutional Quality and Individual Preferences for Madeline Cronin
Social Policy WollstonecraftĀs Concepts of Virtue and Duty
Israel Marques Martina Reuter, University of Jyväskylä
Who to Help? Trust and Preferences over Redistribution DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
in Russia 95.4 CONSTITUTIONS AND REVOLUTIONS
Ekaterina Borisova, National Research University Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
Higher School of Economics
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
Andrei Govorun, Institute for Industrial and Market THEORY
Studies
Denis Sergeyevich Ivanov, Higher School of Chair: Jean L. Cohen, Columbia University
Economics Disc: Hanna Lerner, Tel Aviv University
Irina Levina, Institute for Industrial and Market
Studies, National Research University Higher School Papers: Beyond Revolution? Theory and Cases
of Econimcs Andrew Arato, New School for Social Research, New
Whose Problem Are They?: Subnational Migration York
Policy in RussiaĀs Volga Region Comparative Constitutional Law as a Revolutionary
Colin Johnson, Brown University Force
Service Providers or Advocates? Social Welfare NPOs Ran Hirschl, University of Toronto
in Russia Revolutionary Change and Constitutional Revision in
Stefan Toepler, George Mason University Prmodern Republics
Yulia Skokova John P. McCormick, University of Chicago
Christian Froehlich, National Research University - The Neglect of Enlightenment Constitutionalism
Higher School of Economics Jeremy Waldron, New York University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
HISTORICAL APPROACHES 95.5 INTERROGATING, HISTORICIZING, AND
95.2 REAPPRAISING NATIONAL SELF- DECOLONIZING MATERIALIST POLITICS AND
DETERMINATION METHOD
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF Chair: Ryan Schowen, Union Institute and University
POLITICAL THEORY
Disc: Alexander Weheliye, Northwestern University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL
THEORY
Papers: In the Beginning was the Body? The Slave, the
Chair: Courtney Jung, University of Toronto
Feminine, and the Political
Disc: Joshua Simon, Columbia University Asma Abbas, Bard College at Simon's Rock
Rainer Forst, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University
Gender Genealogy: Historicity, Materiality, Biopolitics
Jemima Repo, University of Helsinki
Papers: From Principle to Right: Self-determination in the Age
of Decolonization Testing Transparency
Adom Getachew, University of Chicago Vanita Seth, University of California--Santa Cruz
Metamorphosis: The Jewish Struggle for Freedom DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Through Mastery in Palestine 95.6 POSTER SESSION: FOUNDATIONS OF
Joan E. Cocks, Mount Holyoke College POLITICAL THEORY
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
A Theory of Democratic and Legal National
Papers: A New Method for Analyzing Comparative Political
Daily Schedule

Independence Within the EU


Casiano A.W. Hacker-Cordon, CUNY-Brooklyn Theory in a 3-D Space
College Meicen Sun, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: Alberti's Renaissance: The Autonomy of the Political
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
and the Politics of Space
Peter Janos Galambos
95.3 WOMEN AND REPUBLICANISM IN THE
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY Sustainability and the Civic Imagination: Statistics as a
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Democratic Pedagogy
Chair: Alan Coffee Callum Ingram

DAILY SCHEDULE 205


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Food, Race, and Agency: Cultural Objects and Citizen- Norm-based Discrimination: Functioning and Diffusion
Making of Respectability Norms
Charles T. Lee, Arizona State University Tamar Malloy, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Helen of Argos and the Feminine Complex of "Dialectic Hill
of Enlightenment" Ostracism, and the Paradox of Democratic Exclusion
Katherine Bermingham, University of Notre Dame Anthoula Malkopoulou, Uppsala University
Is it Curtains for Greatness?: Acting as a Democratic The Space for Meso-Level Justice: Norm-Governed
Form of Greatness Productivity in the Corporation
Katherine Goktepe Abraham A. Singer, University of Toronto
Plato and the Politics of Crying Uncertainty in Scientific and Political Representations
Danielle Hanley, University of Pennsylvania Matthew Evan Heller, University of Colorado,
Culture-Specific World Order Concepts in International Boulder
Political Thought Immigrant Disenfranchisement and Democratic
Alexander Niedermeier Legitimacy
Wolfram C. Ridder, University of Erlangen- Matt S. Whitt, Thompson Writing Program, Duke
Nuremberg University
How to Kill a Mortal God: Power and History Drone Warfare, Targeted Killing and the Conditions of
in HobbesĀs "Behemoth" "Legitimate" Violence
Vijay Phulwani, Cornell University Ian R. Zuckerman, Stanford University
Marx and Atheism Theorizing Collective Silence as Deliberation
Charles Devellennes, University of Kent Matthew Calhoun Shafer, Yale University
Political Theory and the Activist Turn of the 1960s DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
Jason Toby Reiner, Dickinson College 95.8 POSTER SESSION: POLITICS, LITERATURE,
Reason of State and the Dilemma of Ottoman Power AND FILM
M. Christian Jurlando Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
The NAACPĀs ĄAn Appeal to the Worldď and the Papers: Ignorance Rising: Hollywood Wrestles with Populism
Midcentury Politics of Human Rights John S. Nelson, University of Iowa
Emma Stone Mackinnon, University of Chicago How Hollywood Films Support the Tea Party--
The Sun Too Casts Shadows: Truth in Diverse Worlds Subliminally
Richard A. Barrett, University of Southern California Michael Haas, California Polytechnic University,
Pomona
The Time is Always Out of Joint: Democratic Time of
Frustration Zvyaginatsev's Film 'Leviathan' as Political Thought:
Juman Kim, University of Pennsylvania Ideology and the Tragic in Contemporary Russia
Christy Brandly, University of Chicago
The Outsider(s) in SpinozaĀs Philosophy
Dorothy H. B. Kwek, Universität Konstanz DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
95.9 POSTER SESSION: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND
The Political against the State: Laclau, Poulantzas and POLITICS
Radical Democracy Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom
Rafael Khachaturian, Indiana University
Papers: The Pictures Inside Our Heads: Race and Opinion
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY Toward Paying College Athletes
95.7 POSTER SESSION: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Tatishe Mavovosi Nteta, University of Massachusetts,
THEORY Amherst
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Kevin Jay Wallsten, California State University, Long
Papers: Against the New Communism Beach
Evan Robert Farr Lauren McCarthy, University of Massachusetts,
Bringing In the Work of Nature: From Natural Capital Amherst
to Hybrid Labor Fight or Flight: Mobility, Political Behavior, and
Alyssa Battistoni, Yale University Nativism in the United States
Dramatization as a Method of Realist Political Theory Yamil Velez
Nobutaka Otobe, Ibaraki University Party Loyalty among A Changing Electorate: Latino
Land, Jurisdiction, and Territories: A Cosmopolitan Voters and Vote Switching
Account Amy Stringer, University of Florida
Anna Jurkevics Political Trust, Race, and Levels of Government
Liberalism and the Politics of Legalizing Unauthorized James C. Garand, Louisiana State University
Migrants Thomas M. Holbrook, University of Wisconsin,
Fumio Iida, Kobe University Milwaukee
Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University,
Living Together as Equals in the Global Context Carbondale
Kevin K W Ip, The Chinese University of Hong Anand Edward Sokhey, University of Colorado,
Kong Boulder
Nature on Trial: Diversity and Domination beyond
Intersubjectivity
Umur Basdas, Yale University

206 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

The Lingering History of Race in Racial Attitudes and Unhinged Frames: What's Wrong with Hypotheticals
Presidential Approval about Torture
Patricia Posey, University of Pennsylvania Mathias Thaler, University of Edinburgh
Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania Violence, Utopia and Political Order
Vying for Votes: How Appeals to Ethnic Voters Change Chetan Bhatt, London School of Economics &
Opinion Political Science
Tabitha Bonilla, University of Southern California Violence as Expression of Collective Freedom: Pericles'
Pragmatic Protest: Clientelism and Strategic Demands by Ideal and Its Critics
Ethnic Minorities Dustin Howes, Louisiana State University
Jessica J. Price, University of Texas, Austin Economies of Violence: A Critical Reflection on the
Motivations for Ethnic Affinity Voting - Interests, Ethics of Political Violence
Ideology, and Identity Christopher J Finlay, POLSIS, University of
Randy Besco, Queen's University Birmingham
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
95.10 POSTER SESSION: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS 95.13 DIVERSITY, DEMOCRACY, REPRESENTATION
Room: Hilton, Grand Ballroom Room: Nikko, Carmel II
Disc: Michael Joel Voss, University of Toledo Chair: Mark B. Brown, California State University, Sacramento
Charles W. Gossett Disc: Mark B. Brown, California State University, Sacramento
Francis André Cheneval, University of Zurich,
Papers: Politics of Protection: the Determinants of Asylum Cases Switzerland
in the U.S. and Europe
Patricia Charlotte Rodda, University of California, Papers: Deliberation Under Conditions of Deep Diversity
Irvine Afsoun Afsahi, University of British Columbia
Convergence and Variation in Same-Sex Relationship Directly Representative Democracy
Recognition Policies Michael Neblo, Ohio State University
Misty Knight-Rini, University of California, Irvine Kevin M. Esterling, University of California,
Postmaterialism, Party Politics, and the Passage of Pro- Riverside
LGBT Legislation David Lazer
David Fisk, University of California San Diego Examining the Deliberative Systems in the Age of
Veronica Bracho Hoyo, UCSD Communicative Plenty
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY Selen A. Ercan
95.11 STRUGGLES OVER THE COMMON-WEALTH Caroyn Maree Hendriks
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 John S. Dryzek, University of Canberra
Chair: Joan C. Tronto, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Paul Fawcett
Disc: Joan C. Tronto, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Procedural Blindspots: Rehabilitating Deliberative
Models of Democracy
Molly F. Scudder, Texas Christian University
Papers: The Fight for Time: Day LaborersĀ Visions of
Community at Worker Centers Representative Deliberation in Shifting Contexts of
Paul C. Apostolidis, Whitman College Democratic Representation
Jenni Marianne Rinne, University of Helsinki
Parks and Refs: Democracy, the State, and Public Space
Margaret Kohn, University of Toronto DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
Resisting Black Objectification in the Afterlife of 95.14 THE GOOD REPRESENTATIVE 2.0
Slavery Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Ella Myers, University of Utah Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
The Solidarity Economy vs. Sharing Economy in San Chair: Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy School
Francisco and Philadelphia Disc: Susan Bickford, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Keally DeAnne McBride, University of San Francisco Hill
Craig Borowiak, Haverford College Sigal R. Ben-Porath, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
95.12 THE POLITICS/VIOLENCE FRONTIER Papers: Accountability as resistance: Helping others be
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 autonomous?
Suzanne Dovi, University of Arizona
Chair: Sonia Kruks, Oberlin College
Constitutive Representation & the Shifting Boundaries of
Disc: Moya Lloyd, Loughborough University
Intersectional Marginalization
Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton University
Daily Schedule

Papers: Violence and Non-Violence in Contentious Politics: The


Politics of Justification A Fulsome Account of Good Representation:
Elizabeth Frazer, DPIR, Manor Road, Oxford Responsiveness, Inclusion & Equality
OX13UQ Karen I.L. Celis, Free University of Brussels
Kimberly Hutchings, Queen Mary University of Sarah Childs, University of Bristol
London Ethnic MPs on Representation
Lucy Abbott, University of Oxford Eline M. Severs, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Sara de Jong

DAILY SCHEDULE 207


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Unelected Senators and 'Good' Visible Minority Electoral Targeting of Disaster Insurance in Mexico
Representation in Canada Maya Duru, UCSD
Karen Bird, McMaster University Floods and Corruption: Evidence from Local
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY Government in Bulgaria
95.15 WHAT IS RESISTANCE? Elena Nikolova, European Bank for Reconstruction
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A and Development
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
POLITICAL THEORY 95.18 INEQUALITY AND HISTORICAL POLITICAL
Chair: Jennet Kirkpatrick, Arizona State University DEVELOPMENT IN EUROPE
Disc: Andrew Sabl, Yale University Room: Hilton, Union Square 25
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
Papers: Flight and Fight: Exit as Political Resistance POLITICS
Jennet Kirkpatrick, Arizona State University Chair: Isabela Mares, Columbia University
Building Houses for Free Men: Adam Michnik's Ethics Disc: Isabela Mares, Columbia University
of Democratic Resistance
Joshua L. Cherniss, Georgetown University Papers: Autocracy, Inequality and Tax Capacity: Evidence from
Gun-loving Girls and Million Mom Marchers: Anger in 19th Century Prussia
the U.S. Gun Control Debate Florian Max Benjamin Hollenbach, Texas A&M
Holloway Sparks, Emory University University
Freedom and Resistance in Frederick Douglass Elite Persistence, Institutional Change and Development
Sharon R. Krause, Brown University in Historical Britain
Adriane Fresh, Stanford University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
95.16 RACE AND ETHNICITY: EXPERIMENTAL DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
INVESTIGATIONS 95.19 WAR, DEVELOPMENT AND THE EMERGENCE
Room: Parc 55, Balboa OF THE STATE
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Chair: Efren Osvaldo Perez
Chair: David Stasavage, New York University
Disc: Carolin Rapp, University of Bern
Disc: Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University
Papers: Racial Priming Effect? Evidence from a GOTV Field
Experiment in Southern Israel Papers: Micro Events and Macro Dynamics
Joseph Sarid, School of Political Sciences, University Jonathan Bendor, Stanford University
of Haifa Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University
Daphna Canetti, University of Haifa Queens
Israel S. Waismel-Manor, University of Haifa Oeindrila Dube
Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, University of Nebraska- Harish S.P.
Lincoln Commerce, War and Parliaments in Medieval and
The Enemy of My Enemy: Assad, ISIS, and Ethnic Modern Europe
Priming in the Syrian Conflict Carles Boix, Princeton University
Rolfe D. Peterson Scott Abramson, University of Rochester
Carl L. Palmer, Illinois State University Is Africa Different? Historical Conflict and State
How Stereotype Measures Underestimate the Political Development
Impact of Racial Attitudes Mark Dincecco, University of Michigan
Michael Tesler, UC Irvine Massimiliano G. Onorato, IMT Institute Advanced
David O. Sears, University of California, Los Angeles Studies Lucca
Racial Atypicality, Scandal, and Political Judgments: An James Fenske
Experimental Test Swords into Bank Shares: Financial Assets and Conflict
Nyron N. Crawford, Temple University in Meiji Japan
Racial Variations in the Social Evaluations Of Civic Saumitra Jha, Stanford University
Engagement Behavior DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY
Allison Penelope Anoll, Stanford University 95.20 INSTITUTIONAL LEGACIES AND THE
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY POLITICAL ECONOMY OF GROWTH
95.17 ECONOMIC SHOCKS AND DISTRIBUTIVE Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
POLITICS Disc: Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Montana
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE Papers: Democratization, Inequality and Fiscal Capacity in
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Colonial India
Disc: Rikhil R Bhavnani, University of Wisconsin, Madison Pavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins University
Free Incorporation and Political Processes in Nineteenth
Papers: Aspirations & Social Protection: Evidence from Century United States
Economic Shocks in Rural Pakistan Jonathan Chausovsky, SUNY, Fredonia
Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, Vanderbilt University
Katrina Kosec, IFPRI

208 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Inheritance Rules: Medieval Family Structures and Part: Ben Ross Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of
Current Institutional Quality Technology
Rasmus Broms, Quality of Government Institute, Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin
University of Gothenburg Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University
Sebastian Oskar Lundmark, University of Daniela Campello, Getulio Vargas Foundation
Gothenburg Tasha A. Fairfield, London School of Economics
Large Industrial Corporations and the Rise of Finance in DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
the US 95.24 TRANSPARENCY IN DEMOCRACIES AND
Youn Ki, Miami University DICTATORSHIPS: CHALLENGES AND
The Creative Destruction of Predatory Elite Coalitions ENDURING QUESTIONS
Petrus Sundin Olander, University of Gothenburg Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Dept. Political Science Chair: Milan Svolik, Yale University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY Disc: James E. Alt, Harvard University
95.21 CAUSAL EFFECTS IN TIME-VARYING DATA Scott Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
Chair: Jonathan N. Katz, California Institute of Technology Papers: Why Do Autocrats Disclose?
Disc: Luke Keele, Pennsylvania State University James R. Hollyer, University of Minnesota, Twin
Jonathan N. Katz, California Institute of Technology Cities
B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University
James Vreeland, Georgetown University
Papers: Estimating the Impact of Endogenous Predictors with
Annual Panel Data The Consequences of Fiscal Openness
Markus Prior, Princeton University Joachim Wehner, London School of Economics
Paolo de Renzio, Pontifical Catholic University - Rio
Generalized Synthetic Control Method for Causal de Janeiro (PUC-Rio)
Inference with TSCS Data
Yiqing Xu, MIT Competition and Compliance: Municipal Access to
Information in South Africa
Identification and Inference for Time-varying Daniel Berliner, Arizona State University
Instrumental Variables
Matthew Blackwell, Harvard University Transparent They Endure: An Analysis of Fiscal
Transparency in Hybrid Regimes
Lagged Independent Variables and the Estimation of Ghazal Poshtkouhian Nadi, American University
Causal Effects
Marc F. Bellemare, Applied Economics Who's Asking? The Politics of Transparency and
Takaaki Masaki, Cornell University Identity
Gregory Michener, Fundação Getúlio Vargas
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Karina Furtado Rodrigues, Fundacao Getulio Vargas
95.22 DISTRIBUTIONAL CONFLICTS AND
GOVERNANCE AT THE SUBNATIONAL LEVEL DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 COUNTRIES
Chair: Eleonora Pasotti, University of California, Santa Cruz 95.25 CONTENTION, UNCERTAINTY AND REFORM
AFTER THE ARAB UPRISINGS
Disc: Jefferey M. Sellers Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Chair: Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg
Papers: The Segregation of Public Goods
Jessica Luce Trounstine, University of California, Disc: Amaney Jamal, Princeton University
Merced
Papers: Economies of Uncertainty: SyriaĀs Civil War in a Digital
Does Housing Provision Buy Loyalty to the Ruling
Era
Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago
Party in Developing Countries?
M. Anne Pitcher, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Redeeming Modernization? Development and Post-Arab
The Political and Social Underpinnings of Informal
Spring Trajectories
Tarek E. Masoud, Harvard University
Institutions of Order: Evidence from Urban Vigilantism
in South Africa
Eduardo Moncada, Barnard College - Columbia Contentious Politics in a Neoliberal Era? Insights from
University the Arab Uprisings
Jillian M. Schwedler, Hunter College
Conflict over Redevelopment in Aspiring Global Cities
Eleonora Pasotti, University of California, Santa Trashing Transitions: Uncertainty, Polarization and the
Cruz Arab Media
Marc Lynch, George Washington University
Democratizing Urban Development in Washington, DC
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
Daily Schedule

and São Paulo, Brazil


Maureen M. Donaghy, Rutgers University, Camden INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
95.26 PARTY STRATEGIES: ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
AND LEGISLATIVE ORGANIZATION
95.23 PATTERNS OF UNEVEN REPRESENTATION AND
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
ECONOMIC POLICYMAKING IN LATIN
AMERICA Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Room: Hilton, Powell Room Chair: Robert J. Pekkanen, University of Washington
Chair: Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Disc: Keith Dowding, Australian National Univerisity

DAILY SCHEDULE 209


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Kaare Wallace Strom, University of California, San Guns and Trades: How Realist Rhetoric Mobilizes
Diego Support for Trade Agreements
Ikuo Kume, Waseda University
Papers: The Role of Gender on Legislative Committee Commerce, Coalitions, and the Rise of the Firm: Trade
Assignments in Portugal Politics in the EU
Ana Espirito-Santo, Institute of Social Sciences (ICS) Mary Anne Madeira, Queens College - CUNY
Edalina Sanches, Institute of Social Sciences - Why Trade Losers Behave like Winners: Geography and
University of Lisbon Preferences for Compensation
How do Electoral Contexts Affect Committee Irene Menendez, Department Political Science,
Assignment? The Case of Germany University of Zürich
Thomas Gschwend, University of Mannheim
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Thomas Zittel, Goethe-University Frankfurt
95.29 WHAT’S THE “I” IN “IPE”?
Party vs. Candidate Attributes in Committee Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Assignments: New Zealand and Germany Chair: Benjamin J. Cohen, University of California, Santa
Cory Belden, UC Davis Barbara
Matthew S. Shugart, University of California, Davis
Matthew Bergman, University of California, San Disc: Benjamin J. Cohen, University of California, Santa
Diego Barbara
Jeffrey M. Chwieroth, London School of Economics
Party Personnel Strategies: JapanĀs Electoral Reform in
Comparative Perspective
Papers: A System Is Not a Level: Complexity and Structure in
Ellis S. Krauss, UCSD
Global Political Economy
Robert J. Pekkanen, University of Washington
Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY Hill
95.27 POLITICAL REVERBERATIONS OF THE William Kindred Winecoff, Indiana University
FINANCIAL CRISIS II: CONSEQUENCES FOR When Does Democracy Promote Financial Openness?
THE EU Stephen Craig Nelson, Northwestern University
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 David A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins University
Chair: Mariely Lopez-Santana, George Mason University Christoph Giang Nguyen, Northwestern University
Disc: Daniel Phillip Kinderman, University of Delaware Between Markets and Institutions: FDI as Flows vs.
Multinational Firms as Actors
Papers: Banking System Structure and State Preferences in Mark Peter Dallas, Union College
European Banking Union The Impact of Government Policy on the International
Christopher Mitchell, George Washington University Currency System
European v. National Identity at the Dawn of the Carla M. Norrlof, University of Toronto
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
Financial Crisis
Pete Mohanty, Stanford University
95.30 THE DESIGN OF INTERNATIONAL
Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin
AGREEMENTS
Failure to Deliver? How the Economic Crisis Affects Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Public Support for the EU Chair: Barbara Koremenos, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Laurie Beaudonnet, Universite de Montreal
Christine Arnold, Universiteit Maastricht Disc: Jeffrey Kaplow, College of William & Mary
The Effects of Economic Crises on Macro-Salience and
Papers: Mapping Networks of International Organizations as
EU Support:
Agents of International Law
Robert Rohrschneider, University of Kansas
Charles R. Boehmer, University of Texas at El Paso
Nicholas J. Clark, Susquehanna University
Renato Corbetta
Contentious Politics in the New Europe, 2005-2012
The Dynamics of Copying-and-Pasting Across
Nicholas Toloudis, College of New Jersey
International Agreements
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Manfred Elsig, University of Bern
95.28 NEW APPROACHES TO TRADE POLICY Todd L. Allee
ANALYSIS At the Crossroads of Law and License: Retracing the
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6 Evolution of Jus ad Bellum
Chair: Irene Menendez, Department Political Science, Anatoly Levshin, Princeton University
University of Zürich
Consensus on Corruption? A Comparative Analysis of
Disc: Iain Osgood International Commitments
Mathis Lohaus, Freie Universitaet Berlin
Papers: The Price of Decentralized Enforcement in the WTO
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Leslie Johns, University of California, Los Angeles
95.31 INSURGENCIES IN COMPARATIVE
Krzysztof J. Pelc, McGill University
PERSPECTIVE: AFRICAN AND CROSS-
Producers and the Political Economy of the Smoot- REGIONAL EVIDENCE
Hawley Tariff Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
Michael Plouffe, University College London Chair: Paul Staniland, University of Chicago
Disc: William Reno, Northwestern University

210 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Papers: The Boko Haram Insurgency: a Mixed Methods Disc: Christian Davenport, University of Michigan
Approach Christopher J. Fariss, Penn State University
Peter M. Lewis, Johns Hopkins University
Nathaniel D.F. Allen Papers: A Repressive Inheritance: Decolonization and Dissent
Hilary Matfess, The Johns Hopkins University Kristine Eck, Uppsala University
Civil War as Auto-Immune Disease: Conflict as an End One for all? State Violence and Insurgent Cohesion
in Itself Livia Isabella Schubiger, London School of
Jason Stearns, Yale University Economics
Warlords Rule: The Central African Republic The Metamorphosis of State-Sponsored Violence
Christopher R. Day, College of Charleston Belen Gonzalez, University of Mannheim
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Killing Bad News: International Accountability and the
95.32 LEADERSHIP CHANGE AND FOREIGN POLICY Treatment of The Press
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 Sabine C. Carey, University of Mannheim
Chair: Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, George Washington Anita R. Gohdes, Harvard University
University State Capacity, Regime Type, and Sustaining the Peace
Disc: Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa After Civil War
Sarah E. Croco, University of Maryland, College Park T. David Mason, University of North Texas
Autonomy, Secession and Conflict: A Strategic Model
Papers: Do People or Events Make the Difference? Evidence Lars-Erik Cederman, ETH Zurich
from Domestic Revolutions Simon Hug, University of Geneva
Jeff Colgan, Brown University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Edward Lucas, American University
95.35 DESCRIPTIVE REPRESENTATION AND THE
Leader Attributes And Credibility In International POLICY IMPACT OF WOMEN IN
Disputes LEGISLATURES
Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Interests, Institutions, and Foreign Policy Change Co-sponsored by DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Brett Ashley Leeds, Rice University Chair: Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa
Michaela Mattes, UC-Berkeley Disc: Diana Z. O' Brien, Indiana University
Sitting Ducks: Political Sensitivity and the Targeting of Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa
Economic Sanctions
Amanda A. Licht, Binghamton University Papers: Do Women Matter? Female Representation and Policy
New Leaders and Conflict: A Natural Experiment Outcomes in the Bundestag
Patrick E. Shea, University of Houston Tamaki Ohmura, ETH Zurich
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES HeĀs a Warrior, SheĀs a Warrior: Gender and Legislative
95.33 REBEL STRATEGIES AND COUNTER- Style in the U.S. Senate
STRATEGIES IN CIVIL WAR Jennifer L. Lawless, American University
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin
Chair: Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of Legislative Leadership of Women in the contemporary
Maryland, College Park Senates of Latin America
Disc: Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University Guillermina Martínez Bermúdez
WomenĀs Committee Appointments and the Impact of
Papers: The Logic of Rebel Strategies in Civil War Institutional Design
Barbara F. Walter, University of California, San Tiffany D. Barnes, University of Kentucky
Diego Constanza F. Schibber, Washington University in St.
The Influence of Female Fighters on Civil Conflict Louis
Processes Reassessing When Women are More Effective
Reed M. Wood, Arizona State University Lawmakers than Men
Jakana Thomas, Michigan State University Jennifer Hayes Clark, University of Houston
Law as a Tool of Counterinsurgency Marcia Neille Beyer, The University of Houston
Jessica Stanton, University of Pennsylvania DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Fighting they Hydra: United Nations Sanctions and 95.36 PRESIDENTIAL FOREIGN POLICY
Rebel Groups LEADERSHIP: LEGAL AND RHETORICAL
Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University RESOURCES
Mitchell Radtke, Texas A&M University Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Daily Schedule

Are Religious Militants More or Less Likely to Target


Civilians in Civil Wars? Chair: Melanie M. Marlowe
Christopher Meserole, University of Maryland Disc: John Edward Brooks, UC Berkeley
Neil Chaturvedi, California Polytechnic University,
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Pomona
95.34 STRATEGIC STATE REPRESSION BETWEEN
CONFLICT AND POLITICAL ORDER
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 Papers: Early Use of the Sole Organ Doctrine Establishes the
Tone for Contemporary Use
Chair: Jessica Maves Braithwaite, University of Arizona
Kimberley Fletcher, San Diego State University

DAILY SCHEDULE 211


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

War and the Declaring of War as Performative Speech Papers: Legal Mobilization and Scientific Knowledge: The Case
Acts of Vaccine Critics
Brien Hallett, University of Hawaii Anna R. Kirkland, University of Michigan-Ann
Partisan Polarization and Presidential Leadership in Arbor
Foreign Policy The Goldilocks Constraint: Frame Alignment and the
Bruce Miroff, SUNY Albany Fight for Marriage Equality
U.S. Presidential Foreign Policy Making: Bush, Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont
Obama & the Asian-Pacific Turning Anguish to Anger: Mobilizing a Multi-Racial
Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, Southern Methodist Coalition for Human Rights
University George I. Lovell, University of Washington
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Michael W. McCann, University of Washington,
95.37 GOVERNANCE AND SERVICE PROVISION Seattle
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Who Engages in Legal Mobilization? Class and Beliefs
Chair: Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma in Northern Mexico
Janice Kreinick Gallagher, Brown University
Disc: James D. Ward, Mississippi University for Women
Campaign Against Coal-Plant Permits: Mapping
Papers: A Qualitative Assessment of Service Provision Decisions Contentious Strategic Litigation
by US Local Governments Charles R. Epp, University of Kansas
Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
Meeyoung Lamothe, University of Oklahoma RELATIONS
How Collaborative Leadership Matters: An 95.40 ELECTORAL DYNAMICS IN INDIA: A MULTI-
Intergovernmental Study of Homelessness LEVEL AND LONGITUDINAL PERSPECTIVE
Michael McGuire, Indiana University Room: Parc 55, Fillmore
David Lee, Indiana University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Local Revenue Expansion: Political Context or
Managerial Capacity? Chair: Surinder kler shukla, surinder k, Panjab University,
Claudia N. Avellaneda, Indiana University Chandigarh, India
Gabriel Pina Disc: Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University
Taking 'Bottom Up' Seriously in Governance
Euiyoung Kim Papers: When Do Parties Cooperate? Explaining Pre-Election
Jun-han Yon Alliances in India
Adam W. Ziegfeld, George Washington University
Central Networks and Leadership for Collaborative
Environmental Management Explaining the Decline of the Congress Party in 2014: A
David P. Adams, Auburn University Longitudinal Perspective
Eswaran Sridharan, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Adnan Farooqui, Department of Political Science,
95.38 STAGES OF THE PUBLIC POLICY PROCESS Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi,India
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Nationalization of the Indian Party System and Authority
Chair: Terry J. Royed, University of Alabama
Migration Revisited
Disc: Harold Pollack, University of Chicago Arjan Hille Schakel, Maastricht University
Edella C. Schlager, University of Arizona Wilfried Swenden, University of Edinburgh
Failure of the Indian Federation in the Process of Civic
Papers: Do Politicians Use Policy to Make Politics? The Case of Nation Formation
Public Sector Labor Laws Ila Singh
Sarah F. Anzia, University of California, Berkeley
Terry M. Moe, Stanford University DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
95.41 THE ROLE OF GEOGRAPHY IN THE
AMERICAN STATES
Genomic Science Meets Electoral Politics
Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University
Room: Parc 55, Mason
Public Opinion toward Privatizing Domestic Services in Chair: William D. Hicks
a Compound Republic
Paul G. Lewis, Arizona State University Disc: Adam Myers, Providence College
Transformative Policy Change: A Study of Dynamic
Papers: Assessing Fully Automated Redistricting: Evidence from
Multivariate Relationships
Pennsylvania
Peter B. Mortensen, University of Aarhus
Peter Miller, University of Pennsylvania
Matthew W. Loftis, Aarhus University
Steven Kimbrough, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS Institutions, Clustering, and Tradeoffs in Redistricting
95.39 TAKIN' IT TO THE STREETS: LEGAL Justin Levitt
MOBILIZATION IN THE UNITED STATES AND
ABROAD New Estimates of the Geography of Religion in the
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room American States
Kellen J. Gracey, University of Iowa
Chair: Aaron J. Ley, University of Rhode Island
Disc: Aaron J. Ley, University of Rhode Island
Alison Dundes Renteln, University of Southern
California

212 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Not Just the Number: Formulary Apportionment and Papers: All (Local) Politics Is Social: Institutional Effects on
Interstate Tax Competition Electoral Participation
Vincent Arel-Bundock, Université de Montréal Wouter Van Erve, University of Massachusetts-
Srinivas Parinandi, University of Michigan, Ann Amherst
Arbor Leading Horses to Water: Compulsory Voting and
Reprecincting and Voting Behavior Economic Voting
Brian Amos Christian B. Jensen, UNLV
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS Rafael Oganesyan
95.42 GENDER AND CAMPAIGN DYNAMICS Voter Turnout in Mixed-Member Electoral Systems
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 Ko Maeda, University of North Texas
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 5: POLITICAL Bipolar Voters: Heterogeneous Effect of Political
PSYCHOLOGY Polarization on Voter Turnout
Chair: Shauna L Shames Mert Moral, Binghamton University
Disc: Kelly Dittmar, Rutgers University - Camden Proportionality and Turnout
Shauna L Shames Gary W. Cox, Stanford University
Daniel M. Smith, Harvard University
Papers: On the Nature and Impact of Candidate Gender (Not DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
Just Sex) PARTIES
Nicholas Winter, University of Virginia 95.45 PARTY POSITIONS AND THEIR
The Indirect Relationship between Masculinity and PROGRAMMATIC AND REPRESENTATIONAL
Progressive Political Ambition ORIENTATIONS
Sarah Oliver, St. Lawrence University Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Perpetuating the Problem: How Bias Frames Affect Papers: From Campaigns to Experts: A Unifying Theory of
WomenĀs Electoral Prospects Party Preferences
Deborah Jordan Brooks, Dartmouth College Zachary David Greene, University of Strathclyde
Danny Hayes, George Washington University In Whose Interest? Representational Role Orientations
Strategic Gender Stereotyping in Congressional and Parliamentary Behavior
Campaigns Heiko Giebler, WZB
Nichole Bauer, University of Alabama Christian Rauh
Do Voters Prefer Well-Behaved Women? Experimental Placing Parties and Voters in Supranational Elections:
Tests of Competing Stereotypes An Introduction to euandi
Rachel Velázquez Bernhard, UC Berkeley Diego Garzia, European University Institute
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS Alexander H. Trechsel, European University Institute
95.43 THE ORIGINS AND IMPLICATIONS OF STATE Lorenzo De Sio, LUISS Guido Carli
REGULATION OF RELIGION IN MUSLIM Programmatic Parties and Provision of Public Goods
SOCIETIES Tiago Peterlevitz, Yale University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 Sabotaging the Party: Factionalism, Incumbency and
Chair: Lawrence P. Rubin, Georgia Institute of Technology Electoral Spillovers in India
Papers: In the Name of Regime Survival: The Politics of Gareth Nellis, Yale University
Education in Morocco and Tunisia DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Sarah Feuer, The Washington Institute for Near East 95.46 REPRESENTATION AND VOTING
Policy Room: Hilton, Imperial A
Religious Regulation and the Management of Salafi Chair: Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Activity in the Sahel Disc: Andrew Gooch, Yale University
Sebastian Elischer, University of Florida
How Official Islam Mattered in the Arab Uprisings Papers: Conservative Bias Pervades Elite Perceptions of Public
Lawrence P. Rubin, Georgia Institute of Technology Opinion
Michael Robbins, Princeton University David Broockman, Stanford GSB
Religious Regulation as Foreign Policy: The Case of Christopher Skovron
Morocco Geotropic Voting: Investigating the Causal Mechanism
Ann Marie Wainscott, St. Louis University Taeyong Park, Washington University in St. Louis
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL Andrew Reeves, Washington University in St. Louis
SYSTEMS Ideological Signaling through Issue Agendas
95.44 COMPETITION, MOBILIZATION, AND John A. Henderson, Yale University
PARTICIPATION
Daily Schedule

Political Advertising's Effect on Elections


Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 Jorg L Spenkuch, Kellogg School of Management
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND
VOTING BEHAVIOR Enfranchisement and Representation: Italy 1909-1913
Valentino Larcinese, Universita' Bocconi, Milan
Chair: Aina Gallego, Institut de Barcelona d'Estudis
Internacionals DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Disc: Emily Beaulieu, University of Kentucky 95.47 PARTIES, PARTISANSHIP AND POLARIZATION
Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Chair: Peter W. Wielhouwer, Western Michigan University

DAILY SCHEDULE 213


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Disc: Peter W. Wielhouwer, Western Michigan University DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE
95.50 DIVERSIFYING INTERNATIONAL STRUGGLES:
Papers: I Just Hate Them: Affective Polarization and Partisan THEORY AND PRACTICE IN GLOBAL JUSTICE
Hatred Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Stacy G. Ulbig, Sam Houston State University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL
HISTORY AND POLITICS
Nature, Nurture, or Choice? Political Tolerance &
Perceived Causes of Ideology Chair: Julie Hollar, City University of New York Graduate
Elizabeth Suhay, Government, American University Center
Mark Brandt, Tilburg University Disc: Mauro J. Caraccioli, Saint Michael's College
Travis Proulx, Tilburg University Isaac Kamola, Trinity College
Parties in the Electorate: Absolute vs. Relative
Preferences and Polarization Papers: "They All Think They Are Here to Stay": Resistance to
Greg Wolf, Colgate University Governance in Herat
Bojan Savic, Assistant Professor of International
What the Public Knows (and DoesnĀt Know) About
Relations
Party Line Voting in Congress
Logan Dancey, Wesleyan University Doubting Dogma: Interrogating IRĀs Constructivist-
Geoffrey Sheagley, University of Minnesota, Duluth Critical Theory Synthesis
Laura E Sjoberg
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND Samuel J Barkin, University of Massachusetts Boston
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
95.48 WATER AND MARINE POLITICS International or Western criminal court? Insights from
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 CLS and Constructivism
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Lucrecia Garcia Iommi, Fairfield University
Chair: Sara Hughes, University of Toronto Decolonizing Sovereignty: Indigenous Contributions to
Political Science
Disc:
Sandra Cristina Alvarez, Chapman University
Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa Barbara

Papers: A Tale of Two Oceans: Success and Failure in North Towards Queer Cosmopolitanism? Re-thinking Butler's
American Fishing Regimes Theory of Performativity
Andrew Kirkpatrick, Christopher Newport Bogdan Popa, Oberlin College
University DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
Property Rights in Agricultural Drainage: Implications 95.51 IS DECEPTION JUSTIFIED? COVERT FIELD
for Collective Action RESEARCH AND DEMOCRATIC VALUES
Pranay Ranjan, The Ohio State University Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
Tomas Koontz, University of Washington Tacoma Chair: Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University
The Influence of Institutional Complexity on Policy Part: Lee Ann Fujii, University of Toronto
Outcomes Timothy Pachirat
Ramiro Berardo, The Ohio State University Edward Schatz, University of Toronto
Jack Mewhirter, Florida State University Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah
Dvora Yanow, Wageningen University
Examining the Politics of Institutional Change for Urban
Sustainability DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS
Sara Hughes, University of Toronto 95.52 COMMERCIAL SEX, COMPARATIVELY
Room: Parc 55, Powell I
Regional Water Cooperation after the Communist
Collapse Chair: Julie L. Novkov
Alexander Ovodenko, U.S. Department of Energy Disc: Matthew Calhoun Shafer, Yale University
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
95.49 EXPLORING PHILOSOPHY, FAITH AND THE Papers: Disabling Consent, or Reconstructing Sexual Autonomy
POLITICAL THROUGH ART Joseph Fischel, Yale University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 Of Butchers and Courtesans: Shame and Dignity in
Chair: Ann Ward, University of Regina Colonial Korea
Disc: Richard A. Barrett, University of Southern California Diana Kim, Harvard University
Cyrus Ernesto Zirakzadeh, University of Connecticut Prostitution Regulation and Local Statebuilding in
China, 1905-1937
Papers: Of Ants, Politics, and Religion in ĄThe Legend of the Elizabeth J. Remick, Tufts University
Grand Inquisitorď The Policing of Prostitution in China
Brandon Garcia, University of Dallas Margaret Boittin, Stanford University
Poetry, Philosophy and Faith in Kierkegaard's Constructing the Sex Trafficker: Discourse, Institutions
Philosophical Fragments and Feminist Politics
Ann Ward, University of Regina Daniel HoSang, University of Oregon
The Political Philosophy of Arthurian Romance Priscilla Yamin, University of Oregon
Jason Caro, University of Houston, Downtown DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
Philosophy, Greek Tragedy, and History, on Why the 95.53 THE POLITICS OF OBAMACARE
Ideal State is not Ideal. Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Kenneth DeLuca, Hampden-Sydney College Chair: Michael S Sparer, Columbia University

214 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Disc: Eric M. Patashnik Political Brokers and Local Family Networks: Evidence
for the Philippines
Papers: In the Shadow of King: States and the Uncertain Fate of Cesi Cruz, University of British Columbia
Obamacare Pablo Querubin, New York University
David K. Jones, Boston University Julien Labonne
Jonathan B. Oberlander, University of North Regime Consolidation and the Challenge of Diversity
Carolina, Chapel Hill Basak Taraktas, University of Pennsylvania
Policy Feedbacks & Federalism: State Public Opinion Detecting Defections: The Causes of Party Breakdown
Toward Health Reform in Georgia, 2003-2012
Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota, Twin Scott B. Radnitz, University of Washington
Cities Julie George, CUNY, Queens College
Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University Jeremy M. Teigen, Ramapo College
Uncharted Territory: The Effect of the ACA on Public The Political Motivations of the Chinese Anticorruption
Opinion and Medicaid Campaign
Mark C. Hines, Georgetown University Yang Zhang, University of Iowa
Who Was Health Reform For? The ACA, the DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Submerged State, and Policy Drift 95.56 INFORMED CONSENT IN FIELD EXPERIMENTS
Sean Miskell, Georgetown University Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS Chair: Joshua A. Tucker, New York University
95.54 FRANCOPHONE MINORITIES IN Part: Alan Gerber, Yale University
MULTILINGUAL COUNTRIES Gwyneth McClendon, Harvard University
Room: Parc 55, Davidson Drew Dimmery, New York University
Chair: Georgia Kernell, UCLA Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University
Disc: Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles
Willem Maas, York University DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
95.57 THE POLITICS OF CITIZENSHIP AND
Papers: Mono vs. Multi-lingual Parties: Canada, Belgium and MIGRATION IN EAST ASIA
Switzerland Compared Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Nenad Stojanovic, University of Lucerne Disc: Erin Aeran Chung, Johns Hopkins University
Anja Giudici, University of Zurich
Francophone Minority Communities: Claiming Papers: Chinese Migrant Brides in Taiwan: Facing the Paradox
Institutional Completeness of Marginalized Citizenship
Stephanie Chouinard, University of Ottawa Shan-Jan Sarah Liu, Pennsylvania State University
Analysis Framework of Cultural and Linguistic Policies: Minority Rights Attitudes and Pre-Migration Political
3 Types of Minorities Socialization in East Asia
Alexandre Couture Gagnon, The University of Texas Pei-te Lien, University of California Santa Barbara
Rio Grande Valley Yanjun Liu, University of California, Santa Barbara
Diane Saint-Pierre, Institut national de la recherche Outsmarting the Authoritarian State: Public Services in a
scientifique Urbanisation Culture Société (INRS Fragmented System
UCS) Alexsia T. Chan, University of California, Berkeley
Toward a Theory of Separatism in Post-industrial Registration vs. Residence: Changing Definitions of
Democracies: The Quebec Case Citizenship in China
Yannick Dufresne Kay Shimizu, Columbia University
Charles Tessier, Université Laval
Clifton van der Linden, University of Toronto The Politics of Immigration and Nationalism in Japan
and Korea
Interculturalism and the Québec āReasonable Seo-Hyun Park, Lafayette College
AccommodationĀ Debates
Related Groups
Guillaume Bogiaris, Texas A&M University
96.1 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
95.55 CONTESTED ACCOUNTABILITY IN PHILOSOPHY: MEDIEVAL JEWISH POLITICAL
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES PHILOSOPHY AND THE QUESTION OF
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 ROOTEDNESS
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Chair: Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College
Chair: Christopher J. Fariss, Penn State University
Disc: Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College
Daily Schedule

Disc: Christopher J. Fariss, Penn State University Richard J. Dougherty, University of Dallas

Papers: The corruption Network of Zhou Yongkang Papers: MaimonidesĀs Reflections on Jewish Closeness
Franziska Barbara Keller, Columbia University Seth Appelbaum, Tulane University
ĀBy Savoring, Not by ReasoningĀ? The Paradoxes of
HaleviĀs Assessment of Philosophy and Judaism in the
Kuzari
Douglas Kries, Gonzaga University

DAILY SCHEDULE 215


Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM

Alfarabi and Maimonides on Rootedness and Religion Latina Political Leaders in Rhode Island: Patterns of
Joshua S. Parens, University of Dallas Recruitment, Ambition, and Constraint
96.2 COMMITTEE FOR ANALYSIS OF MILITARY Lizeth Gonzalez, City of Pawtucket
OPERATIONS AND STRATEGY: DIVERSITY IN Tony Affigne, Providence College
SECURITY: PROFESSORS AND PRACTITIONERS Latina Intersectionality and Race-Gendering in TexasĀ
IN UNCONVENTIONAL DISCOURSE Legislative Process
Room: Parc 55, Powell II Patricia Lopez, University of Texas at Austin
Chair: Paul D. Brister Latinas and the Congressional Policy Agenda: the First
Disc: Jennifer Kibbe, Franklin & Marshall College 20 Years
Walter Wilson, University of Texas, San Antonio
Papers: PSC and Their Expansion: The Costs and Consequences Juan Luis Urbano, Texas A&M University-Corpus
to Security Christi
Daniel Glenn Straub, Commanding Officer, LCS 96.5 WALTER BAGEHOT RESEARCH COUNCIL ON
Crew 208 NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY: IMMIGRATION:
Economic Opportunism and Rebel Campaign Choice LEGAL, POLITICAL AND MORAL
Patricia Blocksome, School of Advanced Military CONSIDERATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES
Studies ROUNDTABLE
Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Beyond Defense Toward Health: CERT Teams and
Polycentricity Chair: Joseph Prud''homme
Nina A. Kollars, Franklin & Marshall College Frank P. Le Veness, Saint John's University
Part: Joseph DiSarro, Washington & Jefferson College
Innovation in Counterinsurgency: Theory and Practice of
Joseph Prud''homme
Ministerial Advising
Matthew A. Pauley
Scott C. Buchanan, Office of the Secretary of Defense
Alan G. Stolberg, U.S. Army War College
96.3 EUROPEAN CONSORTIUM FOR POLITICAL Lucy Margarita Arraya
RESEARCH: RESPONSES TO POLITICAL Buba Misawa, Washington & Jefferson College
CORRUPTION: THE ANTI-CORRUPTION Frank P. Le Veness, Saint John's University
RECORD Jacob Marberger, Washington College
Room: Parc 55, Sutro Robert F. Pecorella, St. John's University
Chair: Martin J Bull, University of Salford
Papers: Hindering Corruption via Administrative Accountability Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:30 PM
Alessia Damonte, Università degli Studi di Milano APSA Events
Claire Dunlop, University of Exeter 97.1 YALE-STANFORD-BERKELEY ADVISING AND
Claudio M. Radaelli MENTORING COMMITTEE
Banning Bribes Abroad: U.S. Enforcement of the Room: Hilton, Executive Conf. Ctr. Marina Room
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
Ellen Gutterman, Glendon College, York University Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM
Policy Responses to Corruption within the EU Theme Panels
Framework: the Case of Conditionality and Post 98.1 BREAKING NEWS: TRADE NEGOTIATIONS,
conditionality FAST TRACK AND AMERICAN WORKERS: THE
Gabriela Borz, University of Strathclyde POLITICS OF TPP
Natalia Matukhno, University of Arizona Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
New Trends in Political Financing Regulation in Europe: Chair: Daniel W. Drezner, Tufts University
the Role of Supervisory BodiesĀ Part: Christina Davis, Princeton University
Luis de Sousa, University of Aveiro William G. Howell, University of Chicago
The Policy Impact of ĄAnti-Corruptionď Parties in David Karol, University of Maryland
Central and Eastern Europe 2002-2014Ā Mark S. Manger, University of Toronto
Andreas Bagenholm, University of Gothenburg Rachel Wellhausen, University of Texas at Austin
Daniel W. Drezner, Tufts University
96.4 LATINO CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:
LATINAS IN AMERICAN POLITICS: GETTING 98.2 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF IMMIGRATION,
ELECTED AND EFFECTING POLICIES REDISTRIBUTION, AND INEQUALITY
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Chair: Leslie Navarro, Dallas County Community College Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Papers: The Political Ascension of Latinas to National Public Chair: David Rueda, University of Oxford
Office: A Case Study of Lucille Roybal-Allard, Ileana Disc: Margaret E. Peters, Yale University
Ros-Lehtinen and Nydia Velasquez
Anna Sampaio, Santa Clara University Papers: Does Exposure to Ethnic Minorities Affect Support for
Una Ventaja? A Survey Experiment of the Viability of Welfare Dualism?
Latina Candidates Henning Finseraas, Institute for Social Research
Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, Pace University Andreas Kotsadam
Sarah Allen Gershon, Georgia State University Interest Group Rhetoric and Public Attitudes on
Immigration Policy
Michael J. Donnelly, University of Toronto

216 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Immigrant Integration and Support for the Welfare State Division Panels
Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
Thomas (Tom) W.G. van der Meer, University of
FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
Amsterdam
100.1 SOURCES OF POWER AND WEAKNESS IN NON-
Immigration and Electoral Appeals over the Past Half DEMOCRATIC POST-COMMUNIST REGIMES
Century Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
Yotam Margalit, Tel Aviv University POLITICS
Immigration, Altruism, and Welfare State Preferences in Chair: William Hurst, Northwestern University
Advanced Democracies Disc: Hans Hanpu Tung, National Taiwan University
Gerda Hooijer, University of Oxford Gabriella Ilonszki
98.3 WOMEN’S ENGAGEMENT IN AFRICAN
POLITICS: OPPORTUNITIES AND Papers: State Weakness and Oligarchic Capture in Post-
CONSTRAINTS Communism
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2 Ion Marandici, Rutgers University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN A Silent Revolution: Changing Legitimacy Bases of the
POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP
Chinese Communist Party
Chair: Amanda Lea Robinson, The Ohio State University Shanruo Ning Zhang
Disc: Alice Kang, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Accountability from Cyberspace?Scandal Exposure and
Gretchen M. Bauer, University of Delaware Official Governance in China
Shuo Chen
Papers: Economic Rights and WomenĀs Policy Influence in Yiran Li, the University of Hong Kong
Africa
Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California,
The Politics of Cadre Appointment in State Formation:
Berkeley
The Post-Soviet Context
Dave Siegel, The Graduate Center, City University of
Martha C. Johnson, Mills College
New York
A Policy Experiment on How Gender Quotas Affect
WomenĀs Future Electoral Success DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Amanda Clayton HISTORICAL APPROACHES
100.2 RACE, REVOLUTION, AND LOVE IN
Economic & Social Correlates of Gender Gaps in AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Political Preferences in Africa Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8
Jessica Gottlieb, Texas A&M University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF
Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania POLITICAL THEORY
Amanda Lea Robinson, The Ohio State University
Chair: Andrew J. Douglas, Morehouse College
Islam, Christianity, and Attitudes on Women's Political Disc: Andrew J. Douglas, Morehouse College
Rights and Leadership
Kristin Grace Michelitch, Vanderbilt University
Keith R. Weghorst, Vanderbilt University Papers: The Terror of Tyrants: Revolutionary Violence and
Radical Abolitionism
Development NGOs & the Decline of the WomenĀs Adam J. Dahl, Sewanee: The University of the South
Movement in Post-War Sierra Leone
Rebecca Nielsen, Yale University Calhoun and Fanon on Abolishing Diversity Through
Violence
APSA Events
James M. Glass, University of Maryland, College
99.1 APSA-IPSA ROUNDTABLE: PERSPECTIVES ON Park
INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH & METHODS
WORKSHOPS
Sketching the Limits of Love, Law and Imagination in
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Gustave de BeaumontĀs Marie
Kathy Purnell
Chair: Dirk Berg-Schlosser
Race, Consciousness, and Love in the Democratic
Part: Guy D. Whitten, Texas A&M University Thought of Arendt & Baldwin
Derek Beach, University of Aarhus Sean K Butorac
Lorena G. Barberia
Alina V. Vladimirova DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Andrew Stinson 100.3 IRIS YOUNG'S JUSTICE AND THE POLITICS OF
DIFFERENCE: 25 YEARS ON
99.2 DSP NON-ACADEMIC JOBS ROUNDTABLE
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Chair: Michaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado, Boulder
Chair: Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
Part:
Daily Schedule

Linda M.G. Zerilli, University of Chicago


Part: Sean M. Zeigler, RAND Corp.
Mary G. Dietz, Northwestern University
Clare Robinson
Lori Marso
John C. Fortier, Bipartisan Policy Center
Andrew Dilts, Loyola Marymount University
Elizabeth Super, American Political Science Association
Deva Woodly, New School for Social Research
Frank Kuhn, European Research Council
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
100.4 TELLING THE TRUTH AND BREAKING THE
LAW
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9

DAILY SCHEDULE 217


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Chair: Alexander Moon, Ithaca College DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY


Disc: Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 100.7 EMPIRICAL TESTING OF THEORETICAL
MODELS
Papers: First Amendment Trouble Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine Co-sponsored by DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL
THEORY
Hannah Arendt: Political Theory as New Journalism
Chair:
Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Eastern Michigan
Curtis S. Signorino, University of Rochester
University Disc: Keith E. Schnakenberg, University of Kentucky
Jurors and Whistleblowers: On Learning how to Break
the Law Papers: Abstract Behavioral Models
Sonali Chakravarti, Wesleyan University David A. Siegel, Duke University
Stargazers: Truth-Telling in Plato's _Republic_ and Estimation in the Shadow of the Future
Melville's "Billy Budd" Casey Crisman-Cox, University of Rochester
Lida E. Maxwell, Trinity College Michael Gibilisco, University of Rochester
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Bargaining in the EU
100.5 CLASH OF THE SOCIAL IDENTITIES IN THE Tasos Kalandrakis, University of Rochester
POLITICAL ARENA Money, Polls, and Policy: A Structural Analysis of
Room: Nikko, Monterey II Senate Dynamics
Disc: Sergio C. Wals, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Gabriel Lopez-Moctezuma, Princeton University
Matias Iaryczower, Princeton University
Adam H. Meirowitz
Papers: Is American National Identity Exceptional?
Gal Ariely, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Starving Your Enemies and Your Friends: ĀUpward
Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, University of Nebraska- AccountabilityĀ and Nonlinearity in Fiscal Transfers in
Lincoln Decentralized Countries
Jane Lawrence Sumner, Emory University
Will the Real Americans Please Stand Up? Priming
Second-Generation Identities DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Melinda S. Jackson, San Jose State University 100.8 USING TEXT AND COMMUNICATIONS AS DATA
Karthika Sasikumar Room: Nikko, Carmel I
The New Identity Politics: Socio-Partisan Sorting and Chair: Brice Acree, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Political Behavior Disc: Kenneth R. Benoit, London School of Economics
Lilliana Hall Mason, University of Maryland, College Brice Acree, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Park
Nicholas Davis, Louisiana State University Papers: Supervised Event Coding From Text Written in Spanish:
Faith or Party: The Centrality of Religious Identity in Introducing Eventus ID
American Politics Javier Osorio, John Jay College, CUNY
Bethany Albertson, University of Texas, Austin Alejandro Reyes
Do Group Politics Matter More to Men? Measuring and Testing Deliberative Quality: An
Emily Cochran Bech, Aarhus University automated Text-Analysis Approach
Valentin Gold, University of Konstanz
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
100.6 INEQUALITY AND REDISTRIBUTION Measuring Mass-mediated Public Spheres: A Network-
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 based Approach
Chair: Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University Rebekah Tromble, Leiden University
Disc: Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University Sequence Analysis in Political Elite Studies: Two
Examples from Germany
Sebastian Jaeckle, University of Freiburg
Papers: More Inequality Does Lead to More Redistribution
Christian Houle, Michigan State University DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Where is the Political Response to Inequality in the US? 100.9 DIVERSITIES IN DEMOCRACY: POLITICAL
Lucy M. Goodhart, Brandeis University ACCOUNTABILITY IN 21ST CENTURY LATIN
AMERICA
The Political Foundations of Redistribution in the Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Postindustrial Era Chair: Marisa Kellam, Waseda Univeristy
Duane H. Swank, Marquette University
Disc: Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh
Representative Democracy, Education, and Income
Inequality
Papers: Disarming the Opposition: Opposition Weakness in New
Christian Ponce de Leon Albuerne, Princeton
University
Left Cases in Latin America
Manuel Balan, McGill University
Globalization as the Great Educational Equalizer
Thomas Gift, Duke University
Accountability Deficit Trap: Declining Political
Competition and Media Freedom
Marisa Kellam, Waseda Univeristy
Elizabeth A. Stein, Institute of Social and Political
Studies, State University of Rio de Janeiro

218 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Media Barons on the Ballot: Politically-Controlled Papers: Oil and Development: Technology, Geology and the
Broadcasting in Brazil āCurseĀ of Natural Resources
Taylor C. Boas, Boston University Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University
Infrastructure of Democracy: Electoral Governance Marcus J. Kurtz, Ohio State University
Institutions in Latin America Renting to Own: How Resource Rents Fueled Peruvian
Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University Political Liberalization?
Robert E Nyenhuis Yu-Ming Liou, Georgetown University
Political Innovation and a Post-Liberal Model of Paul Musgrave, Georgetown University
Democratic Accountability Resource Booms and Immigration Policy in the Era of
Enrique Peruzzotti, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella Trade Liberalization
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Adrian J. Shin, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
100.10 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON ELECTORAL Natural Resources Magnify the Democratic Advantage
PARTICIPATION in Africa
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6 Rod Alence, University of the Witwatersrand
Chair: Timothy J Feddersen Xichavo Alecia Ndlovu
Disc: Timothy J Feddersen DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
Papers: A Solution to the Paradox of Voting: The Subjective 100.13 THE CONSEQUENCES OF CLIENTELISM
Costs of Abstention Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
S. Erdem Aytaç, Koç University Papers: Decentralization and Clientelism: Evidence from 150
Susan C. Stokes, Yale University Districts in Ghana
Inequality and Electoral Participation in Developed and Anna Schultz, Duke University
Developing Democracies Heather LaRue Huntington, Cloudburst Consulting
Francesc Amat, Institute for Political Economy and Group, Inc.
Governance Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University
Pablo Beramendi, Duke University The middle class and clientelism: the advent of
Bureaucratic Capacity and Turnout Inequality in the redistributive welfare states in Latin America
United States (1936-1954) Elin Bergman, University of Gothenburg
Kimuli Kasara, Columbia University Privileging One's Own: Voting Patterns and Politicized
Pavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins University Spending in India
Measuring the Duty to Vote: A Proposal Pradeep Chhibber, University of California, Berkeley
André Blais, University of Montreal Francesca Refsum Jensenius, Norwegian Institute of
International Affairs
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
100.11 UNDERSTANDING QUASI-DEMOCRATIC DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
INSTITUTIONS UNDER AUTHORITARIAN COUNTRIES
REGIMES 100.14 THE POLITICS OF PROPERTY RIGHTS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 PROTECTION
Chair: Lisa Blaydes, Stanford University Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Disc: Lily L. Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chair: Jordan Luc Gans-Morse, Northwestern University
Disc: Jordan Luc Gans-Morse, Northwestern University
Papers: Democratic Preferences under Authoritarianism: Non-
conformist Voting in Cuba Papers: Property Rights and Inherited Power: A Theory of
Jorge I. Dominguez, Harvard University Transformative Social Reform
Angela Maria Fonseca Galvis, Pontificia Universidad Rachel E. Brule, New York University Abu Dhabi
Javeriana The Politics of Order in Informal Trade: Evidence from
Chiara Superti, Harvard University Lagos
Taxation and Government Responsiveness in China Shelby Grossman, Harvard University
Jennifer Pan, Stanford University Subnational property rights regimes and land disputes:
Tianguang Meng, Tsinghua University Evidence from Liberia
Participation in Regulatory Drafting and Downstream Alexandra Hartman, Yale University
Compliance Dispossessions as a Cause of Agrarian Reform Claims in
Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University Mexico
Building the Rule of Law: An Alternative Theory of Maria Paula Saffon, Columbia University
Authoritarian Liberalization DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
Paul J. Schuler, University of Arizona INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Daily Schedule

DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING 100.15 COALITION GOVERNMENTS AND


COUNTRIES LEGISLATIVE BARGAINING
100.12 OIL POLITICS AND DEVELOPMENT Room: Hilton, Union Square 16
Room: Nikko, Carmel II Co-sponsored by DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Chair: Victor Menaldo Co-sponsored by French Politics Group
Disc: Victor Menaldo Chair: Bernard Dolez
Disc: Eric Kerrouche, Sciences Po, Bordeaux

DAILY SCHEDULE 219


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Papers: The Vote of Confidence and Government Popularity Evaluating the IMFĀs Performance in the Global
Michael Becher, University of Konstanz Financial Crisis
Sylvain Brouard, Sciences Po Tamar Gutner, American University-SIS
Isabelle Guinaudeau, Pacte - Sciences Po Grenoble Beyond Credible Commitments: The ICTYĀs Impact on
Coalition Bargaining Duration in Central and Eastern Peace Settlements
Europe Jacqueline R. McAllister, Kenyon College
Alejandro Ecker DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Fragile Cabinets and Credit Risk 100.18 INTERVENTION POLITICS
David Fortunato, University of California, Merced Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Power by Numbers? Coalition Dynamics and Agenda- Co-sponsored by DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Setting Power Papers: The Informal Origins of American Empire
Christoffer Green-Pedersen, University of Aarhus Eric Grynaviski, George Washington University
Peter B. Mortensen, University of Aarhus Intervention Entrepreneurs
Florence So, Aarhus University Marina Elisabeth Henke, Northwestern University
Bundling the Bundles: Coalition Dynamics and Distinctly Humanitarian? : U.S. PresidentsĀ Justifications
Institutional Reforms in Italy for Force, 1898-2014
Camille Bedock Sarah Maxey, Cornell University
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY Foreign Intervention and Democratization: Puppets or
100.16 PARTY STRATEGIES IN ELECTIONS AND Populists?
GOVERNMENT Melissa Willard-Foster, University of Vermont
Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Disc:
100.19 RECONSIDERING RATIONALIST APPROACHES
Georgia Kernell, UCLA
TO WAR
Papers: Containing Ideological Diversity: The Strategic Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Dilemmas of Center-Right Parties Co-sponsored by DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Noam Gidron, Harvard University
Chair: Kyle Haynes, Webster University
Explaining the Electoral Success of Niche Parties in
Disc: Dale Copeland, University of Virginia
Europe
Carrie Humphreys, University of Utah
Papers: A New Approach to Security Studies
Grand Coalitions in Europe: Still an Anomaly? Karen Ruth Adams, University of Montana
Amir Abedi, Western Washington University
Alan Siaroff, University of Lethbridge Costly Peace and Rationalist Explanations for War
Andrew J. Coe, University of Southern California
Keep Your Enemies Closer: Intraparty Competition and
Ministerial Appointments. Issue Indivisibilities as a Rationalist Explanation for
Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh Peace
Olivier Henripin, Loyola University, Chicago
The Policy Relationship between Youth Party and Parent
Party in Scandinavia A Bargain Might not Exist: How the Distribution of
Martin Ejnar Hansen, Brunel University London Power Causes War
Richard Pell Jordan, Princeton University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
100.17 THE PERFORMANCE OF INTERNATIONAL Issue Indivisibility as an Irrational Explanation for War
ORGANIZATIONS Sean Braniff, University of Notre Dame
Room: Hilton, Sutter Room DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
Chair: Ronald B. Mitchell, University of Oregon CONTROL
Disc: Tana Johnson, Duke University 100.20 ROUNDTABLE ON NUNO P. MONTEIRO’S
“THEORY OF UNIPOLAR POLITICS”
Room: Parc 55, Powell II
Papers: The Performance of International Organizations:
Conceptualization & Measurement Chair: John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago
Jonas Tallberg, Stockholm University Part: Charles L. Glaser, George Washington University
Magnus Lundgren, Stockholm University David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Thomas Sommerer, Stockholm University Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University
Theresa Squatrito, University of Oslo James D. Fearon, Stanford University
The Performance of International Courts DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
Theresa Squatrito, University of Oslo CONTROL
Oran R. Young, University of California, Santa 100.21 THE FUTURE OF U.S. GRAND STRATEGY: NEW
Barbara VULNERABILITIES, NEW TOOLS, NEW
Bureaucratic Autonomy and Policy Outcome: Evidence THREATS?
from a Comparative Study Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Michael W. Bauer Chair: David Blagden, University of Exeter
Joern Ege, German Research Institute for Public Disc: Kevin Narizny, Lehigh University
Administration Speyer
The Effective Governance of Climate Finance: A North-
South Perspective
Alexander Thompson, Ohio State University

220 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Papers: Strategic Surprise, Nuclear Proliferation, and U.S. Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis
Foreign Policy
Michael D. Cohen, University of Southern Denmark Papers: Income Inequality and US State Legislative Polarization,
Aaron Rapport, University of Cambridge 1993-2013
Soviet Reactions to U.S. Counterforce Capabilities John Voorheis, University of Oregon Department of
Brendan R. Green, University of Cincinnati Economics
Austin Long, Columbia University Boris Shor, Georgetown University
The Role of Drone Strikes in Grand Strategies of Nolan McCarty
Restraint and Primacy Pivotal Politics: A Reconsideration
Jacqueline L. Hazelton, Naval War College Thomas Gray, University of Virginia
The Cultural Foundations of American Grand Strategy Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Virginia
Jacqueline L. Hazelton, Naval War College Congressional Polarization in the Gilded Age: An
Gregory Mitrovich, Saltzman Institute of War and Exploration
Peace Studies Sara N. Chatfield, MIT
The Pivot before the Pivot: A Long-term Strategy for Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Virginia
U.S. Hegemony in Asia Charles Stewart, Massachusetts Institute of
Nina Silove Technology

DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY


Polarization, Foreign Travel, and the Decline of Trust
100.22 DOMESTIC POLITICS AND AMERICAN
within Congress
Alexander Alduncin, University of Wisconsin,
FOREIGN POLICY: SAILING THE WATER'S
EDGE Madison
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II Sean Q Kelly, California State University, Channel
Islands
Chair: Dustin Halliday Tingley, Harvard University David CW Parker, Montana State University,
Part: Helen V. Milner, Princeton University Bozeman
Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin
Hill
The Effect of Polarization on Federal Laws for Specific
J. Lawrence Broz, University of California, San Diego
Groups, 1947-2010
Pamela Lopez
Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of California,
San Diego
Peter D. Feaver, Duke University DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
100.25 PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATION IN A
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES POLARIZED AGE
100.23 UNITED NATIONS PEACEKEEPING DURING Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
AND AFTER CIVIL VIOLENCE
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 Chair: Daniel E. Ponder, Drury University
Chair: Michael W. Doyle, Columbia University Disc: Lara Michelle Brown, The George Washington
University
Disc: Michael W. Doyle, Columbia University
Brendan J. Doherty, U.S. Naval Academy
Papers: UN Engagement and the Severity of Conflict
Papers: Competitive Communication in an Age of Polarization
Kyle Beardsley, Duke University
Anne C Pluta, Rowan University
David E. Cunningham, University of Maryland,
John T. Woolley, University of California, Santa
College Park
Barbara
Peter White, University of Maryland-College Park
Presidential Leadership in an Unequal Society
Terri Bimes, University of California at Berkeley
Peacekeeping and the Militarisation of Peace
Philip Cunliffe
Obama's Second Term Rhetoric of Electoral Logic
Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University
The Rise of UN Peace Enforcement
Lise Morje Howard, Georgetown University
Justin S. Vaughn, Boise State University
International Intervention and Mechanisms for Securing
Presidential Campaigning from the Bloody Shirt to the
Conflict Settlements
Southern Strategy
Aila M. Matanock, University of California-Berkeley
Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University
Adam G. Lichtenheld, University of California-
Berkeley Feeding the Fire? Presidential Tone about Government
and Partisan Conflict
Christopher Olds, University of Central Florida
United Nations Peacekeeping Shortfalls and Violence in
Civil Wars
Megan Shannon, University of Colorado DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
The Power of Peacekeeping Reconsidered 100.26 HUMAN RESOURCES IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
Daily Schedule

Bear F. Braumoeller, Ohio State University


Aisha Bradshaw, Ohio State University Disc: Tom Rabovsky, Indiana University, Bloomington
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
100.24 POLARIZATION AND ITS IMPACT ON Papers: Does Self-Interest Crowd Out Public Service Motivation
INSTITUTIONS AND POLICYMAKING in the Face of Failure?
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1 William G. Resh, University of Southern California
John Marvel, George Mason University
Chair: Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis
Disc: Scott Adler, University of Colorado, Boulder

DAILY SCHEDULE 221


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Experiments on Dishonesty and Selection into the Public Chair: Dawn L. Teele, University of Pennsylvania
Sector Disc: Jacob Bowers, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Asmus Leth Olsen, University of Copenhagen
Frederik Hjorth, University of Copenhagen Papers: Examining Barriers to the P-Suite for Female Leaders
Sebastian Barfort Using Conjoint Experiments
Job Security and its Outcomes: Moderating Effects of Joshua L Kalla, University of California, Berkeley
Public-Private Differentials Dawn L. Teele, University of Pennsylvania
Hyunkang Hur, Indiana University, Bloomington Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University
James L. Perry, Indiana University, Bloomington Gender and Political Communication in the Middle East
Triggering the Decision to Retire: Pay Freezes, Sarah S. Bush, Temple University
Sequesters, & Budget Uncertainty Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
Susannah Bruns Ali, Florida International University Education, Party Polarization, and the Origins of the
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY Partisan Gender Gap
100.27 THE POLITICAL SCIENCE OF PUBLIC POLICY Marc Meredith, University of Pennsylvania
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 Jonathan M. Ladd, Georgetown University
Chair: Anthony Michael Bertelli, New York University Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania
Disc: Paasha Mahdavi, Georgetown University Gender Quotas and WomenĀs Political Leadership
Diana Z. O' Brien, Indiana University
Papers: New Directions in Public Policy: Theories of Policy Johanna Rickne, IFN
Change Reconsidered How Primary Voters Evaluate Candidate Ideology and
Peter C. John, University College London Gender
Legislative Policy Trade-offs Danielle Thomsen, Syracuse University
Christian Breunig, University of Konstanz DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
Measuring Policy Diffusion with Automated Content 100.30 BEYOND BLACK AND WHITE: THE NEW
Analysis MULTIRACIAL AMERICA
Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
Charles R. Shipan, University of Michigan, Ann Chair: Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor Arbor
Bruno R. Wueest, University of Zurich Disc: Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, Ann
Entrepreneurial Politics, Policy Gridlock, and Legislative Arbor
Effectiveness Karam Dana, University of Washington Bothell
Craig Volden, University of Virginia
Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University Papers: Are Minorities Intolerant Like Everyone Else?: A
Income Inequality and Longevity Inequality Survey of American Muslims
Eric Neumayer, London School of Economics Youssef Chouhoud, University of Southern California
Thomas Pluemper, University of Essex National Security or Civil Rights? Conditions of Support
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS for Racial Profiling
100.28 WE JUST DISAGREE:THE DYNAMICS OF Julie Lee Merseth, Northwestern University
DISSENTS The Effect of Implicit Racial Bias on Multiracial
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 AmericansĀ Political Attitudes
Chair: Rachel A. Schutte, Hunter College - CUNY Lauren D. Davenport, Stanford University
Disc: Rachel A. Schutte, Hunter College - CUNY Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
Paul M. Collins, University of Massachusetts, Amherst The Measurement and Influence of Racial Sympathy in
American Politics
Papers: "Too Many Pages": Categorizing Multiple Dissents on Jennifer Chudy, University of Michigan
the U.S. Supreme Court DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
Pamela C. Corley, Southern Methodist University 100.31 NEW RESEARCH ON ASIAN AND ASIAN
Artemus Ward, Northern Illinois University AMERICANS
Judging with Personality Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Matthew E.K. Hall, University of Notre Dame Disc: Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California
The Strategy of Dissent: A Comparative Examination of Riverside
Dissenting Behavior
Benjamin Bricker, Southern Illinois University, Papers: Cash Rules Everything Around Me: The New Strategy
Carbondale of Asian American Campaigning
The Influence of Supreme Court Dissents Shyam K. Sriram, University of California, Santa
John P. Kastellec, Princeton University Barbara
Alexander Victor Hirsch stonegarden grindlife, UCLA
James S. Lai, Santa Clara University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
100.29 FRONTIERS IN THE QUANTITATIVE STUDY OF
Electoral Participation Across Immigrant Cohorts in
WOMEN IN POLITICS
2012
Loan K. Le, Institute for Good Government and
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Inclusion
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
Phi Hong Su
METHODOLOGY

222 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Mismatch in Issue Priorities: A Case of Asian Papers: Black Populations and White Voters: New Findings on
Americans Contact and Black Threat
Saemyi Park, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Joseph Bafumi, Dartmouth College
Psychological Distance of Asians Toward Other Competing for Identity: Electoral Closeness and Social
Minorities Vis-a-Vis Whites Group Unity in Politics
Na Youn Lee, University of Michigan Ali A. Valenzuela, Princeton University
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS God, Guns, and Glory: Patriotism and Voting Behavior
100.32 THE POLITICS OF RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY in Presidential Elections
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 Pavielle Haines, Princeton University
Chair: James D. Ward, Mississippi University for Women The Greatest Generation: Making America Safe for
Disc: James L. Guth, Furman University Democrats
Michael W. Wagner, University of Wisconsin, Madison Helmut Norpoth, Stony Brook University
Comparing the Effects of CandidatesĀ Ethnicity on
Papers: Between Sovereignty and Diversity: Spinoza's Doctrine Voting in Canada and Japan
of Charity Go Murakami, Ritsumeikan University
Rory Gordon Schacter, Harvard University DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Prophetic and Priestly: How Race and Parish Matter for 100.35 ASSESSING THE ECONOMY: BELIEFS,
Politics KNOWLEDGE AND OPINIONS
Larycia A. Hawkins, Wheaton College Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
Reconciling the God and Gender Gaps: The Influence of Chair: Ryan Carlin, Georgia State University
Women in Church Politics Disc: Gregory Mc Avoy, University of North Carolina,
Andre Pierre Audette, University of Notre Dame Greensboro
Christopher L. Weaver, University of Notre Dame Ryan Carlin, Georgia State University
The Religious Ties that Bind? Islam and Anti-Kurdish
Bias in Turkey Papers: A New Measure of Economic Voting: Priority Heuristics
Avital Livny, University of Illinois, Urbana- and Performance Evaluation
Champaign Jungsub Shin, University of Missouri
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL James W. Endersby, University of Missouri
SYSTEMS Partisan Biases in Economic Perceptions: The Influence
100.33 DIVERSITY AND REPRESENTATION of the Local Economy
CHALLENGES Bradley Thomas Dickerson, University of Mississippi
Room: Parc 55, Davidson Public Misperceptions About the National Debt
Chair: Carew E. Boulding, University of Colorado, Boulder Emily Thorson, Boston College
Disc: Carew E. Boulding, University of Colorado, Boulder Individual Economic Circumstances, Understandings of
the Economy and Demand for Accountability in Russia
Papers: Constituency Diversity and State Assembly Elections in Katerina Tertytchnaya, University of Oxford
Nigeria Catherine E. De Vries, University of Oxford
Joseph Olayinka Fashagba, Landmark University DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Electoral Engineering and the Representation of 100.36 NOT JUST THE FACTS…
Underrepresented Groups Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Elin Bjarnegard, Uppsala University Chair: Kaiping Chen, Stanford University
Thomas L. Brunell, University of Texas at Dallas Disc: Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University
Par Zetterberg, Uppsala University Martin Johnson, Louisiana State University
The Racialized Professional Identity of African
American Legislative Staff Papers: Where and Why Do Journalists Fact-check?
James R Jones, Columbia University Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College
Understanding Election Rules and Political Behavior in Jason A. Reifler, University of Exeter
Diverse Communities Analyzing PolitiFact.com and Washington Post ĄFact-
Todd Donovan, Western Washington University Checkerď in the 2012 Campaign
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa Stephen J. Farnsworth, University of Mary
Ethnic Quotas as Term Limits: Caste and Distributive Washington
Politics in Karnataka S. Robert Lichter, George Mason University
Ramya Parthasarathy, Stanford University Message Matters: How Fact-Checking Influences
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR Evaluations of Political Messages
100.34 VOTING: RACE, IDENTITY, AND THE Kim L. Fridkin, Arizona State University
Daily Schedule

GREATEST GENERATION Patrick Kenney, Arizona State University


Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1 Amanda Wintersieck, University of Tennessee,
Chair: Andrea Benjamin, University of North Carolina, Chapel Chattanooga
Hill Joshua R. Thompson, Arizona State University
Disc: Michael Tesler, UC Irvine

DAILY SCHEDULE 223


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

You CanĀt Handle the Truth? The Effects of Web Campaigns and Voter Mobilization in Cross-
(In)accuracy in Political Advertising National Context
Barbara Allen, Carleton College Rachel K. Gibson, University of Manchester
Jeffrey Jordan Berg Rosalynd Victoria Southern, Manchester
Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter The Bully Pulpit, Social Media, and Public Opinion: A
How the Media Distort Beliefs about the Causes of Big Data Approach
WomenĀs Under-representation Gabriel J. Michael
Danny Hayes, George Washington University Colin Agur, Yale University
Jennifer L. Lawless, American University Cory Myers, Yale University
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS 100.39 RETHINKING THE SCIENTIFIC IMPOSITION
100.37 PUBLIC OPINION, INFORMATION ON NATURE
TECHNOLOGY, & ENVIRONMENTAL Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
ATTITUDES Chair: Rosemary CR Taylor, Tufts University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 Disc: Mark Edward Denninghoff, Purdue University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 38: POLITICAL Papers: Disability in Flannery O'Connor's Southern Grotesque
COMMUNICATION Lorraine Krall McCrary, Villanova University
Chair: Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech
Mr. Fortune and Machiavelli in Flannery O'Connor's "A
Disc: Kendra E Dupuy, University of Washington View of the Woods"
Jerome C. Foss, Saint Vincent College
Papers: Green for God: The Role of Religion and Property, Possessiveness and Human Nature in Marx
Environmentalism and Tolkien
Juliet Carlisle, University of Idaho Nivedita Bagchi, Millersville University of
April K. Clark, Northern Illinois University Pennsylvania
Heated Talk: Economic framing in American climate Regenerating Political Animals: Science, Fiction and
change newspaper coverage Politics
Jack Zhou, Duke University Emma Planinc, University of Toronto
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION
Media and Public Opinion on Renewable Energy
Oksan Bayulgen, University of Connecticut
100.40 STUDYING THE SEQUENCING OF REGIMES
Salil Deepak Benegal, University of Connecticut
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
The Relationship between Ideology and Faith among Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
Evangelical Protestants POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Matthew Arbuckle, University of Cincinnati Chair: Howard Bartlett Sanborn, Virginia Military Institute
Development 3.0: How Technology Fosters Inclusion in Disc: Matthew Charles Wilson, West Virginia University
the Developing World
J.P. Singh, George Mason University
Papers: The Democratizing Effect of Elections? Regional and
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND Global Analyses
POLITICS Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Gothenburg
100.38 ELITES ONLINE: HOW CANDIDATES, Michael Bernhard, University of Florida
REPRESENTATIVES AND JOURNALISTS USE David Altman, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de
THE INTERNET Chile
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore Amanda Brooke Edgell, University of Florida
Chair: Lauren Copeland, Baldwin Wallace University & Electoral Democracy to Electoral Authoritarianism: An
Community Research Institute Empirical Exploration
Disc: Michael J. Jensen, University of Canberra Carolien Van Ham, University of New South Wales
Christine B. Williams, Bentley University Brigitte Zimmerman, University of North Carolina-
Chapel Hill
Papers: Birds of Feather? Status Homophily in Online Politics Conceptualizing Democracy: A Survey Experiment
Kevin Jay Wallsten, California State University, Long Using Paired Country Comparisons
Beach Adam Glynn, Emory University
Different Channel, Same Strategy? Filling Empirical Daniel Pemstein, North Dakota State University
Gaps in Congress Literature Brigitte Zimmerman, University of North Carolina-
Andreu Casas, University of Washington Chapel Hill
David Cristian Morar, George Mason University Sequences in Choice of Electoral Manipulation
The Consequences of CitizensĀ Uncivil Twitter Use in Strategies, 1974-2012
Interaction with Candidates Michael J. Coppedge, University of Notre Dame
Sebastian Adrian Popa, University of Mannheim Carolien Van Ham, University of New South Wales
Yannis Theocharis, University of Mannheim Learning From Evolutionary Biology: Sequences of
Pablo Barbera, New York University Democratization
Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Gothenburg
Yi-ting Wang, National Cheng Kung University

224 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS Rumors in the Village: Detecting Communication


100.41 LINKING INTERPRETATION AND CAUSAL Networks in Rural Uganda
INFERENCE Jennifer M. Larson, New York University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Janet I. Lewis, U.S. Naval Academy
Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Why Who You Know Matters: Influence Networks and
Chair: Edward Schatz, University of Toronto Centrality
Disc: Edward Schatz, University of Toronto Karen Albert, University of Rochester
Mapping the Rhetoric of Violence: Networks and
Papers: Beyond Probabilistic Causality? Interpretive Process Identity Radicalization
Tracing and Mechanisms Camber Warren, Naval Postgraduate School
Ludvig Norman, Uppsala University Dynamics of Demand: Targeting the Movement of
Grounding Network Analysis in Ethnography: Human Trafficking
Mechanisms, Homophily, and Influence Crysta Nicole Price
Steven Samford, University of Toronto Sophie Joan Freda Wagner, Creighton University
Making Identity Count: Toward a Constructivist DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
National Identity Database 100.44 METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN
Ted Hopf, National University of Singapore EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
Comparative Ethnography: Possibilities for Political Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Science Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL
Erica S. Simmons, University of Wisconsin, Madison METHODOLOGY
Nicholas Rush Smith, City College of New York Disc: Dominik Duell, Institute for Advanced Study Toulouse
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND POLITICS
100.42 DIVERSE PERSPECTIVES ON LGBT RIGHTS Papers: Cost-efficient Protocols for Persuasion Field
AND POLICY Experiments
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Kevin Collins, Analyst Institute
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL Improving Survey Designs in Conjoint Analysis
SCIENCE Jens Hainmueller, Stanford University
Chair: Helma G. E. de Vries-Jordan, University of Pittsburgh, Daniel J. Hopkins
Bradford Teppei Yamamoto, Massachusetts Institute of
Disc: Helma G. E. de Vries-Jordan, University of Pittsburgh, Technology
Bradford Look at me! The Effects of Interview Attire and Gender
Michael J. Bosia, St. Michael's College on Response Bias
Paul White, University of South Carolina
Papers: HIV and the Politics of Mucus: Latex, Pills, and Meghan Wilson, Brown University
Prevention Using Non-Political Content to Mitigate the Civic
J. Ricky Price, The New School Engagement Bias in Surveys
The "B" Isn't Silent: Bisexual Communities and Political Seth B Samuels, Seth Samuels Consulting
Activism Bradley T Spahn, Stanford University, Department of
Charles Smith, University of California, Irvine Political Science
Shawn Richard Schulenberg, Marshall University Theory and Model Forms for Linking Candidate and
Queering Rights: LGBTQ and Immigrant Coalition Policy Preferences of Voters
Building through the Law Leonard Coote, University of Queensland
Erin Adam David Gow, University of Queensland
Progress or Peril? Sexual Orientation and Gender DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Identity at the UN HRC 100.45 VULNERABLE MIGRANTS IN THE AMERICAS
Michael Joel Voss, University of Toledo Room: Nikko, Monterey I
Rendering the Unthinkable Thinkable: Same-Sex Chair: Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Marriage in Argentina and the US Disc: Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Julie Hollar, City University of New York Graduate
Center Papers: The RefugeeĀs Dilemma: Violence, Migration and the
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS ĄExpedited Removalď Campaign
100.43 NETWORKED INTERNATIONAL POLITICS: Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University
METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES AND Abby B. Cordova, University of Kentucky
SOLUTIONS Diana Orces, Oakland University
Room: Parc 55, Mission I A Crisis of Media Proportions: News and Agenda
Daily Schedule

Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL Setting on Child Migrants


METHODOLOGY Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California
Chair: Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Riverside
Disc: Lorien Jasny Andrea Silva, University of California, Riverside
Immigration Control and Public Administration of
Papers: Diplomatic Bargaining in Networks: When and How do Refugee Claimants in Canada
States Get What They Want? Sule Tomkinson
Shawn L. Ramirez, Emory University

DAILY SCHEDULE 225


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Local Citizenship: Sanctuaries for Runaway Slaves and Related Groups


Unauthorized Immigrants 101.1 ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF
Allan Colbern NATIONALITIES: NATION-BUILDING AND
The Politics of Rights Obstruction in the Dominican STATE-BUILDING: UNDERSTANDING THE
Republic DIVERSITIES OF IDENTITY, APPROACH, AND
Danilo Antonio Contreras, College of the Holy Cross OUTCOME
Room: Parc 55, Stockton
DIVISION 53: THE AFRICAN POLITICS CONFERENCE
GROUP Chair: Oxana Shevel, Tufts University
100.46 VIOLENCE AND PATRONAGE IN AFRICAN Disc: Cynthia S. Kaplan, University of California, Santa
DEMOCRACIES Barbara
Room: Parc 55, Balboa Julie George, CUNY, Queens College
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE
DEMOCRATIZATION Papers: Does Russia Matter? Language and Citizenship Policies
Chair: Naunihal Singh, Air War College in Estonia and Latvia
Disc: Jennifer L. De Maio, California State University, Jennie Schulze, Duquesne University
Northridge Explaining Support for Territorial Expansion: Russia in
2013 and 2014
Papers: Violent Democracy: Militias, Politics, and Popular Henry E. Hale, George Washington University
Support in Nigeria The Transformation of Kin-state and Diaspora Relations
Megan Turnbull, Brown University in post-Cold War Europe: Hungarians, Poles, and
Which Jobs for Which Boys? Patronage Patterns in Russians in Central and Eastern Europe
African Democracies Zsuzsa Csergo, Queen's University, Department of
Rachel Sigman, Syracuse University Political Studies
Investing in Authoritarian Rule: Punishment, Patronage Nation-building and State-building in Ethnically Diverse,
and Ethnicity in Rwanda Post-communist Societies: Complementary or
Anu Chakravarty Contradictory Processes?"
Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University
The Geography of Electoral Violence: Burundi 2010-
2015 101.2 THE CHURCHILL CENTRE: “WHAT ABOUT
Cara Eugenia Jones, Mary Baldwin College THE DARDANELLES?” A HUNDRED YEAR
Katrin Wittig RETROSPECTIVE ON CHURCHILL AT THE
ADMIRALTY IN 1915
A Survey-based Analysis of Violence and Vote-buying Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
in African Elections
Chair: Gregory B. Smith, Retired
Manuela Travaglianti
Disc: Forrest A. Nabors, University of Alaska
DIVISION 55: CLASS & INEQUALITY
100.47 INEQUALITY, PUBLIC OPINON, AND POLICY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Papers: A Lesson That Had Sunk into His Nature: The Dangers
of a Subordinate Position
Chair: Martin Gilens, Princeton University James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage
Disc: Nathan J. Kelly, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Defence Except Human Infirmityď: Winston Churchill
and the Dardanelles
Papers: Do Voters Prefer Affluent Politicians? David M. Freeman
Nicholas Carnes, Duke University
101.3 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
Public Opinion and the Subterranean Welfare State STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
Christopher G. Faricy, Syracuse University PHILOSOPHY: ROUNDTABLE ON THE JAFFA-
Christopher R. Ellis, Bucknell University BERNS DEBATE
The Effect of Social Position on Public Opinion: Results Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
from an Experiment Chair: William Morrisey, Hillsdale College
Meghan Condon, DePaul University Part: Hadley Arkes, Amherst College
Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia
The Politics of Exclusion: Who is Missed by the Steven Hayward, Pepperdine University
American Safety Net? Jeremy A Rabkin, George Mason School of Law
Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University Ralph A. Rossum, Claremont McKenna College
The Politics of Tax Expenditures and American Income 101.4 COMMITTEE FOR POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY:
Inequality HOW PARTY ORGANIZATIONS SHAPE
Christopher G. Faricy, Syracuse University DEMOCRATIC OUTCOMES
Income Inequality, Economic Segregation, and Support Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin I
for Redistribution Chair: Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University
William W. Franko, Auburn University Disc: Russell J. Dalton
Avery Livingston, Auburn University Miki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State University

226 DAILY SCHEDULE


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Papers: Party Rules, Party Resources, and the Politics of Intelligence and Conflict in Cyberspace: Writing and
Parliamentary Democracies: How Parties Organize in the Interpreting the History of Current Events
21st Century Michael Warner, United States Cyber Command
Thomas Poguntke, Heinrich-Heine-University 101.7 INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES AND
Susan Scarrow, University of Houston METHODS: VISUALIZING AND INTERPRETING
Paul D. Webb, University of Sussex CHINA IN IR: NEW METHODOLOGICAL
How Do Candidate Selection Rules Affect Descriptive DIVERSITIES
Representation and Participation? Room: Parc 55, Mason
Scott Pruysers, Carleton University Chair: Ido Oren, University of Florida
Bill Cross, Carleton University Disc: Cecelia Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Anika Gauja, University of Sydney
Gideon Rahat, Hebrew University
Papers: Visualizing China and the World: Methods and Ethics
Party Modeling and Changes in Party Organization for Chinese Politics and Foreign Policy
Luciano Bardi, Università di Pisa William A. Callahan, London School of Economics
Enrico Calossi, European University Institute
Eugenio Pizzimenti, University of Pisa
Discourse and Diversity: Visualizing Vulnerability in
American Responses to China
Connecting with Society: How Formal Rules for Eric M. Blanchard
Representation of Social Groups in Political Parties
China's "Harmonious World": New Empirical Analyses
Differ in Contemporary Democracies
Elin Haugsgjerd Allern, Department of Political
and a New Methodological Approach
Astrid Nordin, Lancaster University
Science, University of Oslo
Tània Verge The "Rise of China" and the Economics of Identity:
New Approaches to the Study of Foreign Economic
Intra-party Democracy in Sweden: Candidate and Leader
Policy
Nicola Nymalm, GIGA German Institute of Global
Selection
Nicholas Aylott, Sodertorn University
and Area Studies
Niklas Bolin, Mid Sweden University
101.5 GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICAL
From Power Transition to Power Interpretations:
SCIENTISTS: CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY
Towards an Interpretive Approach to "China Watching"
TODAY: CHANGES AND CONTINUITIES in IR
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2 Chengxin Pan, Deakin University
Chair: Brantly Womack, University of Virginia 101.8 LABOR PROJECT: LABOR AND THE SOUTH IN
AMERICAN POLITICS
Disc: Yong Deng, U.S. Naval Academy Room: Hilton, Imperial A
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
Papers: China and the Future Status Quo SCIENCE
Brantly Womack, University of Virginia Chair: Immanuel Ness
Examining ChinaĀs ĄAssertiveď Diplomacy through the Part: Amy Bromsen, Wayne State University
Eyes of Chinese IR Scholars Michael Goldfield, Wayne State University
Huiyun Feng, Griffith University Bill Fletcher, American Federation of Government
Kai He, Griffith University Employees
Scalene Perspectives, Isosceles Ideas and Equilateral 101.9 PRACTICING POLITICS: POLITICAL
Dependence: Reconsidering the U.S.-EU-China SCIENTISTS AS POLITICAL ACTORS: THE
ĄStrategic Triangle CASE OF SCHOOL BOARDS
Andrew S. Erickson, Naval War College Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Comrades in Broken Arms: Shifting Chinese Policies Part: Robert Maranto, University of Arkansas
towards North Korea Paul R. Babbitt, Southern Arkansas University
Zhiqun Zhu, Bucknell University Jay Barth, Hendrix College
101.6 INTELLIGENCE STUDIES GROUP: DIVERSITIES Marissa Martino Golden, Bryn Mawr College
OF INTELLIGENCE INQUIRY IN THE POST- Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University,
SNOWDEN ERA Harrisburg
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7 John Portz, Northeastern University
Chair: Loch K. Johnson, University of Georgia David L. Leal, University of Texas at Austin
Disc: James J. Wirtz, Naval Postgraduate School 101.10 SLOVENIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE
Joshua Rovner, Southern Methodist University ASSOCIATION: THE POLITICS OF CITIZENSHIP
EDUCATION IN POST-COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
Room: Parc 55, Sutro
Papers: Back to the Future: The Kennedys' Relentless Direction
Chair: Miro Hacek, University of Ljubljana
Daily Schedule

of an Investigation of the Intelligence Leak to the New


York Times Disc: Jason Laker, San Jose State University
David M. Barrett, Villanova University
How Intelligence Organizations View Congressional Papers: The Politicization of Citizenship Education Curriculum:
Oversight Between European Redemption, Nationalist Robustness
Glenn P. Hastedt, James Madison University and Global Convergence
Tomaz Dezelan, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of
The Snowden Leaks and Intelligence Debate: More Heat
Social Science
Than Light
Mark Phythian, University of Leicester

DAILY SCHEDULE 227


Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM

Educating in the Highest Practical Science: The Saturday, 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM


Pedagogy and Epistemology of Student Initiation to
APSA Events
Western Political Philosophy in a Post-Communist
Setting 104.1 OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS RECEPTION
Peter Rozic, Currently none Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
The Politics of Citizenship Education in Post-communist Saturday, 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM
Countries
APSA Events
Mitja Sardoc, Educational Research Institute
105.1 HUMAN RIGHTS SECTION RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Powell Room
Active Citizenship among Youth: Case of Slovenia
Simona Kukovic, University of Ljubljana
Miro Hacek, University of Ljubljana Saturday, 7:30 PM to 8:30 PM
Croatian Citizenship Identity Following the EU APSA Events
Accession
106.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS SECTION
Viktor Koska, Faculty of Political Science, University
RECEPTION
of Zagreb
Room: Nikko, Ballroom III
Ana Matan, Faculty of Political Science, University of
Zagreb 106.2 CUNY GRADUATE CENTER POLITICAL
SCIENCE PROGRAM RECEPTION
101.11 SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT:
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
HUMANITY AND DIVINITY IN ANCIENT
POLITICAL THOUGHT 106.3 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY RELATED GROUP
Room: Parc 55, Embarcadero RECEPTION
Chair: Richard S. Ruderman, University of North Texas Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III
Disc: Peter J. Ahrensdorf, Davidson College 106.4 HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY SECTION
Mark J. Lutz, University of Nevada, Las Vegas RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13
Papers: Cyrus: a Different Kind of King 106.5 RBSI/MFP ALUMNI NETWORKING RECEPTION
Timothy W. Burns, Baylor University Room: Nikko, Carmel I
Uncovering the Athenian StrangerĀs Debts to Tyrtaeus Saturday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM
and Theognis in Book 1 of the Laws APSA Events
Lewis Trelawny-Cassity, Antioch College
107.1 MIT DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Reflections on the Humanity (and Inhumanity) of RECEPTION
Thucydides Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
Seth N. Jaffe, The American School of Classical
Studies at Athens 107.2 RECEPTION FOR REP, LATINO CAUCUS,
LATINO COMMITTEE, AND ASIAN PACIFIC
Xenophon on Heracles' Choice Between the Life of COMMITTEE
Virtue and the Life of Vice Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas, Austin Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
Aristotle and the Intellectual Virtues POLITICS
Lorraine Pangle, University of Texas, Austin Co-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science
107.3 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, DEPARTMENT
Saturday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM OF POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION
APSA Events Room: Parc 55, Mission I
102.1 ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS (APAC) 107.4 UCLA POLITICAL SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS MEETING RECEPTION
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Room: Parc 55, Market Street
102.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETING
Room: Nikko, Ballroom I Sunday, September 6, 2015
102.3 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY RELATED GROUP Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM
BUSINESS MEETING Theme Panels
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
108.1 THE POLITICS OF RACE AND CLASS
102.4 HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY SECTION INEQUALITIES IN THE AMERICAS
BUSINESS MEETING Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 5
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND
102.5 PRACTICING POLITICS WORKING GROUP POLITICS
MEETING Co-sponsored by DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND
Room: Hilton, Green Room CITIZENSHIP
Saturday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM Chair: Juliet Hooker, University of Texas, Austin
Part: Megan Ming Francis, University of Washington
APSA Events
Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
103.1 GRADUATE STUDENT HAPPY HOUR Mala Htun, University of New Mexico
Room: Nikko, Ballroom II Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor

228 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Paul Frymer, Princeton University DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY


Tianna Paschel, University of California, Berkeley 110.4 THE "HUMAN" AND ITS OTHERS
APSA Events Room: Hilton, Powell Room
109.1 ITALIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW (IPSR) Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Room: Hilton, Green Room Chair: Moya Lloyd, Loughborough University
Division Panels Disc: Alan Coffee
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY:
Drew Walker, Brown University
HISTORICAL APPROACHES
110.1 PARADOXES AND POSSIBILITIES OF Papers: ĄThe Same as if Horses or Cattle Had Been Thrown
POLITICAL ACTION Overboardď: Humanity at Sea
Room: Hilton, Union Square 16 Laura Brace, University of Leicester
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Civilian casualties, counterinsurgency, and the politics of
THEORY grief
Chair: Karuna Mantena, Yale University Thomas Gregory, University of Auckland
Disc: Joan E. Cocks, Mount Holyoke College Fanon on Violence, Gender and the Idea of a New
Humanity
Papers: The Sans-culottes, Marx, and the ĄRevolution in Kimberly Hutchings, Queen Mary University of
Permanenceď London
Dan Edelstein, Stanford University Elizabeth Frazer, DPIR, Manor Road, Oxford
OX13UQ
Envisioning the Collective Actor: Masses, Classes,
Crowds and Publics Why the āHumanĀ? Why Now?
Jason Frank, Cornell University Moya Lloyd, Loughborough University
Gandhian Satyagraha and the Hazards of Action The Human Boundary
Karuna Mantena, Yale University Joshua Foa Dienstag, University of California, Los
Angeles
Unconstituting Action: Civil Disobedience and the
Transformation of Norms DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
Erin Pineda, University of Chicago 110.5 HISTORICAL INJUSTICE AND RESPONSIBILITY
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
Chair: Vicki Hsueh, Western Washington University
110.2 JUSTIFYING POLITICAL AUTHORITY:
DIVERSE TRADITIONS IN DEBATE Disc: Amit Ron, Arizona State University, West Campus
Room: Hilton, Lombard Room
Chair: Iseult Honohan, University College Dublin Papers: Historical Injustice, Racial Segregation, and the
Imperative of Integration
Disc: Danielle Petherbridge
Amy Hisaye Hondo, Princeton University
Papers: RousseauĀs Dilemma Reparations and Beyond: The Lasting Significance of
Philip Pettit, Princeton University Historic Injustice
Daniel Butt, University of Oxford
Authority and Autonomy
Maeve Cooke, University College Dublin Settler States and the Problem of Indigenous Political
Obligation
Practical Pluralism Dimitrios Panagos, Memorial University of
Lenn Evan Goodman, Vanderbilt University Newfoundland
A Naturalist, Pragmatist Account of Political Authority DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY
Cheryl Misak, University of Toronto 110.6 FORMAL MODELS OF INTERNAL CONFLICT
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY Room: Nikko, Mendocino I
110.3 LITERATURE OF DIMINISHED DEMOCRACY Chair: Nazli Avdan, Kansas University
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3 Disc: Nazli Avdan, Kansas University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL Sean M. Zeigler, RAND Corp.
THEORY
Chair: Simon A. Stow, College of William & Mary Papers: Extremism in Revolutionary Movements
Disc: Molly F. Scudder, Texas Christian University Mehdi Shadmehr, University of Miami School of
Business
Papers: Joan Didion and the Dream of a Common Language Endogenous Power, Monitoring, and Timing of Attack
Joel Alden Schlosser, Bryn Mawr College in Civil Wars
Xiaoli Guo, Flordia State University
Daily Schedule

Reflections of Helen: Masculinity and the Trouble with


Women Born Weak Growing Strong
Kristy King, Arizona State University Bahar Leventoglu, Duke University
Bearing Power: Mothers, Ambivalence, and Why Do Oil-Rich Minorities Fight So Many Separatist
Intergenerational Politics Civil Wars?
Elizabeth Markovits, Mount Holyoke College Jack Paine, University of Rochester
Democratic Poetry for Individualists
Ali Aslam

DAILY SCHEDULE 229


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Extremism and Moderation in Ethno-Territorial Papers: The Legacy of War on State Capacity
Disputes: A Bargaining Analysis Didac Queralt, Juan March Institute
Shale Horowitz, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Half-Life of History: The Chinese Communist PartyĀs
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY Anti-Japanese War Legacy
110.7 AT FACE VALUE: APPEARANCE EFFECTS AND Daniel Koss, Harvard University
CANDIDATE EVALUATIONS Social ties and Collective Action: Effects of WWII
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 Displacement in Poland
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND Volha Charnysh, Harvard University
VOTING BEHAVIOR
War and Democracy: American Independence War
Chair: Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook Veterans and the French Revolution
Disc: Nichole Bauer, University of Alabama Steven I. Wilkinson, Yale University
Saumitra Jha, Stanford University
Papers: Facial Dominance and Electoral Success in Times of Pushing Back: Heterogeneous Effects of State-led
War and Peace Repression - The Chilean Case
Adam J. Berinsky, Massachusetts Institute of Maria Angelica Bautista, University of Chicago
Technology
Sara N. Chatfield, MIT DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Gabriel S. Lenz, University of California, Berkeley 110.10 IMPROVING BEST PRACTICES FOR
STATISTICAL ANALYSIS
Beauty, Competence or Likability? Appearance Effects Room: Nikko, Mendocino II
in German Elections
Chair: Kevin A. Clarke, University of Rochester
Sebastian Jaeckle, University of Freiburg
Thomas Metz Disc: Ryan T. Moore, American University
Evaluating Emotional Displays of Leading German
Politicians Papers: Beyond Ceteris Paribus: The Observed-value Approach
Lena Masch, University of Trier and Linear Models
Anthony A. Pezzola, Catholic University of Chile
Voters Form Online Tallies of Candidates across
Multiple Personality Dimensions Impact of Sampling Procedure on Statistical Inference
Lasse Laustsen, Aarhus University with Clustered Data
Michael Bang Petersen, Aarhus University Shuai Jin
Lene Aarøe, Aarhus University ĄEpidemicď Politics? What Survival Analysis Can(not)
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Do for Political Scientists
Kathryn Ann Lindquist, University of Chicago
110.8 POLITICAL COMPETITION AND
GOVERNMENT SPENDING The Principle of Least Harm for Missing Data:
Room: Hilton, Union Square 21 Imputation Using Null Interactions
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE Jonathan Kropko
POLITICS DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Disc: Andrew C. Eggers, Nuffield College, Oxford 110.11 MACHINE LEARNING
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15
Papers: Electoral Competition and Political Myopia Chair: Santiago Olivella, University of Miami
Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan Disc: Santiago Olivella, University of Miami
Megan Mullin, Duke University Curtis S. Signorino, University of Rochester
The geography of Incentives to Run a Budget Deficit in
Belgium Papers: Machine Learning and Causal Inference
Geert Jennes, KU Leuven Jacob Bowers, University of Illinois, Urbana-
The Ban of Batasuna: Effects on Local Government Champaign
Spending Mark M. Fredrickson, University of Illinois at
Andreu Arenas Jal Urbana-Champaign
Geographic Representation and Policy Making: Evidence Machine Learning vs. MRP: Estimating Public Opinion
from a Natural Experiment in Small Geographic Units
Santiago Lopez Cariboni Christopher S. Elmendorf, UC Davis
Rafael Piñeiro, Departamento de Ciencias Sociales y Kevin M. Quinn, University of California, Berkeley
PolÃticas - Universidad Catolica del Uruguay Out of Step, but in Office: Newspaper Coverage and
Government Architecture and Political Selection Democratic Accountability
David Dreyer Lassen, University of Copenhagen Michael C. Dougal, University of California, Berkeley
Sebastian Barfort Real-Time Sentiment Analysis in the Context of a
Soren Serritzlew, Aarhus University Political Conflict
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY Yair Fogel-Dror, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
110.9 LONG SHADOWS OF HISTORY: HOW PAST Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
VIOLENCE SHAPES PRESENT-DAY POLITICAL Shaul Rafael Shenhav, Hebrew University of
OUTCOMES Jerusalem
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 Wouter van Atteveldt, VU University Amsterdam
Chair: Jeffrey Kopstein, University of California, Irvine DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
Disc: Laia Balcells, Duke University 110.12 TRACING TEXT THROUGH TIME
Room: Hilton, Mason Room

230 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Chair: Justin Grimmer, Stanford University Protests and the Paradox of Repression: Lessons from
Disc: Arthur Spirling, Harvard University Turkey, Brazil, and Ukraine
S. Erdem Aytaç, Koç University
Papers: A Topic Modeling Approach to the Diffusion of Ideas Luis Schiumerini, University of Oxford
and Precedents in Text Data Susan C. Stokes, Yale University
Yuki Shiraito, Princeton University The Rise of Islamic Populism in Turkey and in Morocco
Supervised Methods for Tracing Ideological Rhetoric Esen Kirdis, Rhodes College
over Time amina drhimeur
Brice Acree, University of North Carolina, Chapel DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Hill 110.15 INEQUALITY, INSTITUTIONS, AND REGIME
Exploring the Fitness of Policy Ideas in Congress: The TRANSITIONS
Case of Sanctions Policy Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 7
John D. Wilkerson, University of Washington Chair: David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
The Origin of Ideas Disc: Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles
Jennifer L. Brookhart, University of Wisconsin,
Madison Papers: The adoption of electoral reforms protecting voter
Alexander M. Tahk, University of autonomy
Wisconsin–Madison Isabela Mares, Columbia University
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION Economic Inequality, Captured Voters, and Incentives
110.13 EXPLORING DIVERSITIES USING CIVIC for Electoral Manipulation
EDUCATION AND ENGAGEMENT Milan Svolik, Yale University
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Elections and Elite Violence on the Road to
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 9: TEACHING AND Democratization
LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Michael K. Miller, George Washington University
Chair: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling Statwe University Distributive Conflict and the Consolidation of
Disc: Ila Singh Democratic Rule
Ryan Emenaker, College of the Redwoods Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego
Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New
Papers: Best Practices in Internships within the Discipline Brunswick
Renee B. Van Vechten, University of Redlands Inequality and Democratic Stability
Shamira M. Gelbman Ben William Ansell, Nuffield College, University of
Bobbi Gentry, Bridgewater College Oxford
Civic Education, Political Knowledge, and Dimensions David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota, Twin
of Political Engagement Cities
Diana M. Owen, Georgetown University DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Suzanne Ruby Soule, California State University COUNTRIES
Channel Islands 110.16 CORRUPTION AND THE POLITICS OF REFORM
Internships: Measuring Value for Both Students and IN MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
Sponsoring Organizations Room: Hilton, Franciscan B
Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of Chair: Emily A. Sellars, Harris School of Public Policy
Pennsylvania Disc: Emily A. Sellars, Harris School of Public Policy
Seeing Like a Citizen: Student Reflections on Local
Government Meetings Papers: Lying about Cheating
Shamira M. Gelbman Alberto Simpser, ITAM
The Enduring Impact of Learning to Deliberate: An Combating Corruption Online: Citizen Participation and
Alumni Assessment State Responses in China
Katy J. Harriger, Wake Forest University Rongbin Han, University of Georgia
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Parties as Disciplinarians: Political Parties, Corruption
110.14 DYNAMICS OF PROTEST MOVEMENTS and Accountability
Room: Hilton, Franciscan A James R. Hollyer, University of Minnesota, Twin
Chair: Monika Nalepa, University of Chicago Cities
Disc: Bogdan Gabriel Popescu, Political Science at UChicago Marko Klasnja, Georgetown University
Rocio Titiunik, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Papers: Explaining Protest Waves under Authoritarian Rule Cynicism and Tolerance Toward Corruption:
James Franklin, Ohio Wesleyan University Experimental Evidence from Brazil
Daily Schedule

Majalis Al-Hareem: Civic Sites of Social and Political Nara Pavao, Vanderbilt University
Engagement Compulsions of Coalitions: Governance and Reform
Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, Northwestern University in Movements in Contemporary India
Qatar Bilal Baloch, University of Oxford
Protester Identity and Government Response DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Sarah Hummel, University of Illinois at Urbana- COUNTRIES
Champaign 110.17 ELECTORAL POLITICS IN AFRICA
Room: Parc 55, Balboa

DAILY SCHEDULE 231


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Chair: Tyson Roberts, University of California, Irvine Welfare Authoritarianism and Global Economic
Disc: Tyson Roberts, University of California, Irvine Integration in Russia and China
Igor Logvinenko, Wellesley College
Papers: Dangerous Disconnect: Politician Misperceptions and DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCED
Political Violence INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES
Steven Rosenzweig, Yale University 110.20 BOOK ROUNDTABLE: "THE POLITICS OF
The African Voter ADVANCED CAPITALISM" (2015, CUP)
Jaimie Bleck, University of Notre Dame Room: Hilton, Taylor Room
Nicolas van de Walle, Cornell University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY
Chiefly Power and Opposition Party Fragmentation in Chair: Silja Haeusermann, University of Zurich
Africa Part: Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley
Timothy Peterka, University of California, Davis Philip Manow, Bremen University
Ethnic Salience: Bringing Institutions Back In Christoffer Green-Pedersen, University of Aarhus
Beth Rabinowitz, Rutgers University Marius R. Busemeyer, University of Konstanz
Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
In Search of Clientelism in African Voting Behavior Pablo Beramendi, Duke University
Amy R. Poteete, Concordia University
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING 110.21 POWER, IDEAS, AND PUBLIC POLICY
COUNTRIES Room: Hilton, Imperial A
110.18 EVALUATING THE ROLE OF NEW Chair: Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University
TECHNOLOGIES ON DEVELOPMENT IN POOR
COUNTRIES Disc: James Ashley Morrison, London School of
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7 Economics & Political Science
Chair: Karen E. Ferree, University of California, San Diego
Papers: Power Through, Over and In Ideas: Conceptualizing
Papers: Improving Democratic Performance with Citizen
Ideational Power
Martin B. Carstensen, Copenhagen Business School
Engagement in South Africa
James D. Long
Vivien A. Schmidt, Boston University
Karen E. Ferree, University of California, San Diego
Clark C. Gibson, University of California, San Diego Ideas and Power: Four Intersections and How to Show
Danielle F. Jung, Emory University Them
Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon
Information Technology and Political Engagement:
Mixed Evidence from Uganda Power and Rules: Governing the Euro and the Perverse
Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania Logic of German Ideas
Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University Matthias M. Matthijs, Johns Hopkins University
Gabriella Sacramone-Lutz Contested Governance: The New Repertoire of the
Development Aid Decision-Making with Geospatial Eurozone Crisis
Data: An Experimental Study Nicolas Jabko, Johns Hopkins University
Catherine Weaver, University of Texas, Austin Crisis, What Crisis? Power, Ideas and the Austerity
Michael Findley, University of Texas, Austin Agenda in Southern Europe
Daniel L. Nielson Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics
Michael J. Tierney, College of William & Mary
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Please Hold the Phone: A Field Experiment on Mobile 110.22 FIRMS AND POLITICS IN EAST ASIA
Technology & WomenĀs Welfare Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Philip Roessler, College of William & Mary Disc: Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University
Daniel L. Nielson
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING Papers: Political Risks and Entry Mode: Evidence from China's
COUNTRIES Outward Investors
110.19 SOCIAL POLICY NON-DEMOCRACIES, Weiyi Shi, UCSD
#1:POLITICAL ECONOMY AUTHORITARIAN Boliang Zhu, Pennsylvania State University
WELFARE STATES Judicial Hierarchy and Judicial Bias
Room: Hilton, Union Square 14 Yuhua Wang, Harvard University
Chair: Jing Lin
Network Ties and the Political Strategies of Firms
Disc: Mitchell A Orenstein, University of Pennsylvania Benjamin A.T. Graham, University of Southern
California
Papers: The Reform of Skill Formation in Russia: Regional Cesi Cruz, University of British Columbia
Responses Multinational Firms and the Microfoundations of the
Thomas F. Remington, Emory University Commercial Peace
Israel Marques Jiakun Jack Zhang, UC San Diego
Authoritarian Regimes & Investment in Human Capital Media Bias against Foreign Firms as a Trade Barrier:
Margaret Hanson, The Ohio State University Evidence from China
Sarah Wilson Sokhey, University of Colorado Sung Eun Kim, Columbia University
Welfare Spending and Investment Attractiveness in Non-
democracies
Celeste Beesley, Brigham Young University

232 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY The US Rebalance to Asia and Bipolarity in the South
110.23 THE IMF AND WORLD BANK: LENDING AND China Sea
CONDITIONALITY IN INTERNATIONAL Stephen F. Burgess, U.S. Air War College
INSTITUTIONS The Effect of Social Trust and Administrative Culture
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4 on EU Crisis Management
Chair: Mark Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison Thomas Persson, Uppsala University
Disc: Mark Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison Charles F. Parker
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY
Papers: Assessing the Effects of IMF and the World Bank 110.27 EXAMINING COUNTER-TERRORISM AND
Programs on Financial Reforms INSURGENCY POLICIES
Sawa Omori, International Christian University Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20
A Two-Level Analysis of IMF Lending: The Turkish Chair: Ivan Sascha Sheehan, University of Baltimore College
Case of Public Affairs
Merih Angin, The Graduate Institute of International Disc: Ivan Sascha Sheehan, University of Baltimore College
and Development Studies of Public Affairs
Diversity in IMF Lending Toolkit: Useful or already Belgin San-Akca, Koc University
obsolete?
Burcu Ucaray-Mangitli, Ipek University Papers: Designating Terrorists and Effects on Foreign Policy
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION Discourse in the Media
110.24 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: "A THEORY OF Anna G. Cotter, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
CONTESTATION" BY ANTJE WIENER How Does ĄForeign Terrorist Organizationď Designation
Room: Parc 55, Fillmore Affect Terrorist Groups?
Part: Antje Wiener, University of Hamburg Brian J. Phillips, CIDE
Jonathan Havercroft, University of Southampton The Role of Women and Ethnic Minorities in U.S.
Brent Steele, University of Utah Counterinsurgency Strategies
Raymond D. Duvall, University of Minnesota, Barbara Elias, Bowdoin College
Minneapolis We Are Watching You: Drones, Data, and Boundaries in
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY the War on Terror
110.25 LEARNING IN INTERNATIONAL SECURITY Mark Alexander Shirk, University of Maryland
Room: Hilton, Franciscan D Counterterrorism Aid Delegation and International
Chair: Jeffrey W. Knopf, Middlebury Institute of International Agreements
Studies at Monterey Henry Pascoe, University of Texas, Austin
Disc: Jeffrey W. Knopf, Middlebury Institute of International DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES
Studies at Monterey 110.28 LEADERSHIP SURVIVAL, POLITICAL
INSTITUTIONS AND CONFLICT
Papers: Cheap Signals, Costly Talk: The Psychology of Room: Hilton, Franciscan C
Updating Chair: Nikolay V. Marinov, University of Mannheim
Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California
Disc: Nikolay V. Marinov, University of Mannheim
The āRightĀ Weapon for the āNext WarĀ
Zachary Zwald, University of Houston Papers: DonĀt Change Horses in Midstream: Leadership Change
Learning, Complexity, and Collaboration in US Army and Civil Conflict Outcomes
Field Manual 3-24 Jessica Maves Braithwaite, University of Arizona
Joseph MacKay, Columbia University Kirssa Cline Ryckman, University of Arizona
Learning in Crisis: How NATO Retains Institutional Intra-Elite Bargains and the Character of Democratic
Memory as Budgets Decline Foreign Policy
Heidi Hardt, University of California, Irvine Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, George Washington
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS University
CONTROL Scott Wolford, University of Texas
110.26 THE CONTINUING BALANCE OF POWER Regime Types and Peacekeeping Contributions
Room: Parc 55, Powell I Jun Koga, University of Strathclyde
Chair: Sung Chull Kim, Seoul National University Sabrina Karim
Disc: Sung Chull Kim, Seoul National University The Foreign Policies of Political Dynasties
Henk Erich Goemans, University of Rochester
Papers: RussiaĀs International Security Calculus: Road to Coup-proofing and Military Inefficiencies: An
Experiment
Daily Schedule

Grandeur or Perdition?
M. Mohsin Hashim, Muhlenberg College Andrew W. Bausch, Carnegie Mellon University
Sino-U.S. Relations and the Case of Space Security Rebel Legitimacy and Wartime Sexual Violence
Alexis Littlefield, The University of Nottingham Katherine M. Sawyer, University of Maryland,
Ningbo China College Park
The Future of Balance of Power in the 21st Century Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, University of
T.V. Paul, McGill University Maryland, College Park

DAILY SCHEDULE 233


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES Explaining Local Government Transparency: A Political


110.29 DIVERSITY WITHIN PARTIES: CAUSES AND Market Framework
CONSEQUENCES Antonio F. Tavares, University of Minho
Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6 Nuno Ferreira da Cruz, LSE Cities
Chair: Marina Lacalle, University of Houston DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
Disc: Pedro Riera, Carlos III University of Madrid 110.32 THE POLITICS OF EDUCATION
Kuniaki Nemoto, Musashi University Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2
Chair: Vladimir Kogan
Papers: Beliefs vs. Ideology: The Imperative of Social Inclusion Disc: Terry M. Moe, Stanford University
in Brazilian Congress
Frederico Bertholini, Getulio Vargas Foundation Papers: Private School Vouchers and Political Participation:
Carlos Pereira, Getulio Vargas Foundation Experimental Evidence
Comparing Territorial and Functional Constituency Deven Carlson, University of Oklahoma
Representations in Hong Kong Does School Board Turnover Affect School District
Jinhyeok Jang, University of Louisville Outcomes? Evidence from Ohio
Explaining Party Ideological Cohesion: Party Labels and Claire Elizabeth Abernathy, Vanderbilt University
Personal Votes in Japan Jason A. Grissom, Vanderbilt University
Hiroki Kubo, Rice University Marc Meredith, University of Pennsylvania
Internally Delayed: The Policy-Making Consequences of Does Popular Control of K-12 Schools Exacerbate
Intra-Party Conflict Educational Inequality?
Zachary David Greene, University of Strathclyde Patrick Flavin, Baylor University
Substantive Representation of Internal Factions during Michael T. Hartney, Lake Forest College
the Hegemonic PRI Consequences of Direct Democracy: A Dynamic RD
Joy Langston, CIDE Analysis of School Tax Referenda
Juan Pablo Micozzi, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo Vladimir Kogan
de Mexico Stephane Lavertu, The Ohio State University
Jeffrey A. Weldon, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo Zachary F. Peskowitz, Emory University
de Mexico DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS 110.33 TELL ME WHY: COURTS AND LEGITIMACY
110.30 THE OBAMA PRESIDENCY AND Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW Chair: Pamela C. Corley, Southern Methodist University
Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room Disc: Deborah Beim, Yale University
Chair: Jasmine Farrier, University of Louisville Pamela C. Corley, Southern Methodist University
Disc: Robert J. Spitzer, SUNY, Cortland
James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University Papers: Is Supreme Court Legitimacy Irredeemably Politicized?
Brandon L. Bartels, George Washington University
Papers: Barack Obama and the Use of Military ForceĚJohn Christopher David Johnston, Duke University
Yoo by Another Name? Legal Legitimacy and Compliance: Disaggregating
Chris Edelson, American University Opinion, Disentangling Concepts
Judicial Restraint and the New War Powers Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Jasmine Farrier, University of Louisville Katrina Heimark, University of Minnesota, Twin
Significance of Legal Advice to the President on Cities
National Security Perceptions of the Supreme Court: Alternative
Nancy Kassop, SUNY New Paltz Approaches, Different Results?
The Evolution of President Obama's Judicial Agenda James L. Gibson, Washington University in St. Louis
Bruce G. Peabody Michael J. Nelson, The Pennsylvania State University
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION The Effects of Opinion Rationales on Supreme Court
110.31 CONTRACTING FOR PUBLIC GOODS AND Legitimacy
SERVICES Chris "Delicious" W. Bonneau, University of
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 Pittsburgh, @Bonneau_Says
Jarrod Kelly, University of Pittsburgh
Disc:
Kira Pronin, Univ of Pittsburgh
Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling Statwe University
Shane Redman
Papers: Accountability in Contracting: Linking Contract Matthew Zarit
Incentives to Performance
Amanda M. Girth, The Ohio State University DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
110.34 AUTHORITY MIGRATION IN FEDERAL
Contracting-out and Bureaucratic Accountability
Ronen Mandelkern, The Hebrew University of
SYSTEMS
Jerusalem Room: Parc 55, Mason
Disasters and Political Participation: Policy Feedback Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism
Theory in a New Context Chair: Mariely Lopez-Santana, George Mason University
Jason David Rivera, Rutgers University-Camden
Disc: Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor

234 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Barry R. Weingast, Stanford University DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
110.37 IMMIGRATION
Papers: Conceptualizing, Measuring and Mapping Dynamic De/ Room: Hilton, Union Square 22
Centralization in Federations Chair: Sergio I Garcia-Rios, Cornell University
Paolo Dardanelli, University of Kent Disc: Sergio I Garcia-Rios, Cornell University
John Kincaid, Lafayette College
Alan Fenna, Curtin University
Papers: DACA, De-Americanization, and the Stickiness of
André Lecours, University of Ottawa
Identity
Disentangling Federalism from Decentralization Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College
Malcolm M. Feeley, University of California, Maria Chavez, Pacific Lutheran University
Berkeley Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, Pace University
Federalism Theory as a Dynamic Theory of European Joe Tafoya, The University of Texas at Austin
Integration? Immigration and the Latino Vote in the 2012, 2014 and
Annegret Christine Eppler, University of Innsbruck 2016 Elections
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS Gary M. Segura, Stanford University
110.35 DIVERSITIES / DIVERSE CITIES -- AND THEIR Matt A. Barreto, University of California, Los
POLITICS Angeles
Room: Parc 55, Mission II Thomas Schaller, UMBC
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND The DACA Policy and Voter Behavior during the 2012
POLITICS Presidential Election
Chair: Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern University Antonio Rodriguez
Disc: Betina Cutaia Wilkinson, Wake Forest University Anne Cizmar, Eastern Kentucky University
Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern University Willie ĄJoseď Horton: Immigration and U.S. Senate
Campaign Appeals
Papers: Is Diversity Always such a Negative for Public Tyler Thomas Reny, University of California Los
Investment? Angeles
Karin Kitchens, Georgetown University DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL
Ailing Agendas, Fractured Frames? The Politics of SYSTEMS
(In)Equality in Suburbia 110.38 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: BRUCE CAIN'S
Laura E. Evans, University of Washington DEMOCRACY MORE OR LESS
Ranked-Choice Voting and Racial Group Vote Choice in Room: Parc 55, Mission I
Urban Mayoral Elections Chair: Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego
Jason Mc Daniel, San Francisco State University Part: Bruce E. Cain
Assimilation and the Asian American Voting Behavior Richard L. Hasen, UC Irvine School of Law
in New York City Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland, College Park
Min Hee Go, CUNY - Brooklyn College Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
The Urban Poor and the Politics of Spatial Justice in
Richard Pildes, New York University
U.S Global Cities
Armando Xavier Mejia, University of Wisconsin, DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND
Madison PARTIES
M. Victoria Quiroz Becerra 110.39 THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF PARTY
NOMINATION RULES
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
Room: Nikko, Carmel I
110.36 CONSERVATISM & FEMINISM, A 'DANGEROUS
LIAISON’? CONTEMPORARY THOUGHT & Chair: Bernard N. Grofman, University of California, Irvine
PRACTICE Disc: Thomas L. Brunell, University of Texas at Dallas
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Chair: Sarah Childs, University of Bristol Papers: Party Control of Party Primaries: Nominations for the
Disc: Karen I.L. Celis, Free University of Brussels U.S. Senate 2004-2012
Hans J.G. Hassell, Cornell College
Papers: Conservatism as an Anti-feminist Force Party Nomination Rules and Candidate Quality
Mieke Verloo, Radboud University Georgia Kernell, UCLA
Is there a Conservative Feminism? Political Representation and the 'Top-Two' Primary
Ronnee Schreiber, San Diego State University System
4.ĄRightingď Conventional Wisdom: Women and Right Ben Highton, University of California, Davis
Parties Robert Huckfeldt, University of California, Davis
Daily Schedule

Diana Z. O' Brien, Indiana University Social Choice and Coordination Problems in Open
Explaining the (Radical) Right Gender Gap in Voting: House Primaries
Gendered Party Competition Kathleen Bawn, University of California, Los Angeles
Rosie Campbell, Birkbeck, University of London Knox Brown
Silvia Erzeel, Université catholique de Louvain Angela Ximena Ocampo, University of California,
Los Angeles
Women Against Abortion: Understanding Prolife Shawn Thomas Patterson, UCLA
Women activism John Logan Ray
Martina Avanza John R. Zaller, University of California, Los Angeles

DAILY SCHEDULE 235


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

The Politics of House Nominations: Evidence from Four Chair: Philip Habel, University of Glasgow
Case Studies Disc: Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College
Stephanie DeMora, University of Arkansas
Andrew J. Dowdle, University of Arkansas, Papers: Media and the Politics of Implementation: Geographic
Fayetteville Variation in ACA Coverage
Spencer Cameron Hall Erika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan University
Mark Myers Colleen L. Barry, Johns Hopkins University
Shawn Thomas Patterson, UCLA Sarah E. Gollust, University of Minnesota, Twin
John R. Zaller, University of California, Los Angeles Cities
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell University
110.40 REPRESENTATION, PARTISANSHIP, AND PARTY Laura Baum, Wesleyan University
DISCIPLINE Narrative and Inoculation: Using Communication Theory
Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18 to Improve Public Health
Chair: Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University Colleen L. Barry, Johns Hopkins University
Disc: Eric McGhee, Public Policy Institute of California Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell University
Jenny McCarthy DoesnĀt Matter: Media, Partisan Cues
Papers: Ideological Migration In The U.S. Congress: Out Of and Scientific Beliefs
Step But Still In Office Dominik Andrzej Stecula, University of British
Adam Bonica Columbia
Gary W. Cox, Stanford University Eric Merkley, University of British Columbia
Do Electoral Rules Reduce Partisan Polarization? A When Personalization Goes Awry: Framing, Collective
Candidate Field Experiment Action, and Climate Change
Christian R. Grose, University of Southern California Adam Seth Levine, Cornell University
The Rise of Negative Partisanship and the Reuben Kline, SUNY, Stony Brook University
Nationalization of U.S. Elections in the 21st Century DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION
Alan I. Abramowitz, Emory University 110.43 WHY (GLOBAL) MEDIA SYSTEMS MATTER
Steven Wayne Webster, Emory University Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3
How Voters Respond to Party Discipline in the United Chair: Bethany Anne Conway, California Polytechnic State
States and Turkey University
Robert Van Houweling Disc: Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter
Oguzhan Aygoren, Istanbul Technical University Shaul Rafael Shenhav, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Representational Preferences of the Non-Ideological
Public in the Polarized Era Papers: The Medium Matters: Cross-national differences in
Douglas Ahler, University of California, Berkeley behavior by media platform
David Broockman, Stanford GSB Amanda Beth Cronkhite, University of Illinois at
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION Urbana-Champaign
110.41 METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN PUBLIC Media Systems and Electoral Accountability
OPINION RESEARCH Martijn Schoonvelde, European University Institute
Room: Nikko, Monterey II The Impact of Subnational Politics on Press Freedom in
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND Transitional Democracies
VOTING BEHAVIOR Jonathan Solis, University of Houston
Chair: Elizabeth J. Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University
Campaign Influences on Evaluations and Vote Choice
Disc: Elizabeth J. Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University Holli A. Semetko, Emory University
Efren Osvaldo Perez
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
Papers: Sampling Error in the Context of Partisan Polarization ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
Gregory Mc Avoy, University of North Carolina, 110.44 DIVERSITIES IN NATURE, SOCIETY, AND
POLICY
Greensboro
Room: Parc 55, Hearst
Surveying Ethnic Sub-Groups: Problematic Priming of Chair: Cliff A. Bob, Duquesne University
Ethnic Identity?
Mara Cecilia Ostfeld, University of Michigan Disc: Christopher McGrory Klyza, Middlebury College
Francisco I. Pedraza, Texas A&M University
Papers: Potential for Collective Action & Environmental Justice:
The Nonrandom Polling of Public Attitudes
Thomas J. Leeper, London School of Economics and
An Agent-Based Analysis
Adam Eckerd, Virginia Tech
Political Science
Yushim Kim
Thundering Herd--The Political Correlates of Polling Heather E Campbell, Claremont Graduate University
Accuracy
Thomas Wood, The Ohio State University
Energy & Justice: Conservation, Efficiency &
Ethan Porter, University of Chicago
Affordability in a Submerged State
Tony Gerard Reames, University of Michigan
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Regulatory Enforcement, Riskscapes, and Environmental
110.42 NOTHING CONTROVERSIAL HERE: CLIMATE Justice
CHANGE, VACCINES & THE AFFORDABLE
David Konisky, Indiana University
CARE ACT
Christopher M. Reenock, Florida State University
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2

236 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Sovereignty, Capacity & Justice: Environmental Policy Popular vs. Elite Democracies and Human Rights:
under Tribal Governance Inclusion Makes a Difference
Manny P. Teodoro, Texas A&M University Devin K. Joshi, Singapore Management University
Mellie Haider J.S. Maloy, University of Louisiana, Lafayette
David Switzer, Texas A&M University Timothy M. Peterson, University of South Carolina
Individual Employment in Fossil Fuel Production and ĄNayirahď Effect: Human Rights Abuse and VictimsĀ
Opinion on Climate Change Emotive Images in War Support
Endre M. Tvinnereim, Uni Research Rokkan Center Kiyoung Chang, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE Joseph Braun, University of Maryland
110.45 HABITATION, HABITABILITY, JUSTICE 1 DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24 110.48 UNPACKING THE LOGIC OF PROCESS
Co-sponsored by Green Politics and Theory TRACING
Chair: Jennifer Lawrence Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5
Papers: Habitation, Republican Citizenship and Climate Chair: James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Disruption Disc: James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Peter F. Cannavo
Environmentalism, Everyday Life and Justice: Papers: Process-Tracing Boix in Egypt
Community Food and Energy Movements Robert Kubinec, University of Virginia
David Schlosberg, University of Sydney Process Tracing as Three-Cornered Fights
Habitats and Habitus: Outside Mediation to Find Our Fit Michael Poznansky, Harvard Kennedy School
Yogi Hendlin, Dept. of Philosophy, University of Boris Heersink, University of Virginia
Vienna Bayesian Process Tracing: Harnessing Foreknowledge
Is Holistic Habitation Desirable? Creating Space for for Causal Inferences
āSoftĀ Dualistic Habitation Marcus Kreuzer, Villanova University
Andy Scerri, Virginia Tech Bayesian Probability: The Logic of (Political) Science
DIVISION 44: COMPARATIVE DEMOCRATIZATION Tasha A. Fairfield, London School of Economics
110.46 POLITICAL PARTIES AND THE CHALLENGES Andrew Charman, University of California, Berkeley
OF DEMOCRATIC CONSOLIDATION DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS AND HEALTH POLICY
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4 110.49 HEALTH POLITICS: CROSS-NATIONAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 35: POLITICAL DIVERSITY IN FOCUS AND METHOD
ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES Room: Parc 55, Divisadero
Chair: Jana Morgan, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Chair: Bert A. Rockman, Purdue University
Disc: Jana Morgan, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Disc: Bert A. Rockman, Purdue University

Papers: Assessing Electoral Collapse on the Right in Nicaragua: Papers: Can't Buy Me Life: Why Higher Incomes Don't
A Survey Experiment Necessarily Increase Life Expectancy
Leslie E. Anderson, University of Florida Brian J. Gaines, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Lawrence C. Dodd, University of Florida Champaign
Won-ho Park, Seoul National University Lloyd Gruber, London School of Economics
Democratic Backsliding: The Case of Slippery Concepts Elite Strategies and Non-State Actors in Post-Communist
and Imprecise Measurements Health Policy
Hans Lueders, Stanford University Brittany Holom, Princeton University
Ellen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg Healthcare and Political Participation
David Waldner Diana Elena Burlacu, Humboldt University of Berlin
Measuring Partisan Identity: A Question-Wording The relationship between Varieties of Democracy and
Experiment from Brazil Health
Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder Valeriya Mechkova, Varieties of Democracy,
Lucio R. Renno Gothenburg University
Religious Competition and the Rise of the WorkersĀ Yi-ting Wang, National Cheng Kung University
Party in Brazil ĄAre We There Yet?ď Is the English NHS Really on the
Guillermo Trejo, University of Notre Dame Road to Privatization?
Fernando Bizzarro Neto, University of Notre Dame Alex Waddan, University of Leicester
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
110.47 DOMESTIC STUFF THAT IMPACTS RESPECT 110.50 COMPARATIVE & MULTILEVEL CITIZENSHIP
FOR HUMAN RIGHTS 1: MULTILEVEL & DIFFERENTIATED
Daily Schedule

Room: Nikko, Carmel II CITIZENSHIP


Chair: Christian Davenport, University of Michigan Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
Papers: Do Nudges Toward Democracy Protect Human Rights? Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
Barry Masanori Hashimoto, Unemployed POLITICS
Chair: Willem Maas, York University
Disc: Rainer Baubock, European University Institute

DAILY SCHEDULE 237


Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM

Papers: Comparing Immigration Policy and Enforcement in Two 111.4 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: THE PROBLEM OF
Neighboring States MULTIPLE MODERNITIES
Monica W Varsanyi, City University of New York Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
Doris Marie Provine, Arizona State University Chair: Juergen Gebhardt
Do New Borders Generate New Rights? A Model for Disc: Thomas W. Heilke, The University of British Columbia,
Borderzone Citizenship Okanagan
Matthew Longo, University of Oxford Thomas J. McPartland, Kentucky State University
Post-imperial Citizenship: Russia, France, and Great
Britain Compared Papers: Voegelin, the Axial Age and Modernity: The Present
Oxana Shevel, Tufts University and the Future in the Mirror of the Past
Varieties of Multilevel and Asymmetric Citizenship Bjorn Thomassen, Roskilde University
Jaime Gerardo Lluch, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Rosario Forlenza, University of Padua
Piedras Multiple Modernities
Comparing Multilevel Citizenship in Europe and North Juergen Gebhardt
America Opposing Perspectives on the Totalitarian Phenomenon:
Willem Maas, York University Voegelin and Kelsen,
Related Groups Francois Denis Lecoutre, University of Lille 2
111.1 AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT: THE STATE Voegelin and Strauss on Civic Community
OF THE STUDY OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN Pierre-Alain Drien, Lyon
POLITICAL THOUGHT ROUNDTABLE WeimarĀs Hyperinflation: A Legacy of War, Struggle for
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin III Survival, and the Affirmation of the State
Chair: Melvin Lee Rogers, University of California, Los Todd Myers, Grossmont College
Angeles 111.5 POLITICA: STUDY OF MEDIEVAL POLITICAL
Part: Desmond Jagmohan, Princeton University THOUGHT: ROUNDTABLE ON THE MEANING
Justin Rose AND LEGACY OF THE MAGNA CARTA
Jack Turner, University of Washington Room: Nikko, Ballroom I
111.2 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF Chair: Elizabeth F. Cohen, Syracuse University
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL Part: Cary J. Nederman, Texas A&M University
PHILOSOPHY: REPUBLICANISM, MORALITY, Justin J. Wert, University of Oklahoma
AND THE COMMON GOOD IN MODERN Kenton W. Worcester, Marymount Manhattan College
POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Robert Michael Pallitto, Seton Hall University
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6
111.6 RUSSIAN POLITICS GROUP: U.S.-RUSSIAN
Chair: Luigi Bradizza, Salve Regina University RELATIONS: IS THERE A WAY OUT OF THE
Disc: Nasser Behnegar, Boston College DEAD-END?
Peter C. Myers, University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire Room: Hilton, Imperial B
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
Papers: Spiritual Warfare in The Prince SECURITY
Michael Anton, Citigroup Chair: Fred Eidlin
Religious Toleration and the Common Good in the Part: Andrei Tsygankov, San Francisco State University
Thought of the American Founding Boris Barkanov, West Virginia University
Nathan Gill, Hillsdale College
Suspicion in MachiavelliĀs Discourses on Livy
Sunday, 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Michael Hoffpauir, Claremont Graduate University APSA Events
Cosmopolitan Morality and Political Particularism: The 112.1 POLICY STUDIES ORGANIZATION EDITORS
Case of Rousseau BUSINESS MEETING
Nicholas Starr, Emory University Room: Hilton, Vista
111.3 DISASTERS AND CRISES: FRONTIERS IN Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM
DISASTER RESEARCH Division Panels
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Chair: Daniel P. Aldrich, Northeastern University DIVISION 13: THE POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND
Disc: Mary Comerio, University of California, Berkeley FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES
113.1 SOCIAL POLICY IN NON-DEMOCRACIES: THE
CHINESE WELFARE STATE
Papers: Building Back Better: Participatory Governance in a Room: Hilton, Mason Room
Post-Haiyan World Co-sponsored by DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE
Nicole Curato, University of Canberra POLITICS OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Vote Buying Strategies in the Aftermath of Natural Chair: Xiaobo Lu, University of Texas at Austin
Disasters: Evidence from U.S. Presidential Elections Disc: Xiaobo Lu, University of Texas at Austin
Massimo Mannino, Stanford University
Institutions of Disaster: A Comparison of Indonesia and Papers: Selective Welfare Provision to Preempt Threats to
the Philippines Regime Stability in China
Jason Enia, Sam Houston State University Jennifer Pan, Stanford University

238 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

The Local Political Economy of Government Spending Empire, Economy, and Civility in Eighteenth-Century
Cai Zuo, University of Wisconsin, Madison Britain
Selective Enforcement: The New Labor Contract Law Onur Ulas Ince, Koc University
and Labor Welfare in China The Modern Imagination of Settlement, or Displacement
Sungmin Rho, stanford university as Method
Do the ĄCarrotsď Work? The Effects of Social Welfare Lorenzo Veracini
on Regime Support in China Grounded Normativity and Indigenous Internationalism
Xian Huang, University of Pennsylvania Glen S. Coulthard
Inter-regional Competition in Pension Benefit Growth in DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY
China 113.5 MARRIAGE, MORALS, AND MARKETS
Jing Lin Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 7
A. Dale Tussing, Syracuse University Co-sponsored by DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY AND
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY: POLITICS
HISTORICAL APPROACHES Chair: William A. Galston, The Brookings Institution
113.2 READING AND RE-READING LOCKE Disc: Tamara Metz, Reed College
Room: Hilton, Union Square 1 & 2 William A. Galston, The Brookings Institution
Disc: Alex Tuckness, Iowa State University
Papers: Liberalism, the Market, and the Contemporary American
Papers: John Locke and the Question of Property, America, and Family
Colonialism Maxine Eichner, University of North Carolina,
Ray Thomas Hartman, Seoul National University Chapel Hill
Lockean Republicanism: To Ąmoderate the Dominion The Value of Marital Choice and the Right to Plural
ofĐevery Member of the Societyď Marriage
Steven Kelts, Princeton University Ronald Clifford Den Otter, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
LockeĀs War on Piracy and the Rise of British Empire Liberalism, Neutrality, and the Defense of Monogamous
Sarah X. Pemberton, University of South Florida Marriage
Stephen Macedo, Princeton University
Politicizing LockeĀs Temporal Subject
Jennifer Corby, City University of New York Is Sexual Intimacy Necessary for Marriage?
Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth College
ĄContesting the Empire of Habitď: Habit and Freedom in
John LockeĀs Education DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Rita Koganzon, Harvard University 113.6 ANYTHING BUT ORDINARY:
UNCONVENTIONAL POLITICAL
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY PARTICIPATION AND VIOLENCE
113.3 MACHIAVELLI OUT OF CONTEXT Room: Hilton, Union Square 21
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 1
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT SECURITY
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES
Papers: ItĀs Not Fair! The Impact of Perceived Injustice on
Chair: Victoria Kahn, University of California, Berkeley
Political Participation
Disc: Victoria Kahn, University of California, Berkeley Gabriele Magni, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Papers: To See or to Feel: Machiavelli and the Illusion of Whether or not to Protest. Evidence from the Arab
Political Transparency Spring
Nicholas Xenos, University of Massachusetts, Stephanie Dornschneider, Graduate Institute of
Amherst International and Development Studies
Machiavelli and Jewish Political Theology Trust in Times of Riots: Violent Protests as a Natural
Miguel Vatter, UNSW Australia Experiment
Machiavelli and the Play-Element in Political Life Robert Klemmensen, University of Southern
Robyn Marasco Denmark
Machiavelli and the Politics of Anticruelty Mogens K. Justesen, Copenhagen Business School
Yves Winter, McGill University Violence, Identity, Emotion and Civilian Attitude
Reading Prophecy with Machiavelli Formation in Conflict Zones
Ronald J. Schmidt, University of Southern Maine Emily K. Gade, University of Washington
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY The Effect of Violence on Impulsivity: Evidence from
113.4 THE VIEW FROM THE PROVINCES: EMPIRE IN the DR Congo
CONTEXTS Vera Mironova
Daily Schedule

Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 8 DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT 113.7 PREROGATIVE AND CONSTRAINT IN
AND PHILOSOPHY: HISTORICAL APPROACHES PRESIDENTIAL POLICY-MAKING
Chair: Jeanne Morefield, Whitman College Room: Hilton, Union Square 14
Disc: Jennifer Pitts, University of Chicago Chair: Bruce Miroff, SUNY Albany
Papers: The Politician's Provence
Papers: Evolutionism, Empire, and The Indian Sociologist William G. Howell, University of Chicago
Inder Singh Marwah, McMaster University Stephane Wolton, London School of Economics

DAILY SCHEDULE 239


Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

From Seneca Falls to Selma to Stonewall: Barack Papers: Democratic Transitions & Institutional
Obama and the Gay Rights Movement Consolidation:Evidence from Egypt
Sidney M. Milkis, University of Virginia Vineeta Yadav, Pennsylvania State University
Boris Heersink, University of Virginia Information and the Organization of Authoritarian
Innovation and Constraint in Public Finance, 1933-2013 Security
Patrick R. O'Brien, Yale University Nicholas Sher, Stanford University
The Tragedy of Woodrow Wilson and the Second Lost Regime Consolidation and the Role of Diversity
Chance for Peace Basak Taraktas, University of Pennsylvania
Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University Strategic Constitutional Choices in an Autocracy
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY Katja Michalak, Zeppelin University
113.8 IDEAL POINT ESTIMATION Gerald B. Pech, American University in Bulgaria
Room: Hilton, Union Square 22 DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Chair: Kevin M. Quinn, University of California, Berkeley COUNTRIES
Disc: Devin Caughey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 113.11 DECENTRALIZATION AND SUBNATIONAL
POLITICS
Papers: Fast Estimation of Ideal Points with Massive Data Room: Hilton, Franciscan D
Kosuke Imai, Princeton University Chair: Luz Marina Arias, CIDE
James Lo, Princeton University Papers: Beyond ĄGood Governanceď: Providing Health Insurance
Jonathan P. Olmsted for the Poor in Indonesia
Electronic Homestyle: Estimating Partisan Ideal Points Diego Fossati
Using Tweets Negotiating Governance in China: the Case of
Jason Radford, University of Chicago, Northeastern Development Zone Planning
University Qianqi Shen, Rutgers University
Betsy Sinclair, Washington University in St Louis
When Elites Meet: Decentralization, Power-Sharing, and
Issues in Bridging Ideology Estimation Local Service Provision
Stephen Jessee, University of Texas, Austin Jennifer Noveck
Voting, Speechmaking, and the Dimensions of Conflict Margaret Levi, Stanford University
in the US Senate Amanda Clayton
Marc Thomas Ratkovic, Princeton University Severed Linkages: Economic Voting in Uneven
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Democracies
113.9 ECONOMIC VOTE AND DEMOCRATIC Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University
ACCOUNTABILITY IN GLOBAL ECONOMIES Mason Wallace Moseley, University of Pennsylvania
Room: Hilton, Franciscan C DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Chair: Daniela Campello, Getulio Vargas Foundation COUNTRIES
Disc: Larry M. Bartels, Vanderbilt University 113.12 NON-STATE ORGANIZATIONS AND
Stuart N. Soroka, University of Michigan DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS IN THE DEVELOPING
WORLD
Papers: The Media, the Economy and the Vote Room: Hilton, Union Square 23
Mark Andreas Kayser, Hertie School of Governance Chair: Carew E. Boulding, University of Colorado, Boulder
Michael Peress, SUNY - Stony Brook Disc: Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa Cruz
Relative Performance and VotersĀ Assessment of
Government Competence Papers: Organizing Formality: Civic Associations in IndiaĀs
Daniela Campello, Getulio Vargas Foundation Urban Slums
Cesar Zucco, Fundacao Getulio Vargas Adam Michael Auerbach, American University
The Mass Political Consequences of Economic Reform Civil Society and Donor-Driven Public Goods Provision
in Latin America of Solar Panels in Africa
Timothy Hellwig, Indiana University, Bloomington Jennifer N. Brass, Indiana University, Bloomington
Ryan Carlin, Georgia State University Lauren M. MacLean, Indiana University,
Who is Wrong Rewarding the Incumbent? Myopic Bloomington
Retrospection in Rural Economies Strange Bedfellows: The Local Politics of NGO-
Lucas Novaes, University of California, Berkeley Government Relations
Luis Schiumerini, University of Oxford Karisa Tritz Cloward, Southern Methodist University
Geographical Distribution of Responses to Economic Service-Delivery NGOs and Local Participation in the
News Peruvian Amazon
Raymond M. Duch, University of Oxford Jami Nelson-Nunez, The University of New Mexico
Akitaka Matsuo, Centre for Experimental Social Evading the Patronage Trap: Interest OrganizationsĀ
Sciences Policy Demands in Mexico
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS Brian Palmer-Rubin, Harvard University
113.10 ELITES, INFORMATION, AND INSTITUTIONS DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
Room: Hilton, Franciscan B COUNTRIES
Disc: Kristin McKie, University of Notre Dame & St. 113.13 THE POLITICS OF LAND AND LABOR
Lawrence University Room: Hilton, Union Square 16

240 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Chair: Marcus J. Kurtz, Ohio State University Social Conventions, Legal Fictions, and Sovereign Debt
Disc: Marcus J. Kurtz, Ohio State University Markets
Stephen Craig Nelson, Northwestern University
Papers: Empowerment or Deprivation? Assessing ChinaĀs Rural Why Corporate Rating and Consumer Scoring do the
Land Reform Same but Differently
Jin Zeng, Florida International University Stefanie Hiss, University of Jena
Labor Scarcity, Land Tenure, and Historical Legacy: Akos Rona-Tas, UC San Diego
Evidence from Mexico DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Emily A. Sellars, Harris School of Public Policy 113.16 TRADE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Security of Property Rights, Ownership, and Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 2
Development: A Misguided Paradigm Chair: Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of California,
Deborah A. Boucoyannis, University of Virginia San Diego
Man, I Look Good! Foreign Investment, Labor Laws, Disc: Christina Davis, Princeton University
and Audience Costs in the Gulf
Samuel R. Greene, National Defense College Papers: Opening of the American Market: Rules, Norms and
Nathan Toronto, UAE National Defense College Coalitions
US GSP Review, Labor Protest and Worker Rights in Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University
Developing Countries Robert Gulotty, The University of Chicago
Emmanuel Teitelbaum, George Washington Protecting Workers and U.S. Industries via the
University Generalized System of Preferences
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of
113.14 SOCIAL CHANGE, DIVERSITY, AND California, San Diego
REDISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 3 Hill
Robert Galantucci, University of North Carolina,
Chair: Duane H. Swank, Marquette University Chapel Hill
Disc: Sigrun Kahl, Yale University
The Domestic Politics of Preferential Trade Agreements
Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia
in Hard Times
Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: Immigrant Insiders and the Ethnic Dimensions of Helen V. Milner, Princeton University
Dualization
Akasemi Newsome, University of California, Berkeley Who Holds the Most Influence Over WTO
Jurisprudence?
Politics of Middle Class Decline and Growth in Mark Daku, McGill University
Industrialized Democracies Krzysztof J. Pelc, McGill University
Young-hwan Byun, CUNY Graduate Center
Domestic Institutions, International Negotiations, and the
Radical Right's Catch-All Position: Multilevel Test of Politics of Trade
the New Winning Formula Timm Betz, Texas A&M University
Szymon Mikolaj Stojek, Bridgewater College
DIVISION 18: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Solidarity Eroded? Immigration and Unemployment 113.17 NEW WAYS OF WAR: DRONES, ROBOTS, AND
Benefit Politics in Sweden UNMANNED WEAPONS
Joshua C. Gordon, SFU School of Public Policy Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 9
Low Skill Youth and the Social Investment Society Chair: Ryan D. Grauer, University of Pittsburgh
Carsten Jensen, Aarhus University
Papers: Automatic Conflict? Robotics Warfare and the Risk of
Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University
Conflict
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Mauro Gilli, Dartmouth College
113.15 THE POLITICS OF CREDIT RATING AGENCIES Drones and the Truth about Self-Defense
Room: Hilton, Union Square 13 Avery Elias Plaw, University of Massachusetts,
Chair: Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University Dartmouth
Disc: Rawi Abdelal, Harvard University João Franco Reis
Hollow Weapons: Reassessing the Role of Defense in
Papers: Macroprudential or Macroeconomic? Policy Spillover Cyberspace
and CRA Regulation Drew Herrick, George Washington University
Christopher Brummer Everyone Loves Drones, Especially China: Motivations
Efficient, Commonsense Regulations to Foster Accurate for the Chinese UAV program
Credit Ratings Ivan Willis Rasmussen, Harvard Kennedy School
Norbert Gaillard, NG Consulting
Daily Schedule

Drones and Crisis Stability


William Jeremiah Harrington Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania
What Regulatory Failure Reveals about How Rating Hyun-Binn Cho, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND ARMS
Really Works
Giulia Mennillo, University of St.Gallen
Timothy J. Sinclair, University of Warwick CONTROL
113.18 U.S.-CHINA NUCLEAR RELATIONS AND THE
FUTURE OF EAST ASIAN SECURITY
Room: Parc 55, Powell I

DAILY SCHEDULE 241


Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Chair: Avery Goldstein, University of Pennsylvania International Conflict and the Structure of Trade
Disc: Christopher P. Twomey, Naval Postgraduate School, Dependencies
Monterey, Calif. Erik Gartzke, University of California, San Diego
Oliver Westerwinter, University of St. Gallen
Papers: US Strategic Nuclear Policy Toward China Solving Problems: INGO Network Socialization and
Charles L. Glaser, George Washington University International Peace Promotion
ChinaĀs Search for Stability: Chinese Views of U.S. Amanda Marie Murdie, University
Nuclear Posture Maya Wilson, Emory University
Fiona Stephanie Cunningham, Political Science David R. Davis, Emory University
Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Working without a Net: Examining Bilateral Dispute
Future Warfare in the Western Pacific Resolution Settlement
Stephen D. Biddle, George Washington University Vanessa Lefler, Middle Tennessee State University
Alliance Defection and the Rise of China DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES
Jasen J. Castillo, Texas A&M University 113.21 CULTIVATING THE CONSTITUENCY:
Alexander B. Downes, George Washington University LEGISLATOR-CONSTITUENT RELATIONS
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 4
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY Chair: Charles J. Finocchiaro, University of South Carolina
113.19 EXAMINING PUBLIC OPINION ON FOREIGN
POLICY Disc: Charles J. Finocchiaro, University of South Carolina
Room: Hilton, Union Square 25 David CW Parker, Montana State University, Bozeman
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Chair: Benjamin E. Goldsmith, University of Sydney Papers: A Constituent-Level Analysis of Home Style
Patrick Tucker, Washington University in St Louis
Disc: Benjamin E. Goldsmith, University of Sydney
The Impact of Constituency Factors on ĄTea Partynessď
Among U.S. Senators
Papers: The Role of Choices in Foreign Policy Preference
Bryan Gervais, University of Texas at San Antonio
Irwin L. Morris, University of Maryland, College
Formation
Clayton McLaughlin Webb, University of Kansas
Park
Nehemia Geva, Texas A&M University
Ideology, Not Service: How Voters Evaluate Congress
John Lapinski
To Denounce, or Not To Denounce: Survey Experiment
Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania
on Diplomatic Quarrels
Kazunori Inamasu, Kwansei Gakuin University
Kenneth M. Winneg, University of Pennsylvania
Shoko Kohama, Hokkaido Univeristy
Kathleen Hall Jamieson, University of Pennsylvania
Atsushi Tago, Kobe University
Keeping in Touch: How Members of Congress
Was Abrams Wrong? The Political Costs of Military
Communicate with Their Supporters
Krista Loose, MIT
Mobilization
Lindsay P. Cohn, U.S. Naval War College
Jessica D Blankshain Representing on the Spin
Jennifer L. Brookhart, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Public Opinion toward the Privatization of U.S. Security
Operations
Mark Daniel Ramirez, Arizona State University DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
Micro-Foundations of Liberalism 113.22 PRESIDENTIAL LEADERSHIP, APPROVAL AND
Belgin San-Akca, Koc University ASSESSMENTS
Room: Hilton, Union Square 3 & 4
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES Chair: Harold F. Bass, Ouachita Baptist University
113.20 NETWORKED INTERNATIONAL POLITICS:
INTERDEPENDENCE AND INTERNATIONAL Disc: Michael A. Genovese
CONFLICT Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 3
Chair: Xun Cao, Penn State University Papers: Explaining Approval for Clinton, Bush-43, and Obama:
A Regime Switching Model
Disc: Alexander Montgomery, Reed College Charles W. Ostrom, Michigan State University
Nils W. Metternich, University College London Alon Peretz Kraitzman, Michigan State University
Paul R. Abramson, Michigan State University
Papers: Modeling, Computing and Evaluating Endogenous Brian Newman, Pepperdine University
Networks
Max Blau Gallop
The Coevolution of Evaluations of Presidents and their
Parties over Time
Teams of Rivals: Adversaries in Alliance Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San
Yonatan Lupu, George Washington University Diego
Paul Poast, University of Chicago
An Expectations Theory of Presidential Assessment
The Re-Organization of Interacting International Bruce Buchanan, University of Texas, Austin
Networks following Major Shocks
Zeev Maoz, University of California, Davis
The Masculine Presidency: Evidence From a Survey
Kyle A. Joyce, University of California, Davis
Experiment
Meredith Conroy, CSUSB

242 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Cross-Pressured: Presidential Leadership of the Public The Political Economy of Heads-of-Government


George C. Edwards, Texas A&M University, College Summits in Multi-level Systems
Station Anthony F Imbrogno, McGill University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY
113.23 THE POLITICS OF EDUCATION POLICY 113.26 ELECTORAL RULES AND VOTING BEHAVIOR
Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 2 Room: Hilton, Van Ness Room
Chair: Sara E. Dahill-Brown, Wake Forest University Chair: Seth C McKee, Texas Tech University
Disc: James C. Clinger, Murray State University Disc: David A. Hughes, University of Georgia

Papers: From Failed State to What? The Politics of Halfway Papers: Are Some Voters a Lost Cause? An Experiment in a
Reform in India Top-2 Primary
Akshay Mangla, Harvard University Seth J. Hill, University of California, San Diego
The Effects of Higher Education Governance and Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego
Finance on Student Access That's How I Roll (Off): Voter Abstention in Direct
Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas at Dallas Democracy Elections
Patrons of Ideas: How Funded Research Influences the Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside
Education Policy Debate Stephen P. Nicholson, University of California,
Sarah E. Reckhow, Michigan State University Merced
Megan Tompkins-Stange, University of Michigan Direct DemocracyĀs Educative Effects: A View from the
Laura Holden Voters
Legislating Upward Mobility through Education?: The Craig M. Burnett, University of North Carolina
Federal TRIO Programs Wilmington
Deondra Rose, Duke University Janine A. Parry, University of Arkansas
Jay Barth, Hendrix College
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS
113.24 WHAT GOES UP MUST COME DOWN: COURTS, Voter Turnout and Satisfaction with Mail-in Voting and
FEDERALISM AND THE STATES Election Day Registration
Room: Hilton, Union Square 15 Robert M. Stein
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND
Andrew Menger, Rice University
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS Greg W. Vonnahme, University of Missouri, Kansas
City
Chair: Ryan Emenaker, College of the Redwoods
Disc: Ryan Emenaker, College of the Redwoods Your Ballot's in the Mail: the Effects of Unsolicited
Absentee Ballots
Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida
Papers: Judicial Federalism, State Policy, and Representation \\ Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida
John P. Kastellec, Princeton University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN & POLITICS
'Political Questions' and U.S. Redistricting: The Road 113.27 COMBATING GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE
Not Taken Room: Hilton, Franciscan A
Kirsten Nussbaumer, Stanford University
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS
The Political Context of the New Judicial Federalism Chair: Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder
Ken Miller, Claremont McKenna College
Disc: Ingrid Bego, Hastings College
What Predicts Bailout from Section 5 of the Voting
Rights Act? A TSCS Analysis
Papers: Child Marriage Reform: The Gendered Economy of
David Blanding, McDaniel College
Representative Claims in Africa
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL Ragnhild Louise Muriaas, University of Bergen
RELATIONS Liv Tonnessen, Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI)
113.25 INTERGOVERNMENTAL INTERACTION IN Vibeke Wang, Chr. Michelsen Institute
FEDERAL SYSTEMS Domestic Violence Policy Adoption Processes: A
Room: Hilton, Union Square 19 & 20 Comparison of Malawi and Uganda
Chair: John Kincaid, Lafayette College Vibeke Wang, Chr. Michelsen Institute
Disc: John Kincaid, Lafayette College Individual & Institutional Influences on Sexual Assault
Jurisprudence
Papers: A Policy-Centered Approach to Intergovernmental Holly Jeanine Boux, Georgetown University
Cooperation in Federal Countries WomenĀs Representation and Anti-Trafficking
Michael Andrea Strebel, University of Zurich Enforcement: A Global Analysis
Christian Ewert, University of Lausanne Amy C. Alexander, Quality of Government Institute,
Daily Schedule

Intergovernmental Shape-Shifting:Tribal Strategies of University of Gothenburg, Sweden


Resistance to State Policy Maria Ravlik, Leuphana University
Paula Mohan, Madison College The Politics of Legal Challenges to Pornography:
Cities as Lobbyists: Local Public Goods Provision, Canada, Sweden, & the U.S.
Federalism, and Intergovernmental Lobbying Max Waltman, Stockholm University
Hye Young You, Vanderbilt University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY AND POLITICS
Rebecca Goldstein, Harvard University
113.28 CAMPAIGNS
Room: Hilton, Powell Room

DAILY SCHEDULE 243


Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Papers: Campaign Advertising: Does Candidate Gender or Race/ DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION
Ethnicity Matter? 113.31 INNOVATIONS IN UNDERSTANDING
Regina Branton ATTITUDES AND BEHAVIOUR ON SUPPORT
Jared Perkins, University of North Texas FOR OVERSEAS AID
Race, Representation, and Campaign Finance Networks Room: Hilton, Union Square 5 & 6
Neil Visalvanich, Durham University Chair: Jennifer A. vanHeerde-Hudson, University College
Keith E. Schnakenberg, University of Kentucky London
The Effects of Campaign Strategy on Marginalized Disc: Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Groups in the 2012 Election Champaign
Kyle Endres, University of Texas, Austin
Kristin Kelly, University of Texas, Austin Papers: The Impact of Moral Appeals on Charitable Donations
Can Personal Text Messages Increase Turnout amongst and Engagement
Low-Propensity Voters? Jennifer A. vanHeerde-Hudson, University College
Marisa Abrajano London
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, David Hudson, University College London
Berkeley Niheer Dasandi, University College London
Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California N. Susan Gaines
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL Support for Overseas Aid: A Comparison of Britain,
SYSTEMS
France, Germany and the US
Harold D. Clarke, University of Texas at Dallas
113.29 CANDIDATE CHARACTERISTICS
Room: Parc 55, Mission I Marianne C. Stewart, University of Texas at Dallas
Chair: Pedro Riera, Carlos III University of Madrid Blindfolded Engagement: Celebrity, Experts and the
Fight against Global Poverty
Disc:
Paolo Morini, University College London
Charlotte Fridolfsson, Link�ping University

Papers: Fewer Rungs, More Political Families: Legacy Disentangling the Role of Corruption in Support for
Candidates in Taiwan Elections Overseas Aid
Nathan F. Batto, Academia Sinica Caryn Peiffer
Heather A. Marquette, University of Birmingham
The Electoral System Type and the Physical
Attractiveness of MPs DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
Daniel Stockemer, University of Ottawa ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
113.32 DETERMINANTS OF NATIONAL
Who Wins Party Nominations for Political Office? ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE: CROSS-
Evidence from South Korea NATIONAL EVIDENCE
Shinhye Choi, University of California, Berkeley Room: Hilton, Sutter Room
Donghyun Danny Choi, University of California,
Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
Berkeley POLITICS
Non-viable candidates and the dynamics of legislative Co-sponsored by DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY
elections in Brazil Chair: Alexander Ovodenko, U.S. Department of Energy
Kristin Noella Wylie, James Madison University
Daniel Marcelino, IPEA Papers: Partisan Politics, Welfare States and Environmental
Pedro G. dos Santos, Luther College Policy Outputs in the OECD
Sijeong Lim, University of Amsterdam
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND Andreas Duit
PARTIES Environmental Attitudes in Vulnerable Areas: Oil and
113.30 THE DYNAMICS OF PARTY POSITIONING Political Trust in Ecuador
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 5 Karleen West, SUNY Geneseo
Disc: Joshua D Potter, Louisiana State University
Balancing Energy Sector Objectives in Brazil and South
Africa
Papers: Economic Stress and Nationalism: a Longitudinal Test Kathryn Hochstetler, University of Waterloo
of Diversionary Theory
Sergi Pardos, University of Oxford, Merton College How Political & Economic Freedom Impact the EKC
Inaki Sagarzazu, University of Glasgow for CO2
Kris Aaron Beck, Gordon State College
Leaders and Labels: A Principal-Agent Perspective on Prathibha Joshi, Gordon State College
Party Position Taking
William B. Heller, SUNY, Binghamton Determinants of Domestic Environmental Policy
Performance Worldwide
Making the poor go right: Conservative parties' Todd A. Eisenstadt, American University
strategies in Latin America Daniel J. Fiorino, American University
Eugenia Giraudy, University of California, Berkeley Laura Daniela Stevens Leon, American University
Party-System Stability and Change in Sixteen Countries, DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND
POLITICS
1890-2010
Jennifer K. Smith, Deep Springs College
113.33 PARTICIPATION AND ENGAGEMENT: THE
ROLE OF ICT'S IN TRANSFORMING CITIZEN
POLITICS
Room: Nikko, Mendocino II

244 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Chair: Kevin Jay Wallsten, California State University, Long Papers: Divergent? Gender & Methods Diversity in Political
Beach Science Dissertations 2005-15
Disc: Ben Epstein, DePaul University Rina Verma Williams, University of Cincinnati
Laura Dudley Jenkins, University of Cincinnati
Papers: Dual-Screening the Political: Media Events, Social Crystal Whetstone, University of Cincinnati
Media, and Citizen Engagement Kristina Teater, University of Cincinnati
Cristian Vaccari, Royal Holloway, University of Process-tracing, Counterfactual Comparison and Causal
London Inference
Andrew Chadwick, Royal Holloway, University of Matto Mildenberger, UC Santa Barbara
London Two Cultures? An Empirical Analysis of Methods
Ben O''Loughlin, University of London, Royal Application in Political Science
Holloway David Kuehn, Heidelberg University
augusto valeriani, Università di Bologna
Mind the Gap: A Survey of Mixed Methods in Political
Everydaymakers Using Facebook and Twitter: Changing Research
Youth Political Engagement? Cassandra Sweet, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de
ariadne vromen, University of Sydney Chile
Political Tinder Box: The Internet and Political Julieta Suarez-Cao, Pontificia Universidad Catolica
Participation in Closed States de Chile
Kevin Wagner, Florida Atlantic University DIVISION 52: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP
Jason Gainous, University of Louisville 113.36 PRACTICING TRANSNATIONAL CITIZENSHIP:
Jason P Abbott, University of Louisville DUAL NATIONALITY AND COMPARATIVE &
Digitally Enabled Collective Action in Areas of Limited MULTILEVEL CITIZENSHIP 2: EFFECTS &
Statehood EVALUATION
Steven L. Livingston, George Washington University Room: Hilton, Continental Parlor 1
The Role of Issue Advocacy in Political Consumerism Co-sponsored by DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE
Campaigns in Social Media POLITICS
Ariel Hasell, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Willem Maas, York University
Lauren Copeland, Baldwin Wallace University & Disc: Maarten P. Vink, Maastricht University
Community Research Institute
Bruce Bimber, University of California, Santa Papers: Global Crossroads: Naturalization Rates in North
Barbara America, Europe & Global South
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS Justin Gest, George Mason University
113.34 AMERICA, LIBERALISM, AND EMPIRE Anna Katherine Boucher, University of Sydney
Room: Hilton, Golden Gate 6 Modeling Migration Flow: Effects of Dual Citizenship
Chair: Peter Trubowitz, London School of Economics as a Push and Pull Factor
Disc: John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago Hannah Marie Alarian, University of California,
Atul Kohli, Princeton University Irvine
Sara Wallace Goodman, University of California,
Irvine
Papers: The Wilsonian Limits to Liberal Imperialism
Tony Smith, Tufts University Selective Migration Strategies and the Politics of
ĄPathways to Citizenshipď
Liberal America and the Globalization of the
Rey Koslowski, SUNY, University at Albany
Westphalian System
Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University Practicing Transnational Citizenship: Dual Nationality
G. John Ikenberry, Princeton University and Simultaneous Political Involvement among
Emigrants
Liberal Hegemony, Illiberal Empire, and the American
Andrea Schlenker, University of Lucerne
Republic
David C. Hendrickson, Colorado College Proposals to Take away Citizenship and New Perception
of National Allegiance
The Construction of the American Standard of
Ben Herzog, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Civilization
Taesuh Cha, Johns Hopkins University Related Groups
America's Strategy of Imperial Decline 114.1 ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS: ASIAN
Henry R. Nau, George Washington University AMERICAN MOBILIZATION AND
MARGINALIZATION: EXPLORING THE
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS CONTEXT AND THE CONSTITUENTS
113.35 MAPPING AND BRIDGING METHODOLOGICAL Room: Hilton, Union Square 17 & 18
DIVERSITY IN THE DISCIPLINE
Chair: Sangay K. Mishra, Drew University, New Jersey
Daily Schedule

Room: Hilton, Lombard Room


Co-sponsored by DIVISION 8: POLITICAL Disc: Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California
METHODOLOGY James S. Lai, Santa Clara University
Chair: Anjali Thomas Bohlken, University of British Columbia
Disc: Anjali Thomas Bohlken, University of British Columbia

DAILY SCHEDULE 245


Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Papers: Political Context and Electoral Fates of Asian Pacific R. J. Snell, Eastern University
Americans
Rhoanne Esteban, University of California, Santa Papers: Synderesis and Common Sense
Barbara Macon W. Boczek, Kent State University
Nicole Filler, University of California, Santa Barbara
Pei-te Lien, University of California Santa Barbara
The Place of the ĄHeartď in Philosophical Anthropology
Thomas E. Lordan
Framing Marginalization: The Construction of Alien
Albert CamusĀs Political Philosophy of Invincible
Identity for Americans of Asian Ancestry
Andy L. Aoki, Augsburg College
Summers and Endless Winters
Sarah Shea, McGill University
Spread of a Movement: Explaining Asian American
Why Blame Calvin?
T. John Jamieson
Opposition to Affirmative Action
Sono Shah, University of California Riverside
The Two Sides of the Same Coin: Political Realism and
How do Asian-Pacific-American Nonprofits Mobilize the
Political Philosophy
Andras Lanczi
Community? Exploring On and Off-Cycle Patterns of
Electoral Participation
Heath Brown, CUNY, John Jay College 114.5 GREEN POLITICS AND THEORY: HABITATION,
HABITABILITY, JUSTICE 2
114.2 CICERONIAN SOCIETY: ARISTOCRATIC
Room: Hilton, Union Square 24
APOLOGETICS
Room: Hilton, Taylor Room Co-sponsored by DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE
Chair: Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Chair: Francois Debrix, Virginia Tech
Disc: Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Disc: Sarah Surak, Salisbury University
Jeffrey Church, University of Houston
Andy Scerri, Virginia Tech
Papers: Plato, Aristotle, Cicero and the Aristocratic Ethos
Papers: Why Habitation: Ecologies as Habitant Networks?
Andreas A.M. Kinneging, University of Leiden
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech
Aristocratic Thought in Russia: Konstanin Leontiev on
Unnatural Habits: Commodification and Politics of
Priesthood, Nobility and Culture
Ethan Alexander-Davey, University of Virginia
Displacement in Appalachia
George V. Davis, Marshall University
Aristocracy as Pride: Thomas Hobbes on the Unreliable
Why ĄHabitability?ď
Zev Trachtenberg, University of Oklahoma
Few
Geoffrey M. Vaughan, Assumption College
Will the Humble Inherit the Earth? Towards a Realistic
Aristocracy and the American Regime: A Contemporary
Politics of Habitation
Manuel Arias-Maldonado, University of Malaga
Reconsideration
David B. Frisk, Alexander Hamilton Institute
114.6 IPSA RESEARCH COMMITTEE #36 (POWER):
114.3 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
POWER IN 21ST CENTURY WORLD POLITICS
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICAL
Room: Hilton, Imperial A
PHILOSOPHY: AMERICAN INSTITUTIONS
FROM A CONSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVE Chair: Philip G. Cerny, Manchester/Rutgers
Room: Hilton, Continental Ballroom 6 Disc: Philip G. Cerny, Manchester/Rutgers
Chair: Jason R. Jividen, Saint Vincent College David A. Baldwin
Disc: Jason R. Jividen, Saint Vincent College
Luigi Bradizza, Salve Regina University Papers: The G-77 in the Climate Negotiations: Explaining Unity
Through Opportunity Costs
Bjornar Egede-Nissen
Papers: The Anti-Federalist Origins of Judicial Federalism
Matthew S. Brogdon, University of Texas at San Power in a Globalized, Information-Drenched World
Antonio Renee Marlin-Bennett, Johns Hopkins University
Presidential Opinions, Congressional Recommendations: State Power in the State-led Model: Influence and
The Ambivalent Constitutional Status of Treasury Control in Financial Governance
Secretary Alexander Hamilton Rui He, Nankai University and York University
Adam M. Carrington Swimming Against the Current? Putinism in a
Executive Power Over Foreign Affairs in the Founding: Globalizing World
The Neutrality Proclamation of 1793 and the Pacificus- Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University
Helvidius Debate Balance of Power in a Networked World
Conner Lund Alina V. Vladimirova
Negative Space and the Constitution: Unearthing the 114.7 SOCIETY FOR ROMANIAN STUDIES: SOCIETY
Principles of American Constitutionalism in MadisonĀs FOR ROMANIAN STUDIES
Notes Room: Hilton, Imperial B
David Ramsey, University of West Florida Chair: Claudiu Daniel Tufis, Universitatea Bucuresti
114.4 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY: THE SPIRIT AND Disc: Claudiu Daniel Tufis, Universitatea Bucuresti
REALITY OF POLITICS
Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin II
Chair: Rouven J. Steeves, United States Air Force Academy
Disc: Jeremy Seth Geddert, Assumption College

246 DAILY SCHEDULE


Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM

Papers: Romanian Politics and Romanian Budgets: A


Preliminary Investigation
Ronald F. King, San Diego State University
Cosmin Marian, Babes-Bolyai University
Political Participation and Policy Preferences of
Romanian Diaspora
Toma Burean, Babes-Bolyai University
Raluca Popp, Babes-Bolyai University
Generalized Trust and Diversity in the Classroom: A
Longitudinal Study of Romanian Adolescents
Paul E. Sum, University of North Dakota
Gabriel Badescu
Global Citizenship, Glam Dirt and the Right-Left
Debate: The Invention of International Development
Studies in Post Communist Romania
Luciana Alexandra Ghica, University of Bucharest

Daily Schedule

DAILY SCHEDULE 247

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