Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
Transcription
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels
Theme, Division and Related Group Panels The following groups organize and sponsor panels, roundtables and plenaries at the APSA Annual Meeting. Theme panels: Organized by Annual Meeting program chairs, focusing on broad topics related to the meeting theme or issues of wide interest to the Association. A “T” precedes the title of theme panels in this program. Division panels: Organized and overseen by Annual Meeting division chairs who also serve as members of the program committee. APSA organizes the annual meeting into 49 divisions, 41 of which align with APSA Organized Sections. APSA allocates panels to each division according to a formula based on prior year attendance and proposal submission rates. The following pages list division panels ordered by division number. Related group panels: Organized by independent professional groups, called “Related Groups,” and invited by APSA to organize scholarly panels during the annual meeting. Several Some related groups only meet at the APSA Annual Meeting (e.g. conference groups) and some are independent associations. Related groups must demonstrate to APSA that they have a persistent organizational structure and membership threshold to be eligible to host panels at the meeting. The following pages list related group panels ordered by related group name. Committee panels: Organized by APSA committees to address professional issues in the discipline and related to the committee’s responsibilities. See the “Committee Sponsored Panels Events” entry in the Table of Contents for the location of the committee panel listings. 190 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels Association of Chinese Political Studies Related Groups African Politics Conference Group Chair: Panel 1 Peter A. VonDoepp, University of Vermont Susanna D. Wing, Haverford College Alice Kang, University of Wisconsin, Madison Mi Yung Yoon, Hanover College DEMOCRATIZATION, STATE STRENGTH AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: NEW EMPIRICAL AND CONCEPTUAL HORIZONS Co-sponsored by 12-40 AFRICAN LEADERSHIP ROLES AND THE ROLE OF THE CIVIC IN A CONTEXT OF POLITICAL CHANGE Panel 3 ETHNICITY, RELIGION AND TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY IN AFRICAN POLITICS Co-sponsored by 12-52 Fri 10:15 am Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago Panel 1 CHINA, THE UNITED STATES, AND GLOBAL ORDER Sat 8:00 am Panel 2 GLOBALIZATION AND THE CHINESE REGULATORY STATE Fri 2:00 pm Association of Korean Political Studies in North America Chair: Jae-Jung Suh, Johns Hopkins University Panel 1 IDENTIFYING KOREA, OTHERING NEIGHBORS Panel 2 KOREA’S RESPONSES TO GLOBALIZATION Fri 8:00 am Panel 3 CONSOLIDATING DEMOCRACY IN SOUTH KOREA? Sat 4:15 pm Sat 2:00 pm Walter Bagehot Research Council on National Sovereignty Chair: Frank P. Le Veness, St. John’s University Matthew A. Pauley, Manhattanville College Joseph Prud’homme, Christopher Newport University Panel 1 CONSTITUTIONAL POWERS OF THE PRESIDENCY: HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL EXPLORATIONS Aging Policy and Politics Group Chair: Panel 1 Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institue of Technology Cynthia Massie Mara, Penn State CROSSNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON AGING POLITICS Thu 10:15 am Thu 10:15 am Sun 10:15 am American Public Philosophy Institute Brazilian Political Science Association Chair: Christopher Wolfe, Marquette University Chair: Panel 1 ROUNDTABLE: STANDING FREEDOM ON ITS HEAD: ‘EQUALITY’ AND ‘NONDISCRIMINATION’ AND THE SUPPRESSION OF DEMOCRATIC LIBERTIES Fabiano Guilherme M. Santos, Rio de Janeiro Graduate Research Institute Amâncio Jorge Oliveira, University of Sao Paulo Panel 1 EMERGING POWERS AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Thu 2:00 pm British Politics Group Asian Pacific American Caucus Chair: Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay Natalie Masuoka, Tufts University Panel 1 ASIAN AMERICANS AND IMMIGRANT POLITICAL INCORPORATION Fri 8:00 am Chair: Mark P. Shephard, University of Strathclyde Panel 1 ROUNDTABLE ON PRESSURE GROUPS AND THE POLICY PROCESS Thu 2:00 pm Panel 2 POLITICS IN SCOTLAND AND QUEBEC Fri 10:15 am Panel 3 MEASUREMENT AND ELECTORAL BEHAVIOUR IN THE UK Sat 8:00 am Panel 4 BRITISH POLITICS GROUP ROUNDTABLE- YEAR IN REVIEW Fri 2:00 pm Association for Israel Studies Chair: Menachem Hofnung, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Panel 1 ELECTIONS IN ISRAEL, 2009: CONTINUITY OR CHANGE Fri 2:00 pm Campaign Finance Research Group Association for Politics and the Life Sciences Chair: Panel 1 Albert Somit, Southern Illinois University Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg EVOLUTION AND POLITICS Sat 4:15 pm Thu 8:00 am Chair: Michael J. Malbin, Campaign Finance Institute Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico Panel 1 SMALL DONORS AND LARGE IN U.S. FEDERAL AND STATE ELECTIONS Thu 10:15 am Association for the Study of Nationalities Chair: Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University Panel 1 UKRAINE: LOOKING WEST ... AND EAST Sun 8:00 am 191 Related Group Panels Panel 2 Sat 8:00 am Chair: Theme, Division and Related Group Panels Cato Institute Chair: Christopher Preble, The Cato Institute John Samples, The Cato Institute Panel 1 ROUNDTABLE: AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY AND THE POLITICS OF FEAR: THREAT INFLATION SINCE 9/11 Panel 6 THE PLACE OF NOBILITY IN THE THOUGHT OF ARISTOTLE, ARISTOPHANES, AND XENOPHON Sun 8:00 am Panel 7 LIBERTY AND HUMAN NATURE IN MODERN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Sat 4:15 pm Panel 8 ABRAHAM LINCOLN: THE 200TH ANNIVERSARY OF HIS BIRTH Fri 8:00 am Panel 9 THE CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT AND THE LEGACY OF WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY, JR. Panel 10 LEO STRAUSS’S ‘WHAT IS POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY?’: 50TH ANNIVERSARY Fri 10:15 am Panel 11 THE AMERICAN FOUNDERS AND FREE SPEECH Sat 10:15 am Panel 12 THE RECENT TERM OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT Sat 8:00 am Panel 13 THE NEW DEAL AND ITS LEGACY Panel 14 CICERO’S POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Fri 2:00 pm Panel 15 TOCQUEVILLE AFTER 150 YEARS: WHAT IS ALIVE AND WHAT IS DEAD IN THE POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY OF ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE? Sat 2:00 pm Sun 8:00 am Center for the Study of Federalism Chair: John Kincaid, Lafayette College Panel 1 DO WE NEED A NEW ACIR: REFLECTIONS ON THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE U.S. ACIR Co-sponsored by 28-9 Fri 10:15 am Center for the Study of the Constitution Chair: Warner R. Winborne, Hampden-Sydney College Panel 1 JUDICIAL RESTRAINT AND POLITICAL CHANGE: FIERCE OPPONENTS OR FELLOW TRAVELERS? Fri 10:15 am Christians in Political Science Chair: Kevin J. Cooney, Northwest University Mark David Hall, George Fox University Panel 1 EVANGELICAL POLITICAL THOUGHT AND NATURAL LAW Co-sponsored by 33-2 Sat 8:00 am Panel 2 THE DISAPPEARING GOD GAP? RELIGION IN THE 2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Co-sponsored by 33-3 Thu 4:15 pm Panel 3 RELIGION AND GLOBAL POLITICS Chair: James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage Panel 1 CHURCHILL AND CANADA Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy Chair: Jason Lyall, Princeton University Panel 1 COERCION AND RECONCILIATION IN COUNTERINSURGENCY OPERATIONS Chair: Florence Faucher-King, Sciences Po Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna Panel 1 PARTY ORGANIZATIONS AND THE CHALLENGE OF “DEMOCRATIZATION” Thu 2:00 pm Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Thomas Karako, Kenyon College Ronald J. Pestritto, Jr., Hillsdale College Panel 1 ROUNDTABLE: SAME-SEX ‘MARRIAGE’ IN THE U.S. AND CANADA: LEGAL CONTROVERSIES AND EVOLVING PARADIGMS Panel 2 ROUNDTABLE: THE STATE OF ACADEMIC FREE SPEECH IN CANADA AND THE U.S. Panel 3 ROUNDTABLE: ISLAM AND THE WEST Thu 2:00 pm Panel 4 ROUNDTABLE: THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION: FIRST SEVEN MONTHS Fri 4:15 pm Panel 5 ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND THE AMERICAN PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT 192 Thu 2:00 pm Fri 8:00 am Committee on Political Sociology Fri 4:15 pm The Churchill Centre Chair: Sun 10:15 am Committee on the Political Economy of the Good Society Chair: Stephen L. Elkin, University of Maryland Jeremy A. Janow, University of Maryland, College Park Panel 1 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JAMES FISHKIN, WHEN THE PEOPLE SPEAK: DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND PUBLIC CONSULTATION Co-sponsored by 2-50 Thu 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am Thu 4:15 pm Fri 10:15 am Fri 8:00 am Comparative Urban Politics Chair: Ronald K. Vogel, University of Louisville Panel 1 SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS AND THE STIMULUS PACKAGES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Co-sponsored by 28-10 Fri 8:00 am Panel 2 DECENTRALIZED GOVERNANCE AND SOCIAL INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 11-76 Fri 4:15 pm Theme, Division and Related Group Panels Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society Chair: Maurizio Carbone, University of Glasgow Panel 1 ITALIAN POLITICS BETWEEN REFORMS AND REVIVAL Thu 2:00 pm Panel 9 THEORISTS, THEOLOGIANS, AND LITTÉRATEURS: EVIL AND MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT Sat 2:00 pm Panel 10 VOEGELIN IN TORONTO, THE DVD: REFLECTIONS ON THE 1978 YORK UNIVERSITY “HERMENEUTICS AND STRUCTURALISM” CONFERENCE Sat 4:15 pm Panel 11 THE PRIMACY OF PERSONS IN POLITICS: EMPIRICISM AND THEORY Thu 4:15 pm Panel 12 THE LANGUAGES OF POLITICAL ORDER: EXPERIENCE AND SYMBOLIZATION IN NON-WESTERN MODES OF THOUGHT Sun 8:00 am Panel 13 ROUNDTABLE: THE MODERN PHILOSOPHICAL REVOLUTION: THE LUMINOSITY OF EXISTENCE Conference Group on Jurisprudence and Public Law Chair: David Fagelson, American University Panel 1 ACCOUNTABILITY AND THE ETHICS OF RESPONSIBILITY Thu 8:00 am Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Joseph Wong, University of Toronto Panel 1 GOVERNING TAIWAN Panel 2 CHOICE AND DEMOCRACY IN TAIWAN Fri 2:00 pm Panel 3 TRANSNATIONALISM AND TAIWAN’S ROLE IN THE WORLD Sat 8:00 am Panel 4 Thu 4:15 pm RE-CONSIDERING THE DEVELOPMENTAL STATE Chair: Augustus Richard Norton, Boston University Panel 1 POLITICAL REFORM IN THE MIDDLE EAST: CONTEXTS, DILEMMAS, CASES European Consortium for Political Research Chair: Luciano Bardi, Università di Pisa Louise Hawkridge, European Consortium for Political Research Panel 1 THE AMERICANISATION OF EUROPEAN EXECUTIVES Panel 2 ENERGY POLICY AND GLOBAL WARMING: AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN APPROACHES Panel 3 TERRORS IN TRANSATLANTIASTILL? EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES FROM BUSH TO OBAMA Sun 10:15 am Conference Group on the Middle East Fri 10:15 am Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and Society Fri 8:00 am Fri 8:00 am Sat 10:15 am Sat 4:15 pm French Politics Group Chair: Frank Fischer, Rutgers University, Newark Dvora Yanow, Vrije Universiteit Panel 1 DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND CIVIL SOCIETY: INTERPRETIVE APPROACHES Co-sponsored by 25-28 Sat 10:15 am Panel 2 EXPERTISE AND PUBLIC POLICY Sun 10:15 am Eric Voegelin Society Chair: Ellis Sandoz, Louisiana State University Panel 1 MYSTICISM AND POLITICS IN VOEGELIN’S PHILOSOPHY Panel 2 CONSCIENCE, EXPRESSION & LIBERTY: PITFALLS OF POLITICAL CORRECTNESS Fri 2:00 pm Panel 3 VOEGELIN AND THE ANCIENTS Sat 8:00 am Panel 4 VOEGELIN’S THE FORM OF THE AMERICAN MIND AND AMERICAN PRAGMATISM AS A SIGNIFICANT CONTRIBUTION TO WORLD PHILOSOPHY Thu 8:00 am Panel 5 VOEGELIN’S THE POLITICAL RELIGIONS AFTER 70 YEARS Panel 6 ASSESSING VOEGELIN’S CRITIQUE OF HEGEL Panel 7 REVISITING REINHOLD NIEBUHR IN THE 21ST CENTURY Panel 8 ANAMNETIC LITERATURE Fri 10:15 am Chair: Andrew M. Appleton, Washington State University Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University Panel 1 THEME PANEL: THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE ‘FRENCH MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN ETHNIC AND RACIAL POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 32-10 and T-14 Panel 2 POLITICAL RADICALISM IN FRANCE: RIGHT, LEFT, AND CENTER Thu 4:15 pm Panel 3 FRANCE AND EUROPE: A REKINDLED AFFECTION? Co-sponsored by 15-7 Sat 10:15 am Panel 4 UNDERSTANDING RECORD VOTER PARTICIPATION IN THE FRENCH ELECTIONS OF 2007 AND THE U.S. ELECTIONS OF 2008 Co-sponsored by 36-32 Fri 2:00 pm Fri 4:15 pm Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists Chair: Guoli Liu, College of Charleston Quansheng Zhao, American University Sat 10:15 am Panel 1 NEW TRENDS IN CROSS-TAIWAN STRAIT RELATIONS Fri 4:15 pm Panel 2 POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT UNDER AN AUTHORITARIAN REGIME: FINDINGS FROM RECENT SURVEY RESEARCH ON CHINA Panel 3 NEW TRENDS IN CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY Thu 10:15 am Thu 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am Sat 10:15 am Fri 4:15 pm 193 Related Group Panels Chair: Theme, Division and Related Group Panels Panel 4 CHINESE DEMOCRATIZATION IN TIMES OF CHANGE Sat 2:00 pm Panel 3 Green Politics and Theory Chair: Joel J. Kassiola, San Francisco State University David Whiteman, University of South Carolina Panel 1 NEW APPROACHES TO GREEN RESEARCH Panel 2 ECOLOGY, EQUITY, AND DEMOCRACY Thu 4:15 pm Sat 8:00 am Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida Panel 1 A ‘SECOND TRANSITION’ IN SPAIN? THE SOCIALIST GOVERNMENT OF JOSÉ LUIS RODRÍGUEZ ZAPATERO (2004-08) Co-sponsored by 15-10 Fri 8:00 am Indigenous Studies Network Fri 8:00 am IPSA Research Committee 12 (Biology and Politics) Chair: Steven A Peterson, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg Albert Somit Panel 1 RECENT RESEARCH IN BIOLOGY AND POLITICS Iberian Studies Group Chair: UNDERSTANDING EXPERIENCES ACROSS THE SUBFIELDS: RHETORIC, PHENOMENOLOGY, FIELDWORK, FRAMING/ NARRATIVES, AND TEXTUAL ETHNOGRAPHY Co-sponsored by 46-26 Sun 8:00 am IPSA Research Committee 36 (Power) Chair: Mark Haugaard, National University of Ireland, Galway Panel 1 POWER, GOVERNMENTALITY AND SOCIAL CHANGE Co-sponsored by 2-51 Sat 2:00 pm Japan Political Studies Group Chair: Stephanie J. Di Alto, University of California, Irvine Paula Mohan, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater Chair: Deborah J. Milly, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Panel 1 EXAMINING INDIGENOUS RIGHTS, IDENTITIES, AND GOVERNANCE THROUGH NATIVE AND NONNATIVE FRAMEWORKS Panel 1 WOMEN, IMMIGRANTS AND LABOR MARKETS: UNDERSTANDING AND RESPONDING TO LABOR SHORTAGES AND LOW FERTILITY IN AGING SOCIETIES Co-sponsored by 11-2 Fri 2:00 pm Panel 2 THE NEW POLITICS OF ECONOMIC POLICY MAKING IN JAPAN Co-sponsored by 6-21 Fri 10:15 am Panel 3 THE INTERACTION OF DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY IN JAPAN Fri 2:00 pm Institute for Constitutional Studies Chair: Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland Maeva Marcus, George Washington University Panel 1 LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: LAW AND COURTS Thu 4:15 pm Panel 2 AUTHOR MEETS READERS, GORDON SILVERSTEIN’S LAW’S ALLURE: HOW LAW SHAPES, CONSTRAINS, SAVES, AND KILLS POLITICS Sat 10:15 am Labor Project Intelligence Studies Group Chair: Loch K. Johnson, University of Georgia Panel 1 NATIONAL SECURITY INTELLIGENCE: A RESEARCH AGENDA Sat 4:15 pm International Association for the Study of German Politics Chair: Dan Hough, University of Sussex Panel 1 THE PARTY POLITICS OF THE 2009 GERMAN ELECTION Chair: Susan E. Orr, SUNY, Brockport Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota Panel 1 VARIETIES OF ECONOMIC CHANGE? Co-sponsored by 11-9 Panel 2 REVERSING THE TIDE? THE ELECTION OF BARACK OBAMA AND THE FUTURE OF ORGANIZED LABOR IN THE US Thu 4:15 pm Panel 3 ROUNDTABLE: 40 YEARS SINCE J DAVID GREENSTONE’S “LABOR IN AMERICAN POLITICS”: REFLECTIONS ON WHERE WE’VE BEEN, WHERE WE ARE, AND WHERE WE SHOULD GO Co-sponsored by 42-10 Fri 2:00 pm Thu 8:00 am Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Chair: Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah Panel 1 DEBATING RESEARCH DESIGNS: DO QUALITATIVE AND INTERPRETIVE LOGICS OF INQUIRY DIFFER? SHOULD THEY? Co-sponsored by 46-24 Thu 10:15 am METHODS CAFE Co-sponsored by 46-25 Thu 12:15 pm Panel 2 194 Sat 8:00 am Sat 4:15 pm Latin American Studies Association Chair: Cynthia McClintock, George Washington University Panel 1 THE POLITICS OF REDISTRIBUTION IN LATIN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 12-34 Sat 4:15 pm Theme, Division and Related Group Panels Panel 2 THE PUZZLE OF POPULAR LEGITIMACY Co-sponsored by 37-14 Sat 2:00 pm Panel 2 Panel 3 FREE TRADE, SOCIAL REFORM, AND POLITICS IN LATIN AMERICA Fri 8:00 am Publius: The Journal of Federalism Latino Caucus in Political Science Chair: Tony Affigne, Providence College Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas Panel 1 ROUNDTABLE: COMPLEX MODELS FOR LATINO POLITICS: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE INNOVATIONS Dawn Carsey, Publius: The Journal of Federalism Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University Panel 1 UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION OF FEDERATIONS: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE Co-sponsored by 28-2 Fri 2:00 pm Panel 2 NON-METROPOLITAN POLICY AND GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 28-11 Sun 8:00 am Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los Angeles Panel 1 ELECTION LAW ISSUES FROM THE 2008 ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 34-12 Society for Greek Political Thought Chair: Leslie G. Rubin, Duquesne University Panel 1 PLATONIC DIALOGUES ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND POLITICAL VIRTUE Co-sponsored by 1-31 Panel 2 JUSTICE, PASSION, AND SELFKNOWLEDGE IN PLATO AND ARISTOPHANES Co-sponsored by 41-8 Sat 2:00 pm Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus Chair: Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine Meredith L. Weiss, SUNY, Albany Panel 1 EMERGING RIGHTS BATTLES: LGBT POLITICS TODAY Fri 4:15 pm Thu 4:15 pm Fri 2:00 pm Society for Romanian Studies National Humanities Institute Chair: Gregory S. Butler, New Mexico State University Panel 1 THEORY AND PRACTICE IN THE AMERICAN FOUNDING Panel 2 LITERATURE AND THE STUDY OF POLITICS Hank C. Jenkins-Smith, University of Oklahoma Panel 1 ’AS IF THERE REALLY WAS A WORLD OUT THERE’: APPLICATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY TO GLOBAL CHALLENGES Steven D. Roper, Eastern Illinois University Panel 1 VOTER, CANDIDATE AND PARTY STRATEGIC DECISION-MAKING: CASES FROM THE ROMANIAN EXPERIENCE Sun 10:15 am Society of Catholic Social Scientists Chair: Kenneth L. Grasso, Texas State University Panel 1 JOHN PAUL II AND LIBERAL MODERNITY Gerson Moreno-Riano, Regent University Panel 1 OBEDIENCE, HIERARCHY, AND AUTHORITY IN THE MIDDLE AGES Theme Panels Sat 8:00 am Political Forecasting Group Chair: Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa Patrick James, University of Southern California Panel 1 FORECASTING CANADIAN FEDERAL ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 49-4 T-1 THEME PANEL: HOW CONSTITUTIONS WORK: DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHES TO CONSTITUTIONAL FUNCTION Co-sponsored by 27-7 Thu 8:00 am T-2 THEME PANEL: THE IDEA OF CHANGE AND THE PROBLEM OF POLITICS Co-sponsored by 1-22 Thu 10:15 am T-3 THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND SECURITY: THE POLITICS OF POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE OF TURBULENCE Co-sponsored by 11-39 and 18-2 Thu 10:15 am T-4 THEME PANEL: ALEKSANDR SOLZHENITSYN 1918-2008: REMEMBRANCE AND LEGACY Co-sponsored by 41-6 Thu 2:00 pm T-5 THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE STATE REACTIONS TO LGBT RIGHTS CLAIMS Co-sponsored by 47-5 and 29-15 Thu 2:00 pm Fri 2:00 pm Political Studies Association Chair: Terrell Carver, University of Bristol Panel 1 CHINA’S WELFARE POLITICS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Sat 4:15 pm Fri 10:15 am Politica: Study of Medieval Political Thought Chair: Fri 8:00 am Sat 4:15 pm Policy Studies Organization Chair: Chair: Sat 2:00 pm 195 Related Group Panels Chair: Fri 4:15 pm Chair: Fri 8:00 am Law and Political Process Study Group CHILDREN, JUSTICE, AND DEMOCRACY Theme, Division and Related Group Panels T-6 THEME PANEL: CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION Co-sponsored by 16-10 Thu 4:15 pm T-7 THEME ROUNDTABLE: DOES POSTCOMMUNISM STILL MAKE SENSE AS AN ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK? Co-sponsored by 13-2 Thu 4:15 pm T-8 T-9 T-10 T-11 T-12 THEME PANEL: UNDERSTANDING A COMPLEX WORLD: COMPLEXITY THEORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE? Co-sponsored by 14-7 Fri 8:00 am THEME PANEL: HEALTH SYSTEM COMPLEXITY AND CHANGE: MEASURING THE POLITICS OF DELIVERING CARE Co-sponsored by 48-2 Fri 8:00 am THEME ROUNDTABLE: INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE AND GLOBAL DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by 3-23 Fri 10:15 am THEME ROUNDTABLE: JUST HOW DIFFERENT? SEXUAL POLITICS IN CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES Co-sponsored by 47-7 Fri 10:15 am THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES Co-sponsored by 3-24 and 2-48 Fri 10:15 am T-14 THEME PANEL: THE Fri 2:00 pm GLOBALIZATION OF THE ‘FRENCH MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN ETHNIC AND RACIAL POLITICS? Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 1 and 32-10 T-15 THEME PANEL: RETHINKING STATE POLICY DIFFUSION Co-sponsored by 29-2 and 25-19 Fri 2:00 pm T-16 THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 31-9 and 32-18 Fri 2:00 pm T-17 THEME ROUNDTABLE: 2008 AND THE FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN PARTY COALITIONS Co-sponsored by 35-9 Fri 4:15 pm T-18 THEME PANEL: WEB 2.0 AND SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE 2008 ELECTIONS AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 40-2 Fri 4:15 pm T-19 THEME PANEL: NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS Fri 4:15 pm T-20 THEME ROUNDTABLE: NEW WAVES IN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Co-sponsored by 2-44 Sat 8:00 am T-21 THEME PANEL: CITIZENS’ ASSEMBLIES AND DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by 34-7 Sat 8:00 am 196 T-22 THEME PANEL: “FORGOTTEN PARTNERSHIP” REMEMBERED: U.S.-CANADA RELATIONS 25 YEARS LATER Co-sponsored by 49-8 Sat 8:00 am T-23 THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA AND THE CITIES Co-sponsored by 30-14 and 28-7 T-24 THEME PANEL: CANADIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSIONS Co-sponsored by 45-10 Sat 2:00 pm T-25 THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE SHIFTING STUDY OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 6-24 and 12-14 Sat 2:00 pm T-26 THEME PANEL: EDUCATING STUDENTS TO BE GLOBAL CITIZENS Co-sponsored by 9-5 and 10-4 Sat 4:15 pm T-27 THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM AND VARIETIES OF CRISIS? Co-sponsored by 14-8 and 13-15 Sat 4:15 pm T-28 THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE OF MULTICULTURALISM IN TORONTO Co-sponsored by 30-13 Sun 8:00 am T-29 THEME PANEL: HISTORY, IDENTITY, POLITICAL VIOLENCE: THE RELATIVE MERITS OF QUALITATIVE METHODS TO EXPLAIN COMPLEX AND DYNAMIC PHENOMENA Co-sponsored by 46-8 Sun 10:15 am 1 Political Thought and Philosophy Division Chair: Duncan Ivison, University of Sydney 1-1 ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES TULLY’S ‘PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW KEY’ Co-sponsored by 2-1 Sat 10:15 am 1-2 ROUNDTABLE: MOTIVATING POLITICS: ANCIENT AND MODERN PERSPECTIVES ON REASON AND DESIRE Sat 4:15 pm 1-3 RELIGION AND MODERN POLITICS IN SPINOZA AND ROUSSEAU Thu 2:00 pm 1-4 THE POLITICS OF HUNGER Fri 10:15 am 1-5 ROUNDTABLE: AFTER THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL AND POSTMODERNISM: RETHINKING APPROACHES TO THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT Co-sponsored by 2-2 Fri 8:00 am 1-6 TOCQUEVILLE’S VIEWS ON AMERICA AFTER 1840: WHAT WOULD THE THIRD VOLUME OF “DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA” HAVE LOOKED LIKE HAD IT EVER BEEN WRITTEN? Co-sponsored by 2-3 Fri 2:00 pm Sat 10:15 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 1-7 ROUNDTABLE: CLINTON ROSSITER’S CONSTITUTIONAL DICTATORSHIP: CRISIS GOVERNMENT IN THE MODERN DEMOCRACIES: STILL RELEVANT? Co-sponsored by 27-1 Sun 8:00 am 1-8 CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL DEMOCRACY AND COSMOPOLITAN CITIZENSHIP Co-sponsored by 3-1 Sat 4:15 pm 1-9 FOUNDINGS AND THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT 1-10 RAWLS AND THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL LIBERALISM 1-11 Sat 8:00 am Thu 4:15 pm THE USES AND ABUSES OF GEORGE ORWELL IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY Fri 10:15 am 1-13 ROUNDTABLE: “THE WEST” AS CATEGORY AND CONCEPT Fri 2:00 pm 1-14 RHETORIC, REPRESENTATION, AUTHORIZATION Fri 4:15 pm 1-15 GLOBAL JUSTICE AND TRANSNATIONAL POLITICS Sat 4:15 pm 1-16 NATURE, TECHNOLOGY AND BIOPOLITICS 1-17 RETHINKING TELEOLOGY AND LIBERALISM Fri 8:00 am 1-18 DEMOCRACY, AGONISM AND POWER Sat 2:00 pm 1-19 RIGHTS, SELF-DETERMINATION AND DIFFERENCE Thu 4:15 pm 1-20 MACHIAVELLI’S METHODS FOR ADDRESSING “POLITICS IN MOTION” Sat 10:15 am 1-21 TOCQUEVILLE AND THE ANALYSIS OF DEMOCRATIC POLITICS Thu 2:00 pm 1-22 THEME PANEL: THE IDEA OF CHANGE AND THE PROBLEM OF POLITICS Co-sponsored by T-2 1-23 HISTORIES OF LIBERTY Sat 4:15 pm 1-24 POLITICAL INHERITANCE AND CRITIQUE Sun 8:00 am 1-25 CULTIVATING AGENCY IN LOCKE, ROUSSEAU AND MILL Fri 10:15 am 1-26 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THOUGHT: PERSPECTIVES ON THE STATE OF NATURE Sat 8:00 am RECOGNITION, CIVILITY AND POLITICAL DISCOURSE 1-28 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY APPLIED: CHANGE AND HYBRIDITY IN THE STUDY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT 1-30 POLITICAL THEORY AND TEACHING Co-sponsored by 10-5 1-31 PLATONIC DIALOGUES ON Thu 4:15 pm POLITICAL SCIENCE AND POLITICAL VIRTUE Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 1 2 Foundations of Political Theory Division Chair: Leslie Paul Thiele, University of Florida 2-1 ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES TULLY’S ‘PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW KEY’ Co-sponsored by 1-1 2-2 ROUNDTABLE: AFTER THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL AND POSTMODERNISM: RETHINKING APPROACHES TO THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT Co-sponsored by 1-5 Fri 8:00 am 2-3 TOCQUEVILLE’S VIEWS ON AMERICA AFTER 1840: WHAT WOULD THE THIRD VOLUME OF “DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA” HAVE LOOKED LIKE HAD IT EVER BEEN WRITTEN? Co-sponsored by 1-6 Fri 2:00 pm 2-4 ATHENS WITHIN JERUSALEM: CONTEMPORARY RE-READINGS OF LEO STRAUSS Thu 8:00 am 2-5 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY PLENARY: CHARLES TAYLOR, “THE MANY FORMS OF SECULARISM” Fri 4:15 pm 2-6 THE POLITICAL THOUGHT OF ISAIAH BERLIN: NEGLECTED DIMENSIONS AND CONTINUING LEGACIES Fri 10:15 am 2-7 FORM, CONTENT, AND CONTINGENCY: THE CONTOURS OF POLITICAL THEORY Thu 10:15 am 2-8 POLITICS AND/AS DRIVE 2-9 ”WE ARE ALL DEMOCRATS NOW...” Fri 10:15 am 2-10 ROUNDTABLE ON STEPHEN K. WHITE’S “THE ETHOS OF A LATEMODERN CITIZEN” Fri 8:00 am 2-11 POLITICAL THEORY AS SUBFIELD AND PROFESSION? Thu 4:15 pm 2-12 POLITICAL THEORY TODAY: RESULTS AND IMPLICATIONS OF A NATIONAL SURVEY Fri 2:00 pm 2-13 THE PEOPLE JUDGE Co-sponsored by 3-2 2-14 FOCUS ON METAPHOR: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON LANGUAGE AND DISCOURSE Co-sponsored by 46-2 Thu 10:15 am LIBERTY, COMMERCE AND VIRTUE: HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL REFLECTIONS ON THE SCOTTISH ENLIGHTENMENT 1-27 TERRITORIAL RIGHT AND GLOBAL JUSTICE Co-sponsored by 3-25 Thu 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am Sun 10:15 am Fri 2:00 pm Sun 10:15 am Fri 4:15 pm Sat 10:15 am Sat 2:00 pm Sat 10:15 am Sat 2:00 pm 197 Related Group Panels 1-12 1-29 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 2-15 THE POLITICS OF GOOD INTENTIONS Sun 8:00 am 2-16 ”CAPITALISM AND CHRISTIANITY, AMERICAN STYLE” BY WILLIAM E. CONNOLLY Sat 4:15 pm 2-17 MACHIAVELLI AND DEMOCRACY Fri 10:15 am 2-18 FEAR OF IMAGES? ROUNDTABLE ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE EVASION OF VISUAL CULTURE Co-sponsored by 41-1 Thu 10:15 am CRITICAL THEORY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS IN THE 21ST CENTURY: A LOOK INTO THE FUTURE WITH AN EYE ON THE PAST Fri 4:15 pm 2-19 2-44 THEME ROUNDTABLE: NEW WAVES IN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Co-sponsored by T-20 Sat 8:00 am 2-45 USES OF RANCIERE Sun 8:00 am 2-46 SPINOZA AND CRITICAL THEORY Fri 4:15 pm 2-47 DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND MASS SOCIETY Co-sponsored by 3-13 Fri 10:15 am 2-48 THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES Co-sponsored by 3-24 and T-12 Fri 10:15 am 2-49 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON STANLEY HAUERWAS AND ROMAND COLES, CHRISTIANITY, DEMOCRACY, AND THE RADICAL ORDINARY Co-sponsored by 33-4 Sat 10:15 am 2-50 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JAMES Fri 8:00 am FISHKIN, WHEN THE PEOPLE SPEAK: DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND PUBLIC CONSULTATION Co-sponsored by Committee on the Political Economy of the Good Society, Panel 1 2-51 POWER, GOVERNMENTALITY AND Sat 2:00 pm SOCIAL CHANGE Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee ‘36 (Power), Panel 1 3 Normative Political Theory Jeff Spinner-Halev, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 2-20 DECOLONIZING MENTAL SPACE: THE INTERIOR STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE AND LIBERATION Thu 2:00 pm 2-21 POLITICS AND THE FORCE OF HABIT Thu 8:00 am 2-22 CONTESTING SECULAR MODERNITIES Co-sponsored by 3-3 Thu 4:15 pm 2-23 NIETZSCHE Sat 8:00 am 2-24 BODIES, PASSIONS, DE BEAUVOIR Sat 2:00 pm 2-25 POLITICS, ECOLOGY, AND EQUITY 2-26 GOVERNMENTALITY AND BIOPOLITICS 2-27 ENCOUNTERING THE OTHER Fri 2:00 pm 2-28 DEPLOYING ARENDT Fri 4:15 pm Division Chair: 2-29 THEORIZING THE SOCIAL SCIENCES Sun 8:00 am 3-1 2-30 JUDGMENT AND POLITICS Sat 2:00 pm CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL DEMOCRACY AND COSMOPOLITAN CITIZENSHIP Co-sponsored by 1-8 2-31 DEMOCRACY IN MOTION 3-2 ABOUT SCHMITT THE PEOPLE JUDGE Co-sponsored by 2-13 Sat 10:15 am 2-32 2-33 CONCEPTS OF THE POLITICAL 3-3 Thu 4:15 pm 2-34 VISION, NARRATIVE AND POLITICS CONTESTING SECULAR MODERNITIES Co-sponsored by 2-22 2-35 LIBERALISM, ETHICS AND CULTURE Thu 4:15 pm 3-4 Sat 4:15 pm 2-36 CITIZENSHIP AND CIVIC CULTURE Sat 10:15 am MISUNDERSTANDING HISTORICAL INJUSTICE Co-sponsored by 2-43 2-37 TOCQUEVILLE CONFRONTS THE DEMOCRATIC MIND 3-5 WHEN ARE CITIZENS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACTIONS OF THE STATE? Fri 2:00 pm 2-38 PLATO AND POLITICAL LIFE 3-6 THE AUTHORITY OF DEMOCRACY Fri 8:00 am 2-39 PSYCHOLOGIES OF DEMOCRATIC CONTESTATION Thu 8:00 am 3-7 ISAIAH BERLIN’S “TWO CONCEPTS OF LIBERTY” AFTER 50 YEARS Sat 4:15 pm 2-40 NATURE, SCIENCE, AND DEMOCRACY AFTER BRUNO LATOUR Sat 10:15 am 3-8 UNCONVENTIONAL CONVENTIONS IN JUST WAR THEORY Sat 2:00 pm 2-41 POLITICAL POSSIBILITY IN THE NOVELS OF JOSE SARAMAGO Co-sponsored by 41-2 Sat 2:00 pm 3-9 DEMOCRACY AND COLLECTIVE WISDOM Sat 8:00 am 3-10 THE RULE OF LAW IN TIMES OF EMERGENCY Fri 2:00 pm INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN AND DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY Thu 2:00 pm 2-42 3-11 MISUNDERSTANDING HISTORICAL INJUSTICE Co-sponsored by 3-4 Sat 4:15 pm TOLERATION, SECULARISM, AND THE NEW RELIGIOUS PLURALISM Thu 8:00 am 2-43 198 Fri 8:00 am Thu 2:00 pm Thu 4:15 pm Sun 10:15 am Sat 4:15 pm Fri 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am Sat 8:00 am Sat 4:15 pm Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 3-12 3-13 SOCIAL JUSTICE, THE PUBLIC, AND THE CITY Fri 4:15 pm Fri 10:15 am 3-14 SHOULD CITIZENS THINK? Fri 10:15 am 3-15 CAN COSMOPOLITANISM CO-EXIST WITH THE NATION-STATE? 3-16 CREATING THE CONDITIONS FOR A DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY 3-17 IMMIGRANTS AND EMIGRANTS 3-18 THE MORAL PSYCHOLOGY OF CHOICE AND COERCION Thu 10:15 am 3-19 FREE MARKET LIBERTARIANISM: IS THERE A MORAL DEFENSE? Thu 10:15 am 3-20 TAKING INJUSTICE SERIOUSLY Sun 10:15 am 3-21 CHALLENGES TO MULTICULTURALISM 3-22 IS EQUALITY POSSIBLE? 3-23 THEME ROUNDTABLE: INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE AND GLOBAL DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by T-10 Fri 10:15 am THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES Co-sponsored by 2-48 and T-12 Fri 10:15 am 3-25 TERRITORIAL RIGHT AND GLOBAL JUSTICE Co-sponsored by 1-29 Sun 10:15 am 3-26 KANT AND RAWLS Sat 2:00 pm 3-27 THE COMPLEXITIES OF SECURING RIGHTS AND DEMOCRACY: A ROUND TABLE ON COREY BRETTSCHNEIDER’S Sat 8:00 am 3-28 THE STATUS OF PARTY PRIMARIES Sun 8:00 am 3-29 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: PETER A. MEYERS, CIVIC WAR AND THE CORRUPTION OF THE CITIZEN, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS, 2008 Thu 4:15 pm RESPONSIBILITIES OF CARE AND DILEMMAS OF FREEDOM Thu 8:00 am ON CHAIM GANS’ BOOK “A JUST ZIONISM: ON THE MORALITY OF THE JEWISH STATE” (OUP 2008) Thu 4:15 pm 3-24 3-30 3-31 Fri 2:00 pm Sat 10:15 am Sun 8:00 am MODELS OF ELECTIONS 4-3 BARGAINING THEORY IN VARIOUS POLITICAL ARENAS Sun 8:00 am 4-4 CONNECTING THE BRANCHES Sat 2:00 pm 4-5 MODELING AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS Fri 4:15 pm 4-6 WARFIGHTING WITHIN AND ACROSS NATIONS Sat 10:15 am 4-7 MODELING REPLACEMENT IN DEMOCRACY Thu 4:15 pm 4-8 AGGREGATION OF PREFERENCES AND INFORMATION Sat 8:00 am 4-9 STRUCTURAL ESTIMATION OF FORMAL MODELS Co-sponsored by 8-4 Fri 2:00 pm 4-10 REPUTATION IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS Co-sponsored by 21-7 5 Political Psychology Division Chair: Thomas J. Rudolph, University of Illinois 5-1 RACE, RACISMS, XENOPHOBIA AND POLITICS Co-sponsored by 32-1 Fri 10:15 am 5-2 CANDIDATE EVALUATIONS Co-sponsored by 36-1 Thu 8:00 am 5-3 FRAMING Co-sponsored by 37-1 Sun 8:00 am 5-4 VALUES Co-sponsored by 37-2 Fri 4:15 pm 5-5 POLITICAL INFORMATION Co-sponsored by 37-3 Fri 2:00 pm 5-6 DELIBERATION AND SOCIAL NETWORKS Co-sponsored by 37-4 Sat 4:15 pm 5-7 MOTIVATED REASONING 5-8 INFORMATION PROCESSING 5-9 RISK Thu 2:00 pm Fri 8:00 am 3-32 THEORIZING DIMENSIONS OF WOMEN’S EQUAL CITIZENSHIP Co-sponsored by 31-11 Fri 4:15 pm 3-33 DEMOCRACY AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF CAREWORK Co-sponsored by 31-18 Fri 8:00 am 4 Formal Political Theory Division Chair: Adam H. Meirowitz, Princeton University 4-1 AGENCY MODELS AND THE POLITICS OF AGENCIES Fri 8:00 am Thu 2:00 pm Sun 10:15 am Sat 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am 5-10 AFFECT AND EMOTIONS 5-11 PERSONALITY AND POLITICS Fri 10:15 am Fri 2:00 pm 5-12 ATTRIBUTIONS AND JUDGMENTS Sat 2:00 pm 5-13 CORRECT VOTING Co-sponsored by 36-25 5-14 BIOLOGY, GENETICS, AND POLITICS Co-sponsored by 37-12 Sat 8:00 am 5-15 IDEOLOGY Co-sponsored by 37-17 Fri 2:00 pm 5-16 POLITICAL TRUST Co-sponsored by 37-18 Sat 10:15 am Thu 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am 199 Related Group Panels DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND MASS SOCIETY Co-sponsored by 2-47 4-2 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 6 Political Economy Division Chair: Cheryl M. Schonhardt-Bailey, London School of Economics 6-1 CORRUPTION AND THE SOURCES OF DEMOCRATIC SUCCESS AND FAILURE Co-sponsored by 11-11 6-2 COMPARATIVE SUBNATIONAL POLITICS AND POLITICAL ECONOMY IN ASIA Co-sponsored by 11-12 Thu 8:00 am 6-4 INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND DOMESTIC POLICY CHANGE Co-sponsored by 16-2 Fri 10:15 am 6-5 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF TRADE AGREEMENTS AND TRADE INSTRUMENTS: NEW INSIGHTS INTO CAUSES AND EFFECTS Co-sponsored by 16-3 Sat 8:00 am THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION Co-sponsored by 16-7 Fri 8:00 am 6-7 DELIBERATION AND DECISIONMAKING IN MONETARY POLICY COMMITTEES 6-8 THE GOVERNANCE AND CRISIS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE Co-sponsored by 14-2 Fri 8:00 am 6-9 THE POLITICS OF FINANCIAL CRISES: RESPONSES TO THE 20072009 CRISIS IN COMPARATIVE AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 16-24 Sat 10:15 am 6-11 6-12 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF MIGRANTS’ FINANCIAL FLOWS Co-sponsored by 16-25 6-21 THE NEW POLITICS OF ECONOMIC Fri 10:15 am POLICY MAKING IN JAPAN Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group, Panel 2 6-22 LEADERSHIP AND RHETORIC 6-23 TRADE AND PARTISANSHIP Co-sponsored by 16-27 Sun 8:00 am 6-24 THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE SHIFTING STUDY OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 12-14 and T-25 Sat 2:00 pm 6-25 VARIETIES OF CHANGE IN EUROPEAN POLITICAL ECONOMY Co-sponsored by 15-12 Sat 4:15 pm 7 Politics and History Division Chair: Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University Julian E. Zelizer, Princeton University 7-1 NORTH, WALLIS AND WEINGAST’S “VIOLENCE AND SOCIAL ORDERS” Co-sponsored by 11-10 7-2 THE PERSISTENCE OF NATIONALISM AND NATIONBUILDING IN THE 21ST CENTURY Co-sponsored by 11-25 Thu 2:00 pm 7-3 BRINGING SEXUAL ORIENTATION IN: GAY CITIZENSHIP AND AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT Fri 4:15 pm 7-4 THE LIFE AND SCHOLARSHIP OF CHARLES TILLY Thu 4:15 pm 7-5 RETHINKING THE AMERICAN STATE: HISTORIANS AND POLITICAL SCIENTISTS CONVERSE 7-6 STANDARDIZING THE AMERICAN STATE: HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES Thu 8:00 am 7-7 FRESH DEBATES IN SOUTHERN POLITICS: RACE, CLASS, RELIGION, AND PARTISANSHIP IN A CHANGING AMERICAN SOUTH Sat 4:15 pm 7-8 AUTHOR MEETS READERS: SHELDON POLLACK’S “WAR, REVENUE, AND STATE BUILDING: FINANCING THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE AMERICAN STATE.” Sun 8:00 am Sat 8:00 am THE POLITICS AND GEOGRAPHY OF DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 11-19 6-10 THE ECONOMICS OF VOTING BEHAVIOR Sun 10:15 am 6-3 6-6 6-20 Thu 2:00 pm Fri 4:15 pm THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF GLOBALIZATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 16-26 Thu 10:15 am NEW APPROACHES TO REGIME PERFORMANCE AND TRANSITION Co-sponsored by 11-55 Sat 2:00 pm Sat 10:15 am Fri 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am Sat 2:00 pm 6-13 PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES OF TRADE Thu 8:00 am 6-14 THE LOBBYING OF BUSINESSES, BANKERS AND AGENCIES Sat 8:00 am 7-9 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONGRESS AND HISTORY 6-15 INSTITUTIONS OF MONETARY POLICY Sat 4:15 pm 7-10 THE POLITICAL ANALYSIS OF POLICY DEVELOPMENT Sat 10:15 am 6-16 THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Thu 4:15 pm 7-11 Fri 10:15 am 6-17 DEMOCRATIC REPRESENTATION AND POLICYMAKING Thu 10:15 am SHIFTING MODES OF GOVERNANCE: A PUNITIVE TURN IN AMERICAN SOCIAL POLICY? 7-12 POLITICS OF FISCAL POLICY SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND THEIR TACTICS Sat 8:00 am 6-18 6-19 INEQUALITY AND REDISTRIBUTION 7-13 ENGINES OF CHANGE? AMERICAN POLITICAL PARTIES IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE 200 Fri 2:00 pm Thu 2:00 pm Fri 8:00 am Sun 10:15 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 7-14 EXPERTS IN THE AMERICAN POLITY 7-15 THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL POLICY: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES Co-sponsored by 25-3 7-16 Thu 2:00 pm Sat 10:15 am 8-16 ESTIMATING IDEAL POINTS IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 22-7 Sat 8:00 am 8-17 NETWORKS OF ADVOCATES AND ACTIVISTS Co-sponsored by 35-13 Sat 2:00 pm INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE COURTS Fri 2:00 pm 8-18 STATISTICAL MODELS AND CAUSAL INFERENCE: DAVID FREEDMAN’S DIALOGUE WITH THE SOCIAL SCIENCES Co-sponsored by 46-7 Thu 4:15 pm 7-18 ECONOMIC REGULATION IN HISTORICAL AND COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Fri 4:15 pm 7-19 PRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 23-2 Sat 10:15 am 8-19 CONSTRUCTING CROSS-NATIONAL DATASETS: CHALLENGES AND LESSONS Co-sponsored by 46-23 Fri 10:15 am 7-20 THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF NELSON W. POLSBY Co-sponsored by 35-8 Fri 10:15 am 9 Teaching and Learning in Political Science Division Chair: 8 Political Methodology Vicki L. Golich, California State University, San Marcos Division Chair: Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young University 9-1 A NEW WORLD OF POLITICAL SCIENCE PEDAGOGY Co-sponsored by 10-1 8-1 EXPERIMENTS IN THE STUDY OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 11-40 Thu 10:15 am 9-2 CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN TEACHING CRITICAL THINKING IN THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT COURSE Co-sponsored by 10-2 HOW BAYESIAN METHODS MAKE THE STUDY OF LATIN AMERICAN POLITICS SUBSTANTIALLY BETTER. Co-sponsored by 12-15 Sat 4:15 pm 9-3 BEAUTIFUL SOULS AND JUST WARRIORS: GENDER, THE MILITARY, AND PEDAGOGY Co-sponsored by 19-1 Fri 8:00 am 8-3 COMPUTATIONAL MODELS OF POLITICS Fri 8:00 am 8-4 STRUCTURAL ESTIMATION OF FORMAL MODELS Co-sponsored by 4-9 Fri 2:00 pm 9-4 ENHANCING & CONNECTING EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION & CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Co-sponsored by 10-3 Fri 4:15 pm 8-5 NEW APPROACHES TO STUDYING PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-5 Fri 10:15 am 9-5 THEME PANEL: EDUCATING STUDENTS TO BE GLOBAL CITIZENS Co-sponsored by 10-4 and T-26 Sat 4:15 pm 8-6 QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 45-1 Sat 10:15 am 9-6 EDUCATING FOR CIVIC ENGAGEMENT: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE Co-sponsored by 10-6 8-7 ESTIMATING CAUSAL EFFECTS Sat 2:00 pm 8-8 ADVANCES IN PANEL/TSCS/ MULTILEVEL MODELS Sat 8:00 am 9-7 IMPROVING STUDENT LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE COURSES Co-sponsored by 10-7 8-9 ADVANCES IN EVENT HISTORY MODELS Sun 8:00 am 8-10 ADVANCES IN QUANTITATIVE TEXTUAL ANALYSIS Fri 4:15 pm 10 Political Science Education Division Chair: 8-11 ADVANCES IN IDEAL POINT ESTIMATION Thu 2:00 pm Johnny Goldfinger, Marian University 8-12 ADVANCES IN STUDYING REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL RULES Thu 10:15 am 10-1 A NEW WORLD OF POLITICAL SCIENCE PEDAGOGY Co-sponsored by 9-1 8-13 ADVANCES IN STUDYING ELECTIONS Fri 4:15 pm 10-2 CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN TEACHING CRITICAL THINKING IN THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT COURSE Co-sponsored by 9-2 8-14 USING NETWORK ANALYSIS Fri 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am Thu 4:15 pm Thu 2:00 pm Sat 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am Thu 4:15 pm 201 Related Group Panels Sun 8:00 am 8-2 NEW APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 21-17 Thu 10:15 am RACE AND AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 32-11 7-17 8-15 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 10-3 ENHANCING & CONNECTING EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION & CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Co-sponsored by 9-4 Fri 4:15 pm 11-11 CORRUPTION AND THE SOURCES OF DEMOCRATIC SUCCESS AND FAILURE Co-sponsored by 6-1 10-4 THEME PANEL: EDUCATING STUDENTS TO BE GLOBAL CITIZENS Co-sponsored by 9-5 and T-26 Sat 4:15 pm 11-12 COMPARATIVE SUBNATIONAL POLITICS AND POLITICAL ECONOMY IN ASIA Co-sponsored by 6-2 Sat 8:00 am 10-5 POLITICAL THEORY AND TEACHING Co-sponsored by 1-30 Fri 4:15 pm 11-13 INSTITUTIONAL ORIGINS OF CAPITALISM Co-sponsored by 15-1 Fri 8:00 am 10-6 EDUCATING FOR CIVIC ENGAGEMENT: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE Co-sponsored by 9-6 Thu 2:00 pm 11-14 ILLIBERAL POLITICS IN LIBERAL STATES: STUDYING THE ‘ROUGH EDGES OF DEMOCRACY’ Co-sponsored by 46-1 Sat 2:00 pm 10-7 IMPROVING STUDENT LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE COURSES Co-sponsored by 9-7 Sat 8:00 am 11-15 MORE FREEDOM, LESS TERROR? LIBERALIZATION AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE ARAB WORLD Co-sponsored by 18-1 Thu 4:15 pm 11-16 DEMOCRACY, DICTATORSHIP, AND POLITICAL SUCCESSION Co-sponsored by 12-1 Fri 4:15 pm 11-17 CIVILIAN TARGETING DURING CIVIL WAR: EXPLORING SUBNATIONAL VARIATION Co-sponsored by 12-2 Sat 10:15 am 11-18 DIFFUSION DYNAMICS IN DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES Co-sponsored by 12-3 Sun 8:00 am 11-19 THE POLITICS AND GEOGRAPHY OF DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 6-3 Thu 8:00 am 11 Comparative Politics Division Chair: Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University Yoshiko M. Herrera, University of Wisconsin, Madison 11-1 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONTENTION AND REPRESSION IN RURAL AND URBAN CHINA Co-sponsored by 13-1 11-2 WOMEN, IMMIGRANTS AND LABOR Fri 2:00 pm MARKETS: UNDERSTANDING AND RESPONDING TO LABOR SHORTAGES AND LOW FERTILITY IN AGING SOCIETIES Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group, Panel 1 Thu 8:00 am Sun 10:15 am 11-3 STUDYING INTERESTS AND DISTRIBUTION Thu 2:00 pm 11-20 CIVILIAN AGENCY IN CIVIL WARS Co-sponsored by 12-4 Sun 10:15 am 11-4 MODES OF DEMOCRATIC PARTISAN ACCOUNTABILITY AND ELECTORAL COMPETITION. PROGRAMMATIC AND/OR CLIENTELISTIC CITIZENPOLITICIAN LINKAGES? Sun 8:00 am 11-21 COMPLEXITY AND CLIENTELISM: THE ROLE OF MOBILIZATION AND REGIME TYPE Co-sponsored by 12-5 Sat 2:00 pm 11-22 Thu 10:15 am 11-5 THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION Co-sponsored by 16-1 Sat 10:15 am THE POLITICS OF SETTLERS AND SETTLEMENTS IN CONTESTED TERRITORIES Co-sponsored by 43-1 11-23 FINANCIAL CRISIS AND CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM Thu 4:15 pm 11-7 VIOLENCE: WHAT DOES COMPARATIVE POLITICS CONTRIBUTE TODAY TO UNDERSTANDING AND ADDRESSING GENOCIDE AND CIVIL WAR? Fri 10:15 am INTER-ETHNIC CONTACT AND VIOLENCE: FROM POGROMS AND RIOTS TO WAR AND GENOCIDE Co-sponsored by 43-2 Sat 8:00 am 11-6 11-24 THE POLITICS OF DEMOCRATIC REVERSAL Co-sponsored by 44-1 Fri 8:00 am 11-25 Thu 2:00 pm COMPARATIVE POLITICS IN A GLOBALIZED WORLD: WHAT PROBLEMS OUGHT IT BE ADDRESSING Fri 4:15 pm THE PERSISTENCE OF NATIONALISM AND NATIONBUILDING IN THE 21ST CENTURY Co-sponsored by 7-2 11-26 Fri 2:00 pm 11-9 VARIETIES OF ECONOMIC CHANGE? Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 1 Sat 4:15 pm THE NEW COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF LATIN AMERICA: ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 12-6 11-10 NORTH, WALLIS AND WEINGAST’S “VIOLENCE AND SOCIAL ORDERS” Co-sponsored by 7-1 Thu 10:15 am 11-27 ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 12-7 Fri 2:00 pm 11-8 202 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON DEMOCRACY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 12-8 Sat 4:15 pm 11-47 THE REMAINS OF THE STATE – GOVERNANCE WITH(OUT) GOVERNMENT Co-sponsored by 12-12 11-29 COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF ADMINISTRATIVE POLITICS, DELEGATION AND OVERSIGHT Thu 4:15 pm 11-48 MODELING PARTY PERFORMANCE OVER TIME AND SPACE Sat 10:15 am 11-49 INSURGENT GOVERNANCE OF CIVILIANS DURING CIVIL WAR Co-sponsored by 12-9 Sat 2:00 pm TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE, EQUALITY, AND RECONCILIATION Thu 8:00 am 11-30 11-50 Thu 2:00 pm 11-31 PARTY CHANGE: NEW APPROACHES TO OLD QUESTIONS Fri 2:00 pm 11-32 TRANSFORMATIONS OF BUSINESSGOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION ECONOMIES Co-sponsored by 12-10 Fri 10:15 am DECENTRALIZATION, DEMOCRATIZATION AND GOVERNANCE: DOES DEMOCRACY IMPROVE LOCAL GOVERNANCE IN DECENTRALIZED SETTINGS? 11-51 LEADERSHIP AND POLICY CHANGE IN THE ERA OF COMPLEXITY Co-sponsored by 25-1 Thu 10:15 am 11-52 11-33 GLOBAL POLITICAL CITY AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Thu 8:00 am DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY Co-sponsored by 16-11 11-34 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HEALTH Co-sponsored by 48-1 Sat 10:15 am 11-53 POLITICS AND NON-TAX REVENUE: EXAMINING CAUSAL MECHANISMS Co-sponsored by 16-21 11-35 THE CHANGING POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION Co-sponsored by 14-1 Sun 8:00 am 11-54 HEALTH POLICY, CROSSING NATIONAL BOUNDARIES, AND IDEOLOGICAL PARADIGMS Co-sponsored by 48-4 Fri 4:15 pm 11-36 POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTIONS IN DIVIDED SOCIETIES Fri 8:00 am 11-55 Sat 2:00 pm 11-37 THE ARMED FORCES IN BUSINESS: MILITARY ENTREPRENEURIAL WORK IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 12-11 Thu 10:15 am NEW APPROACHES TO REGIME PERFORMANCE AND TRANSITION Co-sponsored by 6-12 11-56 THE NEW BUSINESS POLITICS IN DEVELOPING AND POST-SOCIALIST COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 12-24 Sat 10:15 am 11-57 POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCE IN DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES: NEW EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE Co-sponsored by 12-25 Fri 10:15 am 11-58 THE POLITICS OF TARGETED SOCIAL POLICY AND CLIENTELISM IN LATIN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 12-32 Fri 10:15 am 11-59 CHANGING BUSINESS - STATE RELATIONS IN THE EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES IN DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Co-sponsored by 12-35 Sat 8:00 am 11-60 COLONIALISM, DEMOCRACY, AND DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 12-36 Fri 4:15 pm 11-61 CHINA AND INDIA AS DEVELOPMENTAL MODELS?: THE CONCEPTUAL CHALLENGES AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF THE CHINESE AND INDIAN DEVELOPMENTAL PATHS Co-sponsored by 12-37 Sat 10:15 am 11-62 INEQUALITY AND CITIZENSHIP IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 12-38 Fri 8:00 am 11-38 RESACRALIZING IMAGINED COMMUNITIES: RETHINKING RELIGION AND NATIONALISM 11-39 THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND SECURITY: THE POLITICS OF POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE OF TURBULENCE Co-sponsored by 18-2 and T-3 Thu 10:15 am EXPERIMENTS IN THE STUDY OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 8-1 Thu 10:15 am DEMOCRATIZATION AND ETHNIC MINORITIES: CONFLICT, PROTECTION, AND ACCOMMODATION Co-sponsored by 44-2 Fri 10:15 am 11-42 MIGRATION AND DEMOCRACY Thu 4:15 pm 11-43 COORDINATED MARKET ECONOMIES UNDER PRESSURE Sat 4:15 pm 11-44 NEW METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO ETHNICITY AND NATIONAL IDENTITY Sat 4:15 pm 11-45 TRANSPARENCY, INFORMATION AND GOVERNANCE Sat 8:00 am 11-46 DEMOCRACY, ELECTIONS, AND POLITICAL (IN)STABILITY Co-sponsored by 44-3 Sat 2:00 pm 11-40 11-41 Sat 8:00 am Fri 8:00 am Sat 2:00 pm Thu 4:15 pm 203 Related Group Panels 11-28 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 12-2 CIVILIAN TARGETING DURING CIVIL WAR: EXPLORING SUBNATIONAL VARIATION Co-sponsored by 11-17 Sat 10:15 am 12-3 DIFFUSION DYNAMICS IN DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES Co-sponsored by 11-18 Sun 8:00 am 12-4 CIVILIAN AGENCY IN CIVIL WARS Co-sponsored by 11-20 Sun 10:15 am Fri 8:00 am 12-5 COMPLEXITY AND CLIENTELISM: THE ROLE OF MOBILIZATION AND REGIME TYPE Co-sponsored by 11-21 Sat 2:00 pm THE POLITICS OF INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 14-10 Sat 10:15 am 12-6 Fri 2:00 pm THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF REDISTRIBUTION IN DIVERSE WELFARE STATES Co-sponsored by 14-11 Thu 4:15 pm THE NEW COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF LATIN AMERICA: ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 11-26 12-7 Fri 2:00 pm ACTOR FRAGMENTATION AND CIVIL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 21-11 Fri 4:15 pm ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 11-27 12-8 Sat 4:15 pm 11-69 PARTY UNITY AND DEFECTION Co-sponsored by 22-3 Sat 2:00 pm FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON DEMOCRACY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 11-28 11-70 MEASURING QUALITY OF GOVERNMENT: IS THERE ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT? Co-sponsored by 24-6 Sat 4:15 pm 12-9 INSURGENT GOVERNANCE OF CIVILIANS DURING CIVIL WAR Co-sponsored by 11-30 Sat 2:00 pm 12-10 TERRITORIAL AUTONOMIES AND MULTINATIONAL FEDERATIONS: INNOVATION AND COMPLEXITY IN THE INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN OF MULTINATIONAL STATES Co-sponsored by 28-1 Thu 8:00 am TRANSFORMATIONS OF BUSINESSGOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION ECONOMIES Co-sponsored by 11-32 Fri 10:15 am 11-71 12-11 Thu 10:15 am 11-72 THE STATE AND GENDER EQUALITY: INSTITUTIONS, POLICIES AND MOVEMENTS Co-sponsored by 31-12 Thu 2:00 pm THE ARMED FORCES IN BUSINESS: MILITARY ENTREPRENEURIAL WORK IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 11-37 12-12 11-73 SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN : NEW APPROACHES Co-sponsored by 31-14 THE REMAINS OF THE STATE – GOVERNANCE WITH(OUT) GOVERNMENT Co-sponsored by 11-47 12-13 ISLAM, SECULARISM, AND SEXUAL EQUALITY: RESISTANCE AND CHANGE IN MUSLIM SOCIETIES Co-sponsored by 31-20 Sun 8:00 am THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE: CAPITAL MARKETS AND ELECTIONS IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD Co-sponsored by 16-12 Thu 8:00 am 11-74 11-75 IS THERE A MULTIMETHOD CONSENSUS IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 46-5 Sat 8:00 am 12-14 Sat 2:00 pm 11-76 DECENTRALIZED GOVERNANCE Fri 4:15 pm AND SOCIAL INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics, Panel 2 THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE SHIFTING STUDY OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 6-24 and T-25 12-15 HOW BAYESIAN METHODS MAKE THE STUDY OF LATIN AMERICAN POLITICS SUBSTANTIALLY BETTER. Co-sponsored by 8-2 Sat 4:15 pm 12-16 INTERNATIONAL DO-GOODERS AND DOMESTIC POLITICAL ECONOMIES 12-17 STATE RESPONSES TO LIBERALIZING GLOBAL PRESSURES 11-63 TAX ME IF YOU CAN: RENEWED STATE-BUILDING AND REVENUE EXTRACTION IN POST-COMMUNIST EUROPE Co-sponsored by 13-6 11-64 POSTCOMMUNIST PARTY POLITICS: COMPARING CENTRAL EUROPE AND THE FORMER SOVIET UNION Co-sponsored by 13-10 Fri 4:15 pm 11-65 POLITICAL TRUST, SATISFACTION, AND PARTICIPATION IN TODAY’S CHINA Co-sponsored by 13-14 11-66 11-67 11-68 Sat 10:15 am Sun 10:15 am 12 Comparative Politics of Developing Countries Division Chair: Ana Maria Bejarano, University of Toronto Antoinette Handley, University of Toronto Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University 12-1 DEMOCRACY, DICTATORSHIP, AND POLITICAL SUCCESSION Co-sponsored by 11-16 204 Fri 4:15 pm Fri 8:00 am Sun 10:15 am Thu 4:15 pm Theme, Division and Related Group Panels EFFECTING SOCIAL CHANGE IN A GLOBALIZED ERA: SOCIAL DEMOCRACY, INEQUALITY AND PRO-POOR POLICIES 12-19 FDI AND THE CHANGING CONTOURS OF DOMESTIC MARKETS Co-sponsored by 16-28 Thu 2:00 pm 12-20 URBANIZATION AND THE POLITICS OF THE CITY IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD Co-sponsored by 30-2 Fri 10:15 am WHO/WHAT ARE ELECTIONS GOOD FOR? ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION, CHANGE AND VOTER MOTIVATIONS IN SELECT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 44-5 Thu 8:00 am 12-21 Fri 2:00 pm 12-22 MOBILIZING ETHNIC AND CLASS IDENTITIES Co-sponsored by 32-12 Fri 8:00 am 12-23 DISAGGREGATING CIVIL WARS Co-sponsored by 18-27 Sat 4:15 pm 12-24 THE NEW BUSINESS POLITICS IN DEVELOPING AND POST-SOCIALIST COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 11-56 Sat 10:15 am 12-25 POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCE IN DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES: NEW EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE Co-sponsored by 11-57 Fri 10:15 am 12-26 ISLAM AND POLITICAL MOBILIZATION IN SOUTHEAST ASIA Sat 2:00 pm MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP: NATIONAL IDENTITIES IN A TRANSNATIONAL WORLD Thu 10:15 am 12-27 12-28 MIGRANTS: AGENTS OF CHANGE? Fri 4:15 pm 12-29 STATE CAPACITY AND CHANGE: NATIONAL AND LOCAL LEVELS Sat 8:00 am 12-30 GOVERNING DIVERSITY: INCLUSIONS AND EXCLUSIONS Thu 2:00 pm 12-31 THE POLITICS OF ETHNICITY, SECTARIANISM AND THE STATE Fri 2:00 pm 12-32 THE POLITICS OF TARGETED SOCIAL POLICY AND CLIENTELISM IN LATIN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 11-58 Fri 10:15 am 12-33 TOWARDS A NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY OF RENTS: LATE DEVELOPMENT IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Sun 8:00 am 12-34 THE POLITICS OF Sat 4:15 pm REDISTRIBUTION IN LATIN AMERICA Co-sponsored by Latin American Studies Association, Panel 1 12-35 CHANGING BUSINESS - STATE RELATIONS IN THE EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES IN DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Co-sponsored by 11-59 Sat 8:00 am 12-36 COLONIALISM, DEMOCRACY, AND DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 11-60 Fri 4:15 pm 12-37 CHINA AND INDIA AS DEVELOPMENTAL MODELS?: THE CONCEPTUAL CHALLENGES AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF THE CHINESE AND INDIAN DEVELOPMENTAL PATHS Co-sponsored by 11-61 Sat 10:15 am 12-38 INEQUALITY AND CITIZENSHIP IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 11-62 Fri 8:00 am 12-39 LOCAL POLITICS IN NEW DEMOCRACIES: PATTERNS OF DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE MEXICAN STATES Co-sponsored by 44-6 12-40 DEMOCRATIZATION, STATE Sat 8:00 am STRENGTH AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: NEW EMPIRICAL AND CONCEPTUAL HORIZONS Co-sponsored by African Politics Conference Group, Panel 1 12-41 DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN AMERICA: CHANGES AND CHALLENGES Thu 2:00 pm 12-42 FROM REBELS TO SOLDIERS: LEGITIMIZING REBELS AND MILITARIES Fri 2:00 pm 12-43 CONFLICTED: VIOLENCE, COUPS AND THEIR AMBIGUOUS CONSEQUENCES Thu 8:00 am 12-44 SOCIAL ORIGINS OF PARTY SYSTEMS AND PARTY-SYSTEM CHANGE Sun 8:00 am 12-45 THE NEW ROLE OF COURTS IN LATIN AMERICA: ARBITERS OF POLITICAL CONFLICTS OR ACTIVE DEFENDERS OF RIGHTS? Co-sponsored by 26-3 Sat 10:15 am 12-46 FEDERALISM IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: FOUNDINGS AND FINANCING Co-sponsored by 28-4 Thu 4:15 pm 12-47 MASS MEDIA AND NATIONAL IDENTITY Co-sponsored by 38-14 Sun 8:00 am 12-48 IT’S NOT EASY GOING GREEN Co-sponsored by 39-8 Sat 10:15 am 12-49 PROTEST AND DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN AMERICA AND EAST ASIA Co-sponsored by 44-17 12-50 VARIETIES OF PRESIDENTIALISM IN LATIN AMERICA: ORIGINS, SCOPE AND CONSEQUENCES Co-sponsored by 44-18 12-51 AGENCY UNDER AUTHORITARIANISM Co-sponsored by 44-23 Thu 8:00 am Sat 4:15 pm Sat 10:15 am Sat 4:15 pm 205 Related Group Panels 12-18 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 12-52 ETHNICITY, RELIGION AND Sat 2:00 pm TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY IN AFRICAN POLITICS Co-sponsored by African Politics Conference Group, Panel 3 13 The Politics of Communist and Former Communist Countries Division Chair: Michael Bernhard, University of Florida 13-1 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONTENTION AND REPRESSION IN RURAL AND URBAN CHINA Co-sponsored by 11-1 Thu 8:00 am THEME ROUNDTABLE: DOES POSTCOMMUNISM STILL MAKE SENSE AS AN ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK? Co-sponsored by T-7 Thu 4:15 pm ROUNDTABLE: WHERE IS EUROPE AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE EUROPEAN? Co-sponsored by 15-2 Thu 2:00 pm ENERGY AS AN INSTRUMENT OF RUSSIAN FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 16-29 Sun 8:00 am 13-2 13-3 13-4 13-5 13-6 13-7 PECULARITIES OF POSTCOMMUNIST ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Co-sponsored by 36-2 Fri 8:00 am TAX ME IF YOU CAN: RENEWED STATE-BUILDING AND REVENUE EXTRACTION IN POST-COMMUNIST EUROPE Co-sponsored by 11-63 Sat 10:15 am AUTHORITARIAN REGIME BUILDING AND BREAKDOWN IN POST-SOVIET EURASIA Co-sponsored by 44-7 Fri 10:15 am 13-8 POLITICAL PARTIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE: 20 YEARS AFTER THE FALL OF COMMUNISM Co-sponsored by 35-1 Thu 10:15 am 13-9 THE POSTCOMMUNIST DEMOCRATIC EXPERIMENT TWENTY YEARS AFTER 1989: TRAJECTORIES AND ASSESSMENTS Sat 8:00 am 13-10 POSTCOMMUNIST PARTY POLITICS: COMPARING CENTRAL EUROPE AND THE FORMER SOVIET UNION Co-sponsored by 11-64 Fri 4:15 pm 13-11 POSTCOMMUNIST IDENTITY POLITICS 13-12 LOCAL GOVERNANCE, POLICY IMPLEMENTATION, AND AUTHORITARIAN RULE IN CHINA THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM AND VARIETIES OF CRISIS? Co-sponsored by 14-8 and T-27 Sat 4:15 pm 13-16 THE AMBIGUOUS POLITICAL LEGACIES OF EU ENLARGMENT Co-sponsored by 15-11 Sat 2:00 pm 14 Advanced Industrial Societies Division Chair: Mark Blyth, Brown University 14-1 THE CHANGING POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION Co-sponsored by 11-35 14-2 THE GOVERNANCE AND CRISIS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE Co-sponsored by 6-8 Fri 8:00 am 14-3 IDEAS AND NORMS IN COMPLEX POLITICAL ORDERS Fri 2:00 pm 14-4 TAXATION AND INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE IN ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES Thu 2:00 pm 14-5 MODELING COMPLEX POLITICAL ENVIRONMENTS 14-6 THE NEW POLITICS OF LABOR 14-7 THEME PANEL: UNDERSTANDING A COMPLEX WORLD: COMPLEXITY THEORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE? Co-sponsored by T-8 Fri 8:00 am 14-8 THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM AND VARIETIES OF CRISIS? Co-sponsored by 13-15 and T-27 Sat 4:15 pm 14-9 THE FINANCIAL CRISIS - THE RETURN OF THE MIXED ECONOMY? Fri 4:15 pm 14-10 THE POLITICS OF INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 11-66 Sat 10:15 am 14-11 THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF REDISTRIBUTION IN DIVERSE WELFARE STATES Co-sponsored by 11-67 Thu 4:15 pm 14-12 CONDITIONS FOR CHANGE: REFORMING ADVANCED WELFARE STATES Co-sponsored by 15-3 14-13 RESPONSES TO NEW IMMIGRATION: THE EUROPEAN UNION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 15-4 14-14 ANTI-AMERICANISM Sat 8:00 am 14-15 WELFARE PREFERENCES IN A POST-INDUSTRIAL ERA Co-sponsored by 15-5 Fri 2:00 pm 14-16 WELFARE STATE AND INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 15-8 Sat 10:15 am 14-17 WHERE IS THE LEFT? Co-sponsored by 15-14 Sun 8:00 am Thu 4:15 pm Sun 10:15 am 13-13 INTELLECTUALS IN POLITICS Fri 2:00 pm 13-14 POLITICAL TRUST, SATISFACTION, AND PARTICIPATION IN TODAY’S CHINA Co-sponsored by 11-65 Fri 8:00 am 206 13-15 Sun 8:00 am Sat 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am Sat 4:15 pm Fri 10:15 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 14-18 YOUTH, CULTURE AND FOOTBALL: VARIETIES OF NATIONALISM IN ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES Co-sponsored by 15-15 Thu 10:15 am 15-16 THE HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME IN EUROPE: ISSUES AND CHALLENGES Co-sponsored by 45-2 14-19 THE COMPLEXITY OF ELECTORAL SYSTEM CHANGE: THE ROLE OF VALUES Co-sponsored by 34-3 Thu 2:00 pm 15-17 IMMIGRANTS VS. NATIONAL IDENTITY? THE PROBLEM OF INTEGRATION IN EUROPE 15-18 RETHINKING PARTY POLITICS IN COMPARATIVE WELFARE STATE RESEARCH Sat 8:00 am 15-19 JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE EUROPEAN UNION Co-sponsored by 26-7 Fri 4:15 pm 15-20 FACING A RELIGIOUS DIVIDE? EUROPE IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY Co-sponsored by 33-7 15-21 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF PARTY POSITIONS IN EUROPEAN DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 35-14 15-22 EUROPE AND ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 36-23 16 International Political Economy Division Chair: H. Richard Friman, Marquette University 15 European Politics and Society Division Chair: Sven Steinmo, European University Institute 15-1 INSTITUTIONAL ORIGINS OF CAPITALISM Co-sponsored by 11-13 15-2 15-4 ROUNDTABLE: WHERE IS EUROPE AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE EUROPEAN? Co-sponsored by 13-3 Thu 2:00 pm CONDITIONS FOR CHANGE: REFORMING ADVANCED WELFARE STATES Co-sponsored by 14-12 Sat 4:15 pm RESPONSES TO NEW IMMIGRATION: THE EUROPEAN UNION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 14-13 Thu 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am Sat 10:15 am Fri 4:15 pm Fri 10:15 am 15-5 WELFARE PREFERENCES IN A POST-INDUSTRIAL ERA Co-sponsored by 14-15 Fri 2:00 pm 16-1 THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION Co-sponsored by 11-5 Sat 10:15 am 15-6 THE HISTORICAL TURN IN DEMOCRATIZATION STUDIES: LESSONS FROM EUROPE Co-sponsored by 44-8 Sat 8:00 am 16-2 INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND DOMESTIC POLICY CHANGE Co-sponsored by 6-4 Fri 10:15 am 16-3 FRANCE AND EUROPE: A Sat 10:15 am REKINDLED AFFECTION? Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 3 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF TRADE AGREEMENTS AND TRADE INSTRUMENTS: NEW INSIGHTS INTO CAUSES AND EFFECTS Co-sponsored by 6-5 Sat 8:00 am 15-7 15-8 WELFARE STATE AND INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 14-16 16-4 CONSTRUCTING US TRADE POLICY Thu 4:15 pm MIGRATION REGIMES: INTERNATIONAL PROSPECTS AND NATIONAL VARIATIONS Sat 4:15 pm Sat 10:15 am 15-9 EXTREME POLITICS Fri 2:00 pm 16-5 15-10 A ‘SECOND TRANSITION’ IN SPAIN? Fri 8:00 am THE SOCIALIST GOVERNMENT OF JOSÉ LUIS RODRÍGUEZ ZAPATERO (2004-08) Co-sponsored by Iberian Studies Group, Panel 1 16-6 ILLICIT FLOWS AND CONTROLS Co-sponsored by 18-3 Fri 4:15 pm 16-7 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION Co-sponsored by 6-6 Fri 8:00 am 16-8 THE POLITICAL RAMIFICATIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS Co-sponsored by 17-1 Fri 10:15 am 15-11 THE AMBIGUOUS POLITICAL LEGACIES OF EU ENLARGMENT Co-sponsored by 13-16 Sat 2:00 pm 15-12 VARIETIES OF CHANGE IN EUROPEAN POLITICAL ECONOMY Co-sponsored by 6-25 Sat 4:15 pm 15-13 ELITES VS CITIZENS: WHO WANTS THE EUROPEAN UNION, WHO DOESN’T AND WHY Thu 4:15 pm 16-9 THE CONTENTIOUS POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Co-sponsored by 42-1 Thu 8:00 am 15-14 WHERE IS THE LEFT? Co-sponsored by 14-17 Sun 8:00 am 16-10 Thu 4:15 pm 15-15 YOUTH, CULTURE AND FOOTBALL: VARIETIES OF NATIONALISM IN ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES Co-sponsored by 14-18 THEME PANEL: CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION Co-sponsored by T-6 16-11 DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY Co-sponsored by 11-52 Thu 10:15 am Sat 2:00 pm 207 Related Group Panels 15-3 Fri 8:00 am Sun 10:15 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 16-31 GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND CURRENT ISSUES Co-sponsored by 17-16 Sat 4:15 pm 16-32 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INTERNATIONAL REGIMES Co-sponsored by 17-18 Fri 8:00 am 17 International Collaboration Division Chair: Fen Hampson, Carleton University 17-1 THE POLITICAL RAMIFICATIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS Co-sponsored by 16-8 17-2 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON BILATERAL INVESTMENT TREATIES: A DISAGGREGATED ANALYTICAL APPROACH Co-sponsored by 16-14 Sat 8:00 am 17-3 CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN FINANCIAL AND OTHER INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 16-16 Fri 2:00 pm 17-4 CREATING A DIALOGUE BETWEEN QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS Thu 4:15 pm 17-5 EUROPE’S TRANSFORMATIVE POWER AND MECHANISMS OF SOCIAL INFLUENCE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Sat 10:15 am Thu 2:00 pm 17-6 EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF TRANSGOVERNMENTAL POLITICS Thu 8:00 am Sat 2:00 pm 17-7 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW Co-sponsored by 18-28 17-8 THE ENFORCEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL COMMITMENTS 17-9 INTERNATIONAL POLICY DIFFUSION: FURTHER INVESTIGATION ON DOMESTICINTERNATIONAL LINKAGE Fri 4:15 pm 17-10 INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT Fri 10:15 am 17-11 THE ROLE OF DOMESTIC COURTS IN INTERNATIONAL AND TRANSNATIONAL POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC PROCESSES Sat 2:00 pm 17-12 COMPLEXITY AND ORGANIZATIONAL ADAPTATION IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Sun 8:00 am 17-13 TRANSFORMING THE FRAGILE STATE: THE ROLE OF INTERNATIONAL BUREAUCRACIES IN MODERN STATE FORMATION Co-sponsored by 18-29 Fri 4:15 pm 17-14 ACCOUNTABILITY, CREDIBILITY, AND CAPTURE OF NGOS IN GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 16-30 Sat 8:00 am 16-12 THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE: CAPITAL MARKETS AND ELECTIONS IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD Co-sponsored by 12-13 16-13 CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN EXCHANGE RATE POLICIES Thu 10:15 am 16-14 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON BILATERAL INVESTMENT TREATIES: A DISAGGREGATED ANALYTICAL APPROACH Co-sponsored by 17-2 Sat 8:00 am 16-15 RESPONDING TO INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC CRISES Sat 4:15 pm 16-16 CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN FINANCIAL AND OTHER INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 17-3 Fri 2:00 pm 16-17 PUBLIC/PRIVATE INTERACTION AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Fri 4:15 pm 16-18 HEATH, ENVIRONMENT, AND INTERNATIONAL OPENNESS Sun 10:15 am 16-19 STATES, MULTINATIONALS, AND EMERGING POWERS Sat 10:15 am 16-20 DYNAMICS OF REGIONAL INTEGRATION Sun 8:00 am 16-21 POLITICS AND NON-TAX REVENUE: EXAMINING CAUSAL MECHANISMS Co-sponsored by 11-53 Thu 4:15 pm 16-22 RETHINKING THE NECESSITY OF THE STATE FOR 16-23 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS ROUNDTABLE: DAVID LAKE’S HIERARCHY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Co-sponsored by 18-4 16-24 THE POLITICS OF FINANCIAL CRISES: RESPONSES TO THE 20072009 CRISIS IN COMPARATIVE AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 6-9 Thu 8:00 am Sat 10:15 am 16-25 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF MIGRANTS’ FINANCIAL FLOWS Co-sponsored by 6-10 16-26 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF GLOBALIZATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 6-11 16-27 TRADE AND PARTISANSHIP Co-sponsored by 6-23 Sun 8:00 am 16-28 FDI AND THE CHANGING CONTOURS OF DOMESTIC MARKETS Co-sponsored by 12-19 Thu 2:00 pm 16-29 ENERGY AS AN INSTRUMENT OF RUSSIAN FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 13-4 Sun 8:00 am ACCOUNTABILITY, CREDIBILITY, AND CAPTURE OF NGOS IN GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 17-14 Sat 8:00 am 16-30 208 Fri 4:15 pm Thu 10:15 am Fri 10:15 am Fri 8:00 am Thu 2:00 pm Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 17-15 PRIVATE STANDARDS, PUBLIC GOALS: NON-STATE ACTORS AS STANDARD-SETTERS 17-16 GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND CURRENT ISSUES Co-sponsored by 16-31 17-17 ROUNDTABLE ON BETH SIMMONS, MOBILIZING FOR HUMAN RIGHTS: INTERNATIONAL LAW IN DOMESTIC POLITICS, CAMBRIDGE 2009 Co-sponsored by 45-3 Sun 10:15 am THE NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION CHALLENGE IN THE MIDDLE EAST: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Co-sponsored by 19-3 18-11 TO INTERVENE OR NOT TO INTERVENE? ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF FOREIGN MILITARY INTERVENTION AND OCCUPATION Sun 8:00 am 18-12 HOSTILE TERRITORY? IN SEARCH OF COMMON GROUND IN THE THEORETICAL AND POLICY DEBATES ON MILITARY PRIVATIZATION Sat 8:00 am 18-13 SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT REVISITED: THEORIES AND PRACTICES Co-sponsored by 19-4 Sat 4:15 pm 18-14 THREAT AS A THEORETICAL QUESTION: MICROFOUNDATIONS IN EMOTION, COGNITION, AND CONSTRUCTION OF COLLECTIVE EXPERIENCE IN DEMOCRATIC CONDITIONS 18-15 CROSS-BORDER THREATS 18-16 CONCEPTUALIZING TERRORISM Co-sponsored by 19-5 Fri 10:15 am Sat 4:15 pm Thu 10:15 am 17-18 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INTERNATIONAL REGIMES Co-sponsored by 16-32 Fri 8:00 am 17-19 SOFT POWER AND SMART POWER Co-sponsored by 19-16 Thu 2:00 pm 17-20 CHANGING CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF SECURITY Co-sponsored by 19-17 Sun 10:15 am 17-21 WHERE’S TRUTH AND JUSTICE? TRACKING CHANGES IN INTERNATIONAL LAW Co-sponsored by 43-6 Fri 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am Thu 2:00 pm Sun 10:15 am 18 International Security 18-17 CREATING DURABLE ALLIANCES Thu 4:15 pm Division Chair: Deborah Avant, University of California, Irvine Dalia Dassa Kaye, RAND Corporation 18-18 Sat 10:15 am 18-1 MORE FREEDOM, LESS TERROR? LIBERALIZATION AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE ARAB WORLD Co-sponsored by 11-15 THE MOTIVES BEHIND INTERVENTIONS Co-sponsored by 20-1 18-19 TESTING SECURITIZATION THEORY BEYOND THE EUROPEAN UNION Fri 2:00 pm 18-20 POWER AND PRESTIGE IN A CHANGING WORLD: CHINA, RUSSIA, AND THE DILEMMAS OF BECOMING A GREAT POWER Fri 8:00 am 18-21 DILEMMAS IN PRIVATE SECURITY, PAST AND PRESENT 18-22 NEW CHALLENGES IN ASIAN REGIONAL SECURITY Co-sponsored by 19-6 18-23 THE ENVIRONMENT AND SECURITY: CONCEPTUALIZATIONS, PROBLEMS AND STRATEGIES Sat 10:15 am 18-24 NEW CASES AND IDEAS ON INTERNATIONAL PEACE BUILDING Sat 4:15 pm 18-25 COUNTERINSURGENCY STRATEGIES Co-sponsored by 19-7 18-27 DISAGGREGATING CIVIL WARS Co-sponsored by 12-23 Sat 4:15 pm 18-28 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW Co-sponsored by 17-7 Fri 8:00 am 18-29 TRANSFORMING THE FRAGILE STATE: THE ROLE OF INTERNATIONAL BUREAUCRACIES IN MODERN STATE FORMATION Co-sponsored by 17-13 Fri 4:15 pm Thu 4:15 pm 18-2 THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND SECURITY: THE POLITICS OF POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE OF TURBULENCE Co-sponsored by 11-39 and T-3 Thu 10:15 am 18-3 ILLICIT FLOWS AND CONTROLS Co-sponsored by 16-6 Fri 4:15 pm 18-4 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS ROUNDTABLE: DAVID LAKE’S HIERARCHY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Co-sponsored by 16-23 Sat 2:00 pm 18-5 POST-CIVIL WAR PROCESSES Co-sponsored by 44-4 Fri 2:00 pm 18-6 TRANSATLANTIC HOMELAND SECURITY COOPERATION: BETWEEN POLICY AND POLITICS 18-7 NEW APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION Co-sponsored by 19-2 18-8 IMMIGRATION, SECURITY AND THE BORDERLANDS IN THE POSTGLOBAL AGE 18-9 RECONSIDERING THE ROLE OF UNCERTAINTY IN IR Thu 8:00 am Fri 8:00 am Sat 10:15 am Fri 4:15 pm Thu 4:15 pm Fri 4:15 pm Thu 8:00 am 209 Related Group Panels 18-10 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 18-30 ROUNDTABLE ON ATOMIC OBSESSION (OXFORD UP, 2009), BY JOHN MUELLER Co-sponsored by 19-8 Sat 10:15 am 19-4 SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT REVISITED: THEORIES AND PRACTICES Co-sponsored by 18-13 18-31 UNIPOLARITY AND WAR IN TODAY’S WORLD Co-sponsored by 19-9 Thu 4:15 pm 19-5 CONCEPTUALIZING TERRORISM Co-sponsored by 18-16 19-6 18-32 THE NPT AT WORK Co-sponsored by 19-10 Sat 8:00 am NEW CHALLENGES IN ASIAN REGIONAL SECURITY Co-sponsored by 18-22 18-33 UNIFYING ANALYSES OF CIVIL AND INTERSTATE WAR Co-sponsored by 21-6 Sat 8:00 am 19-7 COUNTERINSURGENCY STRATEGIES Co-sponsored by 18-25 Thu 8:00 am 18-34 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: AN ASSESSMENT OF R. HARRISON WAGNER’S “WAR AND THE STATE” Co-sponsored by 21-8 Fri 10:15 am 19-8 ROUNDTABLE ON ATOMIC OBSESSION (OXFORD UP, 2009), BY JOHN MUELLER Co-sponsored by 18-30 Sat 10:15 am 18-35 TERRITORIAL DISPUTES: CONFLICT AND RESOLUTION Co-sponsored by 21-9 Sat 4:15 pm 19-9 UNIPOLARITY AND WAR IN TODAY’S WORLD Co-sponsored by 18-31 Thu 4:15 pm 18-36 ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF PEACEKEEPING AND PEACEMAKING Co-sponsored by 21-10 Sun 10:15 am 19-10 THE NPT AT WORK Co-sponsored by 18-32 Sat 8:00 am 19-11 US FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 20-2 Fri 2:00 pm HUMAN RIGHTS, WOMEN’S RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THE BODY IN IR THEORY Co-sponsored by 31-10 Thu 10:15 am 19-12 FUTURE OF WARFARE 19-13 THE END OF AMERICAN HEGEMONY? RISING POWERS AND WORLD ORDER Co-sponsored by 43-3 Sat 2:00 pm 19-14 NATO AT 60: WHAT IS THE FUTURE FOR ALLIANCES Co-sponsored by 20-3 Thu 2:00 pm 19-15 PREPARING FOR THE FUTURE WHILST CONFRONTING THE PRESENT: BRITISH DEFENCE AND SECURITY POLICY IN AN UNSTABLE WORLD Sat 4:15 pm 19-16 SOFT POWER AND SMART POWER Co-sponsored by 17-19 Thu 2:00 pm 19-17 CHANGING CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF SECURITY Co-sponsored by 17-20 Sun 10:15 am 19-18 DEVELOPING MILITARY CAPACITIES 19-19 THE BALANCE OF POWER IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND HISTORICAL ANALYSIS Co-sponsored by 43-7 20 Foreign Policy Division Chair: Christopher Sprecher, Texas A&M University 20-1 THE MOTIVES BEHIND INTERVENTIONS Co-sponsored by 18-18 20-2 US FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 19-11 20-3 NATO AT 60: WHAT IS THE FUTURE FOR ALLIANCES Co-sponsored by 19-14 18-37 18-38 LESSONS IN WAR, LESSONS FROM WAR Co-sponsored by 43-5 Fri 2:00 pm 18-39 ROUNDTABLE: UNDERSTANDING POLITICAL EXTREMISM Co-sponsored by 43-8 Fri 8:00 am 18-40 INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT AND THE FATE OF LIBERAL DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by 43-10 Fri 10:15 am 18-41 GRAND STRATEGY BETWEEN THE WARS Co-sponsored by 43-11 Sat 2:00 pm 18-42 IDENTITY POLITICS AND NATIONALISM IN CHINA: Co-sponsored by 43-18 Sun 8:00 am 19 International Security and Arms Control Division Chair: Andrew M. Dorman, University of London, Kings College 19-1 BEAUTIFUL SOULS AND JUST WARRIORS: GENDER, THE MILITARY, AND PEDAGOGY Co-sponsored by 9-3 19-2 19-3 210 NEW APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION Co-sponsored by 18-7 THE NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION CHALLENGE IN THE MIDDLE EAST: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Co-sponsored by 18-10 Fri 8:00 am Fri 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am Sat 4:15 pm Fri 10:15 am Fri 4:15 pm Sat 10:15 am Sat 8:00 am Thu 4:15 pm Sat 10:15 am Fri 2:00 pm Thu 2:00 pm Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 20-4 BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (1): THEORY Co-sponsored by 21-1 Sat 2:00 pm 21-6 UNIFYING ANALYSES OF CIVIL AND INTERSTATE WAR Co-sponsored by 18-33 20-5 BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (2) EMPIRICS Co-sponsored by 21-2 Sat 4:15 pm 21-7 REPUTATION IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS Co-sponsored by 4-10 Thu 2:00 pm 20-6 FOREIGN POLICY CHALLENGES FOR THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION Fri 10:15 am 21-8 Fri 10:15 am 20-7 THE CAUSES, CONDUCT AND CONSEQUENCES OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION AND NONPROLIFERATION Co-sponsored by 21-3 Thu 4:15 pm AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: AN ASSESSMENT OF R. HARRISON WAGNER’S “WAR AND THE STATE” Co-sponsored by 18-34 21-9 TERRITORIAL DISPUTES: CONFLICT AND RESOLUTION Co-sponsored by 18-35 Sat 4:15 pm 21-10 ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF PEACEKEEPING AND PEACEMAKING Co-sponsored by 18-36 Sun 10:15 am 21-11 ACTOR FRAGMENTATION AND CIVIL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 11-68 Fri 4:15 pm 21-12 MEDIATION AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT Fri 8:00 am 21-13 INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT Thu 10:15 am 21-14 FORMAL THEORY APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Sun 8:00 am 21-15 POST CIVIL CONFLICT Sat 2:00 pm 21-16 CIVIL WAR ONSET Fri 2:00 pm 21-17 NEW APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 8-15 Sat 10:15 am THE ISRAEL LOBBY AT 2. Co-sponsored by 43-4 20-9 CORE VALUES AND PREFERENCES FOR DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN POLICIES Thu 8:00 am ADVANCES IN TURKISH FOREIGN POLICY Sun 10:15 am HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS Fri 4:15 pm TOOLS OF STATECRAFT: FOREIGN AID Sat 2:00 pm TOOLS OF STATECRAFT: SANCTIONS AND FORCE Fri 8:00 am 20-10 20-11 20-12 20-13 Sat 8:00 am 20-14 ELECTIONS AND ATTITUDES IN FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS Thu 10:15 am 20-15 METHODS, MODELS AND THEORY IN FOREIGN POLICY Fri 2:00 pm 20-16 ASIAN FOREIGN POLICY CONCERNS Sun 8:00 am 21-18 DOMESTIC CONSTRAINTS AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Fri 10:15 am 20-17 DOMESTIC POLITICAL STRUCTURE AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 21-5 Thu 2:00 pm 21-19 DOMESTIC POLITICS AND FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 20-18 Thu 4:15 pm 20-18 DOMESTIC POLITICS AND FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 21-19 Thu 4:15 pm 21-20 DOMESTIC INSTITUTIONS AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Sat 8:00 am 21-21 ELECTIONS AND INTERNATIONAL VIOLENCE Fri 8:00 am 21-22 ALLIANCES: FORMATION AND INFLUENCE Fri 2:00 pm 21-23 CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT 22 Legislative Studies Division Chair: Patrick J. Sellers, Davidson College 22-1 THE BALANCE OF POWER BETWEEN CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENT Co-sponsored by 23-1 22-2 PARTISANSHIP AND BIPARTISANSHIP IN THE U.S. CONGRESS 22-3 PARTY UNITY AND DEFECTION Co-sponsored by 11-69 Sat 2:00 pm 22-4 LEGISLATIVE PRODUCTIVITY Fri 8:00 am 21 Conflict Processes Division Chair: Daniel S. Morey, University of Kentucky Megan Shannon, University of Mississippi 21-1 BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (1): THEORY Co-sponsored by 20-4 Sat 2:00 pm 21-2 BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (2) EMPIRICS Co-sponsored by 20-5 Sat 4:15 pm 21-3 THE CAUSES, CONDUCT AND CONSEQUENCES OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION AND NONPROLIFERATION Co-sponsored by 20-7 Thu 4:15 pm 21-4 ALLIANCE FORMATION & OUTCOMES Thu 8:00 am 21-5 DOMESTIC POLITICAL STRUCTURE AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 20-17 Thu 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am Thu 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am 211 Related Group Panels 20-8 Sat 8:00 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 23-5 CHECKING AND BALANCING? INSTITUTIONAL INTERACTIONS AND THE (IN)OPERATION OF THE SEPARATION OF POWERS IN THE ‘WAR ON TERROR’ Co-sponsored by 27-2 Sat 4:15 pm 23-6 PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATION Co-sponsored by 38-1 Sat 2:00 pm Fri 10:15 am 23-7 GOING PUBLIC AND THE RHETORICAL PRESIDENCY Fri 8:00 am ROUNDTABLE: CONGRESS AND THE 21ST CENTURY: FUTURE CHALLENGES AND DEVELOPMENT Fri 4:15 pm 23-8 ASSESSING EXECUTIVE POWER BEFORE, DURING, AND AFTER THE BUSH PRESIDENCY Sun 8:00 am 22-10 LEGISLATORS’ PREFERENCES AND VOTING ACROSS LEGISLATURES Sat 4:15 pm 23-9 PERSONALITY, PERFORMANCE, AND THE PRESIDENT’S LEGACY Thu 2:00 pm 22-11 CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES Thu 4:15 pm 23-10 CONSTITUTENT CONNECTIONS Sat 10:15 am CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE PARTIES Fri 2:00 pm 22-12 22-13 COMMITTEES OUTSIDE THE U.S. CONGRESS 23-11 PRESIDENTIAL LEADERSHIP, THE NEWS MEDIA, AND PUBLIC OPINION Fri 4:15 pm 22-14 WHAT HAPPENED TO INCUMBENCY ADVANTAGE? 23-12 THE PRESIDENT IN FOREIGN AND DEFENSE POLICY-MAKING Sat 10:15 am 22-15 CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE POLITICS OF SIGNING STATEMENTS Co-sponsored by 23-15 Sun 10:15 am 23-13 THE PRESIDENT AND THE BUREAUCRACY Sat 8:00 am 23-14 STAFFING THE WHITE HOUSE Sat 2:00 pm 22-16 PARTIES AND PARTY CONTROL IN U.S. STATE LEGISLATURES Co-sponsored by 29-6 Thu 8:00 am 23-15 22-17 EXPLAINING PARTY POLARIZATION IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 35-16 Fri 2:00 pm CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE POLITICS OF SIGNING STATEMENTS Co-sponsored by 22-15 23-16 GENDER, RACE AND THE PRESIDENCY Co-sponsored by 31-3 Thu 4:15 pm 22-18 POLITICAL PARTIES AND POLICY MAKING IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 35-17 Sat 4:15 pm 23-17 PRESIDENCY AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-13 Fri 10:15 am 22-19 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS AND ACCOUNTABILITY Co-sponsored by 36-28 Sat 10:15 am 24 Public Administration Division Chair: Sally Coleman Selden, Lynchburg College 24-1 REFLECTIONS ON PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITIONS - THE ROLE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Co-sponsored by 23-4 24-2 HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND CHANGE Thu 4:15 pm 24-3 LABOR RELATIONS IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR: CHANGING PARADIGMS, STRUCTURES, AND MEASUREMENT Sun 8:00 am 24-4 GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE ON THE ROLE OF PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-4 Fri 8:00 am 24-5 CRISIS GOVERNANCE: THE ORGANIZATIONAL AND POLITICAL CHALLENGES OF HEALTH EPIDEMIC POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-5 Fri 2:00 pm 22-5 LEGISLATORS’ SPEECH AND ITS DETERMINANTS Sun 8:00 am 22-6 POLITICAL CAREERS AND AMBITION Thu 2:00 pm 22-7 ESTIMATING IDEAL POINTS IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 8-16 Sat 8:00 am 22-8 LEGISLATIVE POLICY BARGAINING AND CHANGE 22-9 Fri 4:15 pm Thu 2:00 pm 23 Presidency Research Division Chair: Randall E. Adkins, University of Nebraska, Omaha 23-1 THE BALANCE OF POWER BETWEEN CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENT Co-sponsored by 22-1 Thu 8:00 am 23-2 PRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 7-19 Sat 10:15 am 23-3 NEWLY EMERGING QUESTIONS AND TRENDS IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS Thu 4:15 pm 23-4 REFLECTIONS ON PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITIONS - THE ROLE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Co-sponsored by 24-1 212 Thu 10:15 am Sun 10:15 am Thu 10:15 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 25-10 PUBLIC PARTICIPATION, DEMOCRATIC THEORY, AND POLICYMAKING 25-11 AGENDA SETTING AND POLICY CHANGE IN NEW CONTEXTS Fri 4:15 pm 25-12 RAISING THE TEMPERATURE ON CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY Co-sponsored by 39-2 Sat 4:15 pm 25-13 FACTORS THAT DRIVE POLICY FORMATION AND IMPLEMENTATION: WHAT DRIVES THE SCIENCE THAT DRIVES POLICY? Co-sponsored by 39-3 25-14 EXPLOITING NATURAL RESOURCES LIKE THERE IS NO TOMORROW Sat 2:00 pm Sun 10:15 am 25-15 ’INTEREST GROUPS AND TRANSPARENCY IN THE Fri 4:15 pm Sat 8:00 am 25-16 THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF CARBON PRICING IN THE OECD Thu 2:00 pm 25-17 OPPORTUNITIES AND TENSIONS SURROUNDING PUBLIC PARTNERSHIPS WITH FAITH-BASED AND COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS AT THE CLOSE OF THE BUSH ERA Sun 8:00 am 25-18 NEOLIBERAL PENALITY AND SHIFTING INSTITUTIONAL NORMS OF RESPONSIBILITY Co-sponsored by 27-11 Sat 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am 25-19 THEME PANEL: RETHINKING STATE POLICY DIFFUSION Co-sponsored by 29-2 and T-15 Fri 2:00 pm Sat 2:00 pm 25-20 CITIES AND PUBLIC POLICY Co-sponsored by 30-7 25-21 LEADERSHIP IN CITY GOVERNMENT AND SCHOOLS: POLICY PROCESSES AND OUTCOMES Co-sponsored by 30-9 Fri 8:00 am 25-22 EXPLAINING SEX EQUALITY POLICY: RELIGION, ECONOMICS, MOVEMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 31-13 Sat 8:00 am 25-23 TACTICAL CHOICES AND ORGANIZATIONAL SUCCESS Co-sponsored by 35-12 Thu 4:15 pm 25-24 ADAPTING TO OR AVOIDING DOOMSDAY: DEALING WITH CLIMATE CHANGE Co-sponsored by 39-4 Fri 10:15 am 25-25 POLICY CHANGE AND THE GOVERNANCE OF CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE Co-sponsored by 39-5 Thu 8:00 am 25-26 TODAY’S SCIENCE FICTION, TOMORROW’S POLICY? Co-sponsored by 39-6 Sun 8:00 am 25-27 CRITICAL PUBLIC POLICY QUESTIONS IN CANADA AND THE US Co-sponsored by 49-6 Sat 4:15 pm MEASURING QUALITY OF GOVERNMENT: IS THERE ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT? Co-sponsored by 11-70 Sat 4:15 pm 24-7 CHANGING PATTERNS OF GOVERNANCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY Thu 2:00 pm 24-8 BEYOND THE HOLLOW STATE: MULTISECTOR GOVERNANCE Fri 10:15 am 24-9 PERFORMANCE SYSTEMS IN MOTION Thu 8:00 am 24-10 WORKFORCE ISSUES IN MOTION Sat 10:15 am 24-11 GENDER AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: NEW APPROACHS AND TOOLS Co-sponsored by 31-1 Fri 4:15 pm 24-12 GOVERNING AT THE LOCAL LEVEL Co-sponsored by 30-3 24-13 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND URBAN GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 30-16 24-14 DIGITAL GOVERNANCE: POLICY DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTRATIVE STRATEGIES Co-sponsored by 40-7 25 Public Policy Division Chair: Sheldon Kamieniecki, University of California, Santa Cruz 25-1 LEADERSHIP AND POLICY CHANGE IN THE ERA OF COMPLEXITY Co-sponsored by 11-51 25-2 SYSTEM EFFECTS, PATH DEPENDENCE, AND HEALTH POLICY Co-sponsored by 48-3 Thu 4:15 pm 25-3 THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL POLICY: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES Co-sponsored by 7-15 Thu 10:15 am 25-4 GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE ON THE ROLE OF PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND POLICY Co-sponsored by 24-4 Fri 8:00 am 25-5 CRISIS GOVERNANCE: THE ORGANIZATIONAL AND POLITICAL CHALLENGES OF HEALTH EPIDEMIC POLICY Co-sponsored by 24-5 Fri 2:00 pm POLITICAL BRANDING: A NEW APPROACH TO MOBILIZATION AND POLICY MAKING Thu 8:00 am 25-6 25-7 GEOENGINEERING AND GLOBAL ORDER Co-sponsored by 39-1 Thu 10:15 am 25-8 EXPLAINING THE SUCCESS AND FAILURE OF CERTAIN HEALTH POLICIES Co-sponsored by 48-6 Thu 4:15 pm IS EDUCATION POLICY SERVING THE DISADVANTAGED? Co-sponsored by 32-13 Sat 2:00 pm 25-9 Thu 2:00 pm Sat 10:15 am Thu 10:15 am 213 Related Group Panels 24-6 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND Sat 10:15 am CIVIL SOCIETY: INTERPRETIVE APPROACHES Co-sponsored by Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and Society, Panel 1 27-2 CHECKING AND BALANCING? INSTITUTIONAL INTERACTIONS AND THE (IN)OPERATION OF THE SEPARATION OF POWERS IN THE ‘WAR ON TERROR’ Co-sponsored by 23-5 26 Law and Courts 27-3 CONSTITUTIONAL EMPIRE Division Chair: Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27-4 ROUNDTABLE: CONSTITUTIONAL IDENTITY Fri 4:15 pm 26-1 COURTS IN THE POLITICAL ENVIRONMENT Sat 2:00 pm 27-5 Fri 8:00 am 26-2 COURTS IN CRISIS AND TRANSITION: LATIN AMERICAN AND POST-COMMUNIST STATES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Sat 8:00 am ROUNDTABLE: SAME-SEX MARRIAGE, COURTS, AND DIRECT DEMOCRACY 27-6 Thu 2:00 pm THE NEW ROLE OF COURTS IN LATIN AMERICA: ARBITERS OF POLITICAL CONFLICTS OR ACTIVE DEFENDERS OF RIGHTS? Co-sponsored by 12-45 Sat 10:15 am AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: MAVEETY AND KNOWLES ON JUSTICES O’CONNOR AND KENNEDY 27-7 Thu 8:00 am 26-4 JUDICIAL BEHAVIOR IN THE COURTS OF APPEALS Thu 4:15 pm THEME PANEL: HOW CONSTITUTIONS WORK: DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHES TO CONSTITUTIONAL FUNCTION Co-sponsored by T-1 27-8 COURTS AND PUBLIC OPINION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Sun 8:00 am POPULAR CONSTITUTIONALISM IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE Sat 2:00 pm 26-5 27-9 JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-1 RELIGION AND CONSTITUTIONAL CONFLICT Thu 2:00 pm 26-6 27-10 JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE EUROPEAN UNION Co-sponsored by 15-19 Fri 4:15 pm LAWYERING, ADVOCACY, AND INTERESTS Thu 4:15 pm 26-7 27-11 26-8 METHODS IN JUDICIAL POLITICS Fri 8:00 am NEOLIBERAL PENALITY AND SHIFTING INSTITUTIONAL NORMS OF RESPONSIBILITY Co-sponsored by 25-18 26-9 JUDICIAL SELECTION AND JUDICIAL RETIREMENT Fri 2:00 pm 28 Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations 26-10 STRATEGIC INFLUENCES ON JUDICIAL DECISION-MAKING Sat 4:15 pm Division Chair: Robert Vipond, University of Toronto 26-11 JUDICIAL OPINION WRITING IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Thu 8:00 am 28-1 26-12 CANADIAN COURTS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 49-1 Fri 10:15 am TERRITORIAL AUTONOMIES AND MULTINATIONAL FEDERATIONS: INNOVATION AND COMPLEXITY IN THE INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN OF MULTINATIONAL STATES Co-sponsored by 11-71 26-13 JUDICIAL POLITICS AND THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH Thu 2:00 pm 28-2 26-14 SOCIAL IMPACTS OF THE COURTS 26-15 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: SAUL BRENNER AND JOSEPH WHITMEYER, STRATEGY ON THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION Fri 2:00 pm OF FEDERATIONS: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Panel 1 28-3 FEDERALISM, NATIONALISM, AND DEMOCRACY: A ROUNDTABLE HONORING SAMUEL H. BEER’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM Co-sponsored by APSA 28-4 FEDERALISM IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: FOUNDINGS AND FINANCING Co-sponsored by 12-46 28-5 FEDERALISM, MEDICAID, AND CHANGING MODES OF SOCIAL SERVICE DELIVERY 25-28 26-3 27 Constitutional Law and Jurisprudence Division Chair: Mark E. Brandon, Vanderbilt Law School Pamela Brandwein, University of Michigan 27-1 ROUNDTABLE: CLINTON ROSSITER’S CONSTITUTIONAL DICTATORSHIP: CRISIS GOVERNMENT IN THE MODERN DEMOCRACIES: STILL RELEVANT? Co-sponsored by 1-7 214 Thu 10:15 am Fri 8:00 am Sun 10:15 am Sun 8:00 am Sat 4:15 pm Sat 10:15 am Sat 8:00 am Thu 8:00 am Sat 2:00 pm Thu 4:15 pm Sat 8:00 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 28-6 FEDERAL MANDATES IN THE STATES: IMPLEMENTATION AND RESISTANCE Co-sponsored by 29-14 28-7 THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA AND THE CITIES Co-sponsored by 30-14 and T-23 28-8 28-9 28-11 POLICY RESPONSIVENESS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 37-6 29-12 KEY CONCEPTS IN STATE POLITICS AND POLICY RESEARCH 29-13 GUBERNATORIAL POLITICS Fri 4:15 pm 29-14 FEDERAL MANDATES IN THE STATES: IMPLEMENTATION AND RESISTANCE Co-sponsored by 28-6 Sat 4:15 pm 29-15 THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE STATE REACTIONS TO LGBT RIGHTS CLAIMS Co-sponsored by 47-5 and T-5 30 Urban Politics Division Chair: Peter F. Burns, Loyola University New Orleans Kristin Ruth Good, Dalhousie University 30-1 POLITICS, RACE AND THE CITY Co-sponsored by 32-2 Thu 2:00 pm 30-2 URBANIZATION AND THE POLITICS OF THE CITY IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD Co-sponsored by 12-20 Fri 10:15 am 30-3 GOVERNING AT THE LOCAL LEVEL Co-sponsored by 24-12 Sun 10:15 am 30-4 THE ONCE AND FUTURE STUDY OF CITY POLITICS: OVERCOMING THE MALAISE ABOUT THEORY Fri 10:15 am 30-5 ROUNDTABLE: A REEXAMINATION ON THE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF CLARENCE STONE’S REGIME POLITICS: GOVERNING ATLANTA: 1946-1988 Fri 2:00 pm 30-6 URBAN CAMPAIGNS, VOTING, AND ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 36-4 Thu 8:00 am 30-7 CITIES AND PUBLIC POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-20 Thu 10:15 am 30-8 RAINBOW’S END? AN EXAMINATION OF AN URBAN CLASSIC Co-sponsored by 32-15 Thu 4:15 pm 30-9 LEADERSHIP IN CITY GOVERNMENT AND SCHOOLS: POLICY PROCESSES AND OUTCOMES Co-sponsored by 25-21 Fri 8:00 am 30-10 ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN CITIES Co-sponsored by 42-3 Fri 4:15 pm 30-11 NEW DIRECTIONS IN URBAN/ LOCAL POLITICS RESEARCH Fri 10:15 am 30-12 ROUNDTABLE: STUDYING CANADIAN CITIES: A SUB-FIELD IN MOTION Co-sponsored by 49-2 Thu 2:00 pm 30-13 THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE OF MULTICULTURALISM IN TORONTO Co-sponsored by T-28 Sun 8:00 am Sat 10:15 am Sat 4:15 pm DO WE NEED A NEW ACIR: Fri 10:15 am REFLECTIONS ON THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE U.S. ACIR Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism, Panel 1 SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS Fri 8:00 am AND THE STIMULUS PACKAGES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics, Panel 1 NON-METROPOLITAN POLICY AND Sun 8:00 am GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Panel 2 29 State Politics and Policy Section Division Chair: Beth Reingold, Emory University 29-1 JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 26-6 29-2 THEME PANEL: RETHINKING STATE POLICY DIFFUSION Co-sponsored by 25-19 and T-15 Fri 2:00 pm 29-3 ELECTING WOMEN TO STATE AND LOCAL OFFICE Co-sponsored by 31-2 Fri 4:15 pm 29-4 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND REPRESENTATION IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 32-14 Fri 8:00 am 29-5 POLITICS AND PUNISHMENT IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 42-2 Sun 8:00 am 29-6 PARTIES AND PARTY CONTROL IN U.S. STATE LEGISLATURES Co-sponsored by 22-16 Thu 8:00 am 29-7 SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY IN THE STATES Sun 10:15 am 29-8 ELECTORAL REFORM, VOTING TECHNOLOGY, AND EQUAL ACCESS Co-sponsored by 36-3 Fri 10:15 am 29-9 PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 35-2 Sat 8:00 am CONNECTICUT’S NEW PUBLIC FINANCING SYSTEM: A FIRST LOOK Sat 2:00 pm 29-10 29-11 Thu 10:15 am Thu 10:15 am Thu 4:15 pm Thu 2:00 pm 215 Related Group Panels 28-10 ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT TERRITORIAL RESCALING, HOW DO WE KNOW IT AND WHY SHOULD WE STUDY IT: PERSPECTIVES FROM THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Co-sponsored by 30-15 Sat 4:15 pm Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 30-14 THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA AND THE CITIES Co-sponsored by 28-7 and T-23 Sat 10:15 am 30-15 ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT TERRITORIAL RESCALING, HOW DO WE KNOW IT AND WHY SHOULD WE STUDY IT: PERSPECTIVES FROM THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Co-sponsored by 28-8 Sat 4:15 pm 30-16 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND URBAN GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 24-13 Sat 8:00 am 30-17 ORGANIZING DIVERSE COMMUNITIES: NEW STRATEGIES FOR A NEW CENTURY Co-sponsored by 42-5 Women and Politics Research Section Division Chair: S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University 31-1 GENDER AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: NEW APPROACHS AND TOOLS Co-sponsored by 24-11 Fri 4:15 pm 31-2 ELECTING WOMEN TO STATE AND LOCAL OFFICE Co-sponsored by 29-3 Fri 4:15 pm 31-3 GENDER, RACE AND THE PRESIDENCY Co-sponsored by 23-16 Thu 4:15 pm 31-4 ELECTED OFFICIALS AT THE INTERSECTION OF GENDER AND RACE Co-sponsored by 32-16 Fri 10:15 am BETWEEN MINORITY INCLUSION AND GENDER EQUALITY? ANALYZING IDENTITIES AND INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 32-17 Sat 4:15 pm GENDER IN CANADIAN POLITICS AND POLICY Co-sponsored by 49-3 Thu 8:00 am GENDERING POLITICAL ORGANIZING: WOMEN, MEN AND ACTIVISM IN THE US Co-sponsored by 35-3 Sun 8:00 am SELLING SEX, SELLING SELVES? GENDER, THE SEX TRADE AND THE STATE Co-sponsored by 47-1 Sat 10:15 am 31-6 31-7 31-8 31-9 31-10 31-11 216 THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 32-18 and T-16 HUMAN RIGHTS, WOMEN’S RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THE BODY IN IR THEORY Co-sponsored by 18-37 THEORIZING DIMENSIONS OF WOMEN’S EQUAL CITIZENSHIP Co-sponsored by 3-32 THE STATE AND GENDER EQUALITY: INSTITUTIONS, POLICIES AND MOVEMENTS Co-sponsored by 11-72 31-13 EXPLAINING SEX EQUALITY POLICY: RELIGION, ECONOMICS, MOVEMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 25-22 31-14 SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN : NEW APPROACHES Co-sponsored by 11-73 31-15 WOMEN IN MOTION: ADVANCES AND SETBACKS IN IMPLEMENTING WOMEN’S RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 45-4 Fri 10:15 am 31-16 THE POLITICS OF BACKLASH: THEORY AND CASE STUDIES IN DYNAMIC RESISTANCE Co-sponsored by 42-4 Thu 4:15 pm 31-17 THE IMPACT OF GENDER QUOTAS: DESCRIPTIVE, SUBSTANTIVE, AND SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATION Co-sponsored by 34-1 Sat 2:00 pm 31-18 DEMOCRACY AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF CAREWORK Co-sponsored by 3-33 Fri 8:00 am 31-19 BLACK FEMINIST INTERSECTIONALITY IN ACTION: A ROUNDTABLE ON BLACK WOMEN, CULTURAL IMAGES, AND SOCIAL POLICY Co-sponsored by 32-19 Sat 10:15 am 31-20 ISLAM, SECULARISM, AND SEXUAL EQUALITY: RESISTANCE AND CHANGE IN MUSLIM SOCIETIES Co-sponsored by 11-74 Sun 8:00 am 31-21 THE BEST WOMEN FOR THE JOB: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON FEMALE POLITICIANS’ PATHWAYS TO POWER Co-sponsored by 34-9 Thu 8:00 am 31-22 GENDER AND VOTER BEHAVIOR: 2008 AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 36-22 Fri 8:00 am 31-23 GENDER AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-20 Sat 8:00 am 31-24 GENDERED POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Co-sponsored by 38-16 Sat 2:00 pm 31-25 THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN Co-sponsored by 41-5 Fri 4:15 pm 31-26 STATES OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE: WHAT ELSE IS AT STAKE? Co-sponsored by 47-2 Fri 2:00 pm 31-27 GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 47-4 Fri 4:15 pm Thu 8:00 am 31 31-5 31-12 Fri 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am Fri 4:15 pm Thu 2:00 pm Sat 8:00 am Sun 10:15 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Division Chair: Diane-Michele Prindeville, New Mexico State University Mark Q. Sawyer, University of California, Los Angeles 32-1 RACE, RACISMS, XENOPHOBIA AND POLITICS Co-sponsored by 5-1 Fri 10:15 am 32-2 POLITICS, RACE AND THE CITY Co-sponsored by 30-1 Thu 2:00 pm 32-3 PAN-ETHNICITY, EXPLORING NEW HORIZONS IN IDENTITY 32-4 COMPARATIVE RACIAL AND ETHNIC POLITICS Thu 4:15 pm 32-5 COALITIONS, AND MINORITY POLITICS Sat 2:00 pm 32-6 RACE, ETHNICITY, POPULAR CULTURE AND POLITICS Fri 4:15 pm Sat 8:00 am 32-7 ASSIMILATION, INCORPORATION OR RACIALIZATION? Sat 4:15 pm 32-8 GENDER, RACE AND SEXUALITY Thu 10:15 am 32-9 POLICY FOCUS ON FAT POOR MINORITIES: FROM WELFARE REFORM TO FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Thu 8:00 am 32-10 THEME PANEL: THE Fri 2:00 pm GLOBALIZATION OF THE ‘FRENCH MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN ETHNIC AND RACIAL POLITICS? Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 1 and T-14 32-11 RACE AND AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 7-16 Sun 8:00 am 32-12 MOBILIZING ETHNIC AND CLASS IDENTITIES Co-sponsored by 12-22 Fri 8:00 am 32-13 IS EDUCATION POLICY SERVING THE DISADVANTAGED? Co-sponsored by 25-9 Sat 2:00 pm 32-14 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND REPRESENTATION IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-4 Fri 8:00 am 32-15 32-16 32-17 32-18 RAINBOW’S END? AN EXAMINATION OF AN URBAN CLASSIC Co-sponsored by 30-8 Thu 4:15 pm ELECTED OFFICIALS AT THE INTERSECTION OF GENDER AND RACE Co-sponsored by 31-4 Fri 10:15 am BETWEEN MINORITY INCLUSION AND GENDER EQUALITY? ANALYZING IDENTITIES AND INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 31-5 Sat 4:15 pm THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 31-9 and T-16 Fri 2:00 pm 32-19 BLACK FEMINIST INTERSECTIONALITY IN ACTION: A ROUNDTABLE ON BLACK WOMEN, CULTURAL IMAGES, AND SOCIAL POLICY Co-sponsored by 31-19 Sat 10:15 am 32-20 RACE AND ELECTORAL POLITICS IN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 36-15 Thu 4:15 pm 32-21 PREJUDICE, RACISM, RACIAL THREAT, AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-22 Fri 4:15 pm 32-22 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE POLITICS OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE Co-sponsored by 47-3 Sat 2:00 pm 33 Religion and Politics Division Chair: James Matthew Wilson, Southern Methodist University 33-1 RELIGION AND AMERICAN PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS Co-sponsored by 36-5 33-2 EVANGELICAL POLITICAL Sat 8:00 am THOUGHT AND NATURAL LAW Co-sponsored by Christians in Political Science, Panel 1 33-3 THE DISAPPEARING GOD GAP? Thu 4:15 pm RELIGION IN THE 2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Co-sponsored by Christians in Political Science, Panel 2 33-4 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON STANLEY HAUERWAS AND ROMAND COLES, CHRISTIANITY, DEMOCRACY, AND THE RADICAL ORDINARY Co-sponsored by 2-49 Sat 10:15 am 33-5 RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES: EVIDENCE FROM FIVE MUSLIM DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 44-9 Sun 8:00 am 33-6 RELIGIOUS POLITICAL PARTIES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 35-4 33-7 FACING A RELIGIOUS DIVIDE? EUROPE IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY Co-sponsored by 15-20 33-8 RELIGION AND EUROPEAN POLITICS Thu 8:00 am 33-9 POLITICS AND RELIGION IN THE AMERICAN FOUNDING ERA Thu 2:00 pm 33-10 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON MELISSA DECKMAN’S SCHOOL BOARD BATTLES Sat 2:00 pm 33-11 RELIGION AND POLITICS IN CANADA Co-sponsored by 49-5 Sat 10:15 am Fri 2:00 pm Fri 8:00 am Thu 10:15 am 217 Related Group Panels 32 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 35-4 RELIGIOUS POLITICAL PARTIES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 33-6 Fri 8:00 am 35-5 PARTY LINKAGE AND PARTY GOVERNMENT IN CONTEMPORARY DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 34-10 Fri 8:00 am 35-6 THE POLITICS OF PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS Co-sponsored by 36-7 Sat 8:00 am 35-7 STABILITY AND CHANGE IN AMERICAN PARTISANSHIP Co-sponsored by 36-8 Sat 10:15 am 35-8 THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF NELSON W. POLSBY Co-sponsored by 7-20 Fri 10:15 am 35-9 THEME ROUNDTABLE: 2008 AND THE FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN PARTY COALITIONS Co-sponsored by T-17 Thu 10:15 am 35-10 AUTHOR MEETS READERS: LARRY BARTELS’ ‘UNEQUAL DEMOCRACY’ Sat 8:00 am 35-11 ADVOCACY AND LEGISLATIVE ACTIVITY 35-12 TACTICAL CHOICES AND ORGANIZATIONAL SUCCESS Co-sponsored by 25-23 35-13 NETWORKS OF ADVOCATES AND ACTIVISTS Co-sponsored by 8-17 Sat 2:00 pm 35-14 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF PARTY POSITIONS IN EUROPEAN DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 15-21 Sat 10:15 am 35-15 PARTY POLITICS AND LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS Fri 8:00 am 35-16 EXPLAINING PARTY POLARIZATION IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 22-17 Fri 2:00 pm 35-17 POLITICAL PARTIES AND POLICY MAKING IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 22-18 Sat 4:15 pm 34 Representation and Electoral Systems Division Chair: Jack Vowles, University of Exeter 34-1 THE IMPACT OF GENDER QUOTAS: DESCRIPTIVE, SUBSTANTIVE, AND SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATION Co-sponsored by 31-17 Sat 2:00 pm 34-2 TURNOUT AND ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 36-6 Sat 2:00 pm 34-3 THE COMPLEXITY OF ELECTORAL SYSTEM CHANGE: THE ROLE OF VALUES Co-sponsored by 14-19 Thu 2:00 pm 34-4 MINORITY AND DESCRIPTIVE REPRESENTATION Sat 4:15 pm 34-5 COMPARING THE REPRESENTATIVE OUTCOMES OF INSTITUTIONAL DIFFERENCES Fri 4:15 pm 34-6 BEYOND THE BALLOT BOX: INSTITUTIONS, PARTICIPATION AND REPRESENTATION 34-7 THEME PANEL: CITIZENS’ ASSEMBLIES AND DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by T-21 Fri 4:15 pm Thu 2:00 pm Sat 2:00 pm Thu 4:15 pm 34-8 REPRESENTATION AND LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR Fri 10:15 am 34-9 THE BEST WOMEN FOR THE JOB: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON FEMALE POLITICIANS’ PATHWAYS TO POWER Co-sponsored by 31-21 Thu 8:00 am PARTY LINKAGE AND PARTY GOVERNMENT IN CONTEMPORARY DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 35-5 Fri 8:00 am 34-11 BIAS AND RESPONSIVENESS IN ELECTORAL SYSTEMS Co-sponsored by 36-34 Fri 2:00 pm 34-12 ELECTION LAW ISSUES FROM THE Sat 2:00 pm 2008 ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by Law and Political Process Study Group, Panel 1 35 Political Organizations and Parties 36 Elections and Voting Behavior Division Chair: Marie Hojnacki, Pennsylvania State University Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame Division Chair: Christopher J. Anderson, Cornell University 35-1 POLITICAL PARTIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE: 20 YEARS AFTER THE FALL OF COMMUNISM Co-sponsored by 13-8 36-1 CANDIDATE EVALUATIONS Co-sponsored by 5-2 36-2 PECULARITIES OF POSTCOMMUNIST ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Co-sponsored by 13-5 Fri 8:00 am 36-3 ELECTORAL REFORM, VOTING TECHNOLOGY, AND EQUAL ACCESS Co-sponsored by 29-8 Fri 10:15 am 36-4 URBAN CAMPAIGNS, VOTING, AND ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 30-6 Thu 8:00 am 34-10 Thu 10:15 am 35-2 PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-9 Sat 8:00 am 35-3 GENDERING POLITICAL ORGANIZING: WOMEN, MEN AND ACTIVISM IN THE US Co-sponsored by 31-7 Sun 8:00 am 218 Thu 8:00 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 36-5 RELIGION AND AMERICAN PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS Co-sponsored by 33-1 Fri 2:00 pm 36-6 TURNOUT AND ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 34-2 Sat 2:00 pm 36-7 THE POLITICS OF PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS Co-sponsored by 35-6 Sat 8:00 am 36-8 STABILITY AND CHANGE IN AMERICAN PARTISANSHIP Co-sponsored by 35-7 LEARNING, PERSISTENCE, AND HABITS IN VOTING 36-31 REVISITING THE AMERICAN VOTER Co-sponsored by 37-10 36-32 UNDERSTANDING RECORD VOTER Fri 4:15 pm PARTICIPATION IN THE FRENCH ELECTIONS OF 2007 AND THE U.S. ELECTIONS OF 2008 Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 4 36-33 WHAT’S NOW AND WHAT’S NEXT: THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTION STUDIES Co-sponsored by 37-11 Sat 4:15 pm 36-34 BIAS AND RESPONSIVENESS IN ELECTORAL SYSTEMS Co-sponsored by 34-11 Fri 2:00 pm 36-35 A TASTE FOR POLITICS: THE ROOTS AND DYNAMICS OF POLITICAL INTEREST 37 Public Opinion Division Chair: Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University 37-1 FRAMING Co-sponsored by 5-3 Sun 8:00 am 37-2 VALUES Co-sponsored by 5-4 Fri 4:15 pm 37-3 POLITICAL INFORMATION Co-sponsored by 5-5 Fri 2:00 pm 37-4 DELIBERATION AND SOCIAL NETWORKS Co-sponsored by 5-6 Sat 4:15 pm 37-5 NEW APPROACHES TO STUDYING PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 8-5 Fri 10:15 am 37-6 POLICY RESPONSIVENESS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-11 Thu 10:15 am 37-7 ELECTIONS AND THE ECONOMY: NEW DIRECTIONS Co-sponsored by 36-9 Fri 8:00 am 37-8 THE 2008 ELECTION AND THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN POLITICS Co-sponsored by 36-10 Fri 2:00 pm 37-9 POLARIZATION Co-sponsored by 36-12 Sun 8:00 am 37-10 REVISITING THE AMERICAN VOTER Co-sponsored by 36-31 37-11 WHAT’S NOW AND WHAT’S NEXT: THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTION STUDIES Co-sponsored by 36-33 Sat 4:15 pm Sat 8:00 am Sat 10:15 am ELECTIONS AND THE ECONOMY: NEW DIRECTIONS Co-sponsored by 37-7 Fri 8:00 am 36-10 THE 2008 ELECTION AND THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN POLITICS Co-sponsored by 37-8 Fri 2:00 pm 36-11 FIELD EXPERIMENTS AND MOBILIZATION Fri 8:00 am 36-12 POLARIZATION Co-sponsored by 37-9 Sun 8:00 am 36-13 MONEY IN AMERICAN ELECTIONS Fri 10:15 am 36-14 VOTERS AND CANDIDATES Sat 10:15 am 36-15 RACE AND ELECTORAL POLITICS IN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 32-20 Thu 4:15 pm THE AMERICAN VOTER IN CONTEXT: NEIGHBORHOODS, SOCIAL ENVIRONMENTS, AND THE VOTE Fri 4:15 pm 36-17 VOTERS, ELECTIONS, AND THE INTERNET Sun 10:15 am 36-18 EXPLAINING TURNOUT IN AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTIONS 36-19 VOTERS AND WELFARE STATES 36-20 HOW ELECTION RULES AND ADMINISTRATION AFFECT VOTERS 36-21 LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS AND REPRESENTATION Sat 4:15 pm 36-22 GENDER AND VOTER BEHAVIOR: 2008 AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 31-22 Fri 8:00 am 36-23 EUROPE AND ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 15-22 Fri 4:15 pm 36-24 ECONOMIC SELF-INTEREST AND THE VOTE Thu 4:15 pm 36-25 CORRECT VOTING Co-sponsored by 5-13 Thu 2:00 pm 36-26 ELECTORAL VOLATILITY 36-27 VOTERS IN SPACE: SPATIAL MODELS OF VOTING AND ELECTIONS Fri 10:15 am 36-28 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS AND ACCOUNTABILITY Co-sponsored by 22-19 Sat 10:15 am 37-12 BIOLOGY, GENETICS, AND POLITICS Co-sponsored by 5-14 36-29 SOCIAL PROCESSES AND VOTING Sat 2:00 pm 37-13 PRESIDENCY AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 23-17 Thu 8:00 am Sat 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am Sat 8:00 am Sat 4:15 pm Thu 10:15 am Thu 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am Fri 10:15 am 219 Related Group Panels 36-9 36-16 36-30 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 37-14 THE PUZZLE OF POPULAR Sat 2:00 pm LEGITIMACY Co-sponsored by Latin American Studies Association, Panel 2 38-9 GOVERNMENTAL NEWS MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES: EXAMINING THE INTERNATIONAL EVIDENCE 37-15 RELIGION, PUBLIC OPINION, AND POLITICS 38-10 37-16 REPRESENTATION Thu 4:15 pm DELIBERATION, SOCIAL NETWORKS AND THE FRAMING OF DISCOURSE 37-17 IDEOLOGY Co-sponsored by 5-15 Fri 2:00 pm 38-11 CAMPAIGN MESSAGES: IMPACTS OF INFORMATION QUALITY AND TONE Sat 10:15 am 37-18 POLITICAL TRUST Co-sponsored by 5-16 Sat 10:15 am 38-12 MEDIA PREFERENCES AND POLITICAL LEARNING Thu 8:00 am 37-19 IMMIGRATION Thu 8:00 am 38-13 GENDER AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 31-23 Sat 8:00 am NEWS, INFORMATION AND MOBILIZATION Thu 2:00 pm 37-20 38-14 MASS MEDIA AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 38-2 Sat 4:15 pm MASS MEDIA AND NATIONAL IDENTITY Co-sponsored by 12-47 Sun 8:00 am 37-21 37-22 PREJUDICE, RACISM, RACIAL THREAT, AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 32-21 Fri 4:15 pm 38-15 COMMUNICATING AND FRAMING POLITICAL IDENTITIES Sat 8:00 am 38-16 COMPARATIVE PUBLIC OPINION Fri 4:15 pm GENDERED POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Co-sponsored by 31-24 Sat 2:00 pm 37-23 37-24 PUBLIC OPINION AND THE WAR ON TERRORISM 38-17 Sat 4:15 pm 37-25 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: TALKING TOGETHER: PUBLIC DELIBERATION AND POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 38-6 LEGISLATURES AND INTERNET USE: GOVERNING AND CAMPAIGNING Co-sponsored by 40-3 38-18 INTERNET: COLLECTIVE ACTION, SOCIAL MOBILIZATION, AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Co-sponsored by 40-4 38-19 NEW STRATEGIES OF POLITICAL COMMUNICATION IN CANADA Co-sponsored by 49-7 39 Science, Technology and Environmental Politics Division Chair: Mark Zachary Taylor, Georgia Institute of Technology Patricia S. Wrightson, The National Academies 39-1 GEOENGINEERING AND GLOBAL ORDER Co-sponsored by 25-7 Thu 10:15 am 39-2 RAISING THE TEMPERATURE ON CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-12 Sat 4:15 pm 39-3 FACTORS THAT DRIVE POLICY FORMATION AND IMPLEMENTATION: WHAT DRIVES THE SCIENCE THAT DRIVES POLICY? Co-sponsored by 25-13 Sat 10:15 am 39-4 ADAPTING TO OR AVOIDING DOOMSDAY: DEALING WITH CLIMATE CHANGE Co-sponsored by 25-24 Fri 10:15 am 39-5 POLICY CHANGE AND THE GOVERNANCE OF CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE Co-sponsored by 25-25 Thu 8:00 am 39-6 TODAY’S SCIENCE FICTION, TOMORROW’S POLICY? Co-sponsored by 25-26 Sun 8:00 am 39-7 WHEN SCIENCE BEGETS VALUES AND VICE VERSA Fri 4:15 pm 37-26 37-27 Fri 8:00 am Thu 8:00 am Sat 8:00 am COMMUNICATION AND POLITICAL SUPPORT Co-sponsored by 38-8 Fri 10:15 am EXAMINING ATTITUDES ABOUT GAY RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 47-6 Sun 8:00 am 38 Political Communication Division Chair: Stephen J. Farnsworth, George Mason University 38-1 PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATION Co-sponsored by 23-6 Sat 2:00 pm 38-2 MASS MEDIA AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-21 Sat 4:15 pm 38-3 MEDIA, PARTIES, AND THE 2008 ELECTIONS: CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES COMPARED Fri 8:00 am 38-4 FRAMING EXPERIMENTS IN THE 2008 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN 38-5 NEW MEDIA, NEW POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 40-1 Fri 2:00 pm 38-6 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: TALKING TOGETHER: PUBLIC DELIBERATION AND POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 37-25 Sat 8:00 am Fri 10:15 am 38-7 NEWS ACROSS BORDERS Thu 4:15 pm 38-8 COMMUNICATION AND POLITICAL SUPPORT Co-sponsored by 37-26 Fri 10:15 am 220 Fri 2:00 pm Thu 10:15 am Sat 10:15 am Fri 8:00 am Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 39-8 IT’S NOT EASY GOING GREEN Co-sponsored by 12-48 Sat 10:15 am 41-8 JUSTICE, PASSION, AND SELFFri 2:00 pm KNOWLEDGE IN PLATO AND ARISTOPHANES Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 2 Information Technology and Politics Division Chair: Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University 42 New Political Science 40-1 NEW MEDIA, NEW POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 38-5 Fri 2:00 pm Division Chair: Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University 40-2 THEME PANEL: WEB 2.0 AND SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE 2008 ELECTIONS AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by T-18 Fri 4:15 pm 42-1 THE CONTENTIOUS POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Co-sponsored by 16-9 Thu 8:00 am 40-3 LEGISLATURES AND INTERNET USE: GOVERNING AND CAMPAIGNING Co-sponsored by 38-17 Sat 4:15 pm 42-2 POLITICS AND PUNISHMENT IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-5 Sun 8:00 am 42-3 ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN CITIES Co-sponsored by 30-10 Fri 4:15 pm 42-4 THE POLITICS OF BACKLASH: THEORY AND CASE STUDIES IN DYNAMIC RESISTANCE Co-sponsored by 31-16 Thu 4:15 pm Thu 10:15 am 42-5 ORGANIZING DIVERSE COMMUNITIES: NEW STRATEGIES FOR A NEW CENTURY Co-sponsored by 30-17 Thu 8:00 am Thu 4:15 pm 42-6 ARE THESE TIMES A CHANGIN’? PARTY POLITICS IN THE OBAMA ERA Fri 2:00 pm 42-7 RECONSIDERING RESISTANCE: CONTESTED SITES FOR POLITICAL CHANGE Sat 8:00 am 42-8 ANALYZING RELIGION AND SOCIAL RELATIONS IN AN AGE OF GLOBALIZATION Sat 2:00 pm 42-9 MARX AND THE CURRENT CRISIS Fri 10:15 am 42-10 ROUNDTABLE: 40 YEARS SINCE J DAVID GREENSTONE’S “LABOR IN AMERICAN POLITICS”: REFLECTIONS ON WHERE WE’VE BEEN, WHERE WE ARE, AND WHERE WE SHOULD GO Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 3 Fri 2:00 pm 42-11 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE PLENARY ADDRESS, DELIVERED BY TOM HAYDEN: MOVEMENTS AGAINST MACHIAVELLIANS, THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF SOCIAL CHANGE Reception (gratis) & Book Signing to Follow Sat 8:30 pm 43 International History and Politics Division Chair: Dan Lindley, University of Notre Dame 43-1 THE POLITICS OF SETTLERS AND SETTLEMENTS IN CONTESTED TERRITORIES Co-sponsored by 11-22 Thu 10:15 am 43-2 INTER-ETHNIC CONTACT AND VIOLENCE: FROM POGROMS AND RIOTS TO WAR AND GENOCIDE Co-sponsored by 11-23 Sat 8:00 am 40-4 INTERNET: COLLECTIVE ACTION, SOCIAL MOBILIZATION, AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Co-sponsored by 38-18 40-5 INTERNET GOVERNANCE: STRUCTURES AND ISSUES 40-6 COMPARATIVE EXPERIENCES IN ONLINE POLITICAL ORGANIZING, DELIBERATING AND PARTICIPATING 40-7 DIGITAL GOVERNANCE: POLICY DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTRATIVE STRATEGIES Co-sponsored by 24-14 40-8 ROUNDTABLE ON CONNECTING DEMOCRACY: ONLINE CONSULTATION AND THE FUTURE OF DEMOCRATIC DISCOURSE Sat 10:15 am Sat 2:00 pm Sun 10:15 am 41 Politics, Literature and Film Section Division Chair: Charles T. Rubin, Duquesne University 41-1 FEAR OF IMAGES? ROUNDTABLE ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE EVASION OF VISUAL CULTURE Co-sponsored by 2-18 41-2 POLITICAL POSSIBILITY IN THE NOVELS OF JOSE SARAMAGO Co-sponsored by 2-41 Sat 2:00 pm 41-3 ART AND POLITICS IN FLORIAN HENCKEL VON DONNERSMARCK’S THE LIVES OF OTHERS Fri 8:00 am 41-4 THEY’VE ALL GONE TO LOOK FOR AMERICA Sun 8:00 am 41-5 THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN Co-sponsored by 31-25 Fri 4:15 pm 41-6 THEME PANEL: ALEKSANDR SOLZHENITSYN 1918-2008: REMEMBRANCE AND LEGACY Co-sponsored by T-4 Thu 2:00 pm 41-7 BEYOND ‘SELF-RELIANCE’: EMERSON’S POLITICS IN MOTION Sat 10:15 am Thu 10:15 am 221 Related Group Panels 40 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 43-3 THE END OF AMERICAN HEGEMONY? RISING POWERS AND WORLD ORDER Co-sponsored by 19-13 Sat 2:00 pm 43-4 THE ISRAEL LOBBY AT 2. Co-sponsored by 20-8 Sat 8:00 am 43-5 LESSONS IN WAR, LESSONS FROM WAR Co-sponsored by 18-38 Fri 2:00 pm 43-6 WHERE’S TRUTH AND JUSTICE? TRACKING CHANGES IN INTERNATIONAL LAW Co-sponsored by 17-21 Fri 8:00 am 43-7 THE BALANCE OF POWER IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND HISTORICAL ANALYSIS Co-sponsored by 19-19 ROUNDTABLE: UNDERSTANDING POLITICAL EXTREMISM Co-sponsored by 18-39 43-9 PROCESS TRACING IN INTERNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE POLITICS: ACHIEVEMENTS AND CHALLENGES Co-sponsored by 46-3 Sat 10:15 am INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT AND THE FATE OF LIBERAL DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by 18-40 Fri 10:15 am GRAND STRATEGY BETWEEN THE WARS Co-sponsored by 18-41 Sat 2:00 pm 43-12 SHAPING REALITY WITH INFORMATION OPERATIONS, PROPAGANDA, AND SPIN Sat 4:15 pm NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND THE COLD WAR Fri 4:15 pm 43-14 44-3 DEMOCRACY, ELECTIONS, AND POLITICAL (IN)STABILITY Co-sponsored by 11-46 Sat 2:00 pm 44-4 POST-CIVIL WAR PROCESSES Co-sponsored by 18-5 Fri 2:00 pm 44-5 WHO/WHAT ARE ELECTIONS GOOD FOR? ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION, CHANGE AND VOTER MOTIVATIONS IN SELECT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 12-21 Thu 8:00 am 44-6 LOCAL POLITICS IN NEW DEMOCRACIES: PATTERNS OF DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE MEXICAN STATES Co-sponsored by 12-39 Thu 8:00 am 44-7 AUTHORITARIAN REGIME BUILDING AND BREAKDOWN IN POST-SOVIET EURASIA Co-sponsored by 13-7 Fri 10:15 am 44-8 THE HISTORICAL TURN IN DEMOCRATIZATION STUDIES: LESSONS FROM EUROPE Co-sponsored by 15-6 Sat 8:00 am 44-9 RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES: EVIDENCE FROM FIVE MUSLIM DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 33-5 Sun 8:00 am 44-10 VIOLENCE, UNCIVIL POLITICS AND DEMOCRATIZATION Thu 2:00 pm 44-11 CHINA’S THIRD SECTOR: DYNAMICS AND CONSEQUENCES Thu 4:15 pm 44-12 REVISITING REGIME CHANGE: CROSS-REGIONAL PERSPECTIVES Sun 8:00 am 44-13 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF DEMOCRATIZATION Fri 8:00 am 43-11 43-13 DEMOCRATIZATION AND ETHNIC MINORITIES: CONFLICT, PROTECTION, AND ACCOMMODATION Co-sponsored by 11-41 Thu 4:15 pm 43-8 43-10 44-2 Fri 10:15 am SHOCKING! SHOCKS AND OTHER EXTERNAL SOURCES OF FOREIGN POLICY Thu 2:00 pm 43-15 PROGRESS AND CHANGE IN THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM Thu 8:00 am 44-14 CIVIL SOCIETY, CITIZENSHIP AND PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY Fri 2:00 pm 43-16 THE SWEEP OF HISTORY: CLEANING UP ON HISTORICAL LESSONS Sat 10:15 am 44-15 ”NEW” SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND DEMOCRATIZATION Fri 4:15 pm 44-16 43-17 CHINA, WORLD ORDER, AND SECURITY ISSUES IN ASIA Fri 2:00 pm DEMOCRACY, TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE, AND THE MEMORY OF DICTATORSHIP 43-18 IDENTITY POLITICS AND NATIONALISM IN CHINA: Co-sponsored by 18-42 Sun 8:00 am 44-17 PROTEST AND DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN AMERICA AND EAST ASIA Co-sponsored by 12-49 44 Comparative Democratization 44-18 Sat 10:15 am Division Chair: Omar G. Encarnacion, Bard College VARIETIES OF PRESIDENTIALISM IN LATIN AMERICA: ORIGINS, SCOPE AND CONSEQUENCES Co-sponsored by 12-50 44-1 THE POLITICS OF DEMOCRATIC REVERSAL Co-sponsored by 11-24 44-19 ROUNDTABLE: GEORGE W. BUSH’S DEMOCRATIC PROMOTION LEGACY Thu 4:15 pm 44-20 POST-WAR DEMOCRATIZATION Sat 10:15 am 44-21 RELIGION AND DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES Thu 2:00 pm 222 Fri 8:00 am Sun 10:15 am Thu 10:15 am Sat 4:15 pm Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 44-22 AUTHORITARIAN REGIME CONSOLIDATION 44-23 AGENCY UNDER AUTHORITARIANISM Co-sponsored by 12-51 Thu 10:15 am Todd Landman, University of Essex 45-1 QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 8-6 Sat 10:15 am 45-2 THE HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME IN EUROPE: ISSUES AND CHALLENGES Co-sponsored by 15-16 Sun 10:15 am 45-3 ROUNDTABLE ON BETH SIMMONS, MOBILIZING FOR HUMAN RIGHTS: INTERNATIONAL LAW IN DOMESTIC POLITICS, CAMBRIDGE 2009 Co-sponsored by 17-17 Thu 10:15 am 45-4 WOMEN IN MOTION: ADVANCES AND SETBACKS IN IMPLEMENTING WOMEN’S RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 31-15 Fri 10:15 am 45-5 ANALYSING COMPLEXITY AND CHANGE IN HUMAN RIGHTS RESEARCH Fri 2:00 pm 45-6 CONCEPTUAL INNOVATIONS IN HUMAN RIGHTS THEORIZING Sat 8:00 am 45-7 ISLAM AND HUMAN RIGHTS: THEORY, LAW, AND PRACTICE Thu 8:00 am 45-8 THE UNITED STATES AND HUMAN RIGHTS Thu 2:00 pm 45-9 NORMATIVE DIMENSIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS Fri 4:15 pm 45-10 THEME PANEL: CANADIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSIONS Co-sponsored by T-24 Sat 2:00 pm INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS AND HUMAN RIGHTS Fri 8:00 am 46 Qualitative Methods Division Chair: Colin Elman, Syracuse University Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania 46-1 ILLIBERAL POLITICS IN LIBERAL STATES: STUDYING THE ‘ROUGH EDGES OF DEMOCRACY’ Co-sponsored by 11-14 Sat 2:00 pm FOCUS ON METAPHOR: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON LANGUAGE AND DISCOURSE Co-sponsored by 2-14 Sat 2:00 pm 46-3 PROCESS TRACING IN INTERNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE POLITICS: ACHIEVEMENTS AND CHALLENGES Co-sponsored by 43-9 46-5 IS THERE A MULTIMETHOD CONSENSUS IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 11-75 46-6 THE EPISTEMOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF MIXED-METHOD RESEARCH 46-7 STATISTICAL MODELS AND CAUSAL INFERENCE: DAVID FREEDMAN’S DIALOGUE WITH THE SOCIAL SCIENCES Co-sponsored by 8-18 46-8 THEME PANEL: HISTORY, IDENTITY, POLITICAL VIOLENCE: THE RELATIVE MERITS OF QUALITATIVE METHODS TO EXPLAIN COMPLEX AND DYNAMIC PHENOMENA Co-sponsored by T-29 Sun 10:15 am 46-9 TAKING RESEARCH DESIGN SERIOUSLY IN IDEATIONAL APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Fri 8:00 am 46-10 CASE STUDY META-ANALYSIS: METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES AND APPLICATIONS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Sat 4:15 pm 46-11 QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO INSTITUTIONAL AND POLICY CHANGE IN AMERICAN POLITICS Thu 8:00 am 46-12 VIRTUES AND LIMITS OF MIXEDMETHOD RESEARCH IN DIVERSE CONTEXTS Sun 8:00 am 46-13 QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN POSTCOMMUNIST SPACE Sat 4:15 pm 46-14 REPRESSION AND PROTEST IN NON-DEMOCRATIC REGIMES Fri 4:15 pm 46-15 CHALLENGES AND ADVANCES IN HISTORICALLY-ORIENTED RESEARCH 46-16 REFINEMENTS IN RESEARCH DESIGN: CASES, CONCEPTS, VARIABLES Fri 8:00 am 46-17 EVERYDAY POLITICS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: QUALITATIVE APPROACHES Fri 2:00 pm 46-18 MEANING, DISCOURSE AND AGENCY IN POLITICAL LIFE Sat 8:00 am 46-19 QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO STUDYING THE EMERGENCE AND PRACTICE OF DEMOCRACY 46-20 CONSTRUCTIVISM AND TRADITIONAL IR THEORY: PLURALISM, CONFLICT OR ECLECTICISM? 46-21 COMPLEXITY AND INTERDEPENDENCE IN WORLD POLITICS: NEW QUALITATIVE APPROACHES Sat 10:15 am Fri 10:15 am Sat 8:00 am Sun 10:15 am Thu 4:15 pm Sat 10:15 am Thu 10:15 am Thu 2:00 pm Sat 2:00 pm 223 Related Group Panels Human Rights Division Chair: 46-2 ETHNOGRAPHIC METHODS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE: WHAT DIFFERENCE CAN THEY MAKE? Sat 4:15 pm 45 45-11 46-4 Theme, Division and Related Group Panels 46-22 RESEARCH DESIGN, METHODS, AND THEORY-BUILDING IN COMPARATIVE JUDICIAL POLITICS Thu 4:15 pm 46-23 CONSTRUCTING CROSS-NATIONAL DATASETS: CHALLENGES AND LESSONS Co-sponsored by 8-19 Fri 10:15 am 46-24 DEBATING RESEARCH DESIGNS: Thu 10:15 am DO QUALITATIVE AND INTERPRETIVE LOGICS OF INQUIRY DIFFER? SHOULD THEY? Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods, Panel 1 46-25 METHODS CAFE Thu 12:15 pm Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods, Panel 2 46-26 UNDERSTANDING EXPERIENCES Fri 8:00 am ACROSS THE SUBFIELDS: RHETORIC, PHENOMENOLOGY, FIELDWORK, FRAMING/ NARRATIVES, AND TEXTUAL ETHNOGRAPHY Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods, Panel 3 48-2 THEME PANEL: HEALTH SYSTEM COMPLEXITY AND CHANGE: MEASURING THE POLITICS OF DELIVERING CARE Co-sponsored by T-9 Fri 8:00 am 48-3 SYSTEM EFFECTS, PATH DEPENDENCE, AND HEALTH POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-2 Sat 2:00 pm 48-4 HEALTH POLICY, CROSSING NATIONAL BOUNDARIES, AND IDEOLOGICAL PARADIGMS Co-sponsored by 11-54 Fri 4:15 pm 48-5 HEALTH PRIORITIES, AGENDASETTING, AND POLITICAL TENSIONS: DEFINING THE PUBLIC INTEREST IN HEALTH Thu 2:00 pm 48-6 EXPLAINING THE SUCCESS AND FAILURE OF CERTAIN HEALTH POLICIES Co-sponsored by 25-8 Thu 4:15 pm 49 Canadian Politics Division Chair: Melissa A. Haussman, Carleton University 49-1 CANADIAN COURTS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 26-12 Fri 10:15 am 49-2 ROUNDTABLE: STUDYING CANADIAN CITIES: A SUB-FIELD IN MOTION Co-sponsored by 30-12 Thu 2:00 pm 49-3 GENDER IN CANADIAN POLITICS AND POLICY Co-sponsored by 31-6 Thu 8:00 am 49-4 FORECASTING CANADIAN Fri 2:00 pm FEDERAL ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by Political Forecasting Group, Panel 1 47 Sexuality and Politics Division Chair: Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont 47-1 SELLING SEX, SELLING SELVES? GENDER, THE SEX TRADE AND THE STATE Co-sponsored by 31-8 47-2 STATES OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE: WHAT ELSE IS AT STAKE? Co-sponsored by 31-26 Fri 2:00 pm 47-3 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE POLITICS OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE Co-sponsored by 32-22 Sat 2:00 pm 47-4 GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 31-27 Fri 4:15 pm 49-5 RELIGION AND POLITICS IN CANADA Co-sponsored by 33-11 47-5 THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE STATE REACTIONS TO LGBT RIGHTS CLAIMS Co-sponsored by 29-15 and T-5 Thu 2:00 pm 49-6 CRITICAL PUBLIC POLICY QUESTIONS IN CANADA AND THE US Co-sponsored by 25-27 Sat 4:15 pm 47-6 EXAMINING ATTITUDES ABOUT GAY RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 37-27 Sun 8:00 am 49-7 NEW STRATEGIES OF POLITICAL COMMUNICATION IN CANADA Co-sponsored by 38-19 Fri 8:00 am 47-7 THEME ROUNDTABLE: JUST HOW DIFFERENT? SEXUAL POLITICS IN CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES Co-sponsored by T-11 Fri 10:15 am 49-8 THEME PANEL: “FORGOTTEN PARTNERSHIP” REMEMBERED: U.S.-CANADA RELATIONS 25 YEARS LATER Co-sponsored by T-22 Sat 8:00 am Sat 10:15 am 48 Health Politics and Health Policy Division Chair: James M. Brasfield, Webster University Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 48-1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HEALTH Co-sponsored by 11-34 224 Sat 10:15 am Sat 10:15 am Poster Sessions POSTER SESSION 1 Fri 2:00 pm Divisions 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, and 33 POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 1 Co-sponsored by Divisions 29 and 36 Fri 2:00 pm POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 2 Sponsored by Division 29 Fri 2:00 pm Theme, Division and Related Group Panels POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 3 Co-sponsored by Division 26 and 29 Fri 2:00 pm POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 4 Sponsored by Division 29 Fri 2:00 pm POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 5 Sponsored by Division 29 Fri 2:00 pm POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 6 Sponsored by Division 29 Fri 2:00 pm Sat 10:15 am POSTER SESSION 2: NEW FRONTIERS IN AMERICAN PARTY RESEARCH Sponsored by Division 35 Sat 10:15 am POSTER SESSION 2: EXPLAINING ORGANIZED POLITICAL ACTION Sponsored by Division 35 Sat 10:15 am POSTER SESSION 2: INTRA-PARTY DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Sponsored by Division 35 Sat 10:15 am POSTER SESSION 3 Divisions 1, 2, 3, and 4 Thu 2:00 pm POSTER SESSION 4: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE METHODS Divisions 8 and 46 Sat 10:15 am POSTER SESSION 5 Divisions 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 44 Thu 10:15 am POSTER SESSION 6 Divisions 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 45, and 49 Fri 10:15 am POSTER SESSION 7 Divisions 9 and 10 Fri 2:00 pm POSTER SESSION 8 Divisions 5, 6, 7, 38, 41, and 47 Sat 2:00 pm POSTER SESSION 2: RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER INSTITUTE Related Group Panels POSTER SESSION 2 Divisions 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 42, 43, 48 Sat 10:15 am 225 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 APSA Committee on the Status of Women in the Profession Committee Meeting Sat 12:00 pm APSA Meetings APSA Receptions APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession Committee Meeting Sat 12:00 pm APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession Reception Sat 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Asian Pacific American Caucus, the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized Section, and the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession APSA Civic Education and Engagement Committee Committee Meeting Fri 10:00 am APSA Departmental Services Committee Committee Meeting Fri 9:00 am APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered in the Profession Committee Meeting Sat 4:00 pm Fri 4:00 pm International Committee Committee Meeting Fri 4:00 pm APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession Committee Meeting Sat 4:00 pm General Membership Meeting Sat 6:15 pm APSA Council Meeting Wed 9:00 am Meet the APSA Officers and 2010 Council Nominees Fri 12:00 pm Journal Editors' Breakfast Sat 7:30 am Related Group Organizer Meeting Sat 7:30 am 2010 APSA Program Committee Meeting Sat 12:00 pm Perspectives on Politics Editorial Board Meeting Private event for the Perspectives Editorial Board. Fri 12:00 pm Organized Sections Breakfast Thu 7:00 am Associations Breakfast Fri 7:30 am Academic Administrators Meeting Fri 3:15 pm Minority Student Recruitment Program Meeting Fri 1:00 pm APSR Executive Committee Meeting Fri 2:00 pm APSA Task Force on Political Science in the 21st Century Committee Meeting Thu 1:00 pm APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning Committee Meeting Thu 1:00 pm APSA Task Force on Political Science in the 21st Century Meeting Thu 8:00 am APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning Meeting Meetings and Receptions In Memoriam Committee Meeting APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession Reception Sat 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized Section, the Asian Pacific American Caucus, and the APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered in the Profession Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Sexuality and Politics Organized Section and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Latino Caucus in Political Science Reception Honoring Teaching Sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha Fri 7:00 pm Awards Ceremony Thu 12:45 pm Award Luncheon—By Invitation Only Thu 12:00 pm APSA Graduate Student Happy Hour Thu 6:30 pm APSA 105th Annual Meeting Opening Reception Sponsored by Cambridge University Press Thu 9:00 pm International Attendee Welcome Reception Thu 6:00 pm APSA Mentor Program Networking Reception Thu 5:30 pm APSA Minority Fellowship Program 40th Anniversary Sat 6:00 pm Reception Perspectives on Politics Public Reception and Open Dialogue with New Editor Sat 12:00 pm Ralph Bunche Summer Institute, Minority Fellowship Sat 2:00 pm Program, and Minority Student Recruitment Program Coffee Hour APSR Editorial Board Reception Fri 6:30 pm Private reception for the members of the American Political Science Review Editorial Board. Thu 8:00 am 227 Meetings and Receptions Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Working Groups Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Citizenship and Migration Civic Engagement and Political Science Thu 6:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Democratic Policy Processes eLearning in Political Science The Future of Political Leadership Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Immigration and U.S. Politics Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Political Ethics Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Policy Network Analysis Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Citizenship and Migration Civic Engagement and Political Science Comparative Political Theory Democratic Policy Processes eLearning in Political Science The Future of Political Leadership Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Immigration and U.S. Politics Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Political Ethics Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Thu 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Policy Network Analysis Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Thu 6:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Thu 10:00 am eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Thu 10:00 am The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Political Ethics Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm 228 Meetings and Receptions Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Thu 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Thu 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Thu 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Thu 10:00 am Thu 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Thu 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm 229 Meetings and Receptions Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Thu 12:00 pm Meetings and Receptions Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Fri 6:30 pm Thu 6:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Thu 6:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Fri 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Thu 6:00 pm Fri 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Fri 6:30 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm 230 Fri 12:00 pm Meetings and Receptions Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Fri 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Fri 1:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Fri 1:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Fri 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Fri 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 1 Fri 1:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 1 Meetings and Receptions Fri 1:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 1 Fri 12:15 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 1 Political Ethics Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Fri 1:00 pm Fri 12:15 pm 231 Meetings and Receptions Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Fri 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Fri 5:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Fri 5:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Fri 5:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Fri 5:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Fri 5:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Fri 5:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Fri 5:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 eLearning in Political Science Session 2 The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Fri 5:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Fri 5:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Fri 5:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Fri 5:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Political Ethics Session 2 Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Fri 5:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Fri 5:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Fri 5:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Fri 6:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Sat 6:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Fri 6:15 pm 232 Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Meetings and Receptions Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Sat 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Sat 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Sat 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Sat 6:00 pm Sat 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Sat 12:15 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Sat 12:15 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm 233 Meetings and Receptions Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Meetings and Receptions Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Sat 12:00 pm Sat 1:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Sat 1:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Sun 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Sat 1:00 pm Sat 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 2 Sun 12:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 2 Sat 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm 234 Sat 12:00 pm Meetings and Receptions Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm 11 Comparative Politics Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm 15 European Politics and Society Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Sat 4:00 pm 19 International Security and Arms Control Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Sat 4:00 pm 20 Foreign Policy Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm 21 Conflict Processes Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm 22 Legislative Studies Business Meeting Council Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Fri 4:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 3 23 Presidency Research Business Meeting Editorial Board Meeting Sat 12:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm 24 Public Administration Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 3 Political Ethics Session 3 Sat 4:00 pm Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Session 3 Sat 12:00 pm Citizenship and Migration Session 3 Sat 12:00 pm Civic Engagement and Political Science Session 3 25 Public Policy Business Meeting Sat 12:15 pm Sat 12:00 pm 26 Law and Courts Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Comparative Political Theory Session 3 Sat 12:00 pm Democratic Policy Processes Session 3 28 Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations Business Meeting Thu 6:15 pm Sat 12:00 pm 29 State Politics and Policy Section Business Meeting Thu 6:15 pm eLearning in Political Science Session 3 Sat 12:00 pm The Future of Political Leadership Session 3 30 Urban Politics Business Meeting Thu 6:15 pm Sat 12:00 pm 31 Women and Politics Research Section Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm 32 Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Session 3 Sat 12:00 pm Sat 12:00 pm Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Session 3 33 Religion and Politics Business Meeting Thu 6:15 pm Sat 12:00 pm Political Ethics Session 3 34 Representation and Electoral Systems Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Sat 12:00 pm 35 Political Organizations and Parties Executive Council Meeting Business Meeting Thu 12:15 pm Fri 12:15 pm 36 Elections and Voting Behavior Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm 37 Public Opinion Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm 38 Political Communication Business Meeting Mentoring Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Fri 6:00 pm Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Session 3 Sat 12:00 pm Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Session 3 Sat 12:00 pm Policy Network Analysis Session 3 Sat 12:00 pm Division Meetings and Receptions 39 Science, Technology and Environmental Politics Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Section Meetings 40 Information Technology and Politics Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm 2 Foundations of Political Theory Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm 5 Political Psychology Business Meeting 41 Politics, Literature and Film Section Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm 6 Political Economy Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm 42 New Political Science Editorial Board Meeting Publications Executive Committee Meeting Business Meeting Fri 7:30 am Thu 12:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm 7 Politics and History Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm 43 International History and Politics Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm 8 Political Methodology Business Meeting Thu 6:15 pm 44 Comparative Democratization Business Meeting Sat 6:15 pm Sat 6:15 pm 45 Human Rights Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm 10 Political Science Education Business Meeting Meetings and Receptions Immigration and U.S. Politics Session 3 235 Meetings and Receptions 46 Qualitative Methods Business Meeting Thu 6:15 pm 47 Sexuality and Politics Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm 37 Public Opinion Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Political Psychology Organized Section 48 Health Politics and Health Policy Business Meeting Sat 12:15 pm 38 Political Communication Reception Fri 7:30 pm Thu 12:15 pm 40 Information Technology and Politics Reception Fri 7:30 pm 49 Canadian Politics Business Meeting Co-sponsored by the Political Psychology Organized Section 42 New Political Science New Political Science Reception Honoring Tom Hayden Section Receptions 2 Foundations of Political Theory Reception Fri 7:30 pm 5 Political Psychology Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior Organized Section 7 Politics and History Reception Fri 7:30 pm 10 Political Science Education Reception Sat 7:30 pm 11 Comparative Politics Reception Fri 7:30 pm Sat 10:00 pm 43 International History and Politics Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Organized Section 44 Comparative Democratization Reception Sat 7:30 pm 45 Human Rights Reception Fri 7:30 pm 46 Qualitative Methods Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the International History and Politics Organized Section 19 International Security and Arms Control Reception Co-sponsored by CAMOS Fri 7:30 pm 20 Foreign Policy Reception Co-sponsored with Conflict Processes Fri 7:30 pm 47 Sexuality and Politics Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus and the APSA Committee on Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered (LGBT) 21 Conflict Processes Reception Co-sponsored with Foreign Policy Fri 7:30 pm Related Group Meetings and Receptions Related Group Meetings 22 Legislative Studies Reception Fri 7:30 pm 23 Presidency Research Reception African Politics Conference Group Business Meeting Thu 7:30 pm 24 Public Administration Reception Fri 7:30 pm 26 Law and Courts Reception Fri 7:30 pm Aging Policy and Politics Group Aging Politics and Policy Group Dutch-treat Business Fri 12:30 pm Luncheon Luncheon will be held at Azure Restaurant, located in the InterContinental Hotel 29 State Politics and Policy Section Reception Thu 7:30 pm 30 Urban Politics Reception Thu 7:30 pm 31 Women and Politics Research Section Women of Color Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the National Conference of Black Political Scientists, the Women's Caucus for Political Science, APSA Council, Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for Political Science Reception for Women in the Profession Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Women's Caucus for Political Science and the Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal 32 Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Reception Sat 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Asian Pacific American Caucus, the APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession, and the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession 33 Religion and Politics Reception Thu 7:30 pm 35 Political Organizations and Parties Reception Sat 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by Representation and Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties 36 Elections and Voting Behavior Reception 236 Fri 7:30 pm Fri 12:15 pm Asian Pacific American Caucus Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Christians in Political Science Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society Business Meeting Thu 6:15 pm Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Business Meeting Sat 6:15 pm Eric Voegelin Society Business Meeting Sat 6:00 pm French Politics Group Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Green Politics and Theory Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Indigenous Studies Network Business Meeting Thu 12:15 pm Intelligence Studies Group Business Meeting Thu 12:15 pm Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Business Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Labor Project Business Meeting Sat 12:15 pm Meetings and Receptions Latino Caucus in Political Science Business Meeting Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus Business Meeting Political Forecasting Group Business Meeting Women's Caucus for Political Science Meeting 1 Meeting 2 Cooperative Congressional Election Study Business Meeting Sat 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm International Organization (Journal) Meeting Sat 6:15 pm Sat 12:15 pm Journal of Democracy Editorial Board Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Journal of Electoral Studies Editorial Board Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law Board Meeting Sat 5:15 pm Journal of Political Science Education Editorial Board Meeting Sat 12:15 pm Journal of Politics Editorial Board Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Journal of Theoretical Politics Meeting Thu 6:15 pm Legislative Studies Quarterly Meeting Fri 8:00 am McGraw-Hill Business Meeting 1 Business Meeting 2 Thu 10:00 am Thu 2:30 pm Midwest Political Science Association Program Committee Meeting Fri 4:15 pm Sat 7:30 pm National Conference of Black Political Scientists Meeting Fri 12:00 pm Sat 7:00 pm Pi Sigma Alpha Executive Council Meeting Thu 12:15 pm Fri 7:30 pm Political Networks Business Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Politics & Policy Journal Board Meeting Fri 6:15 pm Politics and Gender Editorial Search Committee Thu 6:30 pm Polity Editorial Board Meeting Sat 7:30 am Publius: The Journal of Federalism Meeting of Editorial Board and Advisory Council Fri 7:00 am Thu 12:15 pm Fri 6:15 pm Related Group Receptions Asian Pacific American Caucus Reception Sat 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession, the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized Section, and the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession British Politics Group Reception Fri 7:30 pm Christians in Political Science Reception Fri 7:30 pm Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the International Security and Arms Control Organized Section Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Reception Eric Voegelin Society Reception European Consortium for Political Research Reception French Politics Group Reception Fri 10:00 pm Co-sponsored by the French Embassy, CEVIPOF, AFSP, Sciences Po Bordeaux, and PSA-UK Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Reception Fri 7:30 pm Latino Caucus in Political Science Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Latino/as Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Sexuality and Politics Organized Section and the APSA Committee on Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered (LGBT) Political Studies Association Reception Thu 7:30 pm Women's Caucus for Political Science Women of Color Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the National Conference of Black Political Scientists, the Women and Politics Research Organized Section, APSA Council, Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for Political Science Reception for Women in the Profession Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Women and Politics Research Organized Section and the Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal Soomo Publishing Sponsored Lunch Sat 12:00 pm Featuring a presentation by David Lindrum entitled "Ten Things You Couldn't Do Ten Years Ago" Southern Political Science Association Council Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Theory and Event Editorial Board Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Western Political Science Association 2010 Program Committee Meeting Executive Council Meeting Fri 12:15 pm Thu 6:15 pm Affiliate Group Receptions American University Reception Fri 7:30 pm Brookings Institution Reception Thu 7:30 pm Affiliate Group Meetings and Receptions Cengage-Wadsworth Reception Thu 5:00 pm Affiliate Group Meetings Columbia University Reception Fri 7:30 pm Conference for the Study of Political Thought Reception Thu 7:30 pm Cornell University Government Department Reception Fri 7:30 pm American National Election Studies Public Meeting American Politics Research Business Meeting Sat 10:00 am Fri 12:15 pm Meetings and Receptions Fri 6:15 pm 237 Meetings and Receptions Harvard University Department of Government Reception Fri 10:00 pm Indiana University Department of Political Science Reception Thu 7:30 pm Institute for Humane Studies Reception Thu 7:30 pm University of Houston Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by Rice University, Texas A&M University, and University of Texas at Austin Intercollegiate Studies Institute Reception Sat 7:30 pm University of Maryland Government and Politics Reception Fri 7:30 pm Fri 7:30 pm University of Massachusetts Reception Thu 7:30 pm Sat 7:30 pm University of Michigan Reception Thu 7:30 pm University of Minnesota Reception Fri 7:30 pm Jack Miller Center Reception London School of Economics Reception Co-sponsored by the Global Policy Journal Massachusetts Institute of Technology Political Science Reception Fri 7:30 pm National Conference of Black Political Scientists Women of Color Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Women and Politics Research Organized Section, the Women's Caucus for Political Science, APSA Council, Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for Political Science New York University Wilf Family Department of Politics Reception Thu 7:30 pm Pi Sigma Alpha Reception Honoring Teaching Sponsored by Pi Sigma Fri 7:00 pm Alpha Political Research Quarterly Reception Co-sponsored by Washington State University Thu 10:00 pm Princeton University Department of Politics Reception Fri 7:30 pm Quarterly Journal of Political Science Reception Fri 10:00 pm Representation and Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Reception Sat 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by the Political Organizations and Parties Organized Section Rice University Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by University of Texas at Austin, University of Houston, and Texas A&M University Routledge Reception to Celebrate the Publication of THE FUTURE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE and Our Other New Titles Fri 7:30 pm Rutgers University Reception Fri 7:30 pm RWJF Scholars in Health Policy Research Program Reception Sat 7:00 am Stanford University Reception Fri 7:30 pm Syracuse University Reception Fri 10:00 pm Texas A&M University Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by Rice University, University of Texas at Austin, and University of Houston The Review of Politics Reception Thu 7:30 pm University of California, Berkeley Reception Fri 7:30 pm University of California, San Diego Reception Fri 7:30 pm University of Chicago Political Science Department Reception Fri 7:30 pm 238 University of Georgia School of Public & International Affairs (SPIA) Reception Sat 7:30 pm University of Pennsylvania Political Science Department Reception Thu 7:30 pm University of Rochester Department of Political Science Reception Sat 7:30 pm University of Texas at Austin Reception Fri 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by Rice University, University of Houston, and Texas A&M University University of Toronto Reception Thu 10:00 pm University of Wisconsin-Madison Reception Fri 7:30 pm Vanderbilt University Reception Thu 7:30 pm Washington State University Reception Co-sponsored by Political Research Quarterly Yale University Reception Thu 10:00 pm Fri 7:30 pm York University Department of Political Science Reception Thu 7:30 pm Co-sponsored by Palgrave Macmillan and Caucus for a New Political Science Meetings and Receptions DAILY SCHEDULE , 0, 0 , 9:30 AM to 5:00 PM APSA Short Course Short Courses APPLIED POLITICAL NETWORK ANALYSIS Instructors: David Collier, University of California, Berkeley Part: Colin Elman, Syracuse University Wednesday, September 2, 2009 Wednesday, 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM APSA Short Course Short Courses CODING THE BLOGOSPHERE: INTRODUCING THE CODING AND BLOG ANALYSIS TOOLKITS THE TORONTO TEA PARTY: LGBT CHALLENGES AND STRATEGIES IN POLITICAL SCIENCE LIBRARY 2.0: KNOWLEDGE, POWER, AND PEDAGOGY IN NET SPACE -- EVOLVING COLLABORATIONS AND ROLES A TASTE FOR SOVEREIGNTY: GLOBAL AND LOCAL CHANGE IN THE NEW POLITICS OF FOOD LATINO POLITICS WORKSHOP Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM GETTING A JOB AT A TEACHING INSTITUTION -- AND SUCCEEDING! APSA Short Course STUDYING GOVERNANCE ON THE GROUND: THE POLICE BORDERS OF DEMOCRACY Short Courses MULTI-METHOD RESEARCH Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 7:00 PM Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM APSA Short Course APSA Short Course Short Courses Short Courses DESIGNING AND CONDUCTING FIELD RESEARCH APPROACHING VISUAL IMAGES: PHOTOGRAPHY, POLITICS, & POLITICAL SCIENCE Wednesday, 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM APSA Meetings APSA Events APSA Short Course Short Courses POLITICAL SCIENTISTS AND THE FULBRIGHT SCHOLAR PROGRAM APSA COUNCIL MEETING APSA Short Course Short Courses Thursday, September 3, 2009 CANADIAN AND U.S. FEDERALISM WORKSHOP Thursday, 7:00 AM to 9:00 AM Wednesday, 9:30 AM to 1:00 PM APSA Meetings APSA Short Course ORGANIZED SECTIONS BREAKFAST APSA Events Short Courses ADDRESSING CHALLENGES IN TEACHING TRADITIONAL, HYBRID, AND ONLINE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT COURSES THE FUNDAMENTALS OF POLITICAL FORECASTING CREATING AND TEACHING AMERICAN POLITICS COURSES IN A GLOBALIZED CONTEXT AND CURRICULUM Wednesday, 9:30 AM to 5:00 PM Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM APSA Panel APSA Civic Education and Engagement Committee Panel 1 Chair: GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP Larry W. Chappell, Mississippi Valley State University Part: Christine Ingebritsen, University of Washington Tommy Wong, University of California, Riverside Dan Avnon, Hebrew University of Jerusalem APSA Short Course Short Courses TOOLS FOR MIDDLE-SIZED DATA PROJECTS NEW CHALLENGES, NEW OPPORTUNITIES: THE CSES AND EES DATA SETS Division Panels THEME PANEL: HOW CONSTITUTIONS WORK: DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHES TO CONSTITUTIONAL FUNCTION Co-sponsored by 27-7 1-16 Chair: NATURE, TECHNOLOGY AND BIOPOLITICS Charles T. Rubin, Duquesne University Papers: Eroding Anthropological Foundations Anja Karnein, Goethe Universitaet Wednesday, 10:30 AM to 5:00 PM APSA Short Course Short Courses CITIES, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE Daily Schedule T-1 239 Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM The Parent in Biopolitics Brian Duff, University of New England Equal Respect, Toleration and Identity Recognition Anna Elisabetta Galeotti, Università del Piemonte Orientale POLITICAL CONSERVATISM AND DARWINIAN SCIENCE: Does Conservatism have a future? Stephen C. Dilley, St. Edward’s University Transformative Toleration Zachary White, Columbia University Beyond Bioethics; a Phenomenological Approach to Thinking Reprogenetics Ashley Biser, Ohio Wesleyan University Disc: 2-4 Chair: Papers: Daily Schedule Charles T. Rubin, Duquesne University Frank Vander Valk, Empire State College ATHENS WITHIN JERUSALEM: CONTEMPORARY REREADINGS OF LEO STRAUSS William Clare Roberts, McGill University Disc: Corey L. Brettschneider, Brown University Ingrid Creppell, George Washington University 3-30 RESPONSIBILITIES OF CARE AND DILEMMAS OF FREEDOM Tamara Metz, Reed College Chair: Papers: Non-Sovereign Agency and a Responsibility to Care Tamara Metz, Reed College Pausing for Breath: The Politics of Esotericism and Philosophical Form in Leo Strauss and Walter Benjamin Nicholas Xenos, University of Massachusetts Rethinking the Feminist Position on Care and the Family Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania Why We Remain Jews Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania Do Famliy Policy Regimes Matter for Chile Well-Being? Dan Engster, University of Texas, San Antonio Helena Olofsdotter Stensöta, Goteborg University The Two Cadavers of Political Philosophy: Leo Strauss and the Strategy of Esoteric Writing Sean Noah Walsh, University of Florida Dirty Politics Shadia B. Drury, University of Regina Disc: Jennifer Nedelsky, University of Toronto 5-2 CANDIDATE EVALUATIONS Co-sponsored by 36-1 Philip Habel, Southern Illinois University Chair: 2-21 Papers: The Right to a Family Relationship Mary L. (Molly) Shanley, Vassar College POLITICS AND THE FORCE OF HABIT Brief Habits for a Fast-Paced World Jonathan Kam Shapiro, Illinois State University Papers: Towards a Creative Belonging: Merleau-Ponty and theTemporality of Habituation Mabel Wong, Johns Hopkins University Will Barack Obama be Black in 2012? Stereotypes, Strategies, and Changing Views of a President Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan In-Group and Out-Group Differences in Information About Political Candidates Philip Paolino, University of North Texas Ethos, Habit and Democratic Action Alex Livingston, University of Toronto Disc: Nikolas Kompridis, University of Toronto The Dynamics of Candidate Evaluation During Presidential Election Campaigns: Online Versus Memory-Based Processing Bryce Corrigan, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 2-39 Chair: PSYCHOLOGIES OF DEMOCRATIC CONTESTATION Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia Competence, Schmompetence: Voter Preferences for Inept Legislators Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University Papers: On Grounding Dissent: Doubt, Certainty and Identity Simona Goi, Calvin College Recognition and Reification: Honneth and Interpersonal Psychology Emily Howden Hoechst, Georgetown University Questioning, Authority, and Questioning Authority Alisa Kessel, University of Puget Sound Why Can’t We All Just Get Along? Agonism, Deliberation, and Empathy Michael E. Morrell, University of Connecticut Disc: William R. Caspary, New York University 3-11 TOLERATION, SECULARISM, AND THE NEW RELIGIOUS PLURALISM Corey L. Brettschneider, Brown University Chair: Papers: David A. M. Peterson, Iowa State University 6-3 THE POLITICS AND GEOGRAPHY OF DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 11-19 6-13 Chair: PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES OF TRADE Mark R. Brawley, McGill University Papers: Anti-dumping: Economic Remedy or Political Protection? Youngchae Lee, University of Rochester Imagined Commodities: Non-trade Policies in the Doha Round Holly Jarman, SUNY, University at Albany Rally-Round-the-Flag and Fifth-Column Effects in Trade Sanctions: A Model and a Test Daniel Verdier, Ohio State University Byungwon Woo, Ohio State University Trade and Coalitions Revisited: Political Networks under Changing Trade Policy Environments Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Houston Aldo Fernando Ponce, University of Houston (Not) Just a Piece of Cloth: Begum, Recognition and the Politics of Representation Lasse Thomassen, Queen Mary, University of London Is Modern Religious Freedom Sufficient for the Islamic Legal Maqsad of Hifz al-din? Andrew F. March, Yale University Religious Pluralism: A Rawlsian Approach Daniel A. Dombrowski, Seattle University 240 Disc: Disc: Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University 7-6 STANDARDIZING THE AMERICAN STATE: HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES Robert C. Lieberman, Columbia University Chair: Daily Schedule Papers: Bioequivalence: The Regulatory Career of a Medical Concept Daniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Papers: New York as a Global Political City Eunjung Lim, Johns Hopkins University The American State and Imperial Standardization: Western Expansion and Native American Removal Paul Frymer, Princeton University Comparative Global Political Cities: Brussel and Paris Mariko Defreytas, Ms, SAIS, Johsn Hopkins University Failed Standardization: Social Capital and Political Participation in the Jim Crow South Kimberley S. Johnson, Barnard College Beijing as an International Metropolis Min Ye, Boston University Standardization and the American State: A Theoretical Framework Desmond King, Oxford University Marc Stears, University of Oxford Disc: Margaret Weir, University of California, Berkeley 11-1 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONTENTION AND REPRESSION IN RURAL AND URBAN CHINA Co-sponsored by 13-1 Kellee S. Tsai, Johns Hopkins University Chair: Papers: Dynamics of Virtual Representation: Popular Contention and State Corporatism in China Xi Chen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Fragmented City: Politics of Urban Preservation in Beijing, Paris, and Chicago Yue Zhang, University of Illinois, Chicago Disc: Kent E. Calder, Johns Hopkins University Saskia Sassen, Columbia University 11-49 TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE, EQUALITY, AND RECONCILIATION Monika Nalepa, University of Notre Dame Chair: Papers: Reassessing the Roles of History, Resources, and Civil Society in Rural Chinese Contention William Hurst, Univ. of Texas at Austin Mingxing Liu, Peking University Ran Tao, University of Oxford Land Reform and Transitional Justice Monika Nalepa, University of Notre Dame Domestic Institutions and Supranational Human Rights Adjudication: The ECHR and the IACHR Compared Druscilla L. Scribner, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh Tracy H. Slagter, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh Coping with Petition: The Perspective of a Township Level Government Juan Wang, Johns Hopkins University Disc: Andrew Mertha, Cornell University 11-19 THE POLITICS AND GEOGRAPHY OF DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 6-3 Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University Chair: Papers: Credit Claiming and Votes in Multi-level Governments: Evidence from an Infrastructure Program in Mexico Ana Lorena De La O Torres, Yale University Miriam Bruhn, The World Bank Disc: Cyrus Dara Samii, Columbia University Brian K. Grodsky, University of Maryland, Baltimore County 11-71 TERRITORIAL AUTONOMIES AND MULTINATIONAL FEDERATIONS: INNOVATION AND COMPLEXITY IN THE INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN OF MULTINATIONAL STATES Co-sponsored by 28-1 12-13 THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE: CAPITAL MARKETS AND ELECTIONS IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD Co-sponsored by 16-12 12-21 WHO/WHAT ARE ELECTIONS GOOD FOR? ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION, CHANGE AND VOTER MOTIVATIONS IN SELECT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 44-5 Anirudh Krishna, Duke University Partisan Representation of the Poor Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University Distributive Politics and Power in India: Evidence from Satellite Imagery Brian K. Min, University of California, Los Angeles The Electoral Impact of Infrastructure Investment in Japan Jun Saito, Yale University Disc: Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University 11-33 GLOBAL POLITICAL CITY AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Kent E. Calder, Johns Hopkins University Chair: Chair: Papers: Explaining the African Vote Barak Hoffman, Georgetown University Clark C. Gibson, University of California, San Diego Karen E. Ferree, University of California, San Diego James D. Long, University of California, San Diego Daily Schedule Subsidizing the Counties and Stabilizing the Cities of China Jeremy L. Wallace, Ohio State University Trauma and Efficacy: The Impact of Transitional Justice Interventions on Post-Conflict Development Processes in West Africa David Backer, College of William & Mary Anupma L. Kulkarni, Arizona State University Exploring the Schelling Conjecture in Reverse: ‘International Constraints’ and Cooperation with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia Brian K. Grodsky, University of Maryland, Baltimore County The Politics of Petitioning in Beijing Lianjiang Li, Chinese University of Hong Kong Kevin J. O’Brien, University of California, Berkeley Career Incentives and Political Control Under Authoritarianism: Explaining the Political Fortunes of Subnational Leaders in China, 1978-2005 Yumin Sheng, Wayne State University Washington DC as a Global Political City Kent E. Calder, Johns Hopkins University Elections in Africa: Are They “Instruments of Democracy?” Wonbin Cho, University of Kentucky Do Africans Vote Retrospectively? Job Performance, the Economy, and Voting Behavior in Five Countries Daniel J. Young, Michigan State/Afrobarometer Political Opportunities and Political Participation in Mexico Claudio A Holzner, University of Utah 241 Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Daily Schedule The New Development Agenda and Bottom-Up Activism Peter K. Yu, Drake University Law School Why Political Competition Matters: Leftist Parties and Social Development Indian Rani D. Mullen, College of William & Mary Disc: Anirudh Krishna, Duke University 12-39 LOCAL POLITICS IN NEW DEMOCRACIES: PATTERNS OF DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE MEXICAN STATES Co-sponsored by 44-6 Matthew R. Cleary, University of Chicago Chair: Papers: Women’s Participation in Mexican State Legislatures Caroline C. Beer, University of Vermont Disc: Kenneth Shadlen, London School of Economics 16-12 THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE: CAPITAL MARKETS AND ELECTIONS IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD Co-sponsored by 12-13 Daniela Campello, Princeton University Chair: Papers: Corporatism and Democracy: Consequences of Electoral Competition for Government vs. Teacher Union Relations in the Mexican States Douglas Hecock, Bucknell University Pink Floods and Moody’s Blues in Latin American Electoral Politics Paul M. Vaaler, University of Minnesota Bonds, Stocks or Dollars? Do Voters Care about Capital Markets in Brazil and Mexico Tony P Spanakos, Montclair State University Lucio R. Renno, University of Brasilia Governors, Legislators, and Mayors: Particularism in the Provision of Local Public Goods in the Mexican States Alejandra Armesto, University of Notre Dame Elections, Ideology, or Opposition? Assessing Competing Explanations of Judicial Change in the Mexican States Matthew C. Ingram, University of New Mexico Disc: Matthew R. Cleary, University of Chicago 12-43 CONFLICTED: VIOLENCE, COUPS AND THEIR AMBIGUOUS CONSEQUENCES Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex Chair: Papers: Wall Street and Elections in Latin American Emerging Democracies Javier Santiso, OECD International Constituents: Investigating the Policy Constraint Imposed on Governments by International Investors Heather Bergman, University of California, Los Angeles Presidential Elections, Country-Risk, and Governments’ ’’Room to Maneuver’ in Latin America Daniela Campello, Princeton University Disc: Matias Vernengo, University of Utah/UFRJ Modeling Trans-National Ethnic Linkages and Civil War Ravi Bhavnani, Michigan State University Rick Riolo, University of Michigan Petra Hendrickson, Michigan State University 17-6 EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF TRANSGOVERNMENTAL POLITICS Paul W. Thurner, University of Mannheim The Post Cold War Reestablishment of Effective State Authority in Latin America: Can ‘Colombianization’ Tame Mexico’s Security Crisis? Patricia Olney, Southern Connecticut State University Papers: Chair: Transgovernmental Coordination: Power or Capacity Abraham Newman, Georgetown University David Bach, IE Business School Long-Term Causes and Short-Term Triggers of Coups d’état Taeko Hiroi, The University of Texas at El Paso Sawa Omori, International Christian University Transgovernmental politics and policy diffusion: Evidence from Switzerland Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich Fabio Wasserfallen, University of Zurich The Coup d’Etat as a Force for Democratization: The International Community and the Seizure of Executive Power Nikolay V. Marinov, Yale University The Comparative Value of Domestic and Transgovernmental Networking Paul W. Thurner, University of Mannheim Seizure of Power: Why Some Military Coup Attempts Fail While Others Succeed Naunihal Singh, University of Notre Dame Why Do Some Transgovernmental Networks Succeed While Others Fail? David Zaring, University of Pennsylvania Disc: Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex Disc: David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 13-1 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONTENTION AND REPRESSION IN RURAL AND URBAN CHINA Co-sponsored by 11-1 18-6 TRANSATLANTIC HOMELAND SECURITY COOPERATION: BETWEEN POLICY AND POLITICS Brett V. Kubicek, Government of Canada 16-9 THE CONTENTIOUS POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Co-sponsored by 42-1 Sebastian Haunss, University of Konstanz Chair: Papers: Chair: Papers: Aviation Security and Transatlantic Cooperation Mark B. Salter, University of Ottawa Cat and Mouse: Industries’ and NGOs’ Forum-Shifting in the Battle Over Intellectual Property Enforcement Susan K. Sell, George Washington University The Invisible American Hand: Helping, Tiding, and Compromising? Impact of Transatlantic Networks on Homeland Security Policies of the European Union Patryk Pawlak, European University Institute Illicit Seeds: Intellectual Property and the Underground Proliferation of Agricultural Biotechnologies Ronald J. Herring, Cornell University Indigenous Non-state Actors: A Special Case? Patricia Goff, Wilfrid Laurier University 242 Transatlantic Visa Politics Rey Koslowski, SUNY, University at Albany Security Practices and Their Spread: From Transatlantic Homeland Security to ‘Smart Borders’ Ruben Zaiotti, University of Toronto Disc: Brett V. Kubicek, Government of Canada Daily Schedule 18-25 Chair: Papers: Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM COUNTERINSURGENCY STRATEGIES Co-sponsored by 19-7 Robert Rauchhaus, University of California, Santa Barbara How Elite Opinion Explains Persistent Inter-branch Policy Disagreement David Karol, University of California, Berkeley Running Ahead: Presidential Popularity and Congressional Loyalty Henry A. Kim, University of Arizona Nathan F. Batto, University of the Pacific The Vanguard’s Dilemma: Understanding and Exploiting Insurgency Strategies Jerome Thomas Moriarty, II, University of Virginia Revisiting the Cannon Revolt: How the Senate and the President Affect the Balance of Power in the House Gisela Sin, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Regime Type and Counterinsurgency Operations: Are Democracies More Effective at “Winning the Hearts and Minds”? Jack Porter, The Citadel Who Takes the Blame? The Strategic Effects of Collateral Damage Luke N Condra, Stanford University Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University Military Recruitment and Counterinsurgent Effectiveness Nathan Toronto, US Army/USMC Counterinsurgency Center The Evolution of Congressional Support for the President: 19532006 Andrew B. Whitford, University of Georgia Christopher B. Goodman, University of Georgia Disc: Russell D. Renka, Southeast Missouri State University Andrew J. Dowdle, University of Arkansas Disc: Brendan R. Green, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kelly A. Grieco, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 22-16 PARTIES AND PARTY CONTROL IN U.S. STATE LEGISLATURES Co-sponsored by 29-6 19-7 COUNTERINSURGENCY STRATEGIES Co-sponsored by 18-25 23-1 20-9 CORE VALUES AND PREFERENCES FOR DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN POLICIES William O. Chittick, University of Georgia THE BALANCE OF POWER BETWEEN CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENT Co-sponsored by 22-1 24-9 Chair: PERFORMANCE SYSTEMS IN MOTION Barry M. Mitnick, University of Pittsburgh Papers: Rowing in the Same Direction: The Impact of Managerial Consensus on Program Performance Laurence J. O’Toole, University of Georgia Alisa Hicklin, University of Oklahoma Kenneth J. Meier, Texas A&M University Chair: Papers: Ideology, Patriotism and Foreign Policy Attitudes Jennifer Ramos, Loyola Marymount University Miroslav Nincic, University of California, Davis Popular Support for Multilateralism: How Nationalism and Ideology Shape Preferences in the United States Richard K. Herrmann, Ohio State University Paul M. Sniderman, Stanford University Policy and Organizational Change in the Federal Aviation Administration: The Ontogenesis of a High Reliability Organization Dale A. Krane, University of Nebraska, Omaha Patrick O’Neil, University of Nebraska, Omaha Morality and Preferences for Domestic and Foreign Policies Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California Core Values and Preferences for Domestic and Foreign Policies Harald Schoen, University of Bamberg Disc: Peter John Liberman, CUNY, Queens 21-4 Chair: ALLIANCE FORMATION & OUTCOMES Andrew G. Long, Kansas State University Papers: Too Many Cooks: Coalitions and the Outcome and Duration of Interstate War Daniel S. Morey, University of Kentucky Reliability, Reputation, and Alliance Formation Mark J.C. Crescenzi, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Jacob Daniel Kathman, University of Mississippi Katja B. Kleinberg, SUNY, Binghamton University Towards a More Democratic Performance Measurement Hindy Lauer Schachter, New Jersey Institute of Technology Empowering Employees to Improve Performance: Does it Work? Sergio Fernandez, Indiana University Disc: Patrick S. Roberts, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University 25-6 POLITICAL BRANDING: A NEW APPROACH TO MOBILIZATION AND POLICY MAKING Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago Chair: Papers: Cultural Policy and Political Branding Daniel Silver, University of Toronto, Scarborough Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago Winning Wars With Coalitions: The Effects of Community Partners, Selection, and Targeting Kelly M. Kadera, University of Iowa Andrew G. Long, Kansas State University 22-1 THE BALANCE OF POWER BETWEEN CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENT Co-sponsored by 23-1 Russell D. Renka, Southeast Missouri State University Chair: Papers: Incorporating Public Opinion and the Consequences of Gridlock in Models of Veto Bargaining Cari Lynn Hennessy, Northwestern University Culture, Policy and Politics in Southern Europe: The Cases of Lisbon and Seville Filipe Carreira Da Silva, Universidade de Lisboa Clemente Navarro, Universidad Pablo de Olavide Political Branding and Public Policy in Naples, Bogota and Chicago Eleonora Pasotti, University of California, Santa Cruz Disc: Jefferey M. Sellers, University of Southern California 243 Daily Schedule Disc: The CEO Mayor: Michael Bloomberg and the Rebranding of New York Miriam Greenberg, University of California, Santa Cruz Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Daily Schedule 25-25 POLICY CHANGE AND THE GOVERNANCE OF CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE Co-sponsored by 39-5 Disc: Wayne Norman, Université de Montréal André Lecours, University of Ottawa 26-11 JUDICIAL OPINION WRITING IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Tom Clark, Emory University 29-6 PARTIES AND PARTY CONTROL IN U.S. STATE LEGISLATURES Co-sponsored by 22-16 Nancy Martorano, University of Dayton Chair: Chair: Papers: The Evolution of Legal Constraint and the U.S. Supreme Court Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina Richard W. Waterman, University of Kentucky Andrew Martin, University of Kentucky Papers: Inter-institutional Bargaining, Partisanship, and Control of the Appropriations Process in American Government William Ewell, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Do Litigants’ Briefs Influence Supreme Court Justices? Applying Computer-Assisted Content Analysis to the Problem Joseph L. Smith, University of Alabama Robert M. Howard, Georgia State University Does Power Pay? Party Control and PAC Contributions in the American States Justin Kirkland, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Virginia H. Gray, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill David Lowery, University of Leiden The Citation of Precedent in the European Court of Justice James F. Spriggs, II, Washington University, St. Louis Matthew Gabel, Washington University, St. Louis Citation Behavior on State High Courts: Applying Models of Judicial Behavior to the Opinion-Writing Stage Meghan E. Leonard, University of Arizona Disc: Chad Westerland, University of Arizona 27-7 THEME PANEL: HOW CONSTITUTIONS WORK: DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHES TO CONSTITUTIONAL FUNCTION Co-sponsored by T-1 Keith E. Whittington, Princeton University Chair: Examining the Consequences of Instability in State Government Partisan Composition Carl E. Klarner, Indiana State University Disc: Kathleen A. Bratton, Louisiana State University 30-6 URBAN CAMPAIGNS, VOTING, AND ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 36-4 Joel A. Lieske, Cleveland State University Chair: How Constitutions Work Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland Television Advertising in Mayoral Campaigns Timothy B. Krebs, University of New Mexico David B. Holian, University of North Carolina at Greensboro The Permanent Crisis of the Presidency Stephen M. Griffin, Tulane University Did Patio Man Turn Blue? Exurban Voters and the 2008 Election Ian McDonald, Duke University What Constitutions Do: The Case of Conservative Constitutional Politics, 1954-1980 Ken I. Kersch, Boston College Electoral Ambition, Party, and the Rewards of Intergovernmental Cooperation Kenneth N. Bickers, University of Colorado, Boulder Robert M. Stein, Rice University Papers: Papers: The Colombian Constitutional Court and the Spread of Constitutional Values David Landau, Harvard University Disc: Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, Albany 28-1 TERRITORIAL AUTONOMIES AND MULTINATIONAL FEDERATIONS: INNOVATION AND COMPLEXITY IN THE INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN OF MULTINATIONAL STATES Co-sponsored by 11-71 André Lecours, University of Ottawa Chair: Papers: Territorial Autonomies and Federalism: Towards a Theory of Autonomy Jaime Gerardo Lluch, European University Institute The Federalist Answer to Secessionism – Comparing Canada and Spain Enric Martinez Herrera, European University Institute Change and Continuity in Multinational Democracies: Theoretical and Methodological Reflections on Canadian Federalism Raffaele Iacovino, Queen’s University New Regionalism in Central and Eastern Europe: Territory and Autonomy Dejan Stjepanovic, European University Institute Decentralization: An Institutional Strategy of Appeasement across Western Europe Bonnie M. Meguid, University of Rochester 244 Votes, Preference Estimates, and Party Power James S.C. Battista, SUNY, University at Buffalo Jesse T. Richman, Old Dominion University Mobilizing Urban Constituents: Nonprofits and the Pursuit of Group Interests in Local Elections Kelly M. LeRoux, University of Kansas Disc: Karen M. Kaufmann, University of Maryland, College Park Stephen C. Brooks, University of Akron 30-17 ORGANIZING DIVERSE COMMUNITIES: NEW STRATEGIES FOR A NEW CENTURY Co-sponsored by 42-5 31-6 GENDER IN CANADIAN POLITICS AND POLICY Co-sponsored by 49-3 Melissa A. Haussman, Carleton University Chair: Papers: Contemporary Canadian Feminists Brenda O’Neill, University of Calgary The Political Contradictions of Safe Motherhood and “Natural” Childbirth Candace Johnson, University of Guelph Women’s Electoral Presence: Refuting the Notion of a Municipal Advantage Erin Tolley, Queen’s University Between Legitimacy and Quackery: (De)Constructing Midwives in Ontario, Canada Stephanie Paterson, Concordia University Under the Radar: Feminist Activism, Institutions and the Politics of the Possible in Impossible Times L. Pauline Rankin, Carleton University Daily Schedule Disc: Linda A. White, University of Toronto 31-21 THE BEST WOMEN FOR THE JOB: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON FEMALE POLITICIANS’ PATHWAYS TO POWER Co-sponsored by 34-9 32-9 Chair: Papers: POLICY FOCUS ON FAT POOR MINORITIES: FROM WELFARE REFORM TO FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Anna R. Kirkland, University of Michigan What’s Wrong with the Environmental Approach to Anti-Obesity Policy? Anna R. Kirkland, University of Michigan Food Politics: Race, Gender, and the Politics of Food Access Melissa V. Harris-Lacewell, Princeton University The Recovery Model Comes to Welfare: Success Stories, Oblates, and the Medicalization of Welfare Reform Sanford F. Schram, Bryn Mawr College Linda Houser, Bryn Mawr College Joe Soss, University of Minnesota Richard C. Fording, University of Kentucky Tatiana Winterbottom, Bryn Mawr College Paul Rosenstein, Bryn Mawr College Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Gendered Competitive Interaction and Women’s Executive Electoral Success Karen Beckwith, Case Western Reserve University Women National Leaders- No Less Prepared to Rule Farida Jalalzai, University of Missouri, St. Louis Disc: Aili Mari Tripp, University of Wisconsin, Madison Melanie M. Hughes, University of Pittsburgh 36-1 CANDIDATE EVALUATIONS Co-sponsored by 5-2 36-4 URBAN CAMPAIGNS, VOTING, AND ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 30-6 36-18 EXPLAINING TURNOUT IN AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTIONS Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida Chair: Papers: Maligned Youth? How Exit Polls Systematically Misrepresent Youth Turnout Josh Pasek, Stanford University Who Votes? How and When Negativity Affects Turnout Yanna Krupnikov, University of Michigan The Influence of Calorie Labeling on Food Choice: Initial Evidence from NYC’s Low-Income Communities Rogan Kersh, New York University Victoria Brescoll, Yale University Brian Elbel, New York University L. Beth Dixon, New York University 33-8 Chair: RELIGION AND EUROPEAN POLITICS John Francis Burke, University of St. Thomas Papers: Religious Voting in Belgium: Prevalence and Contextual Effects Sarah Botterman, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Redistricting’s Effects on Political Participation: The Role of Race and Campaign Activity Danny Hayes, Syracuse University Seth C. McKee, University of South Florida St. Petersburg Michael P. McDonald, George Mason University 37-19 Chair: IMMIGRATION Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University Papers: Religion and Preferences for Welfare State Spending in Europe Daniel Stegmueller, University of Nijmegen Amnesty, Guest Workers, Fences! Oh My! Public Opinion about “Comprehensive Immigration Reform” Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University Religion’s Place in Democratic Life: Lessons from Europe’s Culture Wars Bryan T. McGraw, Wheaton College A Multi-Level Analysis of Immigration Patterns and Welfare Attitudes, 1972-2006. Jason Kehrberg, University of Kentucky Disc: Joseph Tyler Amodeo, University at Albany 34-9 THE BEST WOMEN FOR THE JOB: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON FEMALE POLITICIANS’ PATHWAYS TO POWER Co-sponsored by 31-21 Jennifer Marie Piscopo, University of California, San Diego Papers: Who Votes Now? Jan E. Leighley, University of Arizona Jonathan Nagler, New York University Disc: Religion, State Regulation and Political Context: A Comparative Analysis from France and Italy Michael Driessen, University of Notre Dame Chair: Policy Feedback and Voter Turnout Tetsuya Matsubayashi, University of North Texas Media Exposure and IIlegal Immigration: Evidence on Attitudes from the US Riccardo Puglisi, Université Libre de Bruxelles Giovanni Facchini, University of Exeter Anna Maria Mayda, Georgetown University A Backlash Against Immigration: State Immigrant Context and the Political Leanings of White Americans Zoltan L. Hajnal, University of California, San Diego Marisa Abrajano, University of California, San Diego Nicholas Warner, University of California, San Diego Different Paths, Different Perspectives? An Examination of Whether Men’s and Women’s Parliamentary Career Trajectories Translate into Policy Outcomes in France Rainbow Murray, University of London, Queen Mary Pathways to Power in Presidential Cabinets: What are the Norms for Different Cabinet Portfolios and Do Female Appointees Conform to the Norm? A Study of 5 Presidential Democracies Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University Disc: David L. Leal, University of Texas, Austin Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University 37-24 Chair: PUBLIC OPINION AND THE WAR ON TERRORISM Mark Peffley, University of Kentucky 245 Daily Schedule Understanding What Types of Women are Elected: Comparing Male and Female Legislators’ Descriptive Characteristics in the Argentine Congress Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary Jennifer Marie Piscopo, University of California, San Diego Steady or Influx? Attitudinal Responses to Immigration Policy from 1990-2007 Jillian Medeiros, University of Southern California Dino N. Bozonelos, University of California, Riverside Marika Dunn, Rutgers University Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Papers: Fear or Rage?: Assessing Public Opinion Responses to Terrorist Attacks Gabriel Rubin, Montclair State University Daily Schedule Papers: Accountability through Diversity: Challenges for CongregationBased Organizing in Detroit Lara Rusch, University of Michigan, Dearborn Political Attitudes and the Aftermath of Terrorism: Evidence from the London 2005 Bombings Alex Street, University of California, Berkeley Andrew P. Kelly, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Mark Peffley, University of Kentucky 38-12 Chair: MEDIA PREFERENCES AND POLITICAL LEARNING Ivan Katchanovski, SUNY-Potsdam Papers: Jon Stewart versus the Government: The Daily Show and Political Cynicism Xiaoxia Cao, University of Pennsylvania Paul R. Brewer, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Pod Casts, Ramadan Soaps and Talk Shows: Religious and Secular Identity in Syria and Morocco Evelyn A. Early, Air War College Thematic Framing in Entertainment Film and its Effects on Political Attitudes, Beliefs, and Values Ken Mulligan, Southern Illinois University Immigrant Organizing in the Neoliberal City M. Victoria Quiroz-Becerra, New School University The Limits of Civil Society: Community Based Organizations in Good Economic Times and Bad Tracy L. Steffy, CUNY Graduate Center Creating Community: An Examination of Creative Class Cities and Their Residents’ Social Capital Emily Farris, Brown University Disc: Jyl Josephson, Rutgers University, Newark 43-15 PROGRESS AND CHANGE IN THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware Chair: Papers: Progress in International Politics Dane K. Imerman, Ohio State University Globalization and Accountability Valerie Sperling, Clark University An Experimental Exploration of Political Knowledge Acquisition from The Daily Show Versus CNN Student News Dannagal G Young, University of Delaware Lindsay Hoffman, University of Delaware Ivan Katchanovski, SUNY-Potsdam 39-5 POLICY CHANGE AND THE GOVERNANCE OF CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE Co-sponsored by 25-25 Alanna Krolikowski, University of Toronto Chair: Papers: Public Opinion and Climate Change Governance Christopher P. Borick, Muhlenberg College Barry G. Rabe, University of Michigan Synthetic Biology: Identification of Policy Problems and Options Jennifer Kuzma, University of MN Managing Dynamic Change: Public Policy and Genomics. Michael Mintrom, University of Auckland How Structure Encourages and Limits the Influence of Progressive Ideas in International Politics Dan Lindley, University of Notre Dame Disc: Dan Lindley, University of Notre Dame Valerie Sperling, Clark University 44-5 WHO/WHAT ARE ELECTIONS GOOD FOR? ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION, CHANGE AND VOTER MOTIVATIONS IN SELECT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 12-21 44-6 LOCAL POLITICS IN NEW DEMOCRACIES: PATTERNS OF DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE MEXICAN STATES Co-sponsored by 12-39 45-7 ISLAM AND HUMAN RIGHTS: THEORY, LAW, AND PRACTICE Basak Cali, University College London Chair: Papers: Analytics and Values: Competing Explanations for Defining Problems and in Choosing Allies and Opponents in Watershed Partnerships Chris Weible, University of Colorado, Denver Richard H. Moore, Georgia Institute of Technology THE CONTENTIOUS POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Co-sponsored by 16-9 42-5 ORGANIZING DIVERSE COMMUNITIES: NEW STRATEGIES FOR A NEW CENTURY Co-sponsored by 30-17 Jyl Josephson, Rutgers University, Newark Chair: 246 Sharia vs. the West: The Conflict Between Sharia Law and Human Rights Treaties Neil Chaturvedi, University of California, Irvine Orlando Lopez Montoya, University of California, Irvine Jeremy Rayner, University of Regina Stacy VanDeveer, University of New Hampshire 42-1 Female Circumcision under Islamic Jurisprudence in the Sudan James Ryan Bowyer, Emory & Henry College The Dilemma of Religious Freedom: A Comparative Analysis of Religious Liberty in Western and Islamic Human Rights Instruments Kristine J. Kalanges, American University What Do They Know, Anyway? Rethinking Activist Engagement in the Policy Process Shobita Parthasarathy, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor Disc: State and Institution Building: The Irrelevance of War Deborah A. Boucoyannis, Harvard University Why Do Sovereign States Amalgamate? Philip G. Roeder, University of California, San Diego The Implications of Partisan Selective Exposure for Candidate Strategy: Introducing the Concept of Selective Production Natalie Jomini Stroud, University of Texas, Austin Soohee Kim, University of Texas, Austin Keri Thompson, University of Texas, Austin Maegan Stephens, University of Texas, Austin Disc: Faith-Based Community Organizing Goes National Heidi J. Swarts, Rutgers University, Newark Islamic Mysticism and Human Rights Fait Atli Muedini, SUNY University of Buffalo Improving Human Rights in Iran: Exploring the 30 Year Disregard for Internationally Recognized Human Rights Barbara Ann J. Rieffer-Flanagan, Central Washington University Disc: Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State University Daily Schedule 46-11 Chair: QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO INSTITUTIONAL AND POLICY CHANGE IN AMERICAN POLITICS Donald Rosdil, Northern Virginia Community College Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Disc: Eric Voegelin Society Panel 4 Papers: Complexifying Collaboration Morris D. Bidjerano, SUNY, Albany New Insights About Critical Junctures: Lessons From The Study of Governing Majority Formation in American Politics Adam Myers, University of Texas, Austin Curt Nichols, University of Texas, Austin Chair: Papers: Mapping Complex Coalitions: Using Frames and Policy Positions to Identify Ideologues, Pragmatists, and Dogmatic Coalition Members in Conflict over Charter Schools Alex Leland Medler, University of Colorado, Boulder Abigail Fisher Williamson, Harvard University 49-3 GENDER IN CANADIAN POLITICS AND POLICY Co-sponsored by 31-6 Related Group Panels EVOLUTION AND POLITICS Donald G. Tannenbaum, Gettysburg College Papers: Evolutionary Psychology and Nuclear Deterrence Theory Bradley A. Thayer, Baylor University Disc: Group Selection and Group Conflict Roger D. Masters, Dartmouth College The Biology of Fairness: Beyond Capitalism and Socialism Peter Corning, Institute for the Study of Complex Systems Disc: Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of Pennsylvania Lionel Tiger, Rutgers University Macon W. Boczek, Kent State University Steven Ealy, Liberty Fund, Inc. Thomas J. McPartland, Kentucky State University International Association for the Study of German Politics Panel 1 Chair: Papers: Life Styles Predict Political Behavior Nancy E. Aiken Science and Paradox: Peirce and Voegelin on the Practice of Language amid God, Man, World, and Society Rhydon Jackson The American Open Self: Exploring Voegelin’s Experience of Peircian Philosophy Clancy Smith, Duquesne University Association for Politics and the Life Sciences Panel 1 Chair: VOEGELIN’S THE FORM OF THE AMERICAN MIND AND AMERICAN PRAGMATISM AS A SIGNIFICANT CONTRIBUTION TO WORLD PHILOSOPHY Macon W. Boczek, Kent State University Two Pragmatic Moral Universes: James vs. Dewey and the Latter Pragmatist Scott Segrest, U.S. Military Academy Escaping the Black Hole: Revitalizing Urban Research in the 21st Century Donald Rosdil, Northern Virginia Community College Disc: J. Donald Moon, Wesleyan University THE PARTY POLITICS OF THE 2009 GERMAN ELECTION James C. Sperling, University of Akron The Paradoxical Impact of Party System Change in Germany Charles Lees, University of Sheffield Moving into Unchartered Territory? Economic Crisis and the German Greens’ New Green Deal Ingolfur Blühdorn, University of Bath Back from the Brink; The Strange Survival of Germany’s Left Party Dan Hough, University of Sussex Coalition Governance Under Merkel’s Grand Coalition Thomas Saalfeld, University of Kent Thursday, 8:00 AM to 10:00 AM Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy APSA Meetings Panel 1 MEETING Chair: ROUNDTABLE: SAME-SEX ‘MARRIAGE’ IN THE U.S. AND CANADA: LEGAL CONTROVERSIES AND EVOLVING PARADIGMS Matthew J. Franck, Radford University APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:00 AM Working Group: Citizenship and Migration Part: Robert P. George, Princeton University Bradley C.S. Watson, Saint Vincent College Frank Guliuzza, III, Patrick Henry College Christopher Wolfe, Marquette University Hadley Arkes, Amherst College SESSION 1 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 1 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory Conference Group on Jurisprudence and Public Law Panel 1 Chair: Judging the Holocaust: Hans Morgenthau and Hannah Arendt on Evil, Accountability, and Genocide Douglas B. Klusmeyer, American University Intramural Conflict Among German Courts: The Struggle for Postwar Justice in the British Zone Michael E. Bryant, Tufts University SESSION 1 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 1 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Daily Schedule Papers: ACCOUNTABILITY AND THE ETHICS OF RESPONSIBILITY J. Donald Moon, Wesleyan University SESSION 1 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 1 Collapse: Power Versus Law in a National Security State David Fagelson, American University 247 Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:00 AM Daily Schedule Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Part: Kirstie M. McClure, University of California, Los Angeles Timothy Fuller, Colorado College SESSION 1 2-7 FORM, CONTENT, AND CONTINGENCY: THE CONTOURS OF POLITICAL THEORY Davide Panagia, Trent University Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 1 Working Group: Political Ethics Chair: Papers: SESSION 1 Aesthetics of the Urban: Beyond form and Content Michael J. Shapiro, University of Hawaii Inhuman Aesthetics: From Kant to Meillassoux Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Tour de Force: Vitalism, Humanity and Poetry in Alain Locke’s Aesthetic Michelle Smith, Cornell University SESSION 1 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership Martha Nussbaum and Problem of Artistic-Political Content J. Maggio, University of Florida SESSION 1 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Disc: Nancy S. Love, Appalachian State University SESSION 1 2-18 FEAR OF IMAGES? ROUNDTABLE ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE EVASION OF VISUAL CULTURE Co-sponsored by 41-1 James D. Johnson, University of Rochester Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 1 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science Chair: Part: Victoria Hattam, New School University David Campbell, University of Durham James D. Johnson, University of Rochester Michelle L. Woodward, Middle East Research and Information Project Mark Reinhardt, Williams College 2-37 Chair: TOCQUEVILLE CONFRONTS THE DEMOCRATIC MIND Dana R. Villa, University of Notre Dame Papers: Tocqueville and Locke on the Utility of Religion Sanford Kessler, North Carolina State University SESSION 1 Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM Affiliate Group Meetings McGraw-Hill BUSINESS MEETING 1 Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Division Panels T-2 THEME PANEL: THE IDEA OF CHANGE AND THE PROBLEM OF POLITICS Co-sponsored by 1-22 T-3 THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND SECURITY: THE POLITICS OF POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE OF TURBULENCE Co-sponsored by 11-39 and 18-2 1-9 Chair: Papers: The Time of Democracy: Tocqueville and the Fourth Dimension Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin, Madison Politics is not Economics: Tocqueville and Low Liberalism Christopher Gaelan Murphy, Grant MacEwan College Disc: Susan Jane McWilliams, Pomona College Dana R. Villa, University of Notre Dame FOUNDINGS AND THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT Alexandra E. Hoerl, Wabash College 3-18 THE MORAL PSYCHOLOGY OF CHOICE AND COERCION Alan Houston, University of California, San Diego The Concept of Founding Angelica Maria Bernal, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Papers: Chair: Moral Psychology and Political Choice Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine The Topicality of the Foundations of Politics in Plato’s Republic Karen Francois, Free University of Brussels Cognitive and Affective Aspects of Three Concepts of Liberty Gerry Mackie, University of California, San Diego Rousseau on Founding Moments and Political Culture: Or How to Make Sense of the Lawgiver? Serdar Tekin, University of Toronto Does ‘May’ Equal ‘Must?’: Drawing the Line between Permission and Coercion Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University Disc: Alexandra E. Hoerl, Wabash College Big Love in the Liberal State Olivia Newman, University of Pittsburgh 1-22 THEME PANEL: THE IDEA OF CHANGE AND THE PROBLEM OF POLITICS Co-sponsored by T-2 Michael Allen Gillespie, Duke University Chair: Disc: 248 Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago Tracy B. Strong, University of California, San Diego Disc: Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Eastern Michigan University 3-19 FREE MARKET LIBERTARIANISM: IS THERE A MORAL DEFENSE? Debra Satz, Stanford University Chair: Papers: The Conscience of a Libertarian Chandran Kukathas, London School of Economics Daily Schedule Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Globalization and Domestic Politics:Party Politics and Preferences for CAFTA in Costa Rica Raymond Hicks, Princeton University Helen V. Milner, Princeton University Dustin Halliday Tingley, Princeton University Market Democracy: Economic Liberty and Social Justice John Tomasi, Brown University Recognized Rights as Devices of Public Reason Gerald F. Gaus, University of Arizona Disc: Stephen Macedo, Princeton University Debra Satz, Stanford University Disc: Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego 4-1 Chair: AGENCY MODELS AND THE POLITICS OF AGENCIES Nolan McCarty, Princeton University 6-17 Papers: Preference Aggregation in Heirarchies Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester Jinhee Jo, University of Rochester Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester DEMOCRATIC REPRESENTATION AND POLICYMAKING Micah Altman, Harvard University Chair: Papers: Is “Neutral” Information Aggregation Possible in a Hierarchy? Thomas H. Hammond, Michigan State University Stephen R. Haptonstahl, Washington University, St. Louis Democracy, Labor Power and Social Spending in Latin America Amanda Louise Beal, University of Missouri, Columbia Learning and Teaching in a Model of Supervised Policy Implementation Alexander Victor Hirsch, Stanford University Democratic Representation, Opinion Liberalism, and the Size of Welfare Jungho Roh, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Partisanship and the Effectiveness of Oversight Justin Fox, Yale University Richard Van Weelden, Yale University Leaps or Ladders: Organizational Structure and Expertise Development John W. Patty, Harvard University Disc: Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley 5-9 Chair: RISK Elizabeth Popp, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Papers: Attitudes towards Risk and Electoral Decision-Making Cindy D. Kam, Vanderbilt University Elizabeth Simas, University of California, Davis Red Brain, Blue Brain: Evaluative Processes Differ in Democrats and Republicans James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego Effective Representation and Authority Allocation in Democratic Policymaking: An Empirical Model of the Complex ContextConditionality of (Re)Distributive Policy Robert J. Franzese, Jr., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Disc: Simon Hix, London School of Economics 7-1 NORTH, WALLIS AND WEINGAST’S “VIOLENCE AND SOCIAL ORDERS” Co-sponsored by 11-10 7-15 THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL POLICY: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES Co-sponsored by 25-3 Patricia Strach, Harvard University Chair: Papers: Risk, Ambivalence, and Global Warming Daniel J. Coffey, University of Akron Elizabeth Popp, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 6-11 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF GLOBALIZATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 16-26 Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University Chair: Papers: Why is there Trade without Compensation in the South? Globalization without Welfare States in the Developing World Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder Globalization and Risk Protection in Developing Countries Sarah M. Brooks, The Ohio State University Nixon’s Northern Strategy: Welfare Reform and Race after the Great Society Scott Spitzer, California State University, Fullerton Disc: Patricia Strach, Harvard University 8-1 EXPERIMENTS IN THE STUDY OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 11-40 8-12 ADVANCES IN STUDYING REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL RULES Alberto Simpser, University of Chicago Chair: Papers: How Eectoral Systems Affect MPs’ Positions Simon Hug, Université de Genève The Returns to Office: Public Service Requires No Financial Sacrifice for U.S. Representatives Gabriel S. Lenz, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kevin Lim, MIT Comparative Election Fraud Detection Walter R. Mebane, Jr., University of Michigan Kirill Kalinin, University of Michigan 249 Daily Schedule Protecting the Poor: Skill Bias in the International Distribution of Trade Protection Kenneth F. Scheve, Yale University Xiaobo Lu, Yale University Matthew Slaughter, Dartmouth College Conspicuous and Inconspicuous Public Health Spending alongside the Development of a Private Health Care System in the United States Colleen M. Grogan, University of Chicago Urban Housing and the Rise of the Public-Private Partnership in United States Social Policy Alexander Von Hoffman, Harvard University Priming Risk: The Accessibility of Uncertainty in Political Decision Making Brian F. Schaffner, University of Massachusetts, Amherst David L. Eckles, University of Georgia Disc: Rainfall and Representation: How Voter Turnout Shapes the Effective Constituency for Legislators Joel Simmons, SUNY, Stony Brook Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Explaining Variation in the Degree of Electoral Competition in a Mature Democracy: U.S. Senate Elections, 1922-2004 Stanley L. Winer, Carleton University Bernard N. Grofman, University of California, Irvine Lawrence Kenny, University of Florida Daily Schedule Chair: Maiah Jaskoski, Naval Postgraduate School Papers: U.S. Military Privatization and its Implications for Developing Country Coercive Institutions Shana R Marshall, University of Maryland Disc: Karen Long Jusko, Stanford University Is Defense a Public Good? Ayesha Siddiqa, University of Pennsylvania 9-1 A NEW WORLD OF POLITICAL SCIENCE PEDAGOGY Co-sponsored by 10-1 Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida Patterns of Military Entrepreneurship in Latin America Kristina Mani, Oberlin College Chair: Papers: Army For Hire: Variation in the Privatization of Peruvian and Ecuadorian Army Security Work Maiah Jaskoski, Naval Postgraduate School Student Discussion Participation and Satisfaction in Different Learning Environments Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida Philip H. Pollock, III, University of Central Florida Bruce M. Wilson, University of Central Florida ‘Text Me, Text Me’: Bringing the Capitol into the Classroom Via a Blackberry Himanee Gupta-Carlson, Tacoma Community College Soldiers of Fortune: The Rise and Fall of PLA, Inc. James Mulvenon, Center for Intelligence Research and Analysis Disc: Zachary Zwald, UC Santa Cruz 11-39 THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND SECURITY: THE POLITICS OF POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE OF TURBULENCE Co-sponsored by 18-2 and T-3 Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London Online Discussion, Student Engagement, and Critical Thinking Leonard Williams, Manchester College Mary Lahman, Manchester College Informationalism Overtakes Educational Issues Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University Chair: Papers: Europe’s Brave New World: Security Implications of Global Population Changes, 2007-2050 Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University Disc: Bruce Pencek, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 10-1 A NEW WORLD OF POLITICAL SCIENCE PEDAGOGY Co-sponsored by 9-1 11-10 NORTH, WALLIS AND WEINGAST’S “VIOLENCE AND SOCIAL ORDERS” Co-sponsored by 7-1 Margaret Levi, University of Washington, Seattle Disc: Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London Disc: Robert H. Bates, Harvard University Larry Diamond, Stanford University 11-40 Part: David Stasavage, New York University Barry R. Weingast, Stanford University Douglass C. North, Washington University John Wallis, University of Maryland EXPERIMENTS IN THE STUDY OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 8-1 Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley Chair: 11-22 Chair: Papers: THE POLITICS OF SETTLERS AND SETTLEMENTS IN CONTESTED TERRITORIES Co-sponsored by 43-1 Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania The Impact of Jewish Settlers in the West Bank on the Palestinian-Israeli Peace Process Oded Haklai, Queen’s University Settlers and Mobilization in Cyprus: Antinomies of Ethnic Conflict and Immigration Politics Neophytos Loizides, Queen’s University of Belfast Arabs in Iraqi Kurdistan: Reframing the Kirkuk problem Denise Natali The Demography of Religious Radicalism Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London An Age Structural Theory of State Performance Richard P. Cincotta, H.L. Stimson Center Global Population Aging and American Security Interests Mark L. Haas, Duquesne University Chair: Papers: The Tension between Sampling and Statistical Theories: Sampling Strategies for Cluster-Randomized Experiments Steven Shewfelt, Yale University Joel A. Middleton, Yale University Do Politicians Answer More to Core Voters or to Swing Voters? Paolo Spada, Yale University Corruption and Inequality at the Crossroad:A Multi-Method Study of Bribery and Discrimination in Latin America Brian Fried, Yale University Corruption and Inequality at the Crossroad:A Multi-Method Study of Bribery and Discrimination in Latin America Paul Lagunes, Yale University Corruption and Inequality at the Crossroad:A Multi-Method Study of Bribery and Discrimination in Latin America Atheendar Venkataramani, Yale University Disc: Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania Statistical Analysis of Causal Mechanisms in Randomized Experiments Kosuke Imai, Princeton University Luke Keele, Ohio State University Teppei Yamamoto, Princeton University 11-37 THE ARMED FORCES IN BUSINESS: MILITARY ENTREPRENEURIAL WORK IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 12-11 Redistributive Records, Partisan Cues, and Voting Behavior among the Urban Poor: Evidence from a Survey Experiment in Brazil Fernando Daniel Hidalgo, University of California, Berkeley Miguel de Figueiredo, University of California, Berkeley “Master Race” or Victims of Totalitarianism? Italian Participants in Fascist Settlement Projects Roberta Pergher, University of Kansas 250 Daily Schedule Disc: Paolo Spada, Yale University Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley 11-51 LEADERSHIP AND POLICY CHANGE IN THE ERA OF COMPLEXITY Co-sponsored by 25-1 Alan J. Renwick, University of Reading Chair: Papers: Political Leadership in Anglophone Democracies Nigel Bowles, University of Oxford Alan J. Renwick, University of Reading Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM The Endurance of the Czech Communist Party Mary Stegmaier, University of Virginia Klara Plecita-Vlachova, Czech Academy of Sciences Disc: Andrew Roberts, Northwestern University 14-6 Chair: THE NEW POLITICS OF LABOR Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam Papers: Evaluating “Upsurge” in Theory and Comparison: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Labor Movement Upsurges and Democratization Andrew G. Lawrence, University of Edinburgh Leadership Responses to Electoral System Change in Japan Ellis S. Krauss, University of California, San Diego Robert J. Pekkanen, University of Washington Society of Owners? A Comparative-Historical Study of Class and Finance Capitalism in the United States and Germany Natascha van der Zwan, New School University Presidential Policy Leadership: Types and Variations Bruce Miroff, SUNY, Albany How Do Workers Strike? Globalization, Networks, and Emergent Solidarity Erin C. McGrath, University of Pittsburgh Michael Dale Siciliano, University of Pittsburgh Gunes Ertan, University of Pittsburgh Policy Entrepreneurs as Policy Leaders: Cognitive and Affective Strategies of Policy-Making Success Nikolaos Zahariadis, University of Alabama, Birmingham Disc: Nannerl O. Keohane, Princeton University 12-11 THE ARMED FORCES IN BUSINESS: MILITARY ENTREPRENEURIAL WORK IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 11-37 12-27 Chair: Papers: MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP: NATIONAL IDENTITIES IN A TRANSNATIONAL WORLD Apichai W. Shipper, University of Southern California Globalization, Nationality, and the Construction of Citizenship: the United Arab Emirates in Comparative Historical Perspective Manal A. Jamal, James Madison University The Dual Citizenship Debate in South Korea Young Ju Audrey Rhee, University of Oxford Taking Preferences to Task: The Relationship between Job Characteristics and Views on Welfare Policy Yotam M. Margalit, Stanford University Disc: Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam 14-18 YOUTH, CULTURE AND FOOTBALL: VARIETIES OF NATIONALISM IN ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES Co-sponsored by 15-15 15-15 YOUTH, CULTURE AND FOOTBALL: VARIETIES OF NATIONALISM IN ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES Co-sponsored by 14-18 Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Chair: Papers: Political Transnationalism in Question: What Limits the Political Transnationalism of “Transnational” Groups in Liberal Democracies? Michael Orlando Sharpe, CUNY-York College Generational Change in Attitudes about Women’s Roles in Politics and in the Home. Kathleen Knight, Columbia University Yvonne Galligan, Queen’s University Belfast Constructing the Nation on the Stadium: Contesting “Catalanisms” manifested in Football Elga Castro, New School of Social Research Labor Migration and Ethno-Nationalism under Contestation Yoonkyung Lee, SUNY, Binghamton Should I Stay or Should I Go? An Exploration of National Identity in the Face of Forced Migration Jennifer Eileen Byrne, James Madison University From Geopolitics to Cultural Affinity: The Change in Voting Behavior in Eurovision Song Contest Basak Yavcan Ural, University of Pittsburgh Stacy Bondanella Taninchev, University of Pittsburgh Disc: Apichai W. Shipper, University of Southern California 13-8 POLITICAL PARTIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE: 20 YEARS AFTER THE FALL OF COMMUNISM Co-sponsored by 35-1 Mary Stegmaier, University of Virginia Disc: Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 15-20 Party Divisions in Europe: Theory and Evidence from an Expert Survey in 27 European Democracies Robert Rohrschneider, University of Kansas Stephen Whitefield, University of Oxford FACING A RELIGIOUS DIVIDE? EUROPE IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY Co-sponsored by 33-7 16-13 Are Mixed Electoral Systems the Best Choice for Central and Eastern Europe or the Reason for Defective Party Systems? Daniel Bochsler, Center for Comparative and International Studies (University of Zurich) CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN EXCHANGE RATE POLICIES David Leblang, University of Virginia Papers: Chair: Papers: Chair: Daily Schedule Populist Appeals in Postcommunist Europe Kevin Deegan-Krause, Wayne State University Tim Haughton, University of Birmingham Un-United Kingdom: Tolerance, Intolerance, and Contemporary British Youth Culture Carol Lorraine Carano Sore Losers? Multilateral Trade Agreements, Commercial Disputes, and Exchange Rate Protection Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin Mark S. Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison Firms and Exchange Rates. The Sectoral and Institutional Sources of Monetary Regime Preferences Jose Fernandez-Albertos, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals 251 Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Daily Schedule Answering Oren’s Challenge: The Independent Role of Public Democratic Identity in the Security and Foreign Policies of Democracies Jarrod Hayes, University of Southern California Exchange Rate Regime Choice with Multiple Key Currencies Eric Neumayer, London School of Economics Thomas Pluemper, University of Essex The Political Geography of International Monetary Power David M. Andrews, Scripps College Fast Money: Institutional Investors and Exchange Rate Politics in Emerging Markets Benjamin J. Bloom, University of Virginia Disc: Babak Bahador, University of Canterbury 21-13 INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT Lilach Gilady, University of Toronto Disc: Michael G. Hall, Wichita State University Chair: 16-26 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF GLOBALIZATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 6-11 Papers: 17-17 ROUNDTABLE ON BETH SIMMONS, MOBILIZING FOR HUMAN RIGHTS: INTERNATIONAL LAW IN DOMESTIC POLITICS, CAMBRIDGE 2009 Co-sponsored by 45-3 Thomas Risse, Freie Universität Berlin Chair: Part: 18-2 18-10 Chair: Part: Ryan Goodman, Harvard University Xinyuan Dai, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Stephen D. Krasner, Stanford University Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University Thomas Risse, Freie Universität Berlin Barbara Koremenos, University of Michigan THEME PANEL: DEMOGRAPHY AND SECURITY: THE POLITICS OF POPULATION CHANGE IN AN AGE OF TURBULENCE Co-sponsored by 11-39 and T-3 Let’s Talk: Forum Selection in Dispute Resolution Vanessa Lefler, University of Iowa Just how Humanitarian are Interventions? UN Peacekeeping and the Prevention of Civilian Killing during and after Civil Wars Sarah E. Kreps, Cornell University Geoffrey Wallace, Cornell University Disc: Lilach Gilady, University of Toronto 21-23 CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Cullen S. Hendrix, University of North Texas Chair: Papers: 19-3 THE NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION CHALLENGE IN THE MIDDLE EAST: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Co-sponsored by 18-10 20-14 ELECTIONS AND ATTITUDES IN FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS Michael T. Koch, Texas A&M University Climate change, economic welfare and conflict Vally Koubi, ETH Zurich Thomas C. Bernauer, ETH Zurich The Impact of the Troop Surge in Iraq on the Size Distribution of Violent Events: What can we Learn about the Nature of the War? Neil Johnson, University of Miami Michael Spagat, University of London Privatization of Security and its Effects on Civil War Duration Megan Becker, University of California, San Diego Disc: Cullen S. Hendrix, University of North Texas 22-2 PARTISANSHIP AND BIPARTISANSHIP IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester Chair: Papers: Fourth Estate or Mouthpiece? A Game Theoretic Model of the Influence of Foreign Policy on the Domestic Relationship among Media, Regime Type and Government Respect for Physical Integrity Rights Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, University of Southern California Patrick James, University of Southern California Electoral Margins, Presidential Mandates, and American Foreign Policy Philip B. K. Potter, University of Michigan Economic Considerations in Public Opinion about War: Evidence from the American Public’s Support for the Invasion of Iraq Sam Sierra Seljan, UC San Diego 252 Pirates: Cause or Consequence of Civil War Chelsea Denise Brown, Southern Methodist University Shelby Bishop, Southern Methodist University Political Demography: Structural Policy Implications of Changing Demographic Patters Jacek Kugler, Claremont Graduate University Tadeusz Kugler, Roger Williams University F. Gregory Gause, III, University of Vermont Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University Negeen Pegahi, University of Chicago Caitlin Talmadge, Massachusetts Institute of Technology HUMAN RIGHTS, WOMEN’S RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THE BODY IN IR THEORY Co-sponsored by 31-10 Chair: See You Out of Court? Arbitration Treaties and Peaceful Conflict Management Megan Shannon, University of Mississippi THE NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION CHALLENGE IN THE MIDDLE EAST: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Co-sponsored by 19-3 Dalia Dassa Kaye, RAND Corporation 18-37 The WTO Dispute Resolution Body and Its Effects on the Kantian Tripod Christina Fattore, West Virginia University Papers: Evaluating Theories of Lawmaking Using Bill Support Rates Scott Adler, University of Colorado, Boulder Charles M. Cameron, Princeton University Partisan Signaling and Agenda Control in the U.S. House of Representatives Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia Michael Crespin, University of Georgia Anthony Madonna, University of Georgia Daily Schedule Managing Uncertainty in the U.S. Senate: Procedural Innovation and Routinization Richard S. Beth, Congressional Research Service Valerie Heitshusen, Congressional Research Service / Library of Congress Bill Heniff, Jr., Congressional Research Service Elizabeth Rybicki, Congressional Research Service Disc: 23-4 Chair: Disc: Part: 24-1 Undoing the Initiative: When Are Ballot Measures Challenged in Court, and When Do Judges Overturn Them? Dean P. Lacy, Dartmouth College Carlos A. Mejia, University of California David M. Primo, University of Rochester William Minozzi, Ohio State University “Pigs in Robes”: An Experimental Study of the Influence of Negative Judicial Campaign Messages Jeffrey A. Gottfried, University of Pennsylvania REFLECTIONS ON PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITIONS THE ROLE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Co-sponsored by 24-1 Terry Sullivan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Disc: Jeff Yates, Binghamton University, SUNY 29-1 Christopher Lu, The White House Martha Joynt Kumar, Towson University JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 26-6 29-11 POLICY RESPONSIVENESS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 37-6 Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida Blake Gottesman, White House James A. Thurber, American University John P. Burke, University of Vermont Chair: Papers: REFLECTIONS ON PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITIONS THE ROLE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Co-sponsored by 23-4 THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL POLICY: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES Co-sponsored by 7-15 Income Inequality and Unequal Policy Responsiveness in the American States Patrick Flavin, University of Notre Dame Democratic Responsiveness and Education Governance: Are State Charter School Laws Responsive to Public Preferences? Jonah Liebert, Columbia University, Teachers College Connecting the Representational Dots between Public Opinion and State Budget Priorities Kasey Swanke, University of Notre Dame Lauren Deschamps, University of Notre Dame Thermostatic Policy Responsiveness in the Fifty States Julianna Pacheco, Pennsylvania State University Institutions and Representation: Policy Responsiveness in the U.S. States Justin Phillips, Columbia University Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University GEOENGINEERING AND GLOBAL ORDER Co-sponsored by 39-1 Renee Marlin-Bennett, Johns Hopkins University Uncertainty, Fat Tails, and Time Lags: Why we Must Start Planning Now to Geoengineer Earth Soon Thomas F. Homer-Dixon, University of Waterloo Disc: Gerald C. Wright, Indiana University, Bloomington Daniel C. Lewis, University of New Orleans Geoengineering and World Order: Past and Future Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University Jairus V. Grove, Johns Hopkins University 30-7 CITIES AND PUBLIC POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-20 Mara Sidney, Rutgers University, Newark An Emergent Mangle of Practice: Local Adaptation, Regional Planning, and National Management of Global Climate Change as Vernacular Geo-Engineering Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University The Utility and Implications of Real Geoengineering Concepts Jason J. Blackstock, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis Geoffrey Herrera, Pitzer College 25-20 CITIES AND PUBLIC POLICY Co-sponsored by 30-7 26-6 JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-1 Jeff Yates, Binghamton University, SUNY Chair: Papers: Nonprofits, Governance, and Sustainability in American Cities Kent E. Portney, Tufts University Jeffrey M. Berry, Tufts University The Politics of Environmental Science Richard C. Hula, Michigan State University Rebecca Elizabeth Bromley-Trujillo, Michigan State University Daily Schedule Disc: Chair: Legislative Responses to Unconstitutionality: Evidence from the State Level Matthew H. Bosworth, Winona State University Partisan Polarization, Rules and Legislative Productivity Barbara Sinclair, University of California, Los Angeles 25-3 Papers: Negativity and Television Advertising in State Supreme Court Elections Melinda Gann Hall, Michigan State University Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh Executive Strategy and Judicial Candidates: “Going Public” in State Supreme Court Elections Teena Wilhelm, University of Georgia Richard L. Vining, Jr., University of Georgia LEADERSHIP AND POLICY CHANGE IN THE ERA OF COMPLEXITY Co-sponsored by 11-51 Chair: Papers: Legislative Compensation within Parties: A Theory with Evidence Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Virginia Nathan W. Monroe, University of California, Merced 25-1 25-7 Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Neighborhood Democracy and Affordable Housing in Minneapolis Neil J. Kraus, University of Wisconsin, River Falls Neighborhood Regeneration Policy and the Contest for Subgovernment Control in Baltimore Robert P. Stoker, George Washington University Clarence N. Stone, The George Washington University Donn C. Worgs, Towson University 253 Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Spanning Policymaking Silos in Urban Development and Environmental Management: When Global Cities are Coastal Cities Too Herman L. Boschken, San Jose State University Disc: Christopher Leo, University of Winnipeg 31-10 HUMAN RIGHTS, WOMEN’S RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THE BODY IN IR THEORY Co-sponsored by 18-37 Debra J. Liebowitz, Drew University Chair: Papers: Challenging Realists to “Get Real”: Gendering Weapons, War, and Terrorism in a Post-9/11 World Kimberly Rae Carter, University of Toronto The International Criminal Court: A New Avenue for the Diffusion of Women’s Rights Norms? Louise Chappell, University of Sydney Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Micro-Level Responses to the Transnational Campaign on Gender-Based Violence Karisa Tritz Cloward, Yale University Civil Society Activism and Women’s Human Rights: An Analysis of the International Marriage Broker Regulation Act and the International Violence Against Women Act Noha Shawki, Illinois State University Disc: Aaron M. Hoffman, Purdue University 32-8 Chair: GENDER, RACE AND SEXUALITY Regina P. Branton, Rice University Papers: Is the Gender Gap “American”? The Generational Evolution of Latino/a Political Differences Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder Christina Elizabeth Bejarano, University of Kansas Sylvia Manzano, Texas A&M University Daily Schedule Papers: Locked in and Silent? The Role of ‘Voice’ in Delivering Public Services John Kevin Curtice, University of Strathclyde Stratos Patrikios, University of Strathclyde Specialization in Electoral and Non-electoral Political Participation: A Comparative Analysis Eline A. de Rooij, University of Oxford The Changing Determinants of Protest Participation Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign Disc: Marc Hooghe, KU Leuven 35-1 POLITICAL PARTIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE: 20 YEARS AFTER THE FALL OF COMMUNISM Co-sponsored by 13-8 36-20 HOW ELECTION RULES AND ADMINISTRATION AFFECT VOTERS John E. McNulty, SUNY, Binghamton Chair: Papers: Disc: Regina P. Branton, Rice University Michael Javen Fortner, Harvard University 33-7 FACING A RELIGIOUS DIVIDE? EUROPE IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY Co-sponsored by 15-20 Helene Slessarev-Jamir, Claremont School of Theology Chair: Papers: Legally Mandated Inconvenience: Does Driver’s License Suspension reduce Voter Turnout? John E. McNulty, SUNY, Binghamton Is There Really a Secret Ballot? Conor M. Dowling, Yale University Alan Gerber, Yale University Gregory Huber, Yale University David Doherty, Yale University Disc: Rachael Vanessa Cobb, Suffolk University 36-31 REVISITING THE AMERICAN VOTER Co-sponsored by 37-10 George Rabinowitz, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Chair: Papers: Candidate Perceptions in the 2008 Election Helmut Norpoth, SUNY, Stony Brook Preferential Treatment of Religious Organizations and Discrimination against Minority Religions in Europe Claus Hofhansel, Rhode Island College Disc: Aida Paskeviciute, University of Essex 34-6 BEYOND THE BALLOT BOX: INSTITUTIONS, PARTICIPATION AND REPRESENTATION Marc Hooghe, KU Leuven Chair: 254 The Economy and Voting Behavior in the 2008 Election Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa Policy Attitudes, Ideology, and Voting Behavior in the 2008 Election William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University Segmented Pluralism as Problem or Solution: The Debate about Pillarization in The Netherlands Matthijs Bogaards, Jacobs University Bremen Religion and Support for Turkish Membership in the EU Hajo Georg Boomgaarden, University of Amsterdam Satisfaction with Voting Technology and Election Administration in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election Paul S. Herrnson, University of Maryland Richard G. Niemi, University of Rochester Kelly D. Patterson, Brigham Young University It’s in the Mail: Surveying UOCAVA Voters and Barriers to Overseas Voting Claire M. Smith, Overseas Vote Foundation Muslim, American and Female: Constructing Social Identity Shawn W. Rosenberg, University of California, Irvine Fatima Z. Rahman, University of California, Irvine Straddling the Digital Divide: Race, Pornography, and Representation in Cyberspace Niambi M. Carter, Purdue University One of Us: Multilevel Models Examining the Impact of Social Representation on Civic Engagement Pippa Norris, Harvard University Mona Lena Krook, Washington University, St. Louis Party Identification in the 2008 Election Herbert F. Weisberg, The Ohio State University Disc: Paul N. Goren, University of Minnesota George Rabinowitz, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 37-6 POLICY RESPONSIVENESS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-11 Daily Schedule 37-10 REVISITING THE AMERICAN VOTER Co-sponsored by 36-31 38-10 DELIBERATION, SOCIAL NETWORKS AND THE FRAMING OF DISCOURSE Matthew A. Baum, Harvard University Chair: Papers: Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Papers: Divergent Paths to Transitional Justice: Spain and Portugal Compared Omar G. Encarnacion, Bard College Memorials to Struggle: Artistic Representations and the Politics of Democratic Consolidation in Latin America Katherine Hite, Vassar College Citizen Group Sponsored Issue Ads and Agenda Setting Daniel E. Bergan, Michigan State University Genevieve Risner, Michigan State University Evolution or Revolution? Transitional Justice Culture Across Borders Stephanie R. Golob, Baruch College-CUNY Social Influence and Social Selection in Networks David Lazer, Harvard University Michael Neblo, Ohio State University Brian Rubineau, Cornell University The Power of Symbolic Capital: Political Struggles over Monuments and Memorials in the Post-Communist World Juliet Johnson, McGill University Benjamin Forest, McGill University The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: How to Save Political Discussion from Itself Gregory A. Petrow, University of Nebraska, Omaha Timothy Vercellotti, Western New England College Leadership and Political Communication Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University Torun Dewan, London School of Economics Disc: Jo-Marie Burt, George Mason University 44-22 Chair: AUTHORITARIAN REGIME CONSOLIDATION Andreas Schedler, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas Papers: How Autocrats Defend Themselves against Armed Rivals Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles Disc: Jennifer Ogg Anderson, Vanderbilt University 39-1 GEOENGINEERING AND GLOBAL ORDER Co-sponsored by 25-7 Structural Challenges to the Consolidation of Electoral Authoritarian Regimes Andreas Schedler, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas 40-6 COMPARATIVE EXPERIENCES IN ONLINE POLITICAL ORGANIZING, DELIBERATING AND PARTICIPATING Cecilia G. Manrique, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse Institutionalizing Popular Support for Plebiscitarian Autocracies: The Case of Russia Richard Rose, University of Aberdeen William Mishler, University of Arizona Revitalising Particpatory Politics?: The Internet, Social Capital and Political Action. Rachel K. Gibson, University of Manchester Ian McAllister, Australian National University Authoritarian Resilience and State Failure: Lessons from Zimbabwe Michael Bratton, Michigan State University Chair: Papers: Can Online Deliberation Transform Citizens? Knowledge and Opinion Change in an Internet Field Experiment in the UK Peter C. John, University of Manchester Chin-Cher Chen, National Chung-Cheng University Corinne Wales, University of Southampton Patrick James Sturgis, University of Surrey Gerry Stoker, University of Southampton At Least We Could See Them When They Marched in Skokie! The Virtual Reality of Radical Political Movements in a Web 2.0 World Robert D. Duval, West Virginia University Kyle Christensen, West Virginia University Arian Spahiu, West Virginia University Disc: Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University 45-3 ROUNDTABLE ON BETH SIMMONS, MOBILIZING FOR HUMAN RIGHTS: INTERNATIONAL LAW IN DOMESTIC POLITICS, CAMBRIDGE 2009 Co-sponsored by 17-17 46-19 QUALITATIVE APPROACHES TO STUDYING THE EMERGENCE AND PRACTICE OF DEMOCRACY Djamel Mermat, University of Lille 2 Chair: Papers: The MoveOn Effect: Internet Fundraising and the Second Interest Group Realignment David A Karpf, University of Pennsylvania Democratisation Processes in Arab Countries: A Fuzzy Set Analysis Mohamed Charfi, University of Geneva Citizens in Front of their Screens: The Joint Influence of Al Jazeera and TF1 on the Electoral Choice of French Voters of Maghreb Origin Djamel Mermat, University of Lille 2 Monia Chaabane, PACTE Organizing the Web? An Investigation of Party Organization and Online Presence of Political Partie. Maria Laura Sudulich, Trinity College Dublin Michael J. Jensen, University of California, Irvine 41-1 FEAR OF IMAGES? ROUNDTABLE ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE EVASION OF VISUAL CULTURE Co-sponsored by 2-18 Governance Infrastructure and High Quality Democracy: A Theoretically Motivated Concept Construction and Necessary Condition Analysis Ryan G. Baird, University of Arizona 43-1 THE POLITICS OF SETTLERS AND SETTLEMENTS IN CONTESTED TERRITORIES Co-sponsored by 11-22 44-16 DEMOCRACY, TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE, AND THE MEMORY OF DICTATORSHIP Jo-Marie Burt, George Mason University Chair: Disc: Patricia J. Woods, University of Florida 255 Daily Schedule Disc: The Role of Coalitions in the Spanish and the Portuguese Transition to Democracy 1974-1978 Ivo Lima Veiga, University College London Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM 46-24 DEBATING RESEARCH DESIGNS: DO QUALITATIVE AND INTERPRETIVE LOGICS OF INQUIRY DIFFER? SHOULD THEY? Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods, Panel 1 Poster Sessions POSTER SESSION 5 Divisions 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 44 Papers: The Logic of Dispute Initiation in Regional Trade Agreements: The Case of the European Union Martha Thomas, Pennsylvania State University All Free Trade is Not the Same: Why People Like Liberalized Trade with Some Countries but Not With Others Jeffrey Drope, Marquette University The Co-Evolution and Transnational Spread of Corporate Social Responsibility and Market Liberalism: A Social Network Analysis, 1982-2007 Daniel Phillip Kinderman, Cornell University Foreign Aid as Signal to Investors: Predicting FDI in PostConflict Countries Ana Carolina Garriga, University of Pittsburgh Brian J. Phillips, University of Pittsburgh The China Investment Corporation: China’s Sovereign Wealth Fund William Norris, MIT Cooperation or Collusion: Lead Donors and the Development Aid Cartel Martin Steinwand, University of Rochester National Integration and the Closing of Economies Ishan Joshi, Cornell University Between Market Radicalism and Policy Palimpsest: Tax and Welfare Reforms in the New EU Member States Cornel Ban, University of Maryland Shareholder Activism and Socially Responsible Investment Networks: Real or Imagined Power? Michael R. MacLeod, Bentley College Enforcement of the International Nonproliferation Regime: Expanding the Role of International Organizations Robert L. Brown, Temple University Embracing Hierarchy in International Organizations: The UN Security Council and Non-Democratic Sources of Legitimacy Lora Anne Viola, Social Science Research Center Berlin The Durability of Power-Sharing Arrangements Melani Cammett, Brown University Edmund J. Malesky, University of California, San Diego State Failure and External Threat: Exploring the Causal Relationship Bridget Coggins, Dartmouth College Targeted Killings in Israel: Why Decision Making Process Matters Samy Cohen, CERI Revolutionary Regimes and International Conflict Jeff Colgan, Princeton University Summer Lopez, Princeton University Tough Talk, Cheap Talk, and Babbling: Government Unity, Hawkishness, and Military Challenges Matthew Fehrs, Ohio State University Politics and Security in the Energy Supply Market Andrea E. Jones-Rooy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor It’s All About the Umma: Attack Motivations among European Islamist Terrorists William J. Josiger, Georgetown University Black Gold and Blackmail: The Politics of International Oil Coercion Rosemary Kelanic, University of Chicago Implicit Liberalization: Changes to Tariff Type and Protection Ashley Renee Conner, Stanford University Deterrence in the Media Age - Security, Discourse and Public Opinion Ilan Danjoux, University of Manchester Weak Ties, Strong Soldiers: Civil Society and Battlefield Effectiveness Trace C. Lasley, University of Kentucky Hegemony and International Society: Must There Be a Conflict? Barak Mendelsohn, Haverford College Let Them Eat Grain: Market Liberalism, Agricultural Decline, and Out-Migration from Mexico Whitney E. Easton, University of Connecticut When Weak States Win Stephanie S. Holmsten, University of Texas, Austin The Continental Construction and Constraint of US Power: Are Canada and Mexico the Prime External Constituents of American Hegemony? Stephen Clarkson, University of Toronto Matto Mildenberger, University of Waterloo Democracies and Market Access: Evidence for the Democratic Advantage Rebecca Nelson, Harvard University Settling Trade Disputes Under Asymmetric Information: A Theoretical and Statistical Evaluation of the WTO Dispute Settlement System Daina Chiba, Rice University Infringements for Sale? The Public Choice of Non-compliance with International Agreements Tobias Hofmann, College of William & Mary Globalization and the Increasing Intolerance of the Indian Middle Class Shanna Dietz Surendra, Indiana University, Bloomington FINANCIAL GOVERNANCE AND TRANSNATIONAL DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY Randall Germain, Carleton University 256 Daily Schedule Hard Questions for Soft Power Robert Rauchhaus, University of California, Santa Barbara Thomas R. Hartman, University of California, Santa Barbara Liberal Interventions, Illiberal Outcomes? Probing the Link Between the Liberal Peace and State Fragility Marie-Joelle Zahar, University of Montreal The Court of International Public Opinion: Assessing the Effectiveness of International Law Benjamin Appel, University of Maryland Can Strategic Culture Change? The Impact of India’s Strategic Partnership with the United States Stephen F. Burgess, U.S. Air War College Deterring North Korea: The Six-Party Talks as a Two-Player Compellence Game Eric H. Honda What Rough Beast: Synthetic Biology and the Future of Biosecurity Gautam Mukunda, Masschusetts Institute of Technology Scott Mohr, Boston University Climate Change and Security: Applying Civil War Dynamics to International Conflict Carmel F. Davis, The Citadel Metaphors of US Missile Defense: Continuity and Change from SDI to GMD William M. Flanik, University of Toronto Political Islam and Peacebuilding: The Somalia Case Afyare A. Elmi, Qatar University Daily Schedule Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM When Communication Makes Actors Drift Further Apart: The United States, North Korea and Nuclear Non-proliferation Markus Kornprobst, Diplomatic Academy of Vienna The Surrender of Secrecy? Explaining the Strength of Transparency and Access to Information Laws Robert Gregory Michener, University of Texas at Austin A Theoretical Examination of the Role of Humanitarian Crisis in Violent Conflict Leah C. Wells, University of Mississippi Memory and Grass-Roots Politics: The Changing Link Between State and Civil Society? Jenny Wustenberg, University of Maryland When Terrorists Reject Violence: Conditions Conducive to the Strategic Use of Nonviolence Susanne Martin, University of Texas, Austin Lack of a Shared Perception of the Terrorist Threat Among EU Member States Oldrich Bures, Metropolitan University Prague This Land is My Land: Ebbs and Flows in Secessionist Violence Keisha S. Haywood, Emory University Related Group Panels When Grandma Doesn’t Just Knit You a Sweater: Support from Co-Ethnics and Civil War Duration Shanna A. Kirschner, University of Michigan Aging Policy and Politics Group Does Threat Make the State? Moran Moshe Mandelbaum, University of Haifa Chair: Third-Party Wars, Vicarious Learning, and Rapprochement in International Rivalries Jonathan M. DiCicco, Canisius College Papers: Panel 1 Not in My Backyard!: External Balancing, Intra-Balancing and Alliance Dynamics Jaewook Chung, Arizona State University CROSSNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON AGING POLITICS Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institue of Technology Competing for the Exits: Recasting Bismarckian Pension Reforms in Europe and Japan Takeshi Ito, Senshu University Swaying Ageing Voters: Electoral Institutions and Pension Reform in Representative Democracy Oliver Pamp, University of Bremen Taking Comparative Advantage Seriously: Sender-Target Trade Relationship and Success of Economic Sanctions Taehee Whang, Texas A&M University Elena V. McLean, Texas A&M University Age Trajectories of Social Policy Preferences - How Demographic Change Influences Age-Based Political Representation Harald Wilkoszewski, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research Making Peace or Keeping Peace? Regional Organization and Conflict Mediation Ying Zhang, Vanderbilt University Population Aging, Political Parties,and the Politics of Labor in Germany Jennifer Dabbs Sciubba, Rhodes College An Explanation of Counterinsurgency Effectiveness Barry Masanori Hashimoto, Emory University Miriam J. Laugesen, University of California, Los Angeles Martin Hering, McMaster University The Partisan Foundations of Participatory Governance Regimes in Brazil and Colombia Lindsay Rose Mayka, University of California, Berkeley Disc: How Politics is fought across Territory: The Institutional Determinants of the Nationalization of Politics Julieta Suarez-Cao, Northwestern University Association of Korean Political Studies in North America Lessons From Eastern Europe for Democratization Theories: From ‘Preconditions’ to ‘Constellations’? Uffe Jakobsen, University of Copenhagen Panel 1 Chair: IDENTIFYING KOREA, OTHERING NEIGHBORS Terence Roehrig, Naval War College Papers: The Politics of the Dokdo/Takeshima Issue Youngshik Daniel Bong, American University The interaction between state and nation-building in fragmented societies Joanne Elizabeth Wallis, University of Cambridge Language Games of US-Japan Negotiation: Speech Act Analysis of Conflict over Wartime Comfort Women in 2007 Kiwoong Yang, University of Hawaii at Manoa Municipal Elections in Saudi Arabia: Review and Assessment Khalid Othman Alyahya, Dubai School of Government Korean Nationalism and the Anti-American sentiment in the Post-Cold War era Geun Koh, University of Delaware Preference Falsification and the Spiral of Silence— How Media Coverage and Opinion Polls led Pinochet to Miscalculate Support for the ‘No’ Vote in the 1988 Chilean Plebiscite Elizabeth Stein, University of New Orleans North Korea’s Nuclear Ambition and Identity Politics: the Security Dilemma in the Six-Party Talks Soon-ok Shin, University of Warwick Shifts in North Korean Strategies in the Asymmetric Conflict with the U.S.? Kyung-Ae Park, University of British Columbia Reigning in the Big Men?: The Politics of Executive Constraints in Sub-Saharan Africa Kristin A. McKie, Cornell University Impact of Transitional Justice on Trajectories of Democratization: A comparison of 3 African cases Anu Chakravarty, University of South Carolina Disc: The Impact of Social Movements on State Policy: Human Rights Movements in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay Cora Fernandez Anderson, University of Notre Dame Panel 1 Measuring and explaining the increase of Participatory Democracy in Latin America (1979-2007). Carlos Melendez, University of Notre Dame Campaign Finance Research Group Chair: Papers: SMALL DONORS AND LARGE IN U.S. FEDERAL AND STATE ELECTIONS Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico Donor Activism in the 2008 Presidential Elections: A Survey of Donors to Barack Obama and John McCain Wesley Joe, Campaign Finance Institute Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University 257 Daily Schedule State Capacity as a Pillar for Democracy: A Test Using 26 Postcommunist Countries. Jessica Fortin, McGill University Mikyoung Kim, Hiroshima Peace Institute Thursday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Small and Large Donors in the Federal Elections of 2008 Aaron Dusso, George Washington University Gregory Fortelny, Georgetown University Small and Large Donors Across the States: Data, Models, and Policy Options Michael J. Malbin, SUNY, Albany and The Campaign Finance Institute Peter W. Brusoe, American University Henrik M. Schatzinger, University of Georgia Disc: Diana Dwyre, California State University, Chico Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Panel 2 Chair: ROUNDTABLE: THE STATE OF ACADEMIC FREE SPEECH IN CANADA AND THE U.S. Luigi Bradizza, Louisiana State University Daily Schedule Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Panel 1 Chair: Part: DEBATING RESEARCH DESIGNS: DO QUALITATIVE AND INTERPRETIVE LOGICS OF INQUIRY DIFFER? SHOULD THEY? Co-sponsored by 46-24 Dvora Yanow, Vrije Universiteit Colin Elman, Syracuse University John Gerring, Boston University Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, Albany Raymond D. Duvall, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah Thursday, 12:00 PM to 12:45 PM APSA Reception APSA Events Part: James R. Stoner, Jr., Louisiana State University Clifford Orwin, University of Toronto Janet Ajzenstat, McMaster University Barry Cooper, University of Calgary AWARD LUNCHEON--BY INVITATION ONLY Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM Working Group: Citizenship and Migration Eric Voegelin Society SESSION 1 Panel 7 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science Chair: Papers: REVISITING REINHOLD NIEBUHR IN THE 21ST CENTURY Greg Russell, University of Oklahoma Pilgrims’ Progress: The Disenchanted Destinations of Reinhold Niebuhr and Raymond Aron Reed M. Davis, Seattle Pacific University Fire In Their Hearts: Christian Realism and Democracy Promotion Eric Patterson, Georgetown University Reinhold Niebuhr on Tragedy and Politics Daniel G. Lang, Lynchburg College Niebuhr’s Christian Realism and Dewey’s Pragmatism: The Faith Experience Vibeke Schou Tjalve, Danish Institute for Military Studies Disc: David A. Mayers, Boston University David Clinton, Baylor University SESSION 1 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory SESSION 1 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 1 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 1 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 1 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 1 Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists Panel 1 Chair: NEW TRENDS IN CROSS-TAIWAN STRAIT RELATIONS Robert S. Ross, Boston College Papers: China, Taiwan and the United States—Using Cost-benefit Analysis to Assess Future Trends Robert G. Sutter, Georgetown University Continuity and Change in the Cross-Strait Relations John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, University of South Carolina US Policy towards Taiwan in Beijing’s View Qiang Xin, Fudan University Identity Politics of the Taiwan Question: From the Island to the Mainland Xin Xu, Cornell University Beijing’s Shifting Positions in the New Era of Cross-Taiwan Strait Relations Quansheng Zhao, American University Guoli Liu, College of Charleston Disc: Robert S. Ross, Boston College Yun-han Chu, Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 1 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 1 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 1 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 1 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics SESSION 1 Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 1 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 1 258 Daily Schedule Thursday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM Thursday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM Intelligence Studies Group APSA Panel BUSINESS MEETING APSA Departmental Services Committee ROUNDTABLE: FRIEND OR FOE: THE EXTERNAL REVIEW Part: Gretchen M. Bauer, University of Delaware John T. Woolley, University of California, Santa Barbara Stephen J. Majeski, University of Washington Michael E. Kraft, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Women’s Caucus for Political Science MEETING 1 Section Business Meetings 35 Political Organizations and Parties EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING 42 New Political Science PUBLICATIONS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 1 49 Canadian Politics BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science Thursday, 12:15 PM to 1:45 PM SESSION 1 Division Panels Working Group: Comparative Political Theory 46-25 SESSION 1 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes Chair: SESSION 1 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives METHODS CAFE Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods, Panel 2 Adam Avrushin, University of Chicago Monika Benova, University of Utah SESSION 1 Analytic Eclecticism: Between Competing Theories and Theoretical Synthesis Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics Concept Formation: Reflexive Approaches Robert Kaufman Adcock, George Washington University Papers: SESSION 1 Contesting the Political Theory/Empirical Research Divide Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, Whitman College Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Critical Constructivist and Discourse Analysis Raymond D. Duvall, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago SESSION 1 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis Designing Research Designs: Adaptability, Validity, Generalizability? Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah Cyrus Ernesto Zirakzadeh, University of Connecticut SESSION 1 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 1 Feminist Methods Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Field Research I (Participant observation, political ethnography, etc.): U.S. Katherine Cramer Walsh, University of Wisconsin, Madison Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University SESSION 1 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership Field Research II (Participant observation, political ethnography, etc.): “Overseas” Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Samer S. Shehata, Georgetown University SESSION 1 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Interpretive Policy Analysis: Value-critical, Policy Discourse, Policy Spaces Ronald J. Schmidt, Sr., California State University, Long Beach Dvora Yanow, Vrije Universiteit SESSION 1 Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 1 Intersectionality Research: Race, Ethnicity, Gender, Class, Sexuality, Religion Julia S. Jordan-Zachery, Providence College Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 1 Affiliate Group Meetings Teaching Qualitative-Interpretive Methods Emily Hauptmann, Western Michigan University Pi Sigma Alpha EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING Related Group Meetings Indigenous Studies Network BUSINESS MEETING Related Group Panels Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Panel 2 METHODS CAFE Co-sponsored by 46-25 259 Daily Schedule Interviewing: Ordinary Language Interviewing and Life History Narratives Frederic C. Schaffer, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Lee Ann Fujii, George Washington University Thursday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM Thursday, 12:45 PM to 1:45 PM Daily Schedule Thursday, 12:45 PM to 1:45 PM 2-20 APSA Reception Chair: DECOLONIZING MENTAL SPACE: THE INTERIOR STRUGGLE FOR CHANGE AND LIBERATION Morton Schoolman, SUNY, Albany APSA Events AWARDS CEREMONY Papers: Thursday, 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM Holocaust Testimony and the Limits of Narrative and Trauma Theory C. Fred Alford, University of Maryland, College Park APSA Meetings APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning COMMITTEE MEETING Différance, Obama Style: Tolerant Implosion, Hospitable Change Mary Andrea Caputi, California State University, Long Beach Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM APSA Panel Unfreedom and the Internal Mental Space: How to Evaluate the Political Transformation of Self James M. Glass, University of Maryland, College Park Disc: William Chaloupka, Colorado State University 2-26 Chair: GOVERNMENTALITY AND BIOPOLITICS Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College Papers: Population as Subject Marcelo Hoffman, Earlham College APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning Panel 1 Chair: Part: CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY: POLITICAL SCIENCE ENTERS THE 21ST CENTURY Luis Ricardo Fraga, University of Washington Terri E. Givens, University of Texas-Austin Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi Manuel Avalos, University of North Carolina, Wilmington The Biopolitical Domination of Life in Nietzsche, Foucault and Adorno Vanessa Eva Maria Lemm, Universidad Diego Portales Scale, Security, and Political Economy: Debating the Biopolitics of the Global War on Terror Nicholas J. Kiersey, Ohio University, Chillicothe Division Panels T-4 THEME PANEL: ALEKSANDR SOLZHENITSYN 19182008: REMEMBRANCE AND LEGACY Co-sponsored by 41-6 T-5 THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE STATE REACTIONS TO LGBT RIGHTS CLAIMS Co-sponsored by 47-5 and 29-15 1-3 RELIGION AND MODERN POLITICS IN SPINOZA AND ROUSSEAU Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas, Austin Chair: On the Use and Abuse of Governmentality for Political Theory Thomas Biebricher, University of Florida Disc: Emily Howden Hoechst, Georgetown University 3-10 INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN AND DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State University Chair: Papers: Papers: Bayle Between Spinoza and Rousseau: A Commentary on the Pensées Diverses Ronald Beiner, University of Toronto, Mississauga Epistemic Risks of Representative Government Robert E. Goodin, Australian National University Kai P. Spiekermann, London School of Economics Pragmatism and Legitimacy Jack Knight, Duke University Spinoza and Rousseau on Vanity and Self-Esteem Julie E. Cooper, University of Chicago Random Selection and Democratic Legitimacy Peter C. Stone, Stanford University Scriptural Hermeneutics as Politics: Spinoza and Rousseau on How to Read the Bible Jeremy Fortier, University of Texas at Austin Supermajority Rules, Arbitrariness, and Democratic Legitimacy Melissa A. Schwartzberg, Columbia University Natural Theology as Conscience: Rousseau’s Democratization of Spinoza’s Ethics Larissa M Atkison, University of Toronto Disc: David M. Estlund, Brown University Disc: David Lay Williams, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point 3-21 Chair: CHALLENGES TO MULTICULTURALISM Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 1-21 TOCQUEVILLE AND THE ANALYSIS OF DEMOCRATIC POLITICS John Grant, Brock University Papers: The Third Wave of Liberal Multiculturalism: Beyond the Gender or Culture Impasse? Fiona MacDonald, University of Manitoba Chair: Papers: The Moral Force of Indigenous Politics Courtney Jung, University of Toronto Tocqueville and Marx: Not Opposites Roger Boesche, Occidental College Taylor and Kymlicka on the Recognition of Religious Diversity James Farney, Queen’s University Sources of Political Cynicism in Democratic Society Steven Bilakovics, Yale University The Politics of Sour Grapes: Tocqueville, Sartre and Elster on American Populism Michael L. McLendon, California State University, Los Angeles Disc: 260 Michael J. Illuzzi, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater Liberal Multiculturalism and the Human Rights Revolution Charles Jones, University of Western Ontario Disc: Nahshon Perez, UCLA 4-10 REPUTATION IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS Co-sponsored by 21-7 Daily Schedule Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM 5-13 CORRECT VOTING Co-sponsored by 36-25 Disc: Ruth O’Brien, CUNY-Graduate Center 6-7 DELIBERATION AND DECISION-MAKING IN MONETARY POLICY COMMITTEES Kevin M. Quinn, Harvard University 8-11 Chair: ADVANCES IN IDEAL POINT ESTIMATION Michael Peress, University of Rochester Papers: Estimating the Effect of Non-Separable Preferences in EU Treaty Negotiations. Daniel Finke, University of Heidelberg Chair: Papers: Does Sunshine Reduce the Quality of Deliberation? The Case of the Federal Open Market Committee John T. Woolley, University of California, Santa Barbara Joseph M. Gardner, Northern Arizona University The Dimensionality of Spatial Voting Estimates Keith L. Dougherty, University of Georgia Ryan Baker, University of Georgia An Econometric Model of Monetary Policy Decision-Making for the United Kingdom Henry Chappell, University of South Carolina Rob Roy McGregor, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Todd Vermilyea, Philadelphia Federal Reserve A Latent Measurement Model of Loyalty and Competence Among Presidential Appointments to U.S. Executive Agencies and Independent Commissions George A. Krause, University of Pittsburgh Anne M. Joseph O’Connell, University of California, Berkeley Deliberating Monetary Policy: The Idea of Low Inflation Among Central Bankers Cheryl M. Schonhardt-Bailey, London School of Economics Andrew Bailey, Bank of England Disc: William T. Bernhard, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Kevin M. Quinn, Harvard University 6-19 Chair: INEQUALITY AND REDISTRIBUTION Barry M. Mitnick, University of Pittsburgh Papers: Sharing the Wealth: Political Competition Within States and Its Effect on Income Inequality Andrew Kirkpatrick, Emory University Amy H. Liu, Emory University Donald M. Beaudette, Emory University Globalization, Inequality, and Redistribution: What Do the (New) Data Say? Lloyd Gruber, London School of Economics Making Votes Talk: Ideology and Government Influence on Legislative Behavior Cesar Zucco, Jr., Insituto Universitario de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro Benjamin Lauderdale, Princeton University Disc: Stephen Jessee, University of Texas 9-6 EDUCATING FOR CIVIC ENGAGEMENT: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE Co-sponsored by 10-6 10-6 EDUCATING FOR CIVIC ENGAGEMENT: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE Co-sponsored by 9-6 Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University South Bend Chair: Papers: Deterinants of Attitudes About Economic Inequality in Latin America Brian D. Cramer, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Revitalising Democracy: Civic Education in Europe and the United States James Sloam, University of London, Royal Holloway Ben Kisby, University of Sheffield The Shadowing Role of Redistributive Institutions in the Relationship Between Income Inequality and Redistribution Ahmet Faruk Aysan, Bogazici University Disc: John Stephen Ahlquist, UCLA 7-2 THE PERSISTENCE OF NATIONALISM AND NATIONBUILDING IN THE 21ST CENTURY Co-sponsored by 11-25 7-14 Chair: EXPERTS IN THE AMERICAN POLITY Ronald F. King, San Diego State University Papers: Amateurs, Experts, and Regulatory Transformations in American History Ann-Marie E. Szymanski, University of Oklahoma Overlooked or Out-of-Sight?: Congressional Oversight of Intelligence, 1945-2005 Meredith Wooten, University of Pennsylvania Going Up, Getting Out or Moving In? The Rise of Professional Politicians in the U.S., 1812-1944 Scott A. MacKenzie, University of California, Davis Samuel Kernell, University of California, San Diego Building Student Engagement in Introduction to American Government John C. Berg, Suffolk University “Seizing the Day: Encouraging Civic Engagement in the Community College Environment” Shyam K. Sriram, Georgia Perimeter College Disc: Lynne E. Ford, College of Charleston Michelle D. Deardorff, Jackson State University 11-3 Chair: STUDYING INTERESTS AND DISTRIBUTION Timothy Frye, Columbia University Papers: Beyond ELF: Measuring Economic Differences Across Ethnic Groups John D. Huber, Columbia University Katharine A. Baldwin, Columbia University Risk and Redistribution Isabela Mares, Columbia University Partisanship and Policymaking in the Latin American Electricity Sector Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University Cecilia Martinez-Gallardo, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The National Defense Education Act: Sputnik, “Intermestics” and the Making of Federal Education Policy Jody Schmid, University at Albany 261 Daily Schedule Information and Bureaucratic Expertise: The Bureau of Corporations, 1903-1914 Jonathan Chausovsky, SUNY-Fredonia Civic Education in Higher Education Institutions: A Status Reports Jean Wahl Harris, University of Scranton Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Daily Schedule Partisanship and Public Opinion on Policymaking: Comparing Survey Experiments from East and West Joshua A. Tucker, New York University Ted Brader, University of Michigan “Walking the Walk”: Signaling a Credible Commitment to Sound Economic Policies in the Eyes of International Investors Heather Bergman, University of California, Los Angeles Developmental Strategies in a Global Economy: The Unexpected Emergence of China’s Indigenous Auto Industry Crystal Chang, University of California, Berkeley The Other Great Illusion: The Advancement of Separatism through Economic Integration Dawn Brancati, Washington University in St. Louis Foreign Capital Liberalization and Development: Lessons from China, India, and Russia Roselyn Hsueh, Temple University Disc: Timothy Frye, Columbia University 11-25 THE PERSISTENCE OF NATIONALISM AND NATIONBUILDING IN THE 21ST CENTURY Co-sponsored by 7-2 Henry E. Hale, George Washington University Disc: Louis W. Pauly, University of Toronto Nathan Jensen, Washington University, St. Louis 12-30 All Good Things Do Not Go Together: The Political Economy of Nation Formation in Tanzania Elliott D. Green, London School of Economics Chair: GOVERNING DIVERSITY: INCLUSIONS AND EXCLUSIONS Bryan R. Daves, Yeshiva University Chair: Papers: Papers: Theories of Nationalism in Latin America: Exploring Insights and Limitations Matthias vom Hau, University of Manchester Paved with Good Intentions: How Consociationalism Contributed to Ethnic Conflict in Iraq Bryan R. Daves, Yeshiva University Does Access to Political Power by Minority Politicians Affect Everyday Group Relations? Micro-level Evidence from India Simon Chauchard, New York University Regions of Nationalism in Europe: Toward a More Complex East/West Divide? Zsuzsa Csergo, Queen’s University Stefan Wolff, University of Nottingham Public Goods Transfers and National Unity: Evidence from PostSoeharto Indonesia Risa J. Toha, University of California, Los Angeles Testing Mechanisms of Change in National Identity: Making the Case for an Evolutionary Dynamic Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Making of a Scapegoat: Mass Immigrant Expulsions in Africa Claire Leslie Adida, Stanford University “Hinduization” of Civil Society: A Study of Subregional Variation in the Proliferation of Hindu Nationalism in India Soundarya Chidambaram, Ohio State University Shifting Subjectivity: Racialization and Otherness in Modern Costa Rica Erica Townsend-Bell, University of Iowa Disc: Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University Disc: Kimuli Kasara, Columbia University 11-50 DECENTRALIZATION, DEMOCRATIZATION AND GOVERNANCE: DOES DEMOCRACY IMPROVE LOCAL GOVERNANCE IN DECENTRALIZED SETTINGS? Thomas F. Remington, Emory University 12-41 DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN AMERICA: CHANGES AND CHALLENGES Jonathan Hartlyn, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Democratic Rollback and Regional Governance in Putin’s Russia Gulnaz Sharafutdinova, Miami University Papers: Chair: Papers: Chair: Decentralization, Democratization, and Sub-National Economic Governance: Vietnam and Indonesia Alasdair Bowie, George Washington University Democratization under Assault: Criminal Violence in PostTransition Societies Jose Miguel Cruz, Vanderbilt University Decentralization and Discontinuity: The Politics of Urban Water and Sanitation Delivery in Mexico Veronica M. Herrera, University of California, Berkeley Choosing Clientelism: Political Competition, Poverty, and Social Welfare Policy in Argentina Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, Brown University The Impact of Institutional Design on Party Control in a Federal Parliamentary System Thomas D. Lancaster, Emory University Disc: THE STATE AND GENDER EQUALITY: INSTITUTIONS, POLICIES AND MOVEMENTS Co-sponsored by 31-12 12-19 FDI AND THE CHANGING CONTOURS OF DOMESTIC MARKETS Co-sponsored by 16-28 Louis W. Pauly, University of Toronto Chair: Papers: 262 21st Century Democracy in the “Two Mexicos”(The ‘Poor’ South and the ‘Rich’ North): Political Factionalism or Political Cohesion? Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, Universidad Iberoamericana Thomas F. Remington, Emory University Alfred P. Montero, Carleton College 11-72 Subnational FDI Competition in Developing Countries: The Case of Viet Nam Kenneth P. Thomas, University of Missouri, St. Louis In the Name of Democracy? Right-Wing Actors in “New Left” Latin America James D. Bowen, Saint Louis University The Impact of Federalism on Mexican Legislative Politics Scott W. Desposato, University of California, San Diego Francisco Cantu, UCSD Disc: Eduardo R. Gomes, Universidade Federal Fluminense Jonathan Hartlyn, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 13-3 ROUNDTABLE: WHERE IS EUROPE AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE EUROPEAN? Co-sponsored by 15-2 Philip G. Roeder, University of California, San Diego Chair: Part: Ziya Onis, Koc University Alexander H. Trechsel, European University Institute Jerzy Mackow, Universitaet Regensburg Daily Schedule 14-4 Chair: Papers: Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Li Bennich-Björkman, Uppsala University Klaus Armingeon, Universitaet of Berne 16-28 FDI AND THE CHANGING CONTOURS OF DOMESTIC MARKETS Co-sponsored by 12-19 TAXATION AND INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE IN ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL STATES Leonard Seabrooke, University of Warwick 17-8 THE ENFORCEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL COMMITMENTS Daniela Donno, University of Pittsburgh Tax Exemptions and Welfare States: A Critique Monica Prasad, Northwestern University Papers: Chair: Compensating Whom for What? Reconsidering Public Spending Imperatives Niamh Hardiman, University College-Dublin Do Markets Punish EU Backsliders? Julia Gray, University of Pittsburgh Tax Reform, Income Inequality and the Welfare State in Western Europe Miguel Glatzer, Harvard University Putting Money to Mouths: Rewarding and Punishing Human Rights Behaviors Darren G. Hawkins, Brigham Young University Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young University Core Constituents or Marginal Voters? A Theory of Social Expenditures in Industrialized Democracies Timo Idema, University of Oxford Disc: Leonard Seabrooke, University of Warwick 14-19 THE COMPLEXITY OF ELECTORAL SYSTEM CHANGE: THE ROLE OF VALUES Co-sponsored by 34-3 15-2 ROUNDTABLE: WHERE IS EUROPE AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE EUROPEAN? Co-sponsored by 13-3 15-17 Chair: Papers: Monitoring and Enforcement Mechanisms in the Design of International Agreements Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University Enforcers Within: Domestic Sanctions and Compliance with International Agreements Thania Sanchez, University of Iowa Disc: Duncan Snidal, University of Chicago 17-19 SOFT POWER AND SMART POWER Co-sponsored by 19-16 IMMIGRANTS VS. NATIONAL IDENTITY? THE PROBLEM OF INTEGRATION IN EUROPE Jennifer Fitzgerald, University of Colorado, Boulder 18-14 Immigrant Integration Policies and Liberal-Democratic Nation Building in Western Europe Triadafilos Triadafilopoulos, University of Toronto Anna Korteweg, University of Toronto Chair: THREAT AS A THEORETICAL QUESTION: MICROFOUNDATIONS IN EMOTION, COGNITION, AND CONSTRUCTION OF COLLECTIVE EXPERIENCE IN DEMOCRATIC CONDITIONS Ingrid Creppell, George Washington University Papers: Immigration, Left and Right Sara Claro da Fonseca, Social Science Research Center Berlin Sonia Alonso, Social Science Research Center Berlin Disc: Jennifer Fitzgerald, University of Colorado, Boulder 16-22 Chair: RETHINKING THE NECESSITY OF THE STATE FOR Tanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität Berlin Papers: Sanctions and Private Self-Regulation Virginia Haufler, UC Irvine Sticks and Pills: Governance Patterns of HIV/Aids Medication in India and Brazil Susanne Luetz, Free University Berlin Thomas Rudolf Eimer, Free University Berlin Order, Identity, and the Interpretation of Threat Ingrid Creppell, George Washington University Collective Action of Firms Anna Kristin Mueller-Debus, European University Instiute Nicole Deitelhoff, Goethe-Universitat Frankfurt The Democratic Peace Revisited in the Context of Transnational Threats George E. Shambaugh, Georgetown University Richard A. Matthew, University of California, Irvine Bryan McDonald, University of California, Irvine Disc: James M. Goldgeier, George Washington University 19-14 NATO AT 60: WHAT IS THE FUTURE FOR ALLIANCES Co-sponsored by 20-3 Jeffrey A. Larsen, Science Applications International Corporation Chair: Papers: Ukraine and NATO Deborah Sanders, JSCSC Systemic Change and Institutional Adaptation: The Cases of EU and NATO Crisis Management Regina Karp, Old Dominion University “Forging a New Strategic Concept” Gale A. Mattox, United States Naval Academy An Evolving Research Agenda for a Changing NATO: If the Alliance Is Embracing Collective Security, How Do We Study the Transformation? Bojan Savic, University of Kent at Brussels 263 Daily Schedule Nailing the Pudding on the Wall: Soft Law and Weak State Capacity in Southern and Eastern Europe Charalambos Koutalakis, University of Athens Aron Buzogany, Yale University Tanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität Berlin Diverse Emotional Reactions to Threat Leonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony Brook Defining Threat: Cognitive and Emotional Bases David L. Rousseau, SUNY, Albany Integration for Entry: Examining New Civic Requirements in Advanced Industrialized Democracies Sara Wallace Goodman, Georgetown University Disc: Defending Democratic Norms: Regional Intergovernmental Organizations and Democratic Change after Flawed Elections Daniela Donno, University of Pittsburgh Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Daily Schedule NATO at War: Understanding the Challenges of Caveats in Afghanistan Stephen M. Saideman, McGill University David P. Auerswald, National War College Reputation Spillovers in International Relations Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University Disc: Andrew M. Dorman, University of London, King’s College Wallace J. Thies, Catholic University of America International Reputation with Dynamic Resolve Anne E. Sartori, Northwestern University 19-16 SOFT POWER AND SMART POWER Co-sponsored by 17-19 Alexander Vuving, Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies Chair: Papers: Attention, Attraction, and Persuasion: Dissecting Soft Power Brantly Womack, University of Virginia Disaggregating Reputation: Type and Commitment Allan Dafoe, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University 22-6 Chair: POLITICAL CAREERS AND AMBITION Richard M. Skinner, Bowdoin College Papers: Ambition and Opportunity in Federal Systems: The Political Sociology of Political Career Patterns in Brazil, Germany, and the United States Jens Borchert, University of Frankfurt Taiwan’s Soft Power and the Future of Cross-Strait Relations Toshi Yoshihara, United States Naval War College How Soft Power Works: Evidence from China’s Influence on Vietnam Alexander Vuving, Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies Joern Dosch, University of Leeds The Persistent Gender Gap in Political Ambition Jennifer L. Lawless, American University Richard L. Fox, Loyola Marymount University Sterner Stuff: An Examination of Ambition in the US Congress. Joseph Sempolinski, Yale University Retooling Public Diplomacy to Enhance Smart Power: With a Special Focus on Taiwan in the Face of a Rising Mainland China Kwei-Bo Huang, National Chengchi University U.S. Engagement in East Asia: A Case for “Track Two” Diplomacy Sarah Graham, University of Southern California Disc: Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Harvard University 20-3 NATO AT 60: WHAT IS THE FUTURE FOR ALLIANCES Co-sponsored by 19-14 20-17 DOMESTIC POLITICAL STRUCTURE AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 21-5 21-5 DOMESTIC POLITICAL STRUCTURE AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 20-17 Bruce M. Russett, Yale University Chair: Papers: Institutions, Intelligence Apparatuses, and the Likelihood of Foreign Policy Mistakes in Dictatorships Erica Emily Frantz, IPS Natasha Marie Ezrow, University of Essex Moderating Effects? Legislative Behavior When Moving from the House to the Senate Kristina Miler, University of Illinois Disc: Richard M. Skinner, Bowdoin College 22-14 Chair: WHAT HAPPENED TO INCUMBENCY ADVANTAGE? Jason M. Roberts, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Part: Jonathan N. Katz, California Institute of Technology Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San Diego David W. Rohde, Duke University Jeffrey M. Stonecash, Syracuse University 23-9 PERSONALITY, PERFORMANCE, AND THE PRESIDENT’S LEGACY Mary E. Stuckey, Georgia State University Chair: Papers: Explaining Presidential Productivity, 1789-2004 J. Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois University War and Domestic Accountability: Political Institutions, War Outcomes, and International Context Jessica Lea Weeks, Cornell University Bush’s Brain (No, Not Karl Rove):How Bush’s Psyche Shaped His Decision-making Robert Maranto, University of Arkansas Conflict and Risks to Leadership Tenure Across Different Types of Regimes Brian Lai, University of Iowa Explaining Presidential Greatness: The Role of Prosperity Irwin L. Morris, University of Maryland Managing the Economy for Whom? Comparing the Economic Policy Leadership of GW Bush with his Post-war Predecessors Stephen Weatherford, University of California, Santa Barbara From War to Leadership Turnover and Regime Change Alexandre Debs, University of Rochester Hein Erich Goemans, University of Rochester Theoretical Foundations of a Gravity Model for International Disputes Data James D. Fearon, Stanford University Disc: 21-7 Chair: Papers: 264 James Lee Ray, Vanderbilt University Allan C. Stam, University of Michigan REPUTATION IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS Co-sponsored by 4-10 Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University Does Cheap Talk Matter? An Experimental Analysis Dustin Halliday Tingley, Princeton University Barbara F. Walter, University of California, San Diego Determining Presidential Legacies: Who Decides and Why It Matters Lori Cox Han, Chapman University Disc: Bruce Miroff, SUNY, Albany Jonathan C. Young, West Virginia University 24-7 CHANGING PATTERNS OF GOVERNANCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY Robert W. Smith, Clemson University Chair: Papers: NGOs and Changing Patterns of Governance: Clear Roles or Growing Complexity? Jennifer N. Brass, University of California Berkeley Daily Schedule Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Do New Modes of Governance Impair Democracy? Attitudes of local politicians on the impact of three New Public Management reforms Mikael Gilljam, University of Gothenburg Anders Sundell, University of Gothenburg The Strategic Presidency During Confirmation: Rhetoric, Uncertainty, and the Selling of Supreme Court Nominees Michael P. Fix, University of South Carolina Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina Daniel S. Morey, University of Kentucky Beyond Performance: Legitimacy, Accountability and the Promise of Integrity Melvin J. Dubnick, University of New Hampshire Justin O’Brien, Queen’s University Courting Election: Ronald Reagan’s Use of Supreme Court Nominations in the 1980 and 1984 Presidential Election Campaigns Christine L. Nemacheck, College of William & Mary When the Piper Gets Paid in Advance: State Funding and Accountability in Australian’ and Israeli’ Private Schools Amos J. Zehavi, Tel Aviv University Judicial Influence on the Executive Branch: How the Prospect of Judicial Review Shapes Bureaucratic Decision Making. Patrick C. Wohlfarth, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Wanted: Smart Government Sheila Suess Kennedy, Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis Deanna Malatesta, Indiana University Purdue UniversityIndianapolis Disc: Isaac Unah, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27-6 Disc: Beryl A. Radin, American University Chair: AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: MAVEETY AND KNOWLES ON JUSTICES O’CONNOR AND KENNEDY Charles M. Lamb, SUNY, Buffalo 25-10 PUBLIC PARTICIPATION, DEMOCRATIC THEORY, AND POLICYMAKING Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter Part: Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University Artemus Ward, Northern Illinois University Nancy Maveety, Tulane University Helen J. Knowles, SUNY, Oswego 27-9 Chair: RELIGION AND CONSTITUTIONAL CONFLICT Dennis J. Coyle, Catholic University of America Papers: Conservative Christian Cause Lawyering, Pluralism, and Gay Rights Jonathan Hensley, University of Maryland Chair: Papers: Civic Participation, Accessibility and Disability Policy Development Paul Manuel Aviles Baker, Georgia Institute of Technology Democracy as an Impediment to Change: Recreational Water Rights in Colorado Deserai Anderson Crow, University of Colorado, Boulder The Evolution of Local Partnerships for Agricultural Sustainability Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis Lauren Shaw, University of California, Davis Disc: Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter 25-16 THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF CARBON PRICING IN THE OECD Steven F. Bernstein, University of Toronto Chair: Papers: Efficiency vs. Feasibility: The Intergovernmental Selection of Climate Policy Tools in the United States Barry G. Rabe, University of Michigan The Politics of Carbon Taxation Kathryn Harrison, University of British Columbia Pricing Carbon in Europe: Trading, Taxes, Technologies and Talking Henrik Selin, Boston University Stacy VanDeveer, University of New Hampshire Taxing Emissions of Carbon Dioxide in the OECD: Explaining Cross-National Variance in the Price of Carbon Erick Lachapelle, University of Toronto Theorizing the First Amendment: From Roger Williams to Larry Flynt H. N. Hirsch, Oberlin College Faith in the Law? The Challenges of Addressing Religion-Based Tensions through Legal Means Ofrit Liviatan, Harvard University We Are All Religious Minorities: Reframing the Constitutional Politics of Religion Dennis J. Goldford, Drake University Disc: Michael L Coulter, Grove City College 29-15 THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE STATE REACTIONS TO LGBT RIGHTS CLAIMS Co-sponsored by 47-5 and T-5 30-1 POLITICS, RACE AND THE CITY Co-sponsored by 32-2 30-12 ROUNDTABLE: STUDYING CANADIAN CITIES: A SUBFIELD IN MOTION Co-sponsored by 49-2 Robert K. Whelan, University of Texas, Arlington Chair: Disc: Michael E. Kraft, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay Steven F. Bernstein, University of Toronto JUDICIAL POLITICS AND THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH Isaac Unah, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Papers: Counting Congress In: Patterns of Success in Judicial Nomination Requests by Members of Congress to Presidents Eisenhower and Ford Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston Chris Nicholson, University of Houston Judith A. Garber, University of Alberta Martin George Horak, University of Western Ontario Christopher Leo, University of Winnipeg Andrew Sancton, University of Western Ontario Zack Taylor, University of Toronto 31-12 THE STATE AND GENDER EQUALITY: INSTITUTIONS, POLICIES AND MOVEMENTS Co-sponsored by 11-72 Sonia Kruks, Oberlin College Chair: 265 Daily Schedule 26-13 Chair: Part: Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Papers: Daily Schedule The Impact of Gender Quotas on Political Party Recruitment: The Limited Reform Potential of Reserved Seats Elin Bjarnegard, Uppsala University Christina Bergqvist, Uppsala University Par Zetterberg, Uppsala University Values or Interests: When Governments’ Electoral Reform Agendas Stall R. Kenneth Carty, University of British Columbia Representing Gender: An Institutional and Ideological Analysis Mala N. Htun, New School for Social Research The Multiple Roles of Values in Electoral Reform: Mechanisms and Hypotheses Jean-Benoit Pilet, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB, Belgium) Alan J. Renwick, University of Reading Constitutional Networks Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin The Hybrid State and Women’s Political Citizenship: The Policy Feedback Model Within and Between Countries Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University Varieties of Electoral Systems in Early 20th c. Democracies: Endogeneity, Methodology and Theory Development in the Study of Institutional Origins Marcus Kreuzer, Villanova University Inequality and the State: Explaining (and overcoming) the ‘Progressive Dilemma’ S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University Bridging State and Civil Society? The Amphibious Nature of ‘State Feminism’ in Brazil Simone R. Bohn, York University Disc: Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M University Karen Beckwith, Case Western Reserve University 32-2 POLITICS, RACE AND THE CITY Co-sponsored by 30-1 Black and White Americans and Latino Immigrants: A Preliminary Look at Attitudes in Three Southern Cities Paula D. McClain, Duke University Jessica D. Johnson Carew, Duke University Candis S. Watts, Duke University Eugene Walton, Jr., Duke University Monique L. Lyle, University of Michigan Efren Osvaldo Perez, Vanderbilt University Shayla C. Nunnally, University of Connecticut Gerald F. Lackey, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Daniell P. Clealand, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Disc: Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina, Greensboro 35-10 AUTHOR MEETS READERS: LARRY BARTELS’ ‘UNEQUAL DEMOCRACY’ Benjamin I. Page, Northwestern University Chair: Papers: Part: Larry M. Bartels, Princeton University Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley Kay Lehman Schlozman, Boston College John R. Zaller, University of California, Los Angeles 36-25 CORRECT VOTING Co-sponsored by 5-13 Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University Chair: Papers: Explaining correct voting in Swiss direct democracy Alessandro Nai, University of Geneva Personal and Political Impediments to Correct Voting Richard R. Lau, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Tessa M. Ditonto, Rutgers University, New Brunswick a Comparative Analysis of Voting Power on City Councils: The Political Incorporation of Minorities in Miami-Dade and Los Angeles Counties Allen Bronson Brierly, University of Northern Iowa Civic Duty, Voting Correctly, and the Quality of Democracy Bryan J. Dettrey, University at Buffalo, SUNY Maria Elena Sandovici, Lamar University Where Race Matters: The Effects of Space and Neighborhood on Voting Behavior Thomas K. Ogorzalek, Columbia University Why Do People Vote ’’Incorrectly?’ Risk Attitudes in Voting Behavior Takeshi Iida, Waseda University Disc: Teri Fair, Suffolk University 33-9 POLITICS AND RELIGION IN THE AMERICAN FOUNDING ERA John R. Pottenger, University of Alabama, Huntsville Disc: Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University 36-35 The Bible in the Political Culture of the American Founding Daniel L. Dreisbach, American University Chair: A TASTE FOR POLITICS: THE ROOTS AND DYNAMICS OF POLITICAL INTEREST Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota Church & State in the States: The Founding-era State Constitutions Phillip Munoz, Tufts University Papers: Chair: Papers: Modeling Political Interest Trajectories in Three Countries Markus Prior, Princeton University Jeffersonian Walls and Madisonian Lines:The Supreme Court’s Interpretation of the First Amendment Religion Clauses Mark David Hall, George Fox University The More You Try The Less It Sticks: How Increased Political Interest Within the Family Breaks the Partisan Link Between Parents and Children Elias Dinas, European University Institute Disc: Diana M. Judd, William Paterson University Information, Campaigns, and the Dynamics of Political Interest Matthew Holleque, University of Wisconsin, Madison 34-3 THE COMPLEXITY OF ELECTORAL SYSTEM CHANGE: THE ROLE OF VALUES Co-sponsored by 14-19 Jack Vowles, University of Exeter Disc: Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota 38-13 Chair: NEWS, INFORMATION AND MOBILIZATION Tim Groeling, University of California, Los Angeles International Standards of Electoral Conduct and Electoral Reform in Semi-Democracies Sarah Birch, University of Essex Papers: The Mobilized Voter: Portrayals of Citizen Participation in Print News Coverage of Campaign 2008 Soo-Hye Han, University of Texas, Austin Sharon E. Jarvis, University of Texas, Austin Chair: Papers: 266 Daily Schedule Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Government Surveillance and Political Engagement in the United States: The Role of Discrete Negative Emotions Brian S. Krueger, University of Rhode Island Social Movement Promotion of De-Democratization: The Case of the Afrikaner Volksbeweging Shamira M. Gelbman, Illinois State University Raising the Battle Cry: Elite Information Dynamics and the Case of Iraq Evan Parker-Stephen, Texas A&M University Corwin D. Smidt, Michigan State University The Warrior’s Curse: Militarized Minorities, Democratic Transitions, and Ethnic Conflict Subhasish Ray, University of Rochester Democratization and Violence in Sub-Saharan Africa Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison Charles Taylor, University of Wisconsin, Madison Facts, Fancies, and Frames: Crafted Talk and the Limits of Threat Inflation A. Trevor Thrall, University of Michigan, Dearborn When Democratization Radicalizes? The Kurdish Nationalist Movement in Turkey Gunes Murat Tezcur, Loyola University, Chicago When Deliberation Divides: Processes Underlying Mobilization to Collective Action Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, IE University Disc: Tim Groeling, University of California, Los Angeles 41-6 THEME PANEL: ALEKSANDR SOLZHENITSYN 19182008: REMEMBRANCE AND LEGACY Co-sponsored by T-4 Flagg Taylor, Skidmore College Chair: Papers: Disc: Sanjib Baruah, Bard College 44-21 RELIGION AND DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES Amaney Jamal, Princeton University Chair: Papers: ‘The Active Struggle Against Evil’: Reflections on a Theme in Solzhenitsyn Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College Islam and Political Ideologies in Europe Andrew C. Gould, University of Notre Dame Islamic Movements and Democracy in Indonesia Michael Buehler, Columbia University Explaining Differences in Rates of Muslim Representation in Western Parliaments Abdulkader Sinno, Indiana University Being, Time and Art: Solzhenitsyn’s Reflections on Heidegger’s Question James Pontuso, Hampden-Sydney College Muslim Democratic Parties: Islam, Globalization and Democracy A.Kadir Yildirim, The Ohio State University The Prophet of Putinism? Solzhenitsyn, Russian Nationalism and the End of Revolution Robert Horvath, La Trobe University Islamic Institutions and Democracy in Central Asia Dilshod Achilov, University of Arizona The First Circle and the Second Government: Solzhenitsyn’s Hierarchy of Freedom. David Rozema, University of Nebraska, Kearney Disc: Ahmet T. Kuru, San Diego State University Disc: Robert P. Kraynak, Colgate University David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America 45-8 Chair: THE UNITED STATES AND HUMAN RIGHTS Donald D.A. Schaefer, Texas Tech University 43-14 SHOCKING! SHOCKS AND OTHER EXTERNAL SOURCES OF FOREIGN POLICY Waleed Hazbun, Johns Hopkins University Papers: US Foreign Policy and Human Rights: Change and Complexity David P. Forsythe, University of Nebraska Chair: Papers: Riding the Cycle of Violence: The Psychological Roots of US Citizens’ Attitudes towards Torture David L. Richards, University of Memphis Mary R. Anderson, University of Tampa Analytical Liberalism versus Neo-Classical Realism: Domestic Politics and British Foreign Policy, 1900-1914 Mark R. Brawley, McGill University Plausible Legality: Intelligence Practices and Human Rights Abuses in the American War on Terror Rebecca Sanders, University of Toronto Policy Instruments and Major Historical Change: Explaining the Spanish-American War as Turning Point in U.S. Foreign Policy Stephen J. Majeski, University of Washington David Sylvan, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies Democracy and the Balance of Power: Hegemonic Shocks and Domestic Reforms in the 20th Century Vsevolod Gunitskiy, Columbia University Too Close for Conflict: Mexican Authoritarianism as a Response to US Power, 1944-1949 Soledad Loaeza, El Colegio de Mexico The Strategic Sources of International Order Kyle M. Lascurettes, University of Virginia Drug War’s Collateral Damage: U.S Counter-Narcotic Aid and Human Rights Violations in Latin America Horace A. Bartilow, University of Kentucky Disc: Denese McArthur, South Texas College 46-20 CONSTRUCTIVISM AND TRADITIONAL IR THEORY: PLURALISM, CONFLICT OR ECLECTICISM? J. Samuel Barkin, University of Florida Chair: Papers: What Is Distinctive about Constructivism? Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon Ja Ian Chong, Princeton University Realism, Constructivism, and International Relations Theory J. Samuel Barkin, University of Florida 44-10 VIOLENCE, UNCIVIL POLITICS AND DEMOCRATIZATION Sanjib Baruah, Bard College Testing Constructivist Identity: Developing Empirical Indicators from In-depth Interviews Cynthia S. Kaplan, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Papers: Precipitants and Facilitators of Terrorist Disengagement: A comparative study of Italy, Spain, Germany and the UK Diego Muro, King’s College London Pluralism in IR Theory: An Eclectic Study of Diplomatic Apologies and Regrets Jérémie Cornut, Université du Québec à Montréal 267 Daily Schedule Disc: Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Disc: Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon 47-5 THEME PANEL: COMPARATIVE STATE REACTIONS TO LGBT RIGHTS CLAIMS Co-sponsored by 29-15 and T-5 Arnold Fleischmann, Eastern Michigan University Chair: Papers: Why State Constitutions Differ in their Treatment of Same-Sex Marriage Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan Yanna Krupnikov, University of Michigan Adam Seth Levine, University of Michigan Spencer Piston, University of Michigan Minority Rights under Direct Democracy Institutions: Accounting for State-Level Policy Preferences Daniel C. Lewis, University of New Orleans Pushing for Equality Within the Backlash: Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions in Three Midwestern States Jason Pierceson, University of Illinois, Springfield Jilted at the Alter: Contingent Public Opinion on Statewide Same-Sex Marriage Ballot Measures Daniel A. Smith, University of Florida Daily Schedule Towards a Post-Secular Paradigm: Habermas and Lefort on the Permanence of the Theologico-Political Carlo Invernizzi Accetti, Columbia University A Political Conception of the Person for International Justice Theory Margaret Jenkins, University of Toronto William Thompson and Anna Wheeler: Linking The Autonomous Individual with the Co-operating Community. Laura R Kelly, Queen’s University Deciphering Socratic Eironeia and Parrhesia Matthew Landauer, Harvard University Three Approaches to Contested Concepts Marcus Schulzke, University at Albany, SUNY Liberalism’s Illiberal Obligation: The American Revolutionaries and the Duty to Revolt Felix Valenzuela, Notre Dame University “No one is free when others are oppressed” - Freedom and Solidarity in Rousseau’s Social Contract Efrat Waksman, New School for Social Research Resource Constraints and the Future of Liberalism Tamas Golya, University of Oregon Individual Characteristics, State Context, and Morality Policy in the U.S. States Heather Marie Rice, University of Pittsburgh Reason, Republic, and Revolution: The Fateful Divergence of Liberalism and Republicanism in France, 1830-1848 Christopher Meckstroth, University of Chicago Disc: Kenneth Sherrill, CUNY, Hunter College Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont Friedrich Nietzsche on the Role of a Bearer of Culture (Kulturträger) in Modern Democracies Mihaela Czobor-Lupp, Georgetown University 48-5 HEALTH PRIORITIES, AGENDA-SETTING, AND POLITICAL TENSIONS: DEFINING THE PUBLIC INTEREST IN HEALTH Mary C. Segers, Rutgers University, Newark Chair: Papers: State Regulation of Rape Insurance and HIV Prevention in India and South Africa Lisa Boswell Sharlach, University of Alabama, Birmingham Health Policymaking in the Contemporary Czech Republic Leah Seppanen Anderson, Wheaton College Local Demand for a Global Intervention: Public Policy Priorities in the Time of AIDS Kim Yi Dionne, University of California, Los Angeles Disc: Tim Hicks, University of Oxford 49-2 ROUNDTABLE: STUDYING CANADIAN CITIES: A SUBFIELD IN MOTION Co-sponsored by 30-12 Poster Sessions POSTER SESSION 3 Divisions 1, 2, 3, and 4 Papers: Statelessness and the Contestation of Community: On the Interrelation Between Democracy and Global Justice Kiran Banerjee, University of Toronto What is a People? From a Transnational Perspective Chia-Ming Chen, University of Chicago The Negative Origins of Positive Law in Rousseau and Plato Brent Edwin Cusher, University of Toronto Nietzsche’s Complex Critique of Pity Laura K. Field, University of Texas, Austin On Divine World Government: Kant, Fichte, and the Religion of Reason Samuel Goldman, Harvard University Labor, Virtue, and Republicanism Alexander Gourevitch, Columbia University 268 Marx, Adorno and the Theoretical Challenge to a Pseudo-Praxis Claudia Leeb, Dartmouth College (Not) Just a Piece of Cloth: Begum, Recognition and the Politics of Representation Lasse Thomassen, Queen Mary, University of London Complexity, Change and Eschatology: Biology and Time in KOJÈVE Gary M. Kelly, Hetta Institute for International Development The After-Affect of Pre-emption?: Confidence or Hope? Geoffrey Whitehall, Acadia University Manifest Destiny, Credit Cards, and the Election of Barack Obama Jill E. Hargis, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Futurity: the Genealogy of a Concept in JS Mill’s Political Philosophy and Political Economy. Christopher James Barker, Claremont Graduate University Art Against Equality: A Theoretical Approach to the Study of Visual Culture, the Politics of Identity, and the Defeat of Democratic Ideals in Eighteenth-Century France Mary L. Bellhouse, Providence College Reading Husserl and Levinas in Light of ’Philosophical Anthropology’ and Political Aesthetics Bettina G. Bergo, Université de Montréal Practices of Intimacy: Race and Politics in the United States Winter E-N Brown, Duke University Ancient Ethics and Modern Times: Lessons in Moderation from Plato’s Charmides, Aristotle’s Ethics, and Cicero’s On Duties Timothy W. Caspar, Hillsdale College Dispositions of Man and the Politics of Responsibility Yusuf Has, University of Chicago Rethinking Perfectibility Through Change in Wollstonecraft’s A VINDICATION OF THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN Angela Maione, Northwestern University Whither Human Rights? Human Rights Theories and their Critics Kathleen R. Arnold, University of Texas, San Antonio Daily Schedule Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Edward C. Page, London School of Economics Graham K. Wilson, Boston University Intimate Labor and Black Feminist Theories of Freedom Shatema Threadcraft, Yale University Deliberation, Interest Clarification, and Recognition Heather Pincock, Syracuse University The Churchill Centre Dworkinian Equality: A Plausible First Principle? Jordan DeCoste, Queen’s University Panel 1 Chair: CHURCHILL AND CANADA Garnet R. Barber The Complexities of Post-Modernity: Inequality, Power, and Political Theory Terrie R. Groth, Universidade de Brasília Papers: Churchill and Canada in the History of the English-Speaking Peoples Evelyna Popova, University of Toronto Rethinking representation: how can we make theories of political representation relevant for those interested in addressing the needs of the segregated black poor? Anthony Berryhill, Yale University Philosophical Anthropology and Institutions in Contemporary Political Science Gregory Douglas Davis, Troy University Justice: Do it. Ryan W. Davis, Princeton University National Identity and Modernization in Established Democracies. If We All Go Global, Where Does the Nation Go ? Yves Dejaeghere, Catholic University, Leuven Churchill and Empire Peter H. Russell, University of Toronto John Churchill and the Hudson Bay Company James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Panel 3 Chair: ROUNDTABLE: ISLAM AND THE WEST Thomas Karako, Claremont Graduate University Part: Brian T. Kennedy, Claremont Institute Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, Catholic University of America Stuart Gottlieb, Yale University Thomas Joscelyn, The Long War Journal Khalil Habib, Salve Regina University Forgiveness and Promise in Transformative Politics between Political Enemies Man Kwon Kim, New School for Social Research The Obligation to Conserve Natural Resources for Future People Joseph Mazor, Harvard University Phillip W. Gray, University of Hong Kong Democracy in Nonideal Theory: Unreasonable Citizens and the Limits of Rawls’ Doctrine of Public Reason Michael Kates, New York University Panel 13 THE NEW DEAL AND ITS LEGACY Chair: William Morrisey, Hillsdale College Papers: Does Global Justice need Democracy? Regina Kreide, Justus Liebig University Giessen Franklin Roosevelt and the Economic Bill of Rights Donald Brand, College of the Holy Cross To Report or Not to Report: Media, Protest Diffusion, and Local Governance Haifeng Huang, Duke University Party Labels and Information: The Implications of Contagion in Coelection Environments Brendan Pablo Montagnes, Northwestern University Political Salience in a Voting Model with Mass Media Guido Cataife, University of Louisville Deliberation and bargaining in State Bureaucracies Ishan Joshi, Cornell University National Identity and Modernization in Established Democracies. If We all Go Global, Where Does the Nation Go? Marc Hooghe, KU Leuven The Supreme Court at the Bar of Politics: The New Deal and Now Ryan P. Williams, Claremont Graduate University Disc: Panel 1 Chair: Papers: Part: Panel 1 Chair: Part: ROUNDTABLE ON PRESSURE GROUPS AND THE POLICY PROCESS Wyn P. Grant, University of Warwick Grant Jordan, University of Aberdeen Wyn P. Grant, University of Warwick Darren R. Halpin, Robert Gordon University Continuity and Discontinuity in Italy’s Foreign Policy Maurizio Carbone, University of Glasgow Disc: Richard S. Katz, Johns Hopkins University Eric Voegelin Society Panel 8 Chair: ANAMNETIC LITERATURE Charles R. Embry, Texas A&M University, Commerce Papers: A Heaven-Gram for World Politics: Hillesum, Heschel and Rilke Rescuing God in Exile Meins G.S. Coetsier, Ghent University EHOC J. M. Coetzee and Eric Voegelin on Remembrance and the Private and Public Dimensions of Guilt. Polly Detels, unaffiliated 269 Daily Schedule British Politics Group The Transformation of Italian Democracy Sergio Fabbrini, University of Trento What’s Left of the Italian Left? James Lawrie Newell James Lawrie, Newell ROUNDTABLE: STANDING FREEDOM ON ITS HEAD: ‘EQUALITY’ AND ‘NONDISCRIMINATION’ AND THE SUPPRESSION OF DEMOCRATIC LIBERTIES Christopher Wolfe, Marquette University Christopher Wolfe, Marquette University Hadley Arkes, Amherst College Iain Benson, Centre for Cultural Renewal ITALIAN POLITICS BETWEEN REFORMS AND REVIVAL Filippo A. Sabetti, McGill University The Evolution of the Right in Italy Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna American Public Philosophy Institute Chair: Steven Ealy, Liberty Fund, Inc. William Morrisey, Hillsdale College Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society Related Group Panels Panel 1 Progressive Dissenters and the American Form of Bureaucracy Joseph Postell, The Heritage Foundation Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Disc: Daily Schedule W.B. Yeats and the Formation of the National Consciousness J. Patrick Dowdall Disc: Brandon Turner, Clemson University Anamnesis in the Work of Stefan George William Petropulos, Eric Voegelin Archive, Munich 1-19 Chair: RIGHTS, SELF-DETERMINATION AND DIFFERENCE Theodore Christov, Northwestern University The Persistence of Symbol and Sacrament in Albert Camus Matthew Charles Connell, Louisiana State University Papers: Community, Security and Universalism: Conflicting Priorities in Early Modern Thought on International Relations Peter Mohanty, University of Texas, Austin Benjamin Gregg, University of Texas, Austin David Palmieri, Auburn University Ron Srigley, Thorneloe University Cannibalism, Death and Slavery: Rights and Liberty in Motion in the New World Lauri Tahtinen, University of Cambridge Thursday, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM Affiliate Group Meetings Reading Cosmopolitan Right through Kant’s “Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason”: Do Indigenous Land Claims Involve an Historical Faith? Timothy P. Waligore, Smith College McGraw-Hill BUSINESS MEETING 2 Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Disc: Theodore Christov, Northwestern University 1-31 PLATONIC DIALOGUES ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND POLITICAL VIRTUE Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 1 2-11 Chair: POLITICAL THEORY AS SUBFIELD AND PROFESSION? Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, Whitman College Part: Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley John G. Gunnell, SUNY, University at Albany Ian Shapiro, Yale University Gregory J. Kasza, Indiana University, Bloomington Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University International Committee 2-22 Panel 1 Chair: THE WORLD ACCORDING TO SAMUEL HUNTINGTON Ethan B. Kapstein, INSEAD Chair: CONTESTING SECULAR MODERNITIES Co-sponsored by 3-3 Roxanne L. Euben, Wellesley College Part: Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University Jorge I. Dominguez, Harvard University John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago Panel 5 THE LIFE AND SCHOLARSHIP OF CHARLES TILLY Co-sponsored by 7-4 APSA Panel APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered in the Profession Panel 1 Chair: Part: ROUNDTABLE: OPERATIONALIZING INTERSECTIONALITY Angelia Ruth Wilson, University of Manchester Donald B. Rosenthal Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine Janelle Wong, University of Southern California Rodolfo Rosales, University of Texas, San Antonio Papers: The Faces of Mohammed: Secularism and the Politics of Islamic Displacement Shirin S. Deylami, Western Washington University “Latin Christendom” in Charles Taylor’s Secular Age Matthew Scherer, Johns Hopkins University Division Panels T-6 T-7 1-11 Chair: Papers: THEME PANEL: CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION Co-sponsored by 16-10 THEME ROUNDTABLE: DOES POSTCOMMUNISM STILL MAKE SENSE AS AN ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK? Co-sponsored by 13-2 Roxanne L. Euben, Wellesley College 2-31 Chair: DEMOCRACY IN MOTION Thomas S. De Luca, Jr., Fordham University Papers: Democracy: A Political Regime or a Type of Society? Marek Skovajsa, Charles University An Anarchist Defense of Democracy Andrew R. Volmert, Brown University The Rise of the People and the Uselessness of “Democracy” as a Research Concept Fred Eidlin, University of Guelph Adam Smith’s Strangership Lisa Ellen Hill, University of Adelaide “Power to the Wise, and Safety to All:” Adam Ferguson and the Republican Argument against the American Revolution Yiftah Elazar, Princeton University Understanding the French Revolution: The Scottish Whig Historians and French Constitutional History Anna Plassart, University of Cambridge 270 Disc: LIBERTY, COMMERCE AND VIRTUE: HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL REFLECTIONS ON THE SCOTTISH ENLIGHTENMENT Brandon Turner, Clemson University Plural Passions: Moral Sense Conceptions of Judgment and the Challenges of Pluralism Marc Hanvelt, Carleton University Identity, Justice and Renewal: Sayyid Qutb and the Challenge of Secularism Smita A. Rahman, DePauw University Deliberate Speed: The Temporality of Democratic Politics Mario Feit, Georgia State University Disc: James E. Bourke, Duke University Julie Mostov, Drexel University 2-35 Chair: LIBERALISM, ETHICS AND CULTURE Gerry Mackie, University of California, San Diego Daily Schedule Papers: Disc: William Roberts Clark, University of Michigan Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill “Culture” in Political Theory: A Typology and Critique Leigh K. Jenco, National University of Singapore 7-4 Chair: THE LIFE AND SCHOLARSHIP OF CHARLES TILLY Brian Balogh, University of Virginia Liberalism: Political Theory as Applied Liberal Ethics Carla Yumatle, Harvard University Part: Richard F. Bensel, Cornell University Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University Ira Katznelson, Columbia University Sven Beckert, Harvard University 8-18 STATISTICAL MODELS AND CAUSAL INFERENCE: DAVID FREEDMAN’S DIALOGUE WITH THE SOCIAL SCIENCES Co-sponsored by 46-7 9-2 CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN TEACHING CRITICAL THINKING IN THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT COURSE Co-sponsored by 10-2 Brigid Harrison, Montclair State University Disc: Jill E. Hargis, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Andrew D. Lister, Queen’s University 3-3 CONTESTING SECULAR MODERNITIES Co-sponsored by 2-22 3-29 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: PETER A. MEYERS, CIVIC WAR AND THE CORRUPTION OF THE CITIZEN, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS, 2008 Harvey S. Goldman, University of California, San Diego Part: 3-31 Political Determinants of Banking Deregulation Min-young Han, Yale University Rethinking the Ethical Attributes of the State in a New Globalized Era Alessandra Sarquis, Univesity of Brasilia Identities and Indignities: Liberalism, Multiculturalism, and Critical Social Theory Bruce Baum, University of British Columbia Chair: Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Benjamin R. Barber, DEMOS (New York) Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin Paul Frymer, Princeton University Peter A. Meyers, Princeton University Chair: ON CHAIM GANS’ BOOK “A JUST ZIONISM: ON THE MORALITY OF THE JEWISH STATE” (OUP 2008) Andreas Follesdal, University of Oslo Disc: Chaim Gans, Tel Aviv University Part: Joel Perlmann, Bard College Daniel Kofman, University of Ottawa Michael R. Marrus, University of Toronto Howard Adelman, York University Chair: Part: Van A. Wigginton, San Jacinto College-Central Campus Ann Wyman, Missouri Southern State University Kathleen M. Collihan, American River College Raymond Sandoval, Richland College John R. Wood, Rose State College 10-2 CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN TEACHING CRITICAL THINKING IN THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT COURSE Co-sponsored by 9-2 11-6 FINANCIAL CRISIS AND CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM Helen V. Milner, Princeton University Peter A. Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego Ronald L. Rogowski, University of California, Los Angeles Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University Part: 4-7 Chair: MODELING REPLACEMENT IN DEMOCRACY Meredith Rolfe, University of Oxford Papers: Internal and External Political Competition David Hugh-Jones, Max Planck Institute of Economics 11-15 Cabinet Management Strategies: Hiring, Firing and Returning from the Wilderness Torun Dewan, London School of Economics David P Myatt, Oxford University Chair: Sanction and Learning in Elections Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago Scott Ashworth, University of Chicago Amanda Y. Friedenberg, Washington University Nathan Brown, George Washington University Marc Lynch, George Washington University Part: Audra K. Grant, RAND Corporation Frederic M. Wehrey, Oxford University Dale Stahl, Columbia University Dalia Dassa Kaye, RAND Corporation Adam H. Meirowitz, Princeton University 11-29 COMPARATIVE ANALYSES OF ADMINISTRATIVE POLITICS, DELEGATION AND OVERSIGHT Christian B. Jensen, University of Iowa Jeeyang Rhee Baum, Harvard University 6-16 THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Thomas Oatley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Chair: Chair: The Bipartisan Roots of the 2008 Financial Services Crisis Helena Simone Yeaman, Broward College APAs and Single Party Majority Government Jeeyang Rhee Baum, Harvard University Christian B. Jensen, University of Iowa A “New New Deal”? The Politics of the Democratic Party’s Program for Economic Recovery James Shoch, California State University, Sacramento The Political Economy of Administrative Procedure Acts: The Role of the Courts Rui J. de Figueiredo, Jr., University of California-Berkeley Papers: Papers: 271 Daily Schedule Disc: Social Networks and the Mass Media David A. Siegel, Florida State University Disc: MORE FREEDOM, LESS TERROR? LIBERALIZATION AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE ARAB WORLD Co-sponsored by 18-1 Nathan Brown, George Washington University Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Accountability in Developing Countries: The oversight and control of the Executive in Mexican states Alejandra Rios-Cazares, CIDE Daily Schedule Chair: Valerie Sperling, Clark University Papers: Why Cyber Nationalists Rebel: A Simultaneous Analysis of Media Effect and the Overseas Chinese Nationalist Movement Meimei Zhang, University of California, Santa Barbara Complying Correct and on Time: An Empirical Study of Member States’ Compliance Record in the Transposition of EC Directives Thomas König, Universität Mannheim Measuring Regulators’ Statutory Independence Chris Hanretty, European University Institute Explaining Increases in Xenophobic Outcomes in PostCommunist Russia Christopher Wendt, Massachusetts Institute of Technolgy Gabriel Rubin, Montclair State University Disc: Jeeyang Rhee Baum, Harvard University Michael F. Thies, University of California, Los Angeles Does a Nationalist Card Make for a Weak Hand? Economic Crisis and Nationalist Demobilization Stephen Bloom, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale 11-42 Chair: MIGRATION AND DEMOCRACY Katrina Burgess, Tufts University Remaking Minority Identities in the Borderlands of the Soviet Union and the European Union: A Diachronic Comparison Jessica Allina-Pisano, University of Ottawa Papers: Are Western-educated Politicians More Democratic and More Competent? Maria Popova, McGill University Immigrant Transnationalism Across Time in the United States Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University Migrants and the Democratization of their Country of Origin Luis F. Jimenez, University of Pittsburgh Disc: Katrina Burgess, Tufts University 11-53 POLITICS AND NON-TAX REVENUE: EXAMINING CAUSAL MECHANISMS Co-sponsored by 16-21 Currency, Identity, and Nation-Building: National Currency Choices in the Post-Soviet States Scott B. Cooper, Brigham Young University Disc: Magda Giurcanu, University of Florida Ekrem Karakoc, Pennsylvania State University 14-11 THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF REDISTRIBUTION IN DIVERSE WELFARE STATES Co-sponsored by 11-67 Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia Chair: 11-67 THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF REDISTRIBUTION IN DIVERSE WELFARE STATES Co-sponsored by 14-11 12-17 STATE RESPONSES TO LIBERALIZING GLOBAL PRESSURES James E. Mahon, Jr., Williams College Chair: Papers: Globalization, Government Ideology, and Redistributive Policies Eunyoung Ha, Claremont Graduate University Disc: James E. Mahon, Jr., Williams College Dongryul Kim, Rochester Institute of Technology 12-46 FEDERALISM IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: FOUNDINGS AND FINANCING Co-sponsored by 28-4 Chair: Part: 13-11 272 Immigration, National Identity, and Support for the Welfare State Keith Gordon Banting, Queen’s University Will Kymlicka, Queen’s University The Welfare State, Multicultural Policies, and Trust: Examining the Determinants of Immigrant Integration Regan Wayne Damron, University of Georgia The Origins of Solidarity in Diverse Welfare States: Primordial or Cosmopolitan? Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia Jonathan T. Polk, University of Georgia Why Did the Chicken Cross the Border? An Investigation of Government Responses to Import Surges in Senegal, Cameroon and the Ivory Coast Martha C. Johnson, University of California, Berkeley Dancing with the Wolf: Institutional Changes and Industrial Development of China’s Automobile Sector After WTO Accession Ying Lin, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology 13-2 Papers: The Impact of Immigration on the Size of Government: Empirical Evidence from Danish Municipalities Christer Gerdes, Swedish Institute for Social Research (SOFI) Disc: Gary P. Freeman, University of Texas, Austin 15-13 ELITES VS CITIZENS: WHO WANTS THE EUROPEAN UNION, WHO DOESN’T AND WHY Willem Maas, Glendon College, York University Chair: Papers: The Evolution of Public Opinion About European Integration Over the Long Run Christopher J. Anderson, Cornell University Jason D. Hecht, Cornell University Opinion Polarization and Inter-Party Competition on Europe: Who’s Taking the Lead and Where? Carole J. Wilson, University of Texas, Dallas Ian Down, University of Tennessee, Knoxville THEME ROUNDTABLE: DOES POSTCOMMUNISM STILL MAKE SENSE AS AN ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK? Co-sponsored by T-7 Michael Bernhard, University of Florida European Elites and the UE in the Intune Project: Attitudes Towards European Integration of Political and Economic Elites Rafael Vázquez-García, University of Granada Miguel Jerez-Mir, University of Granada José Real-Dato, Universidad de Almería Jeffrey Kopstein, University of Toronto Donna Bahry, Pennsylvania State University Keith A. Darden, Yale University Kevin J. O’Brien, University of California, Berkeley Pauline Jones Luong, Brown University Disc: Willem Maas, Glendon College, York University POSTCOMMUNIST IDENTITY POLITICS 16-4 CONSTRUCTING US TRADE POLICY Closing the Community Deficit in the EU Amitai Etzioni, The George Washington University Daily Schedule Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Chair: Stephanie R. Golob, Baruch College-CUNY Primary Education and Human Rights: More than Child’s Play David Sobek, Louisiana State University Papers: Narrative and the Construction of Interests: Implications for the Politics of Trade Frederick W. Mayer, Duke University Easy Money: How Unearned Revenues Reduce Respect for Human Rights Paola Fajardo-Heyward, SUNY, Binghamton Trade Talk: Narratives of US Identity in the Making of Economic Policy Amy M. Skonieczny, San Francisco State University The UN Human Rights Council: New Wine in Old Skins? Eric W. Cox, Texas Christian University A Certain Idea of America: Identity Politics and North American Integration Brian Bow, Dalhousie University Arturo Santa-Cruz, University of Guadalajara Disc: 16-10 Chair: Papers: Disc: Oona Hathaway, Yale University Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University 18-1 MORE FREEDOM, LESS TERROR? LIBERALIZATION AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE ARAB WORLD Co-sponsored by 11-15 18-17 Chair: CREATING DURABLE ALLIANCES Paul Poast, University of Michigan Papers: Previous Commitments and Future Promises: The Relationship Between Military Capacity, Alliance Reliability and Future Alliance Potential, 1950-2005 Anessa L. Kimball, Universite Laval Alia Alatassi, Université Laval Jeffrey M. Ayres, Saint Michael’s College Stephanie R. Golob, Baruch College-CUNY THEME PANEL: CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION Co-sponsored by T-6 Ibrahim Awad, International Labour Organization Governing Migration: A Public Goods Approach James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University Does International Reputation Matter? A Signaling Theory Linking Alliance Commitment and Alliance Formation Neil Narang, University of California, San Diego Brad LeVeck, University of California, San Diego Comparing Immigration Policies for the ‘Best and Brightest’ Lucie Cerna, University of Oxford Variations in Access for High Skilled Migrants Jeannette Money, University of California, Davis Linking Issues and Sealing Deals: Explaining the Role of IssueLinkage in International Cooperation using Economic Provisions in Military Alliance Treaties Paul Poast, University of Michigan Organized Labor and Immigrant Workers: The Changing Politics of Labor Insecurity Dan Tichenor, University of Oregon Janice Fine, Rutgers University Disc: Ibrahim Awad, International Labour Organization 16-21 POLITICS AND NON-TAX REVENUE: EXAMINING CAUSAL MECHANISMS Co-sponsored by 11-53 Sarah Bermeo, Yale University Chair: Why Does Alliance Content Vary and Does it Matter for Interstate Conflict? Brett Benson, Vanderbilt University Disc: Michaela Mattes, Vanderbilt University 18-21 DILEMMAS IN PRIVATE SECURITY, PAST AND PRESENT Norrin M. Ripsman, Concordia University Chair: Papers: Natural Resources and Political Contestation: Evidence from Seventy Years’ Worth of Elections Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University Papers: Oil and Revolutionary Regimes: A Toxic Mix Jeff Colgan, Princeton University Privatization of Security and its Effects on Civil War Duration Megan Becker, University of California, San Diego Instability and Oil: How Political Time Horizons Affect Oil Revenue Management Andrea Herschman Kendall-Taylor, University of California, Los Angeles Fighting Legal Windmills after Blackwater: Private Military Contractors, Accountability, and the Geneva Conventions Tom Syring, University of Oslo The Curse of Aid? Donor Intentions and the Impact of Aid on Authoritarian Regimes Sarah Bermeo, Yale University States and Pre-State Actors: The Nomadic Challenge to Westphalian Territoriality Joseph MacKay, University of Toronto Gustavo Seignemartin de Carvalho, University of Toronto Kristin T R Cavoukian, University of Toronto Ross Allan Cuthbert, Mr., University of Toronto Jamie Levin, University of Toronto Commodity Price Shocks and Civil Conflict: Evidence from Colombia Oeindrila Dube, New York University Juan Fernando Vargas, Universidad del Rosario Michael L. Ross, University of California, Los Angeles 17-4 CREATING A DIALOGUE BETWEEN QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS Michael Strausz, Texas Christian University Chair: Papers: Persuasion, Legalization, and the Genocide Convention Michael Strausz, Texas Christian University Brian D. Greenhill, University of Washington Disc: Michael C. Williams, University of Wales, Aberystwyth 18-31 UNIPOLARITY AND WAR IN TODAY’S WORLD Co-sponsored by 19-9 19-9 UNIPOLARITY AND WAR IN TODAY’S WORLD Co-sponsored by 18-31 Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University Chair: Daily Schedule Disc: Market Failure: The Moral Hazards of Private Military Firms (PMFs) Edward T. Barrett, U.S. Naval Academy 273 Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Papers: Daily Schedule The End of Rivalries and the Beginning of New Ones: The Causes of Foreign Imposed Regime Change Melissa Willard-Foster, University of California, Los Angeles Power and Democratic Weakness: Neoconservatve Approaches to Changes in International Political Polarity Jonathan D. Caverley, Northwestern University Unrest Assured: Why Unipolarity is Not Peaceful Nuno Peres Monteiro, University of Chicago Disc: Philip Arena, SUNY, University at Buffalo Is There an “Emboldenment” Effect? Evidence from the Insurgency in Iraq Jonathan J. Monten, Yale University 22-11 Chair: CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES Gregory Robinson, SUNY, Binghamton Asymmetric Power and the Effectiveness of Coercive Threats Todd S. Sechser, University of Virginia Papers: A New Approach to the Study of Congressional Conference Committees James R. Bourbeau, University of of Connecticut How Unipolarity, Hegemony, and Empire Combine to Cause Conflict Thomas J. Wright, Princeton University Disc: 19-19 20-7 Chair: Papers: Competing Loyalties: Influences on Conferee Decision Making in the 101st-110th Congresses Michael C. Brady, Duke University Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University Christopher Layne, Texas A&M University Competing Theories of Committees: Maltzman’s Conditional Theory Reexamined Natalie M. Jackson, University of Oklahoma THE BALANCE OF POWER IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND HISTORICAL ANALYSIS Co-sponsored by 43-7 THE CAUSES, CONDUCT AND CONSEQUENCES OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION AND NONPROLIFERATION Co-sponsored by 21-3 Matthew Fuhrmann, University of South Carolina The Strategic Consequences of Nuclear Acquisition Negeen Pegahi, University of Chicago Why Conference Committees?: A Policy Explanation for the Use of Conference Ryan J. Vander Wielen, Temple University Disc: Gregory Robinson, SUNY, Binghamton 23-3 NEWLY EMERGING QUESTIONS AND TRENDS IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS Harold F. Bass, Ouachita Baptist University Chair: Papers: The Sources and Consequences of Regional Powers’ Nuclear Postures Vipin Narang, Harvard University Party vs Personal Coalitions in Presidential Nominations Wayne P. Steger, DePaul University Exporting the Bomb: Statecraft and the Spread of Nuclear Weapons Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University Laughing to the Bank: Financial Implications of Political Humor in Presidential Nominations Patrick A. Stewart, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Initiative Design in Combating Illicit Nuclear Trade Emma Belcher, Harvard University Back to the Future?: The Role of Partisan Elites and Masses in Presidential Nominations, 1976-2008 Randall E. Adkins, University of Nebraska, Omaha Andrew J. Dowdle, University of Arkansas John Davis, University of Arkansas Nuclear Deterrence and Nuclear War: Evaluating the Deterrent Value of Small Arsenals Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College Keir A. Lieber, Georgetown University Disc: Matthew Fuhrmann, University of South Carolina 20-18 DOMESTIC POLITICS AND FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 21-19 21-3 THE CAUSES, CONDUCT AND CONSEQUENCES OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION AND NONPROLIFERATION Co-sponsored by 20-7 21-19 Chair: Papers: DOMESTIC POLITICS AND FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 20-18 Philip Arena, SUNY, University at Buffalo Diversionary Behavior for Territorial, Maritime, and River Issues Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa Clayton L Thyne, University of Kentucky The Threat of Coups d’etat and the Diversionary Use of Force Jonathan M. Powell, University of Kentucky Public Commitment and Endogenous Crisis Initiation Ahmer Tarar, Texas A&M University Bahar Leventoglu, Duke University State Fiscal Capacity and State Failure in the Developing World Cameron G. Thies, University of Iowa 274 Friending Obama: How Netroots Technology is Altering Presidential Nomination Dynamics Christopher C. Hull, Georgetown University Briana R. Morgan, Georgetown University A Candidate You Can Believe In? Voter Perceptions of Candidate Character in the 2008 Presidential Elections. Charles L. Prysby, University of North Carolina, Greensboro David B. Holian, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Disc: Lara Michelle Brown, Villanova University 23-16 GENDER, RACE AND THE PRESIDENCY Co-sponsored by 31-3 24-2 Chair: HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND CHANGE Willow Jacobson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Papers: Effective Recruitment in a Time of Hyper Technological Change: The Case of the U.S. Federal Government Jared Llorens, University of Kansas Is SHRM Taking Root in Local Governments? Willow Jacobson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill State Public Management Training Programs: Building Human Capital? Jessica Sowa, Cleveland State University Transforming HR: Structural Changes in State Civil Service Systems Sally Coleman Selden, Lynchburg College Daily Schedule Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM The Black Worker as Individualist? The Effects of Social Movement Competition on the Constitutional Strategies of the Civil Rights Movement during the Lochner Era Allison M. Martens, University of Louisville Civil Service Reform in the U.S. Departments of Defense and Homeland Security Gene A. Brewer, University of Georgia J. Edward Kellough, University of Georgia Disc: James S. Bowman, Florida State University Sara R. Jordan, University of Hong Kong 24-14 DIGITAL GOVERNANCE: POLICY DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTRATIVE STRATEGIES Co-sponsored by 40-7 25-8 EXPLAINING THE SUCCESS AND FAILURE OF CERTAIN HEALTH POLICIES Co-sponsored by 48-6 Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark Chair: Papers: Reliable in Their Failure: An Analysis of Healthcare Reform Policies in Public Systems Damien Contandriopoulos, University of Montreal How Did Change Happen? The Complex Institutions: An Institutional Account of China’s HIV/AIDS Policy Shift, 19852007 Wenjue Lu Knutsen, Queen’s University Social Issues, the GOP’s Values Agenda and the Supreme Court: the New Right Regime’s Fourteenth Amendment J. Mitchell Pickerill, Washington State University Cornell W. Clayton, Washington State University Women Lawyers and Governance in the Progressive Era Kathleen S. Sullivan, Ohio University Carol Nackenoff, Swarthmore College Disc: Thomas M. Keck, Syracuse University 28-4 FEDERALISM IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: FOUNDINGS AND FINANCING Co-sponsored by 12-46 David R. Cameron, University of Toronto Chair: Papers: Soft Budget Constraint and the Perils of Fiscal Federalism: The Case of China Lynette H. Ong, Harvard University Governing Biotechnology: Why Do Governments Bother? A Comparative Analysis of Public Policies in Reproductive Technology, Embryo Research and Stem Cells Research Isabelle Engeli, European University Institute Frédéric Varone, University of Geneva Handling the High Spenders: Implications of the Distribution of Health Expenditures for Financing Health Care Raisa Berlin Deber, University of Toronto Kenneth Cheak Kwan Lam, University of Toronto Reviewing and Reassessing the Problem of HIV/AIDS Anna Persson, University of California, Los Angeles Martin Sjostedt, Goteborg University Disc: Terry S. Weiner, Union College Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark 25-23 TACTICAL CHOICES AND ORGANIZATIONAL SUCCESS Co-sponsored by 35-12 26-4 Chair: JUDICIAL BEHAVIOR IN THE COURTS OF APPEALS Sara C. Benesh, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Papers: Modeling Circuit Effects on the US Courts of Appeals Chad Westerland, University of Arizona Brandon L. Bartels, Stony Brook University Political Variables and Subnational Debt in India Lawrence Saez, University of London, SOAS Disc: David R. Cameron, University of Toronto Robert Agranoff, Indiana University 29-12 KEY CONCEPTS IN STATE POLITICS AND POLICY RESEARCH Ronald E. Weber, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Chair: Papers: Assessing Causes of Panel Effects on the Court of Appeals Sean Farhang, University of California, Berkeley Gregory J. Wawro, Columbia University All Together Now: Putting Congress, State Legislatures, and Individuals on a Common Ideological Space Boris Shor, University of Chicago Defining the South: Electoral Reform and Voter Turnout, 19202000 Melanie Jean Springer, Washington University in Saint Louis Disc: Richard F. Winters, Dartmouth College Ronald E. Weber, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 30-8 RAINBOW’S END? AN EXAMINATION OF AN URBAN CLASSIC Co-sponsored by 32-15 Peter F. Burns, Loyola University New Orleans Sara C. Benesh, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 27-10 Chair: LAWYERING, ADVOCACY, AND INTERESTS Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University Papers: The Federalist Society and the New Federalism: An Epistemic Community at Work Amanda Hollis-Brusky, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Papers: Equality, Inferiority and Electoral Competition: Black-Brown Partnerships in Newark, New Jersey Andra N. Gillespie, Emory University Inter-group Relations and Neighborhood Context in Los Angeles Lorrie A. Frasure, University of California, Los Angeles Stacey Ann Greene, University of California Local Versus National Partisan Representation Jessica Luce Trounstine, Princeton University Kristen Badal, Princeton University Disc: Steven P. Erie, University of California, San Diego 275 Daily Schedule Disc: Place and Perception: Understanding the Relationship between Geography and Attitudes on Voting and Political Identity Daniel J. Coffey, University of Akron Measuring “Term-limitedness” in Multi-state Research Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State University Purposive vs. Strategic Behavior in the U.S. Courts of Appeals Anna O. Law, DePaul University The Effect of War on the U.S. Federal Courts of Appeals: An Analysis of U.S. Appeals Court Treatment of War Related Cases Susanne Schorpp, University of South Carolina Donald R. Songer, University of South Carolina A Negative Case Test on the Origin of Federalism: The Emergence of Chile’s Unitary Regime Rodrigo Mardones, P. Universidad Católica de Chile Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM 31-3 Chair: Papers: GENDER, RACE AND THE PRESIDENCY Co-sponsored by 23-16 Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College Daily Schedule 32-15 RAINBOW’S END? AN EXAMINATION OF AN URBAN CLASSIC Co-sponsored by 30-8 32-20 From Hillary to Michelle: Public Opinion and Presidential Wives Barbara C. Burrell, Northern Illinois University Brian P. Frederick, Bridgewater State College Laurel Elder, Hartwick College RACE AND ELECTORAL POLITICS IN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 36-15 33-3 A Meeting Place for Partisan Politics and Identity Politics: Race, Class, Gender, and the First Ladyship MaryAnne Borrelli, Connecticut College Chair: THE DISAPPEARING GOD GAP? RELIGION IN THE 2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Co-sponsored by Christians in Political Science, Panel 2 Napp Nazworth, University of Georgia From Ferraro to Palin: Sexism in Media Coverage of Female Vice Presidential Candidates Caroline Heldman, Occidental College Sarah Oliver, University of California, Santa Barbara Meredith Conroy, University of California, Santa Barbara Papers: Religion and Election Day Corwin E. Smidt, Calvin College Faith of his Fathers: Barack Obama, Islam, and the Impact of Religious Background Cues on Vote Choice in the 2008 Presidential Election Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame John C. Green, University of Akron Changing, but Staying the Same: The Use of “Motherhood” in Political Campaigns, 1920-2008 Jill S. Greenlee, Brandeis University Shifting the Gender Gaze: The Intersection of Race and Gender in the Obama Candidacy Valeria Sinclair-Chapman, University of Rochester Disc: Paul A. Djupe, Denison University TACTICAL CHOICES AND ORGANIZATIONAL SUCCESS Co-sponsored by 25-23 Virginia H. Gray, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Disc: Janet M. Martin, Bowdoin College Susan J. Carroll, Rutgers University 35-12 31-16 THE POLITICS OF BACKLASH: THEORY AND CASE STUDIES IN DYNAMIC RESISTANCE Co-sponsored by 42-4 Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University Chair: Chair: Papers: Papers: Solving the Collective Action Problem?: Backlash and Coordinated Yet Unplanned Behavior Shauna L. Shames, Harvard University Jane Mansbridge, Harvard University The Structure of Lobbying and Representation across Policymaking Venues Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa John W. Patty, Harvard University Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley Andrew Pettine, University of Iowa Backlash to the Backlash: Immigrant Reaction to Restrictive U.S. State-level Laws Porsha Cropper, Harvard University Interest Group Competition and Legislative Success in the U.S. Congress Holly Brasher, University of Alabama, Birmingham Backlash Responses to Nascent Feminist Activism Johanna L. Ettin, National Organization of Women Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University 32-4 Chair: COMPARATIVE RACIAL AND ETHNIC POLITICS Robin J. Hayes, PhD, Santa Clara University Papers: Comparative Ethno-nationalism: Kurds vs. Lazs Zeki Sarigil, Bilkent University Portuguese in Canada: Diasporas & Adopted Nations Robert Maciel, University of Western Ontario Sikh Politics, Minority Status, and Narrative Identity in Postcolonial India Natasha Behl, University of California, Los Angeles Afro-Brazilian Activists, Blackness, and Black group Identity Gladys Mitchell, Duke University Multicultural Multiracialism, Multiracial Multiculturalism: Race, Mixed-Race and Diversity in the United States, Great Britain and Canada Debra Thompson, University of Toronto Disc: 276 Toygar Halistoprak, Bilkent University Robin J. Hayes, PhD, Santa Clara University Signals through the Fog: Bureaucratic Signaling and Attention in Financial Regulation Samuel Workman, The University of Texas at Austin JoBeth Surface Shafran, University of Texas at Austin Organizational Strategies in Breast Cancer Research Advocacy Patricia Strach, Harvard University Resistance to Climate Change Social Movement Across Geographic Space Jennifer W. Howk, Harvard University Disc: Religion and the Fall Campaign Kevin R. den Dulk, Grand Valley State University Disc: Marie Hojnacki, Pennsylvania State University Beth L. Leech, Rutgers University 36-15 RACE AND ELECTORAL POLITICS IN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 32-20 Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington Chair: Papers: Turn Out or Burn Out? How Negative Ads Affect Latino and non-Latino Voting. Jennifer L. Merolla, Claremont Graduate University Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington Victoria Maria DeFrancesco Soto, Northwestern University Ricardo Ramirez, University of Southern California Race, Redistricting and Minority Officeholding in Congress and State Legislatures, 1960s to 2008 Mingus Mapps, Brandeis University The Impact of Race and Ethnicity on Turnout in US Presidential Elections Beth Ginsberg The Effect of African-American Proximity on Latino Vote Choice in the 2008 Presidential Primary Ryan D. Enos, University of California, Los Angeles Daily Schedule Elections in Black and White: Race, Perceptions, and Voting Behavior in U.S. House Elections Matthew L. Jacobsmeier, University of New Orleans Disc: Gabriel Sanchez, University of New Mexico Matt A. Barreto, University of Washington Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM 40-7 Chair: DIGITAL GOVERNANCE: POLICY DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTRATIVE STRATEGIES Co-sponsored by 24-14 Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University 36-24 Chair: ECONOMIC SELF-INTEREST AND THE VOTE Peter Enns, Cornell University E-Government at the Local Level: Variations and Potential Explanations John Hoornbeek, Kent State University Mark Cassell, Kent State University Papers: Economic Status and Political Voice: Cause or Common Source? Martin Kroh, German Institute for Economic Research E-government in Authoritarian States: Content Analysis of EGovernment Websites in Central Asia Erica J. Johnson, University of Washington Papers: Why Do Red States Vote Republican While Blue States Pay the Bills? Federal Spending and Electoral Votes, 1984-2008 Dean P. Lacy, Dartmouth College Federal Agency Blogs in Transition: Comparison of Late Bush Administration and Early Obama Administration Use of Blogs Julianne Mahler, George Mason University Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University Unemployment, Government Partisanship, and the Dynamics of Voter Choice Hyeok Yong Kwon, Korea University When Do Government Benefits Influence Voters’ Behavior? The Effect of FEMA Disaster Awards on US Presidential Votes. Jowei Chen, University of Michigan Disc: Christopher Wlezien, Temple University 37-16 Papers: REPRESENTATION Rethinking Party Polarization: Political Context, Mass Opinion Dynamics, and Party System Change Christopher R. Ellis, North Carolina State University All Politics Is Local, or Is It? Political Blogs and State Politics Antoinette Pole, Montclair State University Disc: Henry Farrell, George Washington University 42-4 THE POLITICS OF BACKLASH: THEORY AND CASE STUDIES IN DYNAMIC RESISTANCE Co-sponsored by 31-16 43-7 THE BALANCE OF POWER IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND HISTORICAL ANALYSIS Co-sponsored by 19-19 William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College The Partisan Face of Political Representation in the U.S. David C. Barker, University of Pittsburgh Chair: Roll Calls, Constituents, and Representation: Results From a Survey Experiment Andrew P. Kelly, University of California, Berkeley Robert Van Houweling, University of California, Berkeley Papers: Interest Groups and Inequality in Democratic Responsiveness in the U.S. Martin Gilens, Princeton University When Might Makes Right: Legitimacy and Balancing in International Politics Stacie E. Goddard, Wellesley College Sending a Message or Staying Mum: How Newspapers Write about Public Opinion in Non-Election Years Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University Networks of Domination:Social Ties and Imperial Governance in International Politics Paul K. MacDonald, Williams College 38-7 Chair: NEWS ACROSS BORDERS Babak Bahador, University of Canterbury Papers: A Comparative Analysis Of Chinese And American Press Coverage Of Two Tainted Food Scandals Bruce A. Williams, University of Virginia Ruoyun Bai, University of Toronto, Scarborough Ottawa vs. Washington: Comparing the Role of Opinion Referents in Canadian and American Coverage of NAFTA Stacey L. Pelika, College of William & Mary A Grand Strategy of Transnational Coalition-Building Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware Disc: William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College 44-11 CHINA’S THIRD SECTOR: DYNAMICS AND CONSEQUENCES Nara Dillon, Harvard University Chair: Papers: Environment and Energy Policy: Comparing Reports from US and Canadian Television News Stuart N. Soroka, McGill University Stephen J. Farnsworth, George Mason University Lori Young, McGill University Andrea Lawlor, McGill University Trust, Rationality, and Electoral Participation in Rural China Fubing Su, Vassar College Deliberative Democracy in China: Connecting a Deliberative Poll with the Local People’s Congress Alice Siu, Stanford University James S. Fishkin, Stanford University Rui Wang, Stanford University Disc: Jennifer Yuan-Jean Hsu, University of Cambridge Babak Bahador, University of Canterbury 277 Daily Schedule Coverage of Post-Communist Countries by ABC, CBS and NBC: Politics of Miscommunication Ivan Katchanovski, SUNY-Potsdam Alicen Rose Morley, SUNY Potsdam Governing Civil Society in Contemporary China: Adapting Revolutionary Methods to Serve Post-Communist Goals Nara Dillon, Harvard University Accountability Under Authoritarianism: Citizen Complaints in China and Eastern Europe Martin Dimitrov, Dartmouth College Japanese and U.S. Media Coverage of the Iraq War: A Comparative Analysis of Media’s Impact on Public Opinion Kazuhiro Maeshima, Bunkyo University Disc: Structural Realism and Balancing Failure: The Systemic Causes of Underbalancing Revisited Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown University Michael Glosny, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM 44-19 Chair: ROUNDTABLE: GEORGE W. BUSH’S DEMOCRATIC PROMOTION LEGACY Sheri Berman, Barnard College Disc: Sheri Berman, Barnard College Part: Larry Diamond, Stanford University Jennifer Windsor, Freedom House Peter Beinart, City University of New York Omar G. Encarnacion, Bard College 46-7 STATISTICAL MODELS AND CAUSAL INFERENCE: DAVID FREEDMAN’S DIALOGUE WITH THE SOCIAL SCIENCES Co-sponsored by 8-18 Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Disc: Jasjeet Singh Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley David Collier, University of California, Berkeley Part: Jason Seawright, Northwestern University Donald P. Green, Yale University Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley Wendy K. Tam Cho, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Thad Dunning, Yale University Daily Schedule Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Panel 1 Chair: GOVERNING TAIWAN Wei-chin Lee, Wake Forest University Papers: Chances and Limits of the Small Parties in the Legislative Yuan Yun-Chu Tsai, National Chengchi University Friends or Foes? Cross-Party Cooperation during the Period of Divided Government Rung-Yi Chen, National Chengchi University Who Controls the Judiciary in Taiwan? Chin-shou Wang, National Cheng Kung University The Dynamic Triangles Among Constituencies, Parties and Legislators: A Comparison Before and After the Reform of Electoral System Shing-Yuan Sheng, National Chengchi University Women and Politics in Taiwan: A Special Case? Joyce Gelb, CUNY-Graduate Center Disc: 46-22 Chair: Papers: RESEARCH DESIGN, METHODS, AND THEORYBUILDING IN COMPARATIVE JUDICIAL POLITICS Jeffrey Staton, Emory University Eric Voegelin Society Panel 11 THE PRIMACY OF PERSONS IN POLITICS: EMPIRICISM AND THEORY Chair: Thomas W. Heilke, University of Kansas Papers: The True Form of a Government: The Constitutional Movements of Power Tilo Schabert, University of Erlangen, Nuremberg Measuring the Rule of Law Juan Rebolledo, Yale University Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University Jeffrey Staton, Emory University 48-6 EXPLAINING THE SUCCESS AND FAILURE OF CERTAIN HEALTH POLICIES Co-sponsored by 25-8 Can Power be Creative? Evidence and Theory. Thomas W. Heilke, University of Kansas Friendship as Precondition and Consequence of Creativity in Politics John F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge Bridging Theory, Building Courts: Crossing Subfield Boundaries to Clarify Causation in Judicial Politics Matthew C. Ingram, University of New Mexico Disc: T.Y. Wang, Illinois State University Shelley Rigger, Davidson College The Hidden Power for the Creation of Order Peter Nitschke, University of Vechta French Politics Group Related Group Panels Panel 2 Chair: Part: Christians in Political Science Panel 2 THE DISAPPEARING GOD GAP? RELIGION IN THE 2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Co-sponsored by 33-3 Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Panel 5 Chair: Papers: Disc: 278 ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND THE AMERICAN PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT John B. Kienker, Claremont Review of Books Woodrow Wilson and the Legacy of Abraham Lincoln Ronald J. Pestritto, Jr., Hillsdale College POLITICAL RADICALISM IN FRANCE: RIGHT, LEFT, AND CENTER James G. Shields, University of Warwick Jocelyn Evans, University of Salford Florence Haegel, Centre d’Etudes de La Vie Politique Francaise Nonna Mayer, CEVIPOF James G. Shields, University of Warwick Green Politics and Theory Panel 1 Chair: NEW APPROACHES TO GREEN RESEARCH David Whiteman, University of South Carolina Papers: The Local Ecology of New Social Movements Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago Lincoln and the Progressive Historians John Marini, University of Nevada, Reno A Polycentric Theory of Human-Environment Interactions: Understanding Commodity Chains and Social Ecological Changes Tun Myint, Carleton College Distaining the Beaten Path: Herbert Croly and the 100th Anniversary of Lincoln’s Birth David Alvis, University of West Florida Jason Jividen, University of St. Francis The Environment is (a) Good: The Impact of Access, Ideology, and Economics on Environmental Preferences Mirya R. Holman, Claremont Graduate University Travis Coan, Claremont Graduate University Herman Belz, University of Maryland David K. Nichols, Baylor University The Agnotology of Ecology: How Dominant Environmental Discourses serve to Postpone Changing ‘Business As Usual’ Yogi Hendlin, University of California, Los Angeles Daily Schedule Disc: Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech Thursday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Thursday, 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM Institute for Constitutional Studies APSA Reception Panel 1 Chair: LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: LAW AND COURTS Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland APSA Events Part: David J. Danelski, Stanford University Joel B. Grossman, The Johns Hopkins University Thomas G. Walker, Emory University Doris Marie Provine, Arizona State University INTERNATIONAL ATTENDEE WELCOME RECEPTION Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 1 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 1 Labor Project Working Group: Comparative Political Theory Panel 2 REVERSING THE TIDE? THE ELECTION OF BARACK OBAMA AND THE FUTURE OF ORGANIZED LABOR IN THE US Gordon Lafer, University of Oregon SESSION 1 Disc: George Faraday, Change to Win Thea M. Lee, AFL-CIO Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Part: Neil Kwatra, UNITE-HERE Tracy Roof, University of Richmond Taylor E. Dark, III, California State University, Los Angeles Nancy Wiefek, American Rights At Work Bama Athreya, International Labor Rights Forum Chair: Society for Greek Political Thought Panel 1 Chair: Papers: PLATONIC DIALOGUES ON POLITICAL SCIENCE AND POLITICAL VIRTUE Co-sponsored by 1-31 Robert C. Bartlett, Emory University Law and Regime in Plato’s Statesman Amy Nendza, Boston College Is Courage Wisdom? An Examination of Plato’s Protagoras Lisa Leibowitz, Kenyon College The Education for Political Virtue: Courage and Moderation in Plato’s Statesman and Republic Linda Rabieh, Tufts University Disc: Robert C. Bartlett, Emory University Graham R. Howell Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 1 SESSION 1 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 1 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 1 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 1 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 1 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 1 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 1 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics SESSION 1 Thursday, 5:00 PM to 8:00 PM Affiliate Group Receptions Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Cengage-Wadsworth SESSION 1 RECEPTION Working Group: eLearning in Political Science Thursday, 5:30 PM to 6:30 PM SESSION 1 APSA Reception Thursday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM APSA Events APSA MENTOR PROGRAM NETWORKING RECEPTION Affiliate Group Meetings Thursday, 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM MEETING APSA Panel PI SIGMA ALPHA LECTURE: KEVIN PHILLIPS, “BAD MONEY: RECKLESS FINANCE, FAILED POLITICS, AND THE GLOBAL CRISIS OF AMERICAN CAPITALISM” Western Political Science Association EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING Daily Schedule APSA Events Journal of Theoretical Politics Related Group Meetings Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society BUSINESS MEETING Section Business Meetings 8 Political Methodology BUSINESS MEETING 279 Thursday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM Daily Schedule 23 Presidency Research University of Michigan EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING RECEPTION 28 Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations National Conference of Black Political Scientists BUSINESS MEETING WOMEN OF COLOR RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Women and Politics Research Organized Section, the Women’s Caucus for Political Science, APSA Council, Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for Political Science 29 State Politics and Policy Section BUSINESS MEETING 30 Urban Politics BUSINESS MEETING 33 Religion and Politics BUSINESS MEETING 42 New Political Science BUSINESS MEETING 46 Qualitative Methods BUSINESS MEETING New York University Wilf Family Department of Politics RECEPTION University of Pennsylvania Political Science Department RECEPTION The Review of Politics RECEPTION Vanderbilt University Thursday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM RECEPTION APSA Reception APSA GRADUATE STUDENT HAPPY HOUR RECEPTION Co-sponsored by Palgrave Macmillan and Caucus for a New Political Science Affiliate Group Meetings Related Group Receptions Politics and Gender Political Studies Association EDITORIAL SEARCH COMMITTEE RECEPTION APSA Events Thursday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM Section Receptions 23 Presidency Research RECEPTION 29 State Politics and Policy Section RECEPTION York University Department of Political Science Women’s Caucus for Political Science WOMEN OF COLOR RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the National Conference of Black Political Scientists, the Women and Politics Research Organized Section, APSA Council, Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for Political Science 30 Urban Politics Thursday, 8:00 PM to 9:00 PM RECEPTION APSA Panel 31 Women and Politics Research Section APSA Events WOMEN OF COLOR RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the National Conference of Black Political Scientists, the Women’s Caucus for Political Science, APSA Council, Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal, and the Latino Caucus for Political Science APSA PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS DELIVERED BY PETER KATZENSTEIN, CORNELL UNIVERSITY Part: Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University 33 Religion and Politics Thursday, 9:00 PM to 11:00 PM RECEPTION 43 International History and Politics RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Organized Section 46 Qualitative Methods RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the International History and Politics Organized Section APSA Reception APSA Events APSA 105TH ANNUAL MEETING OPENING RECEPTION Sponsored by Cambridge University Press Thursday, 10:00 PM to 11:30 PM Affiliate Group Receptions Political Research Quarterly Brookings Institution RECEPTION Co-sponsored by Washington State University RECEPTION University of Toronto Conference for the Study of Political Thought RECEPTION RECEPTION Washington State University Indiana University Department of Political Science RECEPTION Co-sponsored by Political Research Quarterly Affiliate Group Receptions RECEPTION Institute for Humane Studies RECEPTION University of Massachusetts RECEPTION 280 Daily Schedule Friday, September 4, 2009 Thursday, 10:00 PM to 11:30 PM 2-2 ROUNDTABLE: AFTER THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL AND POSTMODERNISM: RETHINKING APPROACHES TO THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT Co-sponsored by 1-5 2-10 Friday, 7:00 AM to 8:30 AM Affiliate Group Meetings MEETING OF EDITORIAL BOARD AND ADVISORY COUNCIL Chair: ROUNDTABLE ON STEPHEN K. WHITE’S “THE ETHOS OF A LATE-MODERN CITIZEN” Fonna Forman-Barzilai, University of California, San Diego Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM Disc: Stephen K. White, University of Virginia Section Business Meetings Part: Tracy B. Strong, University of California, San Diego Jane Bennett, The Johns Hopkins University Patchen Markell, University of Chicago Sharon R. Krause, Brown University 2-25 Chair: POLITICS, ECOLOGY, AND EQUITY Dennis J. Coyle, Catholic University of America Papers: Climate Justice Beyond Equity: The Flourishing of Human and Non-Human Communities David Schlosberg, Northern Arizona University Publius: The Journal of Federalism 42 New Political Science EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING Friday, 7:30 AM to 9:30 AM APSA Meetings APSA Events ASSOCIATIONS BREAKFAST Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM Republicanism and the Critique of the Domination of Nature Christopher Buck, St. Lawrence University Affiliate Group Meetings Legislative Studies Quarterly We Have Never Been Liberal: Possibilities for Effective Environmental Social Criticism John M. Meyer, Humboldt State University MEETING Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Ecological Citizenship, Time, and Corruption: Aldo Leopold’s Biotic Republicanism Peter Francesco Cannavo, Hamilton College Division Panels T-8 THEME PANEL: UNDERSTANDING A COMPLEX WORLD: COMPLEXITY THEORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE? Co-sponsored by 14-7 T-9 THEME PANEL: HEALTH SYSTEM COMPLEXITY AND CHANGE: MEASURING THE POLITICS OF DELIVERING CARE Co-sponsored by 48-2 1-5 ROUNDTABLE: AFTER THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL AND POSTMODERNISM: RETHINKING APPROACHES TO THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT Co-sponsored by 2-2 Alan Houston, University of California, San Diego Chair: Part: Disc: Elisabeth H. Ellis, Texas A&M University Steven J. Vanderheiden, University of Colorado, Boulder 2-34 Chair: VISION, NARRATIVE AND POLITICS Susan Jane McWilliams, Pomona College Papers: The Anatomy of Political Theory: a Typology Based on Narrative Structure Avery Elias Plaw, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth An Epic Comeback? Post-Western Politics in Theory and Film John S. Nelson, University of Iowa True Lies: Theories of Narrative Imagination in Public Speech and the Bush War on Terror Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Eastern Michigan University Mark Bevir, University of California, Berkeley Richard Boyd, Georgetown University George Klosko, University of Virginia 1-17 Chair: RETHINKING TELEOLOGY AND LIBERALISM Alex Schulman, University of California, Los Angeles Papers: Contra Politanism: Against the Moral Teleology of Political Forms Jacob T. Levy, McGill University The Politics of Cognition and Sense Perception in New Media Technology Martin Morris, Wilfrid Laurier University J. Maggio, University of Florida Nicholas J. Kiersey, Ohio University, Chillicothe 2-50 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JAMES FISHKIN, WHEN THE PEOPLE SPEAK: DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND PUBLIC CONSULTATION Co-sponsored by Committee on the Political Economy of the Good Society, Panel 1 3-6 Chair: THE AUTHORITY OF DEMOCRACY Cristina Lafont, Northwestern University Papers: Christiano on Democracy’s Basis in Equality David M. Estlund, Brown University Skeptical Liberalism as Democratic Virtue Shefali Misra, Oberlin College Rethinking Classical Liberalism in “Progressive” Times Robert Kaufman Adcock, George Washington University The Political Thought of Jotiba Phule and Mahadev Govind Ranade: some Reflections on the Emergence of a Non-Western Model of Liberalism in Modern India Rinku Lamba, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi Disc: Chandran Kukathas, London School of Economics Estlund on Fair Procedures and the Importance of Democracy Thomas Christiano, University of Arizona Democratic Authority as Arbitration Daniel Viehoff, Columbia University 281 Daily Schedule Disc: Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Democracy, Race, and Authority T. J. Donahue, Yale University Disc: Anna Stilz, Princeton University 3-22 Chair: IS EQUALITY POSSIBLE? Michael T. Gibbons, University of South Florida Papers: Contesting and De-Contesting Political Equality Peter D. Breiner, SUNY, Albany Daily Schedule Chair: Randall L. Calvert, Washington University Papers: Deliberation, Endogenous Groups, and Social Polarization Catherine Hafer, New York University Can We Divine Order? The Impossibility of Instrumental Rhetoric and Deliberative Democracy John W. Patty, Harvard University Elizabeth Maggie Penn, Harvard University The Rhetorical Strategies of Leaders: Stepping Down, Standing Back, and Speaking Clearly Torun Dewan, London School of Economics David P Myatt, Oxford University A Capable Theory of Equality and Opportunity Joshua Broady Preiss, Bucknell University Political Equality: Can this Ideal Be Saved in the Contemporary Era? Thomas S. De Luca, Jr., Fordham University Disc: Randall L. Calvert, Washington University Rafael Hortala-Vallve, London School of Economics Finding Time for Democracy: Towards a Theory of Political Equality over Time James L. Wilson, Princeton University 7-9 Chair: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CONGRESS AND HISTORY Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland Disc: Bryan T. McGraw, Wheaton College Papers: 3-33 DEMOCRACY AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF CAREWORK Co-sponsored by 31-18 Public Opinion, the Congressional Policy Agenda, and the Limits of New Deal Liberalism, 1935-1945. Eric Schickler, University of California, Berkeley 4-2 Chair: MODELS OF ELECTIONS Scott Ashworth, University of Chicago Papers: Candidates and Commitment in Repeated Elections Richard Van Weelden, Yale University Congress and the Roots of Sunbelt Conservatism Joseph Crespino, Emory University Disc: Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland The Effects of Violence on Political Elections Yasushi Asako, University of Wisconsin, Madison 8-3 Chair: COMPUTATIONAL MODELS OF POLITICS Stephen R. Haptonstahl, Washington University, St. Louis The Party’s Choice Between a Competitive and an Uncompetitive Primary Election Gilles Serra, Oxford University Papers: The Complex Adaptive Congress Robi Ragan, University of Georgia Gregory Robinson, SUNY, Binghamton Arturas Rozenas, Duke University 6-6 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION Co-sponsored by 16-7 6-8 THE GOVERNANCE AND CRISIS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE Co-sponsored by 14-2 Lloyd Gruber, London School of Economics Papers: The Dynamics of Lawmaking within Sovereignty Related Issues, 1877-1994 John Lapinski, University of Pennsylvania Superconnected: Candidates and Parties in a Complex Adaptive System Michael Tofias, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Disc: Chair: Congress and the Resurgence of a Democratic National Security Advantage, 1954-1960 Julian E. Zelizer, Princeton University The Social Construction of Cause and its Policy Consequences: The Political Geography of the 2008 Financial Crisis Leslie Elliott Armijo, Portland State University Kathryn C. Lavelle, Case Western Reserve University The Process of Civil War Resolution Michael Findley, Brigham Young University An Infinitely Repeated Game of Competition with Stochastically Retrieved Resources Dominick E. Wright, University of Michigan An Agent-Based Model of War Expansion and Diffusion Kyle A. Joyce, University of California, Davis Modeling Trans-National Ethnic Linkages and Civil War Ravi Bhavnani, Michigan State University Rick Riolo, University of Michigan Petra Hendrickson, Michigan State University Disc: Stephen R. Haptonstahl, Washington University, St. Louis Regulating Globally, Implementing Locally: Explaining Variation in Financial Codes and Standards Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 9-3 Financial Markets, Institutions, and Transaction Costs: The Endogeneity of Financial Governance Geoffrey R.D. Underhill, University of Amsterdam Chair: BEAUTIFUL SOULS AND JUST WARRIORS: GENDER, THE MILITARY, AND PEDAGOGY Co-sponsored by 19-1 Katherine Brown, King’s College London Legitimacy and the Political Sources of Financial Liberalisation Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam Geoffrey R.D. Underhill, University of Amsterdam Panicos Demetriadis, University of Leicester Papers: A Canadian perspective Jane Errington, Queen’s University Disc: Michelle D. Deardorff, Jackson State University Disc: Henry Laurence, Bowdoin College Part: 6-22 LEADERSHIP AND RHETORIC Kathleen A. Mahoney-Norris, Air Command and Staff College Morten G. Ender, U.S. Military Academy Diane M. Ryan, PhD, US Military Academy 282 Daily Schedule 11-13 Chair: Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Judith H. Stiehm, Florida International University Disc: Donald L. Horowitz, Duke University INSTITUTIONAL ORIGINS OF CAPITALISM Co-sponsored by 15-1 Alexander Michael Hicks, Emory University 11-47 THE REMAINS OF THE STATE – GOVERNANCE WITH(OUT) GOVERNMENT Co-sponsored by 12-12 The Shadow of the State: Can Governance Without Government Really Work? Tanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität Berlin Thomas Risse, Freie Universität Berlin Papers: Papers: Political Representation of Economic Interests and Two Paths to Democracy Torben Iversen, Harvard University David Soskice, Oxford University Governing and Meta-governing: Confronting the Dilemmas of Limited Control and Influence B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh Gonna Party Like It’s 1899: Electoral Systems and the Origins of Varieties of Coordination Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University Duane H. Swank, Marquette University Transformation(s) of the State? The State of (private) Security and the Security of the State Nicole Deitelhoff, Goethe-Universitat Frankfurt Business Interest Representation under Divided Sovereignty: “Entrepreneurial Representatives” in Interwar Palestine and the USA Omri Metzer, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Michael Shalev, Hebrew University Governance without Government? – Non-State Actors and International Law Beate Rudolf, Freie Universität Berlin Let Us Help You With That: The power and influence of international influences in reshaping post-socialist states Nicholas C Wheeler, University of Virginia Partisanship at the Origins of Modern Capitalist Institutions Richard Carney, Nanyang Technological University Behind Public Sector Efficiency: the role of Culture and Institutions Pietro Tommasino Disc: 11-24 Chair: Papers: 11-62 INEQUALITY AND CITIZENSHIP IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 12-38 11-65 POLITICAL TRUST, SATISFACTION, AND PARTICIPATION IN TODAY’S CHINA Co-sponsored by 13-14 12-12 Why Democracies Die: Leaders, Generals, and Citizens in the Collapse of Representative Government Chappell Lawson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology THE REMAINS OF THE STATE – GOVERNANCE WITH(OUT) GOVERNMENT Co-sponsored by 11-47 12-22 The Fate of Young Democracies Ethan B. Kapstein, INSEAD Chair: MOBILIZING ETHNIC AND CLASS IDENTITIES Co-sponsored by 32-12 Courtney Jung, University of Toronto Safeguarding Fledgling Democracies: The Primacy of Potent Legislatures M. Steven Fish, University of California, Berkeley Papers: Alexander Michael Hicks, Emory University THE POLITICS OF DEMOCRATIC REVERSAL Co-sponsored by 44-1 Larry Diamond, Stanford University Comparative Ethno-nationalism: Kurds vs. Lazs Zeki Sarigil, Bilkent University Democracy and Development: A Historical Perspective John Gerring, Boston University Strom Thacker, Boston University Disc: Larry Diamond, Stanford University 11-36 POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTIONS IN DIVIDED SOCIETIES Donald L. Horowitz, Duke University Chair: Papers: Conservative Peacemakers: Centre-Right Parties in the Northern Irish and Cypriot Peace Processes Nukhet Ahu Sandal, University of Southern California Neophytos Loizides, Queen’s University of Belfast Institutional and Electoral Engineering in Bosnia and Macedonia: Does It Make a Difference? Dejan Guzina, Wilfrid Laurier University International Efforts at Post-conflict Party-building in Divided Societies Andrew Radin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Economics or Culture? Motivations for Sub-State Nationalists in Europe Seth Kincaid Jolly, Syracuse University Rethinking Class Analysis in Democratization Studies: Turkey and Thailand Ayse Zarakol, Washington & Lee University The Genesis of Muhajir Identity and Violence in Pakistan Kavita R. Khory, Mount Holyoke College Disc: Alexandra L. Scacco, Columbia University Courtney Jung, University of Toronto 12-38 INEQUALITY AND CITIZENSHIP IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 11-62 Erik M. Kuhonta, McGill University Chair: Papers: Democracy, Inequality, and Human Development in Southeast Asia Erik M. Kuhonta, McGill University How Inequality Undermines Citizenship: Some Extreme African Cases Jacqueline Klopp, Columbia University Documenting Citizenship: Inequality, Rights, and the Production of Paper Work Kamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine 283 Daily Schedule Revisiting Electoral Engineering: Party Systems and Electoral Reforms In Turkey, Northern Ireland, Guyana, and Sri Lanka Evangelos Liaras, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Why Ethnic Groups Rebel: The Role of Opportunity and Grievances in Civil War Luke N Condra, Stanford University Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Daily Schedule Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania David C. Earnest, Old Dominion University William E. Connolly, Johns Hopkins University Thomas F. Homer-Dixon, University of Waterloo Citizenship as Consumption or Citizenship as Agency: The Challenge for Civil Society Philip D. Oxhorn, McGill University Unfulfilled Promise: Income Inequality, Communist Regimes, and Failed Democratic Transitions Robert Brathwaite, University of Notre Dame 15-1 Disc: Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin John Echeverri-Gent, University of Virginia INSTITUTIONAL ORIGINS OF CAPITALISM Co-sponsored by 11-13 15-10 13-5 PECULARITIES OF POSTCOMMUNIST ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Co-sponsored by 36-2 Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University Chair: A ‘SECOND TRANSITION’ IN SPAIN? THE SOCIALIST GOVERNMENT OF JOSÉ LUIS RODRÍGUEZ ZAPATERO (2004-08) Co-sponsored by Iberian Studies Group, Panel 1 Bonnie N. Field, Bentley University Chair: Papers: Papers: Mass-Level Perceptions of Political Party Corruption and the Vote: A Choice Model of Voting Behavior in Poland Goldie Shabad, The Ohio State University Kazimierz M. Slomczynski, Ohio State University Business as Usual: EU Policy under Zapatero Carlos Closa Montero, Spanish High Council for Scientific Research (CSIC) Party Systems Competition in Post-Communist Europe (19902008): Institutionalization or Fluidity? Zsolt Enyedi, Central European University Fernando Casal Bertoa, European University Institute Immigration and the Labor Movement in Zapatero’s Spain Andrew Richards, Juan March Institute Socially Structured Inequality and Ideological Polarization in Post-Communist Societies Geoffrey Evans, Oxford University Matthew Loveless, University of Oxford Territorial Politics in Zapatero’s Spain Diego Muro, King’s College London Minority Government and Legislative Politics in Spain, 20042008 Bonnie N. Field, Bentley University A Rational Postcommunist Public? Andrew Roberts, Northwestern University Disc: Petia A. Kostadinova, University of Florida Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University 13-14 POLITICAL TRUST, SATISFACTION, AND PARTICIPATION IN TODAY’S CHINA Co-sponsored by 11-65 Robert Harmel, Texas A&M University, College Station Chair: Papers: Disc: Richard Gunther, Ohio State University 16-7 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION Co-sponsored by 6-6 Kate Ivanova, Ohio State University Chair: Papers: One-Party Rule or Multi-Party Competition?: Chinese Attitudes Toward Party Systems Alternatives Robert Harmel, Texas A&M University, College Station Alexander C. Tan, University of Canterbury 14-2 14-7 Patterns of Political Participation in Contemporary China M. Kent Jennings, University of California, Santa Barbara Ning Zhang, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Achieving The U.N.’s MDGs: Corruption, Human Development, and Child Mortality John Doces, Bucknell University Gregory S. Sanjian, Bucknell University Explaining Public Concern for Environmental Protection in China Xinsheng Liu, Texas A&M University Ren Mu, Texas A&M University Changing the Rules of the Game: Historical Insights from Transparency International’s Defence against Corruption Eiko Elize Sakamoto, London School of Economics John James Kennedy, University of Kansas Lily Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology THE GOVERNANCE AND CRISIS OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE Co-sponsored by 6-8 Chair: THEME PANEL: UNDERSTANDING A COMPLEX WORLD: COMPLEXITY THEORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE? Co-sponsored by T-8 Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto Part: Kenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan 284 Institutions, Incentives and Investment: How Financial Market Development Affects Corruption Levels Chelsea Denise Brown, Southern Methodist University A Cross-Country Analysis of Corruption in World Bank Projects Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign What Do Corruption Indices Measure? Dilyan Donchev, Harvard University Gergely Ujhelyi, University of Houston Institutional Trust in China: Levels, Reasons, and Consequences Wenfang Tang, University of Iowa Qing Yang, University of Pittsburgh Disc: Citizenship Policies and the Political Involvement of Minorities in Zapatero’s Spain Kerman Calvo, Centro de Estudios Politicos y Constitucionales Irene Martin Cortes, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid Disc: Kate Ivanova, Ohio State University 16-32 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INTERNATIONAL REGIMES Co-sponsored by 17-18 17-7 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW Co-sponsored by 18-28 Xinyuan Dai, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Chair: Part: Beth A. Simmons, Harvard University Oona Hathaway, Yale University Thania Sanchez, University of Iowa Kal Raustiala, University of California, Los Angeles Xinyuan Dai, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Daily Schedule 17-18 Chair: Papers: THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INTERNATIONAL REGIMES Co-sponsored by 16-32 Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University 18-28 THE DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW Co-sponsored by 17-7 18-39 Testing the Effects of the GATT/WTO: Round 2 Joanne Gowa, Princeton University ROUNDTABLE: UNDERSTANDING POLITICAL EXTREMISM Co-sponsored by 43-8 19-1 Democratization and Human Rights Regimes Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of California, San Diego Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania BEAUTIFUL SOULS AND JUST WARRIORS: GENDER, THE MILITARY, AND PEDAGOGY Co-sponsored by 9-3 19-2 NEW APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION Co-sponsored by 18-7 Strengthening the Dispute Settlement Procedure Leslie Johns, University of California, Los Angeles B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University 20-13 Chair: TOOLS OF STATECRAFT: SANCTIONS AND FORCE Norrin M. Ripsman, Concordia University Why the Overhang? Explaining the Gap Between Bound and Applied Tariff Rates Marc L. Busch, Georgetown University Krzysztof J. Pelc, Georgetown University Papers: Adverse Institutional Consequences of U.S. Interventions in Developing Regions Hilton L. Root, George Mason University Disc: Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University 17-21 WHERE’S TRUTH AND JUSTICE? TRACKING CHANGES IN INTERNATIONAL LAW Co-sponsored by 43-6 18-7 Chair: Papers: Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM A Principal-Agent Approach to Economic Statecraft William Norris, MIT Measuring Success of Foreign Policy Tools: The Role of International Sanctions Francesco Giumelli, Metropolitan University Prague Democratic Diversions: Partisan Ambition and Diversionary War Peter Trubowitz, University of Texas, Austin Jungkun Seo, University of North Carolina, Wilmington NEW APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION Co-sponsored by 19-2 Scott D. Sagan, Stanford University Balancing Force and Diplomacy: Lessons of the 2006 IsraelLebanon War Eric B. Lorber, Duke University Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University The Design of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty Dane Swango, University of California, Los Angeles Disc: Joseph M. Grieco, Duke University Breaking Up The Atom Is Hard to Do: Nuclear Capability as a Function of State Capacity Jacques E.C. Hymans, University of Southern California 21-12 Chair: MEDIATION AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh Papers: Fear of Commitment: Evaluating the Intentions of Conflict Managers Molly M. Melin, Loyola University, Chicago What Drives States to Support New Nonproliferation Obligations? Three Portraits of the 1995 NPT Indefinite Extension Decision Andrew Grotto, Center for American Progress Deterrence Theory and Emerging Nuclear Powers Joshua Rovner, US Naval War College Mediation Processes in African Intra-State Crises: Security Guarantees and the Stability of Negotiated Outcomes Jonathan Wilkenfeld, University of Maryland Michael Brecher, McGill University David Quinn, University of Maryland Pelin Eralp, University of Maryland Theodore D. McLauchlin, McGill University Coercive Disarmament: The Causes of Nuclear Reversal David Palkki, University of California, Los Angeles Disc: Francis J. Gavin, Jr., University of Texas, Austin 18-20 POWER AND PRESTIGE IN A CHANGING WORLD: CHINA, RUSSIA, AND THE DILEMMAS OF BECOMING A GREAT POWER Karrie J. Koesel, University of Oregon Chair: Papers: ‘Great Power Rising’: China Re-Conceptualizes Its Role in the International System Thomas J. Bickford, CNA Corporation The ‘Century of Humiliation,’ Then and Now Alison Kaufman, CNA China Studies Is Russia Resurgent? Why a Less Powerful Russia is More Threatening Sarah E. Kreps, Cornell University Disc: Karrie J. Koesel, University of Oregon Mediator Bias and Impartiality: Mediation Acceptance and Outcome Su-Mi Lee, University of Kentucky Disc: Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh 21-21 Chair: ELECTIONS AND INTERNATIONAL VIOLENCE Clayton L Thyne, University of Kentucky Papers: Terrorism and Electoral Politics Johanna Kristin Birnir, University of Maryland Time to Kill: The Impact of Election Timing and Sequencing on Post-Conflict Stability Dawn Brancati, Washington University in St. Louis Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University 285 Daily Schedule Muddling Through the Shadow of the Past: Post-Communist Russia’s Search for a New Regime Ideology Cheng Chen, SUNY, Albany Uncertainty and Incentives in Mediation Mark Fey, University of Rochester Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Daily Schedule War Terms? Term Limits, Election Cycles, and the Timing and Propensity of Democratic Conflict. Michael T. Koch, Texas A&M University Dangerous Times?: Exploring the Relationship between Elections and Terror. Stephen C. Nemeth, University of Iowa Howard Bartlett Sanborn, IV, Virginia Military Institute Public Services Performance and Stakeholders: Findings from experimental research in China, Hong Kong and South Korea M. Jae Moon, Yonsei University Disc: Hal G. Rainey, University of Georgia 25-4 GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE ON THE ROLE OF PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND POLICY Co-sponsored by 24-4 Disc: Clayton L Thyne, University of Kentucky 22-4 Chair: LEGISLATIVE PRODUCTIVITY Gregory Koger, University of Miami 25-21 LEADERSHIP IN CITY GOVERNMENT AND SCHOOLS: POLICY PROCESSES AND OUTCOMES Co-sponsored by 30-9 Papers: Explaining Legislative Productivity, 1789-2004 Nathan Kelly, University of Tennessee J. Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois University 26-8 Chair: METHODS IN JUDICIAL POLITICS Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University Papers: Taking the Measure of Ideology: Empirically Measuring Supreme Court Cases Tonja Jacobi, Northwestern University Matthew J. Sag, DePaul College of Law Cosponsorship and Coalition-Building in the U.S. House William T. Bernhard, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Tracy Sulkin, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Legislative Seniority: An Excludable or Non-Excludable Good? Andrew J. Taylor, North Carolina State University Measuring the Rule of Law Juan Rebolledo, Yale University Frances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale University Legislative Effectiveness in Congress: Advancing Health Policy Reforms Craig Volden, The Ohio State University Alan E. Wiseman, Ohio State University Disc: The Role of the “Legal Status Quo” in Supreme Court DecisionMaking Thomas H. Hammond, Michigan State University Forrest Maltzman, George Washington University Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin Diana Evans, Trinity College 23-7 Chair: GOING PUBLIC AND THE RHETORICAL PRESIDENCY Philip Abbott, Wayne State University Papers: Constitutional Origins of the Rhetorical Presidency Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University Imagery as Rhetoric in the Early Presidency Karen S. Hoffman, Marquette University Locating the Ideal Points of Solicitors General in Policy Space Ryan J. Owens, Harvard University Ryan C. Black, Michigan State University Disc: Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University 26-14 Chair: SOCIAL IMPACTS OF THE COURTS Christine L. Nemacheck, College of William & Mary Papers: The Importance of Federal Judical Selection on Presidential Vote Choice Nancy Scherer, Wellesley College Sara C. Benesh, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Amy L. Steigerwalt, Georgia State University “Dear America:” Public Letters as an Early Form of Presidential Mass Communication Melvin C. Laracey, University of Texas, San Antonio The Post-Rhetorical Presidency Justin S. Vaughn, Cleveland State University Disc: Philip Abbott, Wayne State University Lilly J. Goren, Carroll College 24-4 GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE ON THE ROLE OF PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-4 Gene A. Brewer, University of Georgia Chair: Papers: Nature of Municipal Outputs in a Latin American Setting: Does the Public Manager’s Previous Sector-based Experience Matter? Claudia N. Avellaneda, University of North Carolina at Charlotte The Judiciary as Agenda Setter: Explaining Interest Group Participation in the Courts Alixandra B. Yanus, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill What to do With Racial Preferences in Financial Aid? Rational Learning and Implementing the Michigan Cases David Glick, Princeton University Disc: Christine L. Nemacheck, College of William & Mary 27-5 ROUNDTABLE: SAME-SEX MARRIAGE, COURTS, AND DIRECT DEMOCRACY John J. Dinan, Wake Forest University Chair: Part: Kenneth P. Miller, Claremont McKenna College Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los Angeles Nathaniel Persily, Columbia University Rainer Knopff, University of Calgary Susan Gluck Mezey, Loyola University, Chicago 28-10 SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS AND THE STIMULUS PACKAGES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics, Panel 1 29-4 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND REPRESENTATION IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 32-14 Political and Managerial Succession and the Performance of English Local Governments George A. Boyne, Cardiff University Rhys Andrews, University of Cardiff Political and Managerial Succession and the Performance of English Local Governance Nicolai Petrovsky, Cardiff University George A. Boyne, Cardiff University Oliver James, University of Exeter 286 Daily Schedule Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Chair: Kerry L. Haynie, Duke University 32-14 Papers: Nationalism, Race and the Obama Victory Joseph Bafumi, Jr., Dartmouth College Michael C. Herron, Dartmouth College RACE, ETHNICITY, AND REPRESENTATION IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-4 33-6 RELIGIOUS POLITICAL PARTIES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 35-4 Ramazan Kilinc, Michigan State University Critical Actors or Critical Mass? The Conditional Role of Race and Ethnicity in Legislative Agenda Setting Stella M. Rouse, University of Maryland Advancing beyond the Local and Congressional Level: Under Which Conditions are Black’s Nominated for High Profile StateWide Office Christopher Stout, University of California, Irvine Chair: Papers: Policymaking in the Forced Federalism Era Richard C. Witmer, Creighton University Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa Joshua Johnson, Creighton University Disc: Kerry L. Haynie, Duke University Lester Kenyatta Spence, Johns Hopkins University 30-9 LEADERSHIP IN CITY GOVERNMENT AND SCHOOLS: POLICY PROCESSES AND OUTCOMES Co-sponsored by 25-21 Wilbur C. Rich, Wellesley College Chair: Papers: Negotiating Islam, Civil Society, and Secularism: The Justice and Development Party in Turkey Ani Sarkissian, Michigan State University Serife Ilgu Ozler, SUNY New Paltz What accounts for the success of Islamist parties in the Arab world? Evidence from Jordan Michael D. H. Robbins, University of Michigan Robert Alfred Dowd, University of Notre Dame In the Eye of Hurricane Katrina: Black Mayoral Leadership and the Reconstruction of New Orleans Stefanie Chambers, Trinity College William E. Nelson, Jr., Ohio State University 34-10 PARTY LINKAGE AND PARTY GOVERNMENT IN CONTEMPORARY DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 35-5 Sex and the City: The Effect of Mayoral Gender on Agenda Setting, Policy Process, and Policy Outcomes. Mirya R. Holman, Claremont Graduate University 35-4 RELIGIOUS POLITICAL PARTIES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 33-6 A New Politics of School Leadership? Tracing the Policy and Practice Effects of New York City’s New School Governing Regime Dorothy Shipps, Baruch College, CUNY 35-5 PARTY LINKAGE AND PARTY GOVERNMENT IN CONTEMPORARY DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 34-10 Richard S. Katz, Johns Hopkins University Disc: Jeffrey R. Henig, Columbia University 31-18 DEMOCRACY AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF CAREWORK Co-sponsored by 3-33 Alisa Rosenthal, Gustavus Adolphus College Papers: Religion between Movement and Party: A Comparative Analysis of Religious Party Formation in Middle East and Latin America Luis F. Mantilla, Georgetown University Disc: When Urban School Districts Innovate: The Politics of Turning Around Low Performing School Organizations Kenneth K. Wong, Brown University Francis X. Shen, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Understanding Moderation and Extremism: The Strategies and Goals of Religious Parties P. Pushkar, McGill University Madhvi Gupta, Concordia University Chair: Papers: Comparing Voter Participation: Individual Resources, Orientations and the Context of Party Politics Miki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State University Parties and Participation: The Linkage between Parties and Voters Ian McAllister, Australian National University Forming a Government: Do Expectations Match Reality Russell J. Dalton, University of California, Irvine Democratic Representation: The Congruence Between Citizens and Government David M. Farrell, University of Manchester Producing Citizens: Women, Parenthood, and the Democratic Public Sphere Elizabeth Markovits, Mount Holyoke College Susan Bickford, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Voter Diversity, Ideological Trends, and Changing Party System Polarization: Implications for Ideological Congruence G. Bingham Powell, Jr., University of Rochester Disc: André Blais, Université de Montréal Care, Resentment, and Vulnerability Julie A. White, Ohio University 35-15 Chair: PARTY POLITICS AND LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS Stephen K. Medvic, Franklin and Marshall College Analyzing Practices of Care & Disabled Embodiment in U.S. Advocacy Organizations Stacy A. Clifford, Vanderbilt University Papers: Disc: Joan C. Tronto, CUNY, Hunter College Candidate Ideology or Candidate Quality: Explaining Democratic House Victories in 2006 and 2008 Gregory Huber, Yale University Conor M. Dowling, Yale University 31-22 GENDER AND VOTER BEHAVIOR: 2008 AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 36-22 Realignment, Open Seats, the Retirement Slump, and the Appearance of an Increasing Incumbency Effect Jeffrey M. Stonecash, Syracuse University 32-12 MOBILIZING ETHNIC AND CLASS IDENTITIES Co-sponsored by 12-22 Risk Taking and Redistricting: How a Party’s Willingness to Accept Risk Leads to Seat Gains and Losses Aaron Dusso, George Washington University 287 Daily Schedule Fashioning Caring Bodies: Inequality, Bodywork, and Caregiving Hollie Sue Mann, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Changing the Playing Field: Redistricting and Party Competition in the States John M. Bruce, University of Mississippi Jonathan Winburn, University of Mississippi Robert D. Brown, University of Mississippi Disc: Jamie L. Carson, University of Georgia 36-2 PECULARITIES OF POSTCOMMUNIST ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR Co-sponsored by 13-5 36-9 ELECTIONS AND THE ECONOMY: NEW DIRECTIONS Co-sponsored by 37-7 Jonathan Nagler, New York University Chair: Papers: Daily Schedule Papers: What is the Difference Between a Hockey Mom and a Pit Bull? Presentations of Palin and Gender Stereotypes in the 2008 Presidential Election Lindsay Eberhardt, Claremont Graduate University Sarah Burns, Claremont Graduate University Victoria Maria DeFrancesco Soto, Northwestern University The Gender Gaps of the 2008 Presidential Election: Explaining Gender Gap Variation Across Regions and States Richard E. Matland, Loyola University, Chicago Charles H. Franklin, University of Wisconsin, Madison Gender Differences in Political and Civic Engagement Among Young People Richard G. Niemi, University of Rochester Kent E. Portney, Tufts University Richard C. Eichenberg, Tufts University Retrospective or Prospective Voters? The Role of Sophistication David A. M. Peterson, Iowa State University Erica Socker, Texas A&M University The American Voter Goes Shopping Peter Enns, Cornell University Christopher J. Anderson, Cornell University Ecologies of Unease: Foreclosures and Presidential Voting in the 2008 Election Andrew Reeves, Boston University James G. Gimpel, University of Maryland, College Park Gender Affinity Effects in Vote Choice? Evidence from Independents, Leaners, and Partisan Defectors Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant, Queen’s University Julie Croskill, Queen’s University Effects without Causes: Explaining Enduring Gender Gaps in Internal Efficacy and Political Interest in Post-Industrial Democracies Melanee Thomas, McGill University Disc: Sally Friedman, SUNY, Albany Is Wal-Mart Good for Political Participation? David S. Brown, University of Colorado 37-7 ELECTIONS AND THE ECONOMY: NEW DIRECTIONS Co-sponsored by 36-9 Electoral Uncertainty and Inverse Political Business Cycles: An Examination of U.S. Housing Market Dynamics Brandice Canes-Wrone, Princeton University 37-15 Chair: RELIGION, PUBLIC OPINION, AND POLITICS Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Disc: Jonathan Nagler, New York University Cameron Anderson, University of Western Ontario Papers: 36-11 Chair: FIELD EXPERIMENTS AND MOBILIZATION Donald P. Green, Yale University Faith of his Fathers: Barack Obama, Islam, and the Impact of Religious Background Cues on Vote Choice in the 2008 Presidential Election Kerem Ozan Kalkan, University of Maryland Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame John C. Green, University of Akron Papers: Both Sides Now: A Field Experiment With Competing Messages Daniel Rubenson, Ryerson University Peter John Loewen, Université de Montréal Where Do Americans Draw The Line Between Church And State? David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame Is it the Message or the Messenger?: Evaluating Race, Religion, and Campaign Rhetoric Khalilah L. Brown-Dean, Yale University Racial Cues, Neighborhood Behavior, and Turnout: Results from a Field Experiment David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame Ismail K. White, Ohio State University Targeting Latino Voters with Spanish vs. English-language Appeals: Field Experimental Evidence Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University Marisa Abrajano, University of California, San Diego Making Vote-by-Mail Elections Work: A Randomized Field Experiment Testing the Impact of Mobilization in Traditional and Vote-by-Mail Precincts Kevin Arceneaux, Temple University Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego Megan Mullin, Temple University A Field Experiment on Nonpartisan Mobilization and Persuasion Down-Ballot Lauren Deschamps, University of Notre Dame Disc: David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame 36-22 GENDER AND VOTER BEHAVIOR: 2008 AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 31-22 Kathleen Knight, Columbia University Chair: God and Country: The Interface of Religious and National Identity Matthew Wright, University of California, Berkeley Jack Citrin, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Kenneth D. Wald, University of Florida 38-3 MEDIA, PARTIES, AND THE 2008 ELECTIONS: CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES COMPARED Richard Davis, Brigham Young University Chair: Part: Jeff Dvorkin, Ryerson University Thomas Flanagan, University of Calgary Christopher Waddell, Carleton University Regina G. Lawrence, Louisiana State University 38-19 NEW STRATEGIES OF POLITICAL COMMUNICATION IN CANADA Co-sponsored by 49-7 41-3 ART AND POLITICS IN FLORIAN HENCKEL VON DONNERSMARCK’S THE LIVES OF OTHERS Jay Nordlinger, National Review Chair: 288 Daily Schedule Papers: Post-Totalitarianism in The Lives of Others Flagg Taylor, Skidmore College The Aesthetic Education of a Good Man: Schiller and The Lives of Others Michael Valdez Moses, Duke University Disc: Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College David K. Nichols, Baylor University 43-6 WHERE’S TRUTH AND JUSTICE? TRACKING CHANGES IN INTERNATIONAL LAW Co-sponsored by 17-21 Matthew Rendall, University of Nottingham Papers: For the Money? Human Rights Agreements and Foreign Aid Richard Nielsen, Harvard University The Redemptive Power of Art Against Communism’s Moral Corruption in The Lives of Others Carl Eric Scott, Hampden-Sydney College Long Day’s Journey into Brecht: The Ambiguous Politics of The Lives of Others Paul A. Cantor, University of Virginia Chair: Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Disc: Denese McArthur, South Texas College 46-9 TAKING RESEARCH DESIGN SERIOUSLY IN IDEATIONAL APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Jeffrey W. Legro, University of Virginia Chair: Papers: Reputation and Image in International Institutions: International Pressures to Adopt ‘Responsible’ Arms Transfer Policy Jennifer L. Erickson, Cornell University Contestation or Consensus? Ideas, Foreign Policy Beliefs, and U.S. Alliance Relations Andrew Yeo, Catholic University of America Complexity and the Administration of the Just War Sara R. Jordan, University of Hong Kong Phillip W. Gray, University of Hong Kong European Security in the Shadow of NATO: Party Ideology and Institution Building Stephanie Claudia Hofmann, Cornell University How Rule of Law Travels: Legal Circulations, Ports of Call, Troubled Destinations Iza Hussin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Methodological Challenges and Progress in Ideational Research Stephen Craig Nelson, Cornell University Andrew Yeo, Catholic University of America Changing the Logic of Appropriateness: The Emergence of the International Norm of Truth Commissions Michal Ben-Josef Hirsch, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Where Is It Still Safe To Be King? A Comparative Analysis of Judicial Treatment of the Sovereign Immunity Rule for Human Rights Violations Suzanne Katzenstein, Columbia University Disc: Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University 46-16 REFINEMENTS IN RESEARCH DESIGN: CASES, CONCEPTS, VARIABLES Hillel David Soifer, Princeton University Chair: Papers: The Other Forgotten War: Understanding Atrocities During the Malayan Emergency Christi Leigh Siver, University of Washington Disc: Matthew Rendall, University of Nottingham 43-8 ROUNDTABLE: UNDERSTANDING POLITICAL EXTREMISM Co-sponsored by 18-39 Manus I. Midlarsky, Rutgers University Chair: When John Bolton is the Life of the Party: Explaining the Erosion of Multilateralism in the GOP Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin Jonathan J. Monten, Yale University Sheri Berman, Barnard College Martha Crenshaw, Stanford University Stuart J. Kaufman, University of Delaware Cas Mudde, University of Antwerp David Art, Tufts University Manus I. Midlarsky, Rutgers University 44-1 THE POLITICS OF DEMOCRATIC REVERSAL Co-sponsored by 11-24 45-11 Chair: INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS AND HUMAN RIGHTS David L. Cingranelli, SUNY, Binghamton Papers: Developing What? Aims and Effects of Foreign Development Assistance Bethany Barratt, Roosevelt University Economic Sanctions and Human Rights: New Findings Based on the Notion of Political Survival Cristiane Carneiro Carmela Lutmar, Princeton University Theory and Method in the Study of Nuclear Proliferation Etel L. Solingen, University of California, Irvine Improving Measurement in Qualitative Social Science Research Stefanie Walter, Harvard University Dirk Leuffen, ETH Zürich Disc: Hillel David Soifer, Princeton University 46-26 UNDERSTANDING EXPERIENCES ACROSS THE SUBFIELDS: RHETORIC, PHENOMENOLOGY, FIELDWORK, FRAMING/NARRATIVES, AND TEXTUAL ETHNOGRAPHY Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies and Methods, Panel 3 48-2 THEME PANEL: HEALTH SYSTEM COMPLEXITY AND CHANGE: MEASURING THE POLITICS OF DELIVERING CARE Co-sponsored by T-9 Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Chair: Papers: Rational Historical Institutionalism: Post-War Health Policy in Sweden and the UK Tim Hicks, University of Oxford Health Care in Crisis: The Drive for Health Reform in Canada and the United States Antonia Maioni, McGill University Theodore R. Marmor, Yale University The Impact of Joint Respect for Human Rights on Bilateral Aid Ali Sanaei, Louisiana State University 289 Daily Schedule Part: Case Selection in Qualitative Research Thomas Pluemper, University of Essex Eric Neumayer, London School of Economics Vera Eva Troeger, University of Essex Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Daily Schedule Environmental Sustainability in East Asia: Policies and Technological Output in Japan, Korea, and Taiwan Matthew A. Shapiro, Illinois Institute of Technology Close to Home: The Impact of Media Attention on Public Health Outcomes Patricia Strach, Harvard University Erika Franklin Fowler, University of Michigan The Political Determinants of Health: A Cross-National Study Simon Wigley, Bilkent University Disc: 49-7 Chair: Papers: Mark A. Peterson, University of California, Los Angeles Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill NEW STRATEGIES OF POLITICAL COMMUNICATION IN CANADA Co-sponsored by 38-19 Richard Schultz, McGill University Does Ethno-Racial Diversity Diminish Political Engagement? Elisabeth L. Gidengil, McGill University Jason J. Roy, McGill University Andrea Lawlor, McGill University Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Panel 8 Chair: Part: Panel 1 Chair: Papers: Richard Schultz, McGill University Related Group Panels Asian Pacific American Caucus Panel 1 Chair: Papers: ASIAN AMERICANS AND IMMIGRANT POLITICAL INCORPORATION Andrew L. Aoki, Augsburg College ‘The Lost Suitcase’: Memory and Narrative in a Post-1965 Indian Immigrant Family Tale Himanee Gupta-Carlson, Tacoma Community College Discourses of Exclusion: Historical Analysis of U.S. Immigration Law vis-a-vis Asian-Americans and Latinos Robert W. Scharr, University of Florida Disc: Andrew L. Aoki, Augsburg College The Paradoxical Role of the Military in the Amnesty, Reconciliation and Reintegration (AR2) Process Michael W. Mosser, University of Texas, Austin Counterinsurgency and Transitional Justice Ganesh Sitaraman, Harvard Law School Disc: Isaiah Wilson, III, United States Military Academy, West Point Jason Lyall, Yale University Committee on the Political Economy of the Good Society Panel 1 Chair: Part: Intergenerational Transmission of Immigrant Political Attitudes: The Case of the Hmong in America Carolyn Wong, Carleton College Immigrants, Political Incorporation and Homeland Politics: The Case of Korean-Americans and Korean Nationalism in the U.S. Soo-Bin You, Rutgers University COERCION AND RECONCILIATION IN COUNTERINSURGENCY OPERATIONS Isaiah Wilson, III, United States Military Academy, West Point Coercion and Accommodation in Counterinsurgency Warfare Jacqueline L. Hazelton, Brandeis University From Pollsters to Journalists: Media Coverage of Polls during the 2008 Canadian Election Francois Petry, Laval University Frédérick Bastien, Université Laval Disc: Joseph R. Fornieri, Rochester Institute of Technology Phillip G. Henderson, Catholic University of America Ethan Fishman, University of South Alabama Lucas E. Morel, Washington & Lee University Herman Belz, University of Maryland Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy Organization Change in Canadian and US Political Parties Mildred A. Schwartz, New York University An Energy Superpower?: Building the Case Through an Examination of Canada’s National Newspapers Coverage of Oil Sands in 2006 Laura Way, University of Alberta ABRAHAM LINCOLN: THE 200TH ANNIVERSARY OF HIS BIRTH Kenneth L. Deutsch, SUNY Geneseo AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JAMES FISHKIN, WHEN THE PEOPLE SPEAK: DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND PUBLIC CONSULTATION Co-sponsored by 2-50 Stephen L. Elkin, University of Maryland James S. Fishkin, Stanford University Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin Jane Mansbridge, Harvard University Lynn M. Sanders, University of Virginia Albena Azmanova, University of Kent Comparative Urban Politics Panel 1 Chair: Part: Association of Korean Political Studies in North America SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS AND THE STIMULUS PACKAGES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Co-sponsored by 28-10 Ronald K. Vogel, University of Louisville Robert Andrew Young, University of Western Ontario Katherine Graham, Carleton University Ann O’M. Bowman, Texas A&M University Michael A. Pagano, University of Illinois at Chicago Panel 2 Chair: KOREA’S RESPONSES TO GLOBALIZATION Jongsoo James Lee, Stonehill College Papers: The Political Logic of Financial Reform: Assessing Reform Outcomes A Decade After Crisis in South Korea and Japan Heon Joo Jung, Indiana University, Bloomington Panel 13 ROUNDTABLE: THE MODERN PHILOSOPHICAL REVOLUTION: THE LUMINOSITY OF EXISTENCE Chair: Michael G. Franz, Loyola College of Maryland Divided Workers in the Era of Globalization: South Korean Case Ji-Young Kim, Ewha University Disc: David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America Part: Glenn Hughes, St. Mary’s University, San Antonio Henrik Syse, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) Cyril O’Regan, University of Notre Dame Eric Voegelin Society South Korean Food Security or Neo-Colonialism? Daewoo Logistics’ Industrial Agriculture in Madagascar Jeffrey L. Gower, SUNY, Buffalo 290 Daily Schedule Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Rouven J. Steeves, U.S. Air Force Academy Thomas W. Heilke, University of Kansas FTAA, Brazil and United States: Why the Negotiations in Agriculture Came to a Deadlock Marco Antonio Ferreira de Araujo, Faculdade Integrada do Recife Marcelo Jorge Figueiredo Lima European Consortium for Political Research Panel 1 Chair: THE AMERICANISATION OF EUROPEAN EXECUTIVES Luciano Bardi, Università di Pisa Papers: The Americanization of European Executives: the Case of the British Prime Minister Patricia Lee Sykes, American University FDI by Economic Sectors and Its Effect on Inequality in Latin American Medium Income Countries Juan Bogliaccini, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Patrick J.W. Egan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Transformation of Social Governance in the Neoliberal Era: The Politics of Social Reform in Argentina and Chile Mikael Wigell, London School of Economics and Political Science The German Core Executive: Ever More Power to the Chancellor? Thomas Poguntke, University of Bochum Personalization of Leadership and the US Presidency Colin Campbell, University of British Columbia Jamie Gillies, University of British Columbia The Americanisation of European Executives: Undisputed Trend or Contrasted Process? Sergio Fabbrini, University of Trento Restraining Clientelism in Mexico Yuriko Takahashi, Kobe University Disc: Latino Caucus in Political Science Panel 1 Iberian Studies Group Panel 1 A ‘SECOND TRANSITION’ IN SPAIN? THE SOCIALIST GOVERNMENT OF JOSÉ LUIS RODRÍGUEZ ZAPATERO (2004-08) Co-sponsored by 15-10 Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Chair: ROUNDTABLE: COMPLEX MODELS FOR LATINO POLITICS: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE INNOVATIONS Tony Affigne, Providence College Disc: Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas Gary M. Segura, Stanford University UNDERSTANDING EXPERIENCES ACROSS THE SUBFIELDS: RHETORIC, PHENOMENOLOGY, FIELDWORK, FRAMING/NARRATIVES, AND TEXTUAL ETHNOGRAPHY Co-sponsored by 46-26 Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, University of Utah Part: Louis DeSipio, University of California, Irvine Rene R. Rocha, University of Iowa Sharon Ann Navarro, University of Texas at San Antonio Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, University of Texas, Pan American How to Research Institutions Experientially:Methods of Creative Syncretism Gerald Berk, University of Oregon Dennis C. Galvan, University of Oregon Panel 1 Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Panel 3 Chair: Papers: Embedded IR-ist: Learning about the EU’s Practices in External Assistance Xymena Kurowska, Central European University Society for Romanian Studies Chair: Papers: The Rhetorical Analysis of Politics Nick Turnbull, University of Manchester Choosing a Good Candidate: Modeling Parties’ Legislative Recruitment Decisions in Romania Oleh Protsyk, European Centre for Minority Issues Frames and Narratives: Two Modes of Political Understanding; Two Forms of Scholarly Interpreation. Cyrus Ernesto Zirakzadeh, University of Connecticut Political Parties and Good Governance in Romania and Beyond Patricia T. Young, Rutgers University Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson College Joseph E. Lowndes, University of Oregon A Tale of Two Palaces: Semi-Presidential Government and Strategic Conflict in Romania Ronald F. King, San Diego State University Cosmin Gabriel Marian, Babes-Bolyai University Latin American Studies Association Panel 3 Chair: Attitudes in the Chilean National Congress During the Ratification Process of the Free Trade Agreement with the United States Jaime Baeza Freer, Academía Nacional de Estudios Políticos y Estratégicos (Anepe) Miguel Ángel López-Varas, Universidad de Chile Disc: Katja Michalak, American University in Bulgaria Friday, 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM Daily Schedule Papers: FREE TRADE, SOCIAL REFORM, AND POLITICS IN LATIN AMERICA Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Marius Lupsa Matichescu, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi, Romania What Drives the Vote for the Extreme Right? Absolute vs. Relative Deprivation Florin Nicolae Fesnic, “Babes-Bolyai” University Cluj Raluca Viman Miller, Georgia State University Methodological Issues in Comparative Political Theory: Perspectives from Indigenous Studies Johannes Morrow, SUNY, University at Albany Disc: VOTER, CANDIDATE AND PARTY STRATEGIC DECISION-MAKING: CASES FROM THE ROMANIAN EXPERIENCE Katja Michalak, American University in Bulgaria APSA Meetings APSA Departmental Services Committee COMMITTEE MEETING 291 Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM Daily Schedule Locke on Civility and Politics Emily Nacol, Vanderbilt University Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM APSA Meetings Paradoxes of Democratic Education: Freedom and Violence in the Training of Good Citizens Dustin Howes, Louisiana State University APSA Civic Education and Engagement Committee COMMITTEE MEETING Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Disc: Brian Duff, University of New England APSA Panel 2-6 THE POLITICAL THOUGHT OF ISAIAH BERLIN: NEGLECTED DIMENSIONS AND CONTINUING LEGACIES Alan Ryan, University of Oxford International Committee Panel 3 Chair: Part: Panel 4 ROUNDTABLE: CHALLENGING AMERICA’S IMPOVERISHED POLITICS: MINING THE SCHOLARSHIP OF H. MARK ROELOFS (1923-2008) Theodore J. Lowi, Cornell University Chair: Papers: Ralph P Hummel, Institute for Applied Phenomenology for Science & Technology Marla Brettschneider, University of New Hampshire Patricia Moynagh, Wagner College Lori Marso, Union College Frank M. Coleman, Independent Scholar Kathy E. Ferguson, University of Hawaii Donald G. Tannenbaum, Gettysburg College THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF NELSON W. POLSBY Co-sponsored by 7-20 and 35-8 Division Panels Berlin and Rawls George Crowder, Flinders University Can Value Pluralism Support Liberalism?: The Problem of Priority and What to do About It James E. Bourke, Duke University Liberty, Choice and Anti-Paternalism in Isaiah Berlin’s Political Thought Joshua L. Cherniss, Harvard University Isaiah Berlin: The History of Ideas as Psychodrama Alan Ryan, University of Oxford Disc: Carla Yumatle, Harvard University 2-9 Chair: ”WE ARE ALL DEMOCRATS NOW...” Nicholas Xenos, University of Massachusetts Part: Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania Neve Gordon, Ben-Gurion University Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley John R. Wallach, CUNY, Hunter College Antonio Y. Vazquez Arroyo, University of Minnesota T-10 THEME ROUNDTABLE: INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE AND GLOBAL DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by 3-23 T-11 THEME ROUNDTABLE: JUST HOW DIFFERENT? SEXUAL POLITICS IN CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES Co-sponsored by 47-7 T-12 THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES Co-sponsored by 3-24 and 2-48 2-17 Chair: MACHIAVELLI AND DEMOCRACY Mary G. Dietz, Northwestern University 1-4 Chair: THE POLITICS OF HUNGER George M. Shulman, New York University Papers: Rhetoric, Violence and Redistribution in Machiavelli’s Account of the Gracchi John P. McCormick, University of Chicago Papers: From Lamentation to Logos: Antigone and the Hunger of Melancholy Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University Populus and Plebs: Roman and Medieval Traditions of Conceiving the People in Machiavelli’s Political Thought Miguel E. Vatter, Universidad Diego Portales Hungry Like a Wolf: Derrida on Voracious Sovereignty Diego Hernan Rossello, Northwestern University Equality and Violence in Machiavelli’s Florentine Histories Yves Winter, University of California, Berkeley What is Political Hunger? Romand Coles, Northern Arizona University Democratic Excess: Machiavelli, Hatred, and the Power of the People Robyn Marasco, Williams College Disc: J. Peter Euben, Duke University 1-12 THE USES AND ABUSES OF GEORGE ORWELL IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY Melissa Lane, Princeton University Chair: Part: David Runciman, University of Cambridge Andrew Sabl, UCLA Corey Robin, Brooklyn College/CUNY Graduate Center Gregory Claeys, University of London, Royal Holloway 1-25 CULTIVATING AGENCY IN LOCKE, ROUSSEAU AND MILL Christopher James Barker, Claremont Graduate University Chair: Disc: Michelle Tolman Clarke, Dartmouth College Melissa Marie Matthes, Yale Divinity School 2-47 DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND MASS SOCIETY Co-sponsored by 3-13 2-48 THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES Co-sponsored by 3-24 and T-12 3-13 DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND MASS SOCIETY Co-sponsored by 2-47 Andreas Follesdal, University of Oslo Chair: Papers: Papers: 292 Complicating Barbarism and Civilization: Mill’s Complex Sociology of Human Development Inder Singh Marwah, University of Toronto Can Deliberative Democracy Fix Kansas? Simone Chambers, University of Toronto Daily Schedule Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Feeling the Pinch: A Cross-National Study of Emotion-Driven Reactions to the Global Economic Crisis Jennifer L. Merolla, Claremont Graduate University Elizabeth Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University Deliberative Democracy and Social Complexity: Decentering Mass Society James Bohman, St. Louis University Supersizing Deliberative Democracy and the Risk of Group Polarization Jose Luis Marti, Pompeu Fabra University Deliberative Democracy and Civic Participation in Mass Society Cristina Lafont, Northwestern University Uneasy Street: Fear and Learning in an Economic Crisis Shana Kushner Gadarian, Princeton University Bethany Albertson, University of Texas, Austin Disc: Cindy D. Kam, Vanderbilt University Dennis F. Thompson, Harvard University Archon Fung, Harvard University 6-4 3-14 Chair: SHOULD CITIZENS THINK? James R. Stoner, Jr., Louisiana State University INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND DOMESTIC POLICY CHANGE Co-sponsored by 16-2 6-21 Papers: The Dark Heart of Critical Citizenship Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College Chair: THE NEW POLITICS OF ECONOMIC POLICY MAKING IN JAPAN Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group, Panel 2 William W. Grimes, Boston University Law-abidingness and Civic Education Ian R. MacMullen, Washington University in St. Louis Papers: Disc: If Democratic Theory Calls for Informed Voters, Why Is It Democratic to Expand the Franchise? Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University Disc: James R. Stoner, Jr., Louisiana State University 3-23 THEME ROUNDTABLE: INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE AND GLOBAL DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by T-10 Benjamin R. Barber, DEMOS (New York) Chair: Part: Benjamin R. Barber, DEMOS (New York) Robert O. Keohane, Princeton University Saskia Sassen, Columbia University Sungmoon Kim, University of Richmond Virginia Held, CUNY, Graduate Center Japanese Fiscal Debts and Public Financing: An Analysis on JGB Markets Myung-koo Kang, Claremont McKenna College Globalization, Inequality, and Political Realignment: the Emerging Clash Between Structural Reforms and Rising Inequalities in Japan Yves E. Tiberghien, University of British Columbia Disc: Jennifer Amyx, University of Pennsylvania Kay Shimizu, Columbia University 7-11 SHIFTING MODES OF GOVERNANCE: A PUNITIVE TURN IN AMERICAN SOCIAL POLICY? Christopher Howard, College of William & Mary Chair: Papers: 3-24 Chair: Part: THEME ROUNDTABLE: THE PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION OF MINORITIES Co-sponsored by 2-48 and T-12 Jeff Spinner-Halev, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill RACE, RACISMS, XENOPHOBIA AND POLITICS Co-sponsored by 32-1 5-10 Chair: AFFECT AND EMOTIONS Cindy D. Kam, Vanderbilt University Papers: Does Affective Contagion Promote Coherent Political Thinking? Cengiz Erisen, SUNY, Stony Brook Milton Lodge, SUNY, Stony Brook Charles S. Taber, SUNY, Stony Brook Appealing to Emotions: How Anger and Anxiety Help Us Move Forward In the Debate Between Proximity and Directional Theories of Vote Choice Andrew J.W. Civettini, Knox College Punitive Governance in Education: The Strange Origins of No Child Left Behind Jesse H. Rhodes, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Experimenting with Punitive Tools: The Changing Governance of Crime Control Vesla Mae Weaver, University of Virginia Disc: Christopher Howard, College of William & Mary Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley 7-20 THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF NELSON W. POLSBY Co-sponsored by 35-8 8-5 NEW APPROACHES TO STUDYING PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-5 Mitchell S. Sanders, Harris Interactive Chair: Papers: Creation of A New Representative Sample Internet Survey Panel Via Face-to-Face Recruitment and Providing Free Computers to All Respondents: Evaluation of the FFISP Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University Matthew DeBell, Stanford University Roger Tourangeau, University of Maryland Allison Renee Ackermann, University of Dayton Chintan Turakhia, Abt SRBI Ariel Malka, Stanford University 293 Daily Schedule Personal Happiness and Retrospective Voting: Evidence from Two Natural Experiments on College Football Outcomes and Election Day Cloud Cover Neil Malhotra, Stanford University Andrew Healy, Loyola Marymount University Governing the Poor: The Rise of the Neoliberal Paternalist State Richard C. Fording, University of Kentucky Sanford F. Schram, Bryn Mawr College Joe Soss, University of Minnesota From Shifting Modes of Governance to Transformed Civic Attitudes? Exploring Social Program Effects, 1970-2008 Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University Jeremy Waldron, New York University Charles Taylor, McGill University Anne Phillips, London School of Economics Duncan Ivison, University of Sydney Gurpreet Mahajan, Jawaharlal Nehru University 5-1 The New Politics of Fiscal Policy in Japan Gene Park, CUNY-Baruch College Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Daily Schedule Old versus New: The Comparative Efficiency of Mail and Internet Surveys Samuel H. Fisher, III, University of South Alabama Rebekah Herrick, Oklahoma State University Democratization and Determinants of Ethnic Violence: The Rebel-Moderate Organizational Nexus Sanjay Jeram, University of Toronto Jacques Bertrand, University of Toronto Hunting Where the Ducks Are: Polling in the Aftermath of a Natural Disaster Brian J. Brox, Tulane University J. Celeste Lay, Tulane University Dollars versus Sense: The Nation-Building Logics of EthnicallyBased Redistribution Brian Shoup, Indiana University Applying Voice Recognition to Vox Populi: State Transition Models in the Study of Public Opinion and Political Communication Abe Gong, University of Michigan Dynamical Decomposition of Political Time-series Pedro C. Magalhaes, Instituto de Ciencias Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa Luis Aguiar-Conraria, Universidade do Minho Patterns of Immigrant Incorporation in Ethnic and Religious Kin States: The Case of Serbia Mila Dragojevic, Brown University Disc: Richard Simeon, University of Toronto 11-57 POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCE IN DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES: NEW EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE Co-sponsored by 12-25 11-58 THE POLITICS OF TARGETED SOCIAL POLICY AND CLIENTELISM IN LATIN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 12-32 Disc: Nathan Kelly, University of Tennessee 8-19 CONSTRUCTING CROSS-NATIONAL DATASETS: CHALLENGES AND LESSONS Co-sponsored by 46-23 12-10 VIOLENCE: WHAT DOES COMPARATIVE POLITICS CONTRIBUTE TODAY TO UNDERSTANDING AND ADDRESSING GENOCIDE AND CIVIL WAR? Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University TRANSFORMATIONS OF BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION ECONOMIES Co-sponsored by 11-32 12-20 URBANIZATION AND THE POLITICS OF THE CITY IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD Co-sponsored by 30-2 Richard Stren, University of Toronto 11-7 Chair: Part: 11-32 Chair: Papers: Scott Straus, University of Wisconsin, Madison Benjamin A. Valentino, Dartmouth College Barbara F. Walter, University of California, San Diego Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University Chair: Papers: TRANSFORMATIONS OF BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION ECONOMIES Co-sponsored by 12-10 Isabela Mares, Columbia University Rural-Urban Migration Experiments in China and India Grace Huang, St. Lawrence University Kevin H. Keepper, TechnoServe Metropolitanization, Decentralization and Local Democracy in East Africa Christopher Gore, Ryerson University Nansozi Muwanga, Makerere University Private or Collective Interests?: Business-Government Relations in Transition Countries G. Magnus Feldmann, University of Bristol Metropolitan Growth, Urbanization and Conflict in Asia-Pacific: The Dislocation of Public Policy Daniel E. Esser, American University The Emergence of Collective Firm Strategies in Industrializing States: Evidence from Prussia Alexander Kuo, Stanford University Liquid Assets and Fluid Contracts: Regulatory Politics following the Washington Consensus Alison E. Post, University of California, Berkeley Governing Transport: An Empirical Study of the Politics of Transport and Growth Sandra Sequeira, Harvard University Business Lobbying & Social Policy: Education and Housing Reforms in the Post-Communist Countries Sarah Wilson Sokhey, Ohio State University Disc: Victor C. Shih, Northwestern University 11-41 DEMOCRATIZATION AND ETHNIC MINORITIES: CONFLICT, PROTECTION, AND ACCOMMODATION Co-sponsored by 44-2 Oded Haklai, Queen’s University Chair: Papers: The Political Integration of Minorities in New European Democracies: Explaining the Variation Zsuzsa Csergo, Queen’s University Democratization and Recognition of Difference in a Chinese Society: The Taiwan Experience Andre Laliberte, University of Ottawa 294 Political Party Linkages to the Urban Poor in African Democracies: The Cases of Senegal and Zambia Danielle Elise Resnick, Cornell University Disc: Mohamed Halfani, UN-Habitat Patricia McCarney, University of Toronto 12-25 POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCE IN DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES: NEW EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE Co-sponsored by 11-57 Nancy Hite, Yale University Chair: Papers: Engendering Political Participation in Traditional Settings: Experimental Grassroots and Elite-Level Evidence on Rural Women’s Behavior in India Jennifer Green, Yale University Expert Information, Public Deliberation, and Electoral Support for Good Governance: Experimental Evidence from Benin Leonard Wantchekon, New York University Political Engagement, Social Change and the Political Economy of Financial Modernization: Experimental Evidence from the Philippines Nancy Hite, Yale University Daily Schedule Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Why Does Political Participation Improve Satisfaction in Public Goods Provision? Field Experiments on Disentangling the Role of Information from Governance Structure in Mexico Rachel Brule, Stanford University Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University Ruth Kricheli, Stanford University Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University Indian Migration and “Temporary” Labor Programs: Select Contrasts in Policies and Trends in the European Union and the United States Mary E. Breeding, Georgetown University Explaining Local Responses to New Immigration Hamutal Bernstein, Georgetown University Corporatist Birds of a Feather? Austrian and Dutch Immigration Politics Alex A. Caviedes, SUNY Fredonia Local Collective Action Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University Jeremy M. Weinstein, Stanford University Disc: Donald P. Green, Yale University 12-32 THE POLITICS OF TARGETED SOCIAL POLICY AND CLIENTELISM IN LATIN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 11-58 Juan Pablo Luna, Universidad Católica de Chile Chair: Papers: Branding Distribution: Social Programs and Political Behavior in Hugo Chávez’s Venezuela Samuel Handlin, University of California, Berkeley The Political Targeting of Social Programs in a Least Likely Case: Chile 2000-2006. Juan Pablo Luna, Universidad Católica de Chile Rodrigo Mardones, P. Universidad Católica de Chile Disc: Susan F. Martin, Georgetown University 15-4 RESPONSES TO NEW IMMIGRATION: THE EUROPEAN UNION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 14-13 16-2 INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND DOMESTIC POLICY CHANGE Co-sponsored by 6-4 J. Lawrence Broz, University of California, San Diego Chair: Papers: Examining the Influence of International Organizations on Domestic Politics: The Case of IMF Labor Market Conditionality between 1980 and 2000 Mark Anner, Pennsylvania State University Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota Stephanie J. Rickard, Dublin City University The Political Effects of Brazil’s Conditional Cash Transfer Program Cesar Zucco, Jr., Insituto Universitario de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro Patronage Networks, Ideological Proximity, and Vote Choice Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Houston Changing Patterns in Partisan Politics: Evidence from East European and Latin American IMF Programs Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University Do Conditional Cash Transfer Programs Influence Political Parties’ Strategies to Win Votes? Evidence from Mexico Ana Lorena De La O Torres, Yale University Disc: 13-7 Chair: Papers: Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick AUTHORITARIAN REGIME BUILDING AND BREAKDOWN IN POST-SOVIET EURASIA Co-sponsored by 44-7 Vladimir Gel’man, European University at St. Petersburg The Logic of Hybrid Regimes in Post-Soviet Eurasia Henry E. Hale, George Washington University IMF Program Suspensions: Theoretical Issues in Model Specification Martin S. Edwards, Seton Hall University Disc: Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University 16-8 THE POLITICAL RAMIFICATIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS Co-sponsored by 17-1 Dale Copeland, University of Virginia Chair: Part: Daniel W. Drezner, Tufts University Jonathan Kirshner, Cornell University Michael Mastanduno, Dartmouth College Mark Blyth, Brown University Varieties of Authoritarian Politics in the Caucusus Valerie Bunce, Cornell University Sharon Wolchik, George Washington University 17-1 THE POLITICAL RAMIFICATIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS Co-sponsored by 16-8 Stability and Breakdown in Transitional States: An Analysis of Central Asia and the Caucasus Scott B. Radnitz, University of Washington 17-10 INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT Dieter Kerwer, Technical University of Munich The Dynamics of Sub-National Authoritarianism: Russia in a Comparative Perspective Vladimir Gel’man, European University at St. Petersburg Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto 14-13 RESPONSES TO NEW IMMIGRATION: THE EUROPEAN UNION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 15-4 Rey Koslowski, SUNY, University at Albany Chair: Papers: Papers: Integration for Entry: Examining New Civic Requirements in Advanced Industrialized Democracies Sara Wallace Goodman, Georgetown University Mechanisms of Conflict Management in EU Regulatory Policy Burkard Eberlein, York University Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter Daily Schedule Disc: Chair: Inviting Wallflowers onto the Floor: International Institutions, Domestic Experts, and State Policies Songying Fang, Rice University Canada-United States Policy Relations and Democratic Legitimacy Monica Gattinger, University of Ottawa Joining Transgovernmental Networks: an empirical analysis David Bach, IE Business School Abraham Newman, Georgetown University 295 Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Daily Schedule After the Halcyon Days: NGO Engagement of International Institutions since 9/11 Edward A. Fogarty, Colgate University Harnessed Power: Authoritarian Leadership Selection and Conflict Behavior Ozlem Elgun, Emory University Disc: Dieter Kerwer, Technical University of Munich Economic Interests and Threat Credibility Katja B. Kleinberg, SUNY, Binghamton University 18-16 CONCEPTUALIZING TERRORISM Co-sponsored by 19-5 David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego Chair: Papers: Assessing the Effectiveness of Leadership Decapitation Against Hamas Jenna Jordan, University of Chicago Disc: Kelly M. Kadera, University of Iowa 22-8 Chair: LEGISLATIVE POLICY BARGAINING AND CHANGE Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University Papers: Delaying the Buck: Timing, Uncertainty, and Appropriations Outcomes Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa Barbara Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh The Politics of Militancy Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University C. Christine Fair, Georgetown University Researching Terrorism: Some Steps Forward Risa A. Brooks, Northwestern University Orthodox Social Choice versus Veto Players Theory: Theory and Evidence Anthony J. McGann, University of California, Irvine Islamist De-Radicalization in Democracies and Dictatorships:Comparing the British and the Egyptian Cases Omar Ashour, University of Exeter The Dynamics of Inertia: Stability and Change in Democratic Brazil’s Budgeting Institutions Sergio Praca, University of São Paulo Disc: David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University Taking Time Seriously: Time Pressure, Time Horizons, and Legislative Behavior Helen Abbie Erler, Kenyon College 18-34 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: AN ASSESSMENT OF R. HARRISON WAGNER’S “WAR AND THE STATE” Co-sponsored by 21-8 Disc: Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University Jason M. Roberts, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 18-40 INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT AND THE FATE OF LIBERAL DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by 43-10 23-17 PRESIDENCY AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-13 24-8 BEYOND THE HOLLOW STATE: MULTISECTOR GOVERNANCE Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers University, Newark 19-5 CONCEPTUALIZING TERRORISM Co-sponsored by 18-16 20-6 FOREIGN POLICY CHALLENGES FOR THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION Christopher Sprecher, Texas A&M University Chair: Part: 21-8 Chair: Part: 21-18 Chair: Papers: Papers: Peter D. Feaver, Duke University Robert J. Lieber, Georgetown University James M. Goldgeier, George Washington University Beyond the Hollow State: The Substitute State? H. Brinton Milward, University of Arizona Evaluating Competitiveness: A Closer Examination of Social Service Contracting Bids. Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma Meeyoung Lamothe, University of Oklahoma James D. Fearon, Stanford University Michael C. Williams, University of Wales, Aberystwyth Hein Erich Goemans, University of Rochester Robert Harrison Wagner, University of Texas, Austin DOMESTIC CONSTRAINTS AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Kelly M. Kadera, University of Iowa United We Fall: Bargaining Failure in the Face of Opposition Support Philip Arena, SUNY, University at Buffalo Audience Costs, Updating, and Domestic Political Conditions Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania Whither the Public Service? American Exceptionalism, Human Resource Management and the Contract State Robert F. Durant, American University Jocelyn M. Johnston, American University Amanda M. Girth, American University The Context of Contracting: Nonprofit Distinctiveness or MultiSector Pervasiveness? Jeffrey L. Brudney, Cleveland State University Chung-Lae Cho, Ewha Womans University AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: AN ASSESSMENT OF R. HARRISON WAGNER’S “WAR AND THE STATE” Co-sponsored by 18-34 Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University The Credibility of Domestic Dissent in Coercive Diplomacy: Indicator of State Weakness or Signal of Leader Resolve? Seth Goldstein, Ohio State University 296 Chair: Ideology, Contracts, and Distributive Politics Anthony Michael Bertelli, University of Southern California David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt University Disc: Sally Coleman Selden, Lynchburg College 25-24 ADAPTING TO OR AVOIDING DOOMSDAY: DEALING WITH CLIMATE CHANGE Co-sponsored by 39-4 26-12 CANADIAN COURTS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 49-1 Roy B. Flemming, Texas A&M University Chair: Daily Schedule Papers: Judicial Decision-making in Canadian Appellate Courts: The Impact of Political Affiliation Troy Riddell, University of Guelph Lori J. Hausegger, Boise State University Matthew Hennigar, Brock University The Supreme Court of Canada in Historical Perspective: The Impact of Institutional Change on Judicial Behavior Susan W. Johnson, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Institutional Legitimacy, Strategic Decision-Making, and the Supreme Court of Canada: A Look at Secession Reference and Marshall Vuk Radmilovic, University of Toronto Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM The Fault Lines of Power: Urban Theory and Disciplinary Divides Richard Gendron, Assumption College Disc: Susan E. Clarke, University of Colorado 30-11 NEW DIRECTIONS IN URBAN/LOCAL POLITICS RESEARCH Bryan D. Jones, University of Texas, Austin Chair: Papers: How Courts Make Federalism Work: The Impact of Judicial Review on Federalism in Spain, Belgium and Canada Gemma Sala, Grinnell College Low Level Equilibrium Traps in Urban Contexts: The Garbage Crisis in Naples Eleonora Pasotti, University of California, Santa Cruz Constitutional Dialogues and Theories of Federalism: Their Impact on Judicial Activism in Canada and the United States Mark E. Rush, Washington and Lee University Disc: Roy B. Flemming, Texas A&M University 28-9 DO WE NEED A NEW ACIR: REFLECTIONS ON THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE U.S. ACIR Co-sponsored by Center for the Study of Federalism, Panel 1 29-8 ELECTORAL REFORM, VOTING TECHNOLOGY, AND EQUAL ACCESS Co-sponsored by 36-3 Carl E. Klarner, Indiana State University Chair: Papers: Election Reform in the States: Income Inequality and the Adoption of Alternative Voting Methods William W. Franko, University of Iowa The Invisible Hand of Election Officials: Promotion of Mail Voting and Methods of Voting in the Colorado 2008 Election Christopher B. Mann, University of Miami Rachel Sondheimer, United States Military Academy American Federalism, City Partisanship, and Local Public Policy Outputs Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan Daniel J. Hopkins, Harvard University Identity, Institutions, and the Election of Ethnic Minority Candidates in European Cities Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University Up and Down with Policy Attention: Reconstructing National Urban Policy Joshua Sapotichne, Michigan State University The Provision of Local Public Goods: Analyzing Municipal Bond Elections Jessica Luce Trounstine, Princeton University Jacob S Rugh, Princeton University Disc: Dennis R. Judd, University of Illinois, Chicago 31-4 ELECTED OFFICIALS AT THE INTERSECTION OF GENDER AND RACE Co-sponsored by 32-16 Julia S. Jordan-Zachery, Providence College Chair: Papers: Estimating the Causal Effect of DRE Allocations on Electoral Outcomes Marc Meredith, University of Pennsylvania Institutions, Intersections, and Women (of Color) Legislators: How Race/Ethnicity and Gender Inform Office Holding across the States Becki Scola, St. Joseph’s University How Do We Get Along? Linked Fate, Political Allies, and Issue Coalitions Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame Pei-te Lien, University of California, Santa Barbara Carol Hardy-Fanta, PH.D., University of Massachusetts, Boston Christine Marie Sierra, University of New Mexico Does Electoral Reform Decrease or Increase Political Inequality? Melanie Jean Springer, Washington University in Saint Louis Elizabeth Rigby, University of Houston Not Worth the Trip? Convenience, Polling Place Accessibility, and Voter Turnout in Primary, Midterm, and Presidential Elections Edward M. Burmila, Indiana University Disc: Carl E. Klarner, Indiana State University Joshua J. Dyck, University at Buffalo, SUNY We’re Not Always Busboys: How Intersectional Discrimination Shapes Latino Political Participation Alesha E. Doan, University of Kansas Christina Elizabeth Bejarano, University of Kansas 30-2 URBANIZATION AND THE POLITICS OF THE CITY IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD Co-sponsored by 12-20 Understanding Differences in the Electoral Success of Women State Legislature Candidates across Racial Groups and Institutional Contexts Katherine Gallagher, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 30-4 THE ONCE AND FUTURE STUDY OF CITY POLITICS: OVERCOMING THE MALAISE ABOUT THEORY David Imbroscio, University of Louisville Chair: Niambi M. Carter, Purdue University Kathleen A. Bratton, Louisiana State University Reconsidering the Pluralist Keyboard: Returning to a Prematurely Foreclosed Debate Clarence N. Stone, The George Washington University 31-15 The Neoliberal City After the Collapse of Neoliberalism Jason Hackworth, University of Toronto Chair: WOMEN IN MOTION: ADVANCES AND SETBACKS IN IMPLEMENTING WOMEN’S RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 45-4 Shannon Drysdale Walsh, University of Notre Dame Challenging Theoretic Orthodoxies in the Study of City Politics David Imbroscio, University of Louisville Papers: Women’s Rights, Informal Institutions and Ombudsman Autonomy in the Central Andes Vilma C. Balmaceda, Ph.D., Nyack College A Turning Point for Cities? J. Phillip Thompson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 297 Daily Schedule Papers: Disc: Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Daily Schedule Implementing Women’s Rights to be Free from Violence in Central America Shannon Drysdale Walsh, University of Notre Dame The Congressional Elections of 2006 and 2008 Stephen D. Ansolabehere, Harvard University Presidential Cabinet Formation and Party-Building Harold F. Bass, Ouachita Baptist University Who Shall Speak For Me? Women Leaders and the Rights of Women Karen L. Mitchell, Ottawa University The Problem of Ideology John R. Zaller, University of California, Los Angeles Women’s Rights, Citizenship Rights, and the “Other” Laura Roost, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Political Regimes Matter in “Abeyance Times”: Feminist Organizing in Franco’s Spain (1930s-1975) Celia Valiente, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Disc: Shawna E. Sweeney, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth 32-1 RACE, RACISMS, XENOPHOBIA AND POLITICS Co-sponsored by 5-1 Gladys Mitchell, Duke University Chair: Papers: Continuity and Change in the Study of Congress David W. Brady, Stanford University 36-3 ELECTORAL REFORM, VOTING TECHNOLOGY, AND EQUAL ACCESS Co-sponsored by 29-8 36-13 Chair: MONEY IN AMERICAN ELECTIONS Richard M. Skinner, Bowdoin College Papers: Hey, Big Spender! Gender and the Financing of Congressional Challengers Sarah Fulton, Texas A&M University Cherokee Freedmen: Racism and Citizenship in Tribal Societies Donna C. Langston, University of Colorado, Denver The Hidden Gatekeepers: Early-Money in Congressional Campaigns Melissa Ann Bell, University of Maryland James M. Curry, University of Maryland Kimberly A. Karnes, University of Maryland Polemics, Political Racism, and Misrecognition: Naming and Analyzing Prejudice Against Arab-Americans Emily Wills, New School University Racial Bias by Another Name: Anti-Muslim Attitudes and Voting Against Barack Obama David P. Redlawsk, University of Iowa The Fifth Source and the Ballot Box: Public Money, Candidate Time, and Changing American Elections Michael G. Miller, Cornell University The Added Value of Explicit Racial Resentment: A Comparison of Old and New Concepts and Measures David C. Wilson, University of Delaware Darren Davis, University of Notre Dame Disc: Gladys Mitchell, Duke University 32-16 ELECTED OFFICIALS AT THE INTERSECTION OF GENDER AND RACE Co-sponsored by 31-4 34-8 Chair: REPRESENTATION AND LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter Papers: Electoral System and Committee Assignment in the German Bundestag Dominic Heinz, University of Hagen The Effects of Early Voting on Congressional Campaign Expenditures: 1980-2004 Robert M. Stein, Rice University Disc: Dino P. Christenson, The Ohio State University 36-27 VOTERS IN SPACE: SPATIAL MODELS OF VOTING AND ELECTIONS James Adams, University of California, Davis Chair: Papers: Activists, Issues, and Medians:Bringing Data to Downsian Puzzles Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley Kay Lehman Schlozman, Boston College Sidney Verba, Harvard University The Distinct Effect of Electoral Systems and Candidate Selection Procedures on Legislators’ Behavior Yael Shomer, Washington University in St. Louis Faulty Recommendations? Party Positions in Online Voting Advice Applications Markus Wagner, London School of Economics Outi Ruusuvirta, London School of Economics and Political Science Legislators and Representational Roles. Habits of the Heart or Strategic Choices? Thomas Zittel, Cornell University District Magnitude and Legislators’ Personal Vote-Seeking Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Audrey Ann André, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Kris Deschouwer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Vote for Me: The Conditional Effects of Electoral Systems on Personal Vote-Seeking Burt L. Monroe, Pennsylvania State University Eitan Tzelgov, Pennsylvania State University Disc: Steven J. Brams, New York University 35-8 THE SCHOLARLY LEGACY OF NELSON W. POLSBY Co-sponsored by 7-20 Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Chair: Papers: 298 The Divided Democrats Revisited: Ideological Cohesion in the American Party System, 1996-2008 William G. Mayer, Northeastern University Issue Proximity and Priority in the 2008 Presidential Election Walter J. Stone, University of California, Davis Ronald B. Rapoport, College of William & Mary Empirical Tests of Canonical Theories of Party Platforms in Spatial Competition Jon Rogowski, University of Chicago Testing the Foundations of Spatial Voting in the 2008 Presidential Election Stephen Jessee, University of Texas Disc: James Adams, University of California, Davis 37-5 NEW APPROACHES TO STUDYING PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 8-5 37-13 PRESIDENCY AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 23-17 Steven E. Schier, Carleton College Chair: Daily Schedule Papers: Who Really Leads Whom? Leadership and Responsiveness Among Multiple Publics in Reagan’s Central America Policy Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston Fighting to Win: Major Wars and the American Public Andrew H. Sidman, CUNY, John Jay College Helmut Norpoth, SUNY, Stony Brook A Tale of Two Wars: Public Opinion on the U.S. Military Interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San Diego Ken Mulligan, Southern Illinois University 39-4 ADAPTING TO OR AVOIDING DOOMSDAY: DEALING WITH CLIMATE CHANGE Co-sponsored by 25-24 Leigh S. Raymond, Purdue University Chair: Papers: Climate Change: From Mitigation to Adaptation Wolfgang Brauner, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth When Things are Fully Expected to Fall Apart: Preemptive State-Building and the New Politics of Global Climate Change Jennifer W. Howk, Harvard University Presidential Saber Rattling and Public Approval B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University Doomsday Thinking: Applying Terror Management Theory to Climate Change Beliefs and Policy Preferences Kristy E.H. Michaud, California State University, Northridge Danny Hayes, Syracuse University Steven E. Schier, Carleton College 37-26 COMMUNICATION AND POLITICAL SUPPORT Co-sponsored by 38-8 38-4 FRAMING EXPERIMENTS IN THE 2008 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN Ann N. Crigler, University of Southern California Papers: Disc: Biased Partisans or Rational Updaters? How Ordinary Citizens Update Their Evaluations of the President Ben Highton, University of California, Davis Disc: Chair: Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Bandwagon and Underdog Effects in the 2008 Presidential Primary Campaign: A Survey Experiment Matthew A. Baum, Harvard University Marion R. Just, Wellesley College How News Coverage of Ads Conditions the Effectiveness of Campaign Ads Richard R. Lau, Rutgers University, New Brunswick John G. Geer, Vanderbilt University Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles The Role of Race and Age in 2008: A Series of List Experiments Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles Climate Change and Social Distress Brian K. Min, University of California, Los Angeles Miriam A. Golden, University of California, Los Angeles Disc: So Young Kim, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology 42-9 Chair: MARX AND THE CURRENT CRISIS John Ehrenberg, Long Island University Part: Stephen Eric Bronner, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Leo Panitch, York University Craig Steven Wilder, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Christine A. Kelly, William Paterson University Adolph L. Reed, Jr., University of Pennsylvania 43-10 INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT AND THE FATE OF LIBERAL DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by 18-40 Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University Chair: Papers: Emotions and Horserace Framing: Studying the Effects of Anxiety and Reassurance on Partisan Identifiers Ann N. Crigler, University of Southern California Jesse John Mills, University of Southern California War, Recruitment Systems, and Democracy Deborah Avant, University of California, Irvine The Effects of War on Civil Society: Cross-National Evidence from World War II Rieko Kage, University of Tokyo What Drives Economic Voting? An Experimental Study Joel A. Middleton, Yale University War and Reform: Gaining Labor’s Compliance on the Homefront Elizabeth Kier, University of Washington Disc: Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University 38-8 COMMUNICATION AND POLITICAL SUPPORT Co-sponsored by 37-26 Ken Mulligan, Southern Illinois University International Conflict and the Constitutional Balance: Executive Authority after War Ronald R. Krebs, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Chair: Papers: Disc: Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University DEMOCRATIZATION AND ETHNIC MINORITIES: CONFLICT, PROTECTION, AND ACCOMMODATION Co-sponsored by 11-41 44-7 The Arc of Resonance: Hurricane Katrina and its Metaphoric Aftermath Andrew Rojecki, University of Illinois, Chicago AUTHORITARIAN REGIME BUILDING AND BREAKDOWN IN POST-SOVIET EURASIA Co-sponsored by 13-7 45-4 The Effects of Patriotic Messages in the Mass Media After the Election of Barack Obama Laura Roselle, Elon University WOMEN IN MOTION: ADVANCES AND SETBACKS IN IMPLEMENTING WOMEN’S RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 31-15 46-4 Chair: ETHNOGRAPHIC METHODS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE: WHAT DIFFERENCE CAN THEY MAKE? Edward Schatz, University of Toronto at Mississauga Disc: Dvora Yanow, Vrije Universiteit Part: Calvin Chen, Mount Holyoke College The End of Alienation? The Rise of Political Trust and Efficacy in the United States Priscilla L. Southwell, University of Oregon Immigration and Government Support in Britain Lauren M. McLaren, University of Nottingham Matthew Lebo, SUNY, Stony Brook 299 Daily Schedule 44-2 Is National Diversity Under Threat? Cosmopolitan Communications and Cultural Convergence Pippa Norris, Harvard University Ronald Inglehart, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Timothy Pachirat, New School University Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University Edward Schatz, University of Toronto at Mississauga 46-23 Chair: CONSTRUCTING CROSS-NATIONAL DATASETS: CHALLENGES AND LESSONS Co-sponsored by 8-19 Andreas Schedler, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas Daily Schedule Do Regional Powers Export their Political Regimes? Comparing China, India and Russia Julia Bader, German Development Institute Redistributive Politics and Public Expenditures on Education in Latin America Christian Ponce de Leon, University of Chicago Ethnic Headcounts in Patronage Democracies: Experimental Evidence from India Mark A. Schneider, Columbia University Simon Chauchard, New York University Disc: Jose Antonio Cheibub, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Islam and Christianity as Sources of Political Orientations Toward Democracy in Nigeria: Complex Causal Relations and Moving Beyond Political Culture Brandon Kendhammer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Part: Amy R. Poteete, Concordia University Ronald A. Francisco, University of Kansas Monty G. Marshall, George Mason University Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University Wolfgang Merkel, WZB The Rise and Fall of Political Rights of Resident Aliens: A Comparative Study of the US and Japan during the First Wave of International Migration (the 1860s to 1945) Choong Hoon Lee, New School for Social Research 47-7 THEME ROUNDTABLE: JUST HOW DIFFERENT? SEXUAL POLITICS IN CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES Co-sponsored by T-11 Ellen Ann Andersen, University of Vermont Chair: Part: Miriam Smith, York University David Rayside, University of Toronto Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University Rinaldo Walcott, University of Toronto 49-1 CANADIAN COURTS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 26-12 Poster Sessions POSTER SESSION 6 Divisions 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 45, and 49 Papers: Attitudes Toward Inequality Amid Economic Globalization: A Comparative Study Across Five Countries Paul R. Viotti, Jr., California State University, Chico Alessandra Cassar, University of San Francisco Framing Income Inequality: The Politics of Growth and Redistribution JongWan Baik, New School of Social Research Income Inequality, Redistribution & Preference Aggregation: The Role of Electoral Institutions Oliver Pamp, University of Bremen Phillip Mohl, Free University Berlin Infrastructural Power as Boundary-Work, or What it Really Means to be a Strong State Matthias Staisch, University of Chicago Young-hwa (Diana) Kim, University of Chicago Comparing Apples without Juxtaposing Oranges: Linking Democratic Practices with Civic Engagement in European PostCommunist Countries Nikolay Valkov, Universite de Montreal Which Repressive Counterterrorism Strategies do Democracies Use? Dominick E. Wright, University of Michigan Measuring Challenges to Healthcare System Reform: A Global Index of Healthcare Financing Ivailo M Kotzev, University of Connecticut Lyle A. Scruggs, University of Connecticut Sanctioning, Clientelism and Ethnic Parties: The Impact of Ethnicity on Primary and Secondary Education in Africa Anke Weber, University of Zurich 300 How do Heterogeneity in Preferences for Redistribution and Political Party Structure Affect Government Social Policy? Elvire Guillaud, University of Paris I Bruno Amable, University of Paris I Donatella Gatti, CEPREMAP The Warrior’s Curse: Militarized Minorities, Democratic Transitions, and Ethnic Conflict Subhasish Ray, University of Rochester Ethnic-Cultural Diversity, Regimes of Minority Integration and Social Cohesion in Europe. Investigating the Conditional Effects of Immigration on Social Trust Tim Reeskens, KU Leuven Defenders of the Regime: How Revolutions Succeed when the Military Fails Marcus Schulzke, University at Albany, SUNY Specific Skilled Labor and the Demand for Social Insurance Jeffrey F. Timmons, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico RECOGNIZING ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND POLITICAL STABILITY Tolga Sinmazdemir, New York University The Choice of Electoral Systems in Electoral Autocracies Arturas Rozenas, Duke University Informal Institutions Compared – Persistence and Change of Neopatrimonialism in Various World Regions Christian von Soest, German Institute of Global and Area Studies Do Regional Powers Export their Political Regimes? Comparing China, India and Russia Julia Bader, German Development Institute Conceding Control: The Political Economy of Decentralization in India Anjali Thomas Bohlken, New York University The Discursive Structure of National Pride: A Cross-Country Comparison Min Shu, Waseda University Reo Matsuzaki, Massachusetts Institute of Technology State-Led Mobilization of Civil Society in the New Democratic Brazil: Comparative Lessons from Three Brazilian Social Movements Jessica Alexis Jolicoeur Rich, University of California, Berkeley Taming Authoritarian Rulers? Comparing the Non-Violent Resistance Movements in Three Sub-Saharan Africa Countries: Kenya, Liberia, and Sierra Leone Robert Press, University of Southern Mississippi Daily Schedule Local Demand for a Global Intervention: Public Policy Priorities in the Time of AIDS Kim Yi Dionne, University of California, Los Angeles Securitizing HIV/AIDS Megan H. MacKenzie Reviewing and Reassessing the Problem of HIV/AIDS Anna Persson, University of California, Los Angeles Martin Sjostedt, Goteborg University Tlhopha Sentle! By-elections in Botswana Charles W. Gossett, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Understanding Social Movements in Contemporary China Bo Ma, CUNY Graduate Center Hegemonic Challenge and Democratization: Theory and the Case of China Nori Katagiri, University of Pennsylvania Coalitions for Party System Change: Cape Town in a Dominant Party System Danielle Langfield, Ohio State University Reigning in the Big Men?: The Politics of Executive Constraints in Sub-Saharan Africa Kristin A. McKie, Cornell University Holding Representatives Accountable in Africa - For What?: Evidence from Ghana Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Florida Testing How Ideology Matters: Globalism, Dependency, and Regressive Taxation in Latin America’s Post Washington Consensus Mark R. Hibben, Syracuse University Flat Taxes and Policy Change in Slovakia and the Czech Republic Joseph M. Ellis, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Organization and the Politics of Difference: Social Policy Regimes and Nonwhite Civil Society in New York City and London Michael Javen Fortner, Harvard University United in Diversity: Support for European Institutions among Europe’s Ethnic Minorities Kathleen M. Dowley, SUNY, New Paltz Brian D. Silver, Michigan State University Andrew Moravcsik, Princeton University Comparative Analysis of French and British Public Opinion on the EU in the Post-Maastricht Era Pierre Philippe Balestrini, University of Surrey Parliamentary Party Group Discipline in Comparison Stefanie Bailer, University of Zurich How Ideas Matter: The Neoclassical Synthesis, Economists and Normpolitik in Spain’s Economic Transition Cornel Ban, University of Maryland Imminent Secession in the North Sea Region: the Cases of Faroe, Shetland, and Orkney Britt Ashton Cartrite, Alma College Who Do Democracies Comply with Human Rights Judgements? A Comparative Analysis of UK, Germany, and Ireland Basak Cali, University College London Alice Wyss, University College London The Ties that Bind: A Network Analysis of Human Rights INGOs Amanda Marie Murdie, Emory University David R. Davis, Emory University David Brewington, Emory University The Dark Side of the Band of Brothers: Explaining Variance in War Crimes Christi Leigh Siver, University of Washington Taxation and State Legitimacy: Explaining Differential Tax Outcomes in Developing Countries Michelle D’Arcy, University College, Dublin Democratization and Human Rights, A Spurious Correlation?: The Role of International Regines on Democratization and Human Rights Improvement Youngsoo Yu, Binghamton University, SUNY Underground Markets in North Korea Hyung-Min Joo, Korea University Change and Continuity in Recent Canadian General Elections Tony L. Hill, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Pirates: Cause or Consequence of Civil War Chelsea Denise Brown, Southern Methodist University Shelby Bishop, Southern Methodist University Lovable Losers or Forgettable Failures? Unsuccessful Leadership Candidates for Federal and Provincial Parties in Canada, 19502007 J.P. Lewis, Carleton University The Effect of Supranational Identity on Political Interest and Efficacy in Divided Societies Ryan Kennedy, University of Houston Ethnic Territorial Autonomy and Post-Soviet Ethnic Political Mobilization David J. Meyer, George Fox University The Strengths of Weakness: State Failure, Weak Civil Society, and (the absence of) Transitional Violence John G. Gledhill, London School of Economics and Political Science Repression and Redistribution Under Authoritarianism: A Comparison of China and Eastern Europe Martin Dimitrov, Dartmouth College Nothing to Gain But Your Chains: Popular Support for Authoritarianism in the Former Soviet Union Robert Person, Yale University Oil, Labor Flows, and Democratization David H. Bearce, University of Pittsburgh Jennifer Ann Laks, Univeristy of Pittsburgh The Contemporary Russian Form of Government in the Context of Political Engineering of the World Oleg Zaznaev, Kazan State University Civil Society and Regime Duration in Authoritarian Countries Jessica C. Teets, University of Colorado, Boulder Susumu Suzuki, Wayne State University Strategic Government Spending and Legislative Fragmentation: Evidence and Lesson from Pre- and Post-Democratization South Korea and Taiwan O. Fiona Yap, University of Kansas Regimes Longevity: A Comparative Analysis Abdel-Fattah Mady, Alexandria University Continuity and Change in Nationality Laws and Citizenship Policies Willem Maas, Glendon College, York University Governing Civil Society in Contemporary China: Adapting Revolutionary Methods to Serve Post-Communist Goals Nara Dillon, Harvard University Large Party Collapse: A Preliminary Investigation Jennifer K. Smith, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Nested Games and One-Party Dominance: Re-examining United Malay National Organization’s (UMNO) One-Party Dominance in Malaysia Thiam Chye Tay, University of California, Los Angeles 301 Daily Schedule To Have is To Be: Social Stratification in Post-Communist Eastern Europe Aleksander Lust, Cornell University Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Daily Schedule Xenophobia and Immigrant Contact: British Public Attitudes Toward Immigrants Seth Kincaid Jolly, Syracuse University The Leadership Variable in Africa: Situating Structure and Agency in Governance Trajectories Peter A. VonDoepp, University of Vermont Mexico’s Electoral Legislation After the Crisis of 2006: An Undemocratic Reform? Gilles Serra, Oxford University Personalism without Neopatrimonialism: A ‘crucial case study’ of leadership and civil society in an African democracy Parakh Hoon, Virginia Tech Socioeconomic Resources and the Civilized State: A Study of Education, Political Trust, and Political Liberalization in Urban China Diqing Lou, Rider University Disc: Carl LeVan, American University British Politics Group Immigrant Integration vs. Transnational Ties? The Role of the Sending State Alexandra Delano, The New School Panel 2 Chair: POLITICS IN SCOTLAND AND QUEBEC Terrence Casey, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Why Violence Stopped: Administrative Boundary Revision in Indonesia Risa J. Toha, University of California, Los Angeles Papers: Intergovernmental Relations and the Scottish National Party Paul Cairney, University of Aberdeen Political Connection and Firms’ Performance: The Case of Hong Kong Stan Hok-Wui Wong, Chinese University of Hong Kong The Devolution Debate About Co-Payment: Reality or Reflection? John Kevin Curtice, University of Strathclyde Stratos Patrikios, University of Strathclyde Regime Responsiveness and the (In-)Stability of Authoritarian Regimes Daniel Lambach, University of Duisburg-Essen Christian Göbel, University of Duisburg-Essen The Party of Scottish Nationalisms: Differences of Identity and Opinion Among SNP Members Robert Johns, University of Strathclyde James Mitchell, University of Strathclyde Demos Conceptions in Liberia - The Limits of Citizenship Among Ex-combatants Johanna Söderström, Uppsala University The Legislative Strategy of Separatist Parties. Clare Joanna McGovern, University of British Columbia Referendums in Scotland and in Quebec Jean A. Laponce, University of British Columbia Old Laws, New Strategies: Continuity and Change in the Labor Politics of Brazil and Mexico Andra Olivia Miljanic, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Winning Elections the Democratic Way: Political Parties and Internal Party Democracy in Post-Communist Europe Maria Spirova, Leiden University Center for the Study of Federalism Insitutional Power and Democracy in the Post-Communist Region Magda Giurcanu, University of Florida Fluid Party Systems, Social Spending, and Inequality: The Democracy-Inequality Paradox in Southern and Postcommunist Europe Ekrem Karakoc, Pennsylvania State University Panel 1 Chair: Papers: Mark P. Shephard, University of Strathclyde Melissa A. Haussman, Carleton University DO WE NEED A NEW ACIR: REFLECTIONS ON THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE U.S. ACIR Co-sponsored by 28-9 Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of Pennsylvania The Next Intergovernmental Management Agenda Bruce D. McDowell, National Academy of Public Administration Lack of a Shared Perception of the Terrorist Threat Among EU Member States Oldrich Bures, Metropolitan University Prague Is There a Futrure for a New ACIR? Carl W. Stenberg, III, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Compliance and International Human Rights Tribunals: Costly Signals and Credible Commitments Courtney Hillebrecht, University of Wisconsin, Madison The State of the State ACIRS Richard L. Cole, University of Texas, Arlington Revive ACIR? - Yes and No Richard P. Nathan, Rockefeller Institute of Government Minsk to Beijing: Eurasian Political Trajectories Theodor Tudoroiu, Universite de Montreal-McGill University State Capacity as a Pillar for Democracy: A Test Using 26 PostCommunist Countrie Jessica Fortin, McGill University Being All She Can Be: Gender Integration in NATO Military Forces Lana Obradovic, Yonsei University Related Group Panels The U.S. ACIR: Killed by Partisan, Coercive Federalism John Kincaid, Lafayette College Disc: Duane D. Milne, West Chester University of Pennsylvania Center for the Study of the Constitution Panel 1 Chair: JUDICIAL RESTRAINT AND POLITICAL CHANGE: FIERCE OPPONENTS OR FELLOW TRAVELERS? Matthew J. Franck, Radford University African Politics Conference Group Panel 2 Chair: Papers: 302 AFRICAN LEADERSHIP ROLES AND THE ROLE OF THE CIVIC IN A CONTEXT OF POLITICAL CHANGE Bruce A. Magnusson, Whitman College The Ravalomanana Reforms and the Efficacy of Civic Oversight in Madagascar Richard R. Marcus, California State University, Long Beach Papers: 19th Century Judicial Restraint: the Curious Case of Barron v. Baltimore William Geisler, University of Dallas Who’s In Charge Here? Luther v. Borden and the Political Questions Doctrine Warner R. Winborne, Hampden-Sydney College Edward Corwin, Judicial Review, and the Death of Judicial Restraint Matthew J. Franck, Radford University Daily Schedule Friday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM William Petropulos, Eric Voegelin Archive, Munich Strict Construction in Historical Perspective Joseph H. Lane, Jr., Emory & Henry College Disc: Dennis J. Goldford, Drake University Jack W. Nowlin, University of Mississippi Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Panel 10 LEO STRAUSS’S ‘WHAT IS POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY?’: 50TH ANNIVERSARY Chair: Ronald J. Pestritto, Jr., Hillsdale College Part: Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College Daniel Tanguay, University of Ottawa Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia Committee on Political Sociology Panel 1 Papers: PARTY ORGANIZATIONS AND THE CHALLENGE OF “DEMOCRATIZATION” Party organization malaise in established democracies. Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna Disc: Piero Ignazi, University of Bologna Part: Rachel K. Gibson, University of Manchester Anika Gauja, University of Sydney Laurent Olivier, université nancy 2 Conference Group on the Middle East Panel 1 Chair: Papers: POLITICAL REFORM IN THE MIDDLE EAST: CONTEXTS, DILEMMAS, CASES Augustus Richard Norton, Boston University Political Reform for Saudi Women: An Intersection of Political Opportunism and Conservative Politics Toby C. Jones, Rutgers University Pod Casts, Ramadan Soaps and Talk Shows: Religious and Secular Identity in Syria and Morocco Evelyn A. Early, Air University - Air War College Papers: Policy Studies Organization Panel 1 Chair: Papers: ’AS IF THERE REALLY WAS A WORLD OUT THERE’: APPLICATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY TO GLOBAL CHALLENGES David Mena Aleman, Universidad Iberoamericana Applying Schmitt to Global Puzzles Emma R. Norman, Universidad de las Américas, Puebla Global and Regional Governance from Southern Perspectives Thomas Legler, Universidad Iberoamericana Would ‘Global Republicanism’ be a better Republicanism than the One we Have David Mena Aleman, Universidad Iberoamericana Legal-constructivism and Crisis Management: a study of three cases in the European Union Rebecka Villanueva Ulfgard, Instituto Mora, México City Cosmopolitan theory meets Constructivism: a new framework for Cultural and Public Diplomacy Cesar Villanueva Rivas, Universidad Iberoamericana Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM APSA Meetings APSA Events MEET THE APSA OFFICERS AND 2010 COUNCIL NOMINEES Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 1 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 1 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory Governing Areas of Dissidence:Nation-Building and Ethnic Movements in Turkey and Morocco Senem Aslan, Princeton University SESSION 1 MYSTICISM AND POLITICS IN VOEGELIN’S PHILOSOPHY Ellis Sandoz, Louisiana State University William James’ Pure Experience and the Creative Potential of the Metaxy Macon W. Boczek, Kent State University Plato as Mystic Philosopher: The Voegelin – Strauss Impasse Henrik Syse, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) Voegelin and Basil of Caesarea’s Teaching on Discernment Anne Gordon Keidel, Boston College How Far Is It from Voegelin’s Reflective Distance to Mysticism? Peter Von Sivers, University of Utah Glenn Hughes, St. Mary’s University, San Antonio Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 1 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 1 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 1 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 1 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 1 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 1 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 1 303 Daily Schedule Joachim of Fiore and Gnosticism Matthias Riedl, Central European University Disc: THE NEW POLITICS OF ECONOMIC POLICY MAKING IN JAPAN Co-sponsored by 6-21 SESSION 1 Eric Voegelin Society Chair: Panel 2 Role of Education in Building Peace: The Case of Somalia Afyare A. Elmi, University of Alberta Sectarianism from Below: Youth Politics and Communal Conflict in Lebanon. Elinor Bray-Collins, University of Toronto Panel 1 Japan Political Studies Group Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM Daily Schedule Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 1 SESSION 1 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 2 SESSION 1 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership Friday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM APSA Meetings APSA Events PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING Private event for the Perspectives Editorial Board. SESSION 1 SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics SESSION 1 APSA Panel SESSION 2 APSA Departmental Services Committee Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global WORKSHOP FOR DEPARTMENT CHAIRS: AFTER THE ECONOMIC CRASH: LEADING THE DISCIPLINE IN A TIME OF TRANSFORMATION Pre-registration is required. Register by sending an e-mail to dsp@apsanet.org. Part: Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University Thomas R. Rochon, Ithaca College Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Education SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Friday, 12:00 PM to 5:00 PM Working Group: Citizenship and Migration Affiliate Group Meetings SESSION 1 National Conference of Black Political Scientists SESSION 2 MEETING Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory Friday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM Affiliate Group Meetings American Politics Research BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 1 Political Networks SESSION 2 BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes Southern Political Science Association SESSION 1 SESSION 2 COUNCIL MEETING Theory and Event EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives Western Political Science Association SESSION 1 Related Group Meetings SESSION 2 African Politics Conference Group Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 1 2010 PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEETING BUSINESS MEETING Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 2 French Politics Group Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 1 BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 2 Section Business Meetings Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 1 SESSION 2 304 Green Politics and Theory 6 Political Economy BUSINESS MEETING 24 Public Administration BUSINESS MEETING Daily Schedule Friday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics 32 Race, Ethnicity, and Politics SESSION 1 31 Women and Politics Research Section BUSINESS MEETING BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global 35 Political Organizations and Parties SESSION 1 BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: eLearning in Political Science 39 Science, Technology and Environmental Politics SESSION 1 34 Representation and Electoral Systems BUSINESS MEETING 41 Politics, Literature and Film Section BUSINESS MEETING 43 International History and Politics BUSINESS MEETING 47 Sexuality and Politics Friday, 12:15 PM to 2:00 PM Affiliate Group Meetings Journal of Democracy EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING BUSINESS MEETING Friday, 12:30 PM to 2:00 PM Friday, 12:15 PM to 1:45 PM Related Group Meetings APSA Panel Aging Policy and Politics Group APSA Events PLENARY SESSION: BARACK OBAMA: THE POLITICS OF CHANGE Chair: Larry M. Bartels, Princeton University Part: Glenn C. Loury, Brown University Theda Skocpol, Harvard University Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania AGING POLITICS AND POLICY GROUP DUTCH-TREAT BUSINESS LUNCHEON Luncheon will be held at Azure Restaurant, located in the InterContinental Hotel Friday, 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM APSA Meetings APSA Events MINORITY STUDENT RECRUITMENT PROGRAM MEETING Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 1 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 1 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory SESSION 1 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 1 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 1 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 1 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 1 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 1 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 1 SESSION 1 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 1 SESSION 1 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 1 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory SESSION 1 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 1 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 1 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 1 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 1 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 1 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 1 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 1 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 1 305 Daily Schedule Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Working Group: Citizenship and Migration Friday, 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Daily Schedule 1-6 SESSION 1 TOCQUEVILLE’S VIEWS ON AMERICA AFTER 1840: WHAT WOULD THE THIRD VOLUME OF “DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA” HAVE LOOKED LIKE HAD IT EVER BEEN WRITTEN? Co-sponsored by 2-3 James T. Schleifer, College of New Rochelle Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Chair: SESSION 1 Disc: Aurelian Craiutu, Indiana University Jeremy R Jennings, University of London, Queen Mary College Part: Jennifer Pitts, University of Chicago James Farr, Northwestern University Cheryl B. Welch, Harvard University 1-13 Chair: ROUNDTABLE: “THE WEST” AS CATEGORY AND CONCEPT Chandran Kukathas, London School of Economics APSA Panel Disc: Leigh K. Jenco, National University of Singapore APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession Part: Delia Alexandru Popescu, LeMoyne College Juliet Hooker, University of Texas, Austin Shirin S. Deylami, Western Washington University 1-28 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY APPLIED: CHANGE AND HYBRIDITY IN THE STUDY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT Mohammad H. Fadel, University of Toronto Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 1 Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM APSA Meetings APSA Events APSR EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Panel 1 Part: NEW DIRECTIONS IN LATINO POLITICS RESEARCH Francisco I. Pedraza, University of Washington Adrian Felix, University of Southern California Ricardo Ramirez, University of Southern California Christina Elizabeth Bejarano, University of Kansas APSA Events THE 40TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE APSA MINORITY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM: PROMOTING SCHOLARSHIP AND DIVERSITY *With special comments from Dr. Jewel Prestage, Prairie View A&M University, and additional APSA Minority Fellow Alumni Part: Matthew B. Platt, Harvard University Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley Maurice C. Woodard, Howard University Tony Affigne, Providence College Joseph S. Brown, Baylor University Mae C. King, Howard University Sherri L. Wallace, University of Louisville Chair: Papers: Paradoxes of Popular Sovereignty in Comparative Perspective Paulina Ochoa Espejo, Yale University Taking People as They Are: Fitra in Modern Islamic Moral and Political Theorizing Andrew F. March, Yale University Disc: Mohammad H. Fadel, University of Toronto 2-3 TOCQUEVILLE’S VIEWS ON AMERICA AFTER 1840: WHAT WOULD THE THIRD VOLUME OF “DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA” HAVE LOOKED LIKE HAD IT EVER BEEN WRITTEN? Co-sponsored by 1-6 2-12 POLITICAL THEORY TODAY: RESULTS AND IMPLICATIONS OF A NATIONAL SURVEY Matthew J. Moore, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo APSA Committee on Teaching and Learning Panel 1 Chair: Part: IS THE NEXT GENERATION OF POLITICAL SCIENTISTS PREPARED? DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES FROM THE DISCIPLINE Terry M. Moe, Stanford University Elizabeth Beaumont, University of Minnesota Susan E. Clarke, University of Colorado Luis Ricardo Fraga, University of Washington Paula D. McClain, Duke University Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine Chair: Part: Jodi Dean, Hobart & William Smith Colleges Martha A. Ackelsberg, Smith College Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Matthew J. Moore, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo 2-27 Chair: ENCOUNTERING THE OTHER Fred R. Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame Papers: In Love and Out of Sorts: Anticolonial Subjects and the Timescapes of Their Politics Asma Abbas, Bard College at Simon’s Rock Division Panels T-14 THEME PANEL: THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE ‘FRENCH MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN ETHNIC AND RACIAL POLITICS? Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 1 and 32-10 T-15 THEME PANEL: RETHINKING STATE POLICY DIFFUSION Co-sponsored by 29-2 and 25-19 T-16 THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 31-9 and 32-18 306 Fear and Fearlessness in Gandhi and Fanon Brandon M. Terry, Yale University Otherness, Canonicity and Comparative Political Theory Hassan Bashir, Texas A&M University at Qatar Travel, Geopolitics, and Borders: Excavating Territorial Attachments across the Arab/Israeli Frontier Waleed Hazbun, Johns Hopkins University Daily Schedule Disc: Matthew Scherer, Johns Hopkins University Lasse Thomassen, Queen Mary, University of London 2-42 Chair: THE RULE OF LAW IN TIMES OF EMERGENCY Jeffrey K. Tulis, University of Texas, Austin Papers: For the Good of the People Ross J. Corbett, Northern Illinois University Filling the Void: Deliberation and the Legitimization of ExtraLegal Powers Clement Fatovic, Florida International University Separation of Powers and the National Security State Benjamin A. Kleinerman, Michigan State University Disc: Jeffrey K. Tulis, University of Texas, Austin 3-5 WHEN ARE CITIZENS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACTIONS OF THE STATE? John Francis Burke, University of St. Thomas Chair: Papers: Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM “Folk Realism” and Political Knowledge: Realism in LowInformation Foreign Policy Contexts Joshua Kertzer, Ohio State University Kathleen McGraw, Ohio State University Candidate Inconsistency and Voter Choice Michael R. Tomz, Stanford University Robert Van Houweling, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University Peter Enns, Cornell University 5-11 Chair: PERSONALITY AND POLITICS Dona-Gene Mitchell, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Papers: When Framing Matters: Emotional, Cognitive, and Partisan Cues’ Influence on Political Attitudes Michael W. Wagner, University of Nebraska The Nature of Civic Duty: Political Science, Life Science and the Determinants of Juror Satisfaction Jeffery Mondak, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Andrew J. Bloeser, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Carl McCurley, Washington State Center for Court Research Taking Citizens Seriously as Responsible Political Agents Farid Abdel-Nour, San Diego State University Global Citizenship with Civic Responsibility Jun-Hyeok Kwak, Korea University Personality, Politics, and Academia Alan Gerber, Yale University Gregory Huber, Yale University David Doherty, Yale University Conor M. Dowling, Yale University Accounting for Political Catastrophe Catherine Lu, McGill University A Responsibility to Know: Challenging the “I didn’t know that was racist” Ignorance of White Supremacy Vincent Jungkunz, Ohio University Julie A. White, Ohio University Disc: Steven J. Vanderheiden, University of Colorado, Boulder 3-15 CAN COSMOPOLITANISM CO-EXIST WITH THE NATION-STATE? Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine Chair: Papers: Genes, Personality and Politics Bradley Verhulst, Stony Brook University Pete Hatemi, University of Iowa Lindon J. Eaves, Virginia Commonwealth University Disc: Matthew V. Hibbing, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign 5-15 IDEOLOGY Co-sponsored by 37-17 Foundations for a Cosmopolitan Citizenship Daniele Archibugi, Italian National Research Council 6-18 Chair: POLITICS OF FISCAL POLICY Edward C. Page, London School of Economics Global Solidarity Runs Through the Democratic State Towards New Global Institutions Joseph M. Schwartz, Temple University Papers: The Politics of Strategic Budgeteering: An Empirical Investigation of the Fiscal-Political Determinants of Political Business Cycles Vera Eva Troeger, University of Essex Christina J. Schneider, University of California, San Diego Cosmopolitan Republics: Rethinking Global Democracy with Hannah Arendt Lars Peter Rensmann, University of Michigan Fragmented Legislatures and the Budget: Analyzing Presidential Democracies Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University Beyond Schadenfreude: Liberal Sovereignty and the Nation-State of Exception Jacqueline Stevens, University of California, Santa Barbara Disc: Julie Mostov, Drexel University The Politics of Fiscal Performance Around the World Joachim Wehner, London School of Economics Paolo de Renzio, University of Oxford 4-9 STRUCTURAL ESTIMATION OF FORMAL MODELS Co-sponsored by 8-4 5-5 POLITICAL INFORMATION Co-sponsored by 37-3 Pazit Ben-Nun-Bloom, SUNY, Stony Brook Fiscal Policies in Canadian Provinces: Convergence or Divergence? Oleg Kodolov, Kent State University Chair: Deliberation and Learning Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin Gaurav Sood, Stanford James S. Fishkin, Stanford University Nuri Kim, Stanford University People Know What They Know: Self-Reported Political Knowledge on Hot-Button Social Issues Dean P. Lacy, Dartmouth College Qian Wang, Dartmouth College James E. Mahon, Jr., Williams College 7-17 Chair: INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE COURTS John D. Skrentny, University of California, San Diego Papers: Adversarial Legalism and the Civil Rights State R. Shep Melnick, Boston College Daily Schedule Papers: Disc: Institutions, Rulemaking, and the Politics of Judicial Retrenchment Sarah Staszak, Brandeis University 307 Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Delegation and Democracy: the Legislative Choice between Administrators and Courts Sean Farhang, University of California, Berkeley Morality, Citizenship, and Immigrants’ Ethnic Education in Japan, the United States, and Sweden Apichai W. Shipper, University of Southern California Intercurrence and the Politics of Injury Compensation Jeb Barnes, University of Southern California Thomas F. Burke, Wellesley College Comparing Immigrant Integration Policies in Japan and Korea Byoungha Lee, Rutgers University Disc: Yumiko Mikanagi, Columbia University Deborah J. Milly, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University STRUCTURAL ESTIMATION OF FORMAL MODELS Co-sponsored by 4-9 Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester 11-26 A Strategic Statistical Model of Crisis Initiation and Escalation Justin E. Esarey, Emory University Chair: THE NEW COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF LATIN AMERICA: ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 12-6 Sebastian Etchemendy, Torcuato Di Tella University Electoral and Policy Dynamics in US Politics Tasos Kalandrakis, University of Rochester John Duggan, University of Rochester Papers: Disc: Ken I. Kersch, Boston College 8-4 Chair: Papers: Daily Schedule A Structural Model of the 2000 Presidential Election: Instrumenting for Endogenous Ideology Guido Cataife, University of Louisville Jose Fernandez, University of Louisville Revolution, Reform, and Reinforcement: Latin American Responses to theGlobalization of Intellectual Property Kenneth Shadlen, London School of Economics Assessing Compliance with International Agreements: Structural Estimation of a Simultaneous-Move Game Yukari Iwanami, University of Rochester Disc: Claire Lim, Stanford University 8-14 Chair: USING NETWORK ANALYSIS David Lazer, Harvard University Papers: Mapping Mobilization Networks in the Democratizing Color Revolutions: A New Methodological Approach to the Study of Contested Elections Spyridon Kotsovilis, McGill University A Snowball’s Chance in Nigeria: Combining Random and Respondent-Driven Sampling to Locate Riot Participants Alexandra L. Scacco, Columbia University From Man, the State, and War to Vertices, Networks, and Change: Relational Ontologies to Understand Complexity in Politics David C. Earnest, Old Dominion University Models of Economic Liberalization: Regime, Power and Compensation to the Losers in Argentina, Spain, Chile and the Iberian-American Region Sebastian Etchemendy, Torcuato Di Tella University Politics and Diversified Business Groups: Origins, Support, and Decline. Ben Ross Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Labor-Market Outsiders and State Expansion: Bridging the Social Policy Divide in Latin America Maria Candelaria Garay, University of California, Berkeley The Rise of Two Lefts in Latin America Raul L. Madrid, University of Texas, Austin Disc: Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University Peter A. Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego 11-27 ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 12-7 M. Steven Fish, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Papers: Network of Interest Groups in Judicial Politics: Using Amicus Curiae Filing Information to Reveal Informal Structure of Interaction Rentaro Iida, Georgetown University Imperfect Democrats: The Muslim Brotherhood and Egyptian Democracy Bruce K. Rutherford, Colgate University Democracy and Authoritarianism in the Muslim World: An Overview Ahmet T. Kuru, San Diego State University Political Communication Networks Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago Islamists and the Democratic Commitment Trap Nathan Brown, George Washington University Disc: David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame Islam and Democracy in the Post-Soviet States Kathleen A. Collins, University of Minnesota 11-2 WOMEN, IMMIGRANTS AND LABOR MARKETS: UNDERSTANDING AND RESPONDING TO LABOR SHORTAGES AND LOW FERTILITY IN AGING SOCIETIES Co-sponsored by Japan Political Studies Group, Panel 1 Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University Chair: Papers: Maternal Employment and Immigration Policy in Low Fertility Countries: A Comparison of Japan and Germany Priscilla A. Lambert, Western Michigan University Marisha Lecea, Western Michigan University An Invisible Policy Shift: International Health-Care Migration to Japan Gabriele Vogt, German Institute for Japanese Studies Labor market structures, women’s work, and low fertility Patricia Boling, Purdue University 308 Paper Stones Redux: The Future of Electoral Islamism David S. Patel, Cornell University Disc: Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University 11-31 PARTY CHANGE: NEW APPROACHES TO OLD QUESTIONS Jason Seawright, Northwestern University Chair: Papers: Partyism in New Democracies Kenneth F. Greene, University of Texas, Austin Rules for Dying: Institutions and Party Demise in the Americas Jennifer Marie Cyr, Northwestern University Larkin Terrie, Northwestern University Daily Schedule The Dynamics of the Party System in Postwar Japan: A Quantitative Content Analysis of Electoral Pledges and Manifestos Michael F. Thies, University of California, Los Angeles Jonathan B. Slapin, Trinity College, Dublin Sven-Oliver Proksch, University of Mannheim Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Chair: Naunihal Singh, University of Notre Dame Papers: From Rebels to Soldiers: An Analysis of the Philippine and East Timorese Policy Integrating Former Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and Falintil Combatants into the Armed Forces Rosalie Arcala Hall, University of the Philippines in the Visayas Feeling Like a Change: Affect and Cognition as Mechanisms for Anti-Party-System Voting Jason Seawright, Northwestern University Transforming a Rebel: Soldiers, Politicians and Post-Conflict Governance Devon Curtis, University of Cambridge Applying New Approaches to Electoral Volatility: East vs. West Joshua A. Tucker, New York University Eleanor Neff Powell, Harvard University Disc: Pradeep Chhibber, University of California, Berkeley Masaru Kohno, Waseda University 12-6 THE NEW COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF LATIN AMERICA: ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 11-26 12-7 ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 11-27 12-18 EFFECTING SOCIAL CHANGE IN A GLOBALIZED ERA: SOCIAL DEMOCRACY, INEQUALITY AND PROPOOR POLICIES Erik M. Kuhonta, McGill University Chair: Papers: The Politics of Combatant Demobilization in Colombia Enrique Desmond Arias, CUNY, John Jay College Gipsy Escobar, CUNY, Graduate Center The Ecuadorian Army’s Mission Performance: Neglecting a Porous Border while Policing the Interior Maiah Jaskoski, Naval Postgraduate School Accommodate or Antagonize? Left Governments and the Military in Latin America Richard T. Hay, Northwestern University Disc: Naunihal Singh, University of Notre Dame 13-13 Chair: INTELLECTUALS IN POLITICS Eleanor Townsley, Mount Holyoke College Papers: Intellectuals in Politics: Reviving Kantian Ethics for 21st Century Realities Barbara J. Falk, Canadian Forces College Is Social Democracy Possible in a Neoliberal Global Order?: A Comparative Analysis of Asia and Latin America Simone B. Chun, Suffolk University The Political Role of Intellectuals in the Revolutions of 1989 Andras Bozoki, Central European University The Intellectual: A Value-laden Concept Rebecka Lettevall, Södertörn University College Welfare States in Global South: What Produces Varying Levels of Redistributive Commitment? Anil Mathew Varughese, University of Toronto Poverty and the Role of Intelligentsia in Qualifying Economic Liberalism Umut Korkut, Dogus University The Politics of Equity-Enhancing Tax Reform in Latin America Tasha A. Fairfield, University of California, Berkeley Between the Masses and Power: The Social Place and Role of Contemporary Intellectuals Ridvan Edmond Peshkopia, University of Kentucky Arben Imami, Institute for Political Studies Divergent Trajectories: Healthcare Reforms in South Korea and Chile Illan Nam, Colgate University Redistributive Spending During Elections in Latin America George F. Avelino, FGV-SP Lorena G. Barberia, Fundação Getulio Vargas Disc: Eleanor Townsley, Mount Holyoke College Disc: James W. McGuire, Wesleyan University 14-3 Chair: IDEAS AND NORMS IN COMPLEX POLITICAL ORDERS Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon 12-31 THE POLITICS OF ETHNICITY, SECTARIANISM AND THE STATE Paul Kingston, University of Toronto Papers: The Comparative Political Economy of Corporate Social Responsibility Across the OECD: 1977-2007 Daniel Phillip Kinderman, Cornell University Chair: Papers: Sectarianism from Below: Youth Politics and Communal Conflict in Lebanon. Elinor Bray-Collins, University of Toronto “... what the hell do you think you are doing there ...?” Comparing Politicians’ Practical Theories of Democracy Jens Borchert, University of Frankfurt Jürgen Petersen, Goethe University Frankfurt/Main Religious Succession in a Sectarian State: the Case of Lebanon Michelle Flores, University of Southern California The Real But Limited Effects of Ideas on Policy Johannes Lindvall, University of Oxford Christianity, Islam and Social Capital in Sub-Saharan Africa Robert Alfred Dowd, University of Notre Dame How Ideas Matter: The Neoclassical Synthesis, Economists and Normpolitik in Spain’s Economic Transition Cornel Ban, University of Maryland Bringing Power to Ideational Analysis of Institutional Change Ronen Mandelkern, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Governing Areas of Dissidence: Nation-Building and Ethnic Movements in Turkey and Morocco Senem Aslan, Princeton University Disc: Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon Disc: Paul Kingston, University of Toronto 14-15 12-42 FROM REBELS TO SOLDIERS: LEGITIMIZING REBELS AND MILITARIES Chair: WELFARE PREFERENCES IN A POST-INDUSTRIAL ERA Co-sponsored by 15-5 David Rueda, University of Oxford 309 Daily Schedule Ethnic Politics and Governance Rachel M. Gisselquist, Harvard University Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Papers: Daily Schedule What Explains Preferences over the Welfare State? Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam Fabian Dekker, Erasmus University 17-3 CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN FINANCIAL AND OTHER INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 16-16 Who are the Outsiders and What do they Want? The Dualization of Welfare Politics in a Comparative Perspective Silja Haeusermann, University of Zurich Hanna Schwander, Institute for Political Scicne 18-5 POST-CIVIL WAR PROCESSES Co-sponsored by 44-4 Nancy Bermeo, Oxford University How the Insider-Outsider Cleavage Changes Preferences for Tax Policies Achim Kemmerling, Jacobs University Bremen Chair: Papers: The Bureaucratic Theory of Government Growth Revisited: A Comparatives Study of Fifteen Post-Industrial Economies Markus Tepe, Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg Can Development Aid Contribute to Social Cohesion After Civil War? Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University Jeremy M. Weinstein, Stanford University Bureaucrats and Bankers: An Analysis of Service Workers and Welfare Preferences Jane R. Gingrich, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Ben William Ansell, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Disc: David Rueda, University of Oxford 15-5 WELFARE PREFERENCES IN A POST-INDUSTRIAL ERA Co-sponsored by 14-15 15-9 Chair: EXTREME POLITICS Ian Cooper, University of Oslo Papers: Back to the Future? Economic Reform and Political Radicalism in France and Germany in the New Century Gabriel Goodliffe, Johns Hopkins University Radical Parties in Eastern Europe: The Effect of Policy Convergence and Ethnic Heterogeneity on Voting Behavior Lenka Bustikova-Siroky, Duke University Laying a Foundation for Peace?: Micro-Effects of Peacekeeping in Cote d’Ivoire Cyrus Dara Samii, Columbia University Eric N. Mvukiyehe, Columbia University Democratization after Civil War Page Fortna, Columbia University Reyko Huang, Columbia University Does War Influence Democratization? Edward D. Mansfield, University of Pennsylvania Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University Disc: Nancy Bermeo, Oxford University Elisabeth King, Columbia University 18-19 TESTING SECURITIZATION THEORY BEYOND THE EUROPEAN UNION Audie Klotz, Syracuse University Chair: Papers: Society and Psychology in Societal Security: Sorting Out Rival Explanations of Anti-Migrant Hostility in Russia Mikhail A. Alexseev, San Diego State University Migration and Politics in Austria: The Legacy of J. Haider Lapo Salucci, University of Colorado at Boulder Migration and Security James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University It’s All About the Umma: Attack Motivations among European Islamist Terrorists William J. Josiger, Georgetown University Does ‘Societal Security’ Travel? A Comparison of German and South African Responses to Immigration Asli Ilgit, Syracuse University Audie Klotz, Syracuse University Disc: Ian Cooper, University of Oslo 16-16 CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY IN FINANCIAL AND OTHER INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 17-3 Michael J. Tierney, College of William & Mary How Well Does the Copenhagen School Travel to Canada? Identity, Societal Security and the Securitization of Migration Policies J.A. Sandy Irvine, Wilfrid Laurier University Chair: Papers: Are IOs Agents or Norms Platforms? Member-Country and World Bank’s Influence on Environmental Practice at the Islamic Development Bank Daniel L. Nielson, Brigham Young University Christopher Blake O’Keefe, University of California, San Diego The Role of Intergovernmental Organizations in Institutional Design Tana Johnson, University of Chicago The IO Learning Curve: The Politics of Performance Evaluation in the World Bank and International Monetary Fund Catherine Weaver, University of Texas, Austin Disc: The Securitization of Migration in Malaysia Kevin McGahan, National University of Singapore Disc: Kamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine 18-38 LESSONS IN WAR, LESSONS FROM WAR Co-sponsored by 43-5 19-11 US FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 20-2 Chris C. Demchak, US Naval War College Chair: Papers: Coercive Diplomacy Meets Diversionary Incentives: Domestic Politics, Credibility and the Standoff Between the United States and Iran Graeme Davies, University of Wales, Aberystwyth Explaining Change in International Governance Institutions: Moving Beyond Path Dependence Lora Anne Viola, Social Science Research Center Berlin Thomas Rixen, Social Science Research Center, Berlin Smart Power, Counterinsurgency and Military Operations Other Than War (MOOTW): American Military Policy in the 21st Century Jack Porter, The Citadel Jon C. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin The Crafting of National Security Policy in the 21st Century Alan G. Stolberg, United States Army War College Wages of War: Public Support for the Military in the Wake of Vietnam and Iraq David T. Burbach, Naval War College 310 Daily Schedule Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM From the Yom-Kippur War to the Second Lebanon War: Systemic Effects on US Management of War and Peace in the Middle East Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa Disc: Caitlin Talmadge, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 20-2 US FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 19-11 20-15 METHODS, MODELS AND THEORY IN FOREIGN POLICY Wallace J. Thies, Catholic University of America Chair: Papers: Personality, Popularity, and Prosperity: Exploring Covariates of Israeli Foreign Policy Behavior (1979-2007) Using Discrete Sequence Pattern Recognition Philip A. Schrodt, University of Kansas Valerie M. Hudson, Brigham Young University Cristian Cantir, University of Kansas Realism, Prediction, and Foreign Policy J. Samuel Barkin, University of Florida Previous Commitments and Future Promises: The Relationship Between Military Capacity, Alliance Reliability and Future Alliance Potential, 1950-2005 Anessa L. Kimball, Universite Laval Alia Alatassi, Université Laval The Moral Hazard and International Disputes Vesna Danilovic, SUNY-Buffalo Joe Clare, Louisiana State University A Good Friend Isn’t Hard to Buy: Economic Interdependence and Alliance Reliability Matthew R. DiGiuseppe, Binghamton University, SUNY Disc: Geoffrey Wallace, Cornell University 22-17 EXPLAINING PARTY POLARIZATION IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 35-16 23-10 Chair: CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE PARTIES Wayne P. Steger, DePaul University Papers: Checks, Balances and Beyond: The Presidential Accountability “System.” Bruce Buchanan, University of Texas, Austin Monitoring, Assessing, and Forecasting International Crises Using Athena’s Prism and ICS: Part I-The Case of the North Korean Nuclear Crisis G. Jiyun Kim, University of Pennsylvania Barry G. Silverman, University of Pennsylvania Gnana K. Bharathy, University of Pennsylvania The President and the Environment Jeffry Burnam, Georgetown University Congress’s Ambivalence in the George W. Bush Presidency Jasmine Farrier, University of Louisville Domestic Legitimacy and Foreign Policy Responses: A Time Series Analysis of India-Pakistan Enduring Rivalry Waheed A. Khan, Brescia University Congressional Development of the Institutional Presidency Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley John W. Patty, Harvard University Policy implications of Anti-Americanism in the Middle East C. Todd Kent, Texas A&M University-Qatar Disc: Philip B. K. Potter, University of Michigan 21-16 Papers: CIVIL WAR ONSET The Counterinsurgency Dilemma: State Repression and Civil War Onset T. David Mason, University of North Texas Jason M. Quinn, University of North Texas Ethnic Brokerage, Coups, and Civil War Philip Roessler, University of Oxford Transnational Linkages and Civil War Interactions Idean Salehyan, University of North Texas David E. Cunningham, Iowa State University Responses to Reagan: Congressional Actions to Deny Executive Designs Wendy R. Ginsberg, Congressional Research Service Disc: Wayne P. Steger, DePaul University MaryAnne Borrelli, Connecticut College 24-5 CRISIS GOVERNANCE: THE ORGANIZATIONAL AND POLITICAL CHALLENGES OF HEALTH EPIDEMIC POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-5 Mark Rhinard, Swedish Institute of International Affairs Chair: Papers: The Rain in Spain Falls Mainly on the Plain: Local Analyses of Rainfall, Growth, and Conflict Cullen S. Hendrix, University of North Texas Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of Essex Decision Support for Complex Systems: Building Capacity for Coordinated Action Among Public Health Organizations Louise K. Comfort, University of Pittsburgh Democracy Aid, Democratization, and Civil Conflict: How Does Aid Affect Civil Conflict? Burcu Savun, University of Pittsburgh Daniel C. Tirone, University of Pittsburgh Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 21-22 Papers: ALLIANCES: FORMATION AND INFLUENCE Military Alliance Formation: A Multilevel Theory and Model Andrew G. Long, Kansas State University Ethan M. Bernick, University of North Texas Formalizing International Agreements: Pre-commitment of Future Leaders Michaela Mattes, Vanderbilt University Citizen Response to Pandemics: Authorities’ Nightmare or Daydream? Ira Helsloot, Free University of Amsterdam Blame Avoidance and Network Coordination: Evidence from Crisis Response Donald P. Moynihan, University of Wisconsin, Madison Disc: Todd R. La Porte, University of California, Berkeley 25-5 CRISIS GOVERNANCE: THE ORGANIZATIONAL AND POLITICAL CHALLENGES OF HEALTH EPIDEMIC POLICY Co-sponsored by 24-5 25-19 THEME PANEL: RETHINKING STATE POLICY DIFFUSION Co-sponsored by 29-2 and T-15 311 Daily Schedule Disc: Dynamic Capacity for Public Health Crises Christopher K. Ansell, University of California, Berkeley Ann C. Keller, University of California, Berkeley Arjen Boin, Louisiana State University Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Daily Schedule 26-9 Chair: JUDICIAL SELECTION AND JUDICIAL RETIREMENT Lawrence Baum, Ohio State University 30-5 Papers: Judicial Selection and Judicial Choice Wendy L. Martinek, SUNY, Binghamton Kevin M. Scott, Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts Chair: The Politics of Leaving the Court Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown University Albert Yoon, University of Toronto Disc: Clarence N. Stone, The George Washington University Part: Amy B. Bridges, University of California, San Diego Martin George Horak, University of Western Ontario Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University Michael Leo Owens, Emory University Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri, St. Louis Margaret Weir, University of California, Berkeley 31-9 THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 32-18 and T-16 Jennifer Leigh Disney, Winthrop University Greener Pastures: Are Federal Judges Leaving the Bench to Pursue More Lucrative Careers in Private Practice? Scott A. Comparato, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale Philip Habel, Southern Illinois University The Public Treatment of Judicial Nominees Lisa M. Holmes, University of Vermont Disc: Lawrence Baum, Ohio State University 28-2 UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION OF FEDERATIONS: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Panel 1 Richard Simeon, University of Toronto Chair: Papers: Chair: Papers: The Politics of Intersectionality Erica Townsend-Bell, University of Iowa Adapting Federalism: Indigenous Peoples and Multilevel Governance in Canada and the United States Martin Papillon, University of Ottawa Intersectionality and Feminist Theory: Reflections on the Current Debate in Europe Ina Kerner, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin Does Diversity Always Lead to Decentralization and Difference? Jennifer M. Wallner, University of Toronto Intersections and Privilege: Uncovering the Genesis of False Universalizations. Lee MacLean, University of Toronto Varieties of Capitalism/Varieties of Federalism in Australia and Canada Luc Turgeon, University of Toronto Robert Kent Weaver, Georgetown University Stéphane Dion, University de Montreal 29-2 THEME PANEL: RETHINKING STATE POLICY DIFFUSION Co-sponsored by 25-19 and T-15 Mark Carl Rom, Georgetown University Chair: Papers: Modeling the Contagion of Innovation: Issue Characteristics, Innovation Carriers, and Policy Outbreaks in the American States. Graeme Boushey, San Francisco State University Determinants and Diffusion: State Legislative Agenda-Setting on Environmental Policy, 1993-2007 Kathleen A. Bratton, Louisiana State University Tabitha Marie Cale, Louisiana State University Intra-state Patterns of Policy Diffusion Deven Carlson, University of Wisconsin, Madison John F. Witte, University of Wisconsin, Madison Mandated Health Insurance Coverage for Infertility Treatment: An Epidemiological Diffusion Analysis John Fulwider, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Vertical Diffusion and the Policymaking Process: The Politics of Embryonic Stem Cell Research Andrew J. Karch, University of Texas at Austin Disc: 312 Craig Volden, The Ohio State University Michael Mintrom, University of Auckland What will be left of parity democracy once we embrace intersectionality? Petra Meier, University of Antwerp Institutionalising Intersectionality in the European Union? Policy Developments and Contestations Emanuela Lombardo, Complutense University Mieke Verloo, Radboud University Nijmegen How Federations Evolve: Interest Group Politics, Public Policy, and Institutional Change Jan Erk, Leiden University Disc: ROUNDTABLE: A REEXAMINATION ON THE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF CLARENCE STONE’S REGIME POLITICS: GOVERNING ATLANTA: 1946-1988 Marion Orr, Brown University Matthew O. Thomas, California State University, Chico Disc: Ange-Marie Hancock, University of Southern California Jennifer Leigh Disney, Winthrop University 31-26 STATES OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE: WHAT ELSE IS AT STAKE? Co-sponsored by 47-2 32-10 THEME PANEL: THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE ‘FRENCH MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN ETHNIC AND RACIAL POLITICS? Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 1 and T-14 32-18 THEME PANEL: INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS Co-sponsored by 31-9 and T-16 33-1 RELIGION AND AMERICAN PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS Co-sponsored by 36-5 Is there a Religious Left? Evidence from the 2006 and 2008 ANES Kenneth D. Wald, University of Florida Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati David C. Leege, University of Notre Dame Papers: Religious Bias in the 2008 Presidential Nominations Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University The Effects of Religion and Income on Presidential Vote Choice: A Comparison of the 2004 and 2008 General Elections Leigh A. Bradberry, University of California, San Diego Framing Faith: How Voters Responded to Candidates’ Religions in the 2008 Presidential Campaign David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame Joseph Quin Monson, Brigham Young University Daily Schedule Disc: Mary C. Segers, Rutgers University, Newark 34-11 BIAS AND RESPONSIVENESS IN ELECTORAL SYSTEMS Co-sponsored by 36-34 35-16 EXPLAINING PARTY POLARIZATION IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 22-17 Jon R. Bond, Texas A&M University, College Station Chair: Papers: Whatever Happened to Moderate Republicans? Party Asymmetry in the U.S. Congress, 1972-2008 David A. Hopkins, University of California, Berkeley Income Inequality and Party Polarization in the U.S. House Jeffrey W. Ladewig, University of Connecticut Samuel J. Best, University of Connecticut Robert O’Brien, University of Connecticut Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM The Impacts of Electoral Systems on Political Representation Tse-Hsin Chen, Michigan State University Disc: Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University 37-3 POLITICAL INFORMATION Co-sponsored by 5-5 37-8 THE 2008 ELECTION AND THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN POLITICS Co-sponsored by 36-10 37-17 IDEOLOGY Co-sponsored by 5-15 William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University Chair: Papers: What about Institutions? The Polarizing Effect of Reforms on the House of Representatives’ Amendment Process Barry Pump, University of Washington The Contingent Ideological Consequences of Authoritarianism: The Role of Political Expertise Christopher M. Federico, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Emily L. Fisher, University of Minnesota Grace M. Deason, University of Minnesota Understanding Political Ideology: The Necessity of a MultiDimensional Conceptualization Stanley Feldman, SUNY, Stony Brook University Christopher David Johnston, SUNY, Stony Brook Procedural Polarization in the U.S. Congress Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin Disc: Jeffrey D. Grynaviski, University of Chicago 36-5 RELIGION AND AMERICAN PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS Co-sponsored by 33-1 Perceptions of Party Positions on the Left-Right Scale Marco Fernandez, Duke University John H. Aldrich, Duke University Sinziana Dorobantu, Duke University 36-10 THE 2008 ELECTION AND THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN POLITICS Co-sponsored by 37-8 Marc J. Hetherington, Vanderbilt University Ideological Identification: Meanings, Origins, Dynamics, and Consequences Over Lifetimes Nathan P. Kalmoe, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Chair: Papers: The 2008 Presidential Election: Change versus More of the Same Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University The Issue Dynamic of the 2008 Presidential Election George Rabinowitz, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Stuart Elaine Macdonald, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Disc: William G. Jacoby, Michigan State University 38-5 NEW MEDIA, NEW POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 40-1 Christine B. Williams, Bentley University Chair: Papers: The 2008 Presidential Campaign in Context Richard G.C. Johnston, University of Pennsylvania Emily Thorson, University of Pennsylvania Why are Internet Users Politically More Active? In Search of a Causal Effect Martin Kroh, German Institute for Economic Research Hannes Neiss, German Institute for Economic Research Obama’s Coalition and the Future of American Politics Alan I. Abramowitz, Emory University Evaluating the time of vote decision in the 2008 presidential election: a panel study Sunshine Hillygus, Harvard University Michael B. Henderson, Harvard University 36-34 Chair: Papers: Needles and Haystacks:The Explosion of Political and NonPolitical Information Flow W. Russell Neuman, University of Michigan Only the Good Vote Young? The Internet, Age, and Political Participation in the 2008 Presidential Campaign Hannes R. Richter, Free University Berlin BIAS AND RESPONSIVENESS IN ELECTORAL SYSTEMS Co-sponsored by 34-11 Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton Electoral Uncertainty and (Increases in) Support for Minor Political Parties in Single-Member-District Plurality Systems Robin E. Best, Leiden University Consistent Biases in Electoral Environments: Evidence from Entry and Exit of Senators Brendan Pablo Montagnes, Northwestern University Yosh Halberstam, Northwestern University Unraveling Differences in Barriers to Technology Use Karen Mossberger, University of Illinois, Chicago Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa Benedict Jimenez, University of Illinois at Chicago Disc: Christine B. Williams, Bentley University 38-9 GOVERNMENTAL NEWS MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES: EXAMINING THE INTERNATIONAL EVIDENCE Gadi Wolfsfeld, Hebrew University Chair: Papers: When Can Governments Shape the News?: Insights from Social Network Analysis Robin Christopher Brown, University of Leeds 313 Daily Schedule The Arithmetic of Votes to Seats in U.S. House Elections, 19582008 Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton The NetRoots Narrative: The Evolution of the Liberal Blogosphere from 2004 to the Present Diana Tracy Cohen, Central Connecticut State University Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Daily Schedule Policy Certainty and the CNN Effect Babak Bahador, University of Canterbury Disc: David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University Media (Non)Conformity to Executive Framing: The Conditions Under Which Media Transmit the President’s Framing of Foreign Policy Crises Amber Ellen Boydstun, University of California, Davis Rebecca Glazier, University of California, Santa Barbara 43-17 CHINA, WORLD ORDER, AND SECURITY ISSUES IN ASIA Jongsoo James Lee, Stonehill College Chair: Papers: Political Messages: Explaining Tone and Content in Comparative Campaigns Scott W. Desposato, University of California, San Diego The External Role in State-Building: Evidence from the Creation of the Modern Chinese and Indonesian States Ja Ian Chong, Princeton University Media Priming and Leadership Evaluations in Britain Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter Susan A. Banducci, University of Exeter Disc: Gadi Wolfsfeld, Hebrew University 40-1 NEW MEDIA, NEW POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 38-5 41-8 JUSTICE, PASSION, AND SELF-KNOWLEDGE IN PLATO AND ARISTOPHANES Co-sponsored by Society for Greek Political Thought, Panel 2 42-6 ARE THESE TIMES A CHANGIN’? PARTY POLITICS IN THE OBAMA ERA Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University Chair: Papers: Independent Politics in the Obama Era: Is the Third-Party Movement Dead? John C. Berg, Suffolk University “Out of Many, We are One”: Spinoza, Obama and the Politics of the Multitude from an APD Perspective Ruth O’Brien, CUNY-Graduate Center The Chinese World Order and War in Asian History Yuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan University The Invisible Hand in the Korean Peninsula: The United States Congressional Influence on the Agreed Framework between United States and North Korea and its Fulfillment Sang Wan Lee, Seoul National University Identity, Critical Junctures, and Adaptation: North Korea’s Path to Nuclear Diplomacy Sung Chull Kim, Hiroshima Peace Institute Disc: Jongsoo James Lee, Stonehill College 44-4 POST-CIVIL WAR PROCESSES Co-sponsored by 18-5 44-14 CIVIL SOCIETY, CITIZENSHIP AND PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY Katherine Hite, Vassar College Chair: Papers: The Democratic Majority and the Immigrant’s Rights Movement: Has the Structure for Political Opportunities Really Changed? Ron Hayduk, CUNY, Borough of Manhattan Community College Miryam Hazan, University of Pennsylvania Disc: Michael Lipscomb, Winthrop University William L. Niemi, Western State College of Colorado 42-10 ROUNDTABLE: 40 YEARS SINCE J DAVID GREENSTONE’S “LABOR IN AMERICAN POLITICS”: REFLECTIONS ON WHERE WE’VE BEEN, WHERE WE ARE, AND WHERE WE SHOULD GO Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 3 43-5 Chair: LESSONS IN WAR, LESSONS FROM WAR Co-sponsored by 18-38 Manus I. Midlarsky, Rutgers University Learning About Military Effectiveness: Lessons Drawn by Military Observers from the Russo- Japanese War. W. Alexander Vacca, Northrop Grumman Reinventing the Wheel: British Adaptation to the U-Boat Menace of World War I and the Eventual Adoption of Convoys, 1914-18 Matthew Tattar, Brandeis University The Reputational Effects of War Losses: Assessing the International Consequences of the Vietnam War Kathryn McNabb Cochran, Duke University 314 Youth Movements in Post-Communist Societies: A Model of Nonviolent Resistance Olena Nikolayenko, Stanford University Democratization, Civil Society, and Social Capital in the Former Communist World: Four Empirical Tests of a Sui Generis Relationship Nikolay Valkov, Universite de Montreal Jump-starting Civil Society: The Experiment of the Public Chamber in Russia Lisa Post, University of Guelph Fred Eidlin, University of Guelph ICT Diffusion and the Incidents of Resistance against Repressive Regimes Patrick Meier, Tufts University Disc: Katherine Hite, Vassar College Andrew S. Barnes, Kent State University 45-5 ANALYSING COMPLEXITY AND CHANGE IN HUMAN RIGHTS RESEARCH Todd Landman, University of Essex Chair: Papers: Military Occupation and Economic Reforms Inhan Kim, University of Virginia Papers: Measuring Complexity and Change in Human Rights Todd Landman, University of Essex Edzia Carvalho, University of Essex Violence Against Women: A Multidimensional Benchmark David L. Richards, University of Memphis Jillienne Haglund, University of Memphis Amanda Kuppers, University of Memphis Windows of Power: North Vietnamese Military Doctrine and Asymmetric Warfare Kelly A. Grieco, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Pro-Government Militias: Incidence, Location, and Impact on Human Rights Neil J. Mitchell, University of Aberdeen Sabine C. Carey, University of Nottingham Soldiers in the Other War: The United States Marine Corps’ Combined Action Platoons in Vietnam Peter P. Campbell, Notre Dame University The Political Terror Scale – and Beyond Mark P. Gibney, University of North Carolina-Asheville Reed M. Wood, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Daily Schedule The Escalation of Violence Against Noncombatants in Civil War: Ethnographic Evidence from Burundi Meghan K. Lynch, Yale University Disc: Mohammed Rodwan Abouharb, Louisiana State University 46-17 EVERYDAY POLITICS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: QUALITATIVE APPROACHES Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Florida Chair: Papers: Navigating Shifting Front Lines: A Relational Approach to Gender and Political Ethnography in Religiously Divided Societies: A Comparison of Nigeria and Lebanon Maren Milligan, University of Maryland The ‘Dependent-Variable Problem’ of the Colonial State: Conceptual Stretching and Discontent in Development Studies Sybille Ngo Nyeck, University of California, Los Angeles Applying Historical Methods to Understanding the Evolution of Property Rights When Land is Not Scarce Tonya Caprarola Giannoni, George Washington University Democracy’s Impact on Bureaucratic - Legislative Relations: Theoretical Expectations and Mexican Realities Rodrigo Velazquez, University of Texas, Austin Fatwas as Data: Uncovering Historical Change in Islamic Institutions Jeremy Menchik, University of Wisconsin 47-2 Chair: Papers: STATES OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE: WHAT ELSE IS AT STAKE? Co-sponsored by 31-26 Angelia Ruth Wilson, University of Manchester The Fundamental Right to Marry, Individual Liberty, and State Interests Anna Marie Smith, Cornell University Home Movies: Families, Film, and the Marriage Debate Joe Rollins, CUNY-Queens College State DOMAs and Sexual Citizenship Jyl Josephson, Rutgers University, Newark 49-4 Chair: Papers: FORECASTING CANADIAN FEDERAL ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by Political Forecasting Group, Panel 1 Richard Nadeau, University de Montreal Campaign News and Vote Intentions in Canada, 1993-2008 Lori Young, McGill University Marc A. Bodet, McGill University Stuart N. Soroka, McGill University What Trial Heat Polls Can (and Cannot) Tell Us About Public Opinion During an Election Campaign: Evidence from Canada Mark A. Pickup, University of Oxford A Vote Function Model to Forecast Canadian Federal Election Outcomes Eric Belanger, McGill University Jean-Francois Godbout, Simon Fraser University Disc: Michael S. Lewis-Beck, University of Iowa Christopher Wlezien, Temple University Poster Sessions POSTER SESSION 1 Divisions 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, and 33 Papers: Lawmaking and Policy Conflict: Reauthorizing Laws in the U.S. Congress, 1987-2007 Jason A. MacDonald, West Virginia University Shifting Minority Leadership: An Analysis of Changing Institutional Context and Minority Congressional Leadership Katrina L. Gamble, Brown University The Power and Influence of the Minority Party in the U.S. House of Representatives Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America Congressional information Management and the Successful Maintenance of Policymaking Power William Curtis Ellis, University of Oklahoma I’m Your Puppet: The Changing Role of the House Rules Committee Jill L. Curry, University of Maryland James M. Curry, University of Maryland Effects of Third Parties on Roll Call Voting Daniel J. Lee, Michigan State University Assessing Experts: Establishing Reliability and Validity of Aggregate Informant Measures Cherie Maestas, Florida State University Matthew Buttice, University of California, Davis Federal Delegation Pamela Clouser McCann, University of Michigan The Role of Gender in Congressional Hearings on Health Policy Nicole C. Quon, Indiana University The Priming Effects of Informational Spillover: Campaign Advertizing and Media Market Overlap in U.S. House Elections Nicholas Seabrook, SUNY, University at Buffalo The Impact of Political Oversight on Public Attitudes Towards the Police Clare Joanna McGovern, University of British Columbia Distributive Politics and Communities of Interest: The Role of Redistricting in Slicing up the Bacon within Districts Jonathan Winburn, University of Mississippi District Characteristics and Representation in the U.S. House of Representatives Daniel Bowen, University of Iowa Signaling Resolve or Rallying The Troops? The Effect of Veto Threats on Cosponsorship. Brad LeVeck, University of California, San Diego On Making Democracy Work in the Constitutional Republic Boris Bruk, Virginia Tech Mr. President, Why Do You Go Public? A Study of President Bush’s Weekly Radio Addresses Jonghoon Eun, University of Texas, Austin The Electoral College after Census 2010 and 2020: the political impact of population growth and redistribution Edward M. Burmila, Indiana University Divided Government and the Expansion of Federal Power, 1960 to 2008 R. Steven Daniels, California State University, Bakersfield Factor Endowment, Regime Type, and Foreign Direct Investment Regulation in Developing Countries Boliang Zhu, Columbia University After the Oath: The Bush Legacy for US Citizenship Policy Robin A. Harper, CUNY-York College Bureaucratic Responsiveness, Accounting Regulation, and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 Renée J. Johnson, Kent State University Hierarchy, Specialization, and Representative Bureaucracy: Expanding the Scope of Representation Meredith Brooke Loudd Walker, Texas A&M University Morgen S. Johansen, Texas A&M University 315 Daily Schedule A Regional Swing Model for Converting Canadian Popular Vote into Parliamentary Seats 1963-2008 Barry J. Kay, Wilfrid Laurier University Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Government Legitimacy: The Effect of Representative Bureaucracy Lina Rombalsky Eskew, Northern Illinois University Parties and Professionals in the Courts: A Survey of 2008 Judicial Campaigns Brian K. Arbour, CUNY, John Jay College Individual-Level Determinants Toward Bureaucracy William J. Miller, Ohio University Parental Mobility under Universal School Voucher Reform Elif Erisen, Cal Poly State University The Impact of Political Oversight on Public Attitudes Towards the Police Clare Joanna McGovern, University of British Columbia Boardroom Progressives: The New Leaders in Urban Education Reform Sarah E. Reckhow, Michigan State University The Nature of Experience: Effects of Hierachical Trust and Perceived Competence on the Use of Bureaucratic Discretion Amy E. Lerman, Princeton University Boris, the Boroughs and the City Charter: A Public Choice Perspective on London’s Evolving Governance Barry Macleod-Cullinane, London Councils Succession Planning in Public Institutions: Reviewing Intergenerational Metanarratives and How They May Inform the Policy Decisions of Human Resource Managers Kimberly A. Carlson, Virginia Tech The Flemish city-region: which urban reality is emerging? Ellen Wayenberg, University College Ghent Beyond the Neighbor Effect: Policy Learning in Managing the Risk of Childhood Obesity in Schools Ling Zhu, Texas A&M University Congressional Preference Formation and Gun Control: The Brady Roll Calls Meredith A. Levine, Yale University Yi Kang, Yale University Karina Cendon Boveda, Yale University Kyohei Yamada, Yale University Regulating the Creative Commons? Uneven Implementation of the EU Copyright Directive Madeline Barch, Indiana University In with the Old, Out with the New: The Politics of Grandfathering in Environmental Law Bruce R. Huber, University of California, Berkeley Partisanship, Public Policy and Private-Sector Social Welfare: How partisanship in Congress has changed the level of privatesector social spending in America from 1967-1994 Christopher Faricy, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Alberta climate-change policy in the Canada-US context David Houle, University of Toronto Douglas Macdonald, University of Toronto The Inequality of Disaster Victim Compensation: 9/11 v. Hurricane Katrina Kevin G. McQueeney, Rutgers University The Power of the Purse: The Impact of Female Representation on Public Expenditure, 1990-2006 Guy Jonathan Sands Burton, London School of Economics Mike Seiferling, London School of Economics Rethinking the Institutional Basis of Urban Development: Hurricane Katrina and Neighborhood Recovery Efforts in New Orleans Min Hee Go, University of Chicago Coping with Colorblind Legal Activism: The Diffusion of Organizational Rights Practices in the Aftermath of Proposal 2 at the University of Michigan Daniel N. Lipson, SUNY, New Paltz The Judicialization of Health Care in Colombia: Assessing the Policy Impact of Judicial Attitudes Rodrigo Nunes, University of Texas, Austin Litigation in Action: Modeling the Decision to Appeal & the Outcome on Appeal Christina L. Boyd, University at Buffalo, SUNY Restorative Justice In Practice: Tribal Law And Tribal Courts In Iraq Adam L. Silverman, US Army The Power to Decide Seth W. Greenfest, University of Washington Precedent and Auditing in the Judicial Hierarchy Greg Goelzhauser, Florida State University 316 Daily Schedule Suburban Transformations in Three U.S. Metropolitan Areas: What Patterns and Trends since 1970 Reveal about the Role of Fragmentation in Shaping Change, Decline, and Local Responses Jeremy W. Main, University of Missouri - Saint Louis Transnational Egg and Sperm Donation: Constructing the Cosmopolitan Citizen? Sara Angevine, Rutgers University The Continued Dependence upon Kinship Ties among Nationallevel Female Candidates 1978-2008 Kimberly L. Casey, University of Missouri, St. Louis Comparative Responses to Sexual Harassment Peter B. Hovde, University of Washington, Seattle Social Movements or Civil Society: Examining Women’s Movements strength in Central and Eastern Europe Ingrid Bego, Washington State University Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University Intimate Labor and Black Feminist Theories of Freedom Shatema Threadcraft, Yale University Explaining the Transatlantic Muslim Public Opinion Gap David Buckley, Georgetown University Religiosity, Societal Development, and Political Attitudes: A Political Economy Model Matt Golder, Florida State University David A. Siegel, Florida State University Ben Gaskins, Florida State University A Comparison of Public Opinion on Abortion in El Salvador, Hungary, Poland, and the United States Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Change and Complexity in the Christian Right Napp Nazworth, University of Georgia God’s Politics and Religious Political Identities Stratos Patrikios, University of Strathclyde State Feminism and Democratic Institutions: South Korea and Taiwan in Comparison Chang-Ling Huang, National Taiwan University Fostering or Hindering Forces of Women’s Legislative Representation in Seychelles Mi Yung Yoon, Hanover College Rethinking Democracy: Legal Challenges Against Pornography and Sex Inequality in Canada, Sweden and the United States Max Waltman, Stockholm University Should Feminism Transcend Nationalism? Hee-Kang Kim, Kyung Hee University Prostitution Policy Reform and the Causal Role of Ideas: A Comparative Study of Policymaking in the Nordic Countries Gregg Bucken-Knapp, University West Women and Political Participation in Egypt and Morocco Jennifer Nowlin, Ohio State University The Turkish Exceptionalism? Islam, Secularism, and Democratization Ramazan Kilinc, Michigan State University Daily Schedule Canadian Cities and Global Migration: Comparing Local Responses to Demographic Change Livianna Stephanie Tossutti, Brock University Jurisdictional Gridlock and the Genesis of Waterfront Toronto Gabriel Eidelman, University of Toronto Local Integration Policies and Immigrant Political Incorporation in U.S. New Destinations Abigail Fisher Williamson, Harvard University POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 1 Co-sponsored by Divisions 29 and 36 Papers: We “No” How to Vote: Confusion and No Votes in the Initiative Process Mike Binder, University of California, San Diego Sequential and Spatial Voting: the Case of the 2008 Presidential Election Baodong Paul Liu, University of Utah Disc: Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Disc: POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 6 Sponsored by Division 29 Papers: Why Do States Adopt Collateral Sanctions Laws? Alec Ewald, University of Vermont The Influence of Professionalism in State Legislatures on Interest Group Strategies David Prince, Georgia Gwinnett College Disc: Boris Shor, University of Chicago Teaching Electoral Behavior and Political Research Methods Through a Course on Election Forecasting Randall J. Jones, Jr., University of Central Oklahoma What Students Read: Representation of Bureaucracy in American Government Textbooks William J. Miller, Ohio University Derek Feuerstein, University of Akron Learning Civic Norms Outside of the Classroom: Diversity and Campus Associational Life J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University Chris Owens, Central Michigan University Gay Neighbors and Political Behavior: Testing Contact vs. Threat Hypotheses in Voting Behavior on Same-Sex Marriage Ballot Measures, 2004-2008 Joshua J. Dyck, University at Buffalo, SUNY Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz, University of Maryland The Complexity of Our Canon: Examining the Content of Introductory Texts in American Politics Jocelyn Evans, University of West Florida David Lindrum, Soomo Publishing Kevin E. Kvalvik, Shadowbox Design Rebecca Smith Shelley, Soomo Publishing Beth Reingold, Emory University POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 3 Co-sponsored by Division 26 and 29 Papers: Organized Interests in State Courts: An Institutional Approach Joseph Ross, University of Arizona Do Graduate Student Teacher Training Programs Affect Placement Rates? John Ishiyama, University of North Texas Christine Anne Balarezo, University of North Texas Darrin Dykes, Lamar University Tom Miles, University of North Texas The Tenth Justice Goes to the States: the Diffusion of State Solicitors General Colin Provost, University College London Contributions to Judicial Campaigns: Assessing Comprehension in an Environment without Partisan Signals Brent D. Boyea, University of Texas, Arlington Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh Damon M. Cann, Utah State University Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington Disc: Teena Wilhelm, University of Georgia Related Group Panels Association for Israel Studies Panel 1 Chair: Papers: POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 4 Sponsored by Division 29 Papers: State Politics, Organized Interests and Income Inequality Suzanne M. Robbins, George Mason University Disc: Finding a Home? The Religious Right in the 2009 Elections Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Rationality of Electoral Competition in a Defused MultiParty System: The Very Small Parties in the Israeli Election Gideon Doron, Tel Aviv University The 2009 Elections and the “Death of the Left”: Class Voting in Israel 1999-2009 Gal Levy, The Open University of Israel Michael Shalev, Hebrew University Association of Chinese Political Studies Panel 2 Chair: GLOBALIZATION AND THE CHINESE REGULATORY STATE Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago 317 Daily Schedule Do State Policies Affect Immigration Rates? Rene R. Rocha, University of Iowa Daniel P. Hawes, Kent State University Alisa Hicklin, University of Oklahoma ELECTIONS IN ISRAEL, 2009: CONTINUITY OR CHANGE Shaul Shenhav, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Between Kadima and Likud: A Matter of Ideology Arye Naor, Ben Gurion University Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas, Dallas POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 5 Sponsored by Division 29 Papers: Bureaucratic Incorporation and Institutional Effects on Immigration Integration: Punctuated Equilibrium in Response to Complexity and Change in the States Christine Thurlow Brenner, Rutgers University Richard F. Winters, Dartmouth College POSTER SESSION 7 Divisions 9 and 10 Papers: Data Matrix, Causal Model, Scatterplot, and Cross-Tabulation: Visual Thinking in the Undergraduate Political Science Research Methods Class Joel Lefkowitz, SUNY-New Paltz POSTER SESSION 1, GROUP 2 Sponsored by Division 29 Papers: Registering and Turning Out: Voting Patterns of Women (of Color) Across the States Carole Jean Uhlaner, University of California, Irvine Becki Scola, St. Joseph’s University Disc: Robert R. Preuhs, Metropolitan State College of Denver Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Papers: Why is the Cost of Regulating China’s Health Sector so High? Yanzhong Huang, Seton Hall University Regulating China’s Land Market: Central-Local Incentives and Institutional Evolution Fubing Su, Vassar College Independence and Mother-in-Laws: the Effect of MOCA Regulations on Civil Society Autonomy in China. Jessica C. Teets, University of Colorado The Regulatory State under Market-Leninism: Telecoms Reform in China and Vietnam Yukyung Yeo, City University of Hong Kong Regulating Food Safety Risk in China: A Historical-Comparative Analysis Peng Liu, Renmin University of China Disc: Xiaobo Hu, Clemson University Fengshi Wu, Chinese University of Hong Kong British Politics Group Panel 4 Chair: Part: Daily Schedule BRITISH POLITICS GROUP ROUNDTABLE- YEAR IN REVIEW Justin T. Fisher, Brunel University Sarah Childs, University of Bristol Elizabeth Penelope Evans, Cardiff University Paul D. Webb, University of Sussex Vote Choices Under the Mixed-Member Majoritarian System: A Comparison Between Taiwan and Japan Chi Huang, National Chengchi University Disc: Eric Voegelin Society Panel 2 Chair: Part: Panel 1 Chair: Papers: Walter J. Nicgorski, University of Notre Dame James H. Nichols, Claremont McKenna College Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Panel 2 Chair: CHOICE AND DEMOCRACY IN TAIWAN Huoyan Shyu, Academia Sinica Papers: Shifting Partisanship Among Taiwan New Voters I-Chou Liu, National Chengchi University Disc: Panel 1 Chair: Papers: EXAMINING INDIGENOUS RIGHTS, IDENTITIES, AND GOVERNANCE THROUGH NATIVE AND NON-NATIVE FRAMEWORKS Timothy P. Waligore, Smith College Expanding Racial Orders: American Indians in the Early American State Ruth Anne French-Hodson, University of Oxford Indigenous Global Politics: Forging International Change Sheryl R. Lightfoot, University of British Columbia Indigenous Justice: Transitional Justice for Indigenous Peoples in Canada Courtney Jung, University of Toronto Methodological Issues in Comparative Political Theory: Perspectives from Indigenous Studies Johannes Morrow, SUNY, University at Albany Electoral Reform on Taiwan in Comparative Perspective Hans J. Stockton, University of St. Thomas 318 Randall A. Hansen, University of Toronto Indigenous Studies Network Hollowing Out in the Middle: A Social-Base Analysis of Political Polarization in Taiwan Since 2000 Yi-feng Tao, National Taiwan University Mingchi Chen, Yale University Issues and Voting Choices in Taiwan’s Local Elections: A Case Study of the Taipei Mayor Elections, 1994-2006 Chia-hung Tsai, National Chengchi University Chi Huang, National Chengchi University Alexander C. Tan, University of Canterbury Ching-hsin Yu, National Chengchi University The Rise of Indirect Affirmative Action: New Strategies for Promoting “Diversity” in Selective Institutions of Higher Education in the United States and France Daniel Sabbagh, Centre d’Etudes et de Recherches Internationales The Interplay between Religion and Ethnicity in Antidiscrimination Policies: a Comparison of France and Britain Valérie Amiraux, Université de Montréal Philosophy, Poetry, and the Law: Confronting Cicero’s de Legibus Richard J. Dougherty, University of Dallas Disc: THEME PANEL: THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE ‘FRENCH MODEL’: A TURNING POINT IN ETHNIC AND RACIAL POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 32-10 and T-14 Terri E. Givens, University of Texas-Austin The Persistence of Intent Requirements in Criminal and Civil Enforcement of Employment Discrimination Law Julie C. Suk, Yeshiva University Ancient Ethics in Modern Times: Lessons in Moderation from Plato’s Charmides, Aristotle’s Ethics, and Cicero’s On Duties Timothy W. Caspar, Hillsdale College Cicero, Machiavelli, and the Stability of States Xavier Marquez, Victoria University of Wellington Jodi L. Bruhn, Independent Scholar John F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge Robert P. George, Princeton University Travis D. Smith, Concordia University Governing Ethnic Minorities in a Post-Secular World: Convergences Between France and Canada Eléonore Lépinard, Université de Montréal Panel 14 CICERO’S POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Chair: Luigi Bradizza, Louisiana State University Augsutine and Cicero on Faith, Reason, and the Best Life Kathleen Arnn, Claremont Graduate University CONSCIENCE, EXPRESSION & LIBERTY: PITFALLS OF POLITICAL CORRECTNESS Barry Cooper, University of Calgary French Politics Group Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Papers: Karl Ho, University of Texas, Dallas John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, University of South Carolina Diluting Practices: How to Keep the “Indigenous” in Indigenous Governance or Listening to the ‘Ginew Grandmothers’ Paula Mohan, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater Disc: Stephanie J. Di Alto, University of California, Irvine Anne FB Flaherty, Duke University Daily Schedule Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Japan Political Studies Group Friday, 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM Panel 1 APSA Meetings WOMEN, IMMIGRANTS AND LABOR MARKETS: UNDERSTANDING AND RESPONDING TO LABOR SHORTAGES AND LOW FERTILITY IN AGING SOCIETIES Co-sponsored by 11-2 International Committee COMMITTEE MEETING Labor Project Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Panel 3 APSA Panel Chair: ROUNDTABLE: 40 YEARS SINCE J DAVID GREENSTONE’S “LABOR IN AMERICAN POLITICS”: REFLECTIONS ON WHERE WE’VE BEEN, WHERE WE ARE, AND WHERE WE SHOULD GO Co-sponsored by 42-10 Susan E. Orr, SUNY, Brockport Disc: Ira Katznelson, Columbia University Part: Michael Goldfield, Wayne State University Paul Frymer, Princeton University Janice Fine, Rutgers University Peter L. Francia, East Carolina University Dorian T. Warren, Columbia University APSA Events FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY PLENARY: CHARLES TAYLOR, “THE MANY FORMS OF SECULARISM” APSA Task Force on U.S. Standing in the World Panel 2 Chair: Papers: FORECASTING CANADIAN FEDERAL ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 49-4 Approval Ratings, the Presidency, and American Standing in the World Margaret G. Hermann, Syracuse University Publius: The Journal of Federalism Panel 1 UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION OF FEDERATIONS: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE Co-sponsored by 28-2 Society for Greek Political Thought Panel 2 Chair: Papers: JUSTICE, PASSION, AND SELF-KNOWLEDGE IN PLATO AND ARISTOPHANES Co-sponsored by 41-8 Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas, Austin The Political Philosophy of Aristophanes: Prosperity, Piety, and Justice in the “Wealth” Svetozar Minkov, Roosevelt University Tyrannical Hopes in Plato’s “Charmides” Robert Goldberg, St. John’s College Why Does Thrasymachus Blush? Injustice and Self-Knowledge in Plato’s “Republic” David Leibowitz, Kenyon College The Political Significance of Man’s Erotic Character Dennis Westergaard, Keyano College Disc: Americans’ Perceptions of U.S. Standing in the World: What They Think and Why It Matters Matthew A. Baum, Harvard University Going International: Understanding the Importance of U.S. Standing Abroad for Presidential Power at Home Meena Bose, Hofstra University Political Forecasting Group Panel 1 INTERNATIONAL STANDING AND AMERICAN POLITICS: HOW AMERICA’S IMAGE ABROAD INFLUENCES POLITICS AT HOME Peter Trubowitz, University of Texas, Austin American Views of Anti-Americanism: Different Schools of Thought Henry R. Nau, George Washington University Disc: Stephen D. Krasner, Stanford University Division Panels T-17 THEME ROUNDTABLE: 2008 AND THE FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN PARTY COALITIONS Co-sponsored by 35-9 T-18 THEME PANEL: WEB 2.0 AND SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE 2008 ELECTIONS AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by 40-2 T-19 THEME PANEL: NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS Janice Bially Mattern, Lehigh University Chair: Papers: “Man” in the Mirror: Human Nature and World Politics Neta C. Crawford, Boston University Neuroscientific Contributions to International Relations Rose McDermott, Brown University Timothy W. Burns, Skidmore College Paul W. Ludwig, St. John’s College Emotional Beliefs Jonathan Mercer, University of Washington Friday, 3:15 PM to 5:00 PM Emotion, Risk, and Surprise in International Politics Janice Gross Stein, University of Toronto APSA Meetings APSA Events Disc: Janice Bially Mattern, Lehigh University 1-14 Chair: RHETORIC, REPRESENTATION, AUTHORIZATION Jill Frank, University of South Carolina Papers: Contested Representations: Cicero on the Republic Joy Connolly, New York University ACADEMIC ADMINISTRATORS MEETING Daily Schedule Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM Section Business Meetings 22 Legislative Studies COUNCIL MEETING Plato’s Mimetic Republic Christina H. Tarnopolsky, McGill University The Representation of Hobbesian Sovereignty Arash Abizadeh, McGill University 319 Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM The Relationship between the Biblical Prophet and Roman Orator: The Limits of Preaching and Prudence Gary Remer, Tulane University Disc: Jill Frank, University of South Carolina Ryan Balot, University of Toronto 1-30 POLITICAL THEORY AND TEACHING Co-sponsored by 10-5 2-5 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY PLENARY: CHARLES TAYLOR, “THE MANY FORMS OF SECULARISM” Leslie Paul Thiele, University of Florida Chair: Papers: 2-19 Chair: Papers: The Many Forms of Secularism Charles Taylor, McGill University CRITICAL THEORY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS IN THE 21ST CENTURY: A LOOK INTO THE FUTURE WITH AN EYE ON THE PAST Katharine N. Farrell, University of Aarhus On the Dialectic of Natural Beauty and the Beauty of Art Donald Burke, York University Marcuse and an Aestheticist Ecocritique Bradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University Daily Schedule 3-12 Chair: SOCIAL JUSTICE, THE PUBLIC, AND THE CITY Clarissa R. Hayward, Washington University Papers: Discipline and Democracy in Progressive Era Theories of Public Space Margaret Kohn, University of Toronto Liberty and Self Respect in the City Loren A. King, Wilfrid Laurier University Bad Stories: Narrative, Identity, and the State’s Materialist Pedagogy Clarissa R. Hayward, Washington University The Re-publican City: Recovering and Reinvigorating the Idea of the “Public” in Contemporary Cities Thad Williamson, University of Richmond Disc: Keally DeAnne McBride, University of San Francisco 3-32 THEORIZING DIMENSIONS OF WOMEN’S EQUAL CITIZENSHIP Co-sponsored by 31-11 4-5 Chair: MODELING AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS David Hugh-Jones, Max Planck Institute of Economics Papers: Electoral Authoritarianism and Democracy: A Formal Model of Regime Transitions Michael K. Miller, Princeton University Non-identity and Ecology Colin J. Campbell, York University Mass Revolutions vs. Elite Coups--A Theory of Authoritarian Regimes’ Stability Ruth Kricheli, Stanford University Yair Livne, Stanford University Complexity and Ecocritique: The Chaos of Commodification Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Unpacking Narratives of Self-delusion: Critical Theory and the Politics of Unsustainability Ingolfur Blühdorn, University of Bath Strategic Constitutional Choice in an Autocracy: The 1980 Constitution in Chile Gerald B. Pech, American University in Bulgaria Katja Michalak, American University in Bulgaria Disc: Robert Paehlke, Trent University Andrew Biro, Acadia University A Dynamic Theory of Economic Openness and Political Stability in Autocracies Kai Zeng, Northwestern University 2-28 Chair: DEPLOYING ARENDT Nick Zavediuk, Saint Louis University Papers: Post-modern Aristotles: Strauss, Arendt, Virno William Clare Roberts, McGill University Globalization and Necessity: Re-Reading Arendt’s Human Condition Patrick F. McKinlay, Morningside College Sustainable Freedom in an Arendtian Mode Rachael Sotos, Fordham University Flying Blind: Media Control and Authoritarian Stability Peter L. Lorentzen, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Piotr Swistak, University of Maryland, College Park Erik Snowberg, Caltech 5-4 VALUES Co-sponsored by 37-2 Philip Habel, Southern Illinois University Chair: Papers: “Perplexities of the Rights of Man”: Methodological and Political Orientations of Arendt’s Critique of Human Rights Ayten Gundogdu, Barnard College-Columbia University Family Values in Political Campaigns Bethany Albertson, University of Texas, Austin The Positive and Negative Dimensions of Freedom Liberatarianism and Self-Expression Values Revisited Gina Linda Gustavsson, Uppsala University Disc: Lena K. Zuckerwise, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Wynne Walker Moskop, Saint Louis University 2-46 Chair: SPINOZA AND CRITICAL THEORY Terrell Carver, University of Bristol Papers: The Affects of Beasts: Agency Beyond the Human in Spinoza Hasana Sharp, McGill University Disc: Philip Habel, Southern Illinois University Painful Affects: Spinoza, Tolerance, and the Politics of Pain Lars Tonder, Northwestern University 6-10 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF MIGRANTS’ FINANCIAL FLOWS Co-sponsored by 16-25 David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Spinoza and the Critical Theory of Political Expression Christopher Skeaff, University of Michigan Disc: 320 Ronald Beiner, University of Toronto, Mississauga Personal Values and Public Opinion Paul N. Goren, University of Minnesota On the Nature of Generalized Trust. A Cross-National Inquiry Into the Relation Between Human Values and Generalized Trust Tim Reeskens, KU Leuven Chair: Daily Schedule Papers: Remittances, Public Goods Provision and Political Inequality Rikhil Bhavnani, Stanford University Margaret Peters, Stanford University Quantitative Discovery from Qualitative Information Gary King, Harvard University Justin Grimmer, Harvard University Harnessing the Diaspora: The Political Economy of External Voting Rights David Leblang, University of Virginia Modeling the Strategic Ratification of Native American Treaties: A Kernel Methods Approach Arthur Spirling, Harvard University Curtis S. Signorino, University of Rochester Clientelism and migrants’ remittances: The 3x1 Program in Mexico Covadonga Meseguer, CIDE Political Investment: Remittances and Elections Angela O’Mahony, University of British Columbia Do Remittances Promote Democratization? How international Migration Helps to Overcome Political Clientilism Tobias Pfutze, Georgetown University Disc: David Andrew Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 7-3 BRINGING SEXUAL ORIENTATION IN: GAY CITIZENSHIP AND AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT Richard M. Valelly, Swarthmore College Chair: Part: 7-18 Chair: Papers: Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Disc: Daniel J. Hopkins, Harvard University 8-13 Chair: ADVANCES IN STUDYING ELECTIONS John E. McNulty, SUNY, Binghamton Papers: Reconciling Neyman and Fisher: Attributing Effects to A Cluster Randomized Get-Out-The-Vote Campaign Jake Bowers, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Ben Hansen, University of Michigan Modeling Voter Heterogeneity via Latent Class Regression Jonathan N. Katz, California Institute of Technology Gabriel Katz, California Inst. Technology Health and Vote Choice: New Bayesian and Classical Approaches to Regional Heterogeneity and Multidimensional Policy Preferences Marcus Alexander, Harvard University Matthew C. Harding, Stanford University Stephen M. Engel, Yale University Margot Canaday, Princeton University Mary Bernstein, University of Connecticut Priscilla Yamin, University of Oregon David Rayside, University of Toronto ECONOMIC REGULATION IN HISTORICAL AND COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Stephen Weatherford, University of California, Santa Barbara Re-Defining Political Participation with Item Response Theory Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania Ecological Inference under Extreme Conditions: Straight and Split-Ticket Voting in Diverse Settings and in Small Samples Michael J. Hanmer, University of Maryland Won-Ho Park, University of Florida Disc: Justin E. Esarey, Emory University Law and Economic Regulation in Nineteenth Century Canada and the United States Ryan R. Hurl, University of Toronto 9-4 The National Recovery Administration Reconsidered, or Why Shipping Container Code Succeeded Gerald Berk, University of Oregon Chair: ENHANCING & CONNECTING EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION & CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Co-sponsored by 10-3 Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi Still Seeking Rents, After All These Years? Testing a NeoBeardian Account of the Birth of the Bank of the United States Eric Lomazoff, Harvard University Papers: Does It Work?: Ways of Assessing Community-Based Learning in Political Science Jennifer Erkulwater, University of Richmond The Creation of a Regulatory Framework: The Enactment of Glass-Steagall Erik M. Filipiak, Cornell University Disc: Charles C. Turner, California State University, Chico J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University Disc: Stephen Weatherford, University of California, Santa Barbara 10-3 ENHANCING & CONNECTING EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION & CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Co-sponsored by 9-4 8-10 Chair: ADVANCES IN QUANTITATIVE TEXTUAL ANALYSIS Albert Peter Weale, University of Essex 10-5 POLITICAL THEORY AND TEACHING Co-sponsored by 1-30 Bruce E. Caswell, Rowan University Papers: Measuring Party Positioning and Issue Salience with MediaData:Characteristics and Research Questions Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center Berlin Anke Daniela Tresch, University of Geneva Chair: Testing the Validity and Robustness of Wordscore to Derive the Ideological Positions of Governors: Are Female Governors More Liberal Than Their Male Counterparts? Karen Shafer, Walden University Richard Herrera, Arizona State University Reconstituting the Political: Foucault and the Modern University: An Exploration of Power, Transition, and Discourse Mike Laurence, University of Western Ontario An Emancipatory Authority?: Teaching in Levinas and Ranciere. Rachel Magnusson, York University Polyvocality and the “Conversation”: Bringing Other Voices into Political Theory Wairimu Njoya, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Deconstructing Discourse in order to Reconstruct a Clearly Defined Position: Teaching Political Theory to students with limited background in Political Science Jeanne W. Simon, Universidad de Concepcion 321 Daily Schedule Cross-Validating Measurement Techniques of Party Positioning Simon Hug, Université de Genève Tobias Schulz, Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL Christine Arnold, Universiteit Maastricht Papers: Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Disc: Johnny Goldfinger, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis 11-8 COMPARATIVE POLITICS IN A GLOBALIZED WORLD: WHAT PROBLEMS OUGHT IT BE ADDRESSING Margaret Levi, University of Washington, Seattle Chair: Part: David D. Laitin, Stanford University Susan C. Stokes, Yale University Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago Craig Calhoun, New York University 11-16 DEMOCRACY, DICTATORSHIP, AND POLITICAL SUCCESSION Co-sponsored by 12-1 Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Chair: Papers: Legislative Institutions in Dictatorships Carles Boix, Princeton University Milan Svolik, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Daily Schedule The Transnational Vote and the 2006 Mexican Presidential Election David L. Leal, University of Texas, Austin James A. McCann, Purdue University Exit During Crisis: How Migration and Economic Crisis Affect Democratization Joseph Wright, Pennsylvania State University The Effects of “Bringing it All Back Home” on Customary Village Governance in Oaxaca: Remittances, Customary Law, and Voluntary Service in Indigenous Southern Mexico Todd Eisenstadt, American University Michael S. Danielson, American University Disc: Anna Sampaio, University of Colorado, Denver 12-36 COLONIALISM, DEMOCRACY, AND DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 11-60 Atul Kohli, Princeton University Chair: Papers: Authoritarian Elections and Leadership Succession, 1975-2000 Gary W. Cox, University of California, San Diego The Effect of Colonizer Identity on Long-Run Development: Theory and Evidence James Mahoney, Northwestern University Colonialism, Democracy, and Institutions Steven I. Wilkinson, University of Chicago Political Competition, Non-Hegemonic Institutions, and Democratic Stability in Latin America during the Twentieth Century Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh Colonial Education and Ethnic Conflict Matthew Lange, McGill University An Institutional Theory of Direct and Indirect Rule Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University Parties, Armies and Bureaucracies: The Institutional Choices of Autocrats and Their Effects on Investment Scott G. Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin, Madison Philip Keefer, The World Bank Colonial Legacies, Ethnicity and Internal Migration in Kenya Kimuli Kasara, Columbia University Do Democratic Breakthroughs Last? Liberalization and Democratization After the Cold War Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Disc: Atul Kohli, Princeton University 13-10 Disc: Robert H. Bates, Harvard University Papers: 11-54 HEALTH POLICY, CROSSING NATIONAL BOUNDARIES, AND IDEOLOGICAL PARADIGMS Co-sponsored by 48-4 POSTCOMMUNIST PARTY POLITICS: COMPARING CENTRAL EUROPE AND THE FORMER SOVIET UNION Co-sponsored by 11-64 The Impact of Media Exposure on Electoral Behavior in a New Democracy Hubert Tworzecki, Emory University Holli A. Semetko, Emory University 11-60 COLONIALISM, DEMOCRACY, AND DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 12-36 11-64 POSTCOMMUNIST PARTY POLITICS: COMPARING CENTRAL EUROPE AND THE FORMER SOVIET UNION Co-sponsored by 13-10 11-68 ACTOR FRAGMENTATION AND CIVIL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 21-11 11-76 DECENTRALIZED GOVERNANCE AND SOCIAL INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by Comparative Urban Politics, Panel 2 12-1 DEMOCRACY, DICTATORSHIP, AND POLITICAL SUCCESSION Co-sponsored by 11-16 12-28 Chair: MIGRANTS: AGENTS OF CHANGE? David L. Leal, University of Texas, Austin Papers: International Migration and the Diffusion of Democracy: Friends or Foes? Sarah Wilson Sokhey, Ohio State University Yoon-Ah Oh, Ohio State University 322 Elections as a Tool of Party System Consolidation in Poland Amie Kreppel, University of Florida The Voting Behavior of Islamic Minorities in a Fledgling Democracy: The Case of Russia Robert G. Moser, University of Texas, Austin Michael P. Dennis, University of Texas, Austin Representation and Constituency Service in Ukraine Erik S. Herron, University of Kansas Nazar Boyko, Lviv Reginald Public Admin Institute Disc: Irina Khmelko, Georgia Southern University 14-9 THE FINANCIAL CRISIS - THE RETURN OF THE MIXED ECONOMY? Sheri Berman, Barnard College Chair: Papers: Preventing Markets from Self-Destruction: The Quality of Government Factor Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg Embedded Liberalism is Dead, Long Live Embedded Liberalism: National Welfare Concerns and the International Financial Crisis Leonard Seabrooke, University of Warwick Good Inflation, Bad Inflation: The Housing Boom, Economic Crisis and the Rise of Public-Private Keynesianism Colin Hay, University of Sheffield Daily Schedule Disc: Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University 15-19 JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE EUROPEAN UNION Co-sponsored by 26-7 15-22 EUROPE AND ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 36-23 16-6 ILLICIT FLOWS AND CONTROLS Co-sponsored by 18-3 H. Richard Friman, Marquette University Chair: Papers: An Extreme Case of Sovereignty at Bay? Illicit Flows and State Power in Historical and Comparative Perspective Peter Andreas, Brown University Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM The Political Economy of Investor Protection: The Adoption and Enforcement of Insider Trading Laws Andrew Kerner, University of Michigan Jeffrey Robert Kucik, Emory University Networks As Channels of Policy Diffusion: Explaining Worldwide Changes in Capital Taxation, 1998-2006 Xun Cao, University of Essex Diffusion and the Design of Constitutions Zachary Elkins, University of Texas, Austin Disc: Jude C. Hays, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Tim Buthe, Duke University 17-13 TRANSFORMING THE FRAGILE STATE: THE ROLE OF INTERNATIONAL BUREAUCRACIES IN MODERN STATE FORMATION Co-sponsored by 18-29 Lise Morjé Howard, Georgetown University Economic Globalizatoin and Canada’s Drug War: The Quest for Prosperity and Security Horace A. Bartilow, University of Kentucky An Analysis of Illicit Arms Trade Kate Ivanova, Ohio State University Chasing Illicit Flows: The OECD and Crime Control Anja P. Jakobi, University of Bremen Chair: Papers: Constructing Enforcement: The International Anti-Money Laundering Regime and the Interaction of Constructivist and Rationalist Dynamics Mark Nance, North Carolina State University Disc: H. Richard Friman, Marquette University 16-17 PUBLIC/PRIVATE INTERACTION AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Alexandra Gheciu, University of Ottawa Chair: Papers: Organizational Strategies and Security in Unstable Territory Virginia Haufler, UC Irvine Non-State Environmental and Social Global Governance and the Transformation of Global Markets: Panacea or Pipe Dream? Steven F. Bernstein, University of Toronto International Peacebuilding Failures: Lessons from the Congo Severine Autesserre, Barnard College, Columbia University Organizational Barriers to Peace: International Bureaucratic Routines and Modern State Formation Susanna Pfohl Campbell, Tufts University Toward Rent-Seeking or Reform? International Organizations and the Politics of Security Sector Reform in Post-Conflict States Louis-Alexandre Berg, Georgetown University 18-3 ILLICIT FLOWS AND CONTROLS Co-sponsored by 16-6 18-9 Chair: RECONSIDERING THE ROLE OF UNCERTAINTY IN IR Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin Papers: Misplaced Certainty and War Jennifer Mitzen, Ohio State University Governing Financial Risk: Intersubjective Expectation and the Failure of Private Governance in Credit Markets Rodney Bruce Hall, Oxford University Circles of Trust: The Creation of International Security Organizations and the Domestic Politics of Multilateralism Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California Multiple Frontiers, Multiple Entanglements: The Changing Public/Private Divide’s Relationship to Other Changing Divides Tony Porter, McMaster University Defining Material Power: U.S. Ballistic Missile Defense, 19832007 Zachary Zwald, UC Santa Cruz The World Bank and Public Private Partnerships (PPPs) in Development Governance Arne Ruckert, University of Ottawa Disc: Randall Germain, Carleton University 16-25 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF MIGRANTS’ FINANCIAL FLOWS Co-sponsored by 6-10 17-9 Chair: Institutional Legacies and the Diffusion of Financial Openness Sarah M. Brooks, The Ohio State University Marcus J. Kurtz, The Ohio State University International Accounting Standards: Domestic-International Linkage Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University Dimensions of Uncertainty and Their Cognitive Challenges: A Social Evolutionary Psychology Perspective Shiping Tang, Fudan University Disc: Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin 18-22 NEW CHALLENGES IN ASIAN REGIONAL SECURITY Co-sponsored by 19-6 Alice D. Ba, University of Delaware Chair: Papers: Autocratic Cooperation in International Organizations: China and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Phillip Y. Lipscy, Stanford University Hiroki Takeuchi, Southern Methodist University Demographic Peace: Northeast Asian Arms Race and Implication of Population Change in the Region Seongho Sheen, Seoul National University Back to the Future? The “Chinese World Order” and China’s Rise Today Ji-Young Lee, Georgetown University 323 Daily Schedule Papers: INTERNATIONAL POLICY DIFFUSION: FURTHER INVESTIGATION ON DOMESTIC-INTERNATIONAL LINKAGE Fabrizio Gilardi, University of Zurich Seeing Like a State or a Dragonfly? Organizational Cultures in UN Peace Operations Michael L. Lipson, Concordia University Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Time for Renewal: The Changing U.S. Role and the Shifting Regional Order in East Asia Il Hyun Cho, Cleveland State University Daily Schedule Chair: Henry A. Kim, University of Arizona Papers: Legislative Committees and Multiparty Government Shane Martin, Dublin City University Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Security Regionalization in Asia Galia Press-Barnathan, Hebrew University, Jerusalem Disc: Chyungly Lee, National Chengchi University 18-29 TRANSFORMING THE FRAGILE STATE: THE ROLE OF INTERNATIONAL BUREAUCRACIES IN MODERN STATE FORMATION Co-sponsored by 17-13 The Evolution of American State Legislative Committee Systems Nancy Martorano, University of Dayton Keith E. Hamm, Rice University Ronald D. Hedlund, Northeastern University Plenary ‘Amendments’ to Committee Reports: Legislative Powers of the European Parliament Committees Nikoleta Yordanova, European University Institute 19-6 NEW CHALLENGES IN ASIAN REGIONAL SECURITY Co-sponsored by 18-22 Disc: Royce A. Carroll, Rice University Henry A. Kim, University of Arizona 20-11 HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS Alan G. Stolberg, United States Army War College 23-11 PRESIDENTIAL LEADERSHIP, THE NEWS MEDIA, AND PUBLIC OPINION Karen S. Hoffman, Marquette University Chair: Chair: Papers: The Nature of Containment, 1945-1953 Paul C. Avey, University of Notre Dame Papers: Generations and Foreign Policy Change: The Case of the “Generation of 1914” Tim Luecke, Ohio State University Presidential Leadership of the Media and Public: The Case of Iraq Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North Texas Jeffrey S. Peake, Bowling Green State University The Foreign Policy Choices of China and India in Historical Perspective Ishan Joshi, Cornell University Three Way Information Flow between the President, News Media, and Public: Who Affects Whom? Han Soo Lee, Texas A&M University The Stubborn Cowboy: An Analysis of G.W. Bush Foreign Policy Colleen E. Miller, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Presidents, Parties, and Prosperity: The Political Economy of Public Opinion Daniel E. Ponder, Drury University Raymond Tatalovich, Loyola University, Chicago Dane G. Wendell, Loyola University Chicago Neoclassical Realism and American Foreign Policy in the Post Cold War Tudor Andrei Onea, Queen’s University 21-11 Chair: Papers: ACTOR FRAGMENTATION AND CIVIL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 11-68 Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology When Nationalists Fall Apart Kristin Marie Bakke, Leiden University Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, Iowa State University Lee Seymour, Harvard University Commitment Problems or Bidding Wars: Rebel Fragmentation As Peacemaking Jesse Driscoll, Stanford University Disc: Lori Cox Han, Chapman University Justin S. Vaughn, Cleveland State University 24-11 GENDER AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: NEW APPROACHS AND TOOLS Co-sponsored by 31-1 Mary E. Guy, University of Colorado, Denver Chair: Papers: Explaining Insurgent Cohesion and Fragmentation: Trajectories of Militancy in Kashmir and Pakistan Paul Staniland, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 22-9 ROUNDTABLE: CONGRESS AND THE 21ST CENTURY: FUTURE CHALLENGES AND DEVELOPMENT Daniel P. Mulhollan, Congressional Research Service Chair: Part: 22-13 324 Frances E. Lee, University of Maryland Thomas E. Mann, Brookings Institution Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America John R. Hibbing, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Kathryn Pearson, University of Minnesota Colleen J. Shogan, Congressional Research Service COMMITTEES OUTSIDE THE U.S. CONGRESS Representative Bureaucracy and Gender Consciousness: A Framework for Investigating Gendered Policy Outputs Julie Dolan, Macalester College A Retrospective Analysis of Scholarship on Gender and Diversity Mary E. Guy, University of Colorado, Denver Kristin L. Schumacher, University of Colorado, Denver Out-Group Conflict, In-Group Unity? Exploring the Effect of Repression on Movement Cohesion Theodore D. McLauchlin, McGill University Wendy Pearlman, Northwestern University Disc: Leading the Party from the Oval Office Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin, Madison Impact of Descriptive Representation in the Bureaucracy on Public Employee Turnover and Satisfaction Lael R. Keiser, University of Missouri, Columbia Jason A Grissom, University of Missouri-Columbia Developing a Management Tool for Gender Gap in Local Governments Fany Yuval, Ben-Gurion University Do Diversity Strategies Promote Social Equity or the Bottom Line? Evidence from U.S. Federal Government Agencies David Pitts, American University Disc: Suzanne J. Piotrowski, Rutgers University, Newark Karen M. Hult, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 25-11 AGENDA SETTING AND POLICY CHANGE IN NEW CONTEXTS Daily Schedule Chair: Sheldon Kamieniecki, University of California, Santa Cruz Papers: Towards a General Theory of Agenda-Setting Stefaan Walgrave, University of Antwerp Brandon C. Zicha, Universiteit van Antwerpen Rens Vliegenthart, University of Amsterdam Multiple Lenses and Multiple Narratives in Public Policy: Are They Complementary or Contradictory? Paul Cairney, University of Aberdeen Norms and Public Policy: Toward a Better Theory of the Policy Process Leigh S. Raymond, Purdue University Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Leslie Friedman Goldstein, University of Delaware Ran Hirschl, University of Toronto Gary J. Jacobsohn, University of Texas, Austin George Thomas, Claremont McKenna College 29-3 Chair: Papers: Counterfactuals and Punctuated Equilibrium Theory: Finding Evidence of Policy Entrepreneurship in Policy Arenas Gordon Shockley, Arizona State University ELECTING WOMEN TO STATE AND LOCAL OFFICE Co-sponsored by 31-2 Susan B. Hansen, University of Pittsburgh The Initiative Process and the Election of Women in the States Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa Tracy Osborn, University of Iowa Alicia Mundy, University of Iowa Where are the Women? Strategically Moving South Carolina out of Last Place in Legislative Gender Representation Lynne E. Ford, College of Charleston How Change Happens: Explaining Civil Rights Policy Change Matt Grossmann, Michigan State University Disc: Frank R. Baumgartner, Pennsylvania State University Sheldon Kamieniecki, University of California, Santa Cruz Women and Politics in Cities: Determinants of the Descriptive Representation of Women in City Halls and Councils Adrienne Smith, Emory University Beth Reingold, Emory University 25-15 Chair: ’INTEREST GROUPS AND TRANSPARENCY IN THE Anthony D. Perl, Simon Fraser University State Effects and the Emergence and Success of Female Gubernatorial Candidates. Jason Windett, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Papers: Transparency as a Legitimation Strategy Alasdair S. Roberts, Suffolk University Law School Are Term Limits a Woman Candidate’s Friend? Stephen J. Stambough, California State University, Fullerton Valerie R. O’Regan, California State University, Fullerton Lobbying Regulation Across Four Continents: Promoting Transparency? Raj S. Chari, Trinity College, Dublin Gary Murphy, Dublin City University John W. Hogan, Dublin Institute of Technology The European Transparency Initiative: Does One Size Fit All Irina Michalowitz, European Doctoral College, Strasborg Following the Money: EU Funding of Civil Society Organizations Christine Mahoney, Syracuse University Michael Beckstrand, Syracuse University Disc: Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina Susan B. Hansen, University of Pittsburgh 29-13 Chair: GUBERNATORIAL POLITICS Margaret R. Ferguson, Indiana University-Indianapolis Papers: State Institutions and Their Distinct Effects on Decreases and Increases Within Budgets Christian Breunig, University of Toronto Chris Koski, James Madison University What Money Can’t Buy: Self-Financed Candidates in Gubernatorial Elections Adam R. Brown, Brigham Young University Transparency, Access and Influence: Regulating Lobbying in the UK Conor McGrath Disc: Anthony D. Perl, Simon Fraser University G. Grant Amyot, Queen’s University 26-7 JUDICIAL POLITICS IN THE EUROPEAN UNION Co-sponsored by 15-19 Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota Chair: Papers: European Courts and the Definition of the Juridical Boundaries of the European Union Alexander Panayotov, New York University Judicial Behavior behind Mask and Shield: Modeling the European Court of Justice Michael Malecki, Washington University in St. Louis The Rise of Adversarial Legalism in Europe R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Disc: Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota 27-4 Chair: ROUNDTABLE: CONSTITUTIONAL IDENTITY Gary J. Jacobsohn, University of Texas, Austin Part: John E. Finn, Wesleyan University Do Term Limits Matter? The Case of Gubernatorial Economic Policy Christopher Parker, Stony Brook University Make it Rain: The Politics of Gubernatorial requests for Presidents Disaster Aid Andrew Reeves, Boston University John Gasper, University of Pennsylvania Disc: Margaret R. Ferguson, Indiana University-Indianapolis Samuel H. Fisher, III, University of South Alabama 30-10 ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN CITIES Co-sponsored by 42-3 Teri Fair, Suffolk University Chair: Papers: The Local Ecology of New Social Movements Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago Is Lobbying Really Effective? A Field Experiment of Local Interest Group Strategies to Influence Elected Representatives in the UK Peter C. John, University of Manchester Liz Richardson, University of Manchester 325 Daily Schedule Judicial Selection and Women on High Courts in Europe: The Role of Selection Mechanisms and Party Quotas Valerie J. Hoekstra, Arizona State University Gender and the Gubernatorial Agenda Brianne Heidbreder, Kansas State University Kate Scheurer, University of North Dakota Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM From the Bottom Up: Building the Power of Working People at the Local Level Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay Robert A. Brown Understanding the Tactics of Refusal: The Relationship Between Autonomous Social Movements and Political Institution. Sean Parson, University of Oregon Disc: Elaine B. Sharp, University of Kansas 31-1 GENDER AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: NEW APPROACHS AND TOOLS Co-sponsored by 24-11 31-2 ELECTING WOMEN TO STATE AND LOCAL OFFICE Co-sponsored by 29-3 31-11 THEORIZING DIMENSIONS OF WOMEN’S EQUAL CITIZENSHIP Co-sponsored by 3-32 Linda C. McClain, Boston University Chair: Papers: Daily Schedule 32-21 PREJUDICE, RACISM, RACIAL THREAT, AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-22 34-5 COMPARING THE REPRESENTATIVE OUTCOMES OF INSTITUTIONAL DIFFERENCES William M. Downs, Georgia State University Chair: Papers: The Electoral Sweet Spot: Low-Magnitude Proportional Electoral Systems Simon Hix, London School of Economics John M. Carey, Dartmouth College The Surprisingly Majoritarian Nature of Proportional Democracy: Testing the Proposition that Small Parties have Disproportionate Influence Anthony J. McGann, University of California, Irvine The Politics of Institutional Choice: Evidence from Ballot Laws Jason M. Roberts, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis Stem Cells, Abortion, and Citizenship: A Feminist Approach to Equal Citizenship Nancy J. Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania Gender at the Margins of Contemporary Constitutional Citizenship Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania The Runoff Rule for the Election of the President in Latin America: Implications for Democracy Cynthia McClintock, The George Washington University Disc: Jill N. Wittrock, University of Oxford Arturas Rozenas, Duke University Feminism, Queer Theory, and Sexual Citizenship Maxine Eichner, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 35-9 Must Feminists Identify as Secular Citizens?: Lessons from Ontario Beverley Baines, Queen’s University Chair: THEME ROUNDTABLE: 2008 AND THE FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN PARTY COALITIONS Co-sponsored by T-17 Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame Women and the Bill of Rights Gretchen Ritter, University of Texas, Austin Disc: Melissa S. Williams, University of Toronto Linda C. McClain, Boston University 31-25 THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN Co-sponsored by 41-5 31-27 GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 47-4 32-6 RACE, ETHNICITY, POPULAR CULTURE AND POLITICS Tatishe Mavovosi Nteta, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Chair: Papers: Part: Paul R. Abramson, Michigan State University Paul Allen Beck, Ohio State University Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame Tasha S. Philpot, University of Texas at Austin Gary M. Segura, Stanford University 36-16 THE AMERICAN VOTER IN CONTEXT: NEIGHBORHOODS, SOCIAL ENVIRONMENTS, AND THE VOTE Robert M. Stein, Rice University Chair: Papers: Overcoming Prejudice? Muslim Americans and their Bumpy Ride in Presidential Politics Dino N. Bozonelos, University of California, Riverside Post-9/11 Politics and the Political Representation of Muslim Women in the West Melanie M. Hughes, University of Pittsburgh 326 Tatishe Mavovosi Nteta, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Battleground Suburbia: Race, Class and Shifting Political Ideology in American Suburbs Lorrie A. Frasure, University of California, Los Angeles The Racial Context in Presidential Elections Joel A. Lieske, Cleveland State University Edward B. Hasecke, Wittenberg University Shifting the Gender Gaze: The Intersection of Race and Gender in the Obama Candidacy Valeria Sinclair-Chapman, University of Rochester Local Context and Citizen Response to Government Action: Sources of Variation in Effects of Vietnam Draft Lottery Status on Voting Behavior Tiffany C. Davenport, Yale University Citizenship and Cultural Diversity: Building Trust, Developing Solidarity and Sharing Power Magdalena Dembinska, McGill University Disc: Do Preference Transfers assist Moderates in Deeply Divided Societies? Evidence from Northern Ireland and Fiji John Coakley, University College Dublin, Belfield Jon Fraenkel, Australian National University Disc: Charles L. Prysby, University of North Carolina, Greensboro 36-23 EUROPE AND ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 15-22 Matthew Gabel, Washington University, St. Louis Chair: Papers: Explaining Heterogeneity in European Union Issue Voting Erik R. Tillman, University of Nebraska Catherine E. De Vries, University of Amsterdam Daily Schedule Learning from the Polish Case: European Parliament Elections and Attitudes toward the EU in Central and Eastern Europe Simona Guerra, University of Nottingham Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Papers: Time and Punishment: An Analysis of the Relationship Between National and European Vote Choice Jonathan T. Polk, University of Georgia Ryan Bakker, University of Georgia Disc: Catherine E. De Vries, University of Amsterdam 36-32 UNDERSTANDING RECORD VOTER PARTICIPATION IN THE FRENCH ELECTIONS OF 2007 AND THE U.S. ELECTIONS OF 2008 Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 4 Jean-Yves Dormagen, Universite Montpellier 1 Chair: Papers: The U.S. and the R.O.K: The Popular Basis of a Security Friendship Giacomo Chiozza, Vanderbilt University Ajin Choi, Yonsei University National Pride, Personal Experiences and Incumbent Support: Public Perceptions towards Neighboring Countries in China, Japan and South Korea Min Shu, Waseda University Hidetoshi Nakamura, Waseda University Winning Muslim Hearts and Minds: Mapping Entrenchment of Anti-American Sentiment in the Islamic World Lisa A. Blaydes, Stanford University Drew Linzer, Emory University Voter Registration and Electoral Turnout : The French Case Braconnier Céline, Université de Cergy-Pontoise Opinion and Policy Beyond the Democratic West Cale Horne, University of Georgia The Return of the Voter: Voter Turnout in the 2008 Presidential Election Michael P. McDonald, George Mason University 39-7 Chair: WHEN SCIENCE BEGETS VALUES AND VICE VERSA Lada V. Kochtcheeva, North Carolina State University Electoral competition and turnout level. A comparative study Joel Gombin, Université de Picardie-Jules Verne Papers: Civic Responsibility and Human Overpopulation: Does Good Citizenship Require Having Fewer Children? Kris Aaron Beck, Gordon College How French Voters Make Their Choice in Presidential Elections: the 2007 French Electoral Panel Anne Muxel, CEVIPOF A Light Bulb Goes On: Values, Attitudes, Social Norms, and Personal Energy Consumption Toby Bolsen, Northwestern University Interest, Attention and Participation in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election: Anomaly or Brave New World? Costas Panagopoulos, Fordham University Disc: André Blais, Université de Montréal Nonna Mayer, CEVIPOF 37-2 VALUES Co-sponsored by 5-4 37-22 PREJUDICE, RACISM, RACIAL THREAT, AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 32-21 Racial Context is Factual, But is Racial Threat Partisan? Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Papers: Eschewing Solidarity: Understanding Anti-Immigration Attitudes Among Immigrants in Europe Aida Paskeviciute, University of Essex Absence of Prejudice or Political Correctness? Comparing Survey-Based Indicators of Racial Bias with the Implicit Association Test Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University Kyu S. Hahn, University of California, Los Angeles and Yonsei University Biotechnology and Power: Toward a Classical Liberal Bioethics Lauren K. Hall, Rochester Institute of Technology Truth or Consequences: Reason and Authority in Contemporary Politics Diana M. Judd, William Paterson University Risk Perceptions, Values, and Public Opinion on Global Warming Jacob Sohlberg, Stony Brook University Disc: Lada V. Kochtcheeva, North Carolina State University Lorelei Moosbrugger, University of California, Santa Barbara 40-2 THEME PANEL: WEB 2.0 AND SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE 2008 ELECTIONS AND BEYOND Co-sponsored by T-18 Antoinette Pole, Montclair State University Chair: Papers: The Impact of Racism on Votes in the 2008 Presidential Election: Results from the Associated Press/Yahoo News!/ Stanford Survey, the Stanford MRI Survey, and the American National Election Studies Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University Josh Pasek, Stanford University Yphtach Lelkes, Stanford University Omair Akhtar, Stanford University Trevor Tompson, The Associated Press Keith Payne, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Identity and Group Politics in the 2008 Presidential Candidate Websites Kimberly A. Mealy, APSA Cyberactivism in the Pre- and Post-Election Period of the Obama Administration Jongwoo Han, Syracuse University Ines A. Mergel, Syracuse University What if you had a choice? George (Bob) Robert Boynton, University of Iowa What is the Best Way to Measure the Bradley Effect? Lessons from the 2008 Election Reuben Kline, University of California, Irvine Deborah Schildkraut, Tufts University 37-23 COMPARATIVE PUBLIC OPINION I Hear America Texting and Other Themes for a Virtual Polis: Rethinking Democracy in the Global InfoTech Age Renee Marlin-Bennett, Johns Hopkins University Disc: Kenneth S. Rogerson, Duke University 327 Daily Schedule Emotions Underlying Contemporary Racial Threat; Anger or Fear Antoine J. Banks, University of Maryland Disc: Examining the Impact of Web 2.0 and Social Media on Political Participation and Civic Engagement in the 2008 Obama Campaign Derrick L. Cogburn, American University Fatima K. Espinoza Vasquez, Syracuse University Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM 41-5 Chair: Papers: THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN Co-sponsored by 31-25 Pamela K. Jensen, Kenyon College Gender, Pornography and the Politics of Liberal Individualism in DeLillo’s “Running Dog” Heather Hadar Wright, Wittenberg University Tom Wolfe’s Theory of Status and Freedom in American Democracy Carol L. McNamara, Utah State University 42-3 Revisiting Human Rights Discourse: The Challenge of Environmental Refugees to International Moral and Legal Norms Nicole Marshall, University of Alberta Towards a Decolonized Global Justice Based on International Human Rights Ariadna Estevez, UNAM Politics, Subversion, and Austen: The Case of Entail in Pride and Prejudice Kimberly L. Casey, University of Missouri, St. Louis Love and Politics in Antony and Cleopatra Mary Mathie, Baylor University Disc: Daily Schedule The Normativity of Human Rights is Self-Evident Amitai Etzioni, The George Washington University Disc: Shareen Hertel, University of Connecticut 46-14 REPRESSION AND PROTEST IN NON-DEMOCRATIC REGIMES Piero Stanig, Columbia University Chair: Papers: Lilly J. Goren, Carroll College Pamela K. Jensen, Kenyon College The Effects of Labor Standards on Export Performance in Lowand Middle-Income Countries Emmanuel Teitelbaum, George Washington University ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN CITIES Co-sponsored by 30-10 43-13 Chair: NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND THE COLD WAR Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University Papers: Does Nuclear Learning Occur? Evidence from the Cold War Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania Political Protest in Neo-liberal Jordan Jillian M. Schwedler, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Kevin Koehler, OSCE Academy in Bishkek Disc: Maria Inclan, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas 47-4 GENDER AND SEXUALITY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 31-27 Miriam Smith, York University Nuclear Weapons and the Origins of America’s Global Empire Sebastian Rosato, University of Notre Dame Domestic Coalitions, State Capacity and and the Politics of Nuclear Adjustment: Comparing Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia and the Southern Cone Nikolaos Biziouras, United States Naval Academy Chair: Papers: Did the Nuclear Taboo Matter? Keir A. Lieber, Georgetown University Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College Disc: Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University 44-15 ”NEW” SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND DEMOCRATIZATION Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico Chair: Papers: Enforcing Gender: The Constitution of Masculinity and Femininity in Prison Regimes Sarah X Pemberton, University of British Columbia Legislating Morality Through the Age of Consent: The Comparative Politics of Generation in Canada, the U.K and the U.S. Carol Dauda, University of Guelph Constructing the Patriarch in the Personal Responsibility Act Alexa DeGagne, University of Alberta Disc: Susan Gluck Mezey, Loyola University, Chicago Penny A. Weiss, Saint Louis University Whose in Charge?: Indigenous Politics, Green Mobilization and Multinational Mining Corporations in Ecuador Monique Segarra, Bard College 48-4 From Subjects to Citizens: The Contribution of HIV/AIDS Associations Toward Deepening Democracy in Southern Africa Kenly Greer Fenio, Virginia Tech University Chair: HEALTH POLICY, CROSSING NATIONAL BOUNDARIES, AND IDEOLOGICAL PARADIGMS Co-sponsored by 11-54 Thomas R. Oliver, University of Wisconsin Environmental Movements and the Development of Democracy: India and the Soviet Union Amy Forster Rothbart, University of Wisconsin, Madison Simanti Lahiri, University of Alabama Papers: Disc: Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico 45-9 Chair: NORMATIVE DIMENSIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS Basak Cali, University College London Papers: Obligations to Non-Citizens in a Globalizing World Barbara Buckinx, Brown University Cross-border Health Cooperation in Zones of Conflict William J. Long, Georgia Institute of Technology Changing Borders: The Complexities of Cross-Border Healthcare in the United States and European Union Miriam J. Laugesen, University of California, Los Angeles Arturo Vargas-Bustamante, UCLA Social Protest in Electoral Autocracies: Competition, Coercion, and Mexico’s Cycle of Indigenous Contention Guillermo Trejo, Duke University 328 Protest and Repression Cycles in Reformist Iran 1997-2001 Mirjam Künkler, Princeton University Funding Foci, Cost Effectiveness, and Recipients’ Priorities for Global Health: Are US Foundations More Responsive Than Official Development Assistance? Daniel E. Esser, American University Health and Canadian Foreign Policy: Canada’s Menu of Choices to Improve Global Drug Access Jillian Clare Kohler, University of Toronto Disc: Jeremy Youde, University of Minnesota, Duluth Daily Schedule Friday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Hegel Today Cyril O’Regan, University of Notre Dame Affiliate Group Meetings Midwest Political Science Association Understanding the Revolution in Philosophy David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEETING Related Group Panels Christians in Political Science Panel 3 Chair: RELIGION AND GLOBAL POLITICS Scott T. Waalkes, Malone College Papers: Explaining Illiberal Protestant Parties in the Developing World Samuel R. Greene, Catholic University of America Eastern Orthodoxy’s Relationship To The State And To Religious Tolerance: The Closer The Church Is To The State, The More Intolerant Of Other Religions They Both Are? David J. Meyer, George Fox University Christian Jihadists and the Middle East: the Problem and a Better Way William Scott Harrop, University of Virginia Disc: Disc: Harald Bergbauer, Munich School of Political Science Michael Allen Gillespie, Duke University French Politics Group Panel 4 UNDERSTANDING RECORD VOTER PARTICIPATION IN THE FRENCH ELECTIONS OF 2007 AND THE U.S. ELECTIONS OF 2008 Co-sponsored by 36-32 Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists Panel 3 Chair: NEW TRENDS IN CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY Yong Deng, U.S. Naval Academy Papers: Managing Sino-American relations in Chinese Foreign Policy Jianwei Wang, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point Mary B. Manjikian, Regent University Mark R. Amstutz, Wheaton College Coping with Internal and External Challenges in Chinese Foreign Policy in a Changing World Yufan Hao, University of Macau Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Media, Public Sphere and China Foreign Policy Ying Hou, University of Macau Panel 4 China and Vietnam in the Global Financial Crisis Brantly Womack, University of Virginia Chair: Part: ROUNDTABLE: THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION: FIRST SEVEN MONTHS John B. Kienker, Claremont Review of Books Brian T. Kennedy, Claremont Institute Charles R. Kesler, Claremont McKenna College Hadley Arkes, Amherst College James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia Comparative Urban Politics Panel 2 Chair: Papers: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus Panel 1 Chair: Papers: DECENTRALIZED GOVERNANCE AND SOCIAL INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 11-76 R. Alan Walks, University of Toronto, Mississauga Gender Mainstreaming in the European Union: Not for All? The EU’s Role in Healthcare Provision for Trans People Ryan Muncy Combs, University of Manchester The Instrumentalization of the LGBT Issue in Transdniester Julien Danero, Université Libre de Bruxelels Political Dynamics of Spatial Inequalities in Swiss Metropolitan Areas Urs Scheuss, University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland The Metropolitanization of Politics and the Restructuring of Urban Governance in Canadian Metropolitan Areas R. Alan Walks, University of Toronto, Mississauga Disc: The New Lure of Local Politics: Harvey Milk, Sean Penn and Sex in the City John Brigham, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Gay and Lesbian Adoptions: Next Battle of Rights Lynna Lan Tien Nguyen Do, Walden University Decentralized Governance and Metropolitan Social Inequality: An Analytical Framework with Applications to the United States Jefferey M. Sellers, University of Southern California Spatial Inequalities and Governance: Policies of Place-Equality in Brazil Marta Arretche, University of São Paulo EMERGING RIGHTS BATTLES: LGBT POLITICS TODAY Ronald L. Holzhacker, University of Twente The Evolution of Same-Sex Partnership Recognition in Brazil Shawn Richard Schulenberg, University of California, Riverside Disc: H. N. Hirsch, Oberlin College Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine Political Studies Association Panel 2 Chair: CHILDREN, JUSTICE, AND DEMOCRACY Pablo Gilabert, Concordia University Papers: Why Not to Worry about Enfranchising Children: The Joint Authorship of Laws Robert E. Goodin, Australian National University Joanne Lau, Australian National University Ronald K. Vogel, University of Louisville Eric Voegelin Society ASSESSING VOEGELIN’S CRITIQUE OF HEGEL Timothy Fuller, Colorado College Papers: Decrypt: Voegelin and Kojeve’s Hegel Barry Cooper, University of Calgary Reflections on Hegel’s Philosophy of Right Timothy Fuller, Colorado College History as Freedom? Voegelin’s Hegel Horst Mewes, University of Colorado, Boulder Justice and The Retreat from Educational Equality Colin Macleod, University of Victoria How Many Parents Can a Child Have? Philosophical Reflections on the “Three Parent Case” and Brighouse and Swift’s Argument for Parental Rights Samantha Brennan, University of Western Ontario The Just School Philip Andrew Cook, London School of Economics 329 Daily Schedule Panel 6 Chair: Friday, 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM Friday, 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM Daily Schedule Working Group: Citizenship and Migration Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 2 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 2 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 2 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 2 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 2 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 2 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics SESSION 2 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 2 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 2 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 2 Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 2 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Friday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics APSA Panel SESSION 2 Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global JOHN GAUS AWARD LECTURE: “THE TIES THAT BIND? NETWORKS, PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, AND POLITICAL SCIENCE” DELIVERED BY LARRY O’TOOLE, UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA SESSION 2 Affiliate Group Meetings Working Group: eLearning in Political Science Journal of Electoral Studies SESSION 2 Friday, 6:00 PM to 6:15 PM Section Business Meetings 38 Political Communication MENTORING MEETING APSA Events EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING Politics & Policy Journal BOARD MEETING Journal of Politics EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING Related Group Meetings Asian Pacific American Caucus Friday, 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Citizenship and Migration Christians in Political Science SESSION 2 BUSINESS MEETING Interpretive Methodologies and Methods Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 2 Latino Caucus in Political Science Working Group: Comparative Political Theory BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 2 Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes Women’s Caucus for Political Science SESSION 2 MEETING 2 330 Daily Schedule Section Business Meetings 2 Foundations of Political Theory BUSINESS MEETING 5 Political Psychology BUSINESS MEETING 7 Politics and History Friday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 2 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 2 11 Comparative Politics Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 2 BUSINESS MEETING 15 European Politics and Society BUSINESS MEETING 19 International Security and Arms Control Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 2 20 Foreign Policy Working Group: eLearning in Political Science BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 2 21 Conflict Processes BUSINESS MEETING 22 Legislative Studies BUSINESS MEETING 26 Law and Courts Friday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 1 BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science 36 Elections and Voting Behavior SESSION 1 BUSINESS MEETING 37 Public Opinion BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Comparative Political Theory SESSION 1 38 Political Communication Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 1 40 Information Technology and Politics Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives BUSINESS MEETING 45 Human Rights BUSINESS MEETING Friday, 6:15 PM to 7:45 PM Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 1 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis Working Group: Comparative Political Theory SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: Political Ethics Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 1 SESSION 2 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 1 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 2 SESSION 1 Working Group: Political Ethics Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 2 SESSION 1 331 Daily Schedule SESSION 2 Friday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM Daily Schedule Friday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM 36 Elections and Voting Behavior APSA Reception RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Political Psychology Organized Section APSA Events APSR EDITORIAL BOARD RECEPTION Private reception for the members of the American Political Science Review Editorial Board. 37 Public Opinion RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Political Psychology Organized Section 38 Political Communication Friday, 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM RECEPTION APSA Reception 40 Information Technology and Politics APSA Events RECEPTION HONORING TEACHING Sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha Affiliate Group Receptions Pi Sigma Alpha RECEPTION HONORING TEACHING SPONSORED BY PI SIGMA ALPHA Friday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM APSA Reception RECEPTION 45 Human Rights RECEPTION 47 Sexuality and Politics RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus and the APSA Committee on Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered (LGBT) Affiliate Group Receptions American University RECEPTION APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered in the Profession University of California, Berkeley RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Sexuality and Politics Organized Section and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus University of California, San Diego APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession RECEPTION RECEPTION RECEPTION University of Chicago Political Science Department RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Latino Caucus in Political Science Columbia University Section Receptions Cornell University Government Department 2 RECEPTION Foundations of Political Theory RECEPTION RECEPTION University of Houston 5 RECEPTION Co-sponsored by Rice University, Texas A&M University, and University of Texas at Austin Political Psychology RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior Organized Section 7 Politics and History Jack Miller Center RECEPTION RECEPTION University of Maryland Government and Politics 11 Comparative Politics RECEPTION RECEPTION Massachusetts Institute of Technology Political Science 19 International Security and Arms Control RECEPTION RECEPTION Co-sponsored by CAMOS University of Minnesota 20 Foreign Policy Princeton University Department of Politics RECEPTION Co-sponsored with Conflict Processes RECEPTION 21 Conflict Processes RECEPTION Co-sponsored with Foreign Policy RECEPTION Co-sponsored by University of Texas at Austin, University of Houston, and Texas A&M University 22 Legislative Studies Routledge RECEPTION RECEPTION TO CELEBRATE THE PUBLICATION OF THE FUTURE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND OUR OTHER NEW TITLES 24 Public Administration RECEPTION 26 Law and Courts RECEPTION 31 Women and Politics Research Section RECEPTION FOR WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION Co-sponsored by the Women’s Caucus for Political Science and the Cambridge University Press-Politics & Gender Journal 332 RECEPTION Rice University Rutgers University RECEPTION Stanford University RECEPTION Texas A&M University RECEPTION Co-sponsored by Rice University, University of Texas at Austin, and University of Houston Daily Schedule Friday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM University of Texas at Austin Saturday, 7:30 AM to 8:30 AM RECEPTION Co-sponsored by Rice University, University of Houston, and Texas A&M University APSA Meetings University of Wisconsin-Madison RECEPTION Yale University APSA Events RELATED GROUP ORGANIZER MEETING Saturday, 7:30 AM to 9:00 AM RECEPTION APSA Meetings Related Group Receptions APSA Events British Politics Group JOURNAL EDITORS’ BREAKFAST RECEPTION Affiliate Group Meetings Christians in Political Science Polity RECEPTION EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING Committee for Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the International Security and Arms Control Organized Section European Consortium for Political Research RECEPTION Interpretive Methodologies and Methods RECEPTION Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM APSA Panel APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession Panel 1 Chair: ROUNDTABLE ON THE 2008 NATIONAL ASIAN AMERICAN SURVEY Janelle Wong, University of Southern California Latino Caucus in Political Science RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Latino/as Part: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Caucus RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Sexuality and Politics Organized Section and the APSA Committee on Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered (LGBT) Division Panels T-20 THEME ROUNDTABLE: NEW WAVES IN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Co-sponsored by 2-44 T-21 THEME PANEL: CITIZENS’ ASSEMBLIES AND DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by 34-7 T-22 THEME PANEL: “FORGOTTEN PARTNERSHIP” REMEMBERED: U.S.-CANADA RELATIONS 25 YEARS LATER Co-sponsored by 49-8 1-10 RAWLS AND THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL LIBERALISM David L. Schaefer, College of the Holy Cross Women’s Caucus for Political Science RECEPTION FOR WOMEN IN THE PROFESSION Co-sponsored by the Women and Politics Research Organized Section and the Cambridge University PressPolitics & Gender Journal Friday, 10:00 PM to 11:30 PM Affiliate Group Receptions Harvard University Department of Government RECEPTION Quarterly Journal of Political Science RECEPTION Syracuse University RECEPTION Natalie Masuoka, Tufts University S. Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California, Riverside Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern California Chair: Papers: Related Group Receptions The Missing History of Political Liberalism Andrew D. Lister, Queen’s University French Politics Group Rawls’s Humean Moment Stephen Adam Seagrave, University of Notre Dame RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the French Embassy, CEVIPOF, AFSP, Sciences Po Bordeaux, and PSA-UK Rawls on Bodin: Comprehensive Doctrines and Political Liberalism Arun Abraham, University of Pennsylvania Saturday, September 5, 2009 Affiliate Group Receptions RWJF Scholars in Health Policy Research Program RECEPTION Stephen L. Newman, York University 1-26 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THOUGHT: PERSPECTIVES ON THE STATE OF NATURE Fred R. Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame Chair: Papers: Sage Kings & the State of Nature: Comparative Preconditions and the Social Contract Jon D. Carlson, University of California, Merced The Politics of Essence in Taoist and Enlightenment Conceptions of the State of Nature Eric Goodfield, American University in Cairo 333 Daily Schedule Saturday, 7:00 AM to 8:30 AM Disc: Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Daily Schedule State of Nature, Absolute-Universalism and Civic-Republicanism: A Comparison on Han Feizi’s ‘Shi’ and Machiavelli’s ‘Prince’ Shaojin Chai, University of Notre Dame 3-27 I’d Rather Just Devolve, Thank You: Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and an Ambiguous State of Nature Stefan Paul Dolgert, Duke University Chair: Disc: Russell Arben Fox, Friends University 2-23 Chair: NIETZSCHE Cynthia Halpern, Swarthmore College Papers: Self-knowledge, Instincts, and Individuality in Nietzsche’s Philosophy Roberto Alejandro, University of Massachusetts-Amherst The End of Morality at the End of History: Nietzsche and Heidegger’s Views on the Values of the Age James Pontuso, Hampden-Sydney College Disc: Corey L. Brettschneider, Brown University James E. Fleming, Boston University Part: Jack Knight, Washington University in St. Louis Eric Beerbohm, Harvard University Elizabeth Beaumont, University of Minnesota Stephen Macedo, Princeton University 4-8 AGGREGATION OF PREFERENCES AND INFORMATION Elizabeth Maggie Penn, Harvard University Chair: Papers: Nietzsche, Empire, and the Critique of Modernity: Politics Beyond the State Paul E. Kirkland, College of the Holy Cross Michelle Tolman Clarke, Dartmouth College Sean Noah Walsh, University of Florida 2-38 Chair: PLATO AND POLITICAL LIFE Gerald Mara, Georgetown University Papers: Legislative Innovation and Conservatism in Plato’s Magnesia Ryan Balot, University of Toronto Knowing Theaetetus Andrew Hertzoff, California State University, Sacramento The Evasive Gadfly: The Strangeness of Socratic Activity Joel Alden Schlosser, Duke University Disc: Arlene W. Saxonhouse, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 2-44 THEME ROUNDTABLE: NEW WAVES IN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Co-sponsored by T-20 Christopher F. Zurn, University of Kentucky Chair: Part: Amy Allen, Dartmouth College Lawrence Hamilton, University of KwaZulu-Natal Ajume H. Wingo, Ajume H. Wingo Mika LaVaque-Manty, University of Michigan Kevin Olson, University of California, Irvine 3-9 Chair: DEMOCRACY AND COLLECTIVE WISDOM Peter C. Stone, Stanford University Papers: Democratic Reason: Why the Many are Smarter than the Few and Why It Matters Helene E. Landemore, Yale University An Aristotelian Middle Way Between Deliberation and Independent-Guess Aggregation Josiah Ober, Stanford University Deliberation, Influence, and Democratic Choices Scott E. Page, University of Michigan Disc: 334 Stephanie Julie Novak, Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris The Banks Set and the Uncovered Set under Supermajority Decision Rules Reuben Kline, University of California, Irvine Post-Electoral Bargaining in Parliamentary Systems Daniel Diermeier, Northwestern University Pride and Sexual Friendship: The Battle of the Sexes in Nietzsche’s Post-Democractic World Lisa Uhlir-Yancy, Tarrant County College Disc: THE COMPLEXITIES OF SECURING RIGHTS AND DEMOCRACY: A ROUND TABLE ON COREY BRETTSCHNEIDER’S Elizabeth Beaumont, University of Minnesota The Undercut Procedure: An Algorithm for the Envy-Free Division of Indivisible Items Marc Kilgour, Wilfrid Laurier University Steven J. Brams, New York University Christian Klamler, University of Graz Information Aggregation and Social Learning in Majority Rule Settings Soenke Ehret, Free University of Berlin Information Aggregation Properties of Agenda Procedures Scott Moser, Oxford University Disc: John W. Patty, Harvard University 5-8 Chair: INFORMATION PROCESSING Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis Papers: A Dual-Process Model of Political Judgment Howard Lavine, SUNY, Stony Brook Christopher David Johnston, SUNY, Stony Brook Marco R. Steenbergen, University of Berne Thinking about Immigration: A Multi-Method Study of Individual Differences in Political Cognition Shawn W. Rosenberg, University of California, Irvine Leah A. Hemze, University of California, Irvine The Cognitive Foundations of Temporal Discounting in Public Policy Scott Matthews, Queen’s University Alan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia Why Do We Use Race and Gender When Policy Information Is Available? Nathan A. Collins, Santa Fe Institute Disc: Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis 5-14 BIOLOGY, GENETICS, AND POLITICS Co-sponsored by 37-12 6-2 COMPARATIVE SUBNATIONAL POLITICS AND POLITICAL ECONOMY IN ASIA Co-sponsored by 11-12 6-5 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF TRADE AGREEMENTS AND TRADE INSTRUMENTS: NEW INSIGHTS INTO CAUSES AND EFFECTS Co-sponsored by 16-3 Daily Schedule 6-14 Chair: Papers: THE LOBBYING OF BUSINESSES, BANKERS AND AGENCIES Oleg Kodolov, Kent State University What Firms Really Want: Evidence from Germany, Japan, and the United States Michael A. Witt, INSEAD Gordon Redding, INSEAD Business Interests and the Exchange Rate: Preferences over Adoption of the Euro in Britain Ophelia Eglene, Harvard University Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM 9-7 IMPROVING STUDENT LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE COURSES Co-sponsored by 10-7 10-7 IMPROVING STUDENT LEARNING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE COURSES Co-sponsored by 9-7 Charles C. Turner, California State University, Chico Chair: Papers: How Do Bankers Lobby? Empirically Examining the Policy Influence of Private Financial Institutions Kevin Young, London School of Economics The Elusive Quest for Learning: Intensive Analytical Writing in Large Lecture Undergraduate Courses Baris Kesgin, University of Kansas Alexandria J. Innes, University of Kansas Catherine Weaver, University of Texas, Austin Intergovernmental Lobbying in U.S. Federal Agencies Scott H. Ainsworth, University of Georgia Erik Kinji Godwin, Texas A&M University Kenneth Godwin, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Disc: Joachim Wehner, London School of Economics 7-12 Chair: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND THEIR TACTICS Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University Papers: The Modern Presidency and Social Movements: the Allegiances and Rivalries that Reform Politics Make Sidney M. Milkis, University of Virginia Dan Tichenor, University of Oregon Running Simulations Without Ruining Your Life: Simple Ways to Incorporate Active Learning into Your Teaching Rebecca Glazier, University of California, Santa Barbara What Students Tell Us About Doing Research Bruce Pencek, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Scott G. Nelson, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Craig Leonard Brians, Virginia Tech Political Economy, Pedagogy and Student Enthusiasm Theresa Reidy, University College Cork Peer Evaluation in the Political Science Classroom Michael K. Baranowski, Northern Kentucky University Kimberly Weir, Northern Kentucky University Patience and Manly Virtue: First-Class Citizenship Rights as Men’s Rights Julie L. Novkov, SUNY, Albany Disc: Leanne C. Powner, College of Wooster Quentin Kidd, Christopher Newport University State Constitutions as Tools for Educational Change Emily Zackin, Princeton University 11-12 COMPARATIVE SUBNATIONAL POLITICS AND POLITICAL ECONOMY IN ASIA Co-sponsored by 6-2 Kevin Morrison, Cornell University Innovation Edges, the Mobilization of Bias, and the Evolution of Political Campaigns: Modeling Changes in Campaigning over Time David A Karpf, University of Pennsylvania Chair: Disc: Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University Decentralization, Indonesia-Style Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University Maria Monica Wihardja, Cornell University 8-8 Chair: ADVANCES IN PANEL/TSCS/MULTILEVEL MODELS Robert W. Walker, Washington University, St. Louis Striking the Right Balance: Economic Concentration and Subnational Politics in Indonesia and the Philippines Christian Von Luebke, Stanford University Papers: Correct Confidence Intervals for Time-Invariant and Rarely Changing Variables in Panel Data: A Bootstrap Approach Jonathan Michael Bischof, Harvard University Why Authoritarian Leaders Sometimes Empower the Public in Authoritarian Regimes: Learning from Local Variations across China Mayling Birney, Princeton University Causal Inference of Repeated Observations: A Synthesis of Propensity Score and Multilevel Modeling Methods Jeronimo Cortina, University of Houston Yu-Sung Su, CUNY, Graduate Center Measuring Accountability in Authoritarian Legislatures: The Representativeness of Vietnamese National Assembly Delegates Edmund J. Malesky, University of California, San Diego Paul J. Schuler, University of California, San Diego Interaction Effects of Electoral Systems, Ethnic Heterogeneity and Time in 20 democracies. The Use of multilevel models. Patrick Vander Weyden, University of Ghent Bart Meuleman, Catholic University of Leuven Electoral Incentives and Municipal Government Consolidation in Japan Kyohei Yamada, Yale University Yusaku Horiuchi, Australian National University Jun Saito, Yale University Modeling Unbalanced Discrete Time-Series Cross-Section Data: Serial Dependence, Heterogeneity and Spatial Correlation Xun Pang, Washington University Disc: Vera Eva Troeger, University of Essex 8-16 ESTIMATING IDEAL POINTS IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 22-7 Disc: Kevin Morrison, Cornell University Lynette H. Ong, Harvard University 11-23 INTER-ETHNIC CONTACT AND VIOLENCE: FROM POGROMS AND RIOTS TO WAR AND GENOCIDE Co-sponsored by 43-2 R. William Ayres, IV, Elizabethtown College Chair: Papers: Threat Framing, Ethnic Demographics, and Xenophobic Violence in Russia Mikhail A. Alexseev, San Diego State University 335 Daily Schedule “Dirty Pool” Revisited: Applying Randomization Tests to the “Democratic Trade” Hypothesis Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University Pablo Martin Pinto, Columbia University Kelly T Rader, Columbia University Papers: Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Constructing Inter-Ethnic Conflict and Cooperation: the Role of State Institutions and Nationality Policy Diana Dumitru, Moldova State Pedagogical University Carter R. Johnson, University of Maryland Daily Schedule Papers: State Capacity and Human Development Outcomes Michael Bernhard, University of Florida Simone Dietrich, Pennsylvania State University Taxes, Institutions and Local Governance: Evidence from a Natural Experiment in Colonial Nigeria Daniel Berger, New York University Who Riots? Explaining Individual Participation in Ethnic Violence Alexandra L. Scacco, Columbia University Disc: Marc Howard Ross, Bryn Mawr College Complexity and Change: On the Relationship of Decentralization and Good Governance Veerle van Doeveren, Leiden University 11-38 RESACRALIZING IMAGINED COMMUNITIES: RETHINKING RELIGION AND NATIONALISM George T. Crane, Williams College On the Incentives to Experiment in a Decentralized Authoritarian Regime: The Politics of Labor Policy Reform in China Chelsea Chia-chen Chou, Cornell University Hans Han-Pu Tung, Harvard University The Impossibility of Confucian Nationalism George T. Crane, Williams College Examining Sources of Conflicts Behind Institutional Change: The Case of Turkish Regulatory Reforms Since 1999 Umit Sonmez, London School of Economics and Political Science Chair: Papers: Nationalizing Protestantism In China Carsten Vala, Loyola University Maryland Sex and the Sacred: Contraception, Catholicism and the Construction of Filipino National Identity Since 1986 Jonathan T. Chow, University of California, Berkeley Haven Nationalism: Secular Elitism and the Challenges of Religious Revival in Turkey, Israel and Pakistan Sener Akturk, Harvard University/Koc University, Istanbul Adnan Naseemullah, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Daniel Berger, New York University 12-35 CHANGING BUSINESS - STATE RELATIONS IN THE EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES IN DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Co-sponsored by 11-59 Unequal Bargains: Corporate Social Responsibility and Changing Business - State Relations in Africa’s Extractive Industries John R. Heilbrunn, Colorado School of Mines Papers: “Nationalism and Religion: Explaining the Radicalization of Separatist Movements” Gregory D. Miller, University of Oklahoma Kuhika Gupta, University of Oklahoma Disc: Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison 11-45 Chair: TRANSPARENCY, INFORMATION AND GOVERNANCE Susan J. Pharr, Harvard University Papers: The Process of Adoption of Freedom of Information Laws: A Nested Logit Model Manuel Balan, University of Texas, Austin The Impact of the Changing Relationship between FIs and Host Governments on Fiscal Regimes in the 20th Century Pauline Jones Luong, Brown University Political Risk and the Resource Curse Nathan Jensen, Washington University, St. Louis Local Direct Investments of Foreign Mining Companies in Peru Cecilia Perla, Brown University Disc: Michael L. Ross, University of California, Los Angeles 12-40 DEMOCRATIZATION, STATE STRENGTH AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: NEW EMPIRICAL AND CONCEPTUAL HORIZONS Co-sponsored by African Politics Conference Group, Panel 1 Richard Joseph, Northwestern University The Surrender of Secrecy? Explaining the Strength of Transparency and Access to Information Laws Robert Gregory Michener, University of Texas at Austin Freedom of Information Laws: Causes and Consequences Thomas C. Ellington, Wesleyan College The Effectiveness of Freedom of Information Legislation in East and Central Europe Alexandru Grigorescu, Loyola University Chicago Chair: Papers: The Impact of Quality of Government as Impartiality: Theory and Evidence Jan Teorell, Lund University Disc: Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia Jeeyang Rhee Baum, Harvard University 11-59 CHANGING BUSINESS - STATE RELATIONS IN THE EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES IN DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Co-sponsored by 12-35 11-75 IS THERE A MULTIMETHOD CONSENSUS IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 46-5 12-29 Chair: 336 STATE CAPACITY AND CHANGE: NATIONAL AND LOCAL LEVELS Richard R. Marcus, California State University, Long Beach The Consequences of Political Inclusion: A Report from Contemporary Africa Carl LeVan, American University Strong States are Good for Business: Democracy, Market and State Capacity in Africa Scott D. Taylor, Georgetown University Toward Further Democratic Stateness in Sub-Saharan Africa: Conceptual and Empirical Challenges. John W. Harbeson, CUNY, City University of New York Disc: Richard Joseph, Northwestern University 13-9 THE POSTCOMMUNIST DEMOCRATIC EXPERIMENT TWENTY YEARS AFTER 1989: TRAJECTORIES AND ASSESSMENTS Luba Racanska, St John’s University Chair: Papers: Creating Democratic Polities and Market-Oriented Economies in Post-Communist Europe: Understanding Large-Scale Political and Economic Change David R. Cameron, Yale University Daily Schedule Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Chair: Mark S. Manger, London School of Economics Papers: Origins Matter: When Expanding Democracy Does Not Expand Welfare Christine S. Lipsmeyer, Texas A&M University Not all PTAs are Equal: Credible Commitment through PTAs and their Effects on Trade Soo Yeon Kim, University of Maryland Raymond Hicks, Princeton University The Devil’s Advocate? Party Politics and the Churches after 1989. Anna M. Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan Trading Freely and Fairly: Distinguishing Sincere versus Insincere Fair Trade States Moonhawk Kim, University of Colorado, Boulder Democratic Revolutions in Post-Communist Europe, Post-Soviet Eurasia and Central Asia Christian William Haerpfer, University of Aberdeen Disc: Matthew A. Light, University of Toronto 14-14 Papers: ANTI-AMERICANISM Anti-Americanism and the Financial Crisis Sophie Meunier, Princeton University Explaining the Spread of Regional Trade Agreements: The Role of Trade and Investment Diversion Andreas Duer, University College Dublin Leonardo Baccini, Trinity College Dublin Vertical Trade Integration and the Formation of North-South PTAs Mark S. Manger, London School of Economics The Economic Consequences of Anti-Americanism Monti Narayan Datta, University of California Davis The Microfoundations of the Diffusion of Capital Account Liberalization Alexandra G. Guisinger, University of Notre Dame Nancy Brune, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Anti-Americanism and International Cooperation in East Asia Byong-Kuen Jhee, Chosun University Framing, Diplomacy and Anti-Americanism in Central Asia Edward Schatz, University of Toronto at Mississauga Renan Levine, University of Toronto Disc: Giacomo Chiozza, Vanderbilt University 15-6 THE HISTORICAL TURN IN DEMOCRATIZATION STUDIES: LESSONS FROM EUROPE Co-sponsored by 44-8 Peter A. Hall, Harvard University Chair: Disc: Megumi Naoi, University of California, San Diego B. Peter Rosendorff, New York University 16-14 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON BILATERAL INVESTMENT TREATIES: A DISAGGREGATED ANALYTICAL APPROACH Co-sponsored by 17-2 Todd L. Allee, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Chair: Papers: Papers: The Historical Turn in Democratization Studies Daniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard University Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University The Popularity of BITs Re-Considered: The Case of Pakistan Lauge Skovgaard Poulsen, London School of Economics The Founding of the French Third Republic Stephen E. Hanson, University of Washington Ratification Matters: The Domestic Fate of Bilateral Investment Treaties Yoram Z. Haftel, University of Illinois-Chicago Modes of Inclusion and Exclusion: The Political Sociology of Regime-Type in Interwar East-Central Europe Jeffrey Kopstein, University of Toronto Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley Settling Investment Disputes in Latin America: Who Needs the ICSID? Daniela Campello, Princeton University Picking a Fair Fight: Why Elites Choose to Hold Fair Elections Nancy Bermeo, Oxford University Disc: Andrew C. Gould, University of Notre Dame 15-18 RETHINKING PARTY POLITICS IN COMPARATIVE WELFARE STATE RESEARCH Robert Kent Weaver, Georgetown University Chair: Papers: Homes States and Bilateral Investment Treaties in the 1970s and 1980s :The Strategic Appeal of Private-Actor Standing Suzanne Katzenstein, Columbia University The Long and the Short of BIT: How Domestic Institutions Shape Preferences over the Length and Precision of Bilateral Investment Treaties Daniel Blake, The Ohio State University Todd L. Allee, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Alison E. Post, University of California, Berkeley Unequal Risk: Partisan Politics and Welfare Reform in the United States and Britain Fiona Ross, University of Bristol 16-30 ACCOUNTABILITY, CREDIBILITY, AND CAPTURE OF NGOS IN GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 17-14 Political Parties, Blame Avoidance, and Welfare State Change Karen M. Anderson, Radboud University Nijmegen 17-2 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON BILATERAL INVESTMENT TREATIES: A DISAGGREGATED ANALYTICAL APPROACH Co-sponsored by 16-14 17-14 ACCOUNTABILITY, CREDIBILITY, AND CAPTURE OF NGOS IN GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 16-30 Peter A. Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego Party Competition and Reforms of Unemployment Benefits in Italy and Germany Georg Picot, University of Milan Why Do Left Parties Cut Back on Welfare? A Socio-Structural Explanation Silja Haeusermann, University of Zurich Disc: Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University 16-3 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF TRADE AGREEMENTS AND TRADE INSTRUMENTS: NEW INSIGHTS INTO CAUSES AND EFFECTS Co-sponsored by 6-5 Chair: Papers: A Household Name: How Amnesty International’s Principles Became Human Rights Norms Wendy Wong, University of Toronto 337 Daily Schedule Disc: Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Searching for Partners: Questions of Accountability and Credibility between Foreign Aid Donors and Local NGOs Carew Boulding, University of Colorado, Boulder Credible Certification: The Politics of Investment, Child Labor, and Watch-Dog Groups Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University Explaining Variation in States’ Battlefield Effectiveness in Interstate Wars Caitlin Talmadge, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 18-12 HOSTILE TERRITORY? IN SEARCH OF COMMON GROUND IN THE THEORETICAL AND POLICY DEBATES ON MILITARY PRIVATIZATION Deborah Avant, University of California, Irvine Can’t Go To War Without Them, Can Win With Them -Conuterinsurgency and Private Security Companies Ulrich Petersohn, RAND Corporation Democratic Peace, or Democratic Pocketbook? The Impact of the Private Security Industry on the Democratic Peace and the Democratic Advantage Molly Clark Dunigan, RAND Corporation Who is a Mercenary? The Private Security Industry: A Changing Normative Landscape Jennifer Catallo, University of Toronto Supply and demand aspects of regulating non-Anglophone PMSCs Olivia Allison Disc: Sarah V. Percy, University of Oxford 18-32 THE NPT AT WORK Co-sponsored by 19-10 18-33 UNIFYING ANALYSES OF CIVIL AND INTERSTATE WAR Co-sponsored by 21-6 19-10 Chair: Papers: Unipolar, Multipolar or Globalized? The International Political Economy of American Weapons Acquisition Jonathan D. Caverley, Northwestern University Ethan B. Kapstein, INSEAD Disc: Stuart Griffin, King’s College London 20-8 THE ISRAEL LOBBY AT 2. Co-sponsored by 43-4 Michael C. Desch, Notre Dame University Chair: Disc: Stephen M. Walt, Harvard University John J. Mearsheimer, University of Chicago Part: Jerome N. Slater, SUNY, University at Buffalo Tony Smith, Tufts University John Mueller, Ohio State University 21-6 UNIFYING ANALYSES OF CIVIL AND INTERSTATE WAR Co-sponsored by 18-33 Distinctions Without Differences?: Comparing Civil and Interstate Wars David E. Cunningham, Iowa State University Douglas Lemke, Pennsylvania State University Papers: The Size of War: Does It Matter Theoretically? You Bet It Does! Brandon G. Valeriano, University of Illinois, Chicago John A. Vasquez, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Battle Deaths, Duration and the Nature of Combat: Distinguishing Low and High Intensity Warfare Havard Strand, PRIO THE NPT AT WORK Co-sponsored by 18-32 Christopher Way, Cornell University International Enforcement of International Nonproliferation Treaties” Robert L. Brown, Temple University Conventional Arms and Influence within the NPT Regime Jennifer L. Erickson, Cornell University Cheating Honestly: Exit Versus Predation in the Nonproliferation Regime Matthew Fuhrmann, University of South Carolina Jeffrey D. Berejikian, University of Georgia “New wars”: the revolution in the ability of governments to win interstate and civil wars Gary Goertz, University of Arizona Disc: Robert Harrison Wagner, University of Texas, Austin 21-20 DOMESTIC INSTITUTIONS AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Michael T. Koch, Texas A&M University Chair: Papers: The Political Geography of the AQ Khan Network and Implications for the Non-Proliferation Regime Justin Hastings, Georgia Institute of Technology Disc: Christopher Way, Cornell University Matthew Kroenig, Georgetown University 19-18 Chair: DEVELOPING MILITARY CAPACITIES Daniel S. Geller, Wayne State University Democratic Peace Revisited: It Is Veto Players George Tsebelis, University of Michigan Seung-Whan Choi, University of Illinois, Chicago Democracy and the Treatment of Prisoners of War Geoffrey Wallace, Cornell University Proportional Doves, Majoritarian Hawks: Government Structure and Conflict Initiation Taehee Whang, Texas A&M University Mark Andreas Kayser, University of Rochester When Allies Go Nuclear: the Use of Security Leverage and the Changing Nature of the American Response to ‘Friendly’ Nuclear Programs Maria N. Zaitseva, Cornell University 338 The Inverse Effects of Military Innovations Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin Cassy Dorff, University of Texas, Austin From Recipients to Participants: African States in Contemporary Multinational Military Operations Katharina P. Coleman, University of British Columbia Janice Gross Stein, University of Toronto Peter A. Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego Papers: Papers: Which Monitors are Credible? Reputation, Signaling, and International Election Monitoring Susan Dayton Hyde, Yale University Disc: Chair: Daily Schedule A Logic of Diversionary-Peace Sung-Ju Cho, University of Virginia Disc: Michael T. Koch, Texas A&M University 22-7 ESTIMATING IDEAL POINTS IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 8-16 Daily Schedule Chair: Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University Papers: Estimating Dynamic Legislator Positions from Speech Burt L. Monroe, Pennsylvania State University Kevin M. Quinn, Harvard University Michael P. Colaresi, University of Colorado, Boulder Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Courting Democracy? High Courts and Regime Dynamics in Post-Transition South America Diana Kapiszewski, University of California, Irvine Judicial Insulation as an Obstacle in the Fight Against Corruption Maria Popova, McGill University Estimating Proposal and Status Quo Locations Using Voting and Cosponsorship Data Michael Peress, University of Rochester Curbing the Courts: Latin American Lessons on Curtailing Judicial Independence Matthew M. Taylor, University of São Paulo Estimating Party-Free Ideal Points in the U.S. Congress Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester Fang-Yi Chiou, Academia Sinica Nicole Asmussen, University of Rochester Courts as Losers: The Impact of Constitutional Crises on Judicial Power in Russia and Ukraine Alexei Trochev, University of Wisconsin, Madison Houses in Motion: Getting to the Unidimensional Congress 1953-2004 Michael Tofias, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Michael J. Ensley, Kent State University Scott de Marchi, Duke University Disc: Lee Epstein, Northwestern University 27-11 Electoral Pressure and Policy Change: Conversion or Replacement? Shawn Treier, University of Minnesota Chair: NEOLIBERAL PENALITY AND SHIFTING INSTITUTIONAL NORMS OF RESPONSIBILITY Co-sponsored by 25-18 Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University Disc: Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown University 23-13 Chair: THE PRESIDENT AND THE BUREAUCRACY Andrew C. Rudalevige, Dickinson College Papers: George W. Bush and Presidential Control of the Bureaucracy: An Assessment David M. Hedge, University of Florida “The Administrator Shall Consider”: Controlling the Basis of Agency Choice Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester Executive Review of Agency Rulemaking Melanie M. Marlowe, Miami University Ryan J. Barilleaux, Miami University A Theoretical and Empirical Analysis of Cabinet Turnover in the United States Alejandro Quiroz-Flores, New York University Papers: Safety Culture and Tropes of Neoliberalism Susan Silbey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Responsibility and Choice: Their Place in Neoliberal Penality Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Cornell University From MaCaulay to Malimath: The Problem of the Police in India Keally DeAnne McBride, University of San Francisco Disc: Uday Mehta, Amherst College Mariana Valverde, University of Toronto 28-5 FEDERALISM, MEDICAID, AND CHANGING MODES OF SOCIAL SERVICE DELIVERY Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University Chair: Papers: Shifting Politics, Enduring Tensions, and the Continuity of Senate-confirmed Agency Appointees Patrick S. Roberts, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University Matthew M. Dull, Virginia Tech Sang Ok Choi, Virginia Tech Disc: 24-13 25-18 25-22 Chair: Papers: Long on Promise, Short on Delivery?: Political intent, policy implementation and state capacities for Medicaid reforms Eldon Grant Porter, Columbia University Disc: Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University 29-9 PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 35-2 Rachael Vanessa Cobb, Suffolk University Chair: Papers: EXPLAINING SEX EQUALITY POLICY: RELIGION, ECONOMICS, MOVEMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 31-13 When Do Party Elites Democratize?: The Direct Primary in Pennsylvania, 1842-1906 Kaori Shoji, Gakushuin University COURTS IN CRISIS AND TRANSITION: LATIN AMERICAN AND POST-COMMUNIST STATES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Lee Epstein, Northwestern University Weak Courts, Risky Judges: Why Do High Courts Invite Political Retribution? Gretchen Helmke, University of Rochester Jeffrey Staton, Emory University The Dynamic Relationship Between State Party Organizational Strength and Electoral Success Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas, Dallas Daily Schedule 26-2 NEOLIBERAL PENALITY AND SHIFTING INSTITUTIONAL NORMS OF RESPONSIBILITY Co-sponsored by 27-11 Intergovernmental Management by Network: Mental Retardation/ Developmental Disabilites, Federal to Local Robert Agranoff, Indiana University Medicaid and the Funding of Nonprofit Service Organizations Scott W. Allard, University of Chicago Steven Rathgeb Smith, University of Washington Robert F. Durant, American University Andrew C. Rudalevige, Dickinson College PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND URBAN GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 30-16 Neoliberal Penality: The Birth of Natural Order, the Illusion of Free Markets Bernard E. Harcourt, University of Chicago A network analysis of state party committee strength Andrew Waugh, University of California, San Diego Party Strength and Activity and Women’s Political Representation at the Local Level Melody Crowder-Meyer, Princeton University Disc: John A. Clark, Western Michigan University 339 Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Rachael Vanessa Cobb, Suffolk University 30-16 Chair: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND URBAN GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 24-13 Arnold Fleischmann, Eastern Michigan University Daily Schedule Disc: Major G. Coleman, SUNY, New Paltz Andrew L. Aoki, Augsburg College 33-2 EVANGELICAL POLITICAL THOUGHT AND NATURAL LAW Co-sponsored by Christians in Political Science, Panel 1 Kevin J. Cooney, Union University Chair: Papers: Is All Collaboration the Same? Metropolitan Contracting and Coordination for Social Services Karen Mossberger, University of Illinois, Chicago Rebecca Hendrick, University of Illinois, Chicago Jennifer M. Benoit-Bryan, University of Illinois, Chicago Evangelical Antipathy and the Natural Law Tradition Bryan T. McGraw, Wheaton College Cultural Apologetics, Natural Law, and Evangelical Political Thought Jesse D. Covington, Westmont College Michigan Local Government Approaches to Fiscal Challenges and Economic Development: Nurturing an “Innovation Ecosystem” Debra Horner, University of Michigan Righteousness and Rights: Toward a Legal Worldview of Evangelical and Fundamentalist Christians Linda Veazey, University of Houston Jason E. Whitehead, California State University, Long Beach Disc: Todd Swanstrom, University of Missouri, St. Louis 31-13 EXPLAINING SEX EQUALITY POLICY: RELIGION, ECONOMICS, MOVEMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 25-22 Patricia Boling, Purdue University Papers: Evangelical Political Thought, Scripture, and Natural Law Micah J. Watson, Union University Intermunicipal Partnerships: Environmental Constraints and Civic Capital in Cooperation for Regional Economic Development Jen Nelles, University of Toronto For Mayors, the Future Is Now: Professionalization of the American Mayoralty, 1801-1980 Scott A. MacKenzie, University of California, Davis Chair: Papers: Disc: Mark David Hall, George Fox University 34-7 THEME PANEL: CITIZENS’ ASSEMBLIES AND DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY Co-sponsored by T-21 R. Kenneth Carty, University of British Columbia Chair: Papers: Constituent Assemblies: Anti-Democratic in Nature Kelby Carter, University of Western Ontario Look Who’s Talking: Deliberation and Social Influence Alice Siu, Stanford University Defining Equality:The Politics of Women, Land and Tradition in Kwazulu, South Africa Jennifer Yvette Terrell, New School for Social Research Using Citizens Assemblies to Reform the Process of Democratic Reform J.H. Snider, iSolon.org Advancing Reproductive Rights in Conservative Gender Regimes Debora Lopreite, Carleton University Investigating the Economic Determinants of Gender Equality Policy Agendas Francesca Gains, University of Manchester Claire Annesley, University of Manchester Should We Let Citizens Decide? Lessons from Citizen Assemblies Patrick Fournier, Université de Montréal R. Kenneth Carty, University of British Columbia Jonathan Rose, Queen’s University The Influence of Religion on Women’s Rights Policies in Africa Alice Kang, University of Wisconsin, Madison Citizen Assemblies and the Global Recession Hilary Pearse, Victoria University of Wellington The Equal Employment Opportunity Law in Japan ; Twenty Years of Progress? Joyce Gelb, CUNY-Graduate Center Disc: Dennis F. Thompson, Harvard University Andre Bächtiger, University of Bern Disc: Merike Blofield, University of Miami Isabelle Engeli, European University Institute 35-2 PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-9 31-23 GENDER AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-20 35-6 32-3 PAN-ETHNICITY, EXPLORING NEW HORIZONS IN IDENTITY Harwood K. McClerking, Ohio State University THE POLITICS OF PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS Co-sponsored by 36-7 Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona Chair: Papers: The Social and Political Consequences of Asian American Panethnicity Kathy Rim, University of California, Irvine Latino Public Opinion: Does It Exist? David L. Leal, University of Texas, Austin Endogenous Pan-Ethnicity: Parties, Politics and American Latino Identity Ali Adam Valenzuela, Stanford University Panethnicity as both a Dependent and Independent Variable: Asian American and Latino Cases Tae Eun Min, University of Iowa 340 Chair: Papers: Early State Primary Momentum: Media Hype or Reliable Cue? Dino P. Christenson, The Ohio State University Corwin D. Smidt, Michigan State University The Consequences of Open Presidential Primaries Michael G. Hagen, Temple University Richard G.C. Johnston, University of Pennsylvania Healing the Rifts: Intraparty Factionalism at the 2008 Presidential Nominating Conventions Michael T. Heaney, University of Florida Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Seth E. Masket, University of Denver Daily Schedule Politics in Motion: Dynamics of Presidential Primaries, 1972 2008 Martin Cohen, James Madison University David Karol, University of California, Berkeley Hans Noel, University of Michigan Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Papers: The Gender Gap & the Use of Force: An Experimental Approach Deborah Jordan Brooks, Dartmouth College Benjamin A. Valentino, Dartmouth College Disc: Seth E. Masket, University of Denver Barbara Norrander, University of Arizona Public Opinion on Gender and Racial Policy: The Politics of Rights and Roles, Rights and Separation Nancy Burns, University of Michigan Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 36-7 THE POLITICS OF PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS Co-sponsored by 35-6 The Hidden Role of Gender Beliefs in Shaping Political Cognition Nicholas Winter, University of Virginia 36-26 Chair: ELECTORAL VOLATILITY Robin E. Best, Leiden University Papers: The Volatile American Voter: Unstable Voting Behavior in American Presidential Elections, 1948-2004 Arthur Beckman, CUNY-Graduate Center Measuring Electoral Volatility in MMD/SNTV Systems: A Candidate-Level Analysis Dennis P. Patterson, Texas Tech University Frank C. Thames, Texas Tech University Taylor McMichael, Texas Tech University Royce Wu, Texas Tech University Philip Van Praag, University of Amsterdam Towards a New Regionalization of National Politics? A Comparative Exploration of Spain, Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands Kris Deschouwer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Disc: 37-12 Chair: Papers: “Mortgage Moms” and “More Responsible Fathers”: Parenthood and Issue Attitudes in the 2008 Presidential Election Laurel Elder, Hartwick College Steven Greene, North Carolina State University Gender, Conflict Avoidance, and Social Network Usage Paul A. Djupe, Denison University Anand E. Sokhey, Ohio State University Disc: Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley Tracy L. Steffy, CUNY Graduate Center 37-25 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: TALKING TOGETHER: PUBLIC DELIBERATION AND POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 38-6 38-6 Chair: AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: TALKING TOGETHER: PUBLIC DELIBERATION AND POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 37-25 Katherine Cramer Walsh, University of Wisconsin, Madison Disc: Simone Chambers, University of Toronto Part: Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota Michael X. Delli Carpini, University of Pennsylvania Fay Lomax Cook, Northwestern University Archon Fung, Harvard University Diana C. Mutz, University of Pennsylvania 38-15 COMMUNICATING AND FRAMING POLITICAL IDENTITIES Hyun Jung Yun, Texas State University Robin E. Best, Leiden University Zeynep Somer-Topcu, Vanderbilt University BIOLOGY, GENETICS, AND POLITICS Co-sponsored by 5-14 Rose McDermott, Brown University The Neural Basis or Representation John R. Hibbing, University of Nebraska, Lincoln John R. Alford, Rice University Genetic and Environmental Transmission of Value Orientations Carolyn L. Funk, Virginia Commonwealth University Kevin B. Smith, University of Nebraska, Lincoln John R. Alford, Rice University Matthew V. Hibbing, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Pete Hatemi, University of Iowa Robert Krueger, Washington University in St. Louis Lindon J. Eaves, Virginia Commonwealth University John R. Hibbing, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Chair: Papers: Racial Framing in Coverage of the 2008 Presidential Election Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington University Johanna Harvey, George Washington University Claire Low, George Washington University Genes, Anxiety, and Heuristics Chris Dawes, University of California, San Diego Genetic Covariation between Survey Response Style and Personality Levente Littvay, Central European University Matthew V. Hibbing, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign The Impact of Political Campaigns on the Nascent Partisanship of Mexican Immigrants in the United States: Evidence from Two Mobilization Experiments James A. McCann, Purdue University Katsuo A. Nishikawa, Trinity University Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue University Michael W. Wagner, University of Nebraska Ira H. Carmen, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 37-20 GENDER AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 31-23 Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Like Parents, Like Citizens: Mexican Children’s Political Socialization Juan Enrique Huerta, ITESM Young Voters in the U.S. and Turkey: The Changing Landscape of Political Attitudes, Media Use and Individual Traits. M. Selcan Kaynak, Bogazici University Disc: Daniel C. Hallin, University of California, San Diego 341 Daily Schedule The Relationship Between Political Preferences, Fear, Trust, and Psychopathologies Pete Hatemi, University of Iowa Rose McDermott, Brown University Disc: Racial Discourse in Political Advertisements: An Historical View Stephen Maynard Caliendo, North Central College Charlton D McIlwain, New York University Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM 42-7 Chair: Papers: Daily Schedule RECONSIDERING RESISTANCE: CONTESTED SITES FOR POLITICAL CHANGE Dorinda Tetens, CUNY-Graduate Center Battles Over Bathrooms: Sexual Difference and Intimate Public Space Jennifer Gaboury, CUNY-Graduate Center What’s at Stake in US-China Relations? Interpretation, Discourse Analysis and the “Responsible Stakeholder” Debate Eric M. Blanchard, University of Southern California Disc: Jeremy Menchik, University of Wisconsin 49-8 THEME PANEL: “FORGOTTEN PARTNERSHIP” REMEMBERED: U.S.-CANADA RELATIONS 25 YEARS LATER Co-sponsored by T-22 Carol Wise, University of Southern California Explaining Variation in Elites’ Mobilization of Women Fighters in the Horn of Africa Lisa Boswell Sharlach, University of Alabama, Birmingham Rethinking “the People” in the Age of Chávez George Ciccariello-Maher, Drexel University Hearing the Voice of the People: Human Rights as if People Mattered Jose Miguel Cruz, Vanderbilt University Brooke A. Ackerly, Vanderbilt University Infrapolitics: Race, Class and the Political Relevance of Resistance Jamila D. Celestine Michener, University of Chicago Chair: Part: Greg Anderson, University of Alberta Earl Fry, Brigham Young University Patrick James, University of Southern California Christopher M. Sands, Hudson Institute Charles F. Doran, Sr., The Johns Hopkins University Related Group Panels African Politics Conference Group Disc: Jennifer Leigh Disney, Winthrop University Robin J. Hayes, PhD, Santa Clara University 43-2 INTER-ETHNIC CONTACT AND VIOLENCE: FROM POGROMS AND RIOTS TO WAR AND GENOCIDE Co-sponsored by 11-23 Association of Chinese Political Studies 43-4 THE ISRAEL LOBBY AT 2. Co-sponsored by 20-8 Panel 1 Chair: CHINA, THE UNITED STATES, AND GLOBAL ORDER Brantly Womack, University of Virginia 44-8 THE HISTORICAL TURN IN DEMOCRATIZATION STUDIES: LESSONS FROM EUROPE Co-sponsored by 15-6 Papers: China’s Second Ascent and International Relations Theory James C. Hsiung, New York University 45-6 CONCEPTUAL INNOVATIONS IN HUMAN RIGHTS THEORIZING Richard P. Hiskes, University of Connecticut Chair: Part: 46-5 Chair: Part: Panel 1 Understanding the Fallout in Sino-American Relations Over the 1999 Belgrade Embassy Bombing Gregory J. Moore, Eckerd College Peaceful Rise, Responsible Stakeholder: A Constructivist Explanation of Improving Sino-American Relations Ramon Pacheco Pardo, London School of Economics & Political Science David L. Cingranelli, SUNY, Binghamton Jack Donnelly, University of Denver Mark P. Gibney, University of North Carolina-Asheville Shareen Hertel, University of Connecticut Richard P. Hiskes, University of Connecticut Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University IS THERE A MULTIMETHOD CONSENSUS IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS? Co-sponsored by 11-75 Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania Michael J. Coppedge, University of Notre Dame Yoshiko M. Herrera, University of Wisconsin, Madison Evan S. Lieberman, Princeton University Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Dan Slater, University of Chicago Energy, Environmental, Public Health, and Food Safety Risks in China: Consequences for US-China Relations Elizabeth Wishnick, Montclair State University China’s Rise and the Challenges of Regulatory Globalization Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago Disc: Chair: Papers: MEANING, DISCOURSE AND AGENCY IN POLITICAL LIFE Chris Mantzavinos, Witten/Herdecke University How to Explain ‘Meaningful’ Actions Chris Mantzavinos, Witten/Herdecke University Imagination, political science, and agency Brendan Jerome Hogan, New York University Designing Conversational Interviews for Phronetic and Causal Analyses: The Constitution in the Everyday Lives of Ordinary Americans J. Mitchell Pickerill, Washington State University 342 Brantly Womack, University of Virginia Ja Ian Chong, Princeton University British Politics Group Panel 3 Chair: Papers: 46-18 DEMOCRATIZATION, STATE STRENGTH AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: NEW EMPIRICAL AND CONCEPTUAL HORIZONS Co-sponsored by 12-40 MEASUREMENT AND ELECTORAL BEHAVIOUR IN THE UK Paul Cairney, University of Aberdeen How Political is Civic Engagement? A Case Study of the United Kingdom Using a Multilevel Latent Class Analysis David John Cutts, University of Manchester Paul Widdop, University of Manchester Katey Matthews, University of Manchester Becoming Independent, Becoming Partisan? A Latent-Class Analysis of Partisan Identification in Britain Thomas John Scotto, University of Essex Malcolm Brynin, University of Essex Political Autonomy and Public Preferences in Scotland and Wales: Conceptualisation, Measurement and Modelling Roger Scully, Aberystwyth University Christopher J. Carman, Strathclyde University Daily Schedule The First Casualty of the End of Conflict? The Death of Class Politics in Northern Ireland Jonathan Tonge, University of Liverpool Disc: Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Chair: Joel J. Kassiola, San Francisco State University Papers: Ecological Citizenship, Time, and Corruption: Aldo Leopold’s Biotic Republicanism Peter Francesco Cannavo, Hamilton College Robert Johns, University of Strathclyde Nonidentity, Equity and Exploitation Matthew Rendall, University of Nottingham Christians in Political Science Panel 1 EVANGELICAL POLITICAL THOUGHT AND NATURAL LAW Co-sponsored by 33-2 Why Participatory Deliberative Democracy and Sustainable Development Need Each Other - Toward a Transformative Green Politics Breanna Maria Forni, University of Maryland Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Limits of Freedom and the Freedom of Limits: Responding to the Extinction Crisis Jason Lambacher, University of Washington, Seattle Panel 12 THE RECENT TERM OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT Chair: Ryan P. Williams, Claremont Graduate University Part: Robert Alt, The Heritage Foundation David R. Upham, University of Dallas Ralph A. Rossum, Claremont McKenna College Anthony A. Peacock, Utah State University Thomas Karako, Claremont Graduate University Disc: Harlan Wilson, Oberlin College Japan Political Studies Group Panel 3 Chair: THE INTERACTION OF DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY IN JAPAN Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Panel 3 Chair: Papers: TRANSNATIONALISM AND TAIWAN’S ROLE IN THE WORLD Vincent Wei-cheng Wang, University of Richmond Papers: Inside the Castle Gates: The Effects of Foreign Firms on Policymaking in Japan Kenji Kushida, University of California, Berkeley Economic Statecraft in the Global Era: A Study of the Effects of China’s Favor-Granting and Businessmen-Coopting Policy Shu Keng, National Chengchi University Comparative Responses to Financial Market Crises Kay Shimizu, Columbia University Values, Instrumentality and US Strategy: Change and continuity in US perceptions and policies towards Taiwan Joshua Su-Ya Wu, Ohio State University Liberalization and Firm Demands for Trade Protection: the Case of Japanese Petroleum Llewelyn Hughes, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Taiwan’s Voluntary Compliance with International Norms of Climate Change: instrumental adaptation or socialization Hsiao-Chi Hsu, University of Washington, Seattle Across the Pacific: Taiwanese / Chinese Abroad and Homeland Politics Pei-te Lien, University of California, Santa Barbara Da-Chi Liao, National Sun Yat-sen University Disc: Educating Future Non-Citizens: The National, International, and Sub-National Politics of Foreign Residents’ Education in Japan Ken Haig, University of California, Berkeley Disc: William W. Grimes, Boston University Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego The Becoming of Immigrants from Outsiders to In-Betweeens: The National Identity of Immigrants in Taiwan Nian-tzu Cheng, University of London, SOAS Politica: Study of Medieval Political Thought Chyungly Lee, National Chengchi University Yuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan University Chair: Eric Voegelin Society Panel 3 Chair: VOEGELIN AND THE ANCIENTS Paul Caringella, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace Papers: The Gnostic and the Spoudaios: Voegelin, Aristotle and the Art of Pneumotaxonomy Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin, Madison Panel 1 Papers: OBEDIENCE, HIERARCHY, AND AUTHORITY IN THE MIDDLE AGES Gerson Moreno-Riano, Regent University Legislative authority in the later Middle Ages Noah Dauber, Harvard University St. Anselm and the Paradox of Justice Alex S. Tuckness, Iowa State University John M. Parrish, Loyola Marymount University ‘[A] dog’s obey’d in office’: Authority and Natural Hierarchy in Aquinas Leonard Donald Gordon Ferry, University of Toronto Harvey Brown, University of Western Ontario Voegelin’s Reading of Plato’s Philebus Bernat Torres Morales, Hermeneutica i Platonisme Josep Monserrat Molas, Hermenèutica i Platonisme Disc: Aristophanic Themes in the Republic Zdravko Planinc, McMaster University Saturday, 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM Voegelin on Aristotle’s “Science of the Polis” Jacqueline L. Pfeffer Merrill, St. John’s College American National Election Studies Daily Schedule Disc: The Political Economy of Energy Efficiency: Japan’s Efficiency Gains in Comparative Perspective Phillip Y. Lipscy, Stanford University Affiliate Group Meetings PUBLIC MEETING Ron Srigley, Thorneloe University Timothy Fuller, Colorado College Green Politics and Theory Panel 2 ECOLOGY, EQUITY, AND DEMOCRACY 343 Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Daily Schedule Disarming the Philosophers: Savonarola and Machiavelli’s Critiques of Natural Philosophy Rebecca Jean McCumbers, University of Notre Dame Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM APSA Panel APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession Panel 1 Part: BLACK FACULTY RECRUITMENT AND RETENTION: THE IMPACT OF THE ECONOMIC CRISIS Angela K. Lewis, University of Alabama, Birmingham Clarissa Peterson, DePauw University Michael O. Adams, Texas Southern University Linda D. Smith, Texas Southern University Disc: Haig Patapan, Griffith University 2-1 ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES TULLY’S ‘PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW KEY’ Co-sponsored by 1-1 2-13 THE PEOPLE JUDGE Co-sponsored by 3-2 Kirstie M. McClure, University of California, Los Angeles APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered in the Profession Chair: Panel 2 Chair: HETEROSEXUAL POLITICAL SCIENCE? Paul A. Passavant, Hobart & William Smith Colleges Papers: Papers: “What’s Wrong with Being Sexy?” Why Political Science Needs to Get Serious About Sexuality Alesha E. Doan, University of Kansas By Means of Decision and Judgment: The Collective Wisdom of the Popular Constituent Power Andreas Kalyvas, New School University Who is Judge? Locke and Kant on Political Judgment and Right of Resistance Miguel E. Vatter, Universidad Diego Portales Bentley was Right: The Significance of LGBT Politics for Political Science Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas Reflections on the Contribution of LGBT Political Studies to the Study of Politics Gary Mucciaroni, Temple University Gay, Straight, or Questioning? Sexuality and Political Science Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine Disc: Martha A. Ackelsberg, Smith College APSA Task Force on U.S. Standing in the World Panel 1 Chair: ROUNDTABLE: U.S. STANDING IN WORLD AFFAIRS Jeffrey W. Legro, University of Virginia Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University Part: Aaron L. Friedberg, Princeton University Martha Finnemore, George Washington University John R. Ruggie, Harvard University Theda Skocpol, Harvard University Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University Peter Trubowitz, University of Texas, Austin Division Panels T-23 THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA AND THE CITIES Co-sponsored by 30-14 and 28-7 1-1 Chair: ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES TULLY’S ‘PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW KEY’ Co-sponsored by 2-1 Duncan Ivison, University of Sydney Disc: James Tully, University of Victoria Part: David Armitage, Harvard University Rainer Forst, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University Anthony Simon Laden, University of Illinois at Chicago 1-20 Chair: Papers: MACHIAVELLI’S METHODS FOR ADDRESSING “POLITICS IN MOTION” Haig Patapan, Griffith University 344 Popular Rule and Democratic Usurpation Bryan Garsten, Yale University Disc: Kirstie M. McClure, University of California, Los Angeles 2-36 Chair: CITIZENSHIP AND CIVIC CULTURE Benjamin McKean, Princeton University Papers: Soft Borders: Complex Interdependencies and Multi-scalar Associations Julie Mostov, Drexel University Eros, Philia and Periclean citizenship. Rachel Templer, Goucher College Cosmopolitan virtues and public acts Anand Bertrand Commissiong, West Texas A&M University Disc: Jennet Kirkpatrick, University of Michigan 2-40 NATURE, SCIENCE, AND DEMOCRACY AFTER BRUNO LATOUR Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Chair: Papers: Bruno Latour and the Symmetries of Science and Politics Mark B. Brown, California State University, Sacramento ‘Faitiche’-izing the People: What Representative Democracy might learn from Science Studies Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan Testing Powers of Engagement: Sustainable Living Experiments, the Object Turn, and the Undoability of Public Involvement Noortje S. Marres, Oxford Institute for Science, Innovation and Society Cosmopolitics, not a Democracy of Things: On Latour’s Political Theory in “Politics of Nature” Michael Nordquist, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Disc: William Chaloupka, Colorado State University 2-49 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON STANLEY HAUERWAS AND ROMAND COLES, CHRISTIANITY, DEMOCRACY, AND THE RADICAL ORDINARY Co-sponsored by 33-4 3-2 THE PEOPLE JUDGE Co-sponsored by 2-13 “Life of Castruccio Castracani”: Machiavelli as Historian, Poet, and Politician Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame The Fortune of Machiavelli’s Unarmed Prophet John T. Scott, University of California, Davis Criticism from Within: Anti-democracy in the Age of Democracy Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University Daily Schedule 3-16 Chair: Papers: Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM CREATING THE CONDITIONS FOR A DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY Ronald Terchek, University of Maryland, College Park Becoming Red and Blue: Education, Productivity and American Voting Lucy M. Goodhart, Columbia University Is Spin Bad? An Analysis of Rhetorical Manipulation Nathaniel Klemp, Pepperdine University The Extension of the Franchise and Political Behavior in Victorian Britain Torun Dewan, London School of Economics Samuel Berlinski, University College, London Does Democracy Presuppose a Secular Public Sphere? Four Arguments Ian Ward, University of Maryland Endogenous Preferences: The Political Consequences of Economic Institutions Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, London School of Economics Two Trust-Based Uses of Mini-Publics in Democracy Mark E. Warren, University of British Columbia Are Poor Voters Easier to Buy Off with Money? A Natural Experiment from the 2004 Florida Hurricane Season Jowei Chen, University of Michigan Democracy Counts Sofia Nasstrom, Stockholm University Disc: 4-6 Papers: Casiano A.W. Hacker-Cordón, Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales WARFIGHTING WITHIN AND ACROSS NATIONS Suicide Terrorism and the Weakest Link Brian Roberson, Miami University Dan Kovenock, University of Iowa Daniel Arce, University of Texas, Dallas Disc: Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San Diego 7-10 THE POLITICAL ANALYSIS OF POLICY DEVELOPMENT Jacob S. Hacker, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Papers: Unsustainability of Equal Opportunity: the Development of the Higher Education Act, 1965-2007. Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University Deondra Rose, Cornell University Uncertainty and Incentives in Mediation Mark Fey, University of Rochester Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University An Experimental Investigation of Colonel Blotto Games Dan Kovenock, University of Iowa Roman M. Sheremeta, Purdue University Subhasish Modak Chowdhury, Purdue University The Delegated State: Marketizing Governance of American Social Provision. Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institue of Technology Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington University A Dynamic Theory of War Initiation and Termination Yoji Sekiya, University of Rochester When Policy Does Not Remake Politics: The Limits of Policy Feedback. Eric M. Patashnik, University of Virginia Julian E. Zelizer, Princeton University Bargaining Chips: Allocating Power in International Politics. Thomas Chadefaux, University of Michigan Disc: Adam H. Meirowitz, Princeton University 5-16 POLITICAL TRUST Co-sponsored by 37-18 6-9 THE POLITICS OF FINANCIAL CRISES: RESPONSES TO THE 2007-2009 CRISIS IN COMPARATIVE AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 16-24 Benjamin J. Cohen, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Papers: Interests, Institutions, and Incentives to Delay Adjustment: Why Policymakers Fail to Address Early Signs of Trouble Stefanie Walter, Harvard University Disc: Jacob S. Hacker, University of California, Berkeley 7-19 PRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 23-2 8-6 QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 45-1 Amanda Marie Murdie, Emory University Chair: Papers: Interest Group Influence in Authoritarian States: Comparing Chinese Responses to the Crises of 1998 and 2008 David A. Steinberg, Northwestern University Using the Zero-Inflated Ordered Probit in a Pooled CrossSectional Time-Series Setting to Clarify the Political Economy of the Ratification of, and Compliance with, Human Rights Treaties Will H. Moore, Florida State University Bumba Mukherjee, Pennsylvania State University At the Edge of Liberty: Proximity and Diffusion in the Human Rights Space Christopher J. Fariss, University of California San Diego Keith E. Schnakenberg, San Diego State University How the 2007-2009 Global Financial Crisis Taught Europeans to Love the Euro Patrick Leblond, University of Ottawa Sara Binzer Hobolt, Oxford University 1925 Return to Gold: Keynes and Mr Churchill’s Economic Crisis James Ashley Morrison, Middlebury College The Theoretical Benefits of Policy-Focused Analysis Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley Measuring Transitional Justice and Human Rights Byung-Jae Lee, University of Texas, Austin Disc: Clair Apodaca, Florida International University Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard University Benjamin J. Cohen, University of California, Santa Barbara 8-15 NEW APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 21-17 6-20 Chair: THE ECONOMICS OF VOTING BEHAVIOR David Hugh-Jones, Max Planck Institute of Economics 11-5 Papers: Who Swings? Income and Unequal Voting Behavior Seth J. Hill, University of California, Los Angeles THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION Co-sponsored by 16-1 Idean Salehyan, University of North Texas Chair: Daily Schedule Disc: 345 Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Papers: Don’t Want to Live with No Refugees David Leblang, University of Virginia Daily Schedule Papers: Citizenship Policy in Global Perspective Jeannette Money, University of California, Davis Jennifer C. Seely, Earlham College Party Nationalization and Institutions Scott Morgenstern, University of Pittsburgh Stephen M. Swindle, Lee University Temporal and Spatial Patterns in District-Level Party Support Thomas Mustillo, Indiana U Purdue U Indianapolis Sarah Mustillo, Purdue University A Million Little Gestures: Individual Transnational Aid and Political Stability Richard W. Frank, Binghamton University Party Organizations and Electoral Performance in PostCommunist Europe Margit Tavits, Washington University Where Did Everybody Go? Migration as a Form of Export-Led Growth Cali Mortenson Ellis, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor Timm Betz, Universitat Pompeu Fabra The Europeanisation of Electoral Politics: An Analysis of Converging Voting Distributions in 30 European Countries, 1970-2008 Daniele Caramani, University of St. Gallen Politics When He’s in the U.S. and She Isn’t: The Political Economy of Migration, Gender Roles, and Women’s Political Participation Jorge Bravo, UCLA National Parties and Sub-National Party Systems: An Analytic Perspective Applicable to Bolivia and Ecuador Simón Pachano, FLACSO Disc: Idean Salehyan, University of North Texas Disc: Pradeep Chhibber, University of California, Berkeley 11-17 CIVILIAN TARGETING DURING CIVIL WAR: EXPLORING SUB-NATIONAL VARIATION Co-sponsored by 12-2 Alexander B. Downes, Duke University 11-56 THE NEW BUSINESS POLITICS IN DEVELOPING AND POST-SOCIALIST COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 12-24 11-61 CHINA AND INDIA AS DEVELOPMENTAL MODELS?: THE CONCEPTUAL CHALLENGES AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF THE CHINESE AND INDIAN DEVELOPMENTAL PATHS Co-sponsored by 12-37 11-63 TAX ME IF YOU CAN: RENEWED STATE-BUILDING AND REVENUE EXTRACTION IN POST-COMMUNIST EUROPE Co-sponsored by 13-6 11-66 THE POLITICS OF INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 14-10 12-2 CIVILIAN TARGETING DURING CIVIL WAR: EXPLORING SUB-NATIONAL VARIATION Co-sponsored by 11-17 12-24 THE NEW BUSINESS POLITICS IN DEVELOPING AND POST-SOCIALIST COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 11-56 Kent Eaton, University of California, Santa Cruz Chair: Papers: Direct and Indirect Violence against Civilians in Internal Conflict Laia Balcells, Yale University Loss Frames and Deliberate Civilian Targeting in the Angolan War, 1961-2002 Jennifer Ziemke, John Carroll University Military Empowerment and Civilian Targeting in Civil War Juan Fernando Vargas, Universidad del Rosario Displacement and Collective Violence in Civil Wars: Evidence from Colombia Abbey Steele, Yale University Disaggregating Civilian Casualties in Civil War: Targeting Patterns in Sri Lanka Lisa Hultman, Uppsala University Jannie Lilja, Uppsala University Disc: Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 11-34 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HEALTH Co-sponsored by 48-1 Marcus Alexander, Harvard University Chair: Chair: Papers: Entrepreneurs and Parties in Democratic Latin America: A Newfound Vocation for Politics William T. Barndt, University of California, Riverside Do Electoral Systems Have an Impact on Population Health? Arzu Akkoyunlu-Wigley, Hacettepe University Out of Chaos? Business Elites and the Rule of Law in Russia Jordan Luc Gans-Morse, University of California, Berkeley Death and Politics: How Partisanship and Inequality Shape Health in the OECD Marcus Alexander, Harvard University From Who Knows Whom to Who Owns Whom? The Impact of Corporate Ownership on State and Market Building Roger Schoenman, University of California, Santa Cruz Diffusion and Democratic Politics: The Rise and Fall of the National Health Service Model Katerina Linos, Harvard University The Fragmentation of Business Interest Representation in Contemporary Mexico Steven T. Wuhs, University of Redlands Disc: Matthew C. Harding, Stanford University 11-48 MODELING PARTY PERFORMANCE OVER TIME AND SPACE Thomas Mustillo, Indiana U Purdue U Indianapolis 346 Business Support for Opposition in African Elections Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California, Berkeley Do Electoral Systems Have an Impact on Population Health? Simon Wigley, Bilkent University Poor Health at High Cost? The Effects of Wealth and Institutions on Mortality in Advanced Democracies Matthew C. Harding, Stanford University Carlos Lamarche, University of Oklahoma Chair: Papers: Disc: Antoinette Handley, University of Toronto Kent Eaton, University of California, Santa Cruz 12-37 CHINA AND INDIA AS DEVELOPMENTAL MODELS?: THE CONCEPTUAL CHALLENGES AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF THE CHINESE AND INDIAN DEVELOPMENTAL PATHS Co-sponsored by 11-61 Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison Chair: Daily Schedule Papers: Friends, Family, or Foreigners? The Political Economy of Remittances and Diasporic FDI in India and China Kellee S. Tsai, Johns Hopkins University Transporting Models of Special Economic Zones: Comparing SEZs in India and China Aseema Sinha, University of Wisconsin, Madison Nayantara Mukherji, University of Wisconsin, Madison Varieties of Asian Capitalism and Federalism: Comparing the Politics of Indian and Chinese Securities Finance Matthew Rudolph, Georgetown University Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM 14-16 WELFARE STATE AND INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 15-8 15-7 FRANCE AND EUROPE: A REKINDLED AFFECTION? Co-sponsored by French Politics Group, Panel 3 Francesca Vassallo, University of Southern Maine Chair: Papers: Leadership in the European Union: Understanding France’s Influence in the Trio Council Presidency Colette Grace Mazzucelli, New York University Sarkozy in Charge: The 2008 French Presidency of the European Union Francesca Vassallo, University of Southern Maine The Illusions of a China Model: China, Latin America and the “Beijing Consensus” Matthew Glen Ferchen, Tsinghua University When Bolkestein is Trapped by the French Anti-Liberal Discourse: A Discursive Institutionalist Account of the French Position on the EU Services Directive Amandine Crespy, Université libre de Bruxelles The Policy and Political Implications for the Developing World of China’s Global Hybrid Model of Development Douglas Fuller, University of London, King’s College Tartuffe or Steamroller? France in the making of EU Health Policy Scott L. Greer, University of Michigan Disc: Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison 12-45 THE NEW ROLE OF COURTS IN LATIN AMERICA: ARBITERS OF POLITICAL CONFLICTS OR ACTIVE DEFENDERS OF RIGHTS? Co-sponsored by 26-3 Disc: Didier Georgakakis, IEP Strasbourg James G. Shields, University of Warwick 12-48 IT’S NOT EASY GOING GREEN Co-sponsored by 39-8 15-8 12-50 VARIETIES OF PRESIDENTIALISM IN LATIN AMERICA: ORIGINS, SCOPE AND CONSEQUENCES Co-sponsored by 44-18 Chair: WELFARE STATE AND INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 14-16 Sofia A. Perez, Boston University 13-6 TAX ME IF YOU CAN: RENEWED STATE-BUILDING AND REVENUE EXTRACTION IN POST-COMMUNIST EUROPE Co-sponsored by 11-63 Scott G. Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin, Madison Chair: Papers: Papers: The Political Foundations of Inequality in Post-Industrial Capitalist Democracies Duane H. Swank, Marquette University Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University Welfare State Institutions, Production Regimes and Preferences for Redistribution in Advanced Industrial Countries Daniel Stegmueller, University of Nijmegen International Leverage vs. Institutional Mimicry: Explaining Tax Reform in Eastern Europe Gerald M. Easter, Boston College Policy Transformation and Pension Regime in Comparative Perspective Hiroshi Araki, Sakushin Gakuin University Politics and the Flat Tax in Post-Communist Europe Hilary Appel, Claremont McKenna College Policy Feedback in the Welfare State: An Analysis of Public Support for the Welfare State in 13 States Jason Jordan, Florida State University Explaining the Changes in Attitudes towards Tax Compliance in Russia: 2001 to 2008 Mikhail Pryadilnikov, Harvard University Disc: Johannes Lindvall, University of Oxford Does Political Culture Matter? Deciphering the Whys of Ukrainian Tax Compliance in Relation to Poland and Russia Marc P. Berenson, Institute of Development Studies, U Sussex 15-21 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF PARTY POSITIONS IN EUROPEAN DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 35-14 Disc: Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University 16-1 THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION Co-sponsored by 11-5 14-10 THE POLITICS OF INEQUALITY Co-sponsored by 11-66 Michael Shalev, Hebrew University 16-19 Chair: STATES, MULTINATIONALS, AND EMERGING POWERS Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Papers: Diasporas vs. Multinationals: Foreign Origins of External Liberalization in China and India Min Ye, Boston University Chair: Papers: Realigning Labor Market and Social Policies: Three Paths to Reform Torben Iversen, Harvard University The Effect of Mass War on Tax Policy Preferences Kenneth F. Scheve, Yale University David Stasavage, New York University Disc: Ronald L. Rogowski, University of California, Los Angeles High-Technology Innovation in India: The Challenging Case of Semiconductors William W. Keller, University of Pittsburgh Louis W. Pauly, University of Toronto Growth and Inequality within India: Government Efficiency, Policy Choice and FDI Tadeusz Kugler, Roger Williams University Travis Coan, Claremont Graduate University Do State Institutions Impact the Research and Development Activities of Multinational Firms in Developing Countries? Evidence from Brazil. Patrick J.W. Egan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 347 Daily Schedule Inequality and Voter Preferences for Redistribution in Western Europe David Rueda, University of Oxford Jonas Pontusson, Princeton University Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Disc: Layna Mosley, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 16-24 THE POLITICS OF FINANCIAL CRISES: RESPONSES TO THE 2007-2009 CRISIS IN COMPARATIVE AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 6-9 Daily Schedule Environmental Change, Humanitarian Aid, and War Andrew Coe, Harvard University Muhammet Bas, Harvard University Disc: Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto 18-30 ROUNDTABLE ON ATOMIC OBSESSION (OXFORD UP, 2009), BY JOHN MUELLER Co-sponsored by 19-8 19-8 Chair: ROUNDTABLE ON ATOMIC OBSESSION (OXFORD UP, 2009), BY JOHN MUELLER Co-sponsored by 18-30 Jacques E.C. Hymans, University of Southern California Disc: John Mueller, Ohio State University Part: Andrew Kydd, University of Wisconsin Etel L. Solingen, University of California, Irvine David A. Welch, University of Toronto Scott D. Sagan, Stanford University How Norms Do Not Travel Unchanged. The Andean Community, Its Court of Justice, and the Challenge of Regional Integration Osvaldo Saldias, Humboldt University in Berlin 19-12 Chair: FUTURE OF WARFARE Robert Rauchhaus, University of California, Santa Barbara Disc: Amichai A. Magen, Stanford University Papers: Reinforcing MAD While Moving Toward Zero Jane Kellett Cramer, University of Oregon 18-8 IMMIGRATION, SECURITY AND THE BORDERLANDS IN THE POST-GLOBAL AGE Michael Minkenberg, New York University 17-5 Chair: Papers: EUROPE’S TRANSFORMATIVE POWER AND MECHANISMS OF SOCIAL INFLUENCE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Anja Jetschke, University of Freiburg The Transformative Power of Europe and Europe’s Neighbourhood Policy Tanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität Berlin Mimetic Adoption and Norm Diffusion: ASEAN, Security Cooperation and Human Rights Hiro Katsumata, University of Bristol Europe’s Transformative Power in Southeast Asia Anja Jetschke, University of Freiburg Chair: Part: 18-18 Chair: Papers: The Evolution of Armed Groups David H. Sacko, US Air Force Academy Disc: Warren Chin, King’s College London Kelly A. Grieco, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Intervener Motives: Altruism or Cynicism? Arman Grigoryan, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology 20-1 THE MOTIVES BEHIND INTERVENTIONS Co-sponsored by 18-18 21-17 NEW APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Co-sponsored by 8-15 Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University What is Bias and How Can We Measure It? Holger Schmidt, George Washington University Chair: Does “the Responsibility to Protect” Encourage Intervention? Taylor B. Seybolt, University of Pittsburgh Papers: Clifford A. Bob, Duquesne University 18-23 THE ENVIRONMENT AND SECURITY: CONCEPTUALIZATIONS, PROBLEMS AND STRATEGIES Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto On Temporal Dependence in International Relations Allan Dafoe, University of California, Berkeley The “Separation Plot”: A New Visual Method for Evaluating the Predictive Power of Logit/Probit Models Brian D. Greenhill, University of Washington Michael D. Ward, University of Washington A Strategic Model of War Onset and Outcomes: A Fresh Empirical Look at Why Democracies Win Wars Patrick Michael Kuhn, University of Rochester Kerim Can Kavakli, University of Rochester Food Security in a Global Age: Addressing Challenges from Malnutrition, Food Safety and Environmental Change Bryan McDonald, University of California, Irvine Climate Change and Human Security: Measuring the Economic Loss due to Future Increase in Tropical Cyclones Christian Webersik, United Nations University Miguel Esteban, United Nations University Tomoya Shibayama, Yokohama National University 348 Command Culture and the US Army in Iraq: Evidence of Disparate Cultures and Approaches to Counterinsurgency Matthew M. Zais, United States Military Academy THE MOTIVES BEHIND INTERVENTIONS Co-sponsored by 20-1 Arman Grigoryan, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Disc: Papers: Strong Horse or Paper Tiger: Reputational Effects of War Outcomes Kathryn McNabb Cochran, Duke University Martin A. Schain, New York University Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University Sylvia Maier, New York University Ariane Chebel D’Appollonia, Sciences Po External Support for Non-Core Groups and the Politics of Nation-Building: The Case of Tibet Harris Mylonas, George Washington University Chair: Globalization, Theory of Action in Conflict, and Cybersphere Chris C. Demchak, US Naval War College Resolve and Uncertainty in International Relations Jeremy Kedziora, University of Rochester Index Variables and Aggregation Bias Jun Xiang, University of Rochester Disc: Hyeran Jo, Texas A&M University Brian Lai, University of Iowa 22-12 CONSTITUTENT CONNECTIONS Daily Schedule Chair: Michael L. Mezey, DePaul University Papers: The Politics of Ego: Senatorial Front Office Presentation of Self to their Constituents Brendan J. Doherty, United States Naval Academy Sorting out influences in legislative voting behavior: The impact of greater transparency and constituencies’ characteristics. Carmen Le Foulon, Columbia University Role Perceptions of Cross-Pressured Legislators in Emerging Democracies: Preliminary Insights from the African Legislatures Project Shaheen Mozaffar, Bridgewater State College Joel D. Barkan, University of Iowa Robert Britt Mattes, University of Cape Town Kimberly Smiddy, University of Cape Town Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM The Foreign Policies of the U.S. Presidents and the Giving of Aid to the United States Agency for International Development for the Reduction of the Spread of Narcotics: 1981 to 2006 Donald D.A. Schaefer, Texas Tech University Disc: Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington R. Steven Daniels, California State University, Bakersfield 24-10 Chair: WORKFORCE ISSUES IN MOTION Stephen E. Condrey, University of Georgia Papers: Implementing the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990: Human Resources Innovations in City Government Christine B. Ledvinka, University of Georgia Stephen E. Condrey, University of Georgia Jonathan P. West, University of Miami Surprisingly Normal: Recognition of Black Issues by Non-Black Members of Congress Matthew B. Platt, Harvard University Disc: Sally Friedman, SUNY, Albany Michael L. Mezey, DePaul University 22-19 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS AND ACCOUNTABILITY Co-sponsored by 36-28 23-2 PRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Co-sponsored by 7-19 Ann-Marie E. Szymanski, University of Oklahoma Chair: Papers: From Substance to Symbol: Head Start and the Change From Modern to Postmodern Presidents Joseph Cammarano, Providence College Assessing the Performance of Pay for Performance in the U.S. Federal Government Laura I. Langbein, American University The Aging of the State Government Workforce: Trends and Implications Yoon Jik Cho, Georgia State University Gregory B. Lewis, Georgia State University Creating Management Development Opportunities: The Unique Role of Independent Employee Associations in Building Public Management Capacity Jared Llorens, University of Kansas Choosing Careers in the Public Sector: A Nationwide Survey of Canadian Post-Secondary Students Charles W. Gossett, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Disc: Wendy R. Ginsberg, Congressional Research Service James S. Bowman, Florida State University 25-13 FACTORS THAT DRIVE POLICY FORMATION AND IMPLEMENTATION: WHAT DRIVES THE SCIENCE THAT DRIVES POLICY? Co-sponsored by 39-3 Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University The Presidency and Prerogative: Lessons From History Michael A. Genovese, Loyola Marymount University Presidential Leadership in the Early United States Fred I. Greenstein, Princeton University Reliving the Lover’s Quarrel: The Creative Destruction of Federalism and Presidential Power Elvin T. Lim, Wesleyan University Judicial Politics in the Streets: How Nixon’s Court Changed American Politics Kevin J. McMahon, Trinity College Disc: Andrew J. Dowdle, University of Arkansas Graham G. Dodds, Concordia University 23-12 THE PRESIDENT IN FOREIGN AND DEFENSE POLICYMAKING Victoria A. Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington Chair: Papers: Chair: Papers: Institutional Incentives and Early Adoption of Sustainable Energy Innovations Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University Anthony Kassekert, Florida State University Frances Stokes Berry, Florida State University Surges, Jolts, Overloads, and Blackouts: Unexpected Changes to Stable Energy Policies William R. Lowry, Washington University Ian Ostrander, Washington University in St. Louis Changing America’s Image in the World: An Early Assessment of Foreign-Policy Leadership in the Obama Administration Meena Bose, Hofstra University The Role of Science in Environmental Protection: Is the Development of Environmental Law Toward More Protective and Productive Way, or Distorted to Inequality, Through the Involvement of Science? Wen-Hsiang Kung, Indiana University Transformation, Change, Continuity? Bush, Obama, and Transition in the Pentagon Tim Came, University of British Columbia Colin Campbell, University of British Columbia Cool Hand Nuke: Lessons from the Quiet Diplomacy of the Cienfuegos Non-Crisis Thomas M. Martin, Eastern Kentucky University Disc: Robert T. Nakamura, SUNY, Albany 25-28 DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND CIVIL SOCIETY: INTERPRETIVE APPROACHES Co-sponsored by Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and Society, Panel 1 349 Daily Schedule Executive War Power and the Supreme Court: A Reconsideration of Historical Practices Richard J. Dougherty, University of Dallas Complexity and the Direction of Influence in the TechnologyEnvironmental Policy Relationship Suna Bayrakal, York University Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM 26-3 Chair: Papers: THE NEW ROLE OF COURTS IN LATIN AMERICA: ARBITERS OF POLITICAL CONFLICTS OR ACTIVE DEFENDERS OF RIGHTS? Co-sponsored by 12-45 Jeffrey Staton, Emory University Sex Work and the City: Local Politics and the Regulation of Sex Among Consenting Adults Cheryl A. Auger, University of Toronto Inequity, Agency, and Subversion: An Ethnographic Case Study of Korean Women Involved in the Sex Trade in the U.S. Military Bases Miduk Kim, Rutgers University And Justice for Whom? Judicial Power and Autonomy in Brazil Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas, Austin Strategic Constitutional Review in Colombia, 1992-2006 Juan Carlos Rodriguez-Raga, Universidad de los Andes/ University of Pittsburgh From Quietism to Incipient Activism: The Institutional Roots of Rights Adjudication in Chile Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota Javier Couso, Universidad Diego Portales The Institutional Setting for Constitutional Justice in Latin America Julio Rios-Figueroa, CIDE Disc: Daily Schedule Gretchen Helmke, University of Rochester John Ferejohn, Stanford University 27-3 Chair: CONSTITUTIONAL EMPIRE Jack M. Balkin, Yale University Papers: International law, citizenship, and empire Christina Duffy Burnett, Columbia University Liberty vs. Tutelage: The Northwest Ordinance and American political development Stefan Heumann, University of Pennsylvania Straddling the Digital Divide: Race, Pornography, and Representation in Cyberspace Niambi M. Carter, Purdue University Disc: Lilly J. Goren, Carroll College Penny A. Weiss, Saint Louis University 31-19 BLACK FEMINIST INTERSECTIONALITY IN ACTION: A ROUNDTABLE ON BLACK WOMEN, CULTURAL IMAGES, AND SOCIAL POLICY Co-sponsored by 32-19 Nikol G. Alexander-Floyd, Rutgers University Chair: Disc: Julia S. Jordan-Zachery, Providence College Nikol G. Alexander-Floyd, Rutgers University Part: Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University James Jennings, Tufts University Stephen H. Marshall, University of Texas, Austin Valerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North Texas Andrea Y. Simpson, University of Richmond 32-19 BLACK FEMINIST INTERSECTIONALITY IN ACTION: A ROUNDTABLE ON BLACK WOMEN, CULTURAL IMAGES, AND SOCIAL POLICY Co-sponsored by 31-19 33-4 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON STANLEY HAUERWAS AND ROMAND COLES, CHRISTIANITY, DEMOCRACY, AND THE RADICAL ORDINARY Co-sponsored by 2-49 Morton Schoolman, SUNY, Albany The Illegitimacy of Constitutional Empire Mariah Zeisberg, University of Michigan Losing the Constitution? Omniviolence, Arms Control, and Limited Government Daniel Deudney, Johns Hopkins University Disc: Jack M. Balkin, Yale University 28-7 THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA AND THE CITIES Co-sponsored by 30-14 and T-23 30-14 THEME ROUNDTABLE: OBAMA AND THE CITIES Co-sponsored by 28-7 and T-23 Harold Wolman, The George Washington University Chair: Chair: Disc: Part: 31-8 Chair: Papers: Douglas W. Rae, Yale University Marion Orr, Brown University Susan E. Clarke, University of Colorado William R. Barnes, National League of Cities Lorrie A. Frasure, University of California, Los Angeles Robert T. Starks, Northeastern Illinois University Wilbur C. Rich, Wellesley College SELLING SEX, SELLING SELVES? GENDER, THE SEX TRADE AND THE STATE Co-sponsored by 47-1 Judith A. Baer, Texas A&M University An Absence of Leadership: The Role of Women in AntiTrafficking Policy in the U.S. Congress Girish J. Gulati, Bentley College Sex Work and Women’s Agency: A Feminist Argument for Decriminalization Carisa R. Showden, University of North Carolina, Greensboro 350 Disc: Stanley Hauerwas, Duke University Romand Coles, Northern Arizona University Part: Cornel West, Princeton University Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia Kathleen Roberts Skerrett, Grinnell College 33-11 RELIGION AND POLITICS IN CANADA Co-sponsored by 49-5 35-7 STABILITY AND CHANGE IN AMERICAN PARTISANSHIP Co-sponsored by 36-8 John J. Coleman, University of Wisconsin, Madison Chair: Papers: The Next American Voter: The Political Demography of American Partisanship Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London Vegard Skirbekk, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis The Geography of Political Independence Brian J. Brox, Tulane University The New Democratic Majority: Who Voted in the 2008 Presidential Election? Seth C. McKee, University of South Florida St. Petersburg David Hill, Stetson University Daily Schedule A Reversal of Trends? Voter Turnout in the 2008 Presidential Elections Priscilla L. Southwell, University of Oregon Disc: John J. Coleman, University of Wisconsin, Madison 35-14 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF PARTY POSITIONS IN EUROPEAN DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 15-21 Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia Chair: Papers: Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM 37-18 Chair: Papers: Who’s the President? Source Cues, Trust, and Public Support for Economic Interventions Elizabeth Popp, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Thomas J. Rudolph, University of Illinois The Influence of School and Peer Networks on Social Integration and Political Trust Jaime E. Settle, University of California, San Diego Justin Levitt, University of Calfornia, San Diego Cross-Cutting Issues and Party Strategy in the European Union Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon Till Weber, European University Institute Who is Left Behind? Comparing European Party and Voter Positions Along Two Dimensions Jan Rovny, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Disc: Michael D. McDonald, SUNY, Binghamton 36-8 STABILITY AND CHANGE IN AMERICAN PARTISANSHIP Co-sponsored by 35-7 36-14 Chair: VOTERS AND CANDIDATES Danny Hayes, Syracuse University Papers: Candidate Quality and Fundraising in Canadian Federal Elections David Coletto, University of Calgary Disc: Jeffrey W. Koch, SUNY, Geneseo 38-11 CAMPAIGN MESSAGES: IMPACTS OF INFORMATION QUALITY AND TONE Robin A. Kolodny, Temple University Chair: Papers: Who Cleans Up When the Party’s Over? The Decline of Partisan Media and Rise of Split-Ticket Voting in the 20th Century Tim Groeling, University of California, Los Angeles Erik J. Engstrom, University of California, Davis Just How Competitive is “Competitive”? Describing the Relationship Between Electoral Competition and the Quality of Campaign Information Environments Keena Lipsitz, CUNY, Queens College Disc: Mary C. Deason, University of Mississippi Arthur Sanders, Drake University A History of Black Presidential Candidates: 1872-2008 Christina M. Greer, Smith College 38-18 INTERNET: COLLECTIVE ACTION, SOCIAL MOBILIZATION, AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Co-sponsored by 40-4 39-3 FACTORS THAT DRIVE POLICY FORMATION AND IMPLEMENTATION: WHAT DRIVES THE SCIENCE THAT DRIVES POLICY? Co-sponsored by 25-13 39-8 IT’S NOT EASY GOING GREEN Co-sponsored by 12-48 Lada V. Kochtcheeva, North Carolina State University Hannah Goble, University of Wisconsin, Madison 36-28 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS AND ACCOUNTABILITY Co-sponsored by 22-19 Brendan Nyhan, University of Michigan The President as a Focal Point in Congressional Elections Matthew A. Childers, University of California, San Diego Competition, Responsiveness, and the Strategic Politicians Hypothesis Eric McGhee, Public Policy Institute of California Brendan Nyhan, University of Michigan Hahrie C. Han, Wellesley College/RWJ Fellow, Harvard Chair: Papers: Climate Agenda as an Agenda for Development in Brazil: A Policy Oriented Approach Sergio Abranches, ECOPOLÍTICA Climate Change Decisions: International Influences on Argentina’s Foreign Policy Decision Making Amy M. Below, Ohio University Changing Climate? China’s New Interest in Multilateral Climate Change Negotiation Wei Liang, Monterey Institute of International Studies 351 Daily Schedule A Field Experiment of Participatory Shirking among Legislators: Pressuring Representatives to Show up for Work Christian R. Grose, Vanderbilt University Disc: Explaining Perceptions of Campaign Tone Travis N. Ridout, Washington State University Erika Franklin Fowler, University of Michigan Does the Public Have a Double Standard for Candidate Emotionality? Voter Reactions to the Tears and Anger of Male and Female Candidates Deborah Jordan Brooks, Dartmouth College Disc: Papers: Toward a Candidate-Centered Model of Campaign Message Strategy Brian K. Arbour, CUNY, John Jay College Do Preconceptions Drive Voter Perception of Campaign Negativity? Stephen C. Brooks, University of Akron Rick D. Farmer, Oklahoma House of Representatives Bias and Vote Choice: Lab Election Experiments on Gender and Race Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, Stanford University G. Michael Weiksner, Stanford University Chair: Experimental Evidence on Political Trust Aleisha Karjala, University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma The Consequences of Conflict: How Party Polarization Affects Political Trust Scott O’Brien, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill When Parties Position Themselves. Political Parties in Policy Space Across Europe Alexander H. Trechsel, European University Institute Voter Engagement and Responses to Party Polarization and Depolarization: An Analysis of Party Positioning and Voter Partisanship in Britain, 1970-2005 James Adams, University of California, Davis Jane Green, University of Manchester Caitlin Milazzo, University of California, Davis POLITICAL TRUST Co-sponsored by 5-16 Jeffrey W. Koch, SUNY, Geneseo Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Regional Environmental Governance: NGOs, States and the Sulu-Sulawesi Marine Ecoregion Kim D. Reimann, Georgia State University Disc: Elizabeth R. DeSombre, Wellesley College 40-4 INTERNET: COLLECTIVE ACTION, SOCIAL MOBILIZATION, AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Co-sponsored by 38-18 Micah Altman, Harvard University Chair: Papers: The Internet and American Politics: Where The Politically Rich Get Richer and the Politically Poor Get Perez Hilton Laura McKenna, Ramapo College of New Jersey Daily Schedule Papers: Pericles’ Statesmanship: Democratic Imperialism and Transformational Statecraft Mark Menaldo, Michigan State University The Theory of Co-evolution in War as an Explanation of Systems Change:A Comparison of Ancient Greece and Ancient India Manjeet S. Pardesi, Indiana University From Anarchy to Hegemony: The Failure of the Balance of Power in Medieval Japan, 1568-1600 Philip Streich, Rutgers University Disc: Christopher Darnton, Catholic University of America Transitions 2.0: Web-Based Social Mobilization in Autocratic Central Asia Eric McGlinchey, George Mason University 44-18 Information Technology, Group Strategies, and News Media Coverage Young Mie Kim, Ohio State University Michael McCluskey, Ohio State University Chair: VARIETIES OF PRESIDENTIALISM IN LATIN AMERICA: ORIGINS, SCOPE AND CONSEQUENCES Co-sponsored by 12-50 Javier Corrales, Amherst College Papers: The Transformation of Collective Action: Comparing Organizations in Collective Action Space Bruce Bimber, University of California, Santa Barbara Disc: Diana M. Owen, Georgetown University 41-7 BEYOND ‘SELF-RELIANCE’: EMERSON’S POLITICS IN MOTION Alan Levine, American University Papers: 43-9 Chair: Part: 43-16 Chair: 352 The Logic of Constitutional Change: Evidence from Latin America Gabriel L. Negretto, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas Explaining the Variation of Presidential Interruptions in Latin America Leiv Marsteintredet, University of Bergen Disc: Scott Mainwaring, University of Notre Dame Jonathan Hartlyn, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 44-20 Chair: POST-WAR DEMOCRATIZATION Christoph M. Zuercher, University of Ottawa Papers: Emerson’s Environmentalism: Nature as a Limit On and Source of Power in His Thought Hans von Rautenfeld, Kansas City Art Institute Democracy Promotion in Post-Conflict Countries: Narratives, Policies, Responses Carrie Manning, Georgia State University Sarah Riese, Freie Universität Berlin Emerson’s Skeptical Morality Compared to Montaigne’s and Nietzsche’s Alan Levine, American University Fostering Stability or Democracy? Aid in post-conflict countries Rachel Hayman, University of Edinburgh Carrie Manning, Georgia State University The Limits of Self-Reliance: Emerson, Slavery, and Abolition James H. Read, College of Saint Benedict Emerson’s Transcendental America: Foolish Consistency and the Contradictions of American Exceptionalism Shannon Mariotti, Southwestern University Disc: The Origins of Presidentialist Constitutions in Latin America since the 1980s Javier Corrales, Amherst College Crisis and Rapid Re-equilibration: The Consequences of Presidential Challenge and Failure In Latin America David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico Facebook is... Fostering Political Engagement: A Study of Social Network Groups and Offline Participation Jessica Timpany Feezell, University of California, Santa Barbara Meredith Conroy, University of California, Santa Barbara Mario Guerrero, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Securing Iraq: Lessons from Davy Crockett David Malet, George Washington University Mission Intrusiveness and Democratic Outcomes Nora Roehner, Freie Universität Berlin Jack Turner, University of Washington Daniel S. Malachuk, Western Ilinois University-Quad Cities PROCESS TRACING IN INTERNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE POLITICS: ACHIEVEMENTS AND CHALLENGES Co-sponsored by 46-3 Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University Andrew Bennett, Georgetown University Colin Elman, Syracuse University James Mahoney, Northwestern University Negotiating the Liberal Peace: On the Interaction Between Peacebuilders and Local Elites Jens Narten, Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy Hamburg Christoph M. Zuercher, University of Ottawa Disc: Jonathan Wheatley, Centre for Democracy, Aarau 45-1 QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO HUMAN RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 8-6 46-3 PROCESS TRACING IN INTERNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE POLITICS: ACHIEVEMENTS AND CHALLENGES Co-sponsored by 43-9 46-15 CHALLENGES AND ADVANCES IN HISTORICALLYORIENTED RESEARCH THE SWEEP OF HISTORY: CLEANING UP ON HISTORICAL LESSONS Kevin Costa, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Daily Schedule Chair: Eileen Doherty-Sil, University of Pennsylvania Papers: Permissive and Causal Conditions in Historical Causation: Windows of Opportunity and types of Critical Junctures Hillel David Soifer, Princeton University Applying Historical Methods to Understanding the Evolution of Property Rights When Land is Not Sacred Tonya Caprarola Giannoni, George Washington University Advice for Raising Registration and Turnout Rates: Field Experiments on 37 College Campuses Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University South Bend Critical Junctures and Legal Meaning: (Re)Constituting Property by Constituting Wetlands Laura J. Hatcher, Southern Illinois University Mirroring the Party: Candidate assessments and Party Images in Britain Tereza Capelos, University of Surrey Evolution and Historical Institutionalism: Tropes Without Theory Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania Are Traditional or Modern Forms of Campaigning More Effective? Combining Evidence from Agent Survey Data, Campaign Spending and BES Survey Data at British General Elections 1992-2005 David John Cutts, University of Manchester Edward A. Fieldhouse, University of Manchester 48-1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HEALTH Co-sponsored by 11-34 49-5 RELIGION AND POLITICS IN CANADA Co-sponsored by 33-11 Christopher Kirkey, State University of New York College at Plattsburgh Religion and Political Thought on the Canadian Prairies Clark Banack, University of British Columbia Evangelical Christians and the Conservative Party of Canada Jonathan Malloy, Carleton University The Catholic-Liberal Connection in Canada: Untangling the Specifics Laura Stephenson, University of Western Ontario The Religion Enigma: Theoretical Riddle or Classificational Artifact? Barry J. Kay, Wilfrid Laurier University Steven D. Brown, Wilfrid Laurier University Andrea M.L. Perrella, Wilfrid Laurier University Disc: Political Survey of Incarcerated Americans Amir Fairdosi, University of Chicago Turnout and Primaries Kristin L. Kanthak, University of Pittsburgh Rebecca B. Morton, New York University SELLING SEX, SELLING SELVES? GENDER, THE SEX TRADE AND THE STATE Co-sponsored by 31-8 Papers: Young Voters, Engagement, and the 2008 Presidential Election David P. Redlawsk, University of Iowa Allison Hamilton, University of Iowa Theoretical Deduction or Empirical Induction? Resolving Causal Tensions in Comparative-Historical Research Sean L. Yom, Harvard University 47-1 Chair: Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM James Farney, Queen’s University Poster Sessions POSTER SESSION 2 Divisions 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 42, 43, 48 Papers: Coalition Signals and Vote Decisions: A Survey Experiment Michael F. Meffert, Leiden University Thomas Gschwend, Universität Mannheim Kingmakers and Leaders in Coalition Formation Steven J. Brams, New York University Marc Kilgour, Wilfrid Laurier University Identification of Party Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa Jonathan van Eerd, University of Zurich Political Risk and Strategic Investing: Explaining Political Parties, Interest Groups, and Activists’ Contributions in State Supreme Court Elections Beth Easter, Indiana University, Bloomington The Effects of Judicial Campaign Messages on Voter Mobilization: An Experimental Study Jeffrey A. Gottfried, University of Pennsylvania Eran N. Ben-Porath, Social Science Research Solutions Campaign Learning and Issue Publics: Seniors in the 2000 and 2004 Elections Michael B. Henderson, Harvard University Context and Sub-National Economic Voting in Canada Cameron Anderson, University of Western Ontario Testing the Impact of Resources on the Individual-Level (In)stability of Political Participation Over Time Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota Sarah A. Treul, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Coalition Signals and Vote Decisions: A Survey Experiment Michael F. Meffert, Leiden University Thomas Gschwend, Universität Mannheim The Effects of Education on Political Participation - An Empirical Test of the Sorting Model in Sweden Mikael Persson, Goteburg University Distinguishing the Attitude from the Behavior: Toward a TwoStage Model of Nativism and Immigration Policy Attitudes Benjamin R. Knoll, University of Iowa Kramer Revisited: Comparing the Effect of Economic Attitudes and the Real Economy on Vote Choice Raymond M. Duch, University of Oxford David A. Armstrong, II, University of Oxford Public Opinion toward Immigrants and Employment Opportunities in the European Union Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron The Perception and Reality of Political Corruption in the American States Robert Kirby Goidel, Louisiana State University Donald A. Gross, University of Kentucky Risk Taking and Redistricting: How a Party’s Willingness to Accept Risk Leads to Seat Gains and Losses Aaron Dusso, George Washington University Beyond the Music: The Impact of Exposure to Rap Music and Black Political Attitudes Lakeyta Bonnette, Ohio State University Are Young Republican Voters Deserting? An Analysis of Partisan Alignment Among Young Conservative-Leaning Voters During the George W. Bush Presidency Emily McClintock Ekins, University of California, Los Angeles Breaking Through the Digital Divide: The Political Implications of Latinos On-Line Corinna A. Reyes, University of California, Santa Barbara Digital Politics Divide: Worldwide Inequalities in Using the Internet to Practice Politics Andrea Calderaro, European University Institute 353 Daily Schedule Party Movement in the Policy Space under Different Electoral Systems Iulia Cioroianu, New York University Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Daily Schedule Using the Issue Crawler to Map Gun Control Issue-Networks Peter Malachy Ryan, Ryerson University Zachary P. Devereaux, Ryerson University Neil R. Thomlinson, Ryerson University Wendy Cukier, Ryerson University How the Voters’ Satisfaction with the Municipal Government Influences the End Result in an Election for Mayor, in a Multiparty System: Brazil, 2008 Luciana Fernandes Veiga, Universidade Federal do Paraná Choices for a New Political Era Dorinda Tetens, CUNY-Graduate Center Issue Interconnections in Party Competition: Policy Linkages and Ideological Change in 23 Democracies Markus Wagner, London School of Economics The World Social Forum: Social Forums as Resistance Relays of the Alter-Globalization Movement Peter N. Funke, University of Pennsylvania Individual Level Determinants of a Populist Vote: Evidence from Eastern Europe Galina Zapryanova, University of Pittsburgh A Theory of Conceptual Change in Conventional Objects: Wittgenstein, Political Inquiry, and ‘The Troubles’ in Northern Ireland Robert M. Mauro, SUNY-Albany Not in My Front Yard! What Yard Signs Tell Us About Expression, Instrumentalism and the Paradox of Political Participation Todd Makse, The Ohio State University Anand E. Sokhey, Ohio State University Complexity, Innovation and the Case for Reading Political Theory Rhetorically Daniel Skinner, CUNY Graduate Center Teaching in the Storm’s Wake: Post-Katrina Public Education Reform in New Orleans Peter F. Burns, Loyola University New Orleans Matthew O. Thomas, California State University, Chico Politics in Motion: Emigration and the Sending State Erin Court, University of Oxford Undecided Beyond SES: System Affect Among Resource-Rich Nonvoters L. Matthew Vandenbroek, University of Texas, Austin The Cash Nexus: Cities, Trade, Debt, and Parliaments Deborah A. Boucoyannis, Harvard University Profit as Aid Lisa M. Burke, University of Denver Visions of Liberalism: Negative Liberty, Positive Liberty, and American Grand Strategy in Europe Brendan R. Green, Massachusetts Institute of Technology After the End: Francis Fukuyama’s End of History at Twenty Ulrich Krotz, Brown University Francisco Resnicoff, Brown University POSTER SESSION 2: NEW FRONTIERS IN AMERICAN PARTY RESEARCH Sponsored by Division 35 Papers: Parties and Movements in American Politics: Patterns of Alliance from Free Soil to the Christian Right Daniel Schlozman, Harvard University From Images to Votes: Understadning the Dynamics of Issue Evolution Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin, Madison A Final Act for Carbon? Helsinki’s Lessons for Transatlantic Cooperation on Climate Change Robert Shum, Johns Hopkins University Troubling Past: Denial and Silence in the Age of Apologies Nava Löwenheim, Hebrew University Vying for the Plank: Discovering the Conditions under which Interest Groups Influence Party Platforms Jennifer Nicoll Victor, University of Pittsburgh Is the Internet Bringing About a New Quality of Democracy? An Analysis of the Effect of Remote Electronic Voting on Turnout Daniel Bochsler, Center for Comparative and International Studies (University of Zurich) The Cultural Basis of Party Identification Joel A. Lieske, Cleveland State University Edward B. Hasecke, Wittenberg University Who Votes Strategically? A Panel Data Analysis of the 2006 Mexican Presidential Election and an Individual-Level Model that Accounts for Measurement Error in the Dependent Variable Francisco Flores-Macias, Massachusetts Institute of Technology When National Politicians Meet Local Stakeholders: A DemandSide Approach of Pork-Barrel Politics Carlos Pereira, Michigan State University Count What You Want to Count: Motivated Perception and Contested Ballots Kyle Casimir Kopko, Ohio State University Disc: POSTER SESSION 2: EXPLAINING ORGANIZED POLITICAL ACTION Sponsored by Division 35 Papers: Examining Endogeneity in Social Movement Protest and Public Opinion: The Case of the U.S. Women’s Movement Lee Ann Banaszak, Pennsylvania State University Heather L. Ondercin, Louisiana State University Baptists and Church-State Advocacy: An Analysis of the Effects of Membership Opinion on Lobbying the Supreme Court Andrew R. Lewis, American University It’s Personal: The Vote and the Role of Candidate Personality in Mexico and Brazil Mary C. Slosar, University of Texas, Austin Should We Go Steady? Patterns of Cooperative Lobbying Behavior Among Forestry Advocacy Groups in France and Sweden Emily Olivia Matthews, University of California, San Diego Primaries in Mexico: The Effect of the PRI Nomination Process in the 2000 and 2006 Presidential Election Amalia Mena-Mora, University of Houston Advocacy Coalitions: Beyond Influence, an Organizational Survival Perspective Stephanie Yates, Laval University Raymond Hudon, Universite Laval Voter Choice in the 2006 Mexican Presidential Election Ines Levin, California Institute of Technology Do Partisans’ Attachments Affect Finnish Parties’ Relocations? Achillefs Papageorgiou, Tampere University Poverty and Pocketbook Politics: The Relationship Between Class, Egotropic Evaluations, and Presidential Approval in Peru Matthew Singer, University of Connecticut Macro Trends in Political Engagement: A Comprehensive Study of Turnout and Unconventional Political Participation Daniel Stockemer, University of Connecticut 354 David Karol, University of California, Berkeley Soliciting Participation: Understanding the Role of Membership Groups in Promoting Political Engagement Maryann Barakso, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Disc: Michael T. Heaney, University of Michigan Daily Schedule Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM POSTER SESSION 2: INTRA-PARTY DEMOCRACY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Sponsored by Division 35 Papers: Do Primaries Matter? How Internal Democracy Affects Party Performance in the General Election Kathleen M. Bruhn, University of California, Santa Barbara Supreme Strategizing: The Nominating President, The Confirming Senate, and the Delayed Supreme Court Justice Jamaal S. Barnes, St. John’s College Do Different Faces = Different Perspectives? The Study of Intersectionality among African American Congresswomen during the 103rd and 105th Congresses Lashonda Marie Brenson, University of Rochester Do Parties Become More Democratic and Does it Pay? Assessing the Reciprocal Relationship Between Intraparty Democracy and Party Membership Ingo Rohlfing, University of Cologne Disc: Zero Tolerance and Academic Performance: When Fear Dictates School Culture LaGina Gause, Howard University Formal Models of Machine Politics Ugur Ozdemir, Washington University in St. Louis The Chavez Effect: Public Opinion in Venezuela Victoria Marie Jackson, Pennsylvania State University Intra-Party Dynamics and Party Splits Hande Mutlu, New York University An Incomplete Evolution: Evangelical Minorities, Cultural Values, and Issue Evolution Ashley Lagaron, University of Florida Simone R. Bohn, York University Marisa Kellam, Texas A&M University Testing Our Tolerance: American Attitudes toward Limitations on the First Amendment Rights of Arab and Muslim Americans Maisha T. Rashid, Barnard College POSTER SESSION 4: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE METHODS Divisions 8 and 46 Papers: Taking Endogeneity of Generalized Trust Seriously: A Multilevel Simultaneous Equation Modeling Approach for the Effect of Generalized Trust on Economic Inequality Changkuk Jung, Michigan State University Traditional Measures for Untraditional Legislators: Legislative Effectiveness of African Americans in the 103rd and 105th Congresses Camillia Redding, University of Rochester Aid and Democratization: At the Intersection of Africa’s Crisis Mariela A. Rodriguez, Georgia State University Broken Promises: Neoliberalism in Latin America Jennifer Tejada, Connecticut College Reexamining Coattail Effects Marc Meredith, University of Pennsylvania Use Data-Mining Technique to Manage Overflow of Information Herlin Chien, National Sun Yat-sen University Verbal Style and Vice-Presidential Rhetoric: Unleashing the Attack Dog in the 2008 Debate David Lynn Painter, University of Florida Specifying Spatio-Temporal Heterogeneity of Currency Policy in East Asia: A Bayesian Analysis Chih-Cheng Almond Meng, University of Texas at Austin Related Group Panels Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Panel 11 THE AMERICAN FOUNDERS AND FREE SPEECH Chair: Larry Greenfield, The Claremont Institute Papers: Accounting for Empirical Uncertainty of Connectivity Weights in Spatial Autoregressive Models Martin Steinwand, University of Rochester Is There a Right to Blaspheme? Thoughts from the Founders on Religion and Freedom of Speech Jeffrey Sikkenga, Ashland University Is the Majority Party Just an Interest Group?: Reconciling Legislator Ideal Points and the Roll Call Record Adam Ramey, University of Rochester The American Founding and the Limits of Free Speech Christopher C. Burkett, Ashland University Uncertainty, Multiple Possibilities, and Institutional Development in Public Finance in Meiji Japan, 1868-1882 Wenkai He, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Disc: FRONTLINES/HEADLINES: Media, Military, and War in Iraq Julia Y. Lam, Harvard University Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and Society What Political Science Has to Learn from Science Studies Michael S. Kochin, Tel Aviv University Genealogy and the Construction of Change, Continuity, and Complexity in International Relations Christine M. Lee, Duke University Panel 1 Chair: Papers: Time to Agree: Gauging the Impact of Time Pressue and ‘Deadline Diplomacy’ in post-Cold War Peace Negotiations Marco Pinfari, London School of Economics Disc: ‘The Only Effectual Guardian of Every Other Right:’ Madison on Free Speech Edward J. Erler, California State University-San Bernardino DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND CIVIL SOCIETY: INTERPRETIVE APPROACHES Co-sponsored by 25-28 Douglas Torgerson, Trent University Students as Stakeholders in Education Policy Celina Su, Brooklyn College Tensions in Deliberative Practice: A View from Civil Society Jennifer Dodge, New York University Disc: Archon Fung, Harvard University Aletta Norval, University of Essex Eric Voegelin Society Panel 5 VOEGELIN’S THE POLITICAL RELIGIONS AFTER 70 YEARS 355 Daily Schedule Social Movements, Knowledge and Public Policy Miriam Smith, York University Michael Orsini, University of Ottawa Michael J. Ensley, Kent State University Luke Keele, Ohio State University Philip A. Schrodt, University of Kansas Shawn Treier, University of Minnesota POSTER SESSION 2: RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER INSTITUTE Papers: Ethnic Diversity and Overurbanization in the Middle East: (Originally) Benign Differences with (Hidden) Political Consequences Jesse James Atencio, Washington University in St. Louis Phillip Munoz, Tufts University Montgomery B. Brown Saturday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Chair: Matthias Riedl, Central European University Papers: A Secular Age as a Religious Age? Voegelin & Taylor on Defining Modern Times Rodney Kilcup, Independent scholar The Concept of Evil in The Political Religions Alin Vara, Central European University The Concept of the State in Political Religions Maxwell Reed Staley, Central European University Fascism as Political Religion: The Case of the Roumanian Iron Guard Ionut Florin Biliuta, Central European University Disc: Peter Brickey LeQuire, University of Chicago Thierry Gontier, University of Jean Moulin - Lyon 3 Daily Schedule Jeb Barnes, University of Southern California Naomi Murakawa, University of Washington, Seattle Gordon Silverstein, University of California, Berkeley Saturday, 11:30 AM to 1:30 PM APSA Panel APSA Departmental Services Committee SESSION FOR GRADUATE DIRECTORS: THE MARKET IN GRADUATE TRAINING: TRENDS IN HIGHER EDUCATION Pre-registration is required. Register by sending an e-mail to dsp@apsanet.org. Part: Richard C. Hula, Michigan State University John Portz, Northeastern University Robert D. Grey, Grinnell College Sofia A. Perez, Boston University European Consortium for Political Research Panel 2 Chair: Papers: ENERGY POLICY AND GLOBAL WARMING: AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN APPROACHES Martin J. Bull, University of Salford Governing Renewable Energy: A Continuing Balancing Act Johannes Stripple, Lund University Roger Hildingsson, Lund University Public Opinion, the 2008 Presidential Election, and the Politics of Climate Change in the United States Paul R. Brewer, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee The Climate Challenge, Ecological Modernisation and Technology Forcing: A Comparative Analysis of EU and US Approaches’ Joseph Szarka, University of Bath Institutions for Adaption to Climate Change Katrien Termeer, Wageningen University Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 2 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 2 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory SESSION 2 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 2 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 2 French Politics Group Panel 3 FRANCE AND EUROPE: A REKINDLED AFFECTION? Co-sponsored by 15-7 Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists Panel 2 Chair: Papers: POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT UNDER AN AUTHORITARIAN REGIME: FINDINGS FROM RECENT SURVEY RESEARCH ON CHINA Melanie Frances Manion, University of Wisconsin, Madison Social Capital and Self-Government under an Authoritarian: A Survey of Rural China Jie Chen, Old Dominion University Narisong Huhe, Old Dominion University Religion and Politics in China Wenfang Tang, University of Iowa Disc: Chair: SESSION 2 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 2 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 2 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 2 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Crisis management in an Authoritarian Regime: Media effects during the Sichuan Earthquake Pierre F. Landry, Yale University Daniela Stockmann, Leiden University SESSION 2 Citizen Compliance and State Legitimacy in Rural China Lily Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Melanie Frances Manion, University of Wisconsin, Madison SESSION 2 Institute for Constitutional Studies Panel 2 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics AUTHOR MEETS READERS, GORDON SILVERSTEIN’S LAW’S ALLURE: HOW LAW SHAPES, CONSTRAINS, SAVES, AND KILLS POLITICS Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 2 Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 2 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 2 Part: 356 Charles R. Epp, University of Kansas R. Shep Melnick, Boston College Daily Schedule Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM Working Group: Citizenship and Migration Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 2 SESSION 2 SESSION 3 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory SESSION 3 SESSION 2 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 3 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 2 SESSION 2 SESSION 3 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 2 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 2 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 2 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 2 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 2 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 2 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics SESSION 2 Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 2 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 2 SESSION 2 SESSION 3 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 2 SESSION 3 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 2 SESSION 3 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 2 SESSION 3 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 2 SESSION 3 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 2 SESSION 3 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 2 Saturday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM SESSION 3 APSA Meetings APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics COMMITTEE MEETING SESSION 2 APSA Events SESSION 3 2010 APSA PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEETING APSA Committee on the Status of Women in the Profession COMMITTEE MEETING APSA Events SESSION 2 Daily Schedule APSA Reception Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 3 PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS PUBLIC RECEPTION AND OPEN DIALOGUE WITH NEW EDITOR Working Group: eLearning in Political Science Affiliate Group Meetings SESSION 3 SESSION 2 Soomo Publishing SPONSORED LUNCH Featuring a presentation by David Lindrum entitled “Ten Things You Couldn’t Do Ten Years Ago” 357 Saturday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM Daily Schedule Saturday, 12:15 PM to 1:15 PM Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership Affiliate Group Meetings SESSION 2 Cooperative Congressional Election Study BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics Journal of Political Science Education SESSION 2 EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING Related Group Meetings Labor Project BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 2 Political Forecasting Group Working Group: eLearning in Political Science BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 2 Section Business Meetings 23 Presidency Research Saturday, 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Citizenship and Migration 25 Public Policy SESSION 2 BUSINESS MEETING Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science 48 Health Politics and Health Policy BUSINESS MEETING SESSION 2 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory Saturday, 12:15 PM to 1:45 PM SESSION 2 APSA Panel Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes APSA Events SESSION 2 PLENARY SESSION GREAT DEBATE: HOW FREE SHOULD HATE SPEECH BE? Chair: Amy Gutmann, University of Pennsylvania Part: Carissima Mathen, University of New Brunswick Robert Post, Yale University Jeremy Waldron, New York University Keith E. Whittington, Princeton University Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 2 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 2 Working Group: Citizenship and Migration Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 2 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 2 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics SESSION 2 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 2 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 2 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 2 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 2 358 SESSION 2 Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 2 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 2 Daily Schedule Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM Papers: APSA Reception Analyzing the Interrelationship between Metaphors and Contexts: Informing and Performing Jernej Pikalo, University of Ljubljana APSA Events RALPH BUNCHE SUMMER INSTITUTE, MINORITY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM, AND MINORITY STUDENT RECRUITMENT PROGRAM COFFEE HOUR Using Metaphors to Analyze the US Report on ‘Trafficking in Persons’ Dag Stenvoll, University of Bergen Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Metaphorical Concepts and the Discursive Construction of Legitimacy: The Framing of (Inter-)National Governance Arrangements in Media Discourses Steffen G. Schneider, University of Bremen APSA Panel International Committee Panel 2 FEDERALISM, NATIONALISM, AND DEMOCRACY: A ROUNDTABLE HONORING SAMUEL H. BEER’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM Co-sponsored by 28-3 APSA Task Force on U.S. Standing in the World Panel 3 Chair: Part: ROUNDTABLE: U.S. STANDING ACROSS THE WORLD’S REGIONS Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University Victor D. Cha, Georgetown University Maya Chadda, William Paterson University Giacomo Chiozza, Vanderbilt University Marc Lynch, George Washington University Kathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown University Etel L. Solingen, University of California, Irvine Division Panels T-24 THEME PANEL: CANADIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSIONS Co-sponsored by 45-10 T-25 THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE SHIFTING STUDY OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 6-24 and 12-14 Context and Metaphor: A New Approach to the History of Ideas Takashi Shogimen, University of Otago Disc: Vasileios Syros, University of Chicago 2-24 Chair: BODIES, PASSIONS, DE BEAUVOIR Mihaela Czobor-Lupp, Georgetown University Papers: Depression and Political Action: Philosophical Reflections Margaret Jean Ogrodnick, University of Manitoba The Embodied Subject in a De-materialized World Elaine Stavro, Trent University Freedom and the Drama of Coexistence Patricia Moynagh, Wagner College Disc: Marilyn LaFay, University of Vermont Cynthia Halpern, Swarthmore College 2-30 Chair: JUDGMENT AND POLITICS Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine Papers: The Role of Judgment in Explanations of Politics Sanjay Ruparelia, New School for Social Research Political Judgment beyond Paralysis and Heroism: Deliberation, Decision, and the Crisis in Darfur Mathias Thaler, Universidade de Coimbra 1-18 Chair: DEMOCRACY, AGONISM AND POWER Emily Nacol, Vanderbilt University The Phenomenological Resurrection of Aristotle: Heidegger, Arendt, and Phronesis Matthew C. Weidenfeld, Washington State University Papers: Between Eris and Eros: Nietzsche on Beautiful Competition Jeffrey Church, Duke University ’My Divinity Opposes Me’: Socrates and the Political Decision Char Roone Miller, George Mason University The Power of Democracy: Spinoza on Collective Action Martin Saar, University of Frankfurt Disc: Any Given We: Sheldon Wolin and Vital Democracy Scott G. Nelson, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Crina Archer, Northwestern University Torrey J. Shanks, University at Albany, SUNY 2-41 POLITICAL POSSIBILITY IN THE NOVELS OF JOSE SARAMAGO Co-sponsored by 41-2 Simona Goi, Calvin College Disc: Emily Nacol, Vanderbilt University 2-8 Chair: POLITICS AND/AS DRIVE Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, Whitman College Papers: Ethics and the Democratic Drive: The Case of George W. Bush James R. Martel, San Francisco State University Mark Andrejevic, University of Queensland Chair: Papers: Jose Saramago: Our Bodies, Our Places Stephen L. Esquith, Michigan State University Emergency! Saramago on Blindness and Seeing Joan C. Tronto, CUNY, Hunter College Citizens Don’t Always Need a Name or How Senhor Jose Can Teach us Political Freedom Eric Gorham, Quest University Canada Politics without Politics Jodi Dean, Hobart & William Smith Colleges Disc: Maria Valadas, Michigan State University Disc: Steven Johnston, University of South Florida 2-51 2-14 FOCUS ON METAPHOR: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON LANGUAGE AND DISCOURSE Co-sponsored by 46-2 Terrell Carver, University of Bristol POWER, GOVERNMENTALITY AND SOCIAL CHANGE Co-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee ‘36 (Power), Panel 1 3-8 UNCONVENTIONAL CONVENTIONS IN JUST WAR THEORY Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago Chair: Chair: 359 Daily Schedule Left Melodrama Elisabeth Anker, George Washington University Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Papers: Daily Schedule Individual and National Defense David R. Mapel, University of Colorado Disc: Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign The Justificatory Independence of the Norms of War Matthew Noah Smith, Yale University 6-12 NEW APPROACHES TO REGIME PERFORMANCE AND TRANSITION Co-sponsored by 11-55 David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota Liberal Lustration Yvonne Chiu, Brown University Vindicating the Principle of Distinction in the Fight against Terrorism Avery Elias Plaw, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth Disc: Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago 3-26 Chair: KANT AND RAWLS Shaun P. Young, York University Papers: Rawlsian Affirmative Action Robert S. Taylor, University of California, Davis Chair: Papers: Modeling the Relationship Between Inequality and Regime Transition: Fear of Expropriation from the State, Not Redistribution from the Poor Ben William Ansell, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota Why Do Some Autocracies Perform Surprisingly Well? William Roberts Clark, University of Michigan Robert R. Kaufman, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Thomas E. Flores, New York University Paul Poast, University of Michigan International Factor Prices and Waves of Regime Change John Stephen Ahlquist, UCLA Erik M. Wibbels, Duke University Rethinking the Reasonable Endorsement Test as a Basis for Public Reason David Thunder, Princeton University Autonomy and the Sources of Political Normativity Christian F. Rostboll, University of Copenhagen Disc: Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles Kant and Rastafari on Respect Neil Roberts, Williams College 6-24 THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE SHIFTING STUDY OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 12-14 and T-25 Richard F. Doner, Emory University Disc: Shaun P. Young, York University 4-4 Chair: CONNECTING THE BRANCHES Alan E. Wiseman, Ohio State University Disc: Robert H. Bates, Harvard University Atul Kohli, Princeton University Papers: Legislatures, Bureaucracies and Distributive Spending Michael M. Ting, Columbia University Part: Ben Ross Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Catherine Boone, University of Texas, Austin Melani Cammett, Brown University Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago 7-5 RETHINKING THE AMERICAN STATE: HISTORIANS AND POLITICAL SCIENTISTS CONVERSE James T. Sparrow, University of Chicago Chair: “The Administrator Shall Consider”: Controlling the Basis of Agency Choice Stuart V. Jordan, University of Rochester Congressional Development of the Institutional Presidency Sean Gailmard, University of California, Berkeley John W. Patty, Harvard University A Dynamic Model of Judicial Appointments David M. Primo, University of Rochester Yoji Sekiya, University of Rochester Chair: Papers: Common Agency Lobbying and Majority Rule Institutions Alexander Victor Hirsch, Stanford University David P. Baron, Stanford University Disc: Justin Fox, Yale University 5-12 Chair: ATTRIBUTIONS AND JUDGMENTS Cara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Papers: The Politics of Causes: Identities, Predispositions, and Attributions Toward Shooting Tragedies Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas Mark R. Joslyn, University of Kansas Public Responses to Global Threats: A Racial Divide? Ted Brader, University of Michigan Nicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan Affective Attributions: Shock, Anxiety, and Attribution of Blame During Crisis Events Cherie Maestas, Florida State University Lonna Rae Atkeson, University of New Mexico Black Elite Rhetoric and System Justification Ideology Byron D’Andra Orey, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Hyung Lae Park, Jackson State University Lester Kenyatta Spence, Johns Hopkins University 360 Beyond Retrenchment: Republicans and the Welfare State Jeremy Johnson, Brown University Ironies of the American State Robert C. Lieberman, Columbia University Desmond King, Oxford University A Government out of Sight: The Mystery of National Authority in Nineteenth-Century America Brian Balogh, University of Virginia Challenging Corporate Liberalism: The Convergence of Right and Left Critiques of Economic Regulation in the United States, 1960-1973 Eduardo Canedo, Princeton University Private Litigants, Public Policy Enforcement: The Regulatory Power of Private Litigation and the American Bureaucracy Quinn W. Mulroy, Columbia University Disc: James T. Sparrow, University of Chicago 8-7 Chair: ESTIMATING CAUSAL EFFECTS Kevin A. Clarke, University of Rochester Papers: Oil, Civil War, and the State Weakness Mechanism: Bounding Mechanism Specific Causal Effects Adam Glynn, Harvard University Daily Schedule Logic of Comparison in Experimental Method: Methodological Compatibility between Experiments and Comparative Studies Junko Kato, University of Tokyo Hiroko Ide, University of Tokyo Modelling Complex Causality in Welfare State Reform: A New Theoretical and Empirical Model Gijs Schumacher, VU University Amsterdam Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM 11-30 Chair: Papers: A General Approach to Causal Mediation Analysis Kosuke Imai, Princeton University Luke Keele, Ohio State University Erin Hartman, University of California, Berkeley 8-17 NETWORKS OF ADVOCATES AND ACTIVISTS Co-sponsored by 35-13 11-14 ILLIBERAL POLITICS IN LIBERAL STATES: STUDYING THE ‘ROUGH EDGES OF DEMOCRACY’ Co-sponsored by 46-1 Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University Chair: Papers: Disc: 11-21 Chair: Papers: Performing the Nation-State: Rebel Groups and Symbolic Sovereignty Zachariah Cherian Mampilly, Vassar College Ethnic Civil War Termination, Minorities, and Post-Partition Violence Carter R. Johnson, University of Maryland In the Midst of Cynicism and Faith: Avenues of Participation among Ex-Combatants in Liberia Johanna Söderström, Uppsala University Disc: Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University Democratic signalling and restrictions to pluralism: Banning extremist parties in advanced democracies Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University 11-46 Antidiscrimination Policy and Rights: Majority vs. Minority Terri E. Givens, University of Texas-Austin Chair: DEMOCRACY, ELECTIONS, AND POLITICAL (IN)STABILITY Co-sponsored by 44-3 Leonard B. Weinberg, University of Nevada, Reno Making Islam Safe for Democracy: Legal Restrictions on Political Islamist Federations in Western European Democracies Jonathan A. Laurence, Boston College Papers: Post-Election Protests and Their Consequences Emily Ann Beaulieu, University of Kentucky Weak Democratic States and Reactions to Extremism Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin Eran Zaidise, University of Haifa Elections and Civil War Jose Antonio Cheibub, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign Jude C. Hays, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign When Democracies Kill. A comparative study of the USA, Northern Ireland, Rwanda, and India. Christian Davenport, University of Maryland Making Democracy Safe: Institutional Causes & Consequences of Electoral Coercion and Violence Megan E. Reif, University of Michigan When Will Parties Comply with Electoral Results? Svitlana Chernykh, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Ami Pedahzur, University of Texas, Austin Giovanni Capoccia, Oxford University COMPLEXITY AND CLIENTELISM: THE ROLE OF MOBILIZATION AND REGIME TYPE Co-sponsored by 12-5 Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University The Effect of Democratic Political Institutions on Political Violence in Different Societal Settings Joel Selway, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Kharis Ali Templeman, University of Michigan Irfan Nooruddin, Ohio State University 11-52 DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY Co-sponsored by 16-11 11-55 NEW APPROACHES TO REGIME PERFORMANCE AND TRANSITION Co-sponsored by 6-12 The Dynamics of Particularistic Politics in Non-Democracies Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University 11-69 PARTY UNITY AND DEFECTION Co-sponsored by 22-3 The Transformation of Political Clientelism in African Democracies Nicolas van de Walle, Cornell University 12-5 COMPLEXITY AND CLIENTELISM: THE ROLE OF MOBILIZATION AND REGIME TYPE Co-sponsored by 11-21 12-9 INSURGENT GOVERNANCE OF CIVILIANS DURING CIVIL WAR Co-sponsored by 11-30 12-14 THEME ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE AND THE SHIFTING STUDY OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 6-24 and T-25 Reconsidering Ecological Evidence of Distributive Politics Susan C. Stokes, Yale University Moderating Effects of Patronage in the Middle East and Eastern Europe Sherrill Stroschein, University College, London Gul M. Kurtoglu Eskisar, Dokuz Eylul University Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University 361 Daily Schedule Disc: Political Cash Transfers? Redistribution, Elections and Bolsa Familia in Brazil Simeon C. Nichter, University of California, Berkeley Claudio Ferraz, PUC-Rio Disc: The Creation of Wartime Social Orders: Armed Groups’ Strategies and Civilian Agency in Civil War Ana Arjona, Yale University Guerrilla Organization of Civilian Resources during Civil War Nelson Kasfir, Dartmouth College A Counterfactual Analysis of Necessary and Sufficient Causation Teppei Yamamoto, Princeton University Disc: INSURGENT GOVERNANCE OF CIVILIANS DURING CIVIL WAR Co-sponsored by 12-9 Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM 12-26 Chair: Papers: Daily Schedule ISLAM AND POLITICAL MOBILIZATION IN SOUTHEAST ASIA David S. Patel, Cornell University Mobilizing Political Islam in Democratic Indonesia Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University R. William Liddle, Ohio State University Saiful Mujani, Syarif Hidayatullah State Islamic University Does Piety Matter? Islamist Party Mobilization in Muslim Southeast Asia Kikue Hamayotsu, Northern Illinois University Islamist or Ethnonationalist Mobilization? Explaining the Resurgence of Ethnic Violence Among Muslim Minorities in Thailand and the Philippines Jacques Bertrand, University of Toronto A Road with Multiple Lanes: Joining Economic and Monetary Union Assem Dandashly, University of Victoria Disc: Klaus Armingeon, Universitaet of Berne Irina Khmelko, Georgia Southern University 16-11 DOMESTIC POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY Co-sponsored by 11-52 Christina Davis, Princeton University Chair: Papers: The decline of “Islamism” in Indonesia Michael Buehler, Columbia University Common Agency and China’s Trade Policymaking: An Endogenous Switching Regression Analysis Hans Han-Pu Tung, Harvard University Interlopers in Ethnic and Religious Conflicts: Terrorist Networks and Militias in Christian-Muslim Violence in Indonesia Yuhki Tajima, University of California, Riverside Disc: Eva R. Bellin, CUNY, Hunter College 12-52 ETHNICITY, RELIGION AND TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY IN AFRICAN POLITICS Co-sponsored by African Politics Conference Group, Panel 3 13-16 THE AMBIGUOUS POLITICAL LEGACIES OF EU ENLARGMENT Co-sponsored by 15-11 14-5 Chair: MODELING COMPLEX POLITICAL ENVIRONMENTS Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto Papers: Party Decision Rules and the Evolution of Party Systems: An Agent-Based Modeling Study James Adams, University of California, Davis Alex Mayer, University of California, Davis Zeynep Somer-Topcu, Vanderbilt University Protectionist Consumers vs. Free Trade Producers: Evidence from Survey Experiments in Japan Megumi Naoi, University of California, San Diego Ikuo Kume, Waseda University Democratic Differences: Electoral Institutions and Compliance withGATT/WTO Agreements Stephanie J. Rickard, Dublin City University Lobbying for Litigation: The Domestic Politics of GATT/WTO Adjudication Christina Davis, Princeton University Disc: Moonhawk Kim, University of Colorado at Boulder Cheryl M. Schonhardt-Bailey, London School of Economics 16-23 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS ROUNDTABLE: DAVID LAKE’S HIERARCHY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Co-sponsored by 18-4 17-11 THE ROLE OF DOMESTIC COURTS IN INTERNATIONAL AND TRANSNATIONAL POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC PROCESSES Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina Chair: Papers: The Role of Social Autonomy in Perceptions of “Other” in the International System Timothy J. Junio, University of Pennsylvania Court Reform and FDI in Transitional States: Chile and the Philippines Charles Anthony Smith, University of California, Irvine Private International Law in Domestic Courts: Implications for Global Economic Welfare Christopher A. Whytock, University of Utah Veto Actors Bargaining in Common Pools: Empirical Models of Policy with Multiple Policymakers Robert J. Franzese, Jr., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Examining Trends over Time in International Law Decisions of the US Courts of Appeals Alan Tauber, University of South Carolina Partisan Waves: Ideological Change and the Economics of the Median Voter Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, London School of Economics Giving Deference: U.S. Judges and the Use of International Comity Tonya L. Putnam, Columbia University Disc: Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto 15-11 THE AMBIGUOUS POLITICAL LEGACIES OF EU ENLARGMENT Co-sponsored by 13-16 Amie Kreppel, University of Florida Disc: Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina 18-4 The Political Challenge of Integrating East/Central European States into the European Union: Equal Partners or Reluctant Neighbors? Luba Racanska, St John’s University Chair: AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS ROUNDTABLE: DAVID LAKE’S HIERARCHY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Co-sponsored by 16-23 Susan Dayton Hyde, Yale University Disc: David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego The Politics of Euro Adoption in the New Member States Petia A. Kostadinova, University of Florida Part: Stephen D. Krasner, Stanford University Robert O. Keohane, Princeton University Alexander Cooley, Barnard College Michael N. Barnett, University of Minnesota 18-41 GRAND STRATEGY BETWEEN THE WARS Co-sponsored by 43-11 Chair: Papers: The Quality of Democracy in the European Union David R. Cameron, Yale University The East Side Story: Socialisation and Empowerment in the EU Enlargement Context Cristina Elena Parau, University of Oxford 362 Daily Schedule 19-13 Papers: Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM THE END OF AMERICAN HEGEMONY? RISING POWERS AND WORLD ORDER Co-sponsored by 43-3 Status Hierarchy and Great Powers: Russia and China William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College David C. Kang, University of Southern California Political Parties and the Duration of the Peace in Post Conflict Societies John Ishiyama, University of North Texas Anna Batta, University of North Texas The Demand for Reparations: Determinants of Transitional Justice in the Aftermath of the Nepali Civil War Wendy L. Hansen, University of New Mexico Prakash Adhikari, University of New Mexico India’s Rise and the Global Order: Slow Integration and Peaceful Change T.V. Paul, McGill University Mahesh Shankar, McGill University Adjusting to the Coming Multipolar World: The Rise of China and American Grand Strategy Christopher Layne, Texas A&M University Bringing Russia and China into the Western Order: Status Concerns and Cooperation Deborah Welch Larson, University of California, Los Angeles Alexei Shevchenko, California State University, Fullerton Explaining Changes in US Grand Strategy:The Rise of Offensive Liberalism and the War in Iraq Benjamin Miller, University of Haifa 20-4 Chair: Papers: Conflict-Induced Displacement, Understanding the Causes of Flight Prakash Adhikari, University of New Mexico Wendy L. Hansen, University of New Mexico Disc: Resat Bayer, Koc University Sarah Zukerman Daly, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 22-3 PARTY UNITY AND DEFECTION Co-sponsored by 11-69 Anna M. Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan Chair: Papers: BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (1): THEORY Co-sponsored by 21-1 Anne E. Sartori, Northwestern University Like day and night? Party Unity in Legislative Voting in Parliamentarianism and Presidentialism Steffen Kailitz, Technical University of Dresden Regulating Party Cohesion in Parliamentary Democracies: The Emergence of Anti-Defection Legislation in India and Israel Csaba Nikolenyi, Concordia University Shaul Shenhav, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Bringing Diplomacy Back In: Theoretical Foundations Shuhei Kurizaki, Texas A&M University Costless Communication and Indivisible Crisis Robert W. Walker, Washington University, St. Louis Bailey Kimssy, Washington University in St. Louis Disc: Anne E. Sartori, Northwestern University James D. Morrow, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Part: Robert F. Trager, University of California, Los Angeles Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University 20-12 Chair: TOOLS OF STATECRAFT: FOREIGN AID Marijke Breuning, University of North Texas Papers: Does Foreign Aid Win Hearts and Minds? How Aid Recipients Feel about their Donors Gina Yannitell Reinhardt, Texas A&M University Institutional and Preference-Based Determinants of Party and Party System Change in Parliaments Olga V. Shvetsova, Binghamton University, SUNY Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia Instrumental Changes in Political Party Structure Kenneth Mori McElwain, University of Michigan Disc: Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University 23-6 PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATION Co-sponsored by 38-1 Diane J. Heith, St. John’s University Chair: Papers: What Happened to Arab Foreign Aid? Examining the Changing Dynamics of Aid from Wealthy Arab Countries to Poor Ones Debra Shushan, College of William & Mary Trading with the Embargoed: State Decisions to Violate United Nations Arms Embargoes Matthew Moore, University of Missouri, Columbia Marijke Breuning, University of North Texas 21-1 BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (1): THEORY Co-sponsored by 20-4 POST CIVIL CONFLICT Resat Bayer, Koc University Papers: Stop Singing the Blues! Blue Helmets and the Duration of Civil Peace Tobias Hofmann, College of William & Mary Lena M. Schaffer, ETH Zürich The Exceptional Electoral Style of Barack Obama Roderick P. Hart, University of Texas, Austin Presidential Nomination Acceptance Speeches as “Presidential” Documents: How do Potential Presidents Address Policy? Donna R. Hoffman, University of Northern Iowa Alison Howard, Dominican University of California The Communications Program of the Bush White House: An Assessment William G. Mayer, Northeastern University Disc: Colleen J. Shogan, Congressional Research Service Matthew J. Dickinson, Middlebury College 23-14 Chair: STAFFING THE WHITE HOUSE Peri E. Arnold, University of Notre Dame Daily Schedule 21-15 Chair: Limping Ducks: Comparing Speechmaking Patterns of Presidential Terms Shannon L. Bow, University of Texas, Austin Demagogic or Dialogic?: Winning Arguments in the 2008 Presidential and Vice Presidential Debates Lara Michelle Brown, Villanova University Zim Gregory Nwokora, Oxford University Coming into Money: the impact of foreign aid on leader survival Amanda A. Licht, University of Iowa Disc: Parliamentary Party Group Discipline in Comparison Stefanie Bailer, University of Zurich 363 Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Papers: The Chief of Staff’s Progenitor: Secretaries to the President from Washington through Coolidge David B. Cohen, University of Akron Charles E. Walcott, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Getting Started in the Obama White House: Presidential Management and Staffing in the New Administration James D. King, University of Wyoming James W. Riddlesperger, Jr., Texas Christian University Daily Schedule Disc: Edward P. Weber, Washington State University 26-1 Chair: COURTS IN THE POLITICAL ENVIRONMENT Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Papers: What Difference Does A New Justice Make? Evidence from the Post-War Period Charles M. Cameron, Princeton University Separate, Representation and Nested Constituencies: The Role of Public Opinion in Supreme Court Nomination Politics Jeffrey R. Lax, Columbia University Jonathan P. Kastellec, Princeton University Your Community is Mine. ¡Si Se Puede!” Latina/o Political Appointees in the Executive Branch: How these Leaders Can Help President-Elect Obama Make a Case to Better Serve the Country Frances Marquez, Gallaudet University Compliance and Legal Consistency in the U.S. Courts of Appeals Joshua A. Strayhorn, Emory University Rivals, or a Team? Advisory Institutions and Hierarchy in the Early Obama Administration Andrew C. Rudalevige, Dickinson College Pay to Play? Judicial Promotion and Ideological Extremism Cliff Carrubba, Emory University Tom Clark, Emory University Distinctiveness in Presidential Operations Terry Sullivan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Disc: Karen M. Hult, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Peri E. Arnold, University of Notre Dame 25-2 SYSTEM EFFECTS, PATH DEPENDENCE, AND HEALTH POLICY Co-sponsored by 48-3 25-9 IS EDUCATION POLICY SERVING THE DISADVANTAGED? Co-sponsored by 32-13 Race, Class and Education Policy: Second-Generation Discrimination in the 21st Century Kenneth J. Meier, Texas A&M University Meredith Brooke Loudd Walker, Texas A&M University Sadé Walker, Texas A&M University Papers: Disc: Georg Vanberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Charles M. Cameron, Princeton University 27-8 POPULAR CONSTITUTIONALISM IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE John Brigham, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Chair: Papers: Politics of Constitution-Building for Reconciliation between Political Enemies Man Kwon Kim, New School for Social Research Jeffersonian Democracy and Popular Constitutionalism Melvin C. Laracey, University of Texas, San Antonio No Latino Left Behind: The Development of Education Policy Affecting Latinos, 1968-2008 Jason P. Casellas, University of Texas, Austin Closing Educational Attainment Gaps:Problem Definition, Measurement, and Policy Strategies Greg Thorson, University of Redlands Welfare, Low-Income Women and Access to Higher Education: The State of Policy in the States Tracy L. Steffy, CUNY Graduate Center Multiple Identity Theory and Racial Integration Policies in the Era of Voluntary School Integration Edwina Barvosa, University of California, Santa Barbara Disc: Khalilah L. Brown-Dean, Yale University 25-14 EXPLOITING NATURAL RESOURCES LIKE THERE IS NO TOMORROW Michael E. Kraft, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay Chair: Papers: Policy Learning and Institutional Change in Collaborative Settings Andrea K. Gerlak, University of Arizona Tanya Heikkila, Columbia University Water Management in an Ecology of Games Mark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis Changing the Face of SMCRA Reclamation: The Importance of Political Trust Darren A. Wheeler, University of North Florida Stacy Edmonds Wheeler, Ball State University Changing the Rules: Interest Groups and Federal Environmental Rulemaking Sara Rinfret, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay 364 Reconstituting the People: The Case of Ecuador’s 2008 Constitution Angelica Maria Bernal, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Jaime Vintimilla, Universidad San Francisco de Quito Two Paths to Judicial Power: The Basic Structure Doctrine, Public Interest Litigation, and the Supreme Court of India Manoj Mate, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Artemus Ward, Northern Illinois University 28-3 FEDERALISM, NATIONALISM, AND DEMOCRACY: A ROUNDTABLE HONORING SAMUEL H. BEER’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM Co-sponsored by APSA Timothy J. Conlan, George Mason University Chair: Part: Hugh Heclo, George Mason University Martha Derthick, University of Virginia Richard P. Nathan, Rockefeller Institute of Government Joseph Paul McLaughlin, Jr., Temple University Robert Vipond, University of Toronto 29-10 CONNECTICUT’S NEW PUBLIC FINANCING SYSTEM: A FIRST LOOK Rick D. Farmer, Oklahoma House of Representatives Chair: Papers: Donor Participation under Connecticut’s New Public Financing System Wesley Joe, Campaign Finance Institute Michael J. Malbin, SUNY, Albany and The Campaign Finance Institute Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University Peter W. Brusoe, American University Henrik M. Schatzinger, University of Georgia Daily Schedule Money, Participation, and Deliberation in the Connecticut Legislature Vincent G. Moscardelli, University of Connecticut Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Disc: Melissa Deckman, Washington College Part: David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame Joseph Quin Monson, Brigham Young University 34-1 THE IMPACT OF GENDER QUOTAS: DESCRIPTIVE, SUBSTANTIVE, AND SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATION Co-sponsored by 31-17 34-2 TURNOUT AND ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 36-6 Mark N. Franklin, European University Institute Does Public Funding in State Legislative Elections Encourage Citizens to Run for Office? Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Perspectives of State Legislative Candidates on Connecticut’s Implementation of Clean Elections Keith E. Hamm, Rice University Robert E. Hogan, Louisiana State University Disc: Thomas M. Carsey, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Rick D. Farmer, Oklahoma House of Representatives Chair: Papers: 31-17 Chair: Papers: THE IMPACT OF GENDER QUOTAS: DESCRIPTIVE, SUBSTANTIVE, AND SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATION Co-sponsored by 34-1 Rainbow Murray, University of London, Queen Mary The Effects and Costs of Early Voting and Same Day Registration in the 2008 Elections Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin David T. Canon, University of Wisconsin, Madison Kenneth R. Mayer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Donald P. Moynihan, University of Wisconsin, Madison Under-Qualified or Over-Prepared? Assessing the Qualifications of ‘Quota Women’ in the Ugandan Parliament Diana Z. O’Brien, Washington University in St. Louis Referendum Design, Quorum Rules and Turnout Pedro C. Magalhaes, Instituto de Ciencias Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa Luis Aguiar-Conraria, Universidade do Minho Who Runs for Office in Which Party? Political Party Gender Quotas and Political Ambition in Germany Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami Political Institutions, Political Knowledge, and the Turnout of Young Citizens: A Nordic Comparison Henry Milner, Universite de Montreal Grappling with the Perverse Effects of Women’s Political Presence in South Africa Denise Marie Walsh, University of Virginia An Interest Based Theory of Turnout and Electoral Bias Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa Todd Donovan, Western Washington University Quotas and Women’s Symbolic Representation: Lessons from Mexico Par Zetterberg, Uppsala University The Impact of Gender Quotas: A Research Agenda Mona Lena Krook, Washington University, St. Louis Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary Jennifer Marie Piscopo, University of California, San Diego Disc: Disc: John H. Aldrich, Duke University Sarah Birch, University of Essex 34-12 ELECTION LAW ISSUES FROM THE 2008 ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by Law and Political Process Study Group, Panel 1 Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los Angeles Gretchen M. Bauer, University of Delaware Mark P. Jones, Rice University Chair: 31-24 GENDERED POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Co-sponsored by 38-16 32-5 Chair: COALITIONS, AND MINORITY POLITICS Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Papers: Robert A. Brown Papers: Public Perceptions about State Election Reforms: Who Cares and Why? David Konisky, University of Missouri Lilliard E. Richardson, Jr., University of Missouri, Columbia Jeffrey Milyo, University of Missouri John D. Griffin, University of Notre Dame 32-13 IS EDUCATION POLICY SERVING THE DISADVANTAGED? Co-sponsored by 25-9 32-22 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE POLITICS OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE Co-sponsored by 47-3 33-10 Chair: AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON MELISSA DECKMAN’S SCHOOL BOARD BATTLES James Matthew Wilson, Southern Methodist University Disc: Richard L. Hasen, Loyola Law School Mark E. Rush, Washington and Lee University 35-11 Chair: ADVOCACY AND LEGISLATIVE ACTIVITY Kristina Miler, University of Illinois Papers: How a Bill Becomes a Law: The Effect of Interest Groups Matt Grossmann, Michigan State University Kurt Pyle, Michigan State University Lobbying the State Legislature: Who Dominates and When Does it Matter? Dave Nelson, University of Wisconsin, Madison Congressional Responses to Lobbying: Observations of an APSA Congressional Fellow Amy Melissa McKay, Georgia State University 365 Daily Schedule Disc: N=1: The Anomalous Early Voter in 2008 and the Perils of Reform Paul Gronke, Reed College Bridge to Nowhere: The Death of Public Funding for Presidential Campaigns in the 2008 Election Clifford A. Jones, University of Florida The Obama and the Clinton Factors: How Race and Gender Factor into Blacks’, Whites’, and Latinos’ Trust in the Representation of Group Interests Shayla C. Nunnally, University of Connecticut Illinois Latinos and Obama: A Comparative Analysis of the the 2004 and 2008 Elections Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern University The Resurgent American Voter, 1988-2008 Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Daily Schedule Organized Interest Campaign Advertisements and Legislative Behavior Mary C. Deason, University of Mississippi Disc: Scott H. Ainsworth, University of Georgia 35-13 NETWORKS OF ADVOCATES AND ACTIVISTS Co-sponsored by 8-17 Timothy M. LaPira, College of Charleston Chair: The Contradictory Consequences of Ambivalence for Political Engagement Robert Huckfeldt, University of California, Davis Scott D. McClurg, Southern Illinois University Disc: Anand E. Sokhey, Ohio State University 37-14 THE PUZZLE OF POPULAR LEGITIMACY Co-sponsored by Latin American Studies Association, Panel 2 Damarys Canache, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Disc: Papers: Network Determinants of Interest Groups’ Participation in Coalitions Over Time John C. Scott, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Part: William Mishler, University of Arizona Christian Welzel, Jacobs University Bremen Russell J. Dalton, University of California, Irvine Mitchell A. Seligson, Vanderbilt University Bruce Gilley, Portland State University 38-1 PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATION Co-sponsored by 23-6 38-16 GENDERED POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Co-sponsored by 31-24 Rosalee Clawson, Purdue University It’s Not Personal; It’s Strictly Business: A Social Networks Analysis of Internal Party Cleavages, 1972-2008 Hans Noel, University of Michigan 527 Committees as Central Actors in the Political Party Network, 2004 and 2006 David A. Dulio, Oakland University Richard M. Skinner, Bowdoin College Seth E. Masket, University of Denver Parties and the Congressional Lobbying Network Gregory Koger, University of Miami Jennifer Nicoll Victor, University of Pittsburgh Social Networks, Political Heterogeneity, and Interpersonal Influence: Test of a Formal Model with Empirical Evidence from Italy and the U.S. Delia Baldassarri, Princeton University Disc: Suzanne M. Robbins, George Mason University 36-6 TURNOUT AND ELECTORAL INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 34-2 36-19 Chair: VOTERS AND WELFARE STATES Stefan Svallfors, Umea University Papers: The Impact of Inequality on Political Participation- New Evidence on a Burgeoning Debate Lyle A. Scruggs, University of Connecticut Daniel Stockemer, University of Connecticut Welfare State Retrenchment and Political Trust in Europe 19732002 Staffan Kumlin, University of Gothenburg The Electoral Consequences of Policy Reform through Social Pacts or Legislation: Evidence from Western Europe, 1980-2006 Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida John E. Kelly, University of London, Birkbeck College Alexia Katsanidou, University of Southampton Chair: Papers: Gendered News Coverage of Women Candidates and Politicians: Theorizing the Presentation-Provision Distinction Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant, Queen’s University Gendered Appeals Online: A Study of Female Representatives’ Websites Sarah Allen Gershon, Georgia State University “Win Ugly or Lose Pretty”: The Calls for Hillary Clinton’s Exit in Historical Comparison Melody Rose, Portland State University Regina G. Lawrence, Louisiana State University Women Covering Women: The effect of Reporter Gender on Candidate Coverage in the 2008 Primaries Rachel VanSickle-Ward, Pitzer College Gender-Based Strategies in Candidate Websites Monica C. Schneider, Miami University of Ohio Disc: Rosalee Clawson, Purdue University 40-5 Chair: INTERNET GOVERNANCE: STRUCTURES AND ISSUES Laura Roselle, Elon University Papers: NGOs in Global Internet Governance: Co-Creation Processes, Collective Learning, and Network Effectiveness Nanette S. Levinson, American University Regulating the New Economy - New Forms of EU Governance for Telecoms and the Information Society Kirsten L. Rodine Hardy, Northeastern University Disc: Stefan Svallfors, Umea University 36-29 Chair: SOCIAL PROCESSES AND VOTING Anand E. Sokhey, Ohio State University Papers: Facebook and Political Engagement: An Analysis of the 2008 Presidential Election Juliet Carlisle, Idaho State University Robert C. Patton, Idaho State University Networked Publics in International Affairs: An Empirical Analysis Stuart J. Thorson, Syracuse University Hyunjin Seo, Syracuse University Social Voting: How Political Discussion May Improve the Chances of Voting in One’s Economic Self-Interest Barry Pump, University of Washington Using Indices to Measure the Digital Divide Cecilia G. Manrique, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse Gabriel G. Manrique, Winona State University 366 Coping with Innovation in Privacy Protection Andreas Busch, University of Göttingen Social Networks as a Shortcut to Information and Correct Voting John Barry Ryan, University of California, Davis Disc: Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University Political Communication Networks Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago 41-2 POLITICAL POSSIBILITY IN THE NOVELS OF JOSE SARAMAGO Co-sponsored by 2-41 Daily Schedule 42-8 Chair: Papers: ANALYZING RELIGION AND SOCIAL RELATIONS IN AN AGE OF GLOBALIZATION William L. Niemi, Western State College of Colorado Zizek and the Fundamentals: Marxism and the Terror of Religious Belief Daniel J. O’Connor, California State University, Long Beach The Opiate of the People: The Marxist Critique of Religion in a Global Dark Age Clyde W. Barrow, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM 46-2 FOCUS ON METAPHOR: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON LANGUAGE AND DISCOURSE Co-sponsored by 2-14 46-21 COMPLEXITY AND INTERDEPENDENCE IN WORLD POLITICS: NEW QUALITATIVE APPROACHES Gary Goertz, University of Arizona Chair: Papers: A Plea for Civil Religion: Reflexions on Rousseau’s Savoyard Vicar in the Global Age Michael Forman, University of Washington, Tacoma Holes in the Whole: Negative Dialectics and the Limits of Integration Theory Daniel J. Levine, Johns Hopkins University Religious Choices and the Decline of American Republicanism R. Claire Snyder-Hall, George Mason University A New Path or a Cul-de-sac? Complex Adaptive Systems and International Relations Theory Vsevolod Gunitskiy, Columbia University Religion: Friend or Foe in the Politics of Immigration Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield University Alethia Jones, SUNY, Albany Disc: Bradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University William L. Niemi, Western State College of Colorado 43-3 THE END OF AMERICAN HEGEMONY? RISING POWERS AND WORLD ORDER Co-sponsored by 19-13 43-11 Chair: GRAND STRATEGY BETWEEN THE WARS Co-sponsored by 18-41 Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College Complexity and Stability in Contexts of Joint Decision-Making. An Experimental Study Tanja Pritzlaff, University of Bremen Implications of Qualitative Methods for Studying International Politics Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University Disc: Kaija E. Schilde, University of Pennsylvania 47-3 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE POLITICS OF SAME-SEX MARRIAGE Co-sponsored by 32-22 Evan Gerstmann, Loyola Marymount University Chair: Papers: Balance of Power, Components of Power, and Britain’s Threat Perception in the 1930s Steven E. Lobell, University of Utah Papers: Strategy of Innocence or Calculated Provocation? Neoclassical Realism, Resource Extraction, the Roosevelt Administration’s Road to World War II, 1938-41 Jeffrey W. Taliaferro, Tufts University Asian-Americans and Marriage Equality Robert W. Scharr, University of Florida Julie Liang, University of Florida Trade Expectations and German Strategy in the Interwar Period Dale Copeland, University of Virginia Disc: Daryl G. Press, Dartmouth College David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University 44-3 DEMOCRACY, ELECTIONS, AND POLITICAL (IN)STABILITY Co-sponsored by 11-46 Chair: Part: Sonia Cardenas, Trinity College Philippe Dufresne, Canadian Human Rights Commission Thomas Flanagan, University of Calgary Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University Julie Mertus, American University Richard Moon, University of Windsor ILLIBERAL POLITICS IN LIBERAL STATES: STUDYING THE ‘ROUGH EDGES OF DEMOCRACY’ Co-sponsored by 11-14 The Political and Sexual Attitudes of Young Black Americans Alexandra Moffett-Bateau, University of Chicago Embodied Borders: The Role of Marital and Immigration Policy in the Regulation of US Citizenship Sara Angevine, Rutgers University Disc: Evan Gerstmann, Loyola Marymount University Helene Slessarev-Jamir, Claremont School of Theology 48-3 SYSTEM EFFECTS, PATH DEPENDENCE, AND HEALTH POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-2 Edward A. Miller, Brown University Chair: Papers: Bridging International and National Regulatory Policymaking on Medical Devices: A Comparison of the EU, Japan and the U.S. Christa Altenstetter, CUNY-Graduate Center Access to Care vs. Access to Coverage: Explaining One State’s Policy Choices Mary A. Clark, Tulane University Transitions between Private and Public Health Insurance Plans: Why it happens and What are Peoples Experiences? Colleen M. Grogan, University of Chicago 367 Daily Schedule 46-1 THEME PANEL: CANADIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSIONS Co-sponsored by T-24 Michael Goodhart, University of Pittsburgh California’s Proposition 8: Demographic Explanations and Implications Patrick J. Egan, New York University Kenneth Sherrill, CUNY, Hunter College ‘Whites Oppose, Blacks Support, Latinos Divided’: Making Sense of the Racialized Discourse Surrounding California’s Proposition 8 Victoria Wilson, University of California, Irvine Balance of Power, Preventive War, and British and French Policy toward Nazi Germany in the Early 1930s Norrin M. Ripsman, Concordia University Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University 45-10 The Political and Institutional Construction of International Regions: Conceptualization and Operationalization Gary Goertz, University of Arizona Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM New Governance In Action: The Renewed War On Cancer In The United States And European Union Thomas R. Oliver, University of Wisconsin The Crisis of the Divided Welfare State: Surprising Lessons from France Marc E. Smyrl, Universite de Montpellier 1 Disc: Jeremy Green, Yale University Terry S. Weiner, Union College Poster Sessions POSTER SESSION 8 Divisions 5, 6, 7, 38, 41, and 47 Papers: American Virtue: Benjamin Franklin and Civic Engagement Christie L. Maloyed, Texas A&M University Bob Dylan, Charles Taylor, and Cultural Disintegration Justin Rex, Wayne State University Election-Specific Factors Versus Routine: Understanding Individuals’ Turnout Decisions James Douglas Melton, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign American Ambivalence Towards Equality and Limited Government Laurence M O’Rourke, ICF International Deficits, Public Opinion, and Context-Conditional Political Budget Cycles Marek Hanusch, University of Oxford The Effect of Educational Quality and Achievement on Political Participation Meghan Condon, University of Wisconsin, Madison The Stubborn Cowboy: An Analysis of G.W. Bush Foreign Policy Colleen E. Miller, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Reaching Back into the Cookie Jar? Explaining Decisions to Increase War Aims Thomas M. Dolan, Jr., University of Rochester Daily Schedule It is Not Easy Being Green: Use of the Environmental Frame by Canadian National Newspapers in Telling the Story of Alberta’s Oil Sands in 200. Laura Way, University of Alberta Interactions Between Risk, Cooperative Experience, and Distribution Preferences: Experimental Evidence for the Importance of Institutions and the Limits of Game Theory William E. English William E., English Michael C. Munger Michael C., Munger Responding to Globalization: How Governments Use Labor Mobility to Deepen Globalization Qiang Zhou, University of Chicago Understanding Oil: Beyond State vs. Market Andrew S. Barnes, Kent State University Institutions, Education, and Economic Performance Jamus Jerome Lim, World Bank Jonathon Adams-Kane, University of California, Santa Cruz Beyond Inflation Fighting: Partisanship, Central Bank Independence, and Foreign Direct Investment Terence Teo, Rutgers University Social Welfare Spending and Disabled Veterans in the United States Kevin G. McQueeney, Rutgers University Evolution of the Second Amendment: 1939-2008 Benjamin B. Carlson, SUNY at Buffalo Change under Pressure: Building the Fiscal State in the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires, 1660-1780 Tolga Demiryol, University of Virginia Using Historical Analysis to Understand Mass Citizen Behavior: The Feedback Effects of Social Welfare and Education Policy Jennifer Erkulwater, University of Richmond Historical Institutionalism, Critical Junctures and the Problem of Civil Peace in Post-Colonial Africa- Lessons from Three States in Africa John Froitzheim, University of Virginia Fellow Kleptocrats? How Mafias and States Cohabit Thomas Chadefaux, University of Michigan Jonson Nathaniel Porteux, University of Michigan Building the Disaster State: Disaster Relief from the Founding to the Twentieth Century Patrick S. Roberts, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University Generous Legislators? A Characterisation of Vote Trading Agreements Rafael Hortala-Vallve, London School of Economics The Neo-institutional Origins of Governing Cycles in American Politics Curt Nichols, University of Texas, Austin The Political Economy of Disease: Historical Evidence from the US, France and Germany Stephen August Meserve, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Mobile Phones and Corruption in Africa Catie Snow Bailard, George Washington University Informal Political Intermediaries and Path Dependence: Evidence from Rural Punjab, Pakistan Shandana Khan Mohmand, University of Sussex Ali Cheema, Lahore University of Management Sciences Manasa Patnam, University of Cambridge Political Advertising and Political Perceptions- The 2008 U.S. Presidential Campaign Joseph Boesch, University of Texas at Austin Shinya Wakao, University of Texas Preferential Trading Agreements and Trade Capacity Building Leonardo Baccini, Trinity College Dublin Johannes Urpelainen, Columbia University Hearing and Talking to the Other Side: Antecedents of CrossCutting Exposure Porismita Borah, University of Wisconsin, Madison Stephanie Edgerly, University of Wisconsin, Madison Emily K. Vraga, University of Wisconsin, Madison Dhavan Vinod Shah, University of Wisconsin Insights from an Unusual Dataset on the Wages of Corruption for India’s Politicians Rikhil Bhavnani, Stanford University This is My Territory! Election Posters as Signals of Campaign Credibility. The case of France and Belgium Delia Dumitrescu, Ohio State University Informalization, Segmentation, Liberalization: The Politics of Changing Labor Markets Sebastian Karcher, Northwestern University Partisan Control, Media Bias, and Viewer Responses: Evidence from Berlusconi’s Italy Ruben Durante, Brown University Economic Retrospecition: National-, State-, and County-Level Contextual Influences on the U.S. Presidential Vote Meredith A. Levine, Yale University A Bayesian Hierarchical Topic Model for Political Texts: Measuring Expressed Agendas in Senate Press Releases Justin Grimmer, Harvard University Public Policy, Media Discourse and Democracy: Elite Manipulation and America’s Right Turn Matthew P. Guardino, Syracuse University 368 Daily Schedule Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Call and Response: Citizen Communication with Congress Emily G. Hickey, Harvard University McCain Played Clean (Mostly): Image Analysis Indicates that Obama’s Skin Tone is Not Darker in McCain’s 2008 Campaign Advertisements Solomon Messing, Stanford University Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University Challenges and Issues in Measuring Media Freedom: The Update of the Global Press Freedom Dataset (1948-2007) Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, University of Southern California Douglas Van Belle, Victoria University of Wellington Political Communication, Fourth Estate and the Nigerian Press Muhammad Jameel Yusha’u, Sheffield University God is Dead, Long Live God: Examining Rebellion and Redemption in the Violent Bear It Away Kimberly Roxanne Hurd, Louisiana State University Voegelin’s Nietzsche: Overcoming the Problem of Evil in Zarathustra Sarah Shea, McGill University Reinhold Niebuhr, Modernity, and the Problem of Evil Matt Sitman, Georgetown University Disc: Global Forum of Chinese Political Scientists Panel 4 Chair: CHINESE DEMOCRATIZATION IN TIMES OF CHANGE Shiping Hua, University of Louisville Papers: Democracy, Dictatorship and Development: China, Africa and the East Asian Model in a Dynamic World Barrett McCormick, Marquette University The Price of Village Democracy: Vote Buying and Village Elections in China John James Kennedy, University of Kansas Wise Blood: Flannery O’Connor’s Theologico-Political Problem Leslie G. Rubin, Duquesne University Enemies of the State: The Evolution of Subversion in Post-Mao China Andrew Wedeman, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Related Group Panels African Politics Conference Group Panel 3 Chair: Papers: ETHNICITY, RELIGION AND TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY IN AFRICAN POLITICS Co-sponsored by 12-52 Keith A. Darden, Yale University Democratization in China Since the Tiananmen Incident Joseph Y.S. Cheng, City University of Hong Kong Chinese Political Tradition and Its Contemporary Practices Yanqi Tong, University of Utah Who Are Africa’s (Non) Ethnic Voters? Evaluating Theories on the Salience of Ethnicity in African Electoral Politics Jeffrey K. Conroy-Krutz, Columbia University Disc: Social Structure and Political Mobilization Dominika Koter, Yale University IPSA Research Committee 36 (Power) The Political Implications of Religion and Ethnicity in Africa: a Field Experiment along the Muslim-Christian Divide. John F. McCauley, University of California, Los Angeles Big Men and Ballots: Results from a Survey Experiment in Zambia Katharine A. Baldwin, Columbia University Disc: Panel 1 Chair: Papers: Thad Dunning, Yale University Daniel N. Posner, University of California, Los Angeles Panel 15 TOCQUEVILLE AFTER 150 YEARS: WHAT IS ALIVE AND WHAT IS DEAD IN THE POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY OF ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE? Chair: Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College Harvey C. Mansfield, Harvard University Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College John Marini, University of Nevada, Reno Cheryl B. Welch, Harvard University Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College Eric Voegelin Society Panel 9 Papers: Brutality, Vulgarity, and Evil in Chekhov’s Three Sisters Lee Trepanier, Saginaw Valley State University F.W.J. Schelling on the Metaphysics of Evil Steven Francis McGuire, Catholic University of America POWER, GOVERNMENTALITY AND SOCIAL CHANGE Co-sponsored by 2-51 Clarissa R. Hayward, Washington University Power and Truth Mark Haugaard, National University of Ireland, Galway Structural Disadvantages and Counterbalancing Strategies of Small States in International Negotiations Diana Panke, University College Dublin Two Modes of Power in IR – Towards a Clearer Distinction Kira Petersen, Harvard University Disc: Giulio M. Gallarotti, Wesleyan University Latin American Studies Association Panel 2 THE PUZZLE OF POPULAR LEGITIMACY Co-sponsored by 37-14 Law and Political Process Study Group Panel 1 Chair: Papers: ELECTION LAW ISSUES FROM THE 2008 ELECTIONS Co-sponsored by 34-12 Daniel H. Lowenstein, University of California, Los Angeles N=1: The Anomalous Early Voter in 2008 and the Perils of Reform Paul Gronke, Reed College Daily Schedule Chair: THEORISTS, THEOLOGIANS, AND LITTÉRATEURS: EVIL AND MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT Martin Palous, Czech Ambassador to the United Nations Dennis Hickey, Missouri State University Andre Laliberte, University of Ottawa Power and Representation Thamy Pogrebinschi, Instituto Universitário de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro (IUPERJ) Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Part: Michael D. Henry, St. John’s University Paul Corey, Humber College Bridge to Nowhere: The Death of Public Funding for Presidential Campaigns in the 2008 Election Clifford A. Jones, University of Florida Psychologists of Evil: Nietzsche and Dostoevsky on the Darkness of the Soul Rouven J. Steeves, U.S. Air Force Academy 369 Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:45 PM Disc: Public Perceptions about State Election Reforms: Who Cares and Why? David Konisky, University of Missouri Jeffrey Milyo, University of Missouri Lilliard E. Richardson, Jr., University of Missouri, Columbia Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global Richard L. Hasen, Loyola Law School Mark E. Rush, Washington and Lee University SESSION 3 Political Studies Association Panel 1 Chair: Daily Schedule CHINA’S WELFARE POLITICS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Ito Peng, University of Toronto SESSION 3 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science Saturday, 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM APSA Meetings APSA Committee on the Status of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and the Transgendered in the Profession COMMITTEE MEETING Papers: Distributional Coalitions and Welfare Politics in Large Uneven Developers: The Case of China Mark W. Frazier, University of Oklahoma APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos in the Profession Job Loss, Worker Disturbances, and State Welfare Response: China, France, and Mexico, 1980-2005 Dorothy J. Solinger, University of California, Irvine Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Social Assistance in China 1993-2002: Accommodating Institutions and Sponsors Daniel Hammond, University of Glasgow APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession Explaining Welfare State Retrenchment: The Case of Health in China, 1978-2003 Jane Duckett, University of Glasgow COMMITTEE MEETING APSA Panel Panel 2 Chair: Part: Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 3 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 3 CAREERS OF SELECTED AFRICAN AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENTISTS WHO RECEIVED THEIR PH.DS DURING THE “SEPARATE BUT EQUAL” ERA Maurice C. Woodard, Howard University Michael Frazier, Howard University Alice M. Jackson, Morgan State University Cris Johnson, Esq., CUNY-Graduate Center Tobe Johnson, Morehouse College E. Walter Miles, San Diego State University Lorenzo Morris, Howard University Jewel L. Prestage, Prairie View A&M University Lucius J. Barker, Stanford University Michael W. Combs, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Working Group: Comparative Political Theory APSA Committee on the Status of Women in the Profession SESSION 3 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes Panel 1 Chair: POLITICS, MORALITY, AND HUMAN TRAFFICKING Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California, Irvine SESSION 3 Part: Audrey Macklin, University of Toronto Jacqueline Berman, Berkeley Policy Associates Lyndsey Gayle Christoffersen, University of California, Irvine Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 3 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics Division Panels SESSION 3 T-26 THEME PANEL: EDUCATING STUDENTS TO BE GLOBAL CITIZENS Co-sponsored by 9-5 and 10-4 T-27 THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM AND VARIETIES OF CRISIS? Co-sponsored by 14-8 and 13-15 1-2 ROUNDTABLE: MOTIVATING POLITICS: ANCIENT AND MODERN PERSPECTIVES ON REASON AND DESIRE Patchen Markell, University of Chicago Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 3 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 3 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 3 Chair: Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government Part: Giulia Sissa, University of California-Los Angeles Jill Frank, University of South Carolina Duncan Kelly, University of Cambridge Sharon R. Krause, Brown University Melissa Lane, Princeton University 1-8 CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL DEMOCRACY AND COSMOPOLITAN CITIZENSHIP Co-sponsored by 3-1 Monique Deveaux, Williams College SESSION 3 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 3 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics SESSION 3 370 Chair: Daily Schedule Papers: Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Global Citizenship and Social Rights Barbara Arneil, University of British Columbia Chair: Burke Hendrix, Cornell University Can Institutions Motivate, or Create, Global Citizens? Patti Tamara Lenard, University of Ottawa Papers: Explaining Historical Injustice: History, Socially Embedded Power, and Group Asymmetries Christopher Lebron, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Democracy and Rights: Beyond the Idealisations Anne Phillips, London School of Economics Redressing the Right Wrong: Historic Redress for Indigenous People Douglas Sanderson, University of Toronto Does Global Justice need Democracy? Regina Kreide, Justus Liebig University Giessen Disc: Rogers M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania 1-15 Chair: GLOBAL JUSTICE AND TRANSNATIONAL POLITICS Casiano A.W. Hacker-Cordón, Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales Papers: Towards Global Justice: Autonomous Development and Global Empowerment Nancy Kokaz, University of Toronto International Justice and Agency: Hegel’s Reply to Rawls Maria G. Kowalski, Columbia University Is the World Social Forum a Transnational Public Sphere? Nancy Fraser, Critical Theory and the Containment of Radical Possibility Jakeet Singh, University of Toronto Janet Conway, Brock University Disc: Casiano A.W. Hacker-Cordón, Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales 1-23 Chair: HISTORIES OF LIBERTY Luigi Bradizza, Louisiana State University Papers: “A difference in Opinion is inevitable”: Benjamin Franklin and Religious Liberty Alan Houston, University of California, San Diego Two Forms of Aboriginal Political Reconciliation: Constitutional and Moral. Dale Turner, Dartmouth College Can We Supersede Historic Injustice Burke Hendrix, Franklin & Marshall College Disc: Melissa S. Williams, University of Toronto 3-1 CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL DEMOCRACY AND COSMOPOLITAN CITIZENSHIP Co-sponsored by 1-8 3-4 MISUNDERSTANDING HISTORICAL INJUSTICE Co-sponsored by 2-43 3-7 ISAIAH BERLIN’S “TWO CONCEPTS OF LIBERTY” AFTER 50 YEARS Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State University Chair: Papers: Freedom and Selves John Christman, Penn State University From Rationalism to Micro-power: Freedom and Its Enemies Diana H. Coole, University of London, Birkbeck College Retrieving Positive Freedom and Why It Matters Carol C. Gould, Temple University Republicanism and the Market in Berlin’s “Two Concepts of Liberty” Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State University Ideas of Power and the English System of Liberty in Eighteenth Century Thought Suzanne Marcuzzi, University of Cambridge Disc: Bruce Baum, University of British Columbia Maria Dimova-Cookson, Durham University The Multiple Freedoms of Cicero’s Emerging Republican Politics Daniel Cordes, Columbia University 5-6 Disc: Luigi Bradizza, Louisiana State University Chair: DELIBERATION AND SOCIAL NETWORKS Co-sponsored by 37-4 Andrew J. Bloeser, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign 2-16 ”CAPITALISM AND CHRISTIANITY, AMERICAN STYLE” BY WILLIAM E. CONNOLLY William E. Connolly, Johns Hopkins University Kathy E. Ferguson, University of Hawaii David R. Howarth, University of Essex Philip Goodchild, University of Nottingham Catherine Keller, Drew University Part: 2-33 Chair: CONCEPTS OF THE POLITICAL Melissa A. Orlie, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Papers: Toward an Ethics of the Third Term Ella Myers, University of Utah Papers: Personal Network Composition and Political Attitudes among First-Year University Students Michael Keane, University of Notre Dame A Group-Based Approach to Understanding Deliberation: The Deliberative Justice Experiment Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University Tali Mendelberg, Princeton University The Impact of Social Network Composition Upon Knowledge and Resistance to Persuasion: Reconciling Findings Lindsey C. Levitan, Stony Brook University Considered Opinions on Further EU Enlargement: Evidence from an EU-Wide Deliberative Poll Robert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin James S. Fishkin, Stanford University Assessing ‘Acknowledgment’ as a Political Language: Ethics and Rhetoric in Baldwin, Cavell, and Butler George M. Shulman, New York University Paul C. Apostolidis, Whitman College 2-43 MISUNDERSTANDING HISTORICAL INJUSTICE Co-sponsored by 3-4 Disc: Andrew J. Bloeser, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign 6-15 INSTITUTIONS OF MONETARY POLICY 371 Daily Schedule Why We Need a New Concept of the Political Melissa A. Orlie, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Disc: The Effect of Social Networks on the Quality of Thinking about Policies Elif Erisen, Cal Poly State University Cengiz Erisen, SUNY, Stony Brook Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Daily Schedule Chair: J. Lawrence Broz, University of California, San Diego Chair: William E. Hudson, Providence College Papers: Voting in Monetary Policy-Making Committees: A Statistical Analysis Nick Vivyan, London School of Economics and Political Science Bjorn Hoyland, University of Oslo Papers: Diversity, Tolerance and Political Socialization: An Empirical Inquiry into the Democratic Impact of Schools and Neighbourhoods. Ellen Claes, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Seeking a Just and Humane World: Motivation for Continuity and Change Pamela N. Waldron-Moore, Xavier University Paying Less to Play: How Central Bank Inflation Targeting Increases Institutional Quality and Political Stability Joseph J. St. Marie, University of Southern Mississippi Shahdad Naghshpour, University of Southern Mississippi Samuel S. Stanton, Jr., Grove City College Bruno Sergi, University of Messina Two Faces to Peace: Reconciling Academics and Advocacy in Peace Education Michaelene D. Cox, Illinois State University Visual Culture as a Pedagogical Tool Toward Ethics and Human Rights Safia Swimelar, Elon University Accounting for Economic Institutions: How Independent Central Banks Affect Democratic Accountability Cassandra Rose Grafstrom, University of Michigan Teaching Political Science in the Poorest State in the U.S. and the Poorest Country in Africa: Similarities and Differences Robert Press, University of Southern Mississippi Ideological Distance and a Common Framework for Political Business Cycles Michael G. Hall, Wichita State University Disc: Robert C. Lowry, University of Texas, Dallas 10-4 6-25 VARIETIES OF CHANGE IN EUROPEAN POLITICAL ECONOMY Co-sponsored by 15-12 THEME PANEL: EDUCATING STUDENTS TO BE GLOBAL CITIZENS Co-sponsored by 9-5 and T-26 11-9 VARIETIES OF ECONOMIC CHANGE? Co-sponsored by Labor Project, Panel 1 Matthew E. Carnes, Georgetown University 7-7 Chair: Part: 8-2 Chair: Papers: FRESH DEBATES IN SOUTHERN POLITICS: RACE, CLASS, RELIGION, AND PARTISANSHIP IN A CHANGING AMERICAN SOUTH Byron E. Shafer, University of Wisconsin, Madison Papers: The Politics of Labor Reform: The Enduring Effects of Labor Relations Systems Teri L. Caraway, University of Minnesota James M. Glaser, Tufts University John C. Green, University of Akron Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University Harold W. Stanley, Southern Methodist University Richard G.C. Johnston, University of Pennsylvania Corporatism 2.0? Understanding the Rebirth of Labor Politics in Latin America Matthew E. Carnes, Georgetown University HOW BAYESIAN METHODS MAKE THE STUDY OF LATIN AMERICAN POLITICS SUBSTANTIALLY BETTER. Co-sponsored by 12-15 Jeff Gill, Washington University Political Origins of Anti-Labor Institutions Alexander Kuo, Stanford University Connor Raso, Stanford University Committee Leadership in Mexico’s Chamber of Deputies, 1997-2006 Francisco Javier Aparicio, CIDE Joy Langston, CIDE Unveiling State-Delegation Effects in Legislative Behavior in Mexico’s National Congress Guillermo Rosas, Washington University Learning, Political Regimes and the Liberalization of Trade Abel Escriba-Folch, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals Covadonga Meseguer, CIDE Putting Postcommunist Labor in Comparative Perspective Stephen F. Crowley, Oberlin College The Politics of Labor Market Deregulation in Japan and Korea Jiyeoun Song, Harvard University Disc: Katrina Burgess, Tufts University Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 11-28 FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON DEMOCRACY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 12-8 Leonard Wantchekon, New York University Chair: Papers: Getting Clean Elections? A Field Experiment with Domestic Election Observers in Ghana Nahomi Ichino, Harvard University Ideology and Discipline in the Mexican Lower Chamber of Congress, 1998-2008 Gustavo Adolfo Robles, Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México Tune in to Governance: An Experimental Investigation of Radio Campaigns in Africa Devra Coren Moehler, Cornell University Judges’ Law: Ideology and Coalitions in Mexico’s Election Tribunal 1996-2006 Federico Estevez, Institute Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico Eric Magar, ITAM Against the Machine: Experimental Results from Georgia’s 2008 Parliamentary Election Jesse Driscoll, Stanford University Fernando Daniel Hidalgo, University of California, Berkeley Disc: Andrew D. Martin, Washington University 9-5 THEME PANEL: EDUCATING STUDENTS TO BE GLOBAL CITIZENS Co-sponsored by 10-4 and T-26 372 Chair: When Do Voters Punish Corrupt Politicians? Experimental Evidence from Brazil Miguel de Figueiredo, University of California, Berkeley Fernando Daniel Hidalgo, University of California, Berkeley Yuri Kasahara, Fundação Getúlio Vargas Disc: Donald P. Green, Yale University Daily Schedule 11-43 Chair: Papers: COORDINATED MARKET ECONOMIES UNDER PRESSURE Markus M. L. Crepaz, University of Georgia Varieties of Capitalism and Varieties of Macroeconomic Policy: Are Some Economies More Pro-Cyclical than Others? Bruno Amable, University of Paris I Karim Azizi, University of Paris 1 1989 and the reshaping of Europe’s ideological landscape Albena Azmanova, University of Kent Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Disc: Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University Jason Lyall, Princeton University 12-34 THE POLITICS OF REDISTRIBUTION IN LATIN AMERICA Co-sponsored by Latin American Studies Association, Panel 1 Gabriel Ondetti, Missouri State Unviersity Chair: Papers: The Politics of Education and Training Reform in Advanced Industrial Economies Sara Jane McCaffrey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Welfare and Redistribution in Latin America: Toward a New Model? Michelle L. Dion, Georgia Institute of Technology Coordinated Market Economies under Pressure: The Politics of Skill Formation in Times of Low Birthrates in Germany, Slovenia and Korea Nicole Richardt, University of Utah Nicole Richardt, University of Utah Monika Benova, University of Utah Hyobin Lee, University of Utah Taxing Agriculture in Argentina: Export Taxes, Producers’ Power, and the 2008 Strikes Tasha A. Fairfield, University of California, Berkeley Incorporating the Informal Sector? The Politics of Fiscal Inclusion in Latin America James E. Mahon, Jr., Williams College Immigration, Welfare State features, and Labor Market Regulation: An analysis based on European data Sofia A. Perez, Boston University Disc: Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University 11-44 NEW METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO ETHNICITY AND NATIONAL IDENTITY Yoshiko M. Herrera, University of Wisconsin, Madison Chair: Papers: Disc: Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 12-49 PROTEST AND DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN AMERICA AND EAST ASIA Co-sponsored by 44-17 Ethnicity, Strategic Contingency and Democracy Shaheen Mozaffar, Bridgewater State College 12-51 Beyond National Identity: Collective Schemata of the Nation in Thirty-Three Countries Bart Bonikowski, Princeton University AGENCY UNDER AUTHORITARIANISM Co-sponsored by 44-23 13-15 United but Unequal: Experiments in Nationalism and Islam Natan B. Sachs, Stanford University THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM AND VARIETIES OF CRISIS? Co-sponsored by 14-8 and T-27 14-8 Yoshiko M. Herrera, University of Wisconsin, Madison Rose McDermott, Brown University Chair: THEME ROUNDTABLE: VARIETIES OF CAPITALISM AND VARIETIES OF CRISIS? Co-sponsored by 13-15 and T-27 Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg Conceptualizing and Measuring Subnationalism Prerna Singh, Harvard University MEASURING QUALITY OF GOVERNMENT: IS THERE ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT? Co-sponsored by 24-6 12-8 FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON DEMOCRACY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Co-sponsored by 11-28 12-15 HOW BAYESIAN METHODS MAKE THE STUDY OF LATIN AMERICAN POLITICS SUBSTANTIALLY BETTER. Co-sponsored by 8-2 Chair: DISAGGREGATING CIVIL WARS Co-sponsored by 18-27 Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University The Effects of Warfare in Civil Wars: An Empirical Analysis Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University Laia Balcells, Yale University Killing cleavages? The politics of religious diversity and civil war Ragnhild Nordås, PRIO How many types of civil wars? Andreas Wimmer, University of California, Los Angeles Part: Juliet Johnson, McGill University Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics Peter A. Hall, Harvard University Mary E. Gallagher, University of Michigan Raj M. Desai, Brookings Institution 14-12 CONDITIONS FOR CHANGE: REFORMING ADVANCED WELFARE STATES Co-sponsored by 15-3 Martin J. Rhodes, University of Denver Chair: Papers: The Political Causes of Unemployment Insurance Reforms in OECD Countries Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh Conditions for Successful Pension Reform: International Pressures and Domestic Politics Sabina Avdagic, University of Sussex Martin J. Rhodes, University of Denver Coalition Governments and Reform Capacity Johannes Lindvall, University of Oxford Power and Institutions in Welfare Politics: The Impact of Political Institutions on Political Power and Policy Outcomes in the Welfare State Jason Jordan, Florida State University 373 Daily Schedule Papers: Democratization and Redistributive Policymaking: Taxation, Social Spending and Labor Market Regulation in Brazil and the Dominican Republic Gabriel Ondetti, Missouri State Unviersity Disc: 11-70 12-23 Politicians & Social Policy: Building Citizenship or Reinforcing Clientelism in Brazil? Wendy Hunter, University of Texas, Austin Natasha Borges Sugiyama, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Daily Schedule Disc: Jonas Pontusson, Princeton University 16-31 15-3 CONDITIONS FOR CHANGE: REFORMING ADVANCED WELFARE STATES Co-sponsored by 14-12 GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND CURRENT ISSUES Co-sponsored by 17-16 17-16 GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: THEORETICAL INNOVATIONS AND CURRENT ISSUES Co-sponsored by 16-31 Tim Buthe, Duke University 15-12 Chair: Papers: VARIETIES OF CHANGE IN EUROPEAN POLITICAL ECONOMY Co-sponsored by 6-25 Pepper D. Culpepper, Harvard University Chair: Papers: When Small States Make Big Leaps into New Industries: Creative Corporatism and High Tech Competition in Northern Europe Darius Ornston, University of California, Berkeley The Circuits of Regulation: Transatlantic Perspectives on Persistent Organic Pollutants and Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals Christopher K. Ansell, University of California, Berkeley Joerg Balsiger, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Capital Mobility, Corporate Governance and Complex Causation: A Comparative Perspective on France-Germany Michel Goyer, Warwick Business School Open Skies, Closed Markets? The Difficult Regulation of Transatlantic Civil Aviation Cornelia Woll, CERI/Sciences Po Ideas, Institutions and Organized Capitalism: Germany, Europe and 21st Century Path Dependent Economic Policy Models Christopher S. Allen, University of Georgia Disc: Pepper D. Culpepper, Harvard University 16-5 MIGRATION REGIMES: INTERNATIONAL PROSPECTS AND NATIONAL VARIATIONS James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University Chair: Papers: The Travel-Refugee Regime Complex Alexander Betts, Oxford University The International Nationality Regime: Imperial Past and Global Prospects Audie Klotz, Syracuse University International Migration Agreements: Why so few? Margaret Peters, Stanford University “Labor Migration to the Gulf: Understanding Variations in the Kafala System” Steven D. Roper, Eastern Illinois University Lilian A. Barria, Eastern Illinois University Private Global Regulation: The Politics of Setting Standards for International Product and Financial Markets Tim Buthe, Duke University Walter Mattli, Oxford University Risky Prospects: Transnational Conflict and Cooperation during Disease Outbreaks Frank Smith, Griffith University Disc: Elliot Posner, Case Western Reserve University 18-13 SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT REVISITED: THEORIES AND PRACTICES Co-sponsored by 19-4 Pascal Vennesson, European University Institute Chair: Papers: James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University 16-15 RESPONDING TO INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC CRISES Joseph M. Grieco, Duke University Chair: Papers: Development, Security and the Contested Usefulness of Human Security Corinne Heaven, Sascha Werthes, Sven Vollnhals Sascha Werthes, University Duisburg-Essen Corinne Heaven, University of Duisburg-Essen Disc: Pascal Vennesson, European University Institute The death of Laissez faire: Self-regulation of banking sector Anna Hanchar, Trinity College Dublin 18-24 political uncertainty and currency crises Jungkeun Yoon, Claremont Graduate University Chair: NEW CASES AND IDEAS ON INTERNATIONAL PEACE BUILDING Eric P. Kaufmann, Harvard University/University of London Reform Processes and Financial Markets: Bureaucratic Origins of Policy Uncertainty and Market Responses before the Asian Financial Crisis Dongryul Kim, Rochester Institute of Technology 374 Beyond Linear Coordination: Coping with the Complexities of the Development-Security Nexus Christian Bueger, European University Institute State Capacity and Economic Crises George E. Shambaugh, Georgetown University The Political Economy of Coordinated Response to Financial Crisis: The Experience of the G7 and G20 in 1997-99 and 20072009 Ivan Savic, Columbia University Disc: Development and Security: Military Cultures and the Conflicting Uses of Colonial Traditions Chiara Ruffa, European University Institute Pascal Vennesson, European University Institute Exploring the Connections Between Development and Security at the United Nations: Imperial Project or Larger Freedom? Laura Zanotti, Virginia Tech The Politics of Immigration and Nationalism in Japan and Korea Seo-Hyun Park, Cornell University Disc: When Local Problems Go Global: Ensuring the Safety of Imported Food, Drugs, and Consumer Products Cary Coglianese, University of Pennsylvania Joseph M. Grieco, Duke University Papers: From Kabul to Kandahar: Has the CF Peace Operations Culture Been Changed? Kimberly Marten, Barnard College INTERNATIONAL PEACEBUILDING FAILURES: LESSONS FROM THE CONGO Severine Autesserre, Barnard College, Columbia University Ethnic Civil Wars and the Illiberal Peace Lise Morjé Howard, Georgetown University Guns, Campaigns or Bankruptcy: Disentangling the Determinants of Armed Organizations’ Post-War Trajectories Sarah Zukerman Daly, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Daily Schedule Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Disc: Stephen M. Saideman, McGill University 22-10 18-27 DISAGGREGATING CIVIL WARS Co-sponsored by 12-23 Chair: 18-35 TERRITORIAL DISPUTES: CONFLICT AND RESOLUTION Co-sponsored by 21-9 19-4 SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT REVISITED: THEORIES AND PRACTICES Co-sponsored by 18-13 19-15 Chair: Papers: Papers: Learning Lessons the Hard Way: Afghanistan, Iraq and the Evolution of British Military Doctrine Stuart Griffin, King’s College London Party Cohesion through Perceived Preference Coherence: An Analysis of Voting Networks in the European Parliament Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, Madison Estimating Cross-Country Common Space Ideal Point Scores using European Parliament Bridge Actors Boris Shor, University of Chicago Disc: Daniel Pemstein, Harvard University 22-18 POLITICAL PARTIES AND POLICY MAKING IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 35-17 23-5 CHECKING AND BALANCING? INSTITUTIONAL INTERACTIONS AND THE (IN)OPERATION OF THE SEPARATION OF POWERS IN THE ‘WAR ON TERROR’ Co-sponsored by 27-2 Nigel Bowles, University of Oxford Fighting while Preparing: Case Studies in Managing Defence Policy While Undertaking Operations Stephen Prince, Royal Naval Historical Branch Memory and Mythology in Policy-Making: Why Let the Facts Spoil a Good Stor. Andrew M. Dorman, University of London, King’s College Disc: Russell A. Burgos, University of California, Los Angeles 20-5 BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (2) EMPIRICS Co-sponsored by 21-2 Revenge and Peaceful Change Resat Bayer, Koc University Papers: European Diplomacy and Security Integration Mai’a Keapuolani Davis Cross, University of Southern California Mapping Legislative Positions in the Absence of Roll-Call Votes: The Case of Colombia, 1998-2006 Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston Minority Governments and Legislative Voting in Parliament Jean-Francois Godbout, Simon Fraser University PREPARING FOR THE FUTURE WHILST CONFRONTING THE PRESENT: BRITISH DEFENCE AND SECURITY POLICY IN AN UNSTABLE WORLD Katherine Brown, King’s College London Britain and the War on Terror: Strategy and Operations and Tactics Warren Chin, King’s College London LEGISLATORS’ PREFERENCES AND VOTING ACROSS LEGISLATURES Daniel Pemstein, Harvard University Chair: Papers: U.S. Torture Policy and Command Responsibility James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University The Politics of Shared Power in the ‘War on Terror’ Louis Fisher, Library of Congress Anna Oldmeadow, University of Oxford Cheney, Vice Presidential Power and the War on Terror Joel K. Goldstein, Saint Louis University Congressional Oversight of The ‘Imperial President’ Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University Disc: Network Analysis of Diplomatic Representation Shuhei Kurizaki, Texas A&M University Benjamin Tkach, Texas A&M University Robert F. Trager, University of California, Los Angeles Koji Kagotani, University of California, Los Angeles James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University Nigel Bowles, University of Oxford 24-6 Disc: Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford University Chair: MEASURING QUALITY OF GOVERNMENT: IS THERE ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT? Co-sponsored by 11-70 B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh 21-2 BRINGING DIPLOMACY BACK IN (2) EMPIRICS Co-sponsored by 20-5 Papers: 21-9 TERRITORIAL DISPUTES: CONFLICT AND RESOLUTION Co-sponsored by 18-35 Krista E. Wiegand, Georgia Southern University Chair: Papers: Government Effectiveness in Comparative Perspective Andrew B. Whitford, University of Georgia Soo-Young Lee, University of Georgia Innovative Approaches to Developing Cross-National Institutional Gauges: The SID Project Peter F. Nardulli, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Past Experience and Methods of Territorial Dispute Resolution Krista E. Wiegand, Georgia Southern University Emilia Justyna Powell, University of Alabama An Experimental Evaluation of Indian Public Service Reforms Jennifer L. Bussell, University of California, Berkeley Auditing Income Inequality Data in Models of Capitalism, Development and Democracy Ross E. Burkhart, Boise State University Credible Commitments and Negotiations over Territory Paul R. Hensel, University of North Texas Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa Disc: Gabriella R. Montinola, University of California, Davis 25-12 RAISING THE TEMPERATURE ON CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY Co-sponsored by 39-2 375 Daily Schedule Secessionist Violence in the Caucasus David S. Siroky, Duke University Why Now? Explaining the Timing of International Militarized Engagements over Territory Jaroslav Tir, University of Georgia Disc: Bureaucratic Structure and Corruption: Does Weberianism Work? Carl Johan Dahlström, University of Gothenburg Victor Lapuente, University of Gothenburg Jan Teorell, Lund University Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Chair: Amy M. Below, Ohio University Papers: Punctuated Equilibrium and Advocacy Coalitions: Toward a Post Carbon Policy Paradigm for the Automobile in North America James A. Dunn, Jr., Rutgers University, Camden Anthony D. Perl, Simon Fraser University Daily Schedule Papers: Creeping National Standards: The Politics of Personal Identification in the Voting Booth, the DMV and Schools Valentina Bali, Michigan State University Belinda Creel Davis, Louisiana State University Federalism and Election Law: Implementation Issues in Rural America Heather M. Creek, University of Maryland Kimberly A. Karnes, University of Maryland The Structure of Evolving US Scientific Opinion on Climate Change And Its Potential Consequences Stephen J. Farnsworth, George Mason University S. Robert Lichter, George Mason University State Resistance to Federal Mandates: A Cross-Case Analysis Christopher J. Deering, George Washington University Bryan Shelly, Wake Forest University An Inconvenient Solution? The Economic and Political Debate on Global Warming Policy in the United States Michael Martin, Carleton College The Impact of Symbolic Action: Local Government Refusal to Comply with State and Federal Laws Lori A. Riverstone-Newell, Illinois State University Who Runs the Greenhouse? The Role of the Judiciary in U.S. Climate Policy Marilyn Averill, University of Colorado at Boulder Politics in Motion: Congressional Devolution and Preemption: Countervailing Trends. Joseph F. Zimmerman, SUNY, Albany Climate Change Policies at the U.S. State Level: Evidence, Complexity, and Challenges to Comprehensive Strategies Lada V. Kochtcheeva, North Carolina State University Disc: Marjorie Sarbaugh-Thompson, Wayne State University Disc: Leigh S. Raymond, Purdue University 30-15 25-27 CRITICAL PUBLIC POLICY QUESTIONS IN CANADA AND THE US Co-sponsored by 49-6 26-10 STRATEGIC INFLUENCES ON JUDICIAL DECISIONMAKING Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT TERRITORIAL RESCALING, HOW DO WE KNOW IT AND WHY SHOULD WE STUDY IT: PERSPECTIVES FROM THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Co-sponsored by 28-8 Andrew Sancton, University of Western Ontario Chair: Papers: Chair: Part: Where Do Legal Opinions Come From? Strategic Opinion Writing on the Supreme Court Yonatan Lupu, University of California, San Diego James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University Andrew Glassberg, University of Missouri, St Louis Jered B. Carr, Wayne State University Pierre Hamel, Universite de Montreal 31-5 Crafting Opinions on the Circuit Courts of Appeals: An Inside Look at Strategic Accommodation Ryan J. Owens, Harvard University Ryan C. Black, Michigan State University Chair: BETWEEN MINORITY INCLUSION AND GENDER EQUALITY? ANALYZING IDENTITIES AND INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 32-17 Hamideh Sedghi, Harvard University Logic of Judicial Deference in the Separation-of-Power Structure – Legislative delegation, information elicitation, and deliberative policymaking Cheng-yi Huang, University of Chicago Papers: Article III: The Executive Enforcement Problem and the Separation of Powers Edward Stiglitz, Stanford University Disc: Chris W. Bonneau, University of Pittsburgh 27-2 CHECKING AND BALANCING? INSTITUTIONAL INTERACTIONS AND THE (IN)OPERATION OF THE SEPARATION OF POWERS IN THE ‘WAR ON TERROR’ Co-sponsored by 23-5 28-6 28-8 29-14 Chair: 376 FEDERAL MANDATES IN THE STATES: IMPLEMENTATION AND RESISTANCE Co-sponsored by 29-14 ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT TERRITORIAL RESCALING, HOW DO WE KNOW IT AND WHY SHOULD WE STUDY IT: PERSPECTIVES FROM THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Co-sponsored by 30-15 FEDERAL MANDATES IN THE STATES: IMPLEMENTATION AND RESISTANCE Co-sponsored by 28-6 John Kincaid, Lafayette College Do Majority-Minority Districts and Reserved Seats for Minorities Undermine the Election of Women? Robert G. Moser, University of Texas, Austin Stephanie S. Holmsten, University of Texas, Austin Dislocating Muslim Women in Post-Feminist, Post-Secular France Hollie Sue Mann, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Ines Valdez, University of Oxford Gender Equality Versus Minority Inclusion: The Political Dilemma of Religious Arbitration Catherine Warrick, Villanova University The Limits of Deliberation: Debating Gender and Religion in the French and Canadian Public Spheres Leah Bassel, City University London 32-7 Chair: Papers: ASSIMILATION, INCORPORATION OR RACIALIZATION? Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay Urban School Contexts and the Political Socialization of Immigrant Children Loan Le, University of California, Berkeley Immigrant Transnationalism Across Time in the United States Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University Overcoming Pre-immigration Barriers to Socio-political Participation in the Latino Immigrant Community Javier M. Rodriguez, University of California, Los Angeles Rafael Augusto Jimeno, Arizona State University Mark Q. Sawyer, University of California, Los Angeles Daily Schedule Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM When The Gloves Come Off: Inter-Party Variation in Negative Campaigning Catherine E. De Vries, University of Amsterdam Annemarie Sophie Walter, University of Amsterdam Residential Concentration and the Political Participation of Immigrants in Canada Antoine Bilodeau, Concordia University Disc: Kim Geron, California State University, East Bay Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania 32-17 BETWEEN MINORITY INCLUSION AND GENDER EQUALITY? ANALYZING IDENTITIES AND INSTITUTIONS Co-sponsored by 31-5 34-4 Chair: MINORITY AND DESCRIPTIVE REPRESENTATION Richard S. Katz, Johns Hopkins University Papers: Should Congress Look Like America? Explaining Preferences about Descriptive Representation Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter Susan A. Banducci, University of Exeter Disc: Renan Levine, University of Toronto 36-30 Chair: LEARNING, PERSISTENCE, AND HABITS IN VOTING Mark N. Franklin, European University Institute Papers: Voting across Time and Generations Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley M. Kent Jennings, University of California, Santa Barbara Using Ballot Order to Test for Cognitive Dissonance: Results From a Natural Experiment Gregory Huber, Yale University Alan Gerber, Yale University Joseph Sempolinski, Yale University Next Time I’ll Remember: Negotiating the Learning Curve for Voter Indentification Requirements Timothy Vercellotti, Western New England College David J. Andersen, Rutgers University Electoral Systems and the Success of Ethnoregional Parties David I. Lublin, American University The Congressional Representation of Muslim-Americans Shane Martin, Dublin City University The Election of Women in List PR Systems: Testing the Conventional Wisdom Gregory D. Schmidt, University of Texas at El Paso Disc: Elias Dinas, European University Institute 36-33 Chair: WHAT’S NOW AND WHAT’S NEXT: THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTION STUDIES Co-sponsored by 37-11 Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan Disc: Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan Part: Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford University Matthew DeBell, Stanford University Keith Payne, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Gary M. Segura, Stanford University Simon D. Jackman, Stanford University 37-4 DELIBERATION AND SOCIAL NETWORKS Co-sponsored by 5-6 37-11 WHAT’S NOW AND WHAT’S NEXT: THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTION STUDIES Co-sponsored by 36-33 37-21 MASS MEDIA AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 38-2 Stacey L. Pelika, College of William & Mary Defining groups entitled to reserved seats in national legislatures: a comparative approach Petra Meier, University of Antwerp Disc: 35-17 Chair: Papers: David M. Farrell, University College Dublin, Belfield Lorelei Moosbrugger, University of California, Santa Barbara POLITICAL PARTIES AND POLICY MAKING IN THE U.S. CONGRESS Co-sponsored by 22-18 Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester A Computational Model of Party Committee Influence on Legislative Behavior Andrew Waugh, University of California, San Diego Taming the Filibuster: Vote Skipping and Omnibus Spending Bills in the U.S. Senate Peter Hanson, University of California Berkeley Party Power in the U.S. House: Discharge Petitions, Agenda Control, and Committees Susan Miller, University of Missouri-Columbia L. Marvin Overby, University of Missouri House Appropriations After the Republican Revolution David W. Rohde, Duke University John H. Aldrich, Duke University Brittany N. Perry, Duke University Disc: Chair: Papers: Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester Steven S. Smith, Washington University LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS AND REPRESENTATION Thomas Zittel, Cornell University Papers: Constituency Campaigns in the 2005 German Federal Elections: Patterns, Motivations, and Effects Thomas Zittel, Cornell University Public Opinion amid a Fragmenting Media Environment Danny Hayes, Syracuse University Television News and the Framing of War Images Jennifer Ogg Anderson, Vanderbilt University Does Changing Media Change Minds?: TV, Partisanship, and Shifting Public Opinion Towards Lesbians and Gays Jeremiah Garretson, Vanderbilt University Geo-Ethnic Political Dialogue: Multi-Color Skins with Blue, Red, and Purple Mindsets Hyun Jung Yun, Texas State University Lynda Lee Kaid, University of Florida The Variable Effect of Congressional Competition on Incumbent Accountability: A Multilevel Model Amber Wichowsky, University of Wisconsin, Madison Losers’ Consent Among Elected Representatives in Established Democracies – Evidence From Six Surveys With Swedish MPs Peter Esaiasson, University of Gothenburg Disc: Stacey L. Pelika, College of William & Mary Jonathan McDonald Ladd, Georgetown University 377 Daily Schedule 36-21 Chair: The Geography of Mass Media Exposure and Political News Consumption James G. Gimpel, University of Maryland, College Park Scott L. Althaus, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Daily Schedule 38-2 MASS MEDIA AND PUBLIC OPINION Co-sponsored by 37-21 Popular Protest and Democratic Consolidation in South Korea Sunhyuk Kim, Korea University 38-17 LEGISLATURES AND INTERNET USE: GOVERNING AND CAMPAIGNING Co-sponsored by 40-3 Determinants of Contentious Political Participation in South America: An Analysis of Citizens’ Survey Responses Margaret Emily Edwards, University of New Mexico 39-2 RAISING THE TEMPERATURE ON CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY Co-sponsored by 25-12 Economic Liberalization, Contentious Politics, and Political Representation in East Asia Wonik Kim, Louisiana State University 40-3 LEGISLATURES AND INTERNET USE: GOVERNING AND CAMPAIGNING Co-sponsored by 38-17 Geoffery William Seaver, IRM College Chair: Disc: Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh 44-23 AGENCY UNDER AUTHORITARIANISM Co-sponsored by 12-51 Mark Beissinger, Princeton University Chair: Papers: Representation as Communication: An Analysis of the Information Environment of Local Government Elected Officials Michael J. Jensen, University of California, Irvine Papers: Timeless Strategy Meets New Medium: Going Negative on Congressional Campaign Websites, 2002-2006 Michael Parkin, Oberlin College James N. Druckman, Northwestern University Martin Kifer, University of Minnesota Altering Authoritarianism: Institutional Complexity and Autocratic Agency in Indonesia Dan Slater, University of Chicago Economic Inequality and Institutions in Dictatorships Milan Svolik, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Would You Ask Turkeys to Mandate Thanksgiving? The Dismal Politics of Legislative Transparency J.H. Snider, iSolon.org Diffusion of Web Innovations among Members of Congress Kevin M. Esterling, University of California, Riverside David Lazer, Harvard University Michael Neblo, Ohio State University Prospering from a Death March: The Role of Remnant Factions in Chinese Elite Coalition Formation Victor C. Shih, Northwestern University Deer in Headlights: Authoritarian Skill and Regime Trajectories after the Cold War Lucan A. Way, University of Toronto Disc: Mark Beissinger, Princeton University Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University Social Networks in Political Campaigns: Facebook and Congressional Elections 2006, 2008 Christine B. Williams, Bentley University Girish J. Gulati, Bentley College 46-10 Disc: Joel D. Bloom, SUNY, University at Albany Chair: CASE STUDY META-ANALYSIS: METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES AND APPLICATIONS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Jens Newig, Leuphana University Lüneburg 43-12 SHAPING REALITY WITH INFORMATION OPERATIONS, PROPAGANDA, AND SPIN Jane Kellett Cramer, University of Oregon Chair: Papers: Papers: Fiction, “Social Facts” and the Construction of National Security Policy Kelly M. Greenhill, Tufts and Harvard Universities Does Participatory Governance Lead to Better Environmental Outcomes? Methodology and Results from a Transatlantic Comparative Meta-Analysis of 60 Case Studies in Environmental Decision Making Jens Newig, Leuphana University Lüneburg Oliver Fritsch, University of Aarhus Research Design and Causal Analysis in European Studies. A Meta-Analysis of the Europeanization Literature Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter Theofanis Exadaktylos, University of Exeter Information Operations as Political Advertising: Overstating the Utility of Information Operations in Internal War Colin F. Jackson, U.S. Naval War College Spinning History and Psychological Ego-Defense: Assessing How Leaders Shape Historical Reality Jane Kellett Cramer, University of Oregon Cumulating the Results from Political Science, Public Administration and Public Policy Case Studies Using MetaAnalysis: Issues, Examples, and Recommendations. Jason Jensen, University of North Dakota Pressure, Resistance and Change: Theorizing States’ Vulnerability to Pressure on Official Narratives of Traumatic Pasts Jennifer M. Dixon, University of California, Berkeley Focusing on the Structure of Uncertainty: Using Information Models to Enhance the Structured-Focused Case Study Method Katya Drozdova, Stanford University & NSI Kurt Taylor Gaubatz, Old Dominion University Disc: David Mendeloff, Carleton University Disc: Claudio M. Radaelli, University of Exeter 44-17 PROTEST AND DEMOCRATIZATION IN LATIN AMERICA AND EAST ASIA Co-sponsored by 12-49 Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico 46-13 QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN POST-COMMUNIST SPACE Jessica Allina-Pisano, University of Ottawa Chair: Chair: Papers: Papers: The Role of Mass Protests in Presidential Failure: Mob Rule or Street Accountability? Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico Market-Based Repoliticization and Democracy in Latin America Moises E. Arce, University of Missouri Paul Thomas Bellinger, Jr, University of Missouri 378 Redefining Russia: Qualitative Research and Western Political Science Paul Goode, University of Oklahoma Power, Space, and Movement in the Eastern Borderlands of the European Union Jessica Allina-Pisano, University of Ottawa André Simonyi, University of Ottawa Daily Schedule Beyond “Beyond Identity”: The Creation of Magyar and Korean “Minorities” in Ukraine André Simonyi, University of Ottawa Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Sensitive Questions Demand Sensitive Methods: A Comparative Analysis of Interview and Survey Responses to Questions about Corruption and Professional Misconduct in the Romanian Judiciary Daniel J. Beers, Indiana University Chair: Disc: Stephen E. Hanson, University of Washington 49-6 CRITICAL PUBLIC POLICY QUESTIONS IN CANADA AND THE US Co-sponsored by 25-27 Janna Ferguson, Rutgers University Chair: Papers: Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM Binational Ecopolitics: An Examination of U.S. Canadian Environmental Policy Glen Sussman, Old Dominion University Byron W. Daynes, Brigham Young University Political/Economic Sustainability and the Development of Commercial Private Sector Involvement in the Canadian Federal/ Provincial Health Care Systems: Particularly, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec Howard A. Palley, University of Maryland Marie-Pascale Pomey, University of Montreal Pierre-Gerlier Forest, Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Panel 7 Papers: Charles Conteh, Lakehead University Francois Petry, Laval University The Problem of Human Nature in the French Enlightenment Peter McNamara, Utah State University Shaftesbury and the Authentic Liberty of the Self Travis S. Cook, Belmont Abbey College Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College Disc: Panel 10 VOEGELIN IN TORONTO, THE DVD: REFLECTIONS ON THE 1978 YORK UNIVERSITY “HERMENEUTICS AND STRUCTURALISM” CONFERENCE Chair: Zdravko Planinc, McMaster University Part: Association of Korean Political Studies in North America Chair: Panel 3 Chair: CONSOLIDATING DEMOCRACY IN SOUTH KOREA? Jong Oh Ra, Hollins University Part: Papers: An Early Assessment of the Lee Myung Bak Presidency: The First CEO President in South Korea Sung Deuk Hahm, Korea University Yonghwan Choi, Korea University Panel 1 Chair: Papers: The Old Friend is Better than the New One: Continuity and Change in South Korea’s Foreign Policy Under President Lee Myung-bak Jae-Jung Suh, The Johns Hopkins University Financial Statecraft and the Emerging Powers: Whither China and Brazil? Leslie Elliott Armijo, Portland State University Shaping Global Governance in Trade: India’s Role in the WTO Surupa Gupta, University of Mary Washington Jean Daudelin, Carleton University Disc: Regina Regina Soares de Lima, IUPERJ NATIONAL SECURITY INTELLIGENCE: A RESEARCH AGENDA Loch K. Johnson, University of Georgia Congressional Oversight of Intelligence: Approaches to Solving Problem Jennifer Kibbe, Franklin & Marshall College Atrophy? Explaining Reversion in Domestic Intelligence Agencies Genevieve Lester, University of California, Berkeley New Directions for America’s Domestic Intelligence Agencies Arthur S. Hulnick, Boston University Disc: David M. Barrett, Villanova University Daily Schedule Papers: Jean-Yves Haines, University of Toronto John Robert Kelley, American University Nicholas Kitchen, London School of Economics Lisa Aronsson, Royal United Services Institute Cristina Barrios, ESCP Europe Learning and Blaming in Intelligence Reform Glenn P. Hastedt, James Madison University Brazilian Political Science Association EMERGING POWERS AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Fabiano Guilherme M. Santos, Rio de Janeiro Graduate Research Institute TERRORS IN TRANSATLANTIA- STILL? EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES FROM BUSH TO OBAMA Sergio Fabbrini, University of Trento Intelligence Studies Group Is South Korea Succeeding in Controlling Corruption? Jong-sung You, University of California, San Diego Panel 1 Chair: Barry Cooper, University of Calgary Joseph Gonda, York University Frederick G. Lawrence, Boston College John O’Neill, York University European Consortium for Political Research Panel 3 Neoliberalism and Korean Democracy: Initial Assessments Jungmin Seo, University of Hawaii, Manoa Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame Eric Voegelin Society Related Group Panels Democracy without Parties? Explaining party underinstitutionalization in Korea Yoonkyung Lee, SUNY, Binghamton Identity and Liberty in Hegel’s Oneship Family Scott E. Yenor, Boise State University Locke’s Confrontation with the Claims of Biblical Revelation in the Two Treatises David Azerrad, University of Dallas Changing Canada’s Politics Towards the US David Dyment, Carleton University Disc: LIBERTY AND HUMAN NATURE IN MODERN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY Kathleen Arnn, Claremont Graduate University Labor Project Panel 1 VARIETIES OF ECONOMIC CHANGE? Co-sponsored by 11-9 Latin American Studies Association Panel 1 THE POLITICS OF REDISTRIBUTION IN LATIN AMERICA Co-sponsored by 12-34 379 Saturday, 4:15 PM to 6:00 PM National Humanities Institute Daily Schedule Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship Panel 2 Chair: LITERATURE AND THE STUDY OF POLITICS Claes G. Ryn, Catholic University of America Papers: The Conundrum of Hector: The Iliad as Political Philosophy William Geisler, University of Dallas Working Group: Policy Network Analysis Edward Bellamy and the Teaching of Political Economy Gregory S. Butler, New Mexico State University Working Group: Political Ethics The Aesthetics of Burke and Gadamer Ryan Robert Holston, University of Alabama, Huntsville Disc: Michael P. Federici, Mercyhurst College Claes G. Ryn, Catholic University of America Society of Catholic Social Scientists Panel 1 Chair: JOHN PAUL II AND LIBERAL MODERNITY Filippo A. Sabetti, McGill University Papers: John Paul II and the Modern Quest for Freedom Kenneth L. Grasso, Texas State University Disc: SESSION 2 SESSION 2 SESSION 2 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 2 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 2 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics SESSION 2 The Culture of Death and Political Tyranny Gary D. Glenn, Northern Illinois University Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global To Lose God is to Lose Man:What “Public Reason” Can Learn from Public Faith J. Budziszewski, University of Texas, Austin SESSION 2 Personalism and Community Kenneth L. Schmitz, John Paul Institute SESSION 2 Carson L. Holloway, University of Nebraska, Omaha Saturday, 5:15 PM to 7:15 PM Working Group: eLearning in Political Science Saturday, 6:15 PM to 7:15 PM APSA Meetings APSA Events GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING Affiliate Group Meetings Related Group Meetings Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law Conference Group on Taiwan Studies BOARD MEETING BUSINESS MEETING Saturday, 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM Related Group Meetings Section Business Meetings 10 Political Science Education BUSINESS MEETING Eric Voegelin Society 44 Comparative Democratization BUSINESS MEETING BUSINESS MEETING Saturday, 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM Saturday, 6:15 PM to 8:00 PM APSA Reception Affiliate Group Meetings APSA Events International Organization (Journal) APSA MINORITY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM 40TH ANNIVERSARY RECEPTION MEETING Working Group: Citizenship and Migration Saturday, 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM SESSION 2 Related Group Receptions Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science Eric Voegelin Society SESSION 2 RECEPTION Working Group: Comparative Political Theory Saturday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM SESSION 2 APSA Reception Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession SESSION 2 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 2 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 2 380 RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Asian Pacific American Caucus, the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized Section, and the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession Daily Schedule Saturday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession Saturday, 10:00 PM to 11:30 PM RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized Section, the Asian Pacific American Caucus, and the APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession Section Receptions 42 New Political Science NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTION HONORING TOM HAYDEN Section Receptions 10 Political Science Education Sunday, September 6, 2009 RECEPTION 32 Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Asian Pacific American Caucus, the APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession, and the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession Division Panels T-28 THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE OF MULTICULTURALISM IN TORONTO Co-sponsored by 30-13 35 Political Organizations and Parties 1-7 ROUNDTABLE: CLINTON ROSSITER’S CONSTITUTIONAL DICTATORSHIP: CRISIS GOVERNMENT IN THE MODERN DEMOCRACIES: STILL RELEVANT? Co-sponsored by 27-1 William E. Scheuerman, Indiana University RECEPTION Co-sponsored by Representation and Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties 44 Comparative Democratization RECEPTION Chair: Affiliate Group Receptions Part: Sanford Levinson, University of Texas, Austin Nomi Claire Lazar, Yale University Clement Fatovic, Florida International University Susan Williams, Indiana University Jack M. Balkin, Yale University London School of Economics 1-24 Chair: POLITICAL INHERITANCE AND CRITIQUE Laura A. Janara, University of British Columbia RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Global Policy Journal Papers: Repugnance: The Boundaries of Law, Governance, and Colonial Power Vicki Hsueh, Western Washington University University of Georgia School of Public & International Affairs (SPIA) RECEPTION Intercollegiate Studies Institute RECEPTION Representation and Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Political Critique and the Inheritance of Authority in Locke’s Two Treatises Torrey J. Shanks, University at Albany, SUNY RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the Political Organizations and Parties Organized Section Ironic Political Theory Past and Present: Julien Offray de la Mettrie and Richard Rorty Sharon Stanley, University of Memphis University of Rochester Department of Political Science RECEPTION Related Group Receptions Economic Subjectivity in a Non-Cartesian World: Hobbes and the Problem of Luxury Dean Mathiowetz, University of California, Santa Cruz Asian Pacific American Caucus RECEPTION Co-sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans in the Profession, the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Organized Section, and the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession Conference Group on Taiwan Studies RECEPTION Disc: James R. Martel, San Francisco State University 2-15 Chair: THE POLITICS OF GOOD INTENTIONS Margaret Kohn, University of Toronto Papers: Rethinking Authenticity Jill L. Locke, Gustavus Adolphus College Saturday, 8:30 PM to 10:00 PM The Road to Hell...Advising Others Laurie E. Naranch, Siena College APSA Panel APSA Events Division Panels 42-11 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE PLENARY ADDRESS, DELIVERED BY TOM HAYDEN: MOVEMENTS AGAINST MACHIAVELLIANS, THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF SOCIAL CHANGE Reception (gratis) & Book Signing to Follow The Tragedy of Humanitarian Intervention: Or, the Perfection of Good Intentions Steven Johnston, University of South Florida Disc: Jane Bennett, The Johns Hopkins University 2-29 Chair: THEORIZING THE SOCIAL SCIENCES Ronald Terchek, University of Maryland, College Park Papers: A Primer to a Democratic Philosophy of Social Science Amit Ron, Arizona State University, West Campus Daily Schedule NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE PLENARY ADDRESS DELIVERED BY TOM HAYDEN: MOVEMENTS AGAINST MACHIAVELLIANS, THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF SOCIAL CHANGE Reception (gratis) & Book Signing to Follow 381 Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Daily Schedule Charles Taylor’s Critical Realism Keith Topper, University of California, Irvine Special Rules and Offices: The Emergence and Persistence of Unequal Legislative Procedures Razvan Vlaicu, University of Maryland Daniel Diermeier, Northwestern University Theory construction in science and the social sciences. Piotr Swistak, University of Maryland, College Park A Picture Theory Based Philosophy for the Social Sciences Itai Sened, Washington University Sarit Smila, Washington University in Saint Louis Disc: Claudia Leeb, Dartmouth College Andrew Dilts, University of Chicago 2-45 Chair: USES OF RANCIERE J. Peter Euben, Duke University Papers: Comic Relief: Ranciere and the Heroes of Aristophanic Comedy John Zumbrunnen, University of Wisconsin, Madison Disc: Erik Snowberg, Caltech 5-3 FRAMING Co-sponsored by 37-1 Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Papers: Durability of Framing Effects on Public Opinion Dennis Chong, Northwestern University James N. Druckman, Northwestern University How Partisan Frames Affect Public Consideration of Policy Problems Jennifer K. Benz, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Thomas M. Carsey, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Bruce Desmarais, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ‘Yes We Can’ and The Democratic Politics of Equality Samuel A. Chambers, Johns Hopkins University Disc: Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan 3-17 Chair: IMMIGRANTS AND EMIGRANTS Daniel Weinstock, Universite de Montreal Papers: Civic Integration: How Does Identity Come into It? A Republican Perspective Iseult Honohan, University College Dublin Disc: Renan Levine, University of Toronto Toward a Liberal Theory of Returns Fumio Iida, Kobe University 6-23 TRADE AND PARTISANSHIP Co-sponsored by 16-27 Stephanie J. Rickard, Dublin City University Framing, Motivated Reasoning, and Emergent Technologies Toby Bolsen, Northwestern University James N. Druckman, Northwestern University Framing Opinion – The Development of Associations between Issues and Social Groups Carl Lucas Palmer, University of California, Davis The Effect of Conceptions of Justice on Attitudes towards Immigration Policy Mary McThomas, Mississippi State University Chair: Towards an Ideal of Integration of Immigrants Brian Thomas Papers: Disc: Daniel Weinstock, Universite de Montreal 3-28 Chair: THE STATUS OF PARTY PRIMARIES James W. Ceaser, University of Virginia Papers: The Constitutional Puzzle of Party Primaries Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth College The Supply and Demand of Protectionism in Hard Times Krzysztof J. Pelc, Georgetown University Factor Mobility, Party Unity, and the Distribution of Trade Protection in Contemporary Democracies Su-Hyun Lee, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Is Consumer Bias Institutionalized?: An Issue Specific Test of the Stigler-Peltzman Framework with International Trade Data Joe Weinberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Primary Reform and the Progressive Quarrel with the State Elvin T. Lim, Wesleyan University Democratic Theory and Party Primaries Russell Muirhead, University of Texas, Austin Bryan Garsten, Yale University Disc: Andrew Rehfeld, Washington University, St. Louis 4-3 BARGAINING THEORY IN VARIOUS POLITICAL ARENAS Michael M. Ting, Columbia University Chair: Papers: 382 Political Institutions, Veto Players, and Consumer Goods: Explaining Tariff Rates and Policy Change in Wealthy Democracies. Jesse T. Wasson, SUNY, University at Buffalo Disc: Stephanie J. Rickard, Dublin City University 7-8 AUTHOR MEETS READERS: SHELDON POLLACK’S “WAR, REVENUE, AND STATE BUILDING: FINANCING THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE AMERICAN STATE.” Leslie Friedman Goldstein, University of Delaware Chair: Part: Stephen Skowronek, Yale University Bartholomew H. Sparrow, University of Texas, Austin Sheldon D. Pollack, University of Delaware David B. Robertson, University of Missouri, St. Louis Leslie Friedman Goldstein, University of Delaware Reputation and Accountability in Repeated Elections Rainer Schwabe, Princeton University 7-16 A Bargaining Model of State Formation Jeremy Kedziora, University of Rochester Chair: RACE AND AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 32-11 Catherine Paden, Simmons College Bargaining Chips: Allocating Power in International Politics. Thomas Chadefaux, University of Michigan Papers: Trading Office for Policy. A Legislative Bargaining Model of Minority and Super-majority Governments. Anna Bassi, New York University Drawing the Color Line – Racial Identity and Antebellum Courts in New Orleans, 1840-1860 Gwendoline M. Alphonso, Cornell University Richard F. Bensel, Cornell University Daily Schedule Crime and Citizenship Megan Ming Francis, University of Chicago Police Chief Ben C. Collins and Law Enforcement in Clarksdale, Mississippi, 1961-1966 Daniel Kryder, Brandeis University A History of Black Presidential Candidates: 1872-2008 Christina M. Greer, Smith College Disc: Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM 11-18 Chair: Papers: Catherine Paden, Simmons College Alvin B. Tillery, Jr., Rutgers University 8-9 Chair: ADVANCES IN EVENT HISTORY MODELS Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa Papers: Estimating Interdependent Duration Models with Applications to Government Formation and Survival and War-Joining Decisions Jude C. Hays, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Aya Kachi, University of Illinois What Happens Depends on When It Happens: Continuous or Ordered Event History Analysis Using Copula Kentaro Fukumoto, Gakushuin University Testing Copula Functions as a Method to Derive Bivariate Weibull Distributions Alejandro Quiroz-Flores, New York University Modeling Rebellion Intensity with a Zero-Inflated Ordered Probit Model Feng-yu Lee, National Taiwan University Tse-min Lin, University of Texas, Austin David Carter, Pennsylvania State University 11-4 MODES OF DEMOCRATIC PARTISAN ACCOUNTABILITY AND ELECTORAL COMPETITION. PROGRAMMATIC AND/OR CLIENTELISTIC CITIZENPOLITICIAN LINKAGES? Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University Chair: Papers: National Profiles of Democratic Accountability: Programmatic and/or Clientelistic Party Competition? Kent E. Freeze, Duke University Kiril Kolev, Duke University Yi-ting Wang, Duke University Strategies of Political Competition: When do Politicians Invest In Clientelistic and/or Programmatic Modes of Party Competition? Daniel Max Kselman, Duke University Arturas Rozenas, Duke University Theories of Clientelism Revisited: What Accounts for the Varying Relevance of Clientelistic Party-Voter Relations in Party Competition? Socio-Economic Development, Institutions, and Strategic Partisan Configurations? Lenka Bustikova-Siroky, Duke University Cristina Corduneanu-Huci, Duke University Clientelism and Corrupation: The Same Thing or Different? Matthew Singer, University of Connecticut Gustavo Rodriguez, Duke University The Spread of New Constitutional Courts in Latin America Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas, Austin Abby Katharine Blass, University of Texas at Austin Diffusion Dynamics in European and Latin American Democratization Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin Disc: Mark Beissinger, Princeton University 11-35 THE CHANGING POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION Co-sponsored by 14-1 Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh Chair: Papers: Disc: Steven I. Wilkinson, University of Chicago James Adams, University of California, Davis Rising De-Industrialization Meets Partisan Strategies in Mature Welfare States Carsten Jensen, University of Aarhus Towards the Knowledge Society?--Contrasting Union Strategies Toward Labor Market Adjustment in Denmark and Germany Tobias Schulze-Cleven, University of California, Berkeley The Politics of Governance Reform in Higher Education and Public Research Institutions Eckhard Schroeter, Zeppelin University Human Capital Formation of the Highly Skilled at the Intersection of Migration and Gender Kathrin Zippel, Northeastern University Disc: Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh 11-74 ISLAM, SECULARISM, AND SEXUAL EQUALITY: RESISTANCE AND CHANGE IN MUSLIM SOCIETIES Co-sponsored by 31-20 12-3 DIFFUSION DYNAMICS IN DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES Co-sponsored by 11-18 12-33 TOWARDS A NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY OF RENTS: LATE DEVELOPMENT IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Pete W. Moore, Case Western Reserve University Chair: Papers: Remittances beyond Rents: How Private Capital Shapes Public Opposition in Authoritarian Settings Sean L. Yom, Harvard University Anya Vodopyanov, Harvard University Shadow Governments: Foreign Aid and Parallel States in Iraq and South Korea Anne Mariel Peters, University of Virginia Escaping the Resource Curse: Lessons from Kentucky Coal Counties Kristen A. Harkness, Princeton University Fiscal Federalism as a Source of Rents: Subnational Rentier States and Democracy in Argentina Carlos Gervasoni, University of Notre Dame 383 Daily Schedule Partisan Strategies and Political Economic Performance. Do Modes of Democratic Accountability Affect Economic Fortunes? Marco Fernandez, Duke University Jan Henryk Pierskalla, Duke University Transnational Networks, Diffusion Dynamics, and Electoral Change in the Postcommunist World Valerie Bunce, Cornell University Sharon Wolchik, George Washington University International Factors and Regime Change in Latin America, 1945-2005 Scott Mainwaring, University of Notre Dame Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Pittsburgh Change Comes with Time: Interpreting the Substantive Impact of Non-Proportional Hazards in Event History Analysis Amanda A. Licht, University of Iowa Disc: DIFFUSION DYNAMICS IN DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES Co-sponsored by 12-3 Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Disc: Pete W. Moore, Case Western Reserve University Benjamin Smith, University of Florida 12-44 SOCIAL ORIGINS OF PARTY SYSTEMS AND PARTYSYSTEM CHANGE Susan C. Stokes, Yale University Chair: Papers: Daily Schedule Chair: Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron Papers: The New Community: Liberal Intergovernmentalism and East African Integration Mwita Chacha, University of Georgia Private Sector Interests and Regional Integration in South America Jessica Crivelli, University of Zürich Party System Stability versus Collapse: Crisis, Social Transformation and Interest Incorporation in Latin America Jana Morgan, University of Tennessee Trade and Financial Regionalisms in East Asia: Structures, Sequencing, and Linkages Saori N. Katada, University of Southern California The Making of Party Systems: The Organization of Social Alliances in India and Pakistan Maya Jessica Tudor, Harvard University Cooperation in Competition: Asymmetrical Uncertainty and the Rise of East Asia Intra-regional FTAs Guan-Yi Leu, University of Virginia Electoral Bases of the ‘Left Turn’ in Latin America Noam Lupu, Princeton University Authoritarian Legacies of Local Incorporation and Democratic Party System Origins in Africa Rachel Beatty Riedl, Princeton University Disc: Joel Selway, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 12-47 MASS MEDIA AND NATIONAL IDENTITY Co-sponsored by 38-14 13-4 ENERGY AS AN INSTRUMENT OF RUSSIAN FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 16-29 John S. Duffield, Georgia State University Chair: Is China Leading?China, Southeast Asia, and East Asian Integration Alice D. Ba, University of Delaware Disc: Karl C. Kaltenthaler, University of Akron 16-27 TRADE AND PARTISANSHIP Co-sponsored by 6-23 16-29 ENERGY AS AN INSTRUMENT OF RUSSIAN FOREIGN POLICY Co-sponsored by 13-4 17-12 COMPLEXITY AND ORGANIZATIONAL ADAPTATION IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Elizabeth Bloodgood, Concordia University Chair: Papers: Energy Leverage in Conditions of External Shock: the case of Russian Energy Relations with Ukraine and Belarus, 2006-2009 Margarita M. Balmaceda, Harvard University Papers: Principal-Agent Theory and Economic Integration in Eurasia Kathleen J. Hancock, University of Texas, San Antonio Governance Experiments in Complex Adaptive Systems Matthew J. Hoffmann, University of Toronto Complexity Transcends Functionalism in Organizational Studies: International Parliamentary Institutions and the Foundation of Evolutionary Learning Robert M. Cutler, Carleton University Russian-Azerbaijani relations: All Change after the August war of 2008? Li-Chen Sim, Zayed University The Dynamics of NGO Death Elizabeth Bloodgood, Concordia University Emily Clough, University of North Texas Russia’s Energy Statecraft and the “Great Game Redux”: Parsing Realism’s Contending Claims Adam N. Stulberg, Georgia Institute of Technology Disc: Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University Confronting Complexity: Can International Bureaucracies Adapt to Post-Conflict? Susanna Pfohl Campbell, Tufts University 14-1 THE CHANGING POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION Co-sponsored by 11-35 Adaptive Activists: Analyzing the Capacity of International Nongovernmental Organizations and Civil Society Networks to Survive and Campaign in a Complex Political Environment Vanessa Timmer, One Earth Web 14-17 WHERE IS THE LEFT? Co-sponsored by 15-14 15-14 WHERE IS THE LEFT? Co-sponsored by 14-17 Marc E. Smyrl, Universite de Montpellier 1 Chair: Papers: Liberalization and the Left in Europe: Why Do Centre-Left Parties Adopt Market Liberal Reforms? Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics Social Democracy’s Strategic Quandary: Responses to Immigration Challenges and Far-Right Policy Capture in Europe William M. Downs, Georgia State University The Politics of Poverty: Income Inequality and the Transformation of the German Left Mark I. Vail, Tulane University Benjamin T. Bowyer, College of William and Mary Disc: 16-20 384 Christopher S. Allen, University of Georgia DYNAMICS OF REGIONAL INTEGRATION Looking in the Mirror: Comparing INGO Networks Across Issue Areas Amanda Marie Murdie, Kansas State University David R. Davis, Emory University 18-11 Chair: Papers: TO INTERVENE OR NOT TO INTERVENE? ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF FOREIGN MILITARY INTERVENTION AND OCCUPATION Mia M. Bloom, University of Georgia Catastrophic Success? The Effectiveness of Foreign-Imposed Regime Change Alexander B. Downes, Duke University Should I Stay or Should I Go Now? Strategies for Struggling Military Interventions David M. Edelstein, Georgetown University Military Force as an Instrument to Craft States Patricia L Sullivan, University of Georgia Women and Occupation: Should we still ‘shoot the women first?’ Mia M. Bloom, University of Georgia Daily Schedule Disc: John M. Owen, IV, University of Virginia 18-42 IDENTITY POLITICS AND NATIONALISM IN CHINA: Co-sponsored by 43-18 20-16 Chair: ASIAN FOREIGN POLICY CONCERNS Tae-Hyung Kim, Daemen College Papers: Realist Logic of Engagement: Explaining U.S. China Policy Wooseon Choi, Ramapo College of New Jersey Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Assessing the Bush Administration White House Legal Policymaking Structure Darby Morrisroe, St. Lawrence University The Post-Bush Presidency and the Constitutional Order Robert J. Spitzer, SUNY, Cortland Limiting the Presidential Surveillance State? An Inquiry into the Role of the Judiciary in the War on Terror Darren A. Wheeler, University of North Florida Disc: Nancy V. Baker, New Mexico State University Kevin J. McMahon, Trinity College 24-3 LABOR RELATIONS IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR: CHANGING PARADIGMS, STRUCTURES, AND MEASUREMENT James D. Ward, Mississippi University for Women THE AUTOCRATIC PEACE OF CENTRAL ASIA Brenda Shaffer, University of Haifa U.S. Foreign Policy – How Bureaucratic Politics Explains Why China May be Getting Mixed Messages Rachel Adler, University of California, Irvine Chair: Disc: Tae-Hyung Kim, Daemen College 21-14 FORMAL THEORY APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania Papers: Chair: Papers: Evolving Preferences: Simulating an Assuring Future Christopher K. Butler, University of New Mexico Bringing Free-Riders into the Fold: Exploring the Link between Procedural Fairness and Union Membership in the Federal Government Ellen V. Rubin, SUNY Albany Reaching Back into the Cookie Jar? Explaining Decisions to Increase War Aims Thomas M. Dolan, Jr., University of Rochester Labor Relations in the Public Sector: Changing Paradigms, Structures, and Measurement Marick Masters, Wayne State University A Unified Model of Military Intervention and Occupation Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Commitment Problems and War Termination Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania Disc: Alex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania 22-5 Chair: LEGISLATORS’ SPEECH AND ITS DETERMINANTS Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh Papers: How Congress Goes Public During Times of War: Examining the Influence of Divided Government on Congressional Behavior Michael Bressler, Furman University Disc: Scott Lamothe, University of Oklahoma J. Edward Kellough, University of Georgia 25-17 OPPORTUNITIES AND TENSIONS SURROUNDING PUBLIC PARTNERSHIPS WITH FAITH-BASED AND COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS AT THE CLOSE OF THE BUSH ERA Cathy M. Johnson, Williams College Chair: Papers: State Faith-Based Practices and the Dual Cultural Processes of Desecularization and Devolution of the Public Sector Rebecca Sager, Loyola Marymount University The Dynamics of Communication with Constituents Chad Murphy, University of Mary Washington Institutional and Electoral Foundations of Parliamentary Speeches Sven-Oliver Proksch, University of Mannheim What Determines the Parliamentary Questions Agenda? A Longitudinal (1978-2007) and Comparative Study in Five Countries Stefaan Walgrave, University of Antwerp Rens Vliegenthart, University of Amsterdam Jonathan Woon, University of Pittsburgh 23-8 ASSESSING EXECUTIVE POWER BEFORE, DURING, AND AFTER THE BUSH PRESIDENCY Kevin J. McMahon, Trinity College Papers: The Tides of Presidential Power: Obama and the Prospects for a Constitutional Presidency David Gray Adler, Idaho State University Looking Forward, Looking Backward: Undoing the Bush Years Nancy Kassop, SUNY, New Paltz The Role of State Faith Community Liaisons in Charitable Choice Implementation Pamela Winston, Mathematica Policy Research Ann E. Person, Mathematica Policy Research Disc: Steven Rathgeb Smith, University of Washington 25-26 TODAY’S SCIENCE FICTION, TOMORROW’S POLICY? Co-sponsored by 39-6 26-5 COURTS AND PUBLIC OPINION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Kevin T. McGuire, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Chair: Papers: Can State Courts Influence Public Opinion? The Case of SameSex Marriage Robert J. Hume, Fordham University Courts, Legislatures, and Ballot Initiatives: How Policy Venue Affects Public Acceptance Alison Gash, University of California, Berkeley Michael H. Murakami, Yale University 385 Daily Schedule Disc: The Overlooked Role of Faith-Based Organizations and Secular Nonprofits in the Modern American Welfare State Scott W. Allard, University of Chicago The Response of Faith-Based Organizations and Secular Nonprofits after Disasters Carol DeVita, Urban Institute To Speak Or Not To Speak: That Is The Question. Stonegarden Grindlife, UCLA Chair: Public Sector Labor Relations and Collective Bargaining: A Review of the Research and Analysis of Future Prospects Richard C. Kearney, North Carolina State University Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Daily Schedule Michael A. Jones-Correa, Cornell University Supreme Court Unity and Public Opinion: An Experimental Study Michael Salamone, University of California, Berkeley 31-7 An Experimental Study of Judicial Impact Vincent James Strickler, Utah State University Brennan Tyler Lindsay, Utah State University Chair: The Australian High Court and Attitudes Toward Aborigines: A Test of Court Influence on Australian Public Opinion William Myers, Michigan State University Reginald S. Sheehan, Michigan State University Papers: GENDERING POLITICAL ORGANIZING: WOMEN, MEN AND ACTIVISM IN THE US Co-sponsored by 35-3 Jennifer Leigh Disney, Winthrop University National Coalition Work in the American Women’s Movement Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina Pro-Women, Antifeminist? Understanding Sarah Palin Through Conservative Women Activists Ronnee Schreiber, San Diego State University Disc: Kevin T. McGuire, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27-1 ROUNDTABLE: CLINTON ROSSITER’S CONSTITUTIONAL DICTATORSHIP: CRISIS GOVERNMENT IN THE MODERN DEMOCRACIES: STILL RELEVANT? Co-sponsored by 1-7 Advocacy in Hard Times: Representing Marginalized Groups in the Twenty-First Century Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities 28-11 NON-METROPOLITAN POLICY AND GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Panel 2 29-5 POLITICS AND PUNISHMENT IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 42-2 Adrienne Smith, Emory University The Electoral Success of Women’s Organizations: Do the Media Matter? Danielle Marie Thomsen, Cornell University Chair: Papers: Finding Their Punitive Best: Explaining Variation in Crime Policy Across the American States Lisa L. Miller, Rutgers University Naomi Murakawa, University of Washington, Seattle A Criminal Background Check to Sleep Here: Housing Options with a Felony Charge Keesha M. Middlemass, Rutgers University, Newark Governance and the Political Activity of Women’s Associations Maryann Barakso, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Disc: Kristin Goss, Duke University 31-20 ISLAM, SECULARISM, AND SEXUAL EQUALITY: RESISTANCE AND CHANGE IN MUSLIM SOCIETIES Co-sponsored by 11-74 Melanie M. Hughes, University of Pittsburgh Chair: Papers: Sanctioning the Right to Assistance: States, Felons, and Social Welfare Michael Leo Owens, Emory University Adrienne Smith, Emory University Declaring Sexual Equality: Documents from around the World Penny A. Weiss, Saint Louis University Islam, Secularism and Gender Equality Ebru Erdem, University of California, Riverside Registration and Turnout among Convicted Offenders and ExOffenders in the 2008 Presidential Election Traci Burch, Northwestern University Reforming the State: An Examination of Changes in Criminal Disenfranchisement Laws Khalilah L. Brown-Dean, Yale University Disc: Vesla Mae Weaver, University of Virginia 30-13 THEME PANEL: THE POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE OF MULTICULTURALISM IN TORONTO Co-sponsored by T-28 Randall A. Hansen, University of Toronto Chair: Papers: The Political Inclusion of Migrants in Multi-ethnic Cities: Toronto Compared Jill S. Gross, Hunter College-CUNY The Municipal Role in Multiculturalism Initiatives: Toronto’s Experience in Comparative Perspective Kristin Ruth Good, Dalhousie University From Monolithic to Multicultural: Toronto’s Urban Transformation Myer Siemiatycki, Ryerson University Governance and Urban Diversity: A Comparative Exploration Richard Stren, University of Toronto Gentrification, Social Mix, and the Immigrant-Reception Function of Inner-City Neighbourhoods: An Updated Analysis, 1971 - 2006 R. Alan Walks, University of Toronto, Mississauga Disc: 386 Randall A. Hansen, University of Toronto Women and the Politics of Resistance in Iran: The One Million Signatures Campaign Hamideh Sedghi, Harvard University Islam’s Patriarchal Effect: Spurious or Substantive? Amy Alexander, University of California Christian Welzel, Jacobs University Bremen Disc: Marijke Breuning, University of North Texas Mary Lou Kendrigan, Lansing Community College 32-11 RACE AND AMERICAN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT Co-sponsored by 7-16 33-5 RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES: EVIDENCE FROM FIVE MUSLIM DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 44-9 Wolfgang Merkel, WZB Chair: Papers: State vs. Government in Turkey: How Islam has Framed the Power Struggle between Elected and Non-Elected Officials Quinn Mecham, Middlebury College Between Diversity and Exclusivism: The Political Role of Islamic Actors in Indonesia’s First Democratic Decade Mirjam Künkler, Princeton University Religious Pragmatism and Democratic Transition in Albania Fatos Tarifa, European University of Tirana The Diverse Roles of Islamic Actors in Mali’s Democratic Consolidation: From Fostering Socio-Political Pluralism to Inhibiting the Development of Strong State Institutions? Julia Leininger, Peace Research Institute Negotiating Muslim Democracy: Religious Actors and Secular Activists in Senegal Leonardo A. Villalon, University of Florida Daily Schedule Disc: Timothy Samuel Shah, Council on Foreign Relations 35-3 GENDERING POLITICAL ORGANIZING: WOMEN, MEN AND ACTIVISM IN THE US Co-sponsored by 31-7 36-12 POLARIZATION Co-sponsored by 37-9 Matthew S. Levendusky, University of Pennsylvania Chair: Papers: Independents in a Polarized Society: Mythical, Critical or Closeted? Jeffrey A. Karp, University of Exeter Todd Donovan, Western Washington University Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside David J. Lanoue, University of Alabama Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Choice in Motion: A Multi-System Framework on Technological Innovation and Environmental Problems Hui-Yin Sung, Free University of Berlin Sheng-Chih Wang, Free University of Berlin The Fuzzy Front End and the Policy Primordial Soup Rachel VanSickle-Ward, Pitzer College Preeta M. Banerjee, Brandeis University 41-4 Papers: THEY’VE ALL GONE TO LOOK FOR AMERICA Hugh Henry Brackenridge’s Satirical Commentary on the Transition from a Republican Political Culture to a Democratic Culture in Early America. Bruce E. Caswell, Rowan University Close Encounters? Power and Recognition in Terrence Malick’s “The New World” Benjamin McKean, Princeton University Partisans Without Constraint: Political Polarization and Trends in American Public Opinion Delia Baldassarri, Princeton University Andrew Gelman, Columbia University Machiavelli’s Presence in Emanuele Criasele’s “The Golden Door” Andrea Ciliotta-Rubery, SUNY, College at Brockport Route 66 State of Nature: Jack Kerouac’s On the Road and the Social Contract Tradition Philip Abbott, Wayne State University Mass Preferences for Bipartisanship in Congress Laurel Harbridge, Stanford University Neil Malhotra, Stanford University Disc: Barry C. Burden, University of Wisconsin Disc: Lee Trepanier, Saginaw Valley State University Mihaela Czobor-Lupp, Georgetown University 37-1 FRAMING Co-sponsored by 5-3 42-2 37-9 POLARIZATION Co-sponsored by 36-12 POLITICS AND PUNISHMENT IN THE STATES Co-sponsored by 29-5 43-18 37-27 EXAMINING ATTITUDES ABOUT GAY RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 47-6 Chair: IDENTITY POLITICS AND NATIONALISM IN CHINA: Co-sponsored by 18-42 Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison 38-14 MASS MEDIA AND NATIONAL IDENTITY Co-sponsored by 12-47 Ranjit Singh, University of Mary Washington Chair: Papers: Papers: The (In)coherence of Chinese Soft Power: A Consideration of the Fluidity of National Identity and Nationalism in Contemporary Chinese Foreign Relations Allen Carlson, Cornell University Communicating Reforms: Exploring Media’s Role in the Political and Economic Development of Post-Communist Bulgaria Petia A. Kostadinova, University of Florida Daniela V. Dimitrova, Iowa State University Strategic Nationalism: The Mobilization and Repression of AntiForeign Protest in China Jessica C. Weiss, Princeton University Advertising the “Nation” in Postapartheid South Africa: Television Commercials and Nation-Building Sean Jacobs, The New School The News Media’s Prospective Accountability Function: Explaining Variable Press Support for Access to Government Information Laws Robert Gregory Michener, University of Texas at Austin Media Use and Political Attitude in China Min Tang, Purdue University Dwayne Woods, Purdue University Disc: Ranjit Singh, University of Mary Washington 39-6 TODAY’S SCIENCE FICTION, TOMORROW’S POLICY? Co-sponsored by 25-26 Gautam Mukunda, Masschusetts Institute of Technology Chair: Are We Ready for Nanotechnology?: How To Define Humaness in Public Policy Liz Johnson, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Developing An Analytical Framework for Genetic Warfare Policy R.E. Burnett, Virginia Military Institute Is Technology Outpacing Democracy? The Case of Cloned Animals and American Regulatory Institutions Maya Joseph, New School University Rebirth of the Propaganda State: Promoting Japan in China James Reilly, University of Sydney Disc: Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin, Madison 44-9 RELIGIOUS ACTORS IN DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESSES: EVIDENCE FROM FIVE MUSLIM DEMOCRACIES Co-sponsored by 33-5 44-12 REVISITING REGIME CHANGE: CROSS-REGIONAL PERSPECTIVES Deborah L. Norden, Whittier College Chair: Papers: Regime Change and Democratization in Cuba: Comparative Perspectives Eusebio Mujal-Leon, Georgetown University Eric Langenbacher, Georgetown University “TRANSITION” VERSUS “CONSOLIDATION” AND “EAST” VERSUS “SOUTH”: A Theoretical Argument for Inter-Regional Comparison of Social Mobilization in Eastern Europe and Latin America. Olga Onuch, University of Oxford 387 Daily Schedule Papers: Selective Othering: the Formation of Chinese National Identity and Attitudes to the External World Yinan He, Seton Hall University Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM Daily Schedule LESSONS FROM EASTERN EUROPE FOR DEMOCRATIZATION THEORIES: From ‘preconditions’ to ‘constellations’? Uffe Jakobsen, University of Copenhagen Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Disc: Deborah L. Norden, Whittier College Chair: 46-12 VIRTUES AND LIMITS OF MIXED-METHOD RESEARCH IN DIVERSE CONTEXTS Aaron Schneider, Tulane University Papers: Chair: Papers: Panel 6 Conceptual Stretching in Mixed Method Research Ariel Ahram, University of Oklahoma Triangulating Methods to Assess the Performance of International Bureaucracies: An Analysis of EU Institutions Through Case Studies and Surveys Kaija E. Schilde, University of Pennsylvania Xenophon and Noble Conduct: Book Four of the Anabasis of Cyrus Eric Buzzetti, Concordia University Disc: Chair: Papers: Panel 12 THE LANGUAGES OF POLITICAL ORDER: EXPERIENCE AND SYMBOLIZATION IN NONWESTERN MODES OF THOUGHT Chair: Timothy Hoye, Texas Woman’s University EXAMINING ATTITUDES ABOUT GAY RIGHTS Co-sponsored by 37-27 Patrick J. Egan, New York University Styles of Truth in Gao Xingjian’s Soul Mountain Timothy Hoye, Texas Woman’s University The Politics and Geopolitics of the Two Koreas and the United States Yu Nam Kim, Dankook University Network Diversity and Views about Same-Sex Marriage Elisabeth L. Gidengil, McGill University Religion and Politics in the Constitutions of Japan Kyoko Inoue, University of Illinois, Chicago Polling Pink: An Examination of Interviewer Bias and Pragmatic Inference in Item Wording and Question Order on the Issue of Gay Rights in the 2008 Presidential Election Paul G. Harwood, University of North Florida Nicholas James Seaton, University of North Florida Patrick J. Egan, New York University Disc: Panel 1 Chair: RECENT RESEARCH IN BIOLOGY AND POLITICS Rob Sprinkle, University of Maryland Papers: Digging up the Past: The Circulation of Biovalue across Space and Time Amy L. Fletcher, University of Canterbury Abandoned Baby Legislation: The States’ Response to Parental Divestment Laurette T. Liesen, Lewis University Association for the Study of Nationalities Panel 1 Chair: UKRAINE: LOOKING WEST ... AND EAST Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University Part: Erik S. Herron, University of Kansas Dominique Arel, University of Ottawa Taras Kuzio, University of Toronto Lowell W. Barrington, Marquette University Red Brain, Blue Brain Darren Schreiber, University of California, San Diego Bizarre Beliefs & Rational Choices: A Behavioral & Neuroimaging Perspective John W. Schiemann, Fairleigh Dickinson University Disc: Cato Institute Chair: Part: 388 ROUNDTABLE: AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY AND THE POLITICS OF FEAR: THREAT INFLATION SINCE 9/11 Justin Logan, Cato Institute Jane Kellett Cramer, University of Oregon A. Trevor Thrall, University of Michigan, Dearborn Benjamin H. Friedman, Massachusets Insitute of Technology Jonathan Renshon, Harvard University John Robert Ross, University of North Texas Thomas J. McPartland, Kentucky State University Timothy J. Lomperis, Saint Louis University IPSA Research Committee 12 (Biology and Politics) Related Group Panels Panel 1 Place and Identity in Palestinian Literature: Susan Abulhawa’s THE SCAR OF DAVID Samah Elhajibrahim, University of Pennsylvania Explaining the Success of Proposition 8: Determinants of Opposition to Same-Sex Marriage Gregory B. Lewis, Georgia State University Politicizing the Courts: Attacking “Activist Judges” in the Debate over Election Referenda about Gay Marriage Seth K. Goldman, University of Pennsylvania Disc: Catherine H. Zuckert, University of Notre Dame David Davies, University of Dallas Eric Voegelin Society Papers: 47-6 Nobility and Beauty in the Plays of Aristophanes Wayne Ambler, University of Colorado Nobility as an End in Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics Erik Dempsey, University of Texas, Austin Understanding Social and Political Practice: A Mixed-Method Strategy Gitte Sommer Harrits, University of Aarhus Change and Complexity in Stateness: Quantitative, Qualitative, and Interpretive Tools to make sense of State Authority in an Age of Globalization Aaron Schneider, Tulane University THE PLACE OF NOBILITY IN THE THOUGHT OF ARISTOTLE, ARISTOPHANES, AND XENOPHON William Morrisey, Hillsdale College Susanne Lohmann, University of California, Los Angeles Jenny Rebecca Kehl, Rutgers University Rebecca J. Hannagan, Northern Illinois University Publius: The Journal of Federalism Panel 2 Chair: Papers: NON-METROPOLITAN POLICY AND GOVERNANCE Co-sponsored by 28-11 Carol S. Weissert, Florida State University Federalism at Work: Housing the Homeless in North Carolina Robert J. Thompson, East Carolina University Carmine P. Scavo, East Carolina University Daily Schedule Policy Responses to the Plight of Infectious Disease in Federal Systems Daniel Baracskay, Valdosta State University Comparing Rural Health and Health Care in Canada and the United States: The Influence of Federalism Joseph Blankenau, Wayne State College Disc: Chair: Papers: Chair: Papers: TERRITORIAL RIGHT AND GLOBAL JUSTICE Co-sponsored by 1-29 Monique Deveaux, Williams College THe External Legitimacy of State Territorial Control Anna Stilz, Princeton University Territorial Right and the Demands of STrangers Margaret Moore, Queens University Shelly R. Arsneault, California State University, Fullerton Ten Minutes of Nice Things to Say About Settlers and Settlements Tamar Meisels, Tel Aviv University Division Panels 1-27 3-25 Federalism and Election Law: Implementation Issues in Rural America Heather M. Creek, University of Maryland Kimberly A. Karnes, University of Maryland Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM T-29 Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:45 AM THEME PANEL: HISTORY, IDENTITY, POLITICAL VIOLENCE: THE RELATIVE MERITS OF QUALITATIVE METHODS TO EXPLAIN COMPLEX AND DYNAMIC PHENOMENA Co-sponsored by 46-8 Territorial Right, Justice and the Environmnet Avery Kolers, Univeristy of Louisville Disc: Burke Hendrix, Franklin & Marshall College 5-7 Chair: MOTIVATED REASONING Andrew J.W. Civettini, Knox College Papers: News Consumption, Partisan Polarization, and Political Learning during Presidential Elections Ramesh Raj Sharma, University of Kentucky RECOGNITION, CIVILITY AND POLITICAL DISCOURSE Michael T. Gibbons, University of South Florida Truth, Relevance and Motivated Processing in Perceptions of Political Advertising Daniel Stevens, University of Exeter Barbara Allen, Carleton College John L. Sullivan, University of Minnesota-Minneapolis A Wittgensteinian Perspective on “People,” “Nation” and “Culture” Catherine Frost, McMaster University The Uses of Civility: Public Discourse and the Requirements of Temperate Reasoning Joseph C. Mink, New College of Florida Opening the Partisan Mind? The Effect of Self-Affirmation on Political Learning Brendan Nyhan, Duke University Jason A. Reifler, Georgia State University “Demanding” Recognition? Plato, Hegel, and Beyond Charles Blattberg, University of Montreal The Paradox of Partisan Responsiveness Eric William Groenendyk, University of Michigan Disc: Michael T. Gibbons, University of South Florida Disc: Andrew J.W. Civettini, Knox College 1-29 TERRITORIAL RIGHT AND GLOBAL JUSTICE Co-sponsored by 3-25 6-1 2-32 Chair: ABOUT SCHMITT Michael Forman, University of Washington, Tacoma CORRUPTION AND THE SOURCES OF DEMOCRATIC SUCCESS AND FAILURE Co-sponsored by 11-11 7-13 Papers: The Nomos of Exception and the Problem of Democratic Space in Schmitt and Agamben Francois Debrix, Florida International University ENGINES OF CHANGE? AMERICAN POLITICAL PARTIES IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University Chair: Papers: Renewing Democratic Authority: Hamlet’s Politics with (and against) Carl Schmitt Philip A. Michelbach, West Virginia University Andrew Poe, University of California, San Diego Party Factions and the President Daniel R. DiSalvo, City College of New York-CUNY Mass Opinion and American Populism Samuel DeCanio, Georgetown University The Utopian Function of the Enemy in the Thought of the Frankfurt School William Winstead, George Washington University Peter D. Breiner, SUNY, Albany 3-20 Chair: TAKING INJUSTICE SERIOUSLY Christopher Lebron, University of Virginia Papers: Expanding the Scope of Transitional Justice: Individual, State and Social Responsibility for Mass Atrocity Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University The Conceptual Priority of Injustice Eric Beerbohm, Harvard University The Vietnam War and the American Party System Robert P. Saldin, University of Montana Parties as Political Institutions in American Political Development Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University Disc: Nancy L. Rosenblum, Harvard University Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University 11-11 CORRUPTION AND THE SOURCES OF DEMOCRATIC SUCCESS AND FAILURE Co-sponsored by 6-1 Philip Keefer, The World Bank Chair: Who Owns the Past? Peter Lindsay, Georgia State University Disc: Christopher Lebron, University of Virginia 389 Daily Schedule Disc: Partisan Regimes in American Politics Andrew J. Polsky, Hunter College, CUNY Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Papers: The Sources and Consequences of Heterogeneity in Perceptions of Political Corruption Eric C.C. Chang, Michigan State University Nicholas Kerr, Michigan State University Daily Schedule Papers: Informal Institutions and Implementation of Unpopular Policies in Authoritarian Regime Jing Vivian Zhan, Chinese University of Hong Kong Corruption, Ideology, and the Returns to Democracy Daniel W. Gingerich, University of Virginia Consensual Elections in Rural China Hiroki Takeuchi, Southern Methodist University Legislative Corruption in Contemporary India Miriam A. Golden, University of California, Los Angeles Devesh Tiwari, University of Calfornia, San Diego Eat, Drink, Bureaucracies: Patronage Distribution and Public Sector Growth in Local China Yuen Yuen Ang, Stanford University Corruption, Electoral Corruption and Development Outcomes: A Cross-National Study Alberto Simpser, University of Chicago Are There Biases in the Cross-National Measures of Perceived Corruption? Jong-sung You, University of California, San Diego Pierre F. Landry, Yale University Xiaobo Lu, Yale University 15-16 Unsettling: Displacement Decisions in Civil Wars Abbey Steele, Yale University THE HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME IN EUROPE: ISSUES AND CHALLENGES Co-sponsored by 45-2 Divergence and Convergence in Path-Dependent Developments: Comparing the Evolution of the European and Inter-American Systems for the Protection of Human Rights Andreas von Staden, Ph.D., TU Darmstadt Unpacking Civilian Collaboration in Civil War: Beyond ‘Hearts and Minds’ and Domination Ana Arjona, Yale University Attack of the Clones? Legal Mobilization and the Litigation Explosion Before the European Court of Human Rights Lisa Conant, University of Denver Making War and Maintaining Peace: Agency and the Limits of Morality in Kenya’s Mau Mau War, 1952-60 Daniel Branch, University of Warwick Ties That Bind: Examining the Role of Human Rights in Family Reunification Policy Formation Aubrey Westfall, University of Colorado, Boulder Violence and the Amplification of Agency in Warscape Social Transformation: A Critical Theoretical Framework Stephen C. Lubkemann, George Washington University A Civil Rights Movement for Europe: The Importance of European Spaces and Institutions in Constructing, Funding and Empowering the Roma Rights Movement Jacqueline S. Gehring, Allegheny College Philip Keefer, The World Bank 11-20 CIVILIAN AGENCY IN CIVIL WARS Co-sponsored by 12-4 David S. Patel, Cornell University Papers: Legal Institutions, Governance, and Economic Growth in China Yu Zheng, University of Connecticut Disc: Disc: Chair: Participation, Collaboration, and Nonparticipation in Civil War: Competition between Government and Rebels and Individuals’ Calculations in Cambodia Yuichi Kubota, SUNY, University at Albany Papers: 16-18 Chair: Disc: Jesse Driscoll, Stanford University 11-73 SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN : NEW APPROACHES Co-sponsored by 31-14 12-4 CIVILIAN AGENCY IN CIVIL WARS Co-sponsored by 11-20 12-16 INTERNATIONAL DO-GOODERS AND DOMESTIC POLITICAL ECONOMIES David S. Brown, University of Colorado Papers: Chair: Papers: Managed Representation for Authoritarian Rule: Local Chinese Congresses as Agents of Constituents and Party Melanie Frances Manion, University of Wisconsin, Madison Is Trade Really Good for Your Health? Nita Rudra, University of Pittsburgh Daniel C. Tirone, University of Pittsburgh Conflicting Norms, Constrained Policies: The Case of Mexico’s Approach to Genetically Modified Organisms Wendy Hicks-Casey, University of Toronto The Impact of IMF Agreements on Public Health Performance Matthew Hoddie, Towson University Caroline A. Hartzell, Gettysburg College Jason Matthew Smith, Texas A&M University Climate Change and Trade: The Case of Environmental Goods and Services Trade in the Developing World Deborah K. Elms, Nanyang Technological University Poverty Reduction Strategies and their Impact on Democratization in Developing Countries Sophia Melody Haenny, University of Zurich Katharina Michaelowa, University of Zurich The Impact of International Support for Political Parties in New Democracies: Malawi and Zambia Compared Lars Svasand, University of Bergen Lise Rakner, University of Bergen HEATH, ENVIRONMENT, AND INTERNATIONAL OPENNESS Jeffrey Drope, Marquette University Disaggregating Aid Matters: How Foreign Aid Affects Human Development Outcomes Simone Dietrich, Pennsylvania State University Disc: Jeffrey Drope, Marquette University Internationalized Regimes Oisín Tansey, University of Reading 17-15 Disc: David S. Brown, University of Colorado Chair: PRIVATE STANDARDS, PUBLIC GOALS: NON-STATE ACTORS AS STANDARD-SETTERS Tim Buthe, Duke University 13-12 LOCAL GOVERNANCE, POLICY IMPLEMENTATION, AND AUTHORITARIAN RULE IN CHINA Hiroki Takeuchi, Southern Methodist University Chair: 390 Papers: Private standards in the Climate Regime: the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Jessica F. Green, Princeton University Daily Schedule Can Non-State Governance “Ratchet Up” Global Standards? Assessing Indirect and Evolutionary Potential Benjamin W. Cashore, Yale University Stefan Renckens, Yale University Kelly Levin, Yale University Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Papers: The (In)Decision to Go to War: Dynamics of Turkey’s Iraq War Policy Making Baris Kesgin, University of Kansas When Effect Becomes Cause: Private Governance Beyond Emergence Graeme Auld, Carleton University Luc Fransen, University of Amsterdam Turkish Foreign Policy in the New Millennium: Contending Pressures from the US, Europe, and Transnational Islam Ali Tekin, Harvard University A New Middle Ground between Humanitarian NonGovernmental Organizations and Epistemic Communities?: the Cases of the Ottawa Convention and the Convention on Cluster Munitions Naoko Kumagai, CUNY, Graduate Center Regional Environmental Governance: NGOs, States and the Sulu-Sulawesi Marine Ecoregion Kim D. Reimann, Georgia State University Who makes the Turkish Foreign Policy: Decision Units? Structure? Or Their Interaction? Gokce Ozgen Baykal, Rutgers University The Power of Religious Ideas: How Islam Transformed Turkish Foreign Policy 2002-2008 Pinar Kizir Tremblay, UCLA Re-evaluating History, Geography and Culture? Understanding Recent Changes in Turkish Foreign Policy Ali Resul Usul, Bahcesehir University Disc: Baris Kesgin, University of Kansas 21-10 ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF PEACEKEEPING AND PEACEMAKING Co-sponsored by 18-36 Holger Schmidt, George Washington University Disc: Tim Buthe, Duke University 17-20 CHANGING CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF SECURITY Co-sponsored by 19-17 18-15 Chair: CROSS-BORDER THREATS Peter Andreas, Brown University Papers: Border Control Assistance in Post-Conflict States George Gavrilis, University of Texas, Austin Peace Treaties: Then and Now Tanisha Fazal, Columbia University Doing Nothing: Explaining Delay and Inaction in Territorial Disputes M. Taylor Fravel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology UN Tactics and the Durability of Peace Kyle Beardsley, Emory University Holger Schmidt, George Washington University Kleptocratic Interdependence: Trafficking, Corruption, and the Marriage of Politics and Illicit Profits Kelly M. Greenhill, Tufts and Harvard Universities Examining the Duration of Peacekeeping Operations Birger Heldt, National Defence College of Sweden Do Walls Work? Exploring the Conditions Under Which Artificial Barriers Impede Population Movement Ron E. Hassner, University of California, Berkeley Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Papers: Peacekeeping and War Outcomes Page Fortna, Columbia University Coercive Diplomacy and the International Criminal Court Leslie Vinjamuri, School of Oriental and African Studies Disc: David E. Cunningham, Iowa State University Disc: Peter Andreas, Brown University 22-15 18-36 ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF PEACEKEEPING AND PEACEMAKING Co-sponsored by 21-10 CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE POLITICS OF SIGNING STATEMENTS Co-sponsored by 23-15 23-15 CHANGING CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF SECURITY Co-sponsored by 17-20 Ramesh Thakur, University of Waterloo Chair: CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE POLITICS OF SIGNING STATEMENTS Co-sponsored by 22-15 Jeffrey S. Peake, Bowling Green State University 19-17 Chair: Papers: Papers: International Monetary Risks to U.S. Security and Foreign Policy:Dissecting Hard and Soft Power Paul R. Viotti, University of Denver Presidential Signing Statements as Informants that Guide Congressional Oversight Kevin Evans, University of California, Davis Re-conceptualizing Security Issues: Securitization and DeSecuritization Carolyn M. Stephenson, University of Hawaii, Manoa Presidential Power and the Politics of Signing Statements Ian Ostrander, Washington University in St. Louis Joel Sievert, Washington University in St. Louis Globalizing Security: The Politics of Human Security James P. Muldoon, Rutgers University, Newark Economic Development and Military Effectiveness Michael C. Beckley, Columbia University Disc: Robert L. Brown, Temple University 20-10 Chair: ADVANCES IN TURKISH FOREIGN POLICY Andrew J. Flibbert, Trinity College Disc: Jeffrey S. Peake, Bowling Green State University Daniel E. Ponder, Drury University 24-12 GOVERNING AT THE LOCAL LEVEL Co-sponsored by 30-3 Jeanne W. Simon, Universidad de Concepcion Chair: Daily Schedule Understanding Security Cooperation in the Face of Technological Change David W. Kearn, Jr., St. John’s University Presidential Signing Statements as an Effort to Counteract Vigilant Congressional Oversight Michael J. Berry, University of Colorado, Denver 391 Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Papers: 26-15 Chair: Part: Constitutive and Substantive Representation: Sex, Gender and Party in the UK Parliament Sarah Childs, University of Bristol Paul D. Webb, University of Sussex Policy Tool Selection: Predicting the Bundling of Economic Development Policy Instruments Using a Multivariate Probit Analysis Anthony Kassekert, Florida State University Richard C. Feiock, Florida State University Explaining the Institutional Influence on Tenure of City Managers: Duration Dependence (Binary TSCS) Approach In Won Lee, Florida State University Defining Women’s Interests: A Comparative Mapping of Representative Claims Karen Celis, University College Ghent Johanna Elina Kantola, University of Helsinki Monitoring The Money: political context and the monitoring of financial discretion in English local government. Stephen Greasley, University of Manchester The Potential Symbolic Value of Descriptive Representation: The Case of Female Representation Ana Espirito-Santo, European University Institute Political Conflict and Interlocal Cooperation Eric Zeemering, San Francisco State University The Role of Personal Experience in Women’s Substantive Representation Christina Xydias, Ohio State University The Formalization of Growth Coalitions and the New Politics of Urban Development Top of Form James M. Smith, Indiana University South Bend Disc: Daily Schedule Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State University Charles Conteh, Lakehead University AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: SAUL BRENNER AND JOSEPH WHITMEYER, STRATEGY ON THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT Lawrence Baum, Ohio State University Disc: Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami Merike Blofield, University of Miami 36-17 Chair: VOTERS, ELECTIONS, AND THE INTERNET Geoffery William Seaver, National Defense University Papers: Attack Politics on the Internet: Comparing German and American E-Campaigns Eva Johanna Schweitzer, University of Mainz A Bottleneck Model of Internet Voting.Explaining the Limited Impact of Technology on Electoral Participation Till Weber, European University Institute Kristjan Vassil, European University Institute David Klein, University of Virginia Wendy L. Martinek, SUNY, Binghamton Paul J. Wahlbeck, The George Washington University Saul Brenner, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Joseph M. Whitmeyer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte James R. Rogers, Texas A&M University 29-7 Chair: SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY IN THE STATES Edward A. Miller, Brown University Papers: Ending Welfare As We Didn’t Know It: The Story of Welfare Privatization in California, New York, Texas and Wisconsin Michelle D. Brophy-Baermann, Rhode Island College Andrew J. Bloeser, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Welfare Reform and Racial Regimes in the American States David M. Hedge, University of Florida Renée J. Johnson, Kent State University Hyun Jung Yun, Texas State University The American Internet Voter Betsy Sinclair, University of Chicago Thad E. Hall, University of Utah Presidential Candidates’ Use of the Internet to Communicate Issue Positions Mark D. Ludwig, California State University, Sacramento Disc: Girish J. Gulati, Bentley College 40-8 ROUNDTABLE ON CONNECTING DEMOCRACY: ONLINE CONSULTATION AND THE FUTURE OF DEMOCRATIC DISCOURSE Peter M. Shane, Ohio State University Chair: Part: David Lazer, Harvard University Sungsoo Hwang, Grand Valley State University Steven J. Balla, George Washington University Alicia Schatteman, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey Laurence Monnoyer-Smith, University of Technology of Compiègne 44-13 Chair: THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF DEMOCRATIZATION Pablo Toral, Beloit College Papers: The Enduring Legacies of the Democratic Transition: Zapatero and the Challenges of Economic Reforms Sebastian Royo, Suffolk University Racial and Economic Segregation, Representation and Social Welfare: A State-Level Analysis Robert R. Preuhs, Metropolitan State College of Denver Rodney E. Hero, University of Notre Dame Explaining Developments in State Medicaid Coverage for LowIncome Families Saundra K. Schneider, Michigan State University Disc: Ann O’M. Bowman, Texas A&M University Michael J. Rich, Emory University 30-3 GOVERNING AT THE LOCAL LEVEL Co-sponsored by 24-12 Labor as a Pro-democracy Actor in Egypt and Brazil Rabab El-Mahdi, American University of Cairo 31-14 SYMBOLIC AND SUBSTANTIVE REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN : NEW APPROACHES Co-sponsored by 11-73 Merike Blofield, University of Miami The Difference that Democracy Makes: Two Phases of Economic Reform in Chile and New Zealand Kate Nicholls, National University of Singapore Paul Buchanan, University of Auckland Chair: Papers: Businessmen and Democratization: A Comparative Analysis of Greece and Turkey Yaprak Gursoy, Sabanci University Representing the Social: Gender and Representation in Japan in the Age of Neo-liberalism and Gender Mainstreaming Yuki Tsuji, Kyoto University Disc: 392 Pablo Toral, Beloit College Daily Schedule Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM 45-2 THE HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME IN EUROPE: ISSUES AND CHALLENGES Co-sponsored by 15-16 State Power and Development: Comparing Taiwan and South Korea Through a Case Study of the Bicycle Industry Michelle F. Hsieh, Academia Sinica 46-6 THE EPISTEMOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF MIXEDMETHOD RESEARCH Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst The Limit of the Developmental State: The Innovation Pattern of Taiwan’s Bio-Pharmaceutical Industry Jenn-Hwan Wang, National Chengchi University Tsung-Yuan Chen, National Chengchi University Are We Really Bridging the Gap? On the Conflicting Epistemological Foundations of Multi-method Research David Kuehn, University of Heidelberg Ingo Rohlfing, University of Cologne Push and Pull in Taiwan’s Technology Transformation: Evaluating the Role of ITRI and Industrial Clusters in Fostering Sectoral Development in Taiwan Douglas Fuller, University of London, King’s College Mei-Chih Hu, National Chung-Hsing University Chair: Papers: Ontology, Epistemology, and Multiple Methods Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Virginia Disc: 46-8 Chair: Papers: Disc: Jeffrey T. Checkel, Simon Fraser University Ted Hopf, Ohio State University Conference Group on Theory, Policy, and Society THEME PANEL: HISTORY, IDENTITY, POLITICAL VIOLENCE: THE RELATIVE MERITS OF QUALITATIVE METHODS TO EXPLAIN COMPLEX AND DYNAMIC PHENOMENA Co-sponsored by T-29 Jonathan Githens-Mazer, University of Exeter Beyond a Snapshot Approach: Findings from Life-History Interviews with Extreme Right-Wing Activists Matthew Goodwin, University of Manchester Understanding Muslim Community Perspectives of Violent Extremism: A Qualitative Case Study in London Robert A. Lambert, University of Exeter EXPERTISE AND PUBLIC POLICY Jennifer Dodge, New York University Papers: Does Political Science Scholarship Order the World? The Case of Complexity in United Nations Peace Operations Christian Bueger, European University Institute Smoking Bans, Health and Science: A Comparative Study of Policy Networks and Smoking Policies in England, Germany and Denmark Lars Thorup Larsen, University of Aarhus Constructing the right to public support: Changing Concepts of Solidarity in Danish Disability Policy Marie Oestergaard Moeller, University of Aarhus Disc: Panel 1 Chair: Papers: Basia Spalek, University of Birmingham ‘A Shining City Upon a Hill’: Ronald Reagan, America, and the Things of God and Caesar Justin David Garrison, Catholic University of America THE CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT AND THE LEGACY OF WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY, JR. Larry Greenfield, The Claremont Institute Charles R. Kesler, Claremont McKenna College Michael M. Uhlmann, Claremont Graduate University William Voegeli, Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy John J. Pitney, Jr., Claremont McKenna College Panel 4 Chair: RE-CONSIDERING THE DEVELOPMENTAL STATE Tun-jen Cheng, College of William & Mary Papers: Techno-nationalism or Techno-globalism Across the Taiwan Strait? A Case Study of Common Technical Standard Setting Hwei-luan Poong, National Chengchi University Gregory S. Butler, New Mexico State University Ryan Robert Holston, University of Alabama, Huntsville Walter Bagehot Research Council on National Sovereignty Panel 1 Chair: CONSTITUTIONAL POWERS OF THE PRESIDENCY: HISTORICAL AND THEORETICAL EXPLORATIONS Joseph Prud’homme, Christopher Newport University Disc: Matthew A. Tengs, Christopher Newport University Stephen J. Shaw, Christopher Newport University Part: Joseph DiSarro, Washington & Jefferson College Frank P. Le Veness, St. John’s University Matthew A. Pauley, Manhattanville College Buba Misawa, Washington & Jefferson College Stuart Farrand Lana Obradovic, Yonsei University Daily Schedule Conference Group on Taiwan Studies Alexander Hamilton in Practice and Theory Michael P. Federici, Mercyhurst College America and the Problem of Endless Reformation Richard M. Gamble, Hillsdale College Disc: Part: THEORY AND PRACTICE IN THE AMERICAN FOUNDING Richard M. Gamble, Hillsdale College The Consolidated Union in John Marshall’s Political Imagination: What’s a Political Community For? Jeffrey Polet, Hope College Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy Chair: Aletta Norval, University of Essex National Humanities Institute Related Group Panels Panel 9 Joseph Wong, University of Toronto Panel 2 Chair: Causal Processes, Radicalisation and Bad Policy: The Importance of Case Studies of Radical Violent Takfiri Jihadism for Establishing Logical Causality Jonathan Githens-Mazer, University of Exeter The Advantages of Qualitative Methods in Difficult to Research Subject Populations: Triangulating Interviews and Secondary Sources Orla Lynch, University of St. Andrews Disc: Remaking Taiwan: Society and the State Since the End of Martial Law Thomas Gold, UC-Berkeley Mapping the Epistemological Commitments of Methods: A framework for Mixed-Method Research Amel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 393 Sunday, 10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Alan G. Stolberg, United States Army War College Sunday, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM Working Group: Citizenship and Migration SESSION 2 Working Group: Civic Engagement and Political Science SESSION 2 Working Group: Comparative Political Theory SESSION 2 Working Group: Democratic Policy Processes SESSION 2 Working Group: Gender, Institutions, and Identities: Historical and Comparative Perspectives SESSION 2 Working Group: Immigration and U.S. Politics SESSION 2 Working Group: Police Practices and Their Impact on Citizenship SESSION 2 Working Group: Policy Network Analysis SESSION 2 Working Group: Political Ethics SESSION 2 Working Group: Practicing Politics: Political Scientists in Government SESSION 2 Working Group: The Future of Political Leadership SESSION 2 Working Group: Tribal Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples and Politics SESSION 2 Working Group: Women’s Rights, Identity, and the State: Gender Moving from Local to Global SESSION 2 Working Group: eLearning in Political Science SESSION 2 394 Daily Schedule INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) A Abbas, Asma............................308 (2-27) Abbott, Philip ..........288 (23-7), 389 (41-4) Abdel-Nour, Farid .......................309 (3-5) Abizadeh, Arash .......................321 (1-14) Abouharb, Mohammed Rodwan.......... 317 (45-5) Abraham, Arun .........................335 (1-10) Abrajano, Marisa ..... 247 (37-19), 290 (3611) Abramowitz, Alan I. ................315 (36-10) Abramson, Paul R. ...................328 (35-9) Abranches, Sergio ....................353 (39-8) Achilov, Dilshod ......................269 (44-21) Ackelsberg, Martha A. ...... 308 (2-12), 346 (Panel 2) Ackerly, Brooke A. ....................344 (42-7) Ackermann, Allison Renee..........295 (8-5) Adams, James ........ 300 (36-27), 353 (3514), 364 (14-5), 385 (11-4) Adams, Michael O. ..............346 (Panel 1) Adams-Kane, Jonathon ...................... 370 Adcock, Robert Kaufman ....... 261 (46-25), 283 (1-17) Adelman, Howard.....................273 (3-31) Adhikari, Prakash ...................365 (21-15) Adida, Claire Leslie ................264 (12-30) Adkins, Randall E. ....................276 (23-3) Adler, David Gray .....................387 (23-8) Adler, Rachel..........................387 (20-16) Adler, Scott ..............................254 (22-2) Affigne, Tony ............... 293 (Panel 1), 308 Agranoff, Robert .....277 (28-4), 341 (28-5) Aguiar-Conraria, Luis..........296 (8-5), 367 (34-2) Ahlquist, John Stephen..... 263 (6-19), 362 (6-12) Ahmed, Amel F......344 (46-5), 394 (46-6), 395 (46-6) Ahram, Ariel ...........................390 (46-12) Aiken, Nancy E....................249 (Panel 1) Ainsworth, Scott H.....337 (6-14), 368 (3511) Ajzenstat, Janet...................260 (Panel 2) Akhtar, Omair .........................329 (37-22) Akkoyunlu-Wigley, Arzu .......... 348 (11-34) Akturk, Sener ......................... 338 (11-38) Alatassi, Alia ...... 275 (18-17), 313 (21-22) Albertson, Bethany ......295 (5-10), 322 (54) Aldrich, John H........ 315 (37-17), 367 (342), 379 (35-17) Alejandro, Roberto....................336 (2-23) Aleman, Eduardo....................377 (22-10) Alexander, Amy ......................388 (31-20) Alexander, Marcus..... 323 (8-13), 348 (1134) Alexander-Floyd, Nikol G. .......352 (31-19) Alexiadou, Despina......... 375 (14-12), 385 (11-35) Alexseev, Mikhail A......... 312 (18-19), 337 (11-23) Alford, C. Fred..........................262 (2-20) Alford, John R. .......................343 (37-12) Allard, Scott W. .... 341 (28-5), 387 (25-17) Allee, Todd L. .........................339 (16-14) Allen, Amy................................336 (2-44) Allen, Barbara ............................391 (5-7) Allen, Christopher S........ 376 (15-12), 386 (15-14) Allina-Pisano, Jessica ..... 274 (13-11), 380 (46-13) Allison, Olivia .........................340 (18-12) Alonso, Sonia .........................265 (15-17) Alphonso, Gwendoline M. .........384 (7-16) Alt, Robert......................... 345 (Panel 12) Altenstetter, Christa ..................369 (48-3) Althaus, Scott L. .....................379 (37-21) Altman, Micah ........251 (6-17), 354 (40-4) Alvis, David .........................280 (Panel 5) Alyahya, Khalid Othman ..................... 259 Amable, Bruno ............... 302, 375 (11-43) Ambler, Wayne ....................390 (Panel 6) Amiraux, Valérie ..................320 (Panel 1) Amodeo, Joseph Tyler ..............247 (33-8) Amstutz, Mark R..................331 (Panel 3) Amyot, G. Grant .....................327 (25-15) Amyx, Jennifer .........................295 (6-21) Andersen, David J. .................379 (36-30) Andersen, Ellen Ann......... 270 (47-5), 302 (47-7) Anderson, Cameron ......... 290 (36-9), 355 Anderson, Christopher J. ....... 274 (15-13), 290 (36-9) Anderson, Greg ........................344 (49-8) Anderson, Jennifer Ogg......... 257 (38-10), 379 (37-21) Anderson, Karen M. ...............339 (15-18) Anderson, Leah Seppanen .......270 (48-5) Anderson, Mary R. ...................269 (45-8) Anderson, Sarah ......................298 (22-8) André, Audrey Ann ...................300 (34-8) Andreas, Peter .....325 (16-6), 393 (18-15) Andrejevic, Mark.........................361 (2-8) Andrews, David M. .................254 (16-13) Andrews, Rhys .........................288 (24-4) Ang, Yuen Yuen .....................392 (13-12) Angevine, Sara................. 318, 369 (47-3) Anker, Elisabeth .........................361 (2-8) Anner, Mark..............................297 (16-2) Annesley, Claire .....................342 (31-13) Ansell, Ben William....312 (14-15), 362 (612) Ansell, Christopher K. ....... 313 (24-5), 376 (17-16) Ansolabehere, Stephen D. ........300 (35-8) Aoki, Andrew L. .... 292 (Panel 1), 342 (323) Aparicio, Francisco Javier...........374 (8-2) Apodaca, Clair............................347 (8-6) Apostolidis, Paul C. ..................373 (2-33) Appel, Benjamin ................................. 258 Appel, Hilary.............................349 (13-6) Araki, Hiroshi............................349 (15-8) Araujo, Marco Antonio Ferreira de ......293 (Panel 3) Arbour, Brian K............... 318, 353 (38-11) Arce, Daniel ...............................347 (4-6) Arce, Moises E. ......................380 (44-17) Arceneaux, Kevin ................... 290 (36-11) Archer, Crina ............................361 (2-30) Archibugi, Daniele ....................309 (3-15) Arel, Dominique...................390 (Panel 1) Arena, Philip....... 276 (21-19), 298 (21-18) Arias, Enrique Desmond ......... 311 (12-42) Arjona, Ana ........ 363 (11-30), 392 (11-20) Arkes, Hadley.............. 249 (Panel 1), 271 (Panel 1), 331 (Panel 4) Armesto, Alejandra .................244 (12-39) Armijo, Leslie Elliott ............284 (6-8), 381 (Panel 1) Armingeon, Klaus ......265 (13-3), 364 (1511) Armitage, David..........................346 (1-1) Armstrong, II, David A. ....................... 355 Arneil, Barbara ...........................372 (1-8) Arnn, Kathleen .......... 320 (Panel 14), 381 (Panel 7) Arnold, Christine.......................323 (8-10) Arnold, Kathleen R. ............................ 270 Arnold, Peri E..... 365 (23-14), 366 (23-14) Aronsson, Lisa ....................381 (Panel 3) Arretche, Marta ...................331 (Panel 2) Arriola, Leonardo R. ...............348 (12-24) Arsneault, Shelly R. .............391 (Panel 2) Art, David .................................291 (43-8) Asako, Yasushi...........................284 (4-2) Ashour, Omar .........................298 (18-16) Ashworth, Scott ..........273 (4-7), 284 (4-2) Aslan, Senem....... 305 (Panel 1), 311 (1231) Asmussen, Nicole.....................341 (22-7) Atencio, Jesse James......................... 357 Athreya, Bama ....................281 (Panel 2) Atkeson, Lonna Rae .................362 (5-12) Atkison, Larissa M ......................262 (1-3) Auerswald, David P.................266 (19-14) Auger, Cheryl A. .......................352 (31-8) Auld, Graeme .........................393 (17-15) Autesserre, Severine ...... 325 (17-13), 376 (18-24) Avalos, Manuel....................262 (Panel 1) Avant, Deborah ....... 301 (43-10), 340 (1812) Avdagic, Sabina .....................375 (14-12) Avelino, George F................... 311 (12-18) Avellaneda, Claudia N. .............288 (24-4) Averill, Marilyn........................378 (25-12) Avey, Paul C. ......................... 326 (20-11) Avnon, Dan .........................241 (Panel 1) Avramenko, Richard ......... 250 (2-37), 345 (Panel 3) Avrushin, Adam ......................261 (46-25) Awad, Ibrahim ........................275 (16-10) Ayres, Jeffrey M. ......................275 (16-4) Ayres, IV, R. William ............... 337 (11-23) Aysan, Ahmet Faruk .................263 (6-19) Azari, Julia Rezazadeh .............288 (23-7) Azerrad, David ....................381 (Panel 7) Azizi, Karim ............................ 375 (11-43) Azmanova, Albena ...... 292 (Panel 1), 375 (11-43) B Bächtiger, Andre.......................342 (34-7) Ba, Alice D. ........ 325 (18-22), 386 (16-20) Baccini, Leonardo............. 339 (16-3), 370 Bach, David.......... 244 (17-6), 297 (17-10) Backer, David ......................... 243 (11-49) Badal, Kristen...........................277 (30-8) Bader, Julia ........................................ 302 Baer, Judith A........250 (3-18), 267 (27-6), 277 (27-10), 352 (31-8) Baeza Freer, Jaime .............293 (Panel 3) Bafumi, Jr., Joseph...................289 (29-4) Bahador, Babak....... 254 (20-14), 279 (387), 315 (38-9) Bahry, Donna ...........................274 (13-2) Bai, Ruoyun .............................279 (38-7) Baik, JongWan ................................... 302 Bailard, Catie Snow ............................ 370 Bailer, Stefanie ................. 303, 365 (22-3) Bailey, Andrew ...........................263 (6-7) Bailey, Michael A. ......314 (26-9), 341 (227) Baines, Beverley .................... 328 (31-11) Baird, Ryan G. .......................257 (46-19) Baker, Andy.............................. 251 (6-11) Baker, Nancy V.........................387 (23-8) Baker, Paul Manuel Aviles ......267 (25-10) Baker, Ryan ............................. 263 (8-11) Bakke, Kristin Marie ............... 326 (21-11) Bakker, Ryan..........................329 (36-23) Balan, Manuel ........................ 338 (11-45) Balarezo, Christine Anne .................... 319 Balcells, Laia ...... 348 (11-17), 375 (12-23) Baldassarri, Delia .... 368 (35-13), 389 (3612) Baldwin, Katharine A. ....... 263 (11-3), 371 (Panel 3) Balestrini, Pierre Philippe.................... 303 Balfour, Lawrie .........................352 (33-4) Bali, Valentina ........................378 (29-14) Balkin, Jack M..........352 (27-3), 383 (1-7) Balla, Steven J. ........................394 (40-8) Balmaceda, Margarita M...........386 (13-4) Balmaceda, Ph.D., Vilma C. ...299 (31-15) Balogh, Brian .............273 (7-4), 362 (7-5) Balot, Ryan ............322 (1-14), 336 (2-38) Balsiger, Joerg .......................376 (17-16) Ban, Cornel .............. 258, 303, 311 (14-3) Banack, Clark...........................355 (49-5) Banaszak, Lee Ann ............................ 356 Banducci, Susan A. .......... 316 (38-9), 379 (34-4) Banerjee, Kiran ..................................270 Banerjee, Preeta M. .................389 (39-6) Banks, Antoine J. ...................329 (37-22) Banting, Keith Gordon ............ 274 (14-11) Baracskay, Daniel................390 (Panel 2) Barakso, Maryann ............ 356, 388 (31-7) Baranowski, Michael K. ............337 (10-7) KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Barber, Benjamin R. ....273 (3-29), 295 (323) Barber, Garnet R. ................271 (Panel 1) Barberia, Lorena G. ................ 311 (12-18) Barch, Madeline ................................. 318 Bardi, Luciano .....................293 (Panel 1) Barilleaux, Ryan J. .................341 (23-13) Barkan, Joel D. ......................351 (22-12) Barker, Christopher James .... 270, 294 (125) Barker, David C. .....................279 (37-16) Barker, Lucius J...................372 (Panel 2) Barkin, J. Samuel .... 269 (46-20), 313 (2015) Barndt, William T. ...................348 (12-24) Barnes, Andrew S. ......... 316 (44-14), 370 Barnes, Jamaal S. .............................. 357 Barnes, Jeb.......310 (7-17), 358 (Panel 2) Barnes, William R...................352 (30-14) Barnett, Michael N....................364 (18-4) Baron, David P. ..........................362 (4-4) Barratt, Bethany ..................... 291 (45-11) Barreto, Matt A. ....... 278 (36-15), 279 (3615) Barrett, David M. .................381 (Panel 1) Barrett, Edward T....................275 (18-21) Barria, Lilian A..........................376 (16-5) Barrington, Lowell W............390 (Panel 1) Barrios, Cristina...................381 (Panel 3) Barrow, Clyde W.......................369 (42-8) Bartels, Brandon L....................277 (26-4) Bartels, Larry M.............. 268 (35-10), 306 Bartilow, Horace A.....269 (45-8), 325 (166) Bartlett, Robert C. ...............281 (Panel 1) Baruah, Sanjib........................269 (44-10) Barvosa, Edwina ......................366 (25-9) Bas, Muhammet .....................350 (18-23) Bashir, Hassan .........................308 (2-27) Bass, Harold F........276 (23-3), 300 (35-8) Bassel, Leah ............................378 (31-5) Bassi, Anna................................384 (4-3) Bastien, Frédérick ....................292 (49-7) Bates, Robert H....... 252 (11-10), 324 (1116), 362 (6-24) Batta, Anna ............................365 (21-15) Battista, James S.C. .................246 (29-6) Batto, Nathan F. .......................245 (22-1) Bauer, Gretchen M. ........ 260, 367 (31-17) Baum, Bruce ............273 (2-35), 373 (3-7) Baum, Jeeyang Rhee ..... 273 (11-29), 274 (11-29), 338 (11-45) Baum, Lawrence ...313 (26-9), 314 (26-9), 394 (26-15) Baum, Matthew A. .......... 256 (38-10), 301 (38-4), 321 (Panel 2) Baumgartner, Frank R. ........... 327 (25-11) Bayer, Resat ........365 (21-15), 377 (20-5) Baykal, Gokce Ozgen .............393 (20-10) Bayrakal, Suna.......................351 (25-13) Beal, Amanda Louise ...............251 (6-17) Bearce, David H. ................................ 303 Beardsley, Kyle ......................393 (21-10) Beaudette, Donald M. ...............263 (6-19) Beaulieu, Emily Ann ............... 363 (11-46) Beaumont, Elizabeth.... 308 (Panel 1), 336 (3-27) Beck, Kris Aaron ......................329 (39-7) Beck, Paul Allen .......................328 (35-9) Becker, Megan ... 254 (21-23), 275 (18-21) Beckert, Sven.............................273 (7-4) Beckley, Michael C. ................393 (19-17) Beckman, Arthur.....................343 (36-26) Beckstrand, Michael ...............327 (25-15) Beckwith, Karen ...247 (34-9), 268 (31-12) Bedi, Sonu ...............................384 (3-28) Beer, Caroline C.....................244 (12-39) Beerbohm, Eric ......336 (3-27), 391 (3-20) Beers, Daniel J.......................381 (46-13) Bego, Ingrid........................................ 318 Behl, Natasha...........................278 (32-4) Beinart, Peter .........................280 (44-19) Beiner, Ronald..........262 (1-3), 322 (2-46) Beissinger, Mark...... 380 (44-23), 385 (1118) 395 Index of Participants Index of Participants Index of Participants Bejarano, Christina Elizabeth .......256 (328), 299 (31-4), 308 (Panel 1) Belanger, Eric...........................317 (49-4) Belcher, Emma.........................276 (20-7) Bell, Melissa Ann....................300 (36-13) Bellhouse, Mary L............................... 270 Bellin, Eva R. .........................364 (12-26) Bellinger, Jr, Paul Thomas ......380 (44-17) Below, Amy M. .....353 (39-8), 377 (25-12) Belz, Herman ... 280 (Panel 5), 292 (Panel 8) Ben-Josef Hirsch, Michal ..........291 (43-6) Ben-Nun-Bloom, Pazit ................309 (5-5) Ben-Porath, Eran N. ........................... 355 Benesh, Sara C.........277 (26-4), 288 (2614) Bennett, Andrew.......................354 (43-9) Bennett, Jane .........283 (2-10), 383 (2-15) Bennich-Björkman, Li................264 (13-3) Bennion, Elizabeth A. ....... 263 (10-6), 355 Benoit-Bryan, Jennifer M. .......342 (30-16) Benova, Monika....... 261 (46-25), 375 (1143) Bensel, Richard F. ....273 (7-4), 384 (7-16) Benson, Brett .........................275 (18-17) Benson, Iain ........................271 (Panel 1) Benz, Jennifer K.........................384 (5-3) Berejikian, Jeffrey D. ..............340 (19-10) Berenson, Marc P. ....................349 (13-6) Berg, John C. .........263 (10-6), 316 (42-6) Berg, Louis-Alexandre ............325 (17-13) Bergan, Daniel E. ...................257 (38-10) Bergbauer, Harald ...............331 (Panel 6) Berger, Daniel ........................338 (12-29) Bergman, Heather .......... 244 (16-12), 264 (12Bergo, Bettina G. ............................ 270 Bergqvist, Christina ................268 (31-12) Berk, Gerald......293 (Panel 3), 323 (7-18) Berlinski, Samuel......................347 (6-20) Berman, Jacqueline .............372 (Panel 1) Berman, Sheri ... 279 (44-19), 280 (44-19), 291 (43-8), 324 (14-9) Bermeo, Nancy ......312 (18-5), 339 (15-6) Bermeo, Sarah .......................275 (16-21) Bernal, Angelica Maria........250 (1-9), 366 (27-8) Bernauer, Thomas C. .............254 (21-23) Bernhard, Michael .....274 (13-2), 338 (1229) Bernhard, William T. ....263 (6-7), 288 (224) Bernick, Ethan M....................313 (21-22) Bernstein, Hamutal .................297 (14-13) Bernstein, Mary ..........................323 (7-3) Bernstein, Steven F. ....... 267 (25-16), 325 (16-17) Berry, Frances Stokes ............351 (25-13) Berry, Jeffrey M. .......................255 (30-7) Berry, Michael J......................393 (23-15) Berryhill, Anthony ............................... 271 Bertelli, Anthony Michael ..........298 (24-8) Bertrand, Jacques ... 296 (11-41), 364 (1226) Best, Robin E. .... 315 (36-34), 343 (36-26) Best, Samuel J. ......................315 (35-16) Beth, Richard S. .......................254 (22-2) Betts, Alexander .......................376 (16-5) Betz, Timm............................... 348 (11-5) Bevir, Mark .................................283 (1-5) Bharathy, Gnana K. ................313 (20-15) Bhavnani, Ravi .......244 (12-43), 284 (8-3) Bhavnani, Rikhil................ 322 (6-10), 370 Bially Mattern, Janice ...............321 (T-19) Bickers, Kenneth N...................246 (30-6) Bickford, Susan ......................289 (31-18) Bickford, Thomas J.................287 (18-20) Bidjerano, Morris D................. 249 (46-11) Biebricher, Thomas...................262 (2-26) Bilakovics, Steven ....................262 (1-21) Biliuta, Ionut Florin...............358 (Panel 5) Bilodeau, Antoine .....................378 (32-7) Bimber, Bruce...........................354 (40-4) Binder, Mike ....................................... 319 Birch, Sarah ...........268 (34-3), 367 (34-2) Birkland, Thomas A. ....... 351 (25-13), 394 (24-12) Birney, Mayling....................... 337 (11-12) Birnir, Johanna Kristin.............287 (21-21) Biro, Andrew ............................322 (2-19) Bischof, Jonathan Michael ..........337 (8-8) Biser, Ashley ............................242 (1-16) Bishop, Shelby ............... 254 (21-23), 303 Biziouras, Nikolaos .................330 (43-13) Bjarnegard, Elin......................267 (31-12) 396 Blühdorn, Ingolfur ........ 249 (Panel 1), 322 (2-19) Black, Ryan C. ..... 288 (26-8), 378 (26-10) Blackstock, Jason J. .................255 (25-7) Blais, André.......... 289 (35-5), 329 (36-32) Blake, Daniel ..........................339 (16-14) Blanchard, Eric M. ..................344 (46-18) Blankenau, Joseph ..............391 (Panel 2) Blass, Abby Katharine ............ 385 (11-18) Blattberg, Charles.....................391 (1-27) Blaydes, Lisa A. .....................329 (37-23) Bloeser, Andrew J. ...... 309 (5-11), 373 (56), 394 (29-7) Blofield, Merike........ 342 (31-13), 394 (3114) Bloodgood, Elizabeth..............386 (17-12) Bloom, Benjamin J. ................254 (16-13) Bloom, Joel D...........................380 (40-3) Bloom, Mia M. ........................ 386 (18-11) Bloom, Stephen...................... 274 (13-11) Blyth, Mark...............................297 (16-8) Bob, Clifford A. .......................350 (18-18) Bochsler, Daniel ............... 253 (13-8), 356 Boczek, Macon W........ 249 (Panel 4), 305 (Panel 1) Bodet, Marc A. .........................317 (49-4) Boehmke, Frederick J..... 278 (35-12), 289 (29-4), 327 (29-3), 385 (8-9) Boerzel, Tanja A. ..... 265 (16-22), 285 (1147), 350 (17-5) Boesch, Joseph.................................. 370 Boesche, Roger........................262 (1-21) Bogaards, Matthijs....................256 (33-7) Bogliaccini, Juan .................293 (Panel 3) Bohlken, Anjali Thomas ...................... 302 Bohman, James .......................294 (3-13) Bohn, Simone R. ............ 268 (31-12), 357 Boin, Arjen ...............................313 (24-5) Boix, Carles............................ 324 (11-16) Boling, Patricia ..... 310 (11-2), 342 (31-13) Bolsen, Toby ............329 (39-7), 384 (5-3) Bond, Jon R. ..........................315 (35-16) Bong, Youngshik Daniel.......259 (Panel 1) Bonikowski, Bart..................... 375 (11-44) Bonneau, Chris W. ... 255 (26-6), 319, 378 (26-10) Bonnette, Lakeyta .............................. 355 Boomgaarden, Hajo Georg .......256 (33-7) Boone, Catherine .....................362 (6-24) Borah, Porismita................................. 370 Borchert, Jens ........ 266 (22-6), 311 (14-3) Borick, Christopher P. ...............248 (39-5) Borrelli, MaryAnne .....278 (31-3), 313 (2310) Boryczka, Jocelyn M.................369 (42-8) Boschken, Herman L. ...............255 (30-7) Bose, Meena ........ 321 (Panel 2), 351 (2312) Bosworth, Matthew H. ..............255 (26-6) Botterman, Sarah .....................247 (33-8) Boucoyannis, Deborah A. ......248 (43-15), 356 Boudreau, Cheryl .......................336 (5-8) Boulding, Carew .....................339 (17-14) Bourbeau, James R................ 276 (22-11) Bourke, James E......272 (2-31), 294 (2-6) Boushey, Graeme.....................314 (29-2) Boveda, Karina Cendon...................... 318 Bow, Brian................................275 (16-4) Bow, Shannon L. ......................365 (23-6) Bowen, Daniel .................................... 317 Bowen, James D. ...................264 (12-41) Bowers, Jake ...........................323 (8-13) Bowie, Alasdair ...................... 264 (11-50) Bowler, Shaun ........................389 (36-12) Bowles, Nigel ....... 253 (11-51), 377 (23-5) Bowman, Ann O’M. ..... 292 (Panel 1), 394 (29-7) Bowman, James S. ...277 (24-2), 351 (2410) Bowyer, Benjamin T. ...............386 (15-14) Bowyer, James Ryan................248 (45-7) Boyd, Christina L................................ 318 Boyd, Richard.............................283 (1-5) Boydstun, Amber Ellen .............316 (38-9) Boyea, Brent D................................... 319 Boyko, Nazar .........................324 (13-10) Boyne, George A......................288 (24-4) Boynton, George (Bob) Robert ....329 (402) Bozoki, Andras ....................... 311 (13-13) Bozonelos, Dino N.......... 247 (37-19), 328 (32-6) Bradberry, Leigh A....................314 (33-1) Brader, Ted ............ 264 (11-3), 362 (5-12) Bradizza, Luigi............. 260 (Panel 2), 320 (Panel 14), 373 (1-23) Brady, David W.........................300 (35-8) Brady, Henry E. .........280 (46-7), 300 (3627), 306 Brady, Michael C. ................... 276 (22-11) Brams, Steven J......300 (34-8), 336 (4-8), 355 Brancati, Dawn..... 264 (11-3), 287 (21-21) Branch, Daniel........................ 392 (11-20) Brand, Donald ................... 271 (Panel 13) Branton, Regina P. ...................256 (32-8) Brasher, Holly.........................278 (35-12) Brass, Jennifer N......................266 (24-7) Brathwaite, Robert..................286 (12-38) Bratton, Kathleen A. ......... 246 (29-6), 299 (31-4), 314 (29-2) Bratton, Michael .....................257 (44-22) Brauner, Wolfgang....................301 (39-4) Bravo, Jorge............................. 348 (11-5) Brawley, Mark R. .......242 (6-13), 269 (4314) Bray-Collins, Elinor ...... 305 (Panel 1), 311 (12-31) Brecher, Michael.....................287 (21-12) Breeding, Mary E. ..................297 (14-13) Breiner, Peter D......284 (3-22), 391 (2-32) Brennan, Samantha.............331 (Panel 2) Brenner, Christine Thurlow ................. 319 Brenner, Saul .........................394 (26-15) Brenson, Lashonda Marie................... 357 Brescoll, Victoria.......................247 (32-9) Bressler, Michael ......................387 (22-5) Brettschneider, Corey L. ... 242 (3-11), 336 (3-27) Brettschneider, Marla...........294 (Panel 3) Breunig, Christian...................327 (29-13) Breuning, Marijke .... 365 (20-12), 388 (3120) Brewer, Gene A......276 (24-2), 288 (24-4) Brewer, Paul R. ... 248 (38-12), 358 (Panel 2) Brewington, David .............................. 303 Brians, Craig Leonard...............337 (10-7) Bridges, Amy B. .......................314 (30-5) Brierly, Allen Bronson ...............268 (32-2) Brigham, John ...... 331 (Panel 1), 366 (278) Brinks, Daniel M. ....... 352 (26-3), 385 (1118) Bromley-Trujillo, Rebecca Elizabeth .... 255 (30-7) Bronner, Stephen Eric ..............301 (42-9) Brooks, Deborah Jordan ........ 343 (37-20), 353 (36-14) Brooks, Risa A. ......................298 (18-16) Brooks, Sarah M. ... 251 (6-11), 325 (17-9) Brooks, Stephen C. .......... 246 (30-6), 353 (38Brophy-Baermann, Michelle D. ........394 (29-7) Brown, Adam R. .....................327 (29-13) Brown, Chelsea Denise .........254 (21-23), 286 (16-7), 303 Brown, David S. ...290 (36-9), 392 (12-16) Brown, Harvey.....................345 (Panel 1) Brown, Joseph S. ............................... 308 Brown, Katherine....284 (9-3), 377 (19-15) Brown, Lara Michelle ........ 276 (23-3), 365 (23-6) Brown, Mark B. ........................346 (2-40) Brown, Montgomery B. ...... 357 (Panel 11) Brown, Nathan ... 273 (11-15), 310 (11-27) Brown, Robert A...... 328 (30-10), 367 (325) Brown, Robert D.....................290 (35-15) Brown, Robert L. .... 258, 340 (19-10), 393 (19-17) Brown, Robin Christopher.........315 (38-9) Brown, Steven D. .....................355 (49-5) Brown, Wendy.......... 272 (2-11), 294 (2-9) Brown, Winter E-N.............................. 270 Brown-Dean, Khalilah L. ........290 (37-15), 366 (25-9), 388 (29-5) Brox, Brian J. ...........296 (8-5), 352 (35-7) Broz, J. Lawrence .......297 (16-2), 373 (615) Bruce, John M........................289 (35-15) Brudney, Jeffrey L. ...................298 (24-8) Bruhn, Jodi L.......................320 (Panel 2) Bruhn, Kathleen M.............................. 356 Bruhn, Miriam......................... 243 (11-19) Bruk, Boris ......................................... 317 Brule, Rachel .........................296 (12-25) Brune, Nancy ...........................339 (16-3) KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Brusoe, Peter W. ......... 260 (Panel 1), 366 (29-10) Bruyneel, Kevin M. ..............293 (Panel 3) Bryant, Michael E. ...............249 (Panel 1) Brynin, Malcolm...................344 (Panel 3) Buchanan, Bruce....................313 (23-10) Buchanan, Paul ......................394 (44-13) Buchler, Justin........242 (5-2), 315 (36-34) Buck, Christopher.....................283 (2-25) Bucken-Knapp, Gregg ........................ 318 Buckinx, Barbara ......................330 (45-9) Buckley, David.................................... 318 Budziszewski, J. ..................382 (Panel 1) Bueger, Christian............ 376 (18-13), 395 (Panel 2) Buehler, Michael...... 269 (44-21), 364 (1226) Bueno de Mesquita, Ethan .........273 (4-7) Bull, Martin J. ......................358 (Panel 2) Bunce, Valerie ...... 297 (13-7), 385 (11-18) Burbach, David T. ................... 312 (19-11) Burch, Traci..............................388 (29-5) Burden, Barry C. .......367 (34-2), 389 (3612) Bures, Oldrich ............................ 259, 304 Burgess, Katrina... 274 (11-42), 374 (11-9) Burgess, Stephen F. ...........................258 Burgoon, Brian ........253 (14-6), 284 (6-8), 311 (14-15) Burgos, Russell A...................377 (19-15) Burke, Donald ..........................322 (2-19) Burke, John Francis ....247 (33-8), 309 (35) Burke, John P...........................255 (23-4) Burke, Lisa M. .................................... 356 Burke, Thomas F. .....................310 (7-17) Burkett, Christopher C. ...... 357 (Panel 11) Burkhart, Ross E. .....................377 (24-6) Burmila, Edward M. .......... 299 (29-8), 317 Burnam, Jeffry ........................313 (23-10) Burnett, Christina Duffy.............352 (27-3) Burnett, R.E. ............................389 (39-6) Burns, Nancy .........................343 (37-20) Burns, Peter F. ................. 277 (30-8), 356 Burns, Sarah ..........................290 (36-22) Burns, Timothy W. ...............321 (Panel 2) Burrell, Barbara C.....................278 (31-3) Burt, Jo-Marie.........................257 (44-16) Burton, Guy Jonathan Sands ..............318 Busby, Joshua..........................291 (46-9) Busch, Andreas ........................368 (40-5) Busch, Marc L. .......................287 (17-18) Bussell, Jennifer L. ...................377 (24-6) Bustikova-Siroky, Lenka.... 312 (15-9), 385 (11-4) Buthe, Tim.... 325 (17-9), 376 (17-16), 392 (17-15), 393 (17-15) Butler, Christopher K. .............387 (21-14) Butler, Gregory S......... 382 (Panel 2), 395 (Panel 1) Buttice, Matthew................................. 317 Buzogany, Aron ......................265 (16-22) Buzzetti, Eric .......................390 (Panel 6) Byrne, Jennifer Eileen ............253 (12-27) C Céline, Braconnier ..................329 (36-32) C., Munger, Michael C. Munger Michael ...........................................370 Cairney, Paul........ 304 (Panel 2), 327 (2511), 344 (Panel 3) Calder, Kent E........................ 243 (11-33) Calderaro, Andrea ..............................355 Cale, Tabitha Marie ..................314 (29-2) Calhoun, Craig ......................... 324 (11-8) Cali, Basak..... 248 (45-7), 303, 330 (45-9) Caliendo, Stephen Maynard....343 (38-15) Calvert, Randall L.....................284 (6-22) Calvo, Ernesto F........242 (6-13), 297 (1232) Calvo, Kerman .......................286 (15-10) Came, Tim .............................351 (23-12) Cameron, Charles M. ....... 254 (22-2), 366 (26-1) Cameron, David R.....277 (28-4), 338 (139), 364 (15-11) Cammarano, Joseph ................351 (23-2) Cammett, Melani .............. 258, 362 (6-24) Campbell, Andrea Louise.... 259 (Panel 1), 347 (7-10) Campbell, Colin .... 293 (Panel 1), 351 (2312) Campbell, Colin J. ....................322 (2-19) Campbell, David .......................250 (2-18) Campbell, David E.......... 290 (37-15), 314 (33-1), 367 (33-10) Campbell, Peter P.....................316 (43-5) Campbell, Susanna Pfohl ......325 (17-13), 386 (17-12) Campello, Daniela .......... 244 (16-12), 339 (16Canache, Damarys .............368 (37-14) Canaday, Margot ........................323 (7-3) Canedo, Eduardo .......................362 (7-5) Canes-Wrone, Brandice............290 (36-9) Cann, Damon M. ................................ 319 Cannavo, Peter Francesco ......283 (2-25), 345 (Panel 2) Canon, David T.........................367 (34-2) Cantir, Cristian........................313 (20-15) Cantor, Paul A..........................291 (41-3) Cantu, Francisco ....................264 (12-41) Cao, Xiaoxia...........................248 (38-12) Cao, Xun..................................325 (17-9) Capelos, Tereza .................................355 Capoccia, Giovanni ... 339 (15-6), 363 (1114) Caputi, Mary Andrea.................262 (2-20) Caramani, Daniele.................. 348 (11-48) Carano, Carol Lorraine ...........253 (15-15) Caraway, Teri L. ..... 297 (16-2), 374 (11-9) Carbone, Maurizio ...............271 (Panel 1) Cardenas, Sonia.....................369 (45-10) Carew, Jessica D. Johnson.......268 (32-2) Carey, John M. .........................328 (34-5) Carey, Sabine C. ......................316 (45-5) Caringella, Paul ...................345 (Panel 3) Carlisle, Juliet.........................368 (36-29) Carlson, Allen.........................389 (43-18) Carlson, Benjamin B........................... 370 Carlson, Deven ........................314 (29-2) Carlson, Jon D. ........................335 (1-26) Carlson, Kimberly A............................318 Carman, Christopher J.........344 (Panel 3) Carmen, Ira H. .......................343 (37-12) Carneiro, Cristiane.................. 291 (45-11) Carnes, Matthew E. .................. 374 (11-9) Carney, Richard...................... 285 (11-13) Carpenter, Daniel P.....................242 (7-6) Carr, Jered B..........................378 (30-15) Carreira Da Silva, Filipe............245 (25-6) Carroll, Royce A. ....................326 (22-13) Carroll, Susan J........................278 (31-3) Carrubba, Cliff ..........................366 (26-1) Carsey, Thomas M. ...367 (29-10), 384 (53) Carson, Jamie L. .......254 (22-2), 290 (3515) Carter, David ..............................385 (8-9) Carter, Kelby ............................342 (34-7) Carter, Kimberly Rae ..............256 (31-10) Carter, Niambi M. ......256 (32-8), 299 (314), 352 (31-8) Cartrite, Britt Ashton ........................... 303 Carty, R. Kenneth ......268 (34-3), 342 (347) Carvalho, Edzia ........................316 (45-5) Carver, Terrell.........322 (2-46), 361 (2-14) Casal Bertoa, Fernando............286 (13-5) Casellas, Jason P. ....................366 (25-9) Casey, Kimberly L. ........... 318, 330 (41-5) Casey, Terrence ..................304 (Panel 2) Cashore, Benjamin W. ............392 (17-15) Caspar, Timothy W. ... 270, 320 (Panel 14) Caspary, William R. ..................242 (2-39) Casper, Gretchen G................257 (44-22) Cassar, Alessandra ............................ 302 Cassell, Mark ...........................279 (40-7) Castro, Elga ...........................253 (15-15) Caswell, Bruce E.......323 (10-5), 389 (414) Cataife, Guido ....................271, 310 (8-4) Catallo, Jennifer .....................340 (18-12) Cavari, Amnon ............... 326 (23-11), 356 Caverley, Jonathan D. ...... 275 (19-9), 340 (19-18) Caviedes, Alex A....................297 (14-13) Cavoukian, Kristin T R............275 (18-21) Ceaser, James W. ..... 305 (Panel 10), 331 (Panel 4), 384 (3-28) Celestine Michener, Jamila D.......344 (427) Celis, Karen ...........................394 (31-14) Cerna, Lucie...........................275 (16-10) Cha, Victor D.......................361 (Panel 3) Chaabane, Monia ...................257 (46-19) Chacha, Mwita .......................386 (16-20) Chadda, Maya.....................361 (Panel 3) Chadefaux, Thomas ... 347 (4-6), 370, 384 (4-3) Chai, Shaojin............................335 (1-26) Chakravarty, Anu ................................ 259 Chaloupka, William......262 (2-20), 346 (240) Chambers, Samuel A. ..............384 (2-45) Chambers, Simone....294 (3-13), 343 (386) Chambers, Stefanie ..................289 (30-9) Chang, Crystal .......................264 (12-19) Chang, Eric C.C. .................... 391 (11-11) Chappell, Henry..........................263 (6-7) Chappell, Larry W................241 (Panel 1) Chappell, Louise.....................256 (31-10) Charfi, Mohamed....................257 (46-19) Chari, Raj S. ..........................327 (25-15) Chatterjee, Abhishek ................395 (46-6) Chaturvedi, Neil........................248 (45-7) Chauchard, Simon.......... 264 (12-30), 302 Chausovsky, Jonathan..............263 (7-14) Checkel, Jeffrey T......354 (43-9), 395 (466) Cheema, Ali ....................................... 370 Cheibub, Jose Antonio.... 302 (46-23), 363 (11-46) Chen, Calvin ............................301 (46-4) Chen, Cheng ..........................287 (18-20) Chen, Chia-Ming ................................ 270 Chen, Chin-Cher ......................257 (40-6) Chen, Jie.............................358 (Panel 2) Chen, Jowei .........279 (36-24), 347 (6-20) Chen, Mingchi .....................320 (Panel 2) Chen, Rung-Yi.....................280 (Panel 1) Chen, Tse-Hsin.......................315 (36-34) Chen, Tsung-Yuan ...............395 (Panel 4) Chen, Xi................................... 243 (11-1) Cheng, Joseph Y.S. .............371 (Panel 4) Cheng, Nian-tzu ..................345 (Panel 3) Cheng, Tun-jen....................395 (Panel 4) Cherniss, Joshua L.....................294 (2-6) Chernykh, Svitlana ................. 363 (11-46) Chhibber, Pradeep....311 (11-31), 348 (1148) Chiba, Daina ...................................... 258 Chidambaram, Soundarya ...... 264 (11-25) Chien, Herlin ...................................... 357 Childers, Matthew A. ..............353 (36-28) Childs, Sarah ....... 320 (Panel 4), 394 (3114) Chin, Warren ...... 350 (19-12), 377 (19-15) Chiou, Fang-Yi .........................341 (22-7) Chiozza, Giacomo .......... 329 (37-23), 339 (14Chittick, William O.................245 (20-9) Chiu, Yvonne..............................362 (3-8) Cho, Chung-Lae .......................298 (24-8) Cho, Il Hyun ...........................325 (18-22) Cho, Sung-Ju .........................340 (21-20) Cho, Wendy K. Tam .................280 (46-7) Cho, Wonbin ..........................243 (12-21) Cho, Yoon Jik.........................351 (24-10) Choi, Ajin ...............................329 (37-23) Choi, Sang Ok........................341 (23-13) Choi, Seung-Whan .................340 (21-20) Choi, Wooseon.......................387 (20-16) Choi, Yonghwan ..................381 (Panel 3) Chong, Dennis ...........................384 (5-3) Chong, Ja Ian.... 269 (43-14), 316 (43-17), 344 (Panel 1) Chou, Chelsea Chia-chen.......338 (12-29) Chow, Jonathan T................... 338 (11-38) Chowdhury, Subhasish Modak....347 (4-6) Christensen, Kyle .....................257 (40-6) Christenson, Dino P. ....... 300 (36-13), 342 (35-6) Christia, Fotini .... 326 (21-11), 348 (11-17) Christiano, Thomas ....................283 (3-6) Christman, John .........................373 (3-7) Christoffersen, Lyndsey Gayle ............ 372 (Panel 1) Christov, Theodore ...................272 (1-19) Chu, Yun-han ......................260 (Panel 1) Chun, Simone B. .................... 311 (12-18) Chung, Jaewook................................. 259 Church, Jeffrey .........................361 (1-18) Ciccariello-Maher, George ........344 (42-7) Ciliotta-Rubery, Andrea.............389 (41-4) Cincotta, Richard P. ................ 252 (11-39) Cingranelli, David L. ....... 291 (45-11), 344 (45-6) Cioroianu, Iulia ................................... 355 Citrin, Jack .............................290 (37-15) Civettini, Andrew J.W........ 295 (5-10), 391 (5-7) Claes, Ellen................................374 (9-5) Claeys, Gregory .......................294 (1-12) Clare, Joe ..............................313 (21-22) Clark, John A. ..........................341 (29-9) Clark, Mary A. ..........................369 (48-3) Clark, Terry Nichols .......... 245 (25-6), 280 (Panel 1), 327 (30-10) Clark, Tom............ 245 (26-11), 366 (26-1) Clark, William Roberts ...... 273 (6-16), 362 (6-12) Clarke, Kevin A. .........................362 (8-7) Clarke, Michelle Tolman.... 294 (2-17), 336 (2-23) Clarke, Susan E. ... 299 (30-4), 308 (Panel 1), 352 (30-14) Clarkson, Stephen .............................. 258 Claro da Fonseca, Sara..........265 (15-17) Clawson, Rosalee ..................368 (38-16) Clayton, Cornell W..................277 (27-10) Clealand, Daniell P. ..................268 (32-2) Cleary, Matthew R. .................244 (12-39) Clifford, Stacy A. ....................289 (31-18) Clinton, David......................260 (Panel 7) Closa Montero, Carlos ............286 (15-10) Clough, Emily .........................386 (17-12) Clouser McCann, Pamela ................... 317 Cloward, Karisa Tritz ..............256 (31-10) Coakley, John...........................328 (34-5) Coan, Travis.... 280 (Panel 1), 349 (16-19) Cobb, Rachael Vanessa ........256 (36-20), 341 (29-9) Cochran, Kathryn McNabb.......316 (43-5), 350 (19-12) Coe, Andrew ..........................350 (18-23) Coetsier, Meins G.S.............271 (Panel 8) Coffey, Daniel J. .....251 (5-9), 277 (29-12) Cogburn, Derrick L. ..................329 (40-2) Coggins, Bridget................................. 258 Coglianese, Cary....................376 (17-16) Cohen, Benjamin J. ....................347 (6-9) Cohen, David B. .....................365 (23-14) Cohen, Diana Tracy..................315 (38-5) Cohen, Martin...........................342 (35-6) Cohen, Samy .....................................258 Colaresi, Michael P. ..................341 (22-7) Cole, Richard L. ..................304 (Panel 1) Coleman, Frank M...............294 (Panel 3) Coleman, John J. ......352 (35-7), 353 (357) Coleman, Katharina P. ............340 (19-18) Coleman, Major G. ...................342 (32-3) Coles, Romand ........294 (1-4), 352 (33-4) Coletto, David.........................353 (36-14) Colgan, Jeff.................... 258, 275 (16-21) Collier, David............................280 (46-7) Collihan, Kathleen M. .................273 (9-2) Collins, Kathleen A. ................ 310 (11-27) Collins, Nathan A. ......................336 (5-8) Combs, Michael W. .............372 (Panel 2) Combs, Ryan Muncy ...........331 (Panel 1) Comfort, Louise K.....................313 (24-5) Commissiong, Anand Bertrand ......346 (236) Comparato, Scott A. .................314 (26-9) Conant, Lisa...........................392 (15-16) Condon, Meghan................................ 370 Condra, Luke N ....... 245 (18-25), 285 (1222) Condrey, Stephen E. ..............351 (24-10) Conlan, Timothy J. ...................366 (28-3) Connaughton, Stacey L. .........343 (38-15) Connell, Matthew Charles....272 (Panel 8) Conner, Ashley Renee........................ 258 Connolly, Joy............................321 (1-14) Connolly, William E......286 (14-7), 373 (216) Conroy, Meredith ....278 (31-3), 354 (40-4) Conroy-Krutz, Jeffrey K. ......371 (Panel 3) Contandriopoulos, Damien........277 (25-8) Conteh, Charles ...381 (49-6), 394 (24-12) Conway, Janet..........................373 (1-15) Cook, Fay Lomax .....................343 (38-6) Cook, Philip Andrew ............331 (Panel 2) Cook, Travis S.....................381 (Panel 7) Coole, Diana H...........................373 (3-7) Cooley, Alexander ....................364 (18-4) Cooney, Kevin J. ......................342 (33-2) Cooper, Barry .............. 260 (Panel 2), 320 (Panel 2), 331 (Panel 6), 381 (Panel 10) Cooper, Ian ..............................312 (15-9) Cooper, Julie E...........................262 (1-3) Cooper, Scott B. ..................... 274 (13-11) Copeland, Dale .... 297 (16-8), 369 (43-11) Copelovitch, Mark S. ..............253 (16-13) Coppedge, Michael J. ...............344 (46-5) Corbett, Ross J. .......................309 (2-42) KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Cordes, Daniel .........................373 (1-23) Corduneanu-Huci, Cristina........ 385 (11-4) Corey, Paul .........................371 (Panel 9) Corning, Peter .....................249 (Panel 1) Cornut, Jérémie......................269 (46-20) Corrales, Javier ......................354 (44-18) Correa-Cabrera, Guadalupe....264 (12-41) Corrigan, Bryce ..........................242 (5-2) Cortina, Jeronimo .......................337 (8-8) Costa, Kevin........ 253 (15-15), 293 (Panel 3), 328 (32-6), 354 (43-16) Coulter, Michael L ....................267 (27-9) Court, Erin.......................................... 356 Couso, Javier ...........................352 (26-3) Covington, Jesse D. .................342 (33-2) Cox, Eric W. .............................275 (17-4) Cox, Gary W. ......................... 324 (11-16) Cox, Michaelene D. ....................374 (9-5) Coyle, Dennis J. .....267 (27-9), 283 (2-25) Craiutu, Aurelian.........................308 (1-6) Cramer, Brian D. ......................263 (6-19) Cramer, Jane Kellett ....... 350 (19-12), 380 (43-12), 390 (Panel 1) Crane, George T..................... 338 (11-38) Crawford, Neta C. ....................321 (T-19) Creek, Heather M. .......... 378 (29-14), 391 (Panel 2) Crenshaw, Martha ....................291 (43-8) Crepaz, Markus M. L. ..... 274 (14-11), 353 (35-14), 374 (11-43) Creppell, Ingrid..... 242 (3-11), 265 (18-14) Crescenzi, Mark J.C. ................245 (21-4) Crespin, Michael.......................254 (22-2) Crespino, Joseph .......................284 (7-9) Crespy, Amandine ....................349 (15-7) Crigler, Ann N...........................301 (38-4) Crivelli, Jessica ......................386 (16-20) Cropper, Porsha .....................278 (31-16) Croskill, Julie ..........................290 (36-22) Cross, Mai’a Keapuolani Davis ....377 (205) Crow, Deserai Anderson.........267 (25-10) Crowder, George ........................294 (2-6) Crowder-Meyer, Melody............341 (29-9) Crowley, Stephen F................... 374 (11-9) Cruz, Jose Miguel ... 264 (12-41), 344 (427) Csergo, Zsuzsa ....... 264 (11-25), 296 (1141) Cukier, Wendy.................................... 356 Culpepper, Pepper D. .............376 (15-12) Cunningham, David E..... 313 (21-16), 340 (21-6), 393 (21-10) Cunningham, Kathleen Gallagher ....... 326 (21-11) Curry, James M. ............. 300 (36-13), 317 Curry, Jill L. ........................................ 317 Curtice, John Kevin .......... 256 (34-6), 304 (Panel 2) Curtis, Devon ......................... 311 (12-42) Cusher, Brent Edwin........................... 270 Cuthbert, Mr., Ross Allan........275 (18-21) Cutler, Robert M. ....................386 (17-12) Cutts, David John........ 344 (Panel 3), 355 Cyr, Jennifer Marie ................. 310 (11-31) Czobor-Lupp, Mihaela ..... 270, 361 (2-24), 389 (41-4) D D’Appollonia, Ariane Chebel .....350 (18-8) D’Arcy, Michelle.................................. 303 Dafoe, Allan .........266 (21-7), 350 (21-17) Dahlström, Carl Johan ..............377 (24-6) Dai, Xinyuan.........254 (17-17), 286 (17-7) Dallmayr, Fred R. ........308 (2-27), 335 (126) Dalton, Russell J. ......289 (35-5), 368 (3714) Damron, Regan Wayne .......... 274 (14-11) Dancygier, Rafaela ................. 299 (30-11) Dandashly, Assem.................. 364 (15-11) Danelski, David J. ...............281 (Panel 1) Danero, Julien .....................331 (Panel 1) Daniels, R. Steven.......... 317, 351 (23-12) Danielson, Michael S. .............324 (12-28) Danilovic, Vesna.....................313 (21-22) Danjoux, Ilan ...................................... 258 Darden, Keith A..... 274 (13-2), 371 (Panel 3) Dark, III, Taylor E.................281 (Panel 2) Darnton, Christopher ..............354 (43-16) Datta, Monti Narayan..............339 (14-14) Dauber, Noah ......................345 (Panel 1) 397 Index of Participants Index of Participants Index of Participants Dauda, Carol ............................330 (47-4) Daudelin, Jean ....................381 (Panel 1) Davenport, Christian ............... 363 (11-14) Davenport, Tiffany C...............328 (36-16) Daves, Bryan R. .....................264 (12-30) Davidson-Schmich, Louise K. ......367 (3117), 394 (31-14) Davies, David ......................390 (Panel 6) Davies, Graeme ..................... 312 (19-11) Davis, Belinda Creel ...............378 (29-14) Davis, Carmel F.................................. 258 Davis, Christina ...................... 364 (16-11) Davis, Darren ...........................300 (32-1) Davis, David R. .............. 303, 386 (17-12) Davis, Gregory Douglas...................... 271 Davis, John ..............................276 (23-3) Davis, Reed M. ...................260 (Panel 7) Davis, Richard..........................290 (38-3) Davis, Ryan W. .................................. 271 Dawes, Chris..........................343 (37-12) Daynes, Byron W. ....................381 (49-6) de Carvalho, Gustavo Seignemartin....275 (18-21) de Figueiredo, Miguel ..... 252 (11-40), 374 (11-28) de Figueiredo, Jr., Rui J. ........ 273 (11-29) De La O Torres, Ana Lorena........ 243 (1119), 297 (12-32) De Luca, Jr., Thomas S...........272 (2-31), 284 (3-22) de Marchi, Scott .......................341 (22-7) De Neve, Jan-Emmanuel.........347 (6-20), 364 (14-5) de Renzio, Paolo......................309 (6-18) de Rooij, Eline A. .....................256 (34-6) De Vries, Catherine E..... 328 (36-23), 329 (36-23), 379 (36-21) Dean, Jodi................308 (2-12), 361 (2-8) Deardorff, Michelle D. ....... 263 (10-6), 284 (9-3) Deason, Grace M. ..................315 (37-17) Deason, Mary C. ..... 353 (38-11), 367 (3511) DeBell, Matthew .....295 (8-5), 379 (36-33) Deber, Raisa Berlin ..................277 (25-8) Debrix, Francois .......................391 (2-32) Debs, Alexandre.......................266 (21-5) DeCanio, Samuel .....................391 (7-13) Deckman, Melissa ..................367 (33-10) DeCoste, Jordan ................................ 271 Deegan-Krause, Kevin..............253 (13-8) Deering, Christopher J............378 (29-14) DeFrancesco Soto, Victoria Maria....... 278 (36-15), 290 (36-22) Defreytas, Ms, Mariko............. 243 (11-33) DeGagne, Alexa .......................330 (47-4) Deitelhoff, Nicole ..... 265 (16-22), 285 (1147) Dejaeghere, Yves ............................... 271 Dekker, Fabian .......................312 (14-15) Delano, Alexandra .............................. 304 Delli Carpini, Michael X. ...........343 (38-6) Dembinska, Magdalena ............328 (32-6) Demchak, Chris C. ......... 312 (19-11), 350 (19-12) Demetriadis, Panicos..................284 (6-8) Demiryol, Tolga .................................. 370 Dempsey, Erik .....................390 (Panel 6) den Dulk, Kevin R. ...................278 (33-3) Deng, Yong .........................331 (Panel 3) Dennis, Michael P...................324 (13-10) Depauw, Sam....... 300 (34-8), 326 (22-13) Derthick, Martha .......................366 (28-3) Desai, Raj M. ...........................375 (14-8) Desch, Michael C. ....... 272 (Panel 1), 301 (43-10), 330 (43-13), 340 (20-8) Deschamps, Lauren ....... 255 (29-11), 290 (36-11) Deschouwer, Kris ......300 (34-8), 343 (3626) DeSipio, Louis .....................293 (Panel 1) Desmarais, Bruce.......................384 (5-3) DeSombre, Elizabeth R. ...........354 (39-8) Desposato, Scott W. ....... 264 (12-41), 316 (38-9) Detels, Polly ........................271 (Panel 8) Dettrey, Bryan J......................268 (36-25) Deudney, Daniel .....255 (25-7), 352 (27-3) Deutsch, Kenneth L. ............292 (Panel 8) Deveaux, Monique....372 (1-8), 391 (3-25) Devereaux, Zachary P. ....................... 356 DeVita, Carol..........................387 (25-17) Dewan, Torun ........257 (38-10), 273 (4-7), 284 (6-22), 347 (6-20) Deylami, Shirin S.........272 (2-22), 308 (113) 398 Di Alto, Stephanie J.............320 (Panel 1) Diamond, Larry........ 252 (11-10), 280 (4419), 285 (11-24) Diaz-Cayeros, Alberto..... 297 (12-25), 363 (11-21) DiCicco, Jonathan M. ......................... 259 Dickinson, Matthew J................365 (23-6) Diermeier, Daniel........336 (4-8), 384 (4-3) Dietrich, Simone ...... 338 (12-29), 392 (1618) Dietz, Mary G. ..........................294 (2-17) DiGiuseppe, Matthew R. .........313 (21-22) Dilley, Stephen C......................242 (1-16) Dillon, Nara .................... 279 (44-11), 303 Dilts, Andrew ............................384 (2-29) Dimitrov, Martin .............. 279 (44-11), 303 Dimitrova, Daniela V. ..............389 (38-14) Dimova-Cookson, Maria .............373 (3-7) Dinan, John J. ..........................288 (27-5) Dinas, Elias ........ 268 (36-35), 379 (36-30) Dion, Michelle L......................375 (12-34) Dion, Stéphane ........................314 (28-2) Dionne, Kim Yi ................. 270 (48-5), 302 DiSalvo, Daniel R. ....................391 (7-13) DiSarro, Joseph...................395 (Panel 1) Disch, Lisa J. .........346 (2-40), 384 (2-45) Disney, Jennifer Leigh ...... 314 (31-9), 344 (42-7), 388 (31-7) Ditonto, Tessa M. ...................268 (36-25) Dixon, Jennifer M. ..................380 (43-12) Dixon, L. Beth ..........................247 (32-9) Djupe, Paul A. ......278 (33-3), 343 (37-20) Do, Lynna Lan Tien Nguyen .... 331 (Panel 1) Doan, Alesha E. .... 299 (31-4), 346 (Panel 2) Doces, John .............................286 (16-7) Dodds, Graham G. ...................351 (23-2) Dodge, Jennifer ........... 357 (Panel 1), 395 (Panel 2) Doherty, Brendan J.................351 (22-12) Doherty, David...... 256 (36-20), 309 (5-11) Doherty-Sil, Eileen..................354 (46-15) Dolan, Julie ............................ 326 (24-11) Dolan, Jr., Thomas M. .... 370, 387 (21-14) Dolgert, Stefan Paul .................336 (1-26) Dombrowski, Daniel A. ............. 242 (3-11) Dominguez, Jaime....................367 (32-5) Dominguez, Jorge I. ............272 (Panel 1) Donahue, T. J.............................283 (3-6) Donchev, Dilyan .......................286 (16-7) Doner, Richard F. .....................362 (6-24) Donnelly, Jack ..........................344 (45-6) Donno, Daniela ........................265 (17-8) Donovan, Todd .....367 (34-2), 389 (36-12) Doran, Sr., Charles F. ...............344 (49-8) Dorff, Cassy ...........................340 (19-18) Dormagen, Jean-Yves ............329 (36-32) Dorman, Andrew M. ....... 266 (19-14), 377 (19-15) Dorobantu, Sinziana ...............315 (37-17) Doron, Gideon.....................319 (Panel 1) Dosch, Joern ..........................266 (19-16) Dougherty, Keith L.................... 263 (8-11) Dougherty, Richard J. ....... 320 (Panel 14), 351 (23-12) Dowd, Robert Alfred ......... 289 (33-6), 311 (12-31) Dowdall, J. Patrick...............271 (Panel 8) Dowdle, Andrew J. ....245 (22-1), 276 (233), 351 (23-2) Dowley, Kathleen M............................ 303 Dowling, Conor M........... 256 (36-20), 289 (35-15), 309 (5-11) Down, Ian...............................274 (15-13) Downes, Alexander B. .... 348 (11-17), 386 (18-11) Downs, William M......328 (34-5), 386 (1514) Dragojevic, Mila...................... 296 (11-41) Dreisbach, Daniel L. .................268 (33-9) Drezner, Daniel W. ...................297 (16-8) Driessen, Michael.....................247 (33-8) Driscoll, Jesse ... 326 (21-11), 374 (11-28), 392 (11-20) Drope, Jeffrey................. 258, 392 (16-18) Drozdova, Katya.....................380 (46-10) Druckman, James N. ........ 380 (40-3), 384 (5-3) Drury, Shadia B. .........................242 (2-4) Dube, Oeindrila ......................275 (16-21) Dubnick, Melvin J. ....................267 (24-7) Duch, Raymond M.............................. 355 Duckett, Jane ......................372 (Panel 1) Duer, Andreas ..........................339 (16-3) Duff, Brian ..............241 (1-16), 294 (1-25) Duffield, John S........................386 (13-4) Dufresne, Philippe ..................369 (45-10) Duggan, John.............................310 (8-4) Dulio, David A. .......................368 (35-13) Dull, Matthew M. ....................341 (23-13) Dumitrescu, Delia ............................... 370 Dumitru, Diana ....................... 337 (11-23) Dunigan, Molly Clark ..............340 (18-12) Dunn, Jr., James A. ................378 (25-12) Dunn, Marika..........................247 (37-19) Dunning, Thad....... 280 (46-7), 371 (Panel 3) Durant, Robert F........298 (24-8), 341 (2313) Durante, Ruben ..................................370 Dusso, Aaron ....... 259 (Panel 1), 289 (3515), 355 Duval, Robert D........................257 (40-6) Duvall, Raymond D. .... 260 (Panel 1), 261 (46-25) Dvorkin, Jeff .............................290 (38-3) Dwyre, Diana ... 259 (Panel 1), 260 (Panel 1) Dyck, Joshua J................. 299 (29-8), 319 Dykes, Darrin .....................................319 Dyment, David..........................381 (49-6) E E., English, William E. English William............................................ 370 Ealy, Steven ..... 249 (Panel 4), 271 (Panel 13) Early, Evelyn A. ... 248 (38-12), 305 (Panel 1) Earnest, David C. ........286 (14-7), 310 (814) Easter, Beth .......................................355 Easter, Gerald M. .....................349 (13-6) Easton, Whitney E.............................. 258 Eaton, Kent ............................348 (12-24) Eaves, Lindon J......... 309 (5-11), 343 (3712) Eberhardt, Lindsay .................290 (36-22) Eberlein, Burkard....................297 (17-10) Echeverri-Gent, John..............286 (12-38) Eckles, David L. .........................251 (5-9) Edelstein, David M. ...316 (43-5), 369 (4311), 386 (18-11) Edgerly, Stephanie ............................. 370 Edwards, Margaret Emily........380 (44-17) Edwards, Martin S. ...................297 (16-2) Egan, Patrick J. ......369 (47-3), 390 (47-6) Egan, Patrick J.W. ....... 293 (Panel 3), 349 (16-19) Eglene, Ophelia........................337 (6-14) Ehrenberg, John.......................301 (42-9) Ehret, Soenke ............................336 (4-8) Eichenberg, Richard C............290 (36-22) Eichner, Maxine...................... 328 (31-11) Eidelman, Gabriel............................... 319 Eidlin, Fred...........272 (2-31), 316 (44-14) Eimer, Thomas Rudolf ............265 (16-22) Eisenstadt, Todd.....................324 (12-28) Ekins, Emily McClintock...................... 355 El-Mahdi, Rabab.....................394 (44-13) Elazar, Yiftah ............................ 272 (1-11) Elbel, Brian ..............................247 (32-9) Elder, Laurel.........278 (31-3), 343 (37-20) Elgun, Ozlem .........................298 (21-18) Elhajibrahim, Samah.......... 390 (Panel 12) Elkin, Stephen L. .................292 (Panel 1) Elkins, Zachary.......268 (34-3), 325 (17-9) Ellington, Thomas C. .............. 338 (11-45) Ellis, Cali Mortenson................. 348 (11-5) Ellis, Christopher R.................279 (37-16) Ellis, Elisabeth H. .....................283 (2-25) Ellis, Joseph M. ..................................303 Ellis, William Curtis............................. 317 Elman, Colin........ 241, 260 (Panel 1), 354 (43-9) Elmi, Afyare A. ............ 258, 305 (Panel 1) Elms, Deborah K. ...................392 (16-18) Elshtain, Jean Bethke ....... 250 (1-22), 361 (3-8), 362 (3-8) Embry, Charles R. ...............271 (Panel 8) Encarnacion, Omar G. .... 257 (44-16), 280 (44-19) Ender, Morten G.........................284 (9-3) Engel, Stephen M.......................323 (7-3) Engeli, Isabelle.....277 (25-8), 342 (31-13) Engster, Dan ............................242 (3-30) Engstrom, Erik J........328 (34-5), 353 (3811) KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Enns, Peter ......... 279 (36-24), 290 (36-9), 309 (5-5) Enos, Ryan D.........................278 (36-15) Ensley, Michael J.............. 341 (22-7), 357 Enyedi, Zsolt ............................286 (13-5) Epp, Charles R....................358 (Panel 2) Epstein, Lee .............................341 (26-2) Eralp, Pelin ............................287 (21-12) Erdem, Ebru...........................388 (31-20) Erickson, Jennifer L. ......... 291 (46-9), 340 (19-10) Erie, Steven P. .........................277 (30-8) Erikson, Robert S. .....268 (35-10), 337 (88) Erisen, Cengiz..........295 (5-10), 373 (5-6) Erisen, Elif..........................318, 373 (5-6) Erk, Jan ...................................314 (28-2) Erkulwater, Jennifer ............323 (9-4), 370 Erler, Edward J.................. 357 (Panel 11) Erler, Helen Abbie ....................298 (22-8) Errington, Jane...........................284 (9-3) Ertan, Gunes ............................253 (14-6) Esaiasson, Peter ....................379 (36-21) Esarey, Justin E. ......310 (8-4), 323 (8-13) Escobar, Gipsy ....................... 311 (12-42) Escobar-Lemmon, Maria C. .....247 (34-9), 268 (31-12) Escriba-Folch, Abel ....................374 (8-2) Eshbaugh-Soha, Matthew....... 326 (23-11) Eskew, Lina Rombalsky...................... 317 Espinoza Vasquez, Fatima K. ......329 (402) Espirito-Santo, Ana.................394 (31-14) Esquith, Stephen L. ..................361 (2-41) Esser, Daniel E. ...296 (12-20), 330 (48-4) Esteban, Miguel......................350 (18-23) Esterling, Kevin M. ...................380 (40-3) Estevez, Ariadna ......................330 (45-9) Estevez, Federico.......................374 (8-2) Estevez-Abe, Margarita .... 310 (11-2), 375 (11-43) Estlund, David M. .....262 (3-10), 283 (3-6) Etchemendy, Sebastian .......... 310 (11-26) Ettin, Johanna L. ....................278 (31-16) Etzioni, Amitai ......274 (15-13), 330 (45-9) Euben, J. Peter ........294 (1-4), 384 (2-45) Euben, Roxanne L....................272 (2-22) Eun, Jonghoon ................................... 317 Evans, Diana............................288 (22-4) Evans, Elizabeth Penelope ...... 320 (Panel 4) Evans, Geoffrey........................286 (13-5) Evans, Jocelyn ............ 280 (Panel 2), 319 Evans, Kevin ..........................393 (23-15) Ewald, Alec ........................................319 Ewell, William ...........................246 (29-6) Exadaktylos, Theofanis...........380 (46-10) Ezrow, Natasha Marie ..............266 (21-5) F Fabbrini, Sergio ........... 271 (Panel 1), 293 (Panel 1), 381 (Panel 3) Facchini, Giovanni ..................247 (37-19) Fadel, Mohammad H. ...............308 (1-28) Fagelson, David ..................249 (Panel 1) Fair, C. Christine ....................298 (18-16) Fair, Teri...............268 (32-2), 327 (30-10) Fairdosi, Amir ..................................... 355 Fairfield, Tasha A..... 311 (12-18), 375 (1234) Fajardo-Heyward, Paola ...........275 (17-4) Falk, Barbara J....................... 311 (13-13) Fang, Songying ........................297 (16-2) Faraday, George .................281 (Panel 2) Farhang, Sean .......277 (26-4), 309 (7-17) Faricy, Christopher ............................. 318 Fariss, Christopher J. .................347 (8-6) Farmer, Rick D. ....... 353 (38-11), 366 (2910), 367 (29-10) Farney, James........262 (3-21), 355 (49-5) Farnsworth, Stephen J...... 279 (38-7), 378 (25-12) Farr, James ................................308 (1-6) Farrand, Stuart ....................395 (Panel 1) Farrar-Myers, Victoria A....... 319, 351 (2312) Farrell, David M......289 (35-5), 379 (34-4) Farrell, Henry ...........................279 (40-7) Farrell, Katharine N. .................322 (2-19) Farrier, Jasmine .....................313 (23-10) Farris, Emily .............................248 (42-5) Fatovic, Clement ......309 (2-42), 383 (1-7) Fattore, Christina....................254 (21-13) Fazal, Tanisha ........................393 (21-10) Fearon, James D.......266 (21-5), 298 (218) Feaver, Peter D. .......................298 (20-6) Federici, Michael P. ..... 382 (Panel 2), 395 (Panel 1) Federico, Christopher M. ........315 (37-17) Feezell, Jessica Timpany..........354 (40-4) Fehrs, Matthew ..................................258 Feiock, Richard C........... 351 (25-13), 378 (30-15), 394 (24-12) Feit, Mario................................272 (2-31) Feldman, Stanley ...................315 (37-17) Feldmann, G. Magnus ............ 296 (11-32) Felix, Adrian ........................308 (Panel 1) Fenio, Kenly Greer .................330 (44-15) Ferchen, Matthew Glen ..........349 (12-37) Ferejohn, John .........................352 (26-3) Ferguson, Janna ......................381 (49-6) Ferguson, Kathy E....... 294 (Panel 3), 373 (2-16) Ferguson, Kennan ....250 (2-7), 308 (2-12) Ferguson, Margaret R.............327 (29-13) Fernandez, Jose.........................310 (8-4) Fernandez, Marco ... 315 (37-17), 385 (114) Fernandez, Sergio ....................245 (24-9) Fernandez Anderson, Cora.................259 Fernandez-Albertos, Jose .......253 (16-13) Ferraz, Claudio....................... 363 (11-21) Ferree, Karen E......................243 (12-21) Ferry, Leonard Donald Gordon ........... 345 (Panel 1) Fesnic, Florin Nicolae ..........293 (Panel 1) Feuerstein, Derek............................... 319 Fey, Mark ...............287 (21-12), 347 (4-6) Field, Bonnie N.......................286 (15-10) Field, Laura K..................................... 270 Fieldhouse, Edward A......................... 355 Filipiak, Erik M..........................323 (7-18) Findley, Michael..........................284 (8-3) Fine, Janice..... 275 (16-10), 321 (Panel 3) Finke, Daniel ............................ 263 (8-11) Finn, John E.............................327 (27-4) Finnemore, Martha ..............346 (Panel 1) Fish, M. Steven ....... 285 (11-24), 310 (1127) Fisher, Emily L. ......................315 (37-17) Fisher, Justin T. ...................320 (Panel 4) Fisher, Louis.............................377 (23-5) Fisher, III, Samuel H...........295 (8-5), 327 (29-13) Fishkin, James S............ 279 (44-11), 292 (Panel 1), 309 (5-5), 373 (5-6) Fishman, Ethan ...................292 (Panel 8) Fitzgerald, Jennifer .................265 (15-17) Fix, Michael P.........................267 (26-13) Flaherty, Anne FB................320 (Panel 1) Flanagan, Thomas.....290 (38-3), 369 (4510) Flanik, William M. ............................... 258 Flavin, Patrick......................... 255 (29-11) Fleischmann, Arnold ......... 270 (47-5), 342 (30-16) Fleming, James E.....................336 (3-27) Flemming, Roy B..... 298 (26-12), 299 (2612) Fletcher, Amy L. ..................390 (Panel 1) Flibbert, Andrew J. .................393 (20-10) Flores, Michelle ...................... 311 (12-31) Flores, Thomas E. ....................362 (6-12) Flores-Macias, Francisco ....................356 Fogarty, Edward A..................297 (17-10) Follesdal, Andreas.......273 (3-31), 294 (313) Ford, Lynne E.........263 (10-6), 327 (29-3) Fording, Richard C. .....247 (32-9), 295 (711) Forest, Benjamin ....................257 (44-16) Forest, Pierre-Gerlier ................381 (49-6) Forman, Michael.....369 (42-8), 391 (2-32) Forman-Barzilai, Fonna ............283 (2-10) Forni, Breanna Maria...........345 (Panel 2) Fornieri, Joseph R. ..............292 (Panel 8) Forst, Rainer ..............................346 (1-1) Forster Rothbart, Amy ............330 (44-15) Forsythe, David P. ....................269 (45-8) Fortelny, Gregory.................260 (Panel 1) Fortier, Jeremy ...........................262 (1-3) Fortin, Jessica ............................ 259, 304 Fortna, Page ........ 312 (18-5), 393 (21-10) Fortner, Michael Javen ..... 256 (32-8), 303 Fournier, Patrick .......................342 (34-7) Fowler, James H. ...251 (5-9), 378 (26-10) Fox, Justin .................251 (4-1), 362 (4-4) Fox, Richard L..........................266 (22-6) Fox, Russell Arben ...................336 (1-26) Fraenkel, Jon ...........................328 (34-5) Fraga, Luis Ricardo ..... 261 (Panel 1), 308 (Panel 1) Franceschet, Susan.......... 247 (34-9), 367 (31-17) Francia, Peter L...................321 (Panel 3) Francis, Megan Ming ................384 (7-16) Francisco, Ronald A. ..............302 (46-23) Franck, Matthew J. ...... 249 (Panel 1), 304 (Panel 1) Francois, Karen ..........................250 (1-9) Frank, Jill ....... 321 (1-14), 322 (1-14), 372 (1-2) Frank, Richard W. .................... 348 (11-5) Franklin, Charles H.................290 (36-22) Franklin, Mark N........367 (34-2), 379 (3630) Franklin Fowler, Erika ....... 292 (48-2), 353 (38-11) Franko, William W. ...................299 (29-8) Fransen, Luc ..........................393 (17-15) Frantz, Erica Emily ...................266 (21-5) Franz, Michael G............... 292 (Panel 13) Franzese, Jr., Robert J. .... 251 (6-17), 364 (14-5) Frasure, Lorrie A. ......277 (30-8), 328 (3616), 352 (30-14) Fravel, M. Taylor.....................393 (18-15) Frazier, Mark W. ..................372 (Panel 1) Frazier, Michael...................372 (Panel 2) Frederick, Brian P. ....................278 (31-3) Freeman, Gary P. ................... 274 (14-11) Freeze, Kent E. ........................ 385 (11-4) French-Hodson, Ruth Anne ..... 320 (Panel 1) Fried, Brian ............................ 252 (11-40) Friedberg, Aaron L. .............346 (Panel 1) Frieden, Jeffry A. ......273 (11-6), 347 (6-9) Friedenberg, Amanda Y. .............273 (4-7) Friedman, Benjamin H. ........390 (Panel 1) Friedman, Edward .......... 348 (12-37), 349 (12Friedman, Sally.... 290 (36-22), 351 (2212) Friman, H. Richard ...................325 (16-6) Fritsch, Oliver .........................380 (46-10) Froitzheim, John................................. 370 Frost, Catherine........................391 (1-27) Fry, Earl ...................................344 (49-8) Frye, Timothy ......... 263 (11-3), 264 (11-3) Frymer, Paul..... 243 (7-6), 273 (3-29), 321 (Panel 3) Fuhrmann, Matthew.......... 276 (20-7), 340 (19-10) Fujii, Lee Ann .........................261 (46-25) Fukumoto, Kentaro .....................385 (8-9) Fuller, Douglas .... 349 (12-37), 395 (Panel 4) Fuller, Timothy....... 250 (1-22), 331 (Panel 6), 345 (Panel 3) Fulton, Sarah .........................300 (36-13) Fulwider, John ..........................314 (29-2) Fung, Archon ........295 (3-13), 343 (38-6), 357 (Panel 1) Funk, Carolyn L......................343 (37-12) Funke, Peter N. ..................................356 G Göbel, Christian..................................304 Gabel, Matthew ....... 246 (26-11), 328 (3623) Gaboury, Jennifer .....................344 (42-7) Gadarian, Shana Kushner ........295 (5-10) Gailmard, Sean .....251 (4-1), 278 (35-12), 313 (23-10), 362 (4-4) Gains, Francesca ...................342 (31-13) Galeotti, Anna Elisabetta .......... 242 (3-11) Gallagher, Katherine .................299 (31-4) Gallagher, Mary E.....................375 (14-8) Gallarotti, Giulio M...............371 (Panel 1) Galligan, Yvonne ....................253 (15-15) Galvan, Dennis C. ...............293 (Panel 3) Galvin, Daniel...........................391 (7-13) Gamble, Katrina L. ............................. 317 Gamble, Richard M. ............395 (Panel 1) Gamm, Gerald......254 (22-2), 379 (35-17) Gandhi, Jennifer .....................380 (44-23) Gans, Chaim ............................273 (3-31) Gans-Morse, Jordan Luc ........348 (12-24) Garay, Maria Candelaria ......... 310 (11-26) Garber, Judith A. ....................267 (30-12) Garcia Bedolla, Lisa .... 262 (Panel 1), 308 Gardner, Joseph M. ....................263 (6-7) Garretson, Jeremiah ...............379 (37-21) Garriga, Ana Carolina ......................... 258 Garrison, Justin David .........395 (Panel 1) Garsten, Bryan .......346 (2-13), 384 (3-28) Gartenstein-Ross, Daveed....... 271 (Panel 3) Gash, Alison.............................387 (26-5) Gaskins, Ben...................................... 318 Gasper, John..........................327 (29-13) Gatti, Donatella ..................................302 Gattinger, Monica ...................297 (17-10) Gaubatz, Kurt Taylor...............380 (46-10) Gauja, Anika .......................305 (Panel 1) Gaus, Gerald F. ........................251 (3-19) Gause, III, F. Gregory .............254 (18-10) Gause, LaGina ................................... 357 Gavin, Jr., Francis J..................287 (18-7) Gavrilis, George .....................393 (18-15) Geddes, Barbara .......257 (44-22), 362 (612) Geer, John G............................301 (38-4) Gehlbach, Scott G. ......... 324 (11-16), 349 (13-6) Gehring, Jacqueline S. ...........392 (15-16) Geisler, William ........... 304 (Panel 1), 382 (Panel 2) Gel’man, Vladimir .....................297 (13-7) Gelb, Joyce ..... 280 (Panel 1), 342 (31-13) Gelbman, Shamira M..............269 (44-10) Geller, Daniel S. .....................340 (19-18) Gelman, Andrew.....................389 (36-12) Gendron, Richard .....................299 (30-4) Genovese, Michael A. ..............351 (23-2) Gent, Stephen E...... 313 (21-16), 387 (2114) Georgakakis, Didier ..................349 (15-7) George, Robert P......... 249 (Panel 1), 320 (Panel 2) Gerber, Alan........ 256 (36-20), 309 (5-11), 379 (36-30) Gerber, Elisabeth R. ............... 299 (30-11) Gerdes, Christer ..................... 274 (14-11) Gerlak, Andrea K....................366 (25-14) Germain, Randall ........... 258, 325 (16-17) Geron, Kim.......... 327 (30-10), 378 (32-7), 379 (32-7) Gerring, John ....... 260 (Panel 1), 285 (1124) Gershon, Sarah Allen .............368 (38-16) Gerstmann, Evan .....................369 (47-3) Gervasoni, Carlos...................385 (12-33) Gheciu, Alexandra ..................325 (16-17) Giannoni, Tonya Caprarola .... 317 (46-17), 355 (46-15) Gibbons, Michael T......284 (3-22), 391 (127) Gibney, Mark P. ......316 (45-5), 344 (45-6) Gibson, Clark C......................243 (12-21) Gibson, Rachel K. ............ 257 (40-6), 305 (Panel 1) Gidengil, Elisabeth L......... 292 (49-7), 390 (47-6) Gilabert, Pablo ....................331 (Panel 2) Gilady, Lilach..........................254 (21-13) Gilardi, Fabrizio ......244 (17-6), 325 (17-9) Gilens, Martin .........................279 (37-16) Gill, Jeff......................................374 (8-2) Gillespie, Andra N. ...................277 (30-8) Gillespie, Michael Allen..... 250 (1-22), 331 (Panel 6) Gilley, Bruce...........................368 (37-14) Gillies, Jamie.......................293 (Panel 1) Gillion, Daniel Q. ....323 (8-13), 379 (32-7) Gilljam, Mikael..........................266 (24-7) Gimpel, James G. .....290 (36-9), 379 (3721) Gingerich, Daniel W........ 338 (11-45), 392 (11-11) Gingrich, Jane R. ...................312 (14-15) Ginsberg, Beth .......................278 (36-15) Ginsberg, Wendy R. ....... 313 (23-10), 351 (24-10) Girth, Amanda M. .....................298 (24-8) Gisselquist, Rachel M. ............ 311 (12-31) Githens-Mazer, Jonathan ..........395 (46-8) Giumelli, Francesco ................287 (20-13) Giurcanu, Magda............ 274 (13-11), 304 Givens, Terri E. ........... 262 (Panel 1), 320 (Panel 1), 363 (11-14) Glaser, James M. .......................374 (7-7) Glass, James M. ......................262 (2-20) Glassberg, Andrew .................378 (30-15) Glatzer, Miguel .........................265 (14-4) Glazier, Rebecca ....316 (38-9), 337 (10-7) Gledhill, John G.................................. 303 KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede......244 (12-43), 313 (21-16) Glenn, Gary D. ....................382 (Panel 1) Glick, David............................288 (26-14) Glosny, Michael ........................279 (43-7) Glynn, Adam ..............................362 (8-7) Go, Min Hee....................................... 318 Goble, Hannah .......................353 (36-14) Godbout, Jean-Francois ... 317 (49-4), 377 (22-10) Goddard, Stacie E. ...................279 (43-7) Godwin, Erik Kinji .....................337 (6-14) Godwin, Kenneth......................337 (6-14) Goelzhauser, Greg ............................. 318 Goemans, Hein Erich ....... 266 (21-5), 298 (21-8) Goertz, Gary ........340 (21-6), 369 (46-21) Goff, Patricia ............................244 (16-9) Goi, Simona ...........242 (2-39), 361 (2-41) Goidel, Robert Kirby ........................... 355 Gold, Thomas......................395 (Panel 4) Goldberg, Robert.................321 (Panel 2) Golden, Miriam A. ..... 301 (39-4), 392 (1111) Golder, Matt .......................................318 Goldfield, Michael................321 (Panel 3) Goldfinger, Johnny....................323 (10-5) Goldford, Dennis J............ 267 (27-9), 305 (Panel 1) Goldgeier, James M........ 265 (18-14), 298 (20-6) Goldman, Harvey S. .................273 (3-29) Goldman, Samuel............................... 270 Goldman, Seth K......................390 (47-6) Goldstein, Joel K. .....................377 (23-5) Goldstein, Judith Lynn .... 286 (17-18), 287 (17-18) Goldstein, Leslie Friedman ......327 (27-4), 384 (7-8) Goldstein, Seth.......................298 (21-18) Goldstone, Jack A. ................. 252 (11-39) Golob, Stephanie R. ....... 257 (44-16), 274 (16-4), 275 (16-4) Golya, Tamas .....................................270 Gombin, Joel ..........................329 (36-32) Gomes, Eduardo R.................264 (12-41) Gonda, Joseph.................. 381 (Panel 10) Gong, Abe..................................296 (8-5) Gontier, Thierry ...................358 (Panel 5) Good, Kristin Ruth ..................388 (30-13) Goodchild, Philip ......................373 (2-16) Goode, Paul ...........................380 (46-13) Goodfield, Eric..........................335 (1-26) Goodhart, Lucy M.....................347 (6-20) Goodhart, Michael ..................369 (45-10) Goodin, Robert E. ............ 262 (3-10), 331 (Panel 2) Goodliffe, Gabriel .....................312 (15-9) Goodliffe, Jay ...........................265 (17-8) Goodman, Christopher B. .........245 (22-1) Goodman, Ryan .....................254 (17-17) Goodman, Sara Wallace........ 265 (15-17), 297 (14-13) Goodwin, Matthew....................395 (46-8) Goodyear-Grant, Elizabeth .... 290 (36-22), 368 (38-16) Gordon, Neve.............................294 (2-9) Gore, Christopher...................296 (12-20) Goren, Lilly J. ........288 (23-7), 330 (41-5), 352 (31-8) Goren, Paul N. .......256 (36-31), 322 (5-4) Gorham, Eric ............................361 (2-41) Goss, Kristin.............................388 (31-7) Gossett, Charles W. ....... 303, 351 (24-10) Gottesman, Blake.....................255 (23-4) Gottfried, Jeffrey A. .......... 255 (26-6), 355 Gottlieb, Stuart ....................271 (Panel 3) Gould, Andrew C..... 269 (44-21), 339 (156) Gould, Carol C. ..........................373 (3-7) Gourevitch, Alexander ........................ 270 Gourevitch, Peter A. ......... 273 (11-6), 310 (11-26), 339 (17-14), 340 (17-14) Gowa, Joanne ........................287 (17-18) Gower, Jeffrey L. .................292 (Panel 2) Goyer, Michel .........................376 (15-12) Graber, Mark A...... 246 (27-7), 281 (Panel 1), 358 (Panel 2) Grafstrom, Cassandra Rose .....374 (6-15) Graham, Katherine ..............292 (Panel 1) Graham, Sarah.......................266 (19-16) Grant, Audra K. ...................... 273 (11-15) Grant, J. Tobin........266 (23-9), 288 (22-4) Grant, John ..............................262 (1-21) Grant, Wyn P. ......................271 (Panel 1) Grasso, Kenneth L. .............382 (Panel 1) 399 Index of Participants Index of Participants Index of Participants Gray, Julia................................265 (17-8) Gray, Phillip W.................. 271, 291 (43-6) Gray, Virginia H. ........246 (29-6), 278 (3512) Greasley, Stephen ..................394 (24-12) Green, Brendan R. ......... 245 (18-25), 356 Green, Donald P. .......280 (46-7), 290 (3611), 297 (12-25), 374 (11-28) Green, Elliott D....................... 264 (11-25) Green, Jane ...........................353 (35-14) Green, Jennifer ......................296 (12-25) Green, Jeremy .........................370 (48-3) Green, Jessica F. ...................392 (17-15) Green, John C..... 278 (33-3), 290 (37-15), 374 (7-7) Green, Matthew N. ........... 317, 326 (22-9) Greenberg, Miriam....................245 (25-6) Greene, Kenneth F. ................ 310 (11-31) Greene, Samuel R...............331 (Panel 3) Greene, Stacey Ann .................277 (30-8) Greene, Steven ......................343 (37-20) Greenfest, Seth W. ............................. 318 Greenfield, Larry........ 357 (Panel 11), 395 (Panel 9) Greenhill, Brian D. .....275 (17-4), 350 (2117) Greenhill, Kelly M. .......... 380 (43-12), 393 (18Greenlee, Jill S. ....................278 (31-3) Greenstein, Fred I. ...................351 (23-2) Greer, Christina M. ....353 (36-14), 385 (716) Greer, Scott L...........................349 (15-7) Gregg, Benjamin ......................272 (1-19) Grey, Robert D. ..................................358 Grieco, Joseph M. .......... 287 (20-13), 376 (16Grieco, Kelly A..... 245 (18-25), 316 (435), 350 (19-12) Griffin, John D. .........................367 (32-5) Griffin, Stephen M. ...................246 (27-7) Griffin, Stuart ...... 340 (19-18), 377 (19-15) Grigorescu, Alexandru ............ 338 (11-45) Grigoryan, Arman ...................350 (18-18) Grimes, William W. ........... 295 (6-21), 345 (Panel 3) Grimmer, Justin ................ 323 (8-10), 370 Grindlife, Stonegarden ..............387 (22-5) Grissom, Jason A................... 326 (24-11) Grodsky, Brian K. ................... 243 (11-49) Groeling, Tim..... 268 (38-13), 269 (38-13), 353 (38-11) Groenendyk, Eric William............391 (5-7) Grofman, Bernard N. ................252 (8-12) Grogan, Colleen M. .......... 251 (7-15), 369 (48Gronke, Paul.... 367 (34-12), 371 (Panel 1) Grose, Christian R..................353 (36-28) Gross, Donald A................................. 355 Gross, Jill S............................388 (30-13) Gross, Kimberly A. .................343 (38-15) Grossman, Joel B................281 (Panel 1) Grossmann, Matt..... 327 (25-11), 367 (3511) Groth, Terrie R. ..................................271 Grotto, Andrew .........................287 (18-7) Grove, Jairus V.........................255 (25-7) Gruber, Lloyd ...........263 (6-19), 284 (6-8) Grynaviski, Jeffrey D. .............315 (35-16) Grzymala-Busse, Anna M. .......339 (13-9), 365 (22-3) Gschwend, Thomas............................ 355 Guardino, Matthew P. ......................... 370 Guerra, Simona ......................328 (36-23) Guerrero, Mario ........................354 (40-4) Guillaud, Elvire ................................... 302 Guisinger, Alexandra G.............339 (16-3) Gulati, Girish J. .....352 (31-8), 380 (40-3), 394 (36-17) Guliuzza, III, Frank ..............249 (Panel 1) Gundogdu, Ayten .....................322 (2-28) Gunitskiy, Vsevolod ........ 269 (43-14), 369 (46-21) Gunnell, John G. ...................... 272 (2-11) Gunther, Richard ....................286 (15-10) Gupta, Kuhika ........................ 338 (11-38) Gupta, Madhvi..........................289 (33-6) Gupta, Surupa.....................381 (Panel 1) Gupta-Carlson, Himanee ....252 (9-1), 292 (Panel 1) Gursoy, Yaprak.......................394 (44-13) Gustavsson, Gina Linda .............322 (5-4) Gutmann, Amy ................................... 358 Guy, Mary E. .......................... 326 (24-11) Guzina, Dejan ........................ 285 (11-36) 400 H Ha, Eunyoung ........................274 (12-17) Haas, Mark L.......................... 252 (11-39) Habel, Philip..... 242 (5-2), 314 (26-9), 322 (5-4) Habib, Khalil........................271 (Panel 3) Hacker, Jacob S. ......................347 (7-10) Hacker-Cordón, Casiano A.W. .......347 (316), 373 (1-15) Hackworth, Jason.....................299 (30-4) Haegel, Florence .................280 (Panel 2) Haenny, Sophia Melody ..........392 (12-16) Haerpfer, Christian William .......338 (13-9) Haeusermann, Silja ........ 312 (14-15), 339 (15-18) Hafer, Catherine .......................284 (6-22) Hafner-Burton, Emilie Marie....287 (17-18) Haftel, Yoram Z. .....................339 (16-14) Hagen, Michael G.....................342 (35-6) Haggard, Stephan ..... 251 (6-11), 273 (116), 345 (Panel 3) Haglund, Jillienne .....................316 (45-5) Hahm, Sung Deuk ...............381 (Panel 3) Hahn, Kyu S...........................329 (37-22) Haider-Markel, Donald P. ....346 (Panel 2), 362 (5-12) Haig, Ken ............................345 (Panel 3) Haines, Jean-Yves...............381 (Panel 3) Hajnal, Zoltan L. .....................247 (37-19) Haklai, Oded ...... 252 (11-22), 296 (11-41) Halberstam, Yosh ...................315 (36-34) Hale, Henry E....... 264 (11-25), 297 (13-7) Halfani, Mohamed ..................296 (12-20) Halistoprak, Toygar...................278 (32-4) Hall, Lauren K. .........................329 (39-7) Hall, Mark David.....268 (33-9), 342 (33-2) Hall, Melinda Gann...................255 (26-6) Hall, Michael G..... 254 (16-13), 374 (6-15) Hall, Peter A...........339 (15-6), 375 (14-8) Hall, Rodney Bruce ................325 (16-17) Hall, Rosalie Arcala ................ 311 (12-42) Hall, Thad E. ..........................394 (36-17) Hallin, Daniel C. .....................343 (38-15) Halpern, Cynthia.....336 (2-23), 361 (2-24) Halpin, Darren R. ................271 (Panel 1) Hamann, Kerstin.....252 (9-1), 368 (36-19) Hamayotsu, Kikue ..................364 (12-26) Hamel, Pierre .........................378 (30-15) Hamilton, Allison................................. 355 Hamilton, Lawrence ..................336 (2-44) Hamm, Keith E. ....... 326 (22-13), 367 (2910) Hammond, Daniel................372 (Panel 1) Hammond, Thomas H.........251 (4-1), 288 (26-8) Han, Hahrie C. .......................353 (36-28) Han, Jongwoo ..........................329 (40-2) Han, Lori Cox ....... 266 (23-9), 326 (23-11) Han, Min-young ........................273 (6-16) Han, Soo-Hye.........................268 (38-13) Hanchar, Anna .......................376 (16-15) Hancock, Ange-Marie ...............314 (31-9) Hancock, Kathleen J.................386 (13-4) Handley, Antoinette ................348 (12-24) Handlin, Samuel .....................297 (12-32) Hankla, Charles R. ......242 (6-13), 309 (618) Hanmer, Michael J....................323 (8-13) Hannagan, Rebecca J. ........390 (Panel 1) Hanretty, Chris ....................... 274 (11-29) Hansen, Ben ............................323 (8-13) Hansen, Randall A. ..... 320 (Panel 1), 388 (30-13) Hansen, Susan B. ....................327 (29-3) Hansen, Wendy L...................365 (21-15) Hanson, Peter ........................379 (35-17) Hanson, Stephen E. ......... 339 (15-6), 381 (46-13) Hanusch, Marek ................................. 370 Hanvelt, Marc ........................... 272 (1-11) Hao, Yufan ..........................331 (Panel 3) Haptonstahl, Stephen R......251 (4-1), 284 (8-3) Harbeson, John W..................338 (12-40) Harbridge, Laurel....................389 (36-12) Harcourt, Bernard E................ 341 (27-11) Hardiman, Niamh .....................265 (14-4) Harding, Matthew C.......... 323 (8-13), 348 (11-34) Hardy-Fanta, PH.D., Carol........299 (31-4) Hargis, Jill E. .................... 270, 273 (2-35) Harkness, Kristen A................385 (12-33) Harmel, Robert.......................286 (13-14) Harper, Robin A.................................. 317 Harris, Jean Wahl.....................263 (10-6) Harris-Lacewell, Melissa V. .......247 (32-9) Harrison, Brigid ..........................273 (9-2) Harrison, Kathryn ...................267 (25-16) Harrits, Gitte Sommer .............390 (46-12) Harrop, William Scott...........331 (Panel 3) Hart, Roderick P. ......................365 (23-6) Hartlyn, Jonathan .... 264 (12-41), 354 (4418) Hartman, Erin .............................363 (8-7) Hartman, Thomas R. .......................... 258 Hartzell, Caroline A. ...............392 (16-18) Harvey, Johanna ....................343 (38-15) Harwood, Paul G......................390 (47-6) Has, Yusuf ......................................... 270 Hasecke, Edward B. ....... 328 (36-16), 356 Hasen, Richard L. .......... 367 (34-12), 372 (Panel 1) Hashimoto, Barry Masanori................. 259 Hassner, Ron E. .....................393 (18-15) Hastedt, Glenn P. ................381 (Panel 1) Hastings, Justin ......................340 (19-10) Hatcher, Laura J.....................355 (46-15) Hatemi, Pete ........ 309 (5-11), 343 (37-12) Hathaway, Oona.....275 (17-4), 286 (17-7) Hattam, Victoria........................250 (2-18) Hauerwas, Stanley ...................352 (33-4) Haufler, Virginia ....... 265 (16-22), 325 (1617) Haugaard, Mark...................371 (Panel 1) Haughton, Tim..........................253 (13-8) Haunss, Sebastian ...................244 (16-9) Hauptmann, Emily ..................261 (46-25) Hausegger, Lori J. ..................299 (26-12) Haussman, Melissa A. ...... 246 (31-6), 304 (Panel 2) Hawes, Daniel P. ................................ 319 Hawkesworth, Mary ........ 261 (46-25), 272 (2-11), 352 (31-19) Hawkins, Darren G. ..................265 (17-8) Hay, Colin ................................324 (14-9) Hay, Richard T........................ 311 (12-42) Hayduk, Ron ............................316 (42-6) Hayes, Danny.... 247 (36-18), 301 (37-13), 353 (36-14), 379 (37-21) Hayes, Jarrod.........................254 (20-14) Hayes, PhD, Robin J. ....... 278 (32-4), 344 (42-7) Hayman, Rachel.....................354 (44-20) Haynie, Kerry L. .....288 (29-4), 289 (29-4) Hays, Jude C. ..... 325 (17-9), 363 (11-46), 385 (8-9) Hayward, Clarissa R......... 322 (3-12), 371 (Panel 1) Haywood, Keisha S. ........................... 259 Hazan, Miryam .........................316 (42-6) Hazbun, Waleed ........269 (43-14), 308 (227) Hazelton, Jacqueline L. .......292 (Panel 1) He, Wenkai ........................................ 357 He, Yinan ...............................389 (43-18) Healy, Andrew ..........................295 (5-10) Heaney, Michael T. ........... 342 (35-6), 356 Heaven, Corinne ....................376 (18-13) Hecht, Jason D.......................274 (15-13) Heclo, Hugh .............................366 (28-3) Hecock, Douglas ....................244 (12-39) Hedge, David M. ..... 341 (23-13), 394 (297) Hedlund, Ronald D. ................326 (22-13) Heidbreder, Brianne................327 (29-13) Heikkila, Tanya .......................366 (25-14) Heilbrunn, John R...................338 (12-35) Heilke, Thomas W. .... 280 (Panel 11), 293 (Panel 13) Heinz, Dominic .........................300 (34-8) Heith, Diane J. .........................365 (23-6) Heitshusen, Valerie...................255 (22-2) Helbling, Marc ..........................323 (8-10) Held, Virginia............................295 (3-23) Heldman, Caroline....................278 (31-3) Heldt, Birger ...........................393 (21-10) Helmke, Gretchen .....341 (26-2), 352 (263) Helsloot, Ira..............................313 (24-5) Hemze, Leah A. .........................336 (5-8) Henderson, Michael B. ... 315 (36-10), 355 Henderson, Phillip G............292 (Panel 8) Hendlin, Yogi .......................280 (Panel 1) Hendrick, Rebecca .................342 (30-16) Hendrickson, Petra ....244 (12-43), 284 (83) Hendrix, Burke .......373 (2-43), 391 (3-25) Hendrix, Cullen S. ... 254 (21-23), 313 (2116) KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Heniff, Jr., Bill ...........................255 (22-2) Henig, Jeffrey R. ......................289 (30-9) Hennessy, Cari Lynn ................245 (22-1) Hennigar, Matthew..................299 (26-12) Henry, Michael D. ................371 (Panel 9) Hensel, Paul R. ........................377 (21-9) Hensley, Jonathan ....................267 (27-9) Hering, Martin......................259 (Panel 1) Hermann, Margaret G..........321 (Panel 2) Hero, Rodney E........................394 (29-7) Herrera, Geoffrey .....................255 (25-7) Herrera, Richard.......................323 (8-10) Herrera, Veronica M. .............. 264 (11-50) Herrera, Yoshiko M........... 344 (46-5), 375 (11-44) Herrick, Rebekah........................296 (8-5) Herring, Ronald J. ....................244 (16-9) Herrmann, Richard K. ...............245 (20-9) Herrnson, Paul S....................256 (36-20) Herron, Erik S. .... 324 (13-10), 390 (Panel 1) Herron, Michael C. ...................289 (29-4) Hertel, Shareen ......330 (45-9), 344 (45-6) Hertzoff, Andrew.......................336 (2-38) Hetherington, Marc J. .............315 (36-10) Heumann, Stefan .....................352 (27-3) Hibben, Mark R. ................................. 303 Hibbing, John R.........326 (22-9), 343 (3712) Hibbing, Matthew V........... 309 (5-11), 343 (37-12) Hickey, Dennis ....................371 (Panel 4) Hickey, Emily G. .................................370 Hicklin, Alisa..................... 245 (24-9), 319 Hicks, Alexander Michael........ 285 (11-13) Hicks, Raymond ..... 251 (6-11), 339 (16-3) Hicks, Tim ..............270 (48-5), 291 (48-2) Hicks-Casey, Wendy...............392 (16-18) Hidalgo, Fernando Daniel ...... 252 (11-40), 374 (11-28) Highton, Ben ..........................301 (37-13) Hilbink, Lisa............327 (26-7), 352 (26-3) Hildingsson, Roger ..............358 (Panel 2) Hill, David.................................352 (35-7) Hill, Lisa Ellen .......................... 272 (1-11) Hill, Seth J. ..............................347 (6-20) Hill, Tony L. ........................................ 303 Hillebrecht, Courtney .......................... 304 Hillygus, Sunshine ..................315 (36-10) Hiroi, Taeko ............................244 (12-43) Hirsch, Alexander Victor .....251 (4-1), 362 (4-4) Hirsch, H. N. .....267 (27-9), 331 (Panel 1) Hirschl, Ran .............................327 (27-4) Hirschmann, Nancy J. ...... 242 (3-30), 328 (31-11) Hiskes, Richard P. ....................344 (45-6) Hiskey, Jonathan T. ................247 (37-19) Hite, Katherine ... 257 (44-16), 316 (44-14) Hite, Nancy ............................296 (12-25) Hix, Simon .............251 (6-17), 328 (34-5) Ho, Karl...............................320 (Panel 2) Hobolt, Sara Binzer ....................347 (6-9) Hochschild, Jennifer L. ..... 295 (3-14), 350 (18-8) Hochstetler, Kathryn ....... 330 (44-15), 354 (44-18), 380 (44-17) Hoddie, Matthew ....................392 (16-18) Hoechst, Emily Howden.... 242 (2-39), 262 (2-26) Hoekstra, Valerie J. ..................327 (26-7) Hoerl, Alexandra E. ....249 (1-9), 250 (1-9) Hoffman, Aaron M. .................256 (31-10) Hoffman, Barak ......................243 (12-21) Hoffman, Donna R....................365 (23-6) Hoffman, Karen S......288 (23-7), 326 (2311) Hoffman, Lindsay ...................248 (38-12) Hoffman, Marcelo .....................262 (2-26) Hoffmann, Matthew J........ 286 (14-7), 350 (18-23), 364 (14-5), 386 (17-12) Hofhansel, Claus ......................256 (33-7) Hofmann, Stephanie Claudia ....291 (46-9) Hofmann, Tobias ............ 258, 365 (21-15) Hogan, Brendan Jerome.........344 (46-18) Hogan, John W. .....................327 (25-15) Hogan, Robert E. ...................367 (29-10) Hojnacki, Marie ......................278 (35-12) Holian, David B. .....246 (30-6), 276 (23-3) Holleque, Matthew..................268 (36-35) Hollifield, James F. ......... 275 (16-10), 312 (18-19), 376 (16-5) Hollis-Brusky, Amanda............277 (27-10) Holloway, Carson L..............382 (Panel 1) Holman, Mirya R. ........ 280 (Panel 1), 289 (30-9) Holmes, Lisa M. .......................314 (26-9) Holmsten, Stephanie S. .... 258, 378 (31-5) Holston, Ryan Robert .........382 (Panel 2), 395 (Panel 1) Holzhacker, Ronald L. .........331 (Panel 1) Holzner, Claudio A..................243 (12-21) Homer-Dixon, Thomas F. .........255 (25-7), 286 (14-7) Honda, Eric H..................................... 258 Honig, Bonnie.............294 (1-4), 346 (1-1) Honohan, Iseult ........................384 (3-17) Hooghe, Marc................... 256 (34-6), 271 Hooker, Juliet ...........................308 (1-13) Hoon, Parakh ......................304 (Panel 2) Hoornbeek, John ......................279 (40-7) Hopf, Ted .................................395 (46-6) Hopkin, Jonathan ......375 (14-8), 386 (1514) Hopkins, Daniel J. ..... 299 (30-11), 323 (810) Hopkins, David A....................315 (35-16) Horak, Martin George ..... 267 (30-12), 314 (30-5) Horiuchi, Yusaku .................... 337 (11-12) Horne, Cale............................329 (37-23) Horner, Debra.........................342 (30-16) Horowitz, Donald L. ................ 285 (11-36) Horowitz, Michael .... 298 (21-18), 330 (4313) Hortala-Vallve, Rafael ....... 284 (6-22), 370 Horvath, Robert ........................269 (41-6) Hou, Ying ............................331 (Panel 3) Hough, Dan.........................249 (Panel 1) Houle, David ...................................... 318 Houser, Linda ...........................247 (32-9) Houston, Alan..........250 (3-18), 282 (1-5), 373 (1-23) Hovde, Peter B................................... 318 Howard, Alison .........................365 (23-6) Howard, Christopher................. 295 (7-11) Howard, Lise Morjé ........ 325 (17-13), 376 (18-24) Howard, Robert M. ................. 246 (26-11) Howard-Hassmann, Rhoda E.......275 (174), 344 (45-6), 369 (45-10) Howarth, David R. ....................373 (2-16) Howell, Graham R. ..............281 (Panel 1) Howes, Dustin ..........................294 (1-25) Howk, Jennifer W. ...278 (31-16), 301 (394) Hoye, Timothy ................... 390 (Panel 12) Hoyland, Bjorn..........................374 (6-15) Hsieh, John Fuh-sheng.......260 (Panel 1), 320 (Panel 2) Hsieh, Michelle F. ................395 (Panel 4) Hsiung, James C.................344 (Panel 1) Hsu, Hsiao-Chi ....................345 (Panel 3) Hsu, Jennifer Yuan-Jean ........ 279 (44-11) Hsueh, Roselyn ......................264 (12-19) Hsueh, Vicki .............................383 (1-24) Htun, Mala N. .........................268 (31-12) Hu, Mei-Chih .......................395 (Panel 4) Hu, Xiaobo ..........................320 (Panel 2) Hua, Shiping .......................371 (Panel 4) Huang, Chang-Ling ............................ 318 Huang, Cheng-yi ....................378 (26-10) Huang, Chi..........................320 (Panel 2) Huang, Grace.........................296 (12-20) Huang, Haifeng .................................. 271 Huang, Kwei-Bo .....................266 (19-16) Huang, Reyko ..........................312 (18-5) Huang, Yanzhong ................319 (Panel 2) Huber, Bruce R. ................................. 318 Huber, Evelyne.... 261, 293 (Panel 3), 297 (12-32), 375 (12-34) Huber, Gregory........ 256 (36-20), 289 (3515), 309 (5-11), 379 (36-30) Huber, John D. ......................... 263 (11-3) Huckfeldt, Robert....................368 (36-29) Huddy, Leonie ........................265 (18-14) Hudon, Raymond ............................... 356 Hudson, Valerie M. .................313 (20-15) Hudson, William E. .....................374 (9-5) Huerta, Juan Carlos .... 262 (Panel 1), 323 (9-4) Huerta, Juan Enrique..............343 (38-15) Hug, Simon ............251 (8-12), 323 (8-10) Hugh-Jones, David ....273 (4-7), 322 (4-5), 347 (6-20) Hughes, Glenn .......... 292 (Panel 13), 305 (Panel 1) Hughes, Llewelyn ................345 (Panel 3) Hughes, Melanie M. ......... 247 (34-9), 328 (32-6), 388 (31-20) Huhe, Narisong ...................358 (Panel 2) Hula, Richard C................ 255 (30-7), 358 Hull, Christopher C. ..................276 (23-3) Hulnick, Arthur S. ................381 (Panel 1) Hult, Karen M. .... 326 (24-11), 366 (23-14) Hultman, Lisa ......................... 348 (11-17) Hume, Robert J. .......................387 (26-5) Hummel, Ralph P ................294 (Panel 3) Humphreys, Macartan .... 257 (38-10), 297 (12-25), 312 (18-5) Hunter, Wendy .......................375 (12-34) Hurd, Kimberly Roxanne..................... 371 Hurl, Ryan R. ...........................323 (7-18) Hurst, William ........................... 243 (11-1) Hussin, Iza ...............................291 (43-6) Hutchings, Vincent L...............379 (36-33) Hwang, Sungsoo ......................394 (40-8) Hyde, Susan Dayton....... 340 (17-14), 364 (18-4) Hymans, Jacques E.C. ..... 287 (18-7), 350 (19-8) I Iacovino, Raffaele.....................246 (28-1) Ichino, Nahomi ....................... 374 (11-28) Ide, Hiroko .................................363 (8-7) Idema, Timo .............................265 (14-4) Ignazi, Piero ..... 271 (Panel 1), 305 (Panel 1) Iida, Fumio ...............................384 (3-17) Iida, Rentaro ............................310 (8-14) Iida, Takeshi ...........................268 (36-25) Ilgit, Asli .................................312 (18-19) Illuzzi, Michael J. ......................262 (1-21) Imai, Kosuke .......... 252 (11-40), 363 (8-7) Imami, Arben.......................... 311 (13-13) Imbroscio, David.......................299 (30-4) Imerman, Dane K. ..................248 (43-15) Inclan, Maria ..........................330 (46-14) Ingebritsen, Christine...........241 (Panel 1) Inglehart, Ronald ......................301 (38-8) Ingram, Matthew C. ........ 244 (12-39), 280 (46-22) Innes, Alexandria J. ..................337 (10-7) Inoue, Kyoko ..................... 390 (Panel 12) Invernizzi Accetti, Carlo ...................... 270 Irvine, J.A. Sandy ...................312 (18-19) Ishiyama, John ............... 319, 365 (21-15) Ito, Takeshi..........................259 (Panel 1) Ivanova, Kate .........286 (16-7), 325 (16-6) Iversen, Torben ....... 285 (11-13), 349 (1410) Ivison, Duncan .........295 (3-24), 346 (1-1) Iwanami, Yukari..........................310 (8-4) Iyengar, Shanto .........301 (38-4), 329 (3722), 371 J Jackman, Simon D. .......... 301 (38-4), 315 (36Jackson, Alice M. .............372 (Panel 2) Jackson, Colin F. ....................380 (43-12) Jackson, Natalie M. ................ 276 (22-11) Jackson, Rhydon.................249 (Panel 4) Jackson, Victoria Marie....................... 357 Jacobi, Tonja ............................288 (26-8) Jacobs, Alan M...........................336 (5-8) Jacobs, Lawrence R. ................343 (38-6) Jacobs, Sean .........................389 (38-14) Jacobsmeier, Matthew L. ........278 (36-15) Jacobsohn, Gary J. ..................327 (27-4) Jacobson, Gary C........... 266 (22-14), 301 (37-13), 347 (6-20) Jacobson, Willow......................276 (24-2) Jacoby, William G........... 256 (36-31), 315 (37-17) Jakobi, Anja P. .........................325 (16-6) Jakobsen, Uffe ............... 259, 389 (44-12) Jalalzai, Farida .........................247 (34-9) Jamal, Amaney ......................269 (44-21) Jamal, Manal A. .....................253 (12-27) James, Oliver ...........................288 (24-4) James, Patrick......254 (20-14), 344 (49-8) Janara, Laura A........................383 (1-24) Jarman, Holly ...........................242 (6-13) Jarvis, Sharon E.....................268 (38-13) Jaschik, Scott .....................................306 Jaskoski, Maiah....... 252 (11-37), 311 (1242) Jelen, Ted G................... 290 (37-15), 318 Jenco, Leigh K. ......273 (2-35), 308 (1-13) Jenkins, Jeffery A. ....................255 (22-2) Jenkins, Margaret............................... 270 Jennings, James ....................352 (31-19) Jennings, Jeremy R....................308 (1-6) Jennings, M. Kent ... 286 (13-14), 379 (3630) Jensen, Carsten ..................... 385 (11-35) Jensen, Christian B. ............... 273 (11-29) Jensen, Jason ........................380 (46-10) Jensen, Michael J......257 (40-6), 380 (403) Jensen, Nathan ....... 264 (12-19), 338 (1235) Jensen, Pamela K. ....329 (41-5), 330 (415) Jentleson, Bruce W. ....... 254 (18-10), 287 (20-13) Jeram, Sanjay ........................ 296 (11-41) Jerez-Mir, Miguel ....................274 (15-13) Jessee, Stephen........ 263 (8-11), 300 (3627) Jetschke, Anja..........................350 (17-5) Jhee, Byong-Kuen ..................339 (14-14) Jimenez, Benedict ....................315 (38-5) Jimenez, Luis F. ..................... 274 (11-42) Jimeno, Rafael Augusto............378 (32-7) Jividen, Jason .....................280 (Panel 5) Jo, Hyeran ..... 265 (17-8), 325 (17-9), 350 (21-17) Jo, Jinhee ..................................251 (4-1) Joe, Wesley .... 259 (Panel 1), 366 (29-10) Johansen, Morgen S. ......................... 317 John, Peter C. ......257 (40-6), 327 (30-10) Johns, Leslie ..........................287 (17-18) Johns, Robert.............. 304 (Panel 2), 345 (Panel 3) Johnson, Candace....................246 (31-6) Johnson, Carter R. ......... 338 (11-23), 363 (11-30) Johnson, Cathy M. .................387 (25-17) Johnson, Esq., Cris .............372 (Panel 2) Johnson, Erica J.......................279 (40-7) Johnson, James D....................250 (2-18) Johnson, Jeremy ........................362 (7-5) Johnson, Joshua ......................289 (29-4) Johnson, Juliet .....257 (44-16), 375 (14-8) Johnson, Kimberley S.................243 (7-6) Johnson, Liz.............................389 (39-6) Johnson, Loch K. ................381 (Panel 1) Johnson, Martha C. ................274 (12-17) Johnson, Neil .........................254 (21-23) Johnson, Renée J. ........... 317, 394 (29-7) Johnson, Susan W. ................299 (26-12) Johnson, Tana........................312 (16-16) Johnson, Tobe.....................372 (Panel 2) Johnston, Christopher David ........315 (3717), 336 (5-8) Johnston, Jocelyn M.................298 (24-8) Johnston, Richard G.C. ......... 315 (36-10), 342 (35-6), 374 (7-7) Johnston, Steven......361 (2-8), 383 (2-15) Jolly, Seth Kincaid .......... 285 (11-36), 303 Jones, Alethia...........................369 (42-8) Jones, Bryan D....................... 299 (30-11) Jones, Charles .........................262 (3-21) Jones, Clifford A. ............ 367 (34-12), 371 (Panel 1) Jones, Mark P. .......................367 (31-17) Jones, Jr., Randall J. .......................... 319 Jones, Toby C. ....................305 (Panel 1) Jones Luong, Pauline ....... 274 (13-2), 338 (12-35) Jones-Correa, Michael A. ...... 274 (11-42), 314 (30-5), 378 (32-7), 388 (30-13) Jones-Rooy, Andrea E........................ 258 Joo, Hyung-Min ..................................303 Jordan, Grant ......................271 (Panel 1) Jordan, Jason....... 349 (15-8), 375 (14-12) Jordan, Jenna ........................298 (18-16) Jordan, Sara R. ......277 (24-2), 291 (43-6) Jordan, Stuart V.........251 (4-1), 310 (8-4), 341 (23-13), 362 (4-4) Jordan-Zachery, Julia S. ........ 261 (46-25), 299 (31-4), 352 (31-19) Joscelyn, Thomas ...............271 (Panel 3) Joseph, Maya...........................389 (39-6) Joseph, Richard .....................338 (12-40) Joseph O’Connell, Anne M. ...... 263 (8-11) Josephson, Jyl .......248 (42-5), 317 (47-2) Joshi, Ishan.............258, 271, 326 (20-11) Josiger, William J. ............ 258, 312 (15-9) Joslyn, Mark R. ........................362 (5-12) Joyce, Kyle A. ............................284 (8-3) Judd, Dennis R....................... 299 (30-11) Judd, Diana M........268 (33-9), 329 (39-7) Jung, Changkuk ................................. 357 Jung, Courtney.... 262 (3-21), 285 (12-22), 320 (Panel 1) KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Jung, Heon Joo ...................292 (Panel 2) Jungkunz, Vincent ......................309 (3-5) Junio, Timothy J. ......................364 (14-5) Junn, Jane Y. ......................335 (Panel 1) Jusko, Karen Long .... 243 (11-19), 252 (812) Just, Marion R..........................301 (38-4) K König, Thomas ....................... 274 (11-29) Künkler, Mirjam .... 330 (46-14), 388 (33-5) Kachi, Aya..................................385 (8-9) Kadera, Kelly M.........245 (21-4), 298 (2118) Kage, Rieko ...........................301 (43-10) Kagotani, Koji ...........................377 (20-5) Kaid, Lynda Lee .....................379 (37-21) Kailitz, Steffen ..........................365 (22-3) Kalandrakis, Tasos .....................310 (8-4) Kalanges, Kristine J..................248 (45-7) Kalinin, Kirill .............................251 (8-12) Kalkan, Kerem Ozan ..............290 (37-15) Kalmoe, Nathan P...................315 (37-17) Kaltenthaler, Karl C. ....... 355, 386 (16-20) Kalyvas, Andreas .....................346 (2-13) Kalyvas, Stathis N. .... 296 (11-7), 375 (1223) Kam, Cindy D...........251 (5-9), 295 (5-10) Kamieniecki, Sheldon ..... 326 (25-11), 327 (25-11) Kang, Alice.............................342 (31-13) Kang, David C........................365 (19-13) Kang, Myung-koo .....................295 (6-21) Kang, Yi ............................................. 318 Kanthak, Kristin L. ..............................355 Kantola, Johanna Elina...........394 (31-14) Kapiszewski, Diana ..................341 (26-2) Kaplan, Cynthia S...................269 (46-20) Kapstein, Ethan B........ 272 (Panel 1), 285 (11-24), 340 (19-18) Karako, Thomas .......... 271 (Panel 3), 345 (Panel 12) Karakoc, Ekrem.............. 274 (13-11), 304 Karch, Andrew J.......................314 (29-2) Karcher, Sebastian ............................. 370 Karjala, Aleisha ......................353 (37-18) Karnein, Anja ...........................241 (1-16) Karnes, Kimberly A......... 300 (36-13), 378 (29-14), 391 (Panel 2) Karol, David ... 245 (22-1), 343 (35-6), 356 Karp, Jeffrey A. .....300 (34-8), 316 (38-9), 379 (34-4), 389 (36-12) Karp, Regina ..........................265 (19-14) Karpf, David A........257 (40-6), 337 (7-12) Karpowitz, Christopher F.............373 (5-6) Kasahara, Yuri........................ 374 (11-28) Kasara, Kimuli .... 264 (12-30), 324 (12-36) Kasfir, Nelson ......................... 363 (11-30) Kassekert, Anthony ........ 351 (25-13), 393 (24-12) Kassiola, Joel J. ..................345 (Panel 2) Kassop, Nancy .........................387 (23-8) Kastellec, Jonathan P. ..............366 (26-1) Kasza, Gregory J. .................... 272 (2-11) Katada, Saori N......................386 (16-20) Katagiri, Nori ...................................... 303 Katchanovski, Ivan ......... 248 (38-12), 279 (38-7) Kates, Michael.................................... 271 Kathman, Jacob Daniel.............245 (21-4) Kato, Junko ................................362 (8-7) Katsanidou, Alexia..................368 (36-19) Katsumata, Hiro........................350 (17-5) Katz, Gabriel ............................323 (8-13) Katz, Jonathan N.......266 (22-14), 323 (813) Katz, Richard S. .......... 271 (Panel 1), 289 (35Katzenstein, Mary Fainsod .......341 (2711) Katzenstein, Peter J. .......... 281, 305, 346 (Panel 1) Katzenstein, Suzanne ....... 291 (43-6), 339 (16-14) Katznelson, Ira ....273 (7-4), 321 (Panel 3) Kaufman, Alison .....................287 (18-20) Kaufman, Robert R........... 263 (6-19), 297 (12-32), 362 (6-12) Kaufman, Stuart J........... 248 (43-15), 279 (43-7), 291 (43-8) Kaufman-Osborn, Timothy V. .......261 (4625), 272 (2-11), 361 (2-8) 401 Index of Participants Index of Participants Index of Participants Kaufmann, Eric P..... 252 (11-39), 352 (357), 376 (18-24) Kaufmann, Karen M..................246 (30-6) Kavakli, Kerim Can.................350 (21-17) Kay, Barry J. ..........317 (49-4), 355 (49-5) Kaye, Dalia Dassa.......... 254 (18-10), 273 (11-15) Kaynak, M. Selcan .................343 (38-15) Kayser, Mark Andreas ............340 (21-20) Keane, Michael ..........................373 (5-6) Kearn, Jr., David W. ...............393 (19-17) Kearney, Richard C. .................387 (24-3) Keck, Thomas M. ......267 (27-6), 277 (2710) Kedziora, Jeremy ...350 (21-17), 384 (4-3) Keefer, Philip......324 (11-16), 391 (11-11), 392 (11-11) Keele, Luke .... 252 (11-40), 357, 363 (8-7) Keepper, Kevin H. ..................296 (12-20) Kehl, Jenny Rebecca...........390 (Panel 1) Kehrberg, Jason .....................247 (37-19) Keidel, Anne Gordon ...........305 (Panel 1) Keiser, Lael R......................... 326 (24-11) Kelanic, Rosemary ............................. 258 Kelemen, R. Daniel ..................327 (26-7) Kellam, Marisa ................................... 357 Keller, Ann C. ...........................313 (24-5) Keller, Catherine.......................373 (2-16) Keller, William W. ...................349 (16-19) Kelley, John Robert .............381 (Panel 3) Kellough, J. Edward ......... 277 (24-2), 387 (24-3) Kelly, Andrew P. ...... 248 (37-24), 279 (3716) Kelly, Christine A. .....................301 (42-9) Kelly, Duncan .............................372 (1-2) Kelly, Gary M...................................... 270 Kelly, John E. .........................368 (36-19) Kelly, Laura R..................................... 270 Kelly, Nathan ............288 (22-4), 296 (8-5) Kemmerling, Achim ................312 (14-15) Kendall-Taylor, Andrea Herschman .....275 (16-21) Kendhammer, Brandon ....................... 302 Kendrigan, Mary Lou ..............388 (31-20) Keng, Shu ...........................345 (Panel 3) Kennedy, Brian T. ........ 271 (Panel 3), 331 (Panel 4) Kennedy, John James .... 286 (13-14), 371 (Panel 4) Kennedy, Ryan ................................... 303 Kennedy, Sheila Suess.............267 (24-7) Kenny, Lawrence ......................252 (8-12) Kent, C. Todd .........................313 (20-15) Keohane, Nannerl O............... 253 (11-51) Keohane, Robert O. ......... 295 (3-23), 364 (18-4) Kernell, Samuel ........................263 (7-14) Kerner, Andrew ........................325 (17-9) Kerner, Ina ...............................314 (31-9) Kerr, Nicholas......................... 392 (11-11) Kersch, Ken I. ........246 (27-7), 310 (7-17) Kersh, Rogan ...........................247 (32-9) Kertzer, Joshua ..........................309 (5-5) Kerwer, Dieter .... 297 (17-10), 298 (17-10) Kesgin, Baris ........337 (10-7), 393 (20-10) Kesler, Charles R. ....... 331 (Panel 4), 395 (Panel 9) Kessel, Alisa ............................242 (2-39) Kessler, Sanford .......................250 (2-37) Khan, Waheed A. ...................313 (20-15) Khmelko, Irina .... 324 (13-10), 364 (15-11) Khory, Kavita R. .....................285 (12-22) Kibbe, Jennifer ....................381 (Panel 1) Kidd, Quentin ...........................337 (10-7) Kienker, John B. .......... 280 (Panel 5), 331 (Panel 4) Kier, Elizabeth ........................301 (43-10) Kiersey, Nicholas J. .....262 (2-26), 283 (234) Kifer, Martin..............................380 (40-3) Kilcup, Rodney ....................358 (Panel 5) Kilgour, Marc ......................336 (4-8), 355 Kilinc, Ramazan ............... 289 (33-6), 318 Kim, Dongryul..... 274 (12-17), 376 (16-15) Kim, G. Jiyun .........................313 (20-15) Kim, Hee-Kang................................... 318 Kim, Henry A........245 (22-1), 326 (22-13) Kim, Inhan..............................316 (43-17) Kim, Ji-Young ......................292 (Panel 2) Kim, Man Kwon ................ 271, 366 (27-8) Kim, Miduk ...............................352 (31-8) Kim, Mikyoung.....................259 (Panel 1) Kim, Moonhawk.... 339 (16-3), 364 (16-11) Kim, Nuri ....................................309 (5-5) Kim, So Young .........................301 (39-4) 402 Kim, Soo Yeon .........................339 (16-3) Kim, Soohee ..........................248 (38-12) Kim, Sung Chull .....................316 (43-17) Kim, Sungmoon........................295 (3-23) Kim, Sunhyuk .........................380 (44-17) Kim, Tae-Hyung......................387 (20-16) Kim, Wonik.............................380 (44-17) Kim, Young Mie ........................354 (40-4) Kim, Young-hwa (Diana) ..................... 302 Kim, Yu Nam..................... 390 (Panel 12) Kimball, Anessa L........... 275 (18-17), 313 (21-22) Kimssy, Bailey ..........................365 (20-4) Kincaid, John ....... 304 (Panel 1), 378 (2914) Kinder, Donald R. .... 315 (37-17), 343 (3720) Kinderman, Daniel Phillip..... 258, 311 (143) King, Desmond...........243 (7-6), 362 (7-5) King, Elisabeth .........................312 (18-5) King, Gary................................323 (8-10) King, James D........................366 (23-14) King, Loren A. ..........................322 (3-12) King, Mae C. ...................................... 308 King, Ronald F....... 263 (7-14), 293 (Panel 1) Kingston, Paul ........................ 311 (12-31) Kirkey, Christopher ...................355 (49-5) Kirkland, Anna R. .....................247 (32-9) Kirkland, Justin.........................246 (29-6) Kirkland, Paul E........................336 (2-23) Kirkpatrick, Andrew...................263 (6-19) Kirkpatrick, Jennet ....................346 (2-36) Kirschner, Shanna A........................... 259 Kirshner, Jonathan....................297 (16-8) Kisby, Ben................................263 (10-6) Kitchen, Nicholas.................381 (Panel 3) Kitschelt, Herbert..... 339 (15-18), 363 (1121), 385 (11-4) Kittilson, Miki Caul ....................289 (35-5) Klamler, Christian .......................336 (4-8) Klarner, Carl E........246 (29-6), 299 (29-8) Klein, David............................394 (26-15) Kleinberg, Katja B......245 (21-4), 298 (2118) Kleinerman, Benjamin A. ..........309 (2-42) Klemp, Nathaniel ......................347 (3-16) Kline, Reuben.........329 (37-22), 336 (4-8) Klopp, Jacqueline ...................285 (12-38) Klosko, George ..........................283 (1-5) Klotz, Audie.......... 312 (18-19), 376 (16-5) Klusmeyer, Douglas B. ........249 (Panel 1) Knight, Jack ...........262 (3-10), 336 (3-27) Knight, Kathleen ......253 (15-15), 290 (3622) Knoll, Benjamin R............................... 355 Knopff, Rainer ..........................288 (27-5) Knowles, Helen J. ....................267 (27-6) Knutsen, Wenjue Lu .................277 (25-8) Koch, Jeffrey W. .....................353 (37-18) Koch, Michael T.......254 (20-14), 287 (2121), 340 (21-20) Kochin, Michael S............................... 357 Kochtcheeva, Lada V........ 329 (39-7), 353 (39-8), 378 (25-12) Kodolov, Oleg.........309 (6-18), 336 (6-14) Koehler, Kevin ........................330 (46-14) Koesel, Karrie J......................287 (18-20) Kofman, Daniel.........................273 (3-31) Koger, Gregory.....288 (22-4), 368 (35-13) Koh, Geun...........................259 (Panel 1) Kohler, Jillian Clare...................330 (48-4) Kohli, Atul............. 324 (12-36), 362 (6-24) Kohn, Margaret ......322 (3-12), 383 (2-15) Kohno, Masaru....................... 311 (11-31) Kokaz, Nancy ...........................373 (1-15) Kolers, Avery............................391 (3-25) Kolev, Kiril ................................ 385 (11-4) Kollman, Kenneth W. ................286 (14-7) Kolodny, Robin A.................... 353 (38-11) Kompridis, Nikolas....................242 (2-21) Konisky, David..... 367 (34-12), 371 (Panel 1) Kopko, Kyle Casimir ...........................356 Kopstein, Jeffrey.....274 (13-2), 339 (15-6) Koremenos, Barbara...............254 (17-17) Korkut, Umut .......................... 311 (13-13) Kornprobst, Markus ............................ 258 Korteweg, Anna......................265 (15-17) Koski, Chris............................327 (29-13) Koslowski, Rey.....244 (18-6), 297 (14-13) Kostadinova, Petia A. ....... 286 (13-5), 364 (15-11), 389 (38-14) Koter, Dominika...................371 (Panel 3) Kotsovilis, Spyridon ..................310 (8-14) Kotzev, Ivailo M .................................. 302 Koubi, Vally ............................254 (21-23) Kousser, Thad ........................ 290 (36-11) Koutalakis, Charalambos ........265 (16-22) Kovenock, Dan...........................347 (4-6) Kowalski, Maria G. ...................373 (1-15) Kraft, Michael E...... 261, 267 (25-16), 366 (25-14) Krane, Dale A...........................245 (24-9) Krasner, Stephen D. ....... 254 (17-17), 321 (Panel 2), 364 (18-4) Kraus, Neil J. ...........................255 (30-7) Krause, George A..................... 263 (8-11) Krause, Sharon R.....283 (2-10), 372 (1-2) Krauss, Ellis S........................ 253 (11-51) Kraynak, Robert P. ...................269 (41-6) Krebs, Ronald R.....................301 (43-10) Krebs, Timothy B......................246 (30-6) Kreide, Regina ...................271, 373 (1-8) Kreppel, Amie..... 324 (13-10), 364 (15-11) Kreps, Sarah E........ 254 (21-13), 287 (1820) Kreuzer, Marcus .......................268 (34-3) Kricheli, Ruth..........297 (12-25), 322 (4-5) Kriner, Douglas L......................377 (23-5) Krishna, Anirudh...... 243 (12-21), 244 (1221) Kroenig, Matthew ......276 (20-7), 298 (1816), 340 (19-10) Kroh, Martin .........279 (36-24), 315 (38-5) Krolikowski, Alanna ..................248 (39-5) Krook, Mona Lena .....256 (34-6), 367 (3117) Krosnick, Jon A. ........295 (8-5), 309 (5-5), 329 (37-22), 379 (36-33) Krotz, Ulrich ....................................... 356 Krueger, Brian S.....................268 (38-13) Krueger, Robert......................343 (37-12) Kruks, Sonia...........................267 (31-12) Krupnikov, Yanna..... 247 (36-18), 270 (475) Kryder, Daniel...........................385 (7-16) Kselman, Daniel Max................ 385 (11-4) Kubicek, Brett V........................244 (18-6) Kubik, Jan ............261 (46-25), 301 (46-4) Kubota, Yuichi ........................ 392 (11-20) Kucik, Jeffrey Robert ................325 (17-9) Kuehn, David ...........................395 (46-6) Kugler, Jacek .........................254 (21-23) Kugler, Tadeusz....... 254 (21-23), 349 (1619) Kuhn, Patrick Michael .............350 (21-17) Kuhonta, Erik M....... 285 (12-38), 311 (1218) Kukathas, Chandran ....250 (3-19), 283 (117), 308 (1-13) Kulkarni, Anupma L. ............... 243 (11-49) Kumagai, Naoko.....................393 (17-15) Kumar, Martha Joynt ................255 (23-4) Kume, Ikuo............................. 364 (16-11) Kumlin, Staffan .......................368 (36-19) Kung, Wen-Hsiang .................351 (25-13) Kuo, Alexander..... 296 (11-32), 374 (11-9) Kuppers, Amanda.....................316 (45-5) Kurizaki, Shuhei .....365 (20-4), 377 (20-5) Kurowska, Xymena..............293 (Panel 3) Kurtoglu Eskisar, Gul M. ......... 363 (11-21) Kurtz, Marcus J. .......................325 (17-9) Kuru, Ahmet T. ... 269 (44-21), 310 (11-27) Kushida, Kenji .....................345 (Panel 3) Kuzio, Taras ........................390 (Panel 1) Kuzma, Jennifer .......................248 (39-5) Kvalvik, Kevin E. ................................ 319 Kwak, Jun-Hyeok .......................309 (3-5) Kwatra, Neil.........................281 (Panel 2) Kwon, Hyeok Yong .................279 (36-24) Kydd, Andrew.........325 (18-9), 350 (19-8) Kymlicka, Will ......................... 274 (14-11) L Lépinard, Eléonore ..............320 (Panel 1) López-Varas, Miguel Ángel ...... 293 (Panel 3) Löwenheim, Nava............................... 356 La Porte, Todd R. .....................313 (24-5) La Raja, Raymond J......... 300 (35-8), 367 (29-10) Lachapelle, Erick ....................267 (25-16) Lackey, Gerald F. .....................268 (32-2) Lacy, Dean P. ...... 255 (26-6), 279 (36-24), 309 (5-5) Ladd, Jonathan McDonald ......379 (37-21) Laden, Anthony Simon ...............346 (1-1) KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Ladewig, Jeffrey W. ................315 (35-16) LaFay, Marilyn..........................361 (2-24) Lafer, Gordon ......................281 (Panel 2) Lafont, Cristina .........283 (3-6), 295 (3-13) Lagaron, Ashley ................................. 357 Lagunes, Paul ........................ 252 (11-40) Lahiri, Simanti ........................330 (44-15) Lahman, Mary ............................252 (9-1) Lai, Brian..............266 (21-5), 350 (21-17) Laitin, David D.......................... 324 (11-8) Lake, David A.......298 (18-16), 364 (18-4) Laks, Jennifer Ann.............................. 303 Laliberte, Andre ... 296 (11-41), 371 (Panel 4) Lam, Julia Y. ...................................... 357 Lam, Kenneth Cheak Kwan ......277 (25-8) Lamarche, Carlos ................... 348 (11-34) Lamb, Charles M......................267 (27-6) Lamba, Rinku ...........................283 (1-17) Lambach, Daniel ................................ 304 Lambacher, Jason ...............345 (Panel 2) Lambert, Priscilla A. ................. 310 (11-2) Lambert, Robert A. ...................395 (46-8) Lamothe, Meeyoung .................298 (24-8) Lamothe, Scott .......298 (24-8), 387 (24-3) Lancaster, Thomas D. ............ 264 (11-50) Landau, David ..........................246 (27-7) Landauer, Matthew ............................. 270 Landemore, Helene E.................336 (3-9) Landman, Todd ........................316 (45-5) Landry, Pierre F. .......... 358 (Panel 2), 392 (13-12) Lane, Jr., Joseph H. ............304 (Panel 1) Lane, Melissa ...........294 (1-12), 372 (1-2) Lang, Daniel G. ...................260 (Panel 7) Langbein, Laura I. ..................351 (24-10) Lange, Matthew......................324 (12-36) Langenbacher, Eric.................389 (44-12) Langfield, Danielle .............................. 303 Langston, Donna C. .................300 (32-1) Langston, Joy.............................374 (8-2) Lanoue, David J. ....................389 (36-12) Lapinski, John ............................284 (7-9) LaPira, Timothy M. .................368 (35-13) Laponce, Jean A. ................304 (Panel 2) Lapuente, Victor .......................377 (24-6) Laracey, Melvin C......288 (23-7), 366 (278) Larsen, Jeffrey A. ...................265 (19-14) Larsen, Lars Thorup ............395 (Panel 2) Larson, Deborah Welch ..........365 (19-13) Lascurettes, Kyle M. ...............269 (43-14) Lasley, Trace C. .................................258 Lau, Joanne ........................331 (Panel 2) Lau, Richard R. ....268 (36-25), 301 (38-4) Lauderdale, Benjamin ............... 263 (8-11) Laugesen, Miriam J. .... 259 (Panel 1), 330 (48-4) Laurence, Henry.........................284 (6-8) Laurence, Jonathan A............. 363 (11-14) Laurence, Mike.........................323 (10-5) LaVaque-Manty, Mika ...............336 (2-44) Lavariega Monforti, Jessica L. ............ 293 (Panel 1) Lavelle, Kathryn C. .....................284 (6-8) Lavine, Howard ..........................336 (5-8) Law, Anna O. ...........................277 (26-4) Lawler, Peter Augustine.... 305 (Panel 10), 381 (Panel 7) Lawless, Jennifer L...................266 (22-6) Lawlor, Andrea .......279 (38-7), 292 (49-7) Lawrence, Andrew G. ...............253 (14-6) Lawrence, Frederick G. ..... 381 (Panel 10) Lawrence, Regina G......... 290 (38-3), 368 (38-16) Lawrie, Newell, James Lawrie Newell James..............................271 (Panel 1) Lawson, Chappell................... 285 (11-24) Lax, Jeffrey R. ..... 255 (29-11), 288 (26-8), 366 (26-1) Lay, J. Celeste ...........................296 (8-5) Layman, Geoffrey C. ........ 278 (33-3), 290 (37-15), 328 (35-9), 367 (33-10) Layne, Christopher ....276 (19-9), 365 (1913) Lazar, Nomi Claire......................383 (1-7) Lazer, David ........ 257 (38-10), 310 (8-14), 380 (40-3), 394 (40-8) Le, Loan...................................378 (32-7) Le Foulon, Carmen.................351 (22-12) Le Veness, Frank P. ............395 (Panel 1) Leal, David L. .... 247 (37-19), 324 (12-28), 342 (32-3) Leblang, David .... 253 (16-13), 323 (6-10), 347 (11-5) Leblond, Patrick..........................347 (6-9) Lebo, Matthew..........................301 (38-8) Lebron, Christopher .....373 (2-43), 391 (320) Lecea, Marisha......................... 310 (11-2) Lecours, André.........................246 (28-1) Ledvinka, Christine B..............351 (24-10) Lee, Byoungha ......................... 310 (11-2) Lee, Byung-Jae ..........................347 (8-6) Lee, Choong Hoon ............................. 302 Lee, Christine M. ................................ 357 Lee, Chyungly ..... 326 (18-22), 345 (Panel 3) Lee, Daniel J. .....................................317 Lee, Feng-yu ..............................385 (8-9) Lee, Frances E.........284 (7-9), 326 (22-9) Lee, Han Soo ......................... 326 (23-11) Lee, Hyobin............................ 375 (11-43) Lee, In Won ...........................394 (24-12) Lee, Ji-Young .........................325 (18-22) Lee, Jongsoo James ... 292 (Panel 2), 316 (43-17) Lee, Sang Wan ......................316 (43-17) Lee, Soo-Young........................377 (24-6) Lee, Su-Hyun ...........................384 (6-23) Lee, Su-Mi .............................287 (21-12) Lee, Taeku ...... 268 (35-10), 335 (Panel 1) Lee, Thea M........................281 (Panel 2) Lee, Wei-chin ......................280 (Panel 1) Lee, Yoonkyung.............. 253 (12-27), 381 (Panel 3) Lee, Youngchae .......................242 (6-13) Leeb, Claudia ................... 270, 384 (2-29) Leech, Beth L.........................278 (35-12) Leege, David C. .......................314 (33-1) Lees, Charles ......................249 (Panel 1) Lefkowitz, Joel.................................... 319 Lefler, Vanessa.......................254 (21-13) Legler, Thomas ...................305 (Panel 1) Legro, Jeffrey W. ... 291 (46-9), 346 (Panel 1) Lehoucq, Fabrice....... 268 (34-3), 324 (1116) Leibowitz, David ..................321 (Panel 2) Leibowitz, Lisa.....................281 (Panel 1) Leighley, Jan E.......................247 (36-18) Leininger, Julia .........................388 (33-5) Lelkes, Yphtach ......................329 (37-22) Lemke, Douglas .......................340 (21-6) Lemm, Vanessa Eva Maria .......262 (2-26) Lenard, Patti Tamara ..................373 (1-8) Lenz, Gabriel S. .......................251 (8-12) Leo, Christopher........256 (30-7), 267 (3012) Leonard, Meghan E. ............... 246 (26-11) LeQuire, Peter Brickey.........358 (Panel 5) Lerman, Amy E. ................................. 318 LeRoux, Kelly M. ......................246 (30-6) Lester, Genevieve ...............381 (Panel 1) Lettevall, Rebecka .................. 311 (13-13) Leu, Guan-Yi ..........................386 (16-20) Leuffen, Dirk...........................291 (46-16) LeVan, Carl ..... 304 (Panel 2), 338 (12-40) LeVeck, Brad.................. 275 (18-17), 317 Levendusky, Matthew S. ........ 298 (21-18), 389 (36-12) Leventoglu, Bahar ..................276 (21-19) Levi, Margaret ...... 252 (11-10), 324 (11-8) Levin, Ines ......................................... 356 Levin, Jamie...........................275 (18-21) Levin, Kelly ............................393 (17-15) Levine, Adam Seth ...................270 (47-5) Levine, Alan .............................354 (41-7) Levine, Daniel J......................369 (46-21) Levine, Meredith A. .................... 318, 370 Levine, Renan ......... 339 (14-14), 379 (3621), 384 (5-3) Levinson, Nanette S. ................368 (40-5) Levinson, Sanford ............ 273 (3-29), 292 (Panel 1), 383 (1-7) Levitan, Lindsey C......................373 (5-6) Levitt, Justin ...........................353 (37-18) Levy, Gal.............................319 (Panel 1) Levy, Jack S......... 298 (21-8), 369 (43-11) Levy, Jacob T. ..........................283 (1-17) Lewis, Andrew R. ............................... 356 Lewis, Angela K. .................345 (Panel 1) Lewis, Daniel C. ... 255 (29-11), 270 (47-5) Lewis, David E. ........................298 (24-8) Lewis, Gregory B..... 351 (24-10), 390 (476) Lewis, J.P. .......................................... 303 Lewis-Beck, Michael S........... 256 (36-31), 317 (49-4) Li, Lianjiang.............................. 243 (11-1) Liang, Julie...............................369 (47-3) Liang, Wei ................................353 (39-8) Liao, Da-Chi ........................345 (Panel 3) Liaras, Evangelos................... 285 (11-36) Liberman, Peter John ...............245 (20-9) Licht, Amanda A.....365 (20-12), 385 (8-9) Lichter, S. Robert ...................378 (25-12) Liddle, R. William ...................364 (12-26) Lieber, Keir A. ......276 (20-7), 330 (43-13) Lieber, Robert J........................298 (20-6) Lieberman, Evan S. ..................344 (46-5) Lieberman, Robert C. ....242 (7-6), 362 (75) Liebert, Jonah ........................ 255 (29-11) Liebowitz, Debra J..................256 (31-10) Lien, Pei-te........299 (31-4), 345 (Panel 3) Lienesch, Michael.....................262 (3-21) Liesen, Laurette T................390 (Panel 1) Lieske, Joel A...... 246 (30-6), 328 (36-16), 356 Light, Matthew A. .....................339 (13-9) Lightfoot, Sheryl R...............320 (Panel 1) Lilja, Jannie ............................ 348 (11-17) Lim, Claire..................................310 (8-4) Lim, Elvin T. ...........351 (23-2), 384 (3-28) Lim, Eunjung .......................... 243 (11-33) Lim, Jamus Jerome ............................ 370 Lim, Kevin ................................251 (8-12) Lima, Marcelo Jorge Figueiredo.......... 293 (Panel 3) Lin, Tse-min................................385 (8-9) Lin, Ying.................................274 (12-17) Lindberg, Staffan I. ......... 303, 317 (46-17) Lindley, Dan ...........................248 (43-15) Lindrum, David ................................... 319 Lindsay, Brennan Tyler .............388 (26-5) Lindsay, Peter ..........................391 (3-20) Lindvall, Johannes..... 311 (14-3), 349 (158), 375 (14-12) Linos, Katerina ....................... 348 (11-34) Linzer, Drew ...........................329 (37-23) Lipscomb, Michael....................316 (42-6) Lipscy, Phillip Y............... 325 (18-22), 345 (Panel 3) Lipsitz, Keena......................... 353 (38-11) Lipsmeyer, Christine S..............339 (13-9) Lipson, Daniel N................................. 318 Lipson, Michael L. ..................325 (17-13) Lister, Andrew D.....273 (2-35), 335 (1-10) Littvay, Levente ......................343 (37-12) Liu, Amy H. ..............................263 (6-19) Liu, Baodong Paul .............................. 319 Liu, Guoli.............................260 (Panel 1) Liu, I-Chou ..........................320 (Panel 2) Liu, Mingxing ............................ 243 (11-1) Liu, Peng ............................320 (Panel 2) Liu, Xinsheng .........................286 (13-14) Liviatan, Ofrit ............................267 (27-9) Livingston, Alex ........................242 (2-21) Livne, Yair ..................................322 (4-5) Llorens, Jared ......276 (24-2), 351 (24-10) Lluch, Jaime Gerardo ...............246 (28-1) Loaeza, Soledad ....................269 (43-14) Lobell, Steven E. .................... 369 (43-11) Locke, Jill L. .............................383 (2-15) Lodge, Milton ...........................295 (5-10) Loewen, Peter John ............... 290 (36-11) Logan, Justin.......................390 (Panel 1) Lohmann, Susanne .............390 (Panel 1) Loizides, Neophytos ....... 252 (11-22), 285 (11-36) Lomazoff, Eric ..........................323 (7-18) Lombardo, Emanuela ...............314 (31-9) Lomperis, Timothy J. ......... 390 (Panel 12) Long, Andrew G. .......245 (21-4), 313 (2122) Long, James D. ......................243 (12-21) Long, William J.........................330 (48-4) Lopez, Summer ..................................258 Lopreite, Debora.....................342 (31-13) Lorber, Eric B. ........................287 (20-13) Lorentzen, Peter L......................322 (4-5) Lou, Diqing......................................... 304 Loury, Glenn C. ..................................307 Love, Nancy S............................250 (2-7) Loveless, Matthew....................286 (13-5) Low, Claire .............................343 (38-15) Lowenstein, Daniel H........ 288 (27-5), 367 (34-12), 371 (Panel 1) Lowery, David...........................246 (29-6) Lowi, Theodore J.................293 (Panel 3) Lowndes, Joseph E. ............293 (Panel 3) Lowry, Robert C. ...... 319, 341 (29-9), 374 (6-15) Lowry, William R.....................351 (25-13) Lu, Catherine .............................309 (3-5) Lu, Christopher.........................255 (23-4) Lu, Xiaobo............ 251 (6-11), 392 (13-12) Lubell, Mark N......... 267 (25-10), 366 (2514) Lubkemann, Stephen C. ......... 392 (11-20) Lublin, David I. .........................379 (34-4) Ludwig, Mark D. .....................394 (36-17) Ludwig, Paul W. ..................321 (Panel 2) Luecke, Tim ........................... 326 (20-11) Luetz, Susanne ......................265 (16-22) Luke, Timothy W............... 255 (25-7), 280 (Panel 1), 322 (2-19), 346 (2-40) Luna, Juan Pablo ...................297 (12-32) Lupia, Arthur .... 242 (5-2), 270 (47-5), 379 (36-33) Lupu, Noam ...........................386 (12-44) Lupu, Yonatan ........................378 (26-10) Luskin, Robert C. .......309 (5-5), 373 (5-6) Lust, Aleksander................................. 303 Lustick, Ian S. ..... 252 (11-22), 286 (14-7), 355 (46-15) Lutmar, Carmela..................... 291 (45-11) Lyall, Jason ..... 292 (Panel 1), 375 (12-23) Lyle, Monique L. .......................268 (32-2) Lynch, Marc .... 273 (11-15), 361 (Panel 3) Lynch, Meghan K. ....................316 (45-5) Lynch, Orla...............................395 (46-8) M Ma, Bo ............................................... 303 Maas, Willem ................. 274 (15-13), 303 Macdonald, Bradley J. ...... 322 (2-19), 369 (42-8) Macdonald, Douglas ........................... 318 MacDonald, Fiona ....................262 (3-21) MacDonald, Jason A. ....... 298 (22-8), 317 MacDonald, Paul K...................279 (43-7) Macdonald, Stuart Elaine........315 (36-10) Macedo, Stephen ........251 (3-19), 336 (327) MacGilvray, Eric .......262 (3-10), 373 (3-7) Maciel, Robert ..........................278 (32-4) MacKay, Joseph .....................275 (18-21) MacKenzie, Megan H. ........................ 303 MacKenzie, Scott A. ......... 263 (7-14), 342 (30-16) Mackie, Gerry.........250 (3-18), 272 (2-35) Macklin, Audrey...................372 (Panel 1) Mackow, Jerzy..........................264 (13-3) MacLean, Lee ..........................314 (31-9) Macleod, Colin ....................331 (Panel 2) MacLeod, Michael R........................... 258 Macleod-Cullinane, Barry.................... 318 MacMullen, Ian R. ....................295 (3-14) Madonna, Anthony ...................254 (22-2) Madrid, Raul L........................ 310 (11-26) Mady, Abdel-Fattah ............................ 303 Maeshima, Kazuhiro .................279 (38-7) Maestas, Cherie ............... 317, 362 (5-12) Magalhaes, Pedro C...........296 (8-5), 367 (34-2) Magaloni, Beatriz....................297 (12-25) Magar, Eric.................................374 (8-2) Magen, Amichai A. ...................350 (17-5) Maggio, J. ................250 (2-7), 283 (2-34) Magnusson, Bruce A. ..........304 (Panel 2) Magnusson, Rachel ..................323 (10-5) Mahajan, Gurpreet....................295 (3-24) Mahler, Julianne .......................279 (40-7) Mahon, Jr., James E....... 274 (12-17), 309 (6-18), 375 (12-34) Mahoney, Christine.................327 (25-15) Mahoney, Daniel J.....269 (41-6), 291 (413), 371 (Panel 15) Mahoney, James ..... 324 (12-36), 354 (439) Mahoney-Norris, Kathleen A. ......284 (9-3) Maier, Sylvia.............................350 (18-8) Main, Jeremy W. ................................ 318 Mainwaring, Scott.... 354 (44-18), 385 (1118) Maione, Angela .................................. 270 Maioni, Antonia ........................291 (48-2) Majeski, Stephen J. ........ 261, 269 (43-14) Makse, Todd....................................... 356 Malachuk, Daniel S. .................354 (41-7) Malatesta, Deanna ...................267 (24-7) Malbin, Michael J. ....... 260 (Panel 1), 366 (29-10) Malecki, Michael.......................327 (26-7) Malesky, Edmund J. ....... 258, 337 (11-12) Malet, David ...........................354 (43-16) Malhotra, Neil ....... 295 (5-10), 389 (36-12) Malka, Ariel ................................295 (8-5) Malloy, Jonathan ......................355 (49-5) KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Maloyed, Christie L............................. 370 Maltzman, Forrest ....................288 (26-8) Mampilly, Zachariah Cherian........ 363 (1130) Mandelbaum, Moran Moshe ...............259 Mandelkern, Ronen .................. 311 (14-3) Manger, Mark S........................339 (16-3) Mani, Kristina ......................... 252 (11-37) Manion, Melanie Frances.... 358 (Panel 2), 392 (13-12) Manjikian, Mary B................331 (Panel 3) Mann, Christopher B.................299 (29-8) Mann, Hollie Sue..... 289 (31-18), 378 (315) Mann, Thomas E......................326 (22-9) Manning, Carrie......................354 (44-20) Manrique, Cecilia G. ......... 257 (40-6), 368 (40-5) Manrique, Gabriel G. ................368 (40-5) Mansbridge, Jane........... 278 (31-16), 292 (Panel 1) Mansfield, Edward D. ..... 287 (17-18), 312 (18-5) Mansfield, Harvey C. ......... 371 (Panel 15) Mantilla, Luis F. ........................289 (33-6) Mantzavinos, Chris .................344 (46-18) Manzano, Sylvia .......................256 (32-8) Mapel, David R...........................361 (3-8) Mapps, Mingus.......................278 (36-15) Mara, Gerald ............................336 (2-38) Maranto, Robert .......................266 (23-9) Marasco, Robyn .......................294 (2-17) March, Andrew F. ... 242 (3-11), 308 (1-28) Marcus, Richard R....... 304 (Panel 2), 338 (12-29) Marcuzzi, Suzanne ...................373 (1-23) Mardones, Rodrigo ....277 (28-4), 297 (1232) Mares, Isabela...... 263 (11-3), 296 (11-32) Margalit, Yotam M.....................253 (14-6) Marian, Cosmin Gabriel .......293 (Panel 1) Marini, John ..... 280 (Panel 5), 371 (Panel 15) Marinov, Nikolay V. .................244 (12-43) Mariotti, Shannon .....................354 (41-7) Markell, Patchen.......283 (2-10), 372 (1-2) Markovits, Elizabeth ...............289 (31-18) Marlin-Bennett, Renee ...... 255 (25-7), 329 (40-2) Marlowe, Melanie M. ..............341 (23-13) Marmor, Theodore R. ...............291 (48-2) Marquez, Frances ..................366 (23-14) Marquez, Xavier ................ 320 (Panel 14) Marres, Noortje S. ....................346 (2-40) Marrus, Michael R. ...................273 (3-31) Marshall, Monty G. .................302 (46-23) Marshall, Nicole........................330 (45-9) Marshall, Shana R.................. 252 (11-37) Marshall, Stephen H. ..............352 (31-19) Marso, Lori..........................294 (Panel 3) Marsteintredet, Leiv ................354 (44-18) Martel, James R. ......361 (2-8), 383 (1-24) Marten, Kimberly ....................376 (18-24) Martens, Allison M..................277 (27-10) Marti, Jose Luis ........................295 (3-13) Martin, Andrew ....................... 246 (26-11) Martin, Andrew D. ......................374 (8-2) Martin, Cathie Jo ..... 285 (11-13), 349 (158) Martin, Janet M. .....277 (31-3), 278 (31-3) Martin, Michael.......................378 (25-12) Martin, Shane.......326 (22-13), 379 (34-4) Martin, Susan F. .....................297 (14-13) Martin, Susanne ................................. 259 Martin, Thomas M. .................351 (23-12) Martin Cortes, Irene................286 (15-10) Martinek, Wendy L. ...314 (26-9), 394 (2615) Martinez, Michael D........ 247 (36-18), 367 (34-2) Martinez Herrera, Enric.............246 (28-1) Martinez-Ebers, Valerie J. ........ 293 (Panel 1), 352 (31-19) Martinez-Gallardo, Cecilia......... 263 (11-3) Martorano, Nancy......246 (29-6), 326 (2213) Marwah, Inder Singh ................294 (1-25) Masket, Seth E......342 (35-6), 343 (35-6), 368 (35-13) Mason, T. David .....................313 (21-16) Mastanduno, Michael................297 (16-8) Masters, Marick ........................387 (24-3) Masters, Roger D. ...............249 (Panel 1) Masuoka, Natalie.................335 (Panel 1) Mate, Manoj .............................366 (27-8) Mathen, Carissima.............................. 360 403 Index of Participants Index of Participants Index of Participants Mathie, Mary ............................330 (41-5) Mathiowetz, Dean.....................383 (1-24) Matichescu, Marius Lupsa ....... 293 (Panel 1) Matland, Richard E. ................290 (36-22) Matsubayashi, Tetsuya ...........247 (36-18) Matsuzaki, Reo ..................................302 Mattes, Michaela ..... 275 (18-17), 313 (2122) Mattes, Robert Britt ................351 (22-12) Matthes, Melissa Marie.............294 (2-17) Matthew, Richard A. ...............265 (18-14) Matthews, Emily Olivia........................ 356 Matthews, Katey..................344 (Panel 3) Matthews, Scott..........................336 (5-8) Mattli, Walter ..........................376 (17-16) Mattox, Gale A. ......................265 (19-14) Mauro, Robert M. ............................... 356 Maveety, Nancy........................267 (27-6) Mayda, Anna Maria ................247 (37-19) Mayer, Alex ..............................364 (14-5) Mayer, Frederick W. .................275 (16-4) Mayer, Kenneth R.....................367 (34-2) Mayer, Nonna....... 280 (Panel 2), 329 (3632) Mayer, William G. ......300 (35-8), 365 (236) Mayers, David A..................260 (Panel 7) Mayka, Lindsay Rose ......................... 259 Mazor, Joseph.................................... 271 Mazur, Amy G. ............... 302 (46-23), 318 Mazzucelli, Colette Grace .........349 (15-7) McAllister, Ian.........257 (40-6), 289 (35-5) McArthur, Denese......269 (45-8), 291 (4511) McBride, Keally DeAnne ..........322 (3-12), 341 (27-11) McCaffrey, Sara Jane ............. 375 (11-43) McCann, James A. ......... 324 (12-28), 343 (38-15) McCarney, Patricia .................296 (12-20) McCarty, Nolan...........................251 (4-1) McCauley, John F. ...............371 (Panel 3) McClain, Linda C.................... 328 (31-11) McClain, Paula D. ............ 268 (32-2), 308 (Panel 1) McClerking, Harwood K. ...........342 (32-3) McClintock, Cynthia..................328 (34-5) McClure, Kirstie M. ......250 (1-22), 346 (213) McClurg, Scott D. .... 268 (36-25), 368 (3629) McCluskey, Michael ..................354 (40-4) McCormick, Barrett..............371 (Panel 4) McCormick, John P...................294 (2-17) McCumbers, Rebecca Jean......346 (1-20) McCurley, Carl.......................... 309 (5-11) McDermott, Rose ......321 (T-19), 343 (3712), 375 (11-44) McDonagh, Eileen .....268 (31-12), 337 (712) McDonald, Bryan..... 265 (18-14), 350 (1823) McDonald, Ian ..........................246 (30-6) McDonald, Michael D. .... 315 (36-34), 353 (35-14) McDonald, Michael P. ..... 247 (36-18), 329 (36-32) McDowell, Bruce D..............304 (Panel 1) McElwain, Kenneth Mori ...........365 (22-3) McGahan, Kevin.....................312 (18-19) McGann, Anthony J. ......... 298 (22-8), 328 (34-5) McGhee, Eric .........................353 (36-28) McGlinchey, Eric.......................354 (40-4) McGovern, Clare Joanna ....304 (Panel 2), 317, 318 McGrath, Conor......................327 (25-15) McGrath, Erin C. ......................253 (14-6) McGraw, Bryan T.........247 (33-8), 284 (322), 342 (33-2) McGraw, Kathleen ......................309 (5-5) McGregor, Rob Roy....................263 (6-7) McGuire, James W. ................ 311 (12-18) McGuire, Kevin T. ......387 (26-5), 388 (265) McGuire, Steven Francis .....371 (Panel 9) McIlwain, Charlton D ..............343 (38-15) McKay, Amy Melissa .............. 367 (35-11) McKean, Benjamin ....346 (2-36), 389 (414) McKee, Seth C. ....247 (36-18), 352 (35-7) McKenna, Laura .......................354 (40-4) McKie, Kristin A.......................... 259, 303 McKinlay, Patrick F. ..................322 (2-28) McLaren, Lauren M. .................301 (38-8) 404 McLauchlin, Theodore D........ 287 (21-12), 326 (21-11) McLaughlin, Jr., Joseph Paul ....366 (28-3) McLean, Elena V. ............................... 259 McLendon, Michael L. ..............262 (1-21) McMahon, Kevin J.....351 (23-2), 387 (238) McMann, Kelly M..... 310 (11-27), 363 (1121) McMichael, Taylor...................343 (36-26) McNamara, Carol L. .................330 (41-5) McNamara, Kathleen R. ... 291 (46-9), 324 (14-9), 361 (Panel 3) McNamara, Peter ................381 (Panel 7) McNulty, John E. .......256 (36-20), 323 (813) McPartland, Thomas J........249 (Panel 4), 390 (Panel 12) McQueeney, Kevin G.................. 318, 370 McThomas, Mary......................384 (3-17) McWilliams, Susan Jane..........250 (2-37), 283 (2-34) Mealy, Kimberly A.....................329 (40-2) Mearsheimer, John J. .........272 (Panel 1), 340 (20-8) Mebane, Jr., Walter R...............251 (8-12) Mecham, Quinn ........................388 (33-5) Meckstroth, Christopher...................... 270 Medeiros, Jillian......................247 (37-19) Medler, Alex Leland ................ 249 (46-11) Medvic, Stephen K. ................289 (35-15) Meffert, Michael F. ..............................355 Meguid, Bonnie M. ...................246 (28-1) Mehta, Uday........................... 341 (27-11) Meier, Kenneth J. ......245 (24-9), 366 (259) Meier, Patrick .........................316 (44-14) Meier, Petra............314 (31-9), 379 (34-4) Meirowitz, Adam H. ....273 (4-7), 347 (4-6) Meisels, Tamar .........................391 (3-25) Mejia, Carlos A.........................255 (26-6) Melendez, Carlos ............................... 259 Melin, Molly M. .......................287 (21-12) Melnick, R. Shep .............. 309 (7-17), 358 (Panel Melton, James Douglas................... 370 Mena Aleman, David ...........305 (Panel 1) Mena-Mora, Amalia ............................ 356 Menaldo, Mark .......................354 (43-16) Menchik, Jeremy ..... 317 (46-17), 344 (4618) Mendelberg, Tali .........................373 (5-6) Mendeloff, David ....................380 (43-12) Mendelsohn, Barak............................. 258 Meng, Chih-Cheng Almond................. 357 Mercer, Jonathan......................321 (T-19) Meredith, Marc ................. 299 (29-8), 357 Mergel, Ines A..........................329 (40-2) Merkel, Wolfgang .... 302 (46-23), 388 (335) Mermat, Djamel ......................257 (46-19) Merolla, Jennifer L.....278 (36-15), 295 (510) Mershon, Carol A. ....................365 (22-3) Mertha, Andrew ........................ 243 (11-1) Mertus, Julie...........................369 (45-10) Meseguer, Covadonga...... 323 (6-10), 374 (8-2) Meserve, Stephen August................... 370 Messing, Solomon .............................. 371 Mettler, Suzanne .... 295 (7-11), 347 (7-10) Metz, Tamara ...........................242 (3-30) Metzer, Omri .......................... 285 (11-13) Meuleman, Bart ..........................337 (8-8) Meunier, Sophie .....................339 (14-14) Mewes, Horst ......................331 (Panel 6) Meyer, David J. ........... 303, 331 (Panel 3) Meyer, John M. ........................283 (2-25) Meyers, Peter A. ......................273 (3-29) Mezey, Michael L..... 350 (22-12), 351 (2212) Mezey, Susan Gluck......... 288 (27-5), 330 (47-4) Michaelowa, Katharina............392 (12-16) Michalak, Katja....293 (Panel 1), 322 (4-5) Michalowitz, Irina....................327 (25-15) Michaud, Kristy E.H. .................301 (39-4) Michelbach, Philip A. ................391 (2-32) Michener, Robert Gregory.... 259, 338 (1145), 389 (38-14) Middlemass, Keesha M. ...........388 (29-5) Middleton, Joel A..... 252 (11-40), 301 (384) Midlarsky, Manus I.....291 (43-8), 316 (435) Mikanagi, Yumiko ..................... 310 (11-2) Milazzo, Caitlin .......................353 (35-14) Mildenberger, Matto ............................ 258 Miler, Kristina ....... 266 (22-6), 367 (35-11) Miles, E. Walter ...................372 (Panel 2) Miles, Tom.......................................... 319 Miljanic, Andra Olivia .......................... 304 Milkis, Sidney M. ......................337 (7-12) Miller, Benjamin....... 312 (19-11), 365 (1913) Miller, Char Roone....................361 (2-30) Miller, Colleen E. ............ 326 (20-11), 370 Miller, Edward A. ....369 (48-3), 394 (29-7) Miller, Gregory D. ................... 338 (11-38) Miller, Joanne ................. 268 (36-35), 355 Miller, Kenneth P. .....................288 (27-5) Miller, Lisa L.............................388 (29-5) Miller, Michael G.....................300 (36-13) Miller, Michael K. ........................322 (4-5) Miller, Raluca Viman............293 (Panel 1) Miller, Susan ..........................379 (35-17) Miller, William J. ......................... 318, 319 Milligan, Maren.......................317 (46-17) Mills, Jesse John......................301 (38-4) Milly, Deborah J........................ 310 (11-2) Milne, Duane D. .......... 249 (Panel 1), 304 (Panel 1) Milner, Helen V. ...... 251 (6-11), 273 (11-6) Milner, Henry............................367 (34-2) Milward, H. Brinton ...................298 (24-8) Milyo, Jeffrey ....... 367 (34-12), 372 (Panel 1) Min, Brian K. ........ 243 (11-19), 301 (39-4) Min, Tae Eun ............................342 (32-3) Mink, Joseph C. .......................391 (1-27) Minkenberg, Michael.................350 (18-8) Minkov, Svetozar .................321 (Panel 2) Minozzi, William........................255 (22-2) Mintrom, Michael ....248 (39-5), 314 (29-2) Miroff, Bruce......... 253 (11-51), 266 (23-9) Misawa, Buba......................395 (Panel 1) Mishler, William ....... 257 (44-22), 368 (3714) Misra, Shefali ...........................283 (1-17) Mitchell, Charles L.......252 (9-1), 279 (407), 316 (42-6), 369 (46-21) Mitchell, Dona-Gene ................. 309 (5-11) Mitchell, Gladys ......278 (32-4), 300 (32-1) Mitchell, James ...................304 (Panel 2) Mitchell, Karen L. ...................300 (31-15) Mitchell, Neil J..........................316 (45-5) Mitchell, Sara McLaughlin......276 (21-19), 377 (21-9) Mitnick, Barry M. ....245 (24-9), 263 (6-19) Mitzen, Jennifer ........................325 (18-9) Mo, Cecilia Hyunjung..............353 (36-14) Mockabee, Stephen T. ..............314 (33-1) Moe, Terry M. ......................308 (Panel 1) Moehler, Devra Coren ............ 374 (11-28) Moeller, Marie Oestergaard...... 395 (Panel 2) Moffett-Bateau, Alexandra ........369 (47-3) Mohan, Paula ......................320 (Panel 1) Mohanty, Peter .........................272 (1-19) Mohl, Phillip........................................ 302 Mohmand, Shandana Khan ................ 370 Mohr, Scott......................................... 258 Molas, Josep Monserrat ......345 (Panel 3) Mondak, Jeffery........................ 309 (5-11) Money, Jeannette .... 275 (16-10), 348 (115) Monnoyer-Smith, Laurence .......394 (40-8) Monroe, Burt L. ......300 (34-8), 341 (22-7) Monroe, Kristen Renwick .........250 (3-18), 272 (Panel 1), 308 (Panel 1), 372 (Panel 1) Monroe, Nathan W. ..................255 (22-2) Monshipouri, Mahmood ............248 (45-7) Monson, Joseph Quin....... 314 (33-1), 367 (33-10) Montagnes, Brendan Pablo......... 271, 315 (36-34) Monteiro, Nuno Peres...............276 (19-9) Monten, Jonathan J. ......... 276 (19-9), 291 (46-9) Montero, Alfred P.................... 264 (11-50) Montinola, Gabriella R. .............377 (24-6) Montoya, Celeste M.......... 256 (32-8), 272 (Panel 1) Montoya, Orlando Lopez ..........248 (45-7) Moon, J. Donald ..................249 (Panel 1) Moon, M. Jae ...........................288 (24-4) Moon, Richard........................369 (45-10) Moore, Gregory J. ...............344 (Panel 1) Moore, Margaret.......................391 (3-25) Moore, Matthew......................365 (20-12) Moore, Matthew J.....................308 (2-12) KEY: Presenter name.......page number (Panel/Event number) e.g. Smith, Jane.......22 (50-1), 33 (PS 22) Moore, Pete W. ......................385 (12-33) Moore, Richard H. ....................248 (39-5) Moore, Will H. ............................347 (8-6) Moosbrugger, Lorelei ........ 329 (39-7), 379 (34-4) Morales, Bernat Torres ........345 (Panel 3) Moravcsik, Andrew ............................. 303 Morel, Lucas E. ...................292 (Panel 8) Moreno-Riano, Gerson ........345 (Panel 1) Morey, Daniel S.........245 (21-4), 267 (2613) Morgan, Briana R. ....................276 (23-3) Morgan, Jana .........................386 (12-44) Morgan, Kimberly J. .................347 (7-10) Morgenstern, Scott ................. 348 (11-48) Moriarty, II, Jerome Thomas ...245 (18-25) Morley, Alicen Rose..................279 (38-7) Morrell, Michael E.....................242 (2-39) Morris, Irwin L. .........................266 (23-9) Morris, Lorenzo ...................372 (Panel 2) Morris, Martin ...........................283 (2-34) Morrisey, William ....... 271 (Panel 13), 390 (Panel 6) Morrison, James Ashley .............347 (6-9) Morrison, Kevin ...................... 337 (11-12) Morrisroe, Darby.......................387 (23-8) Morrow, James D. ....................365 (20-4) Morrow, Johannes ....... 293 (Panel 3), 320 (Panel 1) Morton, Rebecca B............................. 355 Moscardelli, Vincent G............366 (29-10) Moser, Robert G...... 324 (13-10), 378 (315) Moser, Scott ...............................336 (4-8) Moses, Michael Valdez .............291 (41-3) Moskop, Wynne Walker ............322 (2-28) Mosley, Layna ........284 (6-8), 349 (16-19) Mossberger, Karen ....315 (38-5), 342 (3016) Mosser, Michael W. .............292 (Panel 1) Mostov, Julie .........272 (2-31), 309 (3-15), 346 (2-36) Moynagh, Patricia........ 294 (Panel 3), 361 (2-24) Moynihan, Donald P.......... 313 (24-5), 367 (34-2) Mozaffar, Shaheen ......... 351 (22-12), 375 (11-44) Mu, Ren .................................286 (13-14) Mucciar