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manuel-b-aalbers-80x108Manuel B. Aalbers – KU Leuven

Manuel B. Aalbers is associate professor of Human Geography at KU Leuven, Belgium, where he leads the research group The Real Estate/Financial Complex. Before that, he was at the Universality of Amsterdam and Columbia University, New York. He has an interest in housing policy, mortgage markets, social exclusion, gentrification and urban development. His latest book is The Financialization of Housing. He also edited the book Subprime Cities.

Read articles by Manuel B. Aalbers.

Aleksi Aaltonen 80x108Aleksi Aaltonen – Warwick Business School

Aleksi Aaltonenis an assistant professor of information systems at Warwick Business School. Aleksi also cofounded smartphone app Moves, and serves as the Chairman of the Demos Helsinki think tank.

Read articles by Aleksi Aaltonen.

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Lene Aaroe 80x108Lene Aarøe – Aarhus University, Denmark

Lene Aarøe is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science and Government, Aarhus University. Her field of research is political psychology. A key motivation in her work is to investigate how the psychological imprints of ancestral living in hunter-gatherer groups shape political attitudes and communication effects in modern mass democracies. Her academic affiliations include the Interacting Minds Centre at Aarhus University. Together with Michael Bang Petersen, she co-directs The Politics and Evolution Lab.

Read articles by Lene Aarøe.

Daniel Aaronson – Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Daniel Aaronson is a vice president and director of microeconomic research in the economic research department at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and an adjunct professor at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. His recent research includes studies on female labour supply over the development transition, the long run impact of access to credit, and job loss associated with automation. His past research has been published in leading journals and featured in Chicago Fed research publications, including Economic Perspectives and Chicago Fed Letter.

Read articles by Daniel Aaronson.

tahir-abbasTahir Abbas – RUSI

Professor Tahir Abbas is Senior Research Fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI).

Read articles by Tahir Abbas.

 

Mabel Abraham – Columbia Business School

Mabel Abraham is an assistant professor of management at Columbia Business School. Her main stream of research examines how organisational and social network processes contribute to gender differences in outcomes. Another stream of her research looks at resource exchange patterns among entrepreneurs more generally and the performance implications. She has received several prestigious awards for her research, including the Academy of Management’s Pondy Best Dissertation Paper Award (2015). Prior to pursuing a career in academia, Professor Abraham worked in defined benefits consulting and risk management at Fidelity Investments. She completed her PhD in Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management.

Read articles by Mabel Abraham.

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Alan I Abramowitz 80x108Alan I. Abramowitz – Emory University

Alan I. Abramowitz is the Alben W. Barkley Professor of Political Science at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.  Dr. Abramowitz has authored or coauthored six books, dozens of contributions to edited volumes and more than fifty articles in political science journals dealing with political parties, elections, and voting behavior in the United States.  His most recent book, The Polarized Public: Why American Government Is So Dysfunctional examines the causes and consequences of growing partisan polarization among political leaders and ordinary Americans.

Read articles by Alan I. Abramowitz.

Sharon Abramowitz 80x108Sharon Abramowitz – University of Florida

Sharon Abramowitz is an assistant professor of medical anthropology and African Studies at the University of Florida. She is the author of Searching for Normal in the Wake of the Liberian War, and is co-editor (with Catherine Panter-Brick) of the forthcoming book Medical Humanitarianism: Ethnographies of Practice.

Read articles by Sharon Abramowitz.

Randy Abreu

Randy Abreu is an attorney and politician from The Bronx, New York. He is a clean energy and technology advocate who recently served in the Administration of President Barack Obama. He tweets @AbreuForNYC.

Read articles by Randy Abreu.

 

Christian Abueg 80x108Christian Abueg – LSE Government

Christian Abueg is an MSc Candidate at the Department of Government in the LSE and Political Science reading Public Policy and Administration with a stream of Public Management. His research interests include American Law and Public Policy, American Political Elections, and the bridge between building a better Public and Private consortium. He tweets @ChristianAbueg.

Read articles by Christian Abueg.

Arthur Acolin – University of Washington

Arthur Acoca Acolin is an Assistant Professor of Real Estate at the University of Washington with a broad interest in housing economics and a focus on international housing policy and finance.

Read articles by Arthur Acolin.

 

Alessandro Acquisti – Carnegie Mellon University

Alessandro Acquisti is a professor of Information Technology and Public Policy at the Heinz College at Carnegie Mellon University, the PwC William W. Cooper Professor of Risk and Regulatory Innovation, and an Andrew Carnegie Fellow (inaugural class). His research focuses on the economics of privacy and the behavioral economics of privacy as well as privacy in online social networks.

Read articles by Alessandro Acquisti.

Ian T. Adams – University of Utah

Ian T. Adams is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of Utah where he also completed a Masters of Public Administration. His multi-disciplinary research interests include body-worn cameras and policing workplace surveillance, and advanaced computational methods in social science. His recent work has appeared in Public Administration Review, Criminology & Public Policy, and Justice Quarterly. His research can be found at https://ianadamsresearch.com/.

Read articles by Ian T. Adams.

Maria Adamson – Middlesex University

Maria Adamson is a senior lecturer in organisational behaviour and HRM at Middlesex University Business School. Her research interests centres on exploring gender inequality in professional work and organisations. She currently leads an ESRC project on Gendered Inclusion in Organisations. She holds a PhD from the University of York.

Read articles by Maria Adamson.

Camilla Addey – Laboratory of International Assessment Studies

Dr Camilla Addey is director of the Laboratory of International Assessment Studies and research associate at the University of East Anglia. She recently completed her PhD on the rationales for participation in international literacy assessments in Mongolia and Laos. Her current research enquires into PISA for Development from a governance perspective in lower and middle income countries. Her research has established International Assessment Studies as a field of enquiry. Dr Addey previously worked at UNESCO in Paris in the Adult Literacy and Non-Formal Education section. She is author of Readers and Non-Readers.

Read articles by Camilla Addey.

Lynn A. Addington – American University

Lynn A. Addington is a Professor in the Department of Justice, Law & Criminology in the School of Public Affairs at American University. Her research focuses on fatal and non-fatal violent victimization, post-victimization responses, and ways to better connect research with policy and practice. In 2016, she received AU’s top award for faculty research.

Read articles by Lynn Addington.

Idris Adjerid – University of Notre Dame

Idris Adjerid is an assistant professor in the IT, Analytics, and Operations Department at the Mendoza College of Business, University of Notre Dame. A key focus of his research is the economics of privacy and the nature of consumer privacy decision-making.

Read articles by Idris Adjerid.

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E Scott Adler 80x108E. Scott Adler – University of Colorado, Boulder

Scott Adler is Professor of Political Science at the University of Colorado, Boulder.  His expertise is the US Congress, elections, political institutions, and policy making.  Among his books are Why Congressional Reforms Fail: Reelection and the House Committee System (University of Chicago Press, 2002), and The Macropolitics of Congress(co-edited with John Lapinski; Princeton University Press, 2006). His most recent book, co-authored with John Wilkerson, is Congress and the Politics of Problem Solving (Cambridge University Press, 2012).  Adler and Wilkerson have an associated website and blog.

Read articles by E. Scott Adler.

Alícia Adserà 80x108Alícia Adserà – Princeton University

Alícia Adsera is a Research Scholar and Lecturer in Economics at the Woodrow Wilson School and faculty affiliate at the Office of Population Research, at Princeton University. She is also a research fellow at the Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration (CReAM), University College London and at IZA (Bonn). Her research interests are in economic demography, development and international political economy. Her recent work focuses on the role of labor market institutions and economic conditions on fertility and household formation as well as in an array of migration topics.

Read articles by Alícia Adsera.

Lazarus Adua 80x108Lazarus Adua – University of Northern Iowa

Lazarus Adua is an Assistant Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology at the University of Northern Iowa. One area of his research interest is local government policy, with a focus on developmental and redistributive policies.  His current work includes examining the extent to which the growth machine drives localities’ enactment and use of austerity and growth-curbing policies. His second research interest is the general area of environmental sociology, with a specific focus on the human dimensions of environment and environmental change.

Read articles by Lazarus Adua.

Kemal Afacan – University of Wisconsin-Madison

Kemal Afacan is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Rehabilitation Psychology and Special Education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He completed his master’s degree in Special Education from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is a former special education teacher who worked at an alternative school serving students with disabilities. His research interests include alternative schools and reading instruction for students with intellectual disability.

Read articles by Kemal Afacan.

Alexandre_afonsoAlexandre Afonso – King’s College London

Alexandre Afonso is Lecturer in Comparative Politics in the Department of Political Economy at King’s College London. His main areas of research are welfare state reforms, labour market policies, labour migration policies and the role of parties and organized interests in these domains. Twitter @alexandreafonso

Read articles by Alexandre Afonso.

Whitney Afonso 80x108Whitney B. Afonso – University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Dr. Whitney Afonso is an Associate Professor at the School of Government at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  Her research focuses on state and local public finance and has been published or is forthcoming in journals such as Public Budgeting & Finance, Public Finance Review, Public Administration Review, Journal of Public Policy, State and Local Government Review, and Contemporary Economic Policy.  Her article, “Leviathan or Flypaper: Earmarked Local Sales Taxes for Transportation,” received the Burkhead Award for best article published in Public Budgeting & Finance in 2015. Afonso earned a BA in political science from Vanderbilt University, and an MA in economics and PhD in public administration and policy from the University of Georgia.

Read articles by Whitney B. Afonso.

Alexander Agadjanian – UC Berkeley

Alexander Agadjanian is a political science PhD student at UC Berkeley. Before this, he worked at the MIT Election Lab for two years after graduating from Dartmouth College. He studies political psychology, political behavior, and race and politics, and his research has been published in Political Behavior, Political Communication, and Research & Politics.

Read articles by Alexander Agadjanian.

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Ajay Agrawal 80x108Ajay K. Agrawal – University of Toronto

Ajay Agrawal is the Peter Munk Professor of Entrepreneurship at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto, Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, MA, and co-founder of The Next 36. His research is focused on the economics of innovation, creativity, and entrepreneurship.

Read articles by Ajay K. Agrawal.

David Agrawal 80x18David R. AgrawalUniversity of Kentucky

David R. Agrawal is an Assistant Professor in the Martin School of Public Policy & Administration and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Kentucky. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Michigan. His research focuses on public economics with an emphasis on taxation, fiscal federalism, and fiscal policy in urban and regional contexts.  David received the Peggy and Richard Musgrave Prize in 2011.

Read articles by David R. Agrawal.

Luis Aguiar – European Commission, Joint Research Center

Luis Aguiar is an economist and a research fellow at the European Commission’s Joint Research Center in Seville, Spain. His main research interests are empirical industrial organisation and the economics of digitisation, with a particular focus on the effects of technological change on firms, consumers, markets, and welfare.

Read articles by Luis Aguiar.

Rodrigo Aguilera

Rodrigo Aguilera is a Mexican-born, London-based economist who has worked as an international economist for Chatham House and the Economist Intelligence Unit, where he was the lead analyst for Mexico from 2012 to 2017 (as well as covering other countries such as Chile, Peru, and Venezuela). Rodrigo holds a BSc in Economics from Universidad de las Américas-Puebla and an MSc in Social Policy and Development from LSE.

Read articles by Rodrigo Aguilera.

Mary Ahearn 80x108Mary Clare AhearnSenior Economic Consultant and Editor of the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association’ Choices publication

Mary Clare Ahearn was previously an Agricultural Economist with the United States Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service. Her primary areas of expertise are the economic well-being of farm operators and their households, the structure and the performance of the agricultural sector, and policies affecting structure and well-being. She also has experience in valuation of nonmarket goods and services and rural health care.

Read articles by Mary Clare Ahearn.

 

Doug Ahler 80x108Doug Ahler – University of California, Berkeley

Doug Ahler is a Ph.D. candidate in the Charles & Louise Travers Department of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. His dissertation research concerns Americans’ political perceptions of parties, politicians, and peers, with an emphasis on the consequences of misperception for political behavior and democratic accountability.

Read articles by Doug Ahler.

Gabriel Ahlfeldt – LSE Geography and Environment

Gabriel Ahlfeldt is Professor of Urban Economics and Land Development in the LSE’s Department of Geography and Environment and an associate of the Centre for Economic Performance.

Read articles by Gabriel Ahlfeldt.

 

Alireza Ahmadian 80x1081Alireza Ahmadian – SOAS, University of London

Alireza Ahmadian is a PhD student in Global Studies at SOAS University of London. He has a Masters of Arts in international studies and diplomacy from SOAS and a Bachelor of Arts in history from University of British Columbia in Canada. Ahmadian’s work has appeared on forums such as openDemocracy, the Foreign Policy Association Blog, and BBC Persian Blog’s Nazeran Migooyand [Observers say…]. He has also appeared on BBC World News and BBC Persian TV to discuss world affairs.

Read articles by Alireza Ahmadian.

Maliha Ahmed – University of Illinois at Chicago

Maliha Ahmed is a PhD candidate in Economics at the University of Illinois at Chicago and an alumni of University College London.

Read articles by Maliha Ahmed.

 

Ufuk Akcigit – University of Chicago

Ufuk Akcigit is an associate professor in economics, director of graduate placement, and FY19 director of admissions at the University of Chicago. He is also affiliated with the National Bureau of Economic Research, Research, the Centre for Economic Policy Research and Koc University, Istanbul. He has a PhD in economics from MIT.

Read articles by Ufuk Akcigit.

Özlem Akın – Ozyegin University, Turkey

Özlem Akın is an assistant professor of finance at Ozyegin University, Turkey. she has a PhD in finance from Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain.

Read articles by Özlem Akın.

 

Scott Akins 80x108Scott AkinsOregon State University

Scott Akins is an Associate Professor of Sociology in the School of Public Policy at Oregon State University. His research interests include drug use and policy; structural criminology; immigration and crime; and the intersection of disadvantage, ethnicity, and crime. He is currently working on a book on marijuana legalization.

Read articles by Scott Akins.

Cevat Giray Aksoy – European Bank for Reconstruction and Development 

Cevat Giray Aksoy is a principal economist in the office of the chief economist at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development in London, and a research associate at IZA Institute of Labor Economics and at LSE’s Institute of Global Affairs. His main research interests are inequalities in the labour market, female labour supply and economics of fertility. He tweets at @cevatgirayaksoy.

Read articles by Cevat Giray Aksoy.

Ranj Alaaldin (1)

Ranj Alaaldin – Columbia University and LSE

Ranj Alaaldin is a Visiting Scholar at Columbia University and a Doctoral Candidate at the London School of Economics (LSE), where he works on Iraqi history and politics. He has published widely on Iraq and the Middle East and previously worked on the law of armed conflict and the use of force, under the supervision of Judge Sir Professor Christopher Greenwood of the International Court of Justice.

 Read articles by Ranj Alaaldin.

Zachary Albert – Brandeis University

Zachary Albert is an assistant professor in Politics at Brandeis University. His research and teaching focus on political campaigns and public policymaking, especially through the lens of political parties and in an era of increased partisan polarization.

 

Read articles by Zachary Albert.

jonathan-albright-80x108Jonathan Albright – Elon University

Jonathan Albright is a professor, award-nominated data journalist, and researcher in news and media analytics. His work lies at the interface of communication, culture, and technology—focusing on the thematic analysis of online and socially-mediated news events, creative data-driven journalistic methods, and informational visual storytelling. His work has been featured on Medium, The Huffington Post, The Conversation, and the LSE Impact Blog. He can be found on Twitter @d1gi

Read articles by Jonathan Albright.

Derek Alderman 80x08Derek AldermanUniversity of Tennessee

Derek Alderman (@MLKStreet) is Professor and Head of the Department of Geography at the University of Tennessee.  He specializes in the study of racism, civil rights, African American agency, and the historical and contemporary role of space and place within US race relations and social justice campaigns.

Read articles by Derek Alderman.

Rachel Aleks – University of Windsor, Canada

Rachel Aleks is an Assistant Professor of Management and Labour Studies at the Odette School of Business, University of Windsor, Canada. Her research interests include innovative union organizing strategies, gender dynamics within unions, and sexual harassment.

Read articles by Rachel Aleks.

Brian Alexander – Washington and Lee University

Brian Alexander is an Assistant Professor of Politics at Washington and Lee University, where he teaches courses in US government and international relations, combining nearly twenty years professional experience in government and politics with research and academic study. Brian’s research is focused on the U.S. Congress and areas such as legislative norms, parliamentary procedure, and bicameral relations.

Read articles by Brian Alexander.

Carlos Algara – University of California, Davis

Carlos Algara is a doctoral candidate in political science at the University of California, Davis. His research focuses on the nature of legislative representation and behavior, the electoral process, mass public opinion, and latent variable measurement methods. His website can be found at: https://calgara.github.io. 

Read articles by Carlos Algara.

Mona Ali 80x108Mona Ali State University of New York at New Paltz

Mona Ali is an assistant professor of economics at the State University of New York at New Paltz. She teaches courses in international trade and finance, multinational corporations, and asymmetries in the global economy. Her research centers on understanding the place and privilege of the US in the global economy. At present, she is working on a long-run study comparing US and UK balance of payments and its implications for monetary hegemony and hegemonic transition.

Read articles by Mona Ali.

Marcus Allen 80x108Marcus D. AllenCity University of New York

Marcus D. Allen is Professor in the Department of Political Science and Urban Studies at CUNY, Stella and Charles Guttman Community College.  His research interests include college textbook diversity and race and politics.

Read articles by Marcus D. Allen.

 

Natalie N Allen 80x108Natalie Allen – The Atlantic

Natalie Allen received her MSc in Conflict Studies from the London School of Economics in 2014. While pursuing her degree, she also worked as an Assistant Editor on the LSE’s USAPP blog. A 2013 graduate of Vassar College, Natalie is currently working as a production coordinator on the live events team for The Atlantic. She tweets at @nnallen on conflict, feminism, and Latin America.

Read articles by Natalie Allen.

ryan-allen-80x108Ryan Allen – University of Minnesota

Ryan Allen is an associate professor of community and economic development at the University of Minnesota. His research focuses on the community and economic development processes of immigrants in the United States.  Recently, he has focused on how households have responded to the foreclosure crisis as well as how the foreclosure crisis has affected neighborhood quality in the U.S.  He is also interested in immigrant home ownership and entrepreneurship.

Read articles by Ryan Allen.

Teresa Almeida – LSE The Inclusion Initiative

Teresa Almeida is a research officer at LSE’s The Inclusion Initiative. She has run B2B campaigns across some of the largest enterprise businesses in the area of information and communication technology. Teresa is fascinated with the world of behavioural science and decision-making, with an emphasis on applying insight to deliver tangible results. She is also an MSc student in behavioural science at LSE.

Read articles by Teresa Almeida. 

James Alm 80x108James Alm – Tulane University

James Alm is Chair of the Department of Economics at Tulane University. His teaching and research are in the area of public economics, in such areas as tax compliance, the tax treatment of the family, income reporting, and tax reform. He has also worked extensively on fiscal and decentralization reforms overseas. 

Read articles by James Alm.

Gregorio Alonso – University of Leeds

Dr Gregorio Alonso is Lecturer in Spanish History for the School of Languages, Cultures, and Societies at the University of Leeds. His research ranges from the study of political and religious conflicts in Modern Europe and Latin America to the making of the liberal and the Catholic traditions during the nineteenth Century. He is interested in the political, cultural and religious aspects of Modernity in comparative perspective. His is the author of La nación en capilla: Ciudadanía Católica y cuestión religiosa en España (Comares: 2014) and co-editor of Londres y el Liberalismo Hispánico (Iberoamericana/Vervuert: 2011). He is currently working on a monograph on the European experiences and contacts of the Latin American Libertadores before, during, and after the independence process.

Read articles by Gregorio Alonso.

Julian M. Alston – University of California-Davis

Julian M. Alston is Distinguished Professor, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California-Davis.

Read articles by Julian M. Alston.

 

Micah Altman – MIT

Dr. Micah Altman is Director of Research and Head/Scientist, Program on Information Science for the MIT Libraries, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  Previously He served as a Non-Resident Senior Fellow at The Brookings Institution, and at Harvard University as the Associate Director of the Harvard-MIT Data Center, Archival Director of the Henry A. Murray Archive, and Senior Research Scientist in the Institute for Quantitative Social Sciences. He conducts work primarily in the fields of social science, information privacy, information science and research methods, and statistical computation — focusing on the intersections of information, technology, privacy, and politics; and on the dissemination, preservation, reliability and governance of scientific knowledge.

Read articles by Micah Altman.

Duane Alwin 80x108Duane F. Alwin – Pennsylvania State University

Duane F. Alwin is the inaugural holder of the Tracy Winfree and Ted H. McCourtney Professorship in Sociology, and Director of the Center for Life Course and Longitudinal Studies, College of the Liberal Arts, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pa. He is also Emeritus Research Professor at the Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, and Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. In addition to the study of political attitudes and behavior, his interests include social stratification, family and the life course. 

Read articles by Duane F. Alwin.

R. Michael Alvarez – Caltech

Dr. R. Michael Alvarez is Professor of Political Science at Caltech, and the Co-Director of the Caltech/MIT Voting Technology Project.  He currently is co-editor of Political Analysis, and is a Fellow of the Society for Political Methodology.

Read articles by R. Michael Alvarez.

Pedro Alviola 80x108Pedro A. Alviola, IVUniversity of the Philippines Mindanao

Pedro A. Alviola, IV is an associate professor in the School of Management & College of Science and Mathematics and was formerly a research associate in the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture.

Read articles by Pedro A. Alviola, IV.

 

Stephen Amberg 80x108Stephen AmbergUniversity of Texas at San Antonio

Stephen Amberg is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science & Geography at UTSA.  His area of specialization is American Political Development, Comparative Political Economy, the Regulation of Work and Popular Participation in Politics.

Read articles by Stephen Amberg.

Brent Ambrose 80x108Brent Ambrose – Pennsylvania State University

Brent W. Ambrose is the Smeal Professor of Real Estate, and Director of the Institute for Real Estate Studies at the Smeal College of Business at the Pennsylvania State University.  He specializes in real estate finance, corporate finance, and fixed income security analysis.  His research interests include issues related to Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), loss mitigation programs associated with mortgage default and foreclosure, Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs), fixed-income securities, and consumer credit contracts.

Read articles by Brent Ambrose.

Vito Amendolagine – University of Foggia

Vito Amendolagine is Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Foggia’s Department of Economics. His research is focused on international trade and development economics, with particular attention to foreign direct investments and cross-national technological transfers. He has an MSc in economics and econometrics from the University of Essex, a PhD in economics from the University of Bari, and a PhD in economics from the University of Glasgow. He has working experience with UNIDO, LSE, Johns Hopkins University, and the Universities of Aalborg, Bari, and Pavia.

Read articles by Vito Amendolagine.

Michael Amior 80x108

Michael Amior LSE Centre for Economic Performance

Michael Amior is a Research Officer at the Centre for Economic Performance at LSE. His research interests include Labour, Migration, Education, Housing, and Urban Economics.

Read articles by Michael Amior.

 

Mary Amiti – Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Mary Amiti is an assistant vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Prior to joining the Bank, she held positions at the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, the University of Melbourne, and the University of Pompeu Fabra. She graduated with a PhD in economics from LSE in 1997, with a specialisation in international trade. Her research interests include trade finance, the effects of trade liberalisation on productivity, wages, the wage skill premium, and product quality.

Read articles by Mary Amiti._

Brian Y. An – Georgia Institute of Technology

Brian Y. An, PhD, is an assistant professor in the School of Public Policy at the Georgia Institute of Technology. His research examines how governance design and institutional choice affect policy and management processes and outcomes at all levels, from local and regional organizations to national governments across the globe. At Georgia Tech, he leads the Urban Research Group. He also co-leads the Pandemic Governance Research Group—a multi-institution and international team. 

Read articles by Brian Y. An.


Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes 80x108Catalina Amueda-Dorantes
 – San Diego State University

Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes is a Professor at the Department of Economics, San Diego State University, California. Her primary research area is labor economics, with a focus on contingent work, immigration policy, undocumented immigrants and remittances.

Read articles by Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes.

Divya Anantharaman – Rutgers Business School

Divya Anantharaman is an associate professor at Rutgers Business School.

Read articles by Divya Anantharaman.

 

l-jason-anastasopoulos-80x108L. Jason Anastasopoulos – University of Georgia

L. Jason Anastasopoulos is Assistant Professor in the departments of Public Administration and Policyand Political Scienceat the University of Georgia. His research interests include understanding how business interests affect policymaking processes at the state and federal levels of government in the US, understanding the roots of collective and religious violence internationally and how gender and race influence political processes among political actors in the US.

Read articles by L. Jason Anastasopoulos.

Patrick Andelic 80x108Patrick Andelic Rothermere American Institute, Corpus Christi College, Oxford

Patrick Andelic is a Research Associate at the Rothermere American Institute and a Teaching Assistant at Queen Mary University of London. He completed his D.Phil. in 2015. His research focuses on liberalism within the Democratic Party in the 1970s and 1980s.

Read articles by Patrick Andelic.

 

Dave Andersen 80x108David Andersen – Iowa State University

David Andersen is an assistant professor at Iowa State University. His research focuses on how people learn about politics and political candidates, focusing on how psychological limitations on attention and memory can constrain our democratic process. He also studies the nations’ governors and how the state-level executive functions differently than the president. 

Read articles by David Andersen.

Bill Anderson 80x108Bill Anderson – University of Windsor

Bill Anderson is the Ontario Research Chair in Cross-Border Transportation Policy at the University of Windsor. An economic geographer, his interests include transportation policy, regional economic development and the Canada-US border. His recent reportThe Border and the Ontario Economy  gives an overview of economic issues related to the border. His textbook Economic Geography was published by Routledge in 2012.

Read articles by Bill Anderson.

Patricia Anderson 80x108Patricia M. AndersonDartmouth College

Patricia M. Anderson is Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Her research interests fall broadly in the field of applied microeconomics, with specific interests in child health and nutrition and in social insurance programs.

Read articles by Patricia M. Anderson.

Sarah-Anderson-80x108Sarah E. Anderson – University of California, Santa Barbara

Sarah E. Anderson is an Assistant Professor at the Bren School of Environmental Science & Management and the Department of Political Science at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her research interests include the role of political parties, bureaucratic delegation, and environmental politics.

Read articles by Sarah E. Anderson.

Simon P. Anderson – University of Virginia

Simon P. Anderson’s field of research is microeconomics, industrial organisation and media economics. He has published in several top-ranked journals like American Economic ReviewEconometrica, Journal of Political Economy and Review of Economics Studies.

Read articles  by Simon P. Anderson.

Eva Andersson 80x108Eva AnderssonStockholm University, Sweden

Evan Andersson is an Associate Professor in Human Geography at Stockholm University. The main themes of her research are residential segregation and neighborhood effects on socio-economic careers.

Read articles by Eva Andersson.

Abigail Andrews 80x108Abigail Andrews – University of California – San Diego

Abigail Andrews is an Assistant Professor of Sociology and a faculty member in the Urban Studies and Planning Program at the University of California, San Diego. She studies the politics of migration, development, and gender, and the interrelationships between Mexico and the United States. She can be found at http://abigailandrews.com.

Read articles by Abigail Andrews.

Ron Angel 80x108Ron Angel – University of Texas at Austin

Ron Angel is a Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Texas at Austin. His research interests encompass the areas of medical sociology, social welfare, poverty and minorities, demography and epidemiology, research methods and statistics.

Read articles by Ron Angel.

Davide Angelucci – University of Siena

Davide Angelucci is a PhD student at the University of Siena and Research Fellow at CISE, LUISS – Guido Carli. His research interests focus on European politics, political behaviour and political participation. He has recently worked on the politicisation of European foreign and security policy. He is currently working on youth and political inequalities in Europe.

Read articles by Davide Angelucci.

Nikolay AnguelovUniversity of Massachusetts, Dartmouth

Dr. Nikolay Anguelov is an Assistant Professor in the department of Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth. He has a Ph.D. in Policy Studies with a focus on Rural and Regional Economic Development from Clemson University.  His research is interdisciplinary with a focus on international trade and diplomacy. His last two books are Economic Sanctions vs. Soft Power: Lessons from North Korea, Myanmar and the Middle East and The Dirty Side of the Garment Industry: Fast Fashion and Its Negative Impact on Environment and Society .

Read articles by Nikolay Anguelov.

Mark Anner 80x108Mark Anner – Penn State

Mark Anner is an Associate Professor of Labor and Employment Relations, and Political Science, and he is the Director of the Center for Global Workers’ Rights. His research examines freedom of association and corporate social responsibility, labor law reform and enforcement, and workers’ rights in apparel global value chains in Central America and Vietnam.

Read articles by Mark Anner.

Ian G. Anson – UMBC

Ian G. Anson is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at UMBC. Ian’s recent publications focus on partisan misperceptions, media and politics, and the scholarship of teaching and learning.

Read articles by Ian Anson.

 

Nadine Ansorg – University of Kent

Dr Nadine Ansorg is a Senior Lecturer in International Conflict Analysis and a Research Fellow at the GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies in Hamburg. Nadine’s research focuses in institutional reform in post-conflict societies, in particular security sector reform, the role of international state and non-state actors in these reform processes, and the conditions for establishing peace in divided and post-conflict societies.

Read articles by Nadine Ansorg.

Michel AntebyMichel Anteby – Boston University

Michel Anteby is an associate professor of organisational behaviour at Boston University’s Questrom School of Business. His research looks at how people relate to their work, their occupations, and the organisations they belong to. He received a joint Ph.D. in management from New York University and in sociology from EHESS (France).

Read articles by Michel Anteby.

Alexis Antoniades – Georgetown University in Qatar

Alexis Antoniades is an associate professor and director of international economics at Georgetown University in Qatar. He is an expert on understanding global markets and on the economies of the Gulf countries. Antoniades previously worked as an assistant economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, was awarded a $1,050,000 research grant (2009-2012) by the Qatar National Research Fund to undertake the first micro-study on the economies of the Gulf countries, and a $867,000 research grant to use social media and analyse sentiment in the Arab World (2014-2017) in collaboration with colleagues from Qatar University.

Read articles by Alexis Antoniades.

António Antunes – Banco de Portugal

António Antunes holds a degree in telecommunications engineering from Instituto Superior Técnico, Portugal, and a PhD in economics from Nova SBE, Portugal. Since 2002 he has worked at Banco de Portugal’s economics and research department, where he currently serves as deputy head. He has been a member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the ECB since 2014. António’s research interests include empirical and quantitative macro and financial intermediation. His research has been published widely.

Read articles by António Antunes.

Sarah Anzia – University of California, Berkeley

Sarah Anzia is the Michelle J. Schwartz Associate Professor of Public Policy and Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. She is also a Senior Fellow at the Niskanen Center and faculty director of the Berkeley Institute for Young Americans. She is the author of Timing and Turnout: How Off-Cycle Elections Favor Organized Groups (University of Chicago Press, 2014).

Read articles by Sarah Anzia.

Paul Apostolidis – LSE Government

Paul Apostolidis is the author of Breaks in the Chain: What Immigrant Workers Can Teach America about Democracy (University of Minnesota Press 2010) and The Fight for Time: Migrant Day Laborers and the Politics of Precarity (Oxford University Press 2019). He is Professorial Lecturer in the Government Department of the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Read articles by Paul Apostolidis. 

Ruth Elisabeth Appel – Stanford University

Ruth Elisabeth Appel is a PhD student at Stanford University’s department of communication, focusing on media psychology. She received a master’s in public policy from Sciences Po Paris and a B.Sc. in economics from the University of Mannheim. She is interested in the intersection of behavioural science and computer science, with the aim of leveraging psychological targeting ethically and for the common good. She is particularly passionate about encouraging prosocial behaviour and political participation and promoting wellbeing and mental health.

Read articles by Ruth Elisabeth Appel.

Steven Appold 80x108Stephen Appold – The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Stephen Appold is at the Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise, Kenan-Flagler Business School, at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. His research interests include airport cities and the spatial structure of contemporary cities.

Read articles by Stephen Appold.

Scott Aquanno – Ontario Tech University

Scott Aquanno is an assistant professor of political science at Ontario Tech University.

Read articles by Scott Aquanno.

 

Diego Acosta Arcarazo 80x108Diego Acosta ArcarazoUniversity of Bristol

Diego Acosta Arcarazo is a Lecturer in European Law at the University of Bristol. He was previously Lecturer in Law at the University of Sheffield and holds a PhD in European Law from Kings College London. His area of expertise is EU Migration Law and he is currently interested in migration law and policies in South America and in the process of construction of a South American citizenship.

Read articles by Diego Acosta Arcarazo.

Kevin Arceneaux 80x108Kevin Arceneaux – Temple University

Kevin Arceneaux is Professor of Political Science, Faculty Affiliate with the Institute for Public Affairs, and Director of the Behavioral Foundations Lab at Temple University. He studies political communication, political psychology, and political behavior, focusing on the interaction between political messages and people’s political predispositions.   His recent book, Changing Minds or Changing Channels: Partisan News in an Age of Choice (2013, University of Chicago Press, co-authored with Martin Johnson) employs novel experimental methods to investigate how human agency shapes the influence of political media.  It was co-winner of the 2014 Goldsmith Book Prize awarded by the Harvard Kennedy School Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics, and Public Policy.  He has published articles on the influence of partisan campaigns on voting behavior, the effects of predispositions on attitude formation, the role of human biology in explaining individual variation in predispositions, and experimental methodology.

Read articles by Kevin Arceneaux.

Greig Arendt 80x108Greig Arendt

Greig Arendt is a former lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps. He currently works in the financial sector.

Read articles by Greig Arendt.

 

Rabah Arezki – World Bank

Rabah Arezki is the chief economist for the Middle East and North Africa Region (MNA) at the World Bank. Previously, he was the chief of the Commodities Unit in the Research Department at the International Monetary Fund. He also was a senior fellow at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, a non-resident fellow at the Brookings Institution, an external research associate at the University of Oxford, a resource person for the African Economic Research Consortium and a research fellow at the Economic Research Forum.

Read articles by Rabah Arezki.

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Gizem Arikan 80x108Gizem Arikan – Yasar University

Gizem Arikan is Associate Professor at the Department of International Relations at Yasar University, Izmir, Turkey. Her research focuses on the effects of religiosity and values on public opinion, and particularly on attitudes towards democracy, redistribution, and immigration policy.

Read articles by Gizem Arikan.

Miles T. Armaly – University of Mississippi

Miles T. Armaly is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Mississippi. His research focuses polarization and mass attitudes toward the US Supreme Court.

Read articles by Miles T. Armaly.

 

Felipe Fernandez-Armesto 80x108Felipe Fernandez-Armesto – University of Notre Dame

Felipe Fernandez-Armesto is the William P. Reynolds Professor of History at the University of Notre Dame. His teaching interests include: Spanish history and the history of late medieval and early modern colonial societies, with some special attention to cartography, maritime subjects, exploration, and cultural exchanges. In recent years, he has made contributions to global history, understood as the study of genuinely global experiences, and to environmental history, especially on a global scale. He has had visiting appointments at many universities and research institutes in Europe and the Americas, and has honorary doctorates from la Trobe University and the Universidad de los Andes. Among other distinctions, he has won the John Carter Brown Medal, the Caird Medal of the National Maritime Museum (UK), the Premio Nacional a Investigacion of the Sociedad Geografica Espanola, Soain’s Premio Nacional de Grastonomia for his history of food, and the Tercentenary Medal of the Society of Antiquaries of London. His most recent book is Our America: A Hispanic history of the United States(W.W Norton, 2014).

Read articles by Felipe Fernandez-Armesto.

J Scott Armstrong 80x108J.Scott Armstrong – Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania

J. Scott Armstrong is a Professor of Marketing at the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania. His research interests include, forecasting, marketing, strategic planning, public policy and organizational behavior. He is a co-founder of the Journal of Forecasting,  International Journal of Forecasting,  International Institute of Forecasters,International Symposium on Forecasting, and PollyVote.com.

Read articles by J. Scott Armstrong.

Nicky Armstrong – LSE Global Health Initiative and Latin America Centre

Nicky Armstrong (@NickyArmstrong0) works in communications for both the Global Health Initiative and the Latin America and Caribbean Centre at the LSE. Nicky also works with PEN focusing on the freedom of speech and has a background in International Relations with a focus on US foreign policy and American exceptionalism.

Read articles by Nicky Armstrong.

Maneesh Arora – University of California, Irvine

Maneesh Arora is a PhD candidate in political science at the University of California, Irvine. His research agenda is at the intersection of racial and ethnic politics, public opinion, and political psychology. His articles have been published in Political Research QuarterlyPolitics Groups and IdentitiesJournal of Education and Social Policy, and the Washington Post’s Monkey Cage.

Read articles by Maneesh Arora.

Kara A. Arnold – Memorial University

Kara A. Arnold is a professor of organisational behaviour and human resource management at Memorial University in St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada. Her research focuses on gender and diversity in organisations and the relationships of various psychosocial factors to employee and leader well-being.

Read articles by Kara A. Arnold.

hadas-aron-80x108Hadas AronColumbia University

Hadas Aron is a PhD Candidate in Political Science at Columbia University. Her research focuses on right wing populism and nationalism with a regional focus on Eastern Europe, the United States, and Israel. She held visiting appointments at the Central European University and the Hungarian Academy of Science. Aron blogs at Commenting Together.

Read articles by Hadas Aron.

Mara S. Aruguete – Lincoln University of Missouri.

Mara S. Aruguete is a professor of Psychology at Lincoln University of Missouri. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of California, Davis in 1994. Her research interests focus on improving educational outcomes in disadvantaged populations.

Read articles by Mara S. Aruguete.

Miqdad Asaria – LSE Health Policy

Miqdad Asaria is an assistant professorial research fellow at LSE’s Department of Health Policy. He is a health economist with extensive experience in both academic and policymaking settings. His research interests include health inequalities, health financing, healthcare prioritisation and healthcare management with a particular focus on the health systems in India and the UK.

Read articles by Miqdad Asaria.

Ivan Ash 80x108Ivan K. Ash – Old Dominion University

Ivan K. Ash is Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology, Old Dominion University.

Read articles by Ivan K. Ash.

 

Lila Asher – University of Manitoba

Lila Asher (she/her) is a Master’s student in City Planning at the University of Manitoba. Her main research interest is climate adaptation in frontline communities. You can find Lila’s previous publications at lilaasher.bitbucket.io.

Read articles by Lila Asher.

Nigel Ashton – LSE International History

Nigel Ashton is Professor of International History at the LSE.

Read articles by Nigel Ashton.

 

Sarah Ashwin – LSE Department of Management

Sarah Ashwin is professor of comparative employment relations in LSE’s department of management. She is currently researching the governance of global supply chains in the garment industry. The stakeholder report can be found here. Her previous research includes projects on workers’ responses to economic reform in Russia, and gendered power relations in Russia. Professor Ashwin is a member of the editorial board of Gender & Society and on the advisory board of the British Journal of Industrial Relations.

Read articles by Sarah Ashwin.

Mark Aspinwall 80x108Mark Aspinwall – University of Edinburgh

Mark Aspinwall is Professor of Politics at the University of Edinburgh. He is currently working in Mexico City on research leave.

Read articles by Mark Aspinwall.

 

Tohid Atashbar – International Monetary Fund (IMF)

Tohid Atashbar is an economist at the macro-policy division of the Strategy, Policy and Review (SPR) department of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). He has published on a variety of topics in monetary policies, AI economics, and poverty alleviation.

Read articles by Tohid Atashbar.

 

Sina Ates – Federal Reserve Board

Sina Ates is a Senior Economist economist in the Emerging Market Economies Section of the Federal Reserve Board.

Read articles by Sina Ates.


Cerelia Athanassiou – 
GnosisLearning
Cerelia Athanassiou works for GnosisLearning, a global provider of practical learning solutions in Finance, Management Strategies and Compliance, where she consults on business development and quality control of training resources. She has a PhD in International Relations from The University of Bristol specialising in discourse theory and US Foreign Policy.

Read articles by Cerelia Athanassiou.

 

Michelle Atherton 80x108Michelle J. Atherton- Temple University

Michelle J. Atherton is the associate director of the Institute for Public Affairs at Temple University and the senior policy writer and editor at its Center on Regional Politics. She has authored and co-authored white papers on such topics as municipal government, legislative reform in Pennsylvania, education policy and finance, and public pensions, and co-authored articles in State Politics and Policy Quarterly and State and Local Government Review. Atherton also co-edited a volume of Commonwealth: A Journal of Pennsylvania Politics and Policy where she serves as an associate editor.

Read articles by Michelle J. Atherton.

 

Lonna Rae Atkeson – University of New Mexico

Dr. Lonna Rae Atkeson is a professor and Regents’ Lecturer in the Department of Political Science at the University of New Mexico where she also directs the Center for the Study of Voting, Elections and Democracy.  Professor Atkeson is a nationally recognized expert in the area of elections, election administration, survey methodology, public opinion, and political behavior and has written extensively in these areas.  Most recently she published Evaluating Elections: Tools for Improvement (2013: Cambridge) with R. Michael Alvarez and Thad Hall and Catastrophe Politics:  Public Opinion and How Extraordinary Events Redefine Perceptions of Government (2012, Cambridge) with Cherie Meastas.

Read articles by Lonna Rae Atkeson.

Danielle Atkins 80x108

Danielle N. Atkins – University of Tennessee

Danielle N. Atkins is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Tennessee.  She studies reproductive health policy, representative bureaucracy, and education policy.  Her research appears in Journal of Public Administration Research and TheoryPublic Management ReviewPerspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, and Contemporary Economic Policy.

Read articles by Danielle N. Atkins.

Matthew D. Atkinson – Long Beach City College

Matthew D. Atkinson is an assistant professor of political science at Long Beach City College.

Read articles by Matthew D. Atkinson.

 

Kafui Attoh – City University of New York

Kafui Attoh is an Assistant Professor of Urban Studies at the City University of New York’s Joseph S. Murphy Institute for Worker Education and Labor Studies. His broad interests are in the political economy of cities, urban mass transit, and “rights-based” social struggles. His work has appeared in Progress in Human Geography, New Labor Forum, The Journal of Cultural Geography, The Geographical Bulletin, Alternate Routes: A Journal of Critical Social Research, ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, Urban Studies, Antipode and Space and Polity.

Read articles by Kafui Attoh.

 

Andre P. Audette – Monmouth College

Andre P. Audette is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Monmouth College. He researches and teaches courses about religion and politics, law, identity politics, and political behaviour.

 

Read articles by Andre P. Audette.

Mauricio Avendano 80x108Mauricio Avendano – LSE Health and Social Care

Mauricio Avendano is Principal Research Fellow at LSE Health and Social Care. He is an epidemiologist with an interest in the causal impact of social and economic policies on health from a cross-national comparative perspective. He has been closely involved in the design and coordination of the health module of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE), a comparative study of 18 countries examining the links between health and the social and economic dimensions of life.

Read articles by Mauricio Avendano.

James Avery – Stockton University

James M. Avery is associate professor of Political Science at Stockton University. 

Read articles by James M. Avery.

 

Paul Avery 80x108Paul Avey- Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Paul Avey is a Stanton Nuclear Security Fellow in the Security Studies Program at MIT. He is working on a book project that explores why states without nuclear weapons challenge and resist nuclear armed opponents. In addition to nuclear politics, Paul’s research interests center on foreign policy and international relations theory.

Read articles by Paul Avey.

Sonja AvlijasSonja Avlijaš – LSE / Sciences Po

Sonja Avlijaš holds a PhD in political economy from the LSE’s European Institute and is an affiliate of the Laboratory for Interdisciplinary Evaluation of Public Policies (LIEPP) at Sciences Po, Paris.

Read articles by Sonja Avlijaš.

Richard Avramenko 80x108Richard Avramenko – University of Wisconsin

Richard Avramenko is an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin. His main areas of interest are ancient and continental political thought.

Read articles by Richard Avramenko.

Nisa Yazici Aydemir –– Middle Eastern Technical University

Nisa Yazici Aydemir is an adjunct instructor in the Department of Political Science and Public Administration at Middle Eastern Technical University in Turkey. Her research focuses on local fiscal policy-making process, information use and decision-making in government, public performance management and science and technology policies. She has published in State and Local Government Review. 

Read articles by Nisa Yazici Aydemir.

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Jennifer Ayscue 80x108Jennifer Ayscue University of California, Los Angeles

Jennifer Ayscue is a doctoral candidate in the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies at University of California, Los Angeles and a research associate at the Civil Rights Project/Proyecto Derechos Civiles.

Read articles by Jennifer Ayscue.

Julia Azari – Marquette University

Prof. Julia Azari is Associate Professor and Assistant Chair in the Department of Political Science at Marquette University. She holds Ph.D., M.A. and M.Phil. degrees in political science from Yale University, and a B.A. in political science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her research and teaching interests include the American presidency, American political parties, the politics of the American state, and qualitative research methods.

Read articles by Julia Azari.

Lauren Azevedo – Penn State Harrisburg

Lauren Azevedo is an Assistant Professor in the School of Public Affairs at Penn State Harrisburg. Her research focuses on nonprofits, leadership, social equity, crisis response, and capacity building. Her recent work examines equitable decision-making and equitable funding distribution.

Read articles by Lauren Azevedo.

 

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Ghazala Azmat 80x108Ghazala Azmat – Queen Mary University, London

Ghazala Azmat is a Reader (Associate Professor) of Economics at Queen Mary University of London. She is also a Research Associate at the Centre for Economic Performance (CEP) at the London School of Economics and a Research Fellow at CESIFO (University of Munich). Her main research interests are in applied and empirical microeconomics. Her research focuses on issues relating to competition, incentives and organizational structure, as well as on topics in labor, education and public economics.

Read articles by Ghazala Azmat.

Marina Azzimonti 80x108

Marina Azzimonti – Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

Marina Azzimonti is a Senior Economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. She works at the intersection of macroeconomics and political economy, with particular emphasis on dynamic public finance and the effects of polarization on the economy.

Read articles by Marina Azzimonti.

Leonardo Baccini – McGill University

Leonardo Baccini is an Associate Professor in the Political Science Department at McGill University and a Research Fellow at CIREQ. He is a National Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University in the 2020-21 academic year. His research interests are in the area of international political economy and comparative political economy.

Read articles by Leonardo Baccini.

Joseph Bafumi 80x108Joseph Bafumi– Dartmouth College

Joseph Bafumi is an Associate Professor of Government at Dartmouth College.

Read articles by Joseph Bafumi.

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Tanya Bagashka 80x108Tanya Bagashka – University of Houston

Tanya Bagashka is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Houston.  Her primary areas of research interest include comparative institutions, corruption, and post-communist politics. 

Read articles by Tanya Bagashka.

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Jeremy Bailey 80x108Jeremy D. Bailey – University of Houston

Jeremy D. Bailey is Associate Professor at the University of Houston, where he holds a dual appointment in the Department of Political Science and the Honors College.  He is the author of Thomas Jefferson and Executive Power (Cambridge University Press 2007), and coauthor of The Contested Removal Power, 1789-2010 (University Press of Kansas, 2013). He is co-director co-director of the Presidential Proclamations Project.

Read articles by Jeremy D. Bailey.
Martha-J-Bailey-80x108Martha J. Bailey- University of Michigan

Martha J. Bailey is an Associate Professor of Economics and a Research Associate Professor at the Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan. She is also a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Her research focuses on issues in labor economics, demography and health in the United States, within the long-run perspective of economic history.

Read articles by Martha J. Bailey.

Melissa N. Baker – University of Toronto

Melissa N. Baker is a Postdoctoral Associate at the University of Toronto in the Policy, Elections, and Representation Lab (PEARL) associated with the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy and the Department of Political Science and incoming assistant professor at the University of Texas at El Paso. She studies political psychology with a focus on political cognition and public opinion. Her research has been published in political science, psychology, and biology journals. 

Read articles by Melissa N. Baker.

Michael Bailey 80x108Michael Bailey Georgetown University

Michael Bailey is the Colonel William J. Walsh Professor of American Government in the Department of Government and the McCourt School of Public Policy at Georgetown University. His research interests include campaign finance, relation of Supreme Court to Congress and the Executive, and interstate competition on social policy.

Read articles by Michael Bailey.

Dimitrios Bakas – Nottingham Business School

Dimitrios Bakas is a Lecturer/Senior Lecturer at Nottingham Business School. Dimitrios’ teaching interests are in the fields of macroeconomics, econometrics and international finance at undergraduate and postgraduate level.

Read articles by Dimitrios Bakas.

Andy Baker 80x108Andy Baker – University of Colorado-Boulder

Andy Baker is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Colorado-Boulder. He is the author of The Market and the Masses in Latin America and Shaping the Developing World.

Read articles by Andy Baker.

Travis Baker 80x108Travis J. Baker – UCLA

Travis Baker is a Ph.D. Candidate in political science at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He studies the nature and origins of polarization and gridlock in American politics. More broadly, he is interested in the relationships between chief executives, legislatures, and the electorate.

Read articles by Travis J. Baker.

Scott Baker 80x108Scott R. Baker – Northwestern University

Scott Ross Baker is an Assistant Professor of Finance in the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. His research is concentrated in empirical finance and macroeconomics. Recent work examines the impact of household leverage and credit constraints in driving sensitivity to both income and asset shocks.

Read articles  by Scott R. Baker.

Thomas Baker 80x108Thomas BakerUniversity of Central Florida

Thomas Baker is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice at the University of Central Florida. His primary research interests focus on corrections with an emphasis on understanding the attitudes of correctional officers and inmates. Thomas also has research interests in criminal justice policy, especially correctional policy, and life-course criminology. His most recent work can be found in Law & Society Review, Criminology, Justice Quarterly, and Criminal Justice Policy Review.

Read articles by Thomas Baker.

Maryia BakhtsiyaravaUniversity of Minnesota

Maryia Bakhtsiyarava is a PhD student at the Department of Geography, Environment and Society at the University of Minnesota and a Doctoral Trainee in Population Studies at the Minnesota Population Center. Her research examines how environmental factors affect migration, fertility, and reproductive health outcomes. Her recent research projects examine the effects of climate variability on livelihoods, birth weight, and domestic and international migration in the developing world.

Read articles by Maryia Bakhtsiyarava.

Bert Bakker 80x108Bert Bakker University of Amsterdam

Bert Bakker (@bnbakker) is assistant professor of political communication at the University of Amsterdam. 

Read articles by Bert Bakker.

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Pierre Alexander Balland 80x108Pierre-Alexandre Balland Utrecht University

Pierre-Alexandre Balland is Assistant Professor in Economic Geography at Utrecht University, and research associate at CIRCLE, Lund University. He is fascinated by the mechanisms that lead to the emergence of new ideas and how societies create and exchange knowledge. His work focuses in particular on the persistent role of geographical proximity in a world that seems smaller than ever before.

Read articles by Pierre-Alexandre Balland.

Fabian Bald – University Duisburg-Essen

Fabian Bald is a PhD student in economics at the Mercator School of Management (University Duisburg-Essen, Germany) and the Ruhr Graduate School in Economics.

Read articles by Fabian Bald.

 

William Bales – Florida State University

William D. Bales, Ph.D., is a Professor at Florida State University’s College of Criminology and also a co-Editor of the journal Criminology & Public Policy with Daniel Nagin.  He has published in Criminology, Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, and Justice Quarterly, among other crime and policy journals.

Read articles by William D. Bales.

Kevin Banda 80x108Kevin K. Banda University of Nevada, Reno

Kevin K. Banda is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Nevada, Reno. His research interests include campaigns, elections, public opinion, and political communication. His research has appeared in journals like Public Opinion Quarterly,American Politics Research, and State Politics & Policy Quarterly.

Read articles  by Kevin K. Banda.

Shantanu Banerjee – Lancaster University

Shantanu Banerjee is a professor of finance at Lancaster University. His main research area is empirical corporate finance, with a focus on investment decisions, financing choice, product market strategy, IPO, bankruptcy, executive compensation, and corporate social responsibility.

Read articles by Shantanu Banerjee.

Andris Banka 80x108Andris Banka – University of Birmingham

Andris Banka is a PhD student at the Department of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Birmingham. His research interests include U.S. foreign policy, security, and terrorism.

Read articles by Andris Banka.

Jesus M. Barajas – University of California, Davis

Jesus M. Barajas is an assistant professor of environmental science and policy at the University of California, Davis. His research on transportation equity addresses how systems of inequities influence travel behavior and how policymakers can and should respond.

Read articles by Jesus M. Barajas.

michael-j-barber-80x108Michael J. BarberBrigham Young University

Michael J. Barber is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Brigham Young University. 

Read articles by Michael J. Barber.
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Janos BarberisJanos Barberis – Hong Kong University Law School

Janos Barberis is a Millennial in FinTech, recognized as a top-35 global FinTech leader. His expertise is focused on the new regulatory considerations raised by the development of FinTech. With a passion to drive change, he founded FinTech HK, a thought leadership platform, and the SuperCharger – a FinTech Accelerator that strategically leverages on Hong Kong as a gateway to Asia. In parallel, he sits on the advisory board of the World Economic Forum’s FinTech Committee and is a PhD Candidate at Hong Kong University Law School. Follow Janos on Twitter @JNBarberis

Read articles by Janos Barberis.

Silvia Helena BarcellosUniversity of Southern CaliforniaSilvia Helena Barcellos 80x108

Silvia Helena Barcellos is an Economist at the Center for Economic and Social Research at the University of Southern California. Her research spans a number of areas in health and labor economics: health insurance and financial risk, health insurance literacy, gender/ethnic health disparities and the impacts of immigration on the labor market. Recent work has been published at the American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Health Affairs and American Economic Journal: Applied Economics.

Read articles by Silvia Helena Barcellos.

Chris Barker – The American University in Cairo

Chris Barker teaches the history of political theory at The American University in Cairo. His first book on JS Mill’s liberalism was published by The University of Rochester Press in 2018. His writing on criminal justice, liberalism, and imperialism have appeared in Foreign Affairs, Aeon Magazine, The Public Seminar, The Conversation, Newsweek, The Week, University Affairs, and other outlets.

Read articles by Chris Barker.

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Geoffrey Barnes 80x108Geoffrey C. Barnes – University of Pennsylvania

Geoffrey C. Barnes is a Research Assistant Professor of Criminology at the University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Criminology. He works primarily on field experiments testing the effects of programs and policies on crime and justice outcomes. He has more than two decades of experience working with large and complex data systems, including those of different criminal justice agencies in Australia, England, and the United States.

Read articles by Geoffrey C. Barnes.

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Lucy Barnes 80x108Lucy Barnes – Nuffield College, Oxford

Lucy Barnes is a Prize Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford. Her research focuses on contemporary causes and consequences of inequality and government redistribution in the advanced industrial democracies, and their historical development. She is currently working on a project on the political economy of progressive taxation, and is interested in the implications of the ‘great recession’ on government, policy and inequality.

Read articles by Lucy Barnes.

David Barney – WarnerMedia Applied Analytics

David Barney is a Primary Research Scientist at WarnerMedia Applied Analytics. He conducted this research while earning his M.A. in Political Science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. His research can be found at https://davidjbarney.github.io/.

Read articles by David Barney.

Jeremy Barnum 80x108Jeremy D. Barnum – Rutgers University

Jeremy D. Barnum is a PhD student at Rutgers University School of Criminal Justice and a project manager in the Rutgers Center on Public Security. His research interests include spatial analysis, risk assessment, and police strategy and innovation.

Read articles by Jeremy D. Barnum.

Ashley Barr – State University of New York at Buffalo

Ashley Barr is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the State University of New York at Buffalo. Her research focuses on the social foundations of health and well-being, particularly the role of romantic and family relationships in promoting or impairing health.

Read articles by Ashley Barr.

Jason Barr – Rutgers University-Newark

Jason Barr is a professor at Rutgers University-Newark, department of economics, and an affiliated faculty member with the  Global Urban Systems Ph.D. programme. His research interests include urban economics, and agent-based computational economics. He is the author of Building the Skyline: The Birth and Growth of Manhattan’s Skyscrapers (Oxford U. Press, 2016). He writes the Skynomics Blog, a blog about skyscrapers, cities, and economics.

Read articles by Jason Barr.

David Barrett 80x108David M. Barrett – Villanova University

Dr David M. Barrett is the author most recently of “Blind Over Cuba: The Photo Gap and the Missile Crisis,” co-authored with Max Holland.  He is one of the America’s leading experts on the critical relationship between the United States Congress and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Current hot topic issues such as national security and the United States presidency are other areas of specialty for Barrett. He is also a good source for stories on President Lyndon Baines Johnson’s handling of the Vietnam War.

Read articles by David M. Barrett.

Charles Barrilleaux 80x108Charles Barrilleaux – Florida State University

Charles Barrilleaux is the LeRoy Collins Professor of Political Science at Florida State University. His primary areas of interest are in public policy and U.S. state and local government and politics. His research addresses questions of “who gets what” in politics, focusing on the effects of democratic rules and citizen preferences as explanations for the differences we observe among democracies.

Read articles by Charles Barrilleaux.

Christopher Barrington-Leigh – McGill University

Christopher Barrington-Leigh is an Associate Professor at McGill University, joint between its Institute for Health and Social Policy and the McGill School of Environment, and an Associate Member in McGill’s Department of Economics.

Read articles by Christopher Barrington-Leigh.

Veronica R. Barrios – Montclair State University

Veronica R. Barrios is a doctoral candidate in Family Science and Human Development at Montclair State University, Montclair, NJ. Ms. Barrios’s research foci concerns the nexus of theory, research, and practice regarding intersectionality research; Latino identity integration and development; sexual abuse disclosure; sibling research; and program development and evaluation.

Read articles by Veronica R. Barrios.


Fabrice-Barthelemy-80x108Fabrice Barthelemy- University of Versailles Saint-Quentin-En-Yvelines (France)

Fabrice Barthelemy is Professor of Economics at the University of Versailles Saint-Quentin-En-Yvelines (France). His research focuses on apportionment and power indices. He is also interested in real estate economics and finance.

Read articles by Fabrice Barthelemy.

Stefano Bartolini 80x108Stefano Bartolini – University of Siena

Stefano Bartolini is professor of economics at the University of Siena (Italy). His research focuses on the causes and possible solutions of the increasing poverty of well-being, social capital, time and natural environment in developed and developing countries. He has published extensively on these topics.

Read articles by Stefano Bartolini.

Alexander Barton – University of Utah

Alexander Barton is a master’s student in the Department of City and Metropolitan Planning at the University of Utah. He received a bachelor of geography degree from Brigham Young University, with an emphasis in urban and regional planning and a minor in psychology.

Read articles by Alexander Barton.

Robert Basedow – LSE 

Robert Basedow is a PhD candidate in the International Relations Department at the London School of Economics. His research focuses on the EU’s new international investment policy.

Read articles by Robert Basedow.

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Scott Basinger 80x108Scott Basinger – University of Houston

Scott Basinger is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Houston. His research interests include the scientific study of politics, game theory and American politics.

Read articles by Scott Basinger.

 

Leonardo Basso 80x108Leonardo Basso – Universidad de Chile

Leonardo J. Basso is Associate Professor at the Department of Civil Engineering at the Universidad de Chile.  His areas of research are transport economics and industrial organization. He has a particular interest on air transport, focusing on the industrial economics aspects such as privatization and pricing of airports, industry structure and the economics of frequent flyer programs.

Read articles by Leonardo Basso.

Feras A. Batarseh – George Mason University

Feras A. Batarseh is a research assistant professor with the College of Science at George Mason University (GMU). His research spans the areas of data science, artificial intelligence, and context-aware software systems. Dr. Batarseh obtained his Ph.D. and M.Sc. in computer engineering from the University of Central Florida (UCF) (2007, 2011), and a graduate certificate in project leadership from Cornell University (2016). He is the director of Turing Research, an AI for policy group at GMU. Additionally, Dr. Batarseh published and edited several book chapters.

Read articles by Feras A. Batarseh.

Harald Bathelt 80x108Harald Bathelt – University of Toronto

Harald Bathelt holds the Canada Research Chair in ‘Innovation and Governance’ at the Department of Political Science, University of Toronto, Canada. He is also Professor in the University of Toronto’s Department of Geography and Planning. His research and teaching interests are in the areas of industrial and economic geography, political economy and methodology. Specific areas which provide the focus of my research and teaching activities include the analysis of long-term social and economic development, industrial clustering and the socio-economic impacts of regional and industrial change.

Read articles by Harald Bathelt.

Simon Bastow 80x108Simon Bastow – LSE Public Policy Group

Simon Bastow is a Senior Research Fellow at the LSE Public Policy Group. He recently published a book with Palgrave Macmillan ‘Governance, performance and capacity stress: The chronic case of prison crowding’. He tweets @simonjbastow.

Read articles by Simon Bastow.

Samuel R. Baty – University of Utah

Samuel R. Baty is a fourth-year Ph.D. candidate in the political science department at The University of Utah where he studies public administration and international relations. Sam also currently works as a graduate researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Prior to coming to Utah, Sam received his B.S. with academic honors in mathematics and economics from the University of California, Los Angeles.

Read articles by Samuel R. Baty.

Tim Bates 80x108Tim Bates – Wayne State University

Timothy Bates is distinguished professor of economics emeritus at Wayne State University. He is an authority on minority business development and entrepreneurship.

Read articles by Tim Bates.

 

Thomas Baudin 80x108Thomas BaudinUniversité catholique de Louvain (Belgium)

Thomas Baudin is

an Assistant Professor at the Centre for Research in Demography and Society at the Université catholique de Louvain. His research interests include family economics, demographic economics, public economics, cultural dynamics, and development economics.

Read articles by Thomas Baudin.


Nichole Bauer 80x108Nichole Bauer – Indiana University

Nichole Bauer is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Political Science at Indiana University. Her research examines gender stereotypes, campaigns, and voting behavior. Her work has been published in journals such as Political Behavior and Political Psychology.

Read articles by Nichole Bauer.

Matthew Baum 80x108Matthew A. Baum – Harvard University

Matthew Baum is Marvin Kalb Professor of Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) and Harvard University Department of Government. He is also Faculty Chair of the Harvard Public Diplomacy Collaborative. His research addresses the evolving relationship between the mass media, public opinion and executive decision-making regarding foreign policy. 

Read articles by Matthew A. Baum.

Harry William Baumgarten

Harry William Baumgarten served as legislative director and counsel to members of the House of Representatives. He is also a member of the Supreme Court Bar whose writings have been featured in leading domestic and international publications.

Read articles by Harry William Baumgarten.

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Frank Baumgartner 80x108Frank R. Baumgartner – University of North Carolina

Frank R. Baumgartner is the Richard J. Richardson Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is the co-author of Agendas and Instability in American Politics and other works.

Read articles by Frank R. Baumgartner.


Roger Beachy 80x108Roger Beachy –
World Food Center

Dr. Roger Beachy is the Executive Director of the World Food Center at the University of California, Davis. He is the former director of the National Institute of Food and Agriculture  at the United States Department of Agriculture.

Read articles by Roger Beachy.

 

Douglas Beal 80x108Douglas BealBoston Consulting

Douglas Beal, Partner and global leader on economic development, The Boston Consulting Group.

Read articles by Douglas Beal.

 

Michael Beam– Kent State University

Michael Beam is the director of the School of Emerging Media and Technology at Kent State University. His research investigates the impact of media systems on the process of information creation, exposure, and processing. His research has focused on the impact of information systems using personalized algorithms on news exposure and health communication, the influence of partisan media sources on political polarization and political information processing, and how new media systems change information distribution patterns.

Read articles by Michael Beam.

Daniel Bear – Humber College

Dr. Daniel Bear is a Professor at Humber College’s School of Social and Community Services, where he teaches on the Criminal Justice degree. He has been working and researching in the field of drugs policy for 15 years. He has previously worked at the American Civil Liberties Union, conducted research for the Ministry of Justice in the UK, and has presented at international conferences across Europe, Australia, and North America. He obtained his PhD in Social Policy and Masters in Social Policy (Research) from The London School of Economics and Political Science.

Read articles by Daniel Bear.

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Paul Beaudry 80x108Paul Beaudry – University of British Columbia

Paul Beaudry is a Professor at the Vancouver School of Economics at the University of British Columbia. He is interested in everything that relates to the macro-economy, both domestically and internationally. In particular his research is related to business cycles, inflation, financial markets, the macro-economic effects of technological change and globalization, and the determinants of aggregate employment and wages. 

Read articles by Paul Beaudry.

Pat Beck 80x108Pat Beck II LSE

A graduate of UC Berkeley, Pat Beck II is a MSc and MA candidate in a dual degree program between London School of Economics and Political Science and Sciences Po – Paris.

Read articles by Pat Beck II.

 

Thorsten Beck – Cass Business School

Thorsten Beck is a professor of banking and finance at Cass Business School in London and a research fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). He is also director of the Florence School of Banking and Finance and a chair of financial stability at the European University Institute since September 2021. His main research interests are in financial intermediation, inclusion and stability. He tweets @TL_Beck_London.

Read articles by Thorsten Beck.

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Ulrich Beck – University of Munich

Ulrich Beck is Professor of Sociology at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, and since 2013 Principal Investigator of the European Research Council (ERC) project: “Methodological Cosmopolitanism – In the Laboratory of Climate Change”. He was born in the Pomeranian town of Stolp, Germany (now Słupsk in Poland) in 1944. Since 1997 he is the British Journal of Sociology Visiting Centennial Professor at the London School of Economics and since 2011 also Professor at the Fondation Maison des Sciences de l’Homme, Paris. He has received many international prizes and honours. He is co-editor of the journal Soziale Welt, and author or editor of more than 45 books, translated in more than 35 languages.

Read interviews with Ulrich Beck.

Amy Bree Becker 80x108Amy Bree Becker – Loyola University

Dr. Amy Bree Becker (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2010) is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at Loyola University Maryland. Her research focuses on public opinion, political entertainment and comedy, science communication, and new media. She studies what factors drive engagement with controversial political issues and what non-traditional media content, particularly political comedy and viral social media, teaches us about politics.  Professionally, Becker worked in the world of political polling and corporate market research, providing analysis and strategic insight for political candidates running for national and state office and for major corporations looking to redefine their brand image.

Read articles by Amy Bree Becker.

Ralph Becker

Ralph Becker served two terms as mayor of Salt Lake City (2008-2015). He also served in the Utah State Legislature as a member of the House of Representatives for 11 years (1996-2007), including five years as House Minority Leader. In 2015, Ralph served as President of the National League of Cities. In his political career, Ralph focused attention on serving the public interest through solution-oriented, inclusive governance practices. He became known for his work improving conditions for the LGBT community around discrimination; sustainability practices in cities and protection of lands and resources; and changes to improve equity in education, access to the outdoors, and community development. In 2017, Ralph served as a Leadership in Government Fellowship with the Open Society Foundation. He speaks regularly around the world on governance and sustainability and has authored numerous publications.

Read articles by Ralph Becker.

sized-charlie-beckettCharlie Beckett – LSE POLIS

Charlie Beckett a professor in the department of media and communications at the LSE  and the founding director of POLIS, the think-tank for research and debate in to international journalism and society in the Media and Communications Department. As well as being spokesperson for Polis and a regular blogger, Charlie Beckett is a regular commentator on journalism and politics for the UK and International media. He’s on twitter as @CharlieBeckett.

Read articles by Charlie Beckett.

Caroline Beer – University of Vermont

Caroline Beer is associate professor of Political Science at the University of Vermont. Her recent research focuses on subnational politics and gender policy in Mexico.

Read articles by Caroline Beer.

 

Iain Begg – LSE European Institute

Iain Begg is a Professorial Research Fellow at the European Institute, London School of Economics and Political Science, and Senior Fellow on the UK Economic and Social Research Council’s initiative on The UK in a Changing Europe.

Read articles by Iain Begg.

Deborah Beim 80x108Deborah Beim – Yale University

Deborah Beim is an Assistant Professor in the Political Science department at Yale University. She studies American politics in general and judicial politics in particular, with a focus on interactions between the U.S. Supreme Court and the Courts of Appeals.

Read articles by Deborah Beim.

Daniel Béland – Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy

Daniel Béland holds the Canada research chair in Public Policy at the Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy. He currently serves as Editor (French) of the Canadian Journal of Sociology, Co-Editor of Global Social Policy, and President of the Research Committee 19 (Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy) of the International Sociological Association. A specialist of fiscal and social policy, he has published 17 books and more than 115 articles in peer-reviewed journals. One of his most recent books is Obamacare Wars: Federalism, State Politics and the Adordable Care Act (University Press of Kansas, 2016; co-authored with Philip Rocco and Alex Waddan).

Read articles by Daniel Béland.

Louis Philipe Beland 80x108Louis-Philippe Beland Louisiana State University

Louis-Philippe is an assistant professor of economics at the E.J. Ourso College of Business at LSU. His research interests are in labor economics, public policy, political economy and education economics.

Read articles by Louis-Philippe Beland.

 

Ross Bellaby – University of Sheffield

Ross Bellaby is a senior lecturer in security studies at the University of Sheffield’s politics department. His research focuses on designing ethical frameworks for the intelligence community and for cyber-activity. His ethical framework is set out in his book, The Ethics of Intelligence: A New Framework (2014). This work is further developed in papers on counterterrorism and the CIA’s extraordinary rendition program (2017), the justifiability of cyber-intelligence(2017), the ethical obligation of whistleblowing (2017), and the need for more dark web technology to protect against state surveillance (2018).

Read articles by Ross Bellaby.

Emilia Belknap – The University of Edinburgh

Emilia Belknap is a PhD candidate in Gender & Politics at the University of Edinburgh investigating voting behaviour, gender gaps and constitutional change.

Read articles by Emilia Belknap.

 

Luna Bellani – University of Konstanz

Luna Bellani is Research Group Leader and Principal Investigator at the Cluster of Excellence “The Politics of Inequality” at the University of Konstanz, a Research Affiliate at IZA in Bonn and at the Dondena Centre for Research on Social Dynamics and Public Policy at Bocconi University. 

Read articles by Luna Bellani.

Lauren Bell 80x108Lauren C. Bell – Randolph-Macon College

Lauren C. Bell is Professor of Political Science and Dean of Academic Affairs at Randolph-Macon College in Ashland, Virginia.  She is the author of Filibustering in the US Senate(Cambria Press: 2011) and Warring Factions: Interest Groups, Money, and the New Politics of Senate Confirmation (The Ohio State University Press: 2002).  She served as a United States Supreme Court Fellow during 2006-07, and was an American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow on the US Senate Committee on the Judiciary from November 1997 until August 1998.

Read articles by Lauren C. Bell.

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C Scott Bell 80x108C. Scott Bell – Florida State University

C. Scott Bell is a doctoral student in Political Science at Florida State University. His main research interests are centered in political psychology and include the study of threat, moral foundations, ideology and other political traits.

Read articles by C.Scott Bell.

 

duncan bellDuncan Bell – University of Cambridge

Duncan Bell is a Reader in Political Thought and International Relations in the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge.

Read articles by Duncan Bell.

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Crystal-Belle-80x108Crystal Belle- Columbia University

Crystal Belle is an educator, poet and Ph.D. candidate of English Education at Teachers College, Columbia University. Her research interests include Black masculinities, multiple literacies, poetry-as-research and hip-hop studies. Belle is the author of a poetry collection, Woman on Fire, which weaves stories through stanzas about a Black woman’s experience in the African Diaspora.

Read articles by Crystal Belle.

Clément Bellet – LSE CEP

Clément Bellet is a research officer in CEP’s wellbeing programme. His research participates in an attempt to reconcile the consumption and savings literature with important findings in behavioural economics, in particular with happiness economics and theories of social preferences. He has been examining ways in which inequality affects choices and wellbeing due to externalities in individual preferences, in India and the United States. He explores issues relative to conspicuous consumption and social status, marketing, happiness at work, inequality and poverty. Clément completed his PhD in economics at Sciences Po Paris and was a visiting scholar at the University of California Berkeley in 2014-2015. He previously worked as a Short Term Consultant for the World Bank.

Read articles by Clément Bellet.

Todd Belt 80x108Todd Belt – University of Hawai‘i at Hilo

Todd L. Belt is Professor of Political Science at the University of Hawai‘i at Hilo.  His research and writing focuses primarily on the influence of the mass media, public opinion, the presidency, and campaigns and elections.

Read articles by Todd Belt.

 

Yuri Gabriel Beltrán Miranda 80x108Yuri Gabriel Beltrán Miranda – Electoral Institute of the Federal District, Mexico

Yuri Beltrán Beltran Miranda has a clear vocation for education as for the spread of democratic culture. At the National Autonomous University of Mexico and at the Center for Economic Research and Teaching, the University of Michigan, and other institutions, he has either taught or studied several specialization courses, in order to develop and democratize knowledge about the technical and political parts of electoral systems. Today, asGeneral Council of the Electoral Institute of the Federal District (IEDF), Beltrán performs a daily effort, joint to that of Mexico City, to organize and administer elections and the mechanisms of an increasingly competitive citizen participation.

Read articles by Yuri Beltrán Beltran Miranda.

William Bendix – Keene State College

William Bendix is an Associate Professor at Keene State College. His research focuses on the Congress, especially its role in developing and monitoring national security policies.  

Read articles by William Bendix.

 

Justin de Benedictis-Kessner – Boston University

Justin de Benedictis-Kessner is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Boston University. His research covers American politics, with a focus on political behavior, public policy, local politics, elections, and experimental and quantitative methodology. 

Read articles by Justin de Benedictis-Kessner.

Simon Bennett – University of Leicester

Dr Simon Bennett is Director of the Civil Safety and Security Unit at the University of Leicester. He is an expert in risk management in commercial and military aviation.

Read articles by Simon Bennett.

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Karima Bennoune 80x108Karima Bennoune – University of California

Karima Bennoune is a professor at the University of California, Davis, School of Law and author of “Your Fatwa Does Not Apply Here: Untold Stories from the Fight Against Muslim Fundamentalism.” www.karimabennoune.com

Read articles by Karima Bennoune.

 

Keith-Gunner-Bentele-80x108Keith G. Bentele- University of Massachusetts, Boston

Keith G. Bentele is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. His research has examined the consequences of welfare reform, rising earnings inequality in the U.S., and the passage of multiple types of state legislation sought by the conservative Evangelical movement. His current research includes continuing research on the passage of restrictions on voter access.

Read articles by Keith Bentele.

 

Bradley Bereitschaft 80x108Bradley Bereitschaft – University of Nebraska at Omaha

Bradley Bereitschaft is an Assistant Professor in the department of Geography/Geology at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. His research interests primarily concern issues of equity, livability, and sustainability in the urban environment. 

Read articles by Bradley Bereitschaft.

Viola von Berlepsch – LSE

Viola von Berlepsch is a post-graduate researcher at the London School of Economics. She holds an MSc in Economics and a Diplom-VWL from the University of Konstanz, Germany and a MA in European Economic Studies from the College of Europe, Belgium. Her research lies in the areas of behavioural economics, the European debt crises and the economics of happiness.

Read articles by Viola von Berlepsch.

Giuseppe-Berlingieri-80x108Giuseppe Berlingieri – LSE Centre for Economic Performance
Giuseppe Berlingieri is a research associate at CEP. His research focuses on international economics, organizational economics, and macroeconomics

Read articles by Giuseppe Berlingieri.

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Patrick Bergan 80x108Daniel Bergan – Michigan State University

Daniel Bergan is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at James Madison College at Michigan State University.Daniel Bergan specializes in public opinion and experimental work on political campaigns.  His academic publications have appeared in the Journal of Politics, Public Opinion Quarterly, and The Journal of Communication,among other journals.

Read articles by Daniel Bergan.

ted bergstromTed Bergstrom – University of California Santa Barbara

Ted Bergstrom is  an economist at the University of California Santa Barbara who usually works on microeconomic theory and the provision of public goods, and occasionally on the  economics of scholarly communication. He is  one of the founders of the eigenfactor project and of the journal prices website at  journalprices.com.

Read articles by Ted Bergstrom.

Y Sekou Bermiss – University of Texas

Y Sekou Bermiss is an associate professor at the University of Texas’ McCombs School of Business. He received a B.S. in chemical engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (NY), and an M.S. and Ph.D in management and organisations from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. His research centres around how value is socially constructed in organisational settings. He investigates how market perceptions of financial performance, organisational identity, and human capital affect firm performance, reputation, and survival. His research has been published in various academic journals, edited volumes, and the press.

Read articles by Y Sekou Bermiss.

Joshua Berning 80x108Joshua Berning – University of Georgia

Joshua Berning is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics at the University of Georgia. His research interests include food marketing, consumer demand for food and consumer health.

Read articles by Joshua Berning.

 

Mary Bernstein 80x108Mary Bernstein – University of Connecticut

Mary Bernstein is Professor of Sociology at the University of Connecticut. She has published numerous articles in the fields of social movements, identity, sexualities, gender, and law and is co-editor of three books.

Read articles by Mary Bernstein.

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Jared Bernstein 80x108Jared Bernstein – Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

Jared Bernstein is a Senior Fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. From 2009 to 2011, Bernstein was the Chief Economist and Economic Adviser to Vice President Joe Biden, executive director of the White House Task Force on the Middle Class, and a member of President Obama’s economic team. Bernstein’s areas of expertise include federal and state economic and fiscal policies, income inequality and mobility, trends in employment and earnings, international comparisons, and the analysis of financial and housing markets. Prior to joining the Obama administration, Bernstein was a senior economist and the director of the Living Standards Program at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C. Between 1995 and 1996, he held the post of deputy chief economist at the U.S. Department of Labor.

Read articles by Jared Bernstein.

Robert Berrens – University of New Mexico

Robert P. Berrens is Professor and Chair of the Department of Economics at the University of New Mexico. He conducts research in the area of environmental economics, including a variety of studies on how environmental attributes affect housing markets.

Read articles by Robert P. Berrens.

christopher-berry-80x108Christopher R. BerryUniversity of Chicago

Christopher R. Berry is a Professor in the Harris School of Public Policy Studies at the University of Chicago. He studies distributive politics, municipal finance, and electoral accountability. His work has recently appeared in the American Journal of Political Science,Journal of Politics, and Yale Law Journal, and he is the author of Imperfect Union: Representation and Taxation in Multilevel Governments published in 2009 by Cambridge University Press.

Read articles by Christopher R. Berry.

Yasemin Besen-Cassino – Montclair State University

Yasemin Besen-Cassino is a Professor of Sociology at Montclair State University and the Book Review Editor of Gender&Society. She is the author of Cost of Being a Girl: Working Teens and the Origins of the Gender Wage Gap (Temple University Press 2018).

Read articles by Yasemin Besen-Cassino.

Sir Tim Besley – LSE Economics

Professor Sir Tim Besley is School Professor of Economics of Political Science and W. Arthur Lewis Professor of Development Economics in the Department of Economics at LSE.

Read articles by Sir Tim Besley.

 

Michelle Betsill 80x108Michele BetsillColorado State University

Michele Betsill is Professor and Chair of Political Science at Colorado State University where she teaches courses on international relations and environmental politics. Her research examines the governance of global environmental issues from the global to the local level across the public and private spheres, which a particular focus on the politics of climate change. Her most recent books include Transnational Climate Change Governance (co-authored with the Leverhulme Network on Transnational Climate Governance, Cambridge, 2014) and Advances in International Environmental Politics, 2e. (co-edited with Dimitris Stevis and Kathryn Hochstetler, Palgrave, 2014).

Read articles by Michele Betsill.

Julian Betts – University of California San Diego

Julian Betts is a professor, and former chair, in the Department of Economics at the University of California San Diego (UCSD). He is the Executive Director of the San Diego Education Research Alliance at UCSD (sandera.ucsd.edu) which undertakes studies of many different education policy issues in the San Diego Unified School District (SDUSD). Betts writes on topics ranging from school choice to mathematics interventions, the academic progress of English Learners, and the impact of school resources on short- and long-term outcomes of students. Betts has advised the U.S. Department of Education on several major research projects and regularly serves on its research proposal review panels. He is an Adjunct Fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California and a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. He holds a Ph.D. from Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, and a M.Phil. in Economics from Oxford University.

Read articles by Julian Betts.

Shaun bevan 80x108Shaun Bevan – Mannheim Centre for European Social Research

Shaun Bevan is a Research Fellow at the Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES) at the University of Mannheim. Shaun’s research interests focus on American, British and Comparative Politics, as well as Political Methodology. Some of his specific interests include agenda-setting, public policy, interest groups, public opinion, time series analysis, event history analysis and measurement. 

Read articles by Shaun Bevan.

Andy Beveridge 80x108Andrew A. Beveridge – CUNY

Andrew A. Beveridge is Professor of Sociology at Queens College and the Graduate School and University Center of the City University of New York.

Read articles by Andrew A. Beveridge.

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Sydney Beveridge 80x108Sydney Beveridge – Social Explorer

Sydney Beveridge is Media and Content Editor at Social Explorer, Inc.

Read articles by Sydney Beveridge.

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kieran-bezila-80x108Kieran BezilaBeloit College

Kieran Bezila is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Beloit College. His research interests include politics, altruism and prosocial behavior, and the social organization of everyday knowledge and decision-making.

Read articles by Kieran Bezila.

 

Atul Bhardwaj – City, University of London

Dr Atul Bhardwaj is an honorary research fellow in the department of international politics at City, University of London. He is the author of India-America Relations (1942-62): Rooted in the Liberal International Order (Routledge, 2018).

Read articles by Atul Bhardwaj.

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Shimshon Bichler 80x108Shimshon Bichler

Shimshon Bichler teaches political economy at colleges and universities in Israel. All of his and Jonathan Nitzan’s publications are available for free on The Bichler & Nitzan Archives.

Read articles by Shimshon Bichler. 

 

Katja Biedenkopf – University of Leuven, Belgium

Katja Biedenkopf is Assistant Professor at the University of Leuven, Belgium. Her research centers on environmental leadership and entrepreneurship, policy diffusion, carbon markets, climate diplomacy, electronic waste and chemicals policy. Previous positions include Assistant Professor at the University of Amsterdam, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Free University of Berlin, Fulbright Fellow at the University of California, Berkeley, and Visiting Fellow at Johns Hopkins University, Washington D.C.

Read articles by Katja Biedenkopf.

Thomas Biegert – LSE Social Policy

Thomas Biegert is a Fellow in Social Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He studies social inequality and stratification, labor markets, and welfare states, with a strong interest in quantitative methods. Other work on insiders and outsiders on the labor market authored by him has been published in Journal of European Social Policy and is Socio-Economic Review.

Read articles by Thomas Biegert.

Rubrick Biegon – University of Kent

Rubrick Biegon is a Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Kent. His research interests include US foreign policy, international security, and international political economy. He is the author of US Power in Latin America: Renewing Hegemony (2017).

Read articles by Rubrick Biegon.

Halil Bilecen – University of Houston

Halil Bilecen is a PhD student in political science at the University of Houston specialising in Turkish politics and public opinion.

Read articles by Halil Bilecen.

 

Volodymyr Bilotkach 80x108Volodymyr Bilotkach – Newcastle University

Volodymyr Bilotkach is a Senior Lecturer in Economics at Newcastle University Business School. His research interest spans the aviation sector of economy. He has published extensively on airline alliances, and written on issues ranging from airline mergers to airport regulation to economics of distribution of airline tickets.

Read articles by Volodymyr Bilotkach.

Natasha BinghamLoyola University New Orleans

Dr. Natasha Bingham is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Loyola University New Orleans. Her research interests focus on intersectionality of gender, race, and ethnicity and gender and sexuality in former Soviet republics and US politics.

Read articles by Natasha Bingham.

Tim Binnig – Miami University

Tim Binnig is a Junior at Miami University studying Political Science and Psychology.

Read artticles by Tim Binnig.


Mia Bird 80x108Mia Bird
PPIC and UC Berkeley

Mia Bird is a research fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California and lecturer in the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. Her work focuses on applying research to criminal justice and health and human services policy-making. Her current projects examine the effects of major policy changes—including California’s Public Safety Realignment and the implementation of the Affordable Care Act—on county priorities, local intervention strategies and individual criminal justice outcomes. Her past work has addressed the allocation of realignment funding to counties, the role counties play in connecting individuals to health insurance, and the ability to improve governance through the effective use of data. She holds her PhD in public policy, MA in demography, and MPP from the University of California, Berkeley.

Read articles by Mia Bird.

Judd Birdsall – Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs at Georgetown University

Judd Birdsall (@JuddBirdsall) is a Senior Research Fellow at the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs at Georgetown University. He was previously based at the Centre for Geopolitics at Cambridge University and continues to serve as an affiliated lecturer in the Cambridge University Department of Politics and International Studies. He has served in the U.S. State Department’s Office of International Religious Freedom and on the Secretary of State’s Policy Planning Staff.

Read articles by Judd Birdsall.

Nathaniel A. Birkhead – Kansas State University
Nathaniel A. Birkhead is Assistant Professor of political science at Kansas State University.  He studies issues of representation, legislative organization, and political behavior.  His research has appeared in Legislative Studies Quarterly, Political Research Quarterly, and American Politics Research and he is finishing a book (with Jordan M. Ragusa) examining when and why Congress repeals major laws.

Read articles by Nathaniel A. Birkhead._

 

Benjamin-Bishin-80x108Benjamin G. Bishin– University of California, Riverside

Benjamin G. Bishin is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the UC Riverside. His research interests include questions of democracy, representation, identity and ethnicity, public opinion and legislative politics. He is the author of Tyranny of the Minority The Subconstituency Politics Theory of Representation (Temple University Press 2009) and the recipient of the 2011 Bailey Award for the best paper on gay and lesbian politics for the paper “Gay Rights and Legislative Wrongs: Representation of Gays and Lesbians,” which he coauthored with Charles Anthony Smith.

Read articles by Benjamin G. Bishin.

Amanda Bittner – Memorial University

Dr. Bittner is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science and the Director of the Gender and Politics Lab at Memorial University. Her research focuses on elections and voting in both Canadian and comparative contexts. In addition to her ongoing work on voters’ perceptions of party leaders, she has published research on parenthood and politics, voter turnout, as well as the impact of social cleavages and political sophistication on political attitudes.

Read articles by Amanda Bittner.

Bryan M. Black – University of Georgia

Bryan M. Black is a political science graduate student at the University of Georgia.  His areas of interest include judicial politics and constitutional law.

Read articles by Bryan M. Black.

 

Graeme Blair 80x108Graeme Blair – Princeton University

Graeme Blair is a Ph.D. candidate in the Politics Department at Princeton University studying comparative politics with a focus on West Africa. His website is http://graemeblair.com/ Follow him on Twitter (@graemedblair)

Read articles by Graeme Blair.

karen-blair-80x108Karen L. Blair – St. Francis Xavier University

Karen L. Blair, PhD., is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia, Canada, and founder of KLB Research. Dr. Blair studies the role that social support for relationships plays in the development, maintenance and dissolution of relationships, LGBTQ Psychology, and the connections between relationships, social prejudices, and health. www.DrKarenBlair.com

Read articles by Karen L. Blair.

Robert Blair – University of Nebraska at Omaha

Robert Blair is a Professor of Public Administration and Urban Studies in the School of Public Administration at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. Professor Blair works closely with Nebraska city managers and administrators, and the International City County Management Association on educational, applied research, and professional development issues, and has provided technical assistance to many communities and public agencies over the years.

Read articles by Robert Blair.

Julie Blais – Carleton University

Julie Blais is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology at Carleton University. Her research interests include personality, risk assessment, and the prediction of both prosocial and antisocial behavior. Her research has appeared in journals such as Political Research Quarterly, Psychological Assessment, Personality and Individual Differences, and Politics & Gender.

Read articles by Julie Blais.

Emmanuelle Blanc – LSE 100 Post Doctoral Fellow

Emmanuelle Blanc completed her PhD in International Relations at the LSE under the supervision of Dr Federica Bicchi. Her dissertation explores the extensive use of political dialogues by the European Union in its external relations. Interdisciplinary in nature, her approach draws on socio-psychological insights to explore the needs and modes of communications characterizing the EU’s interactions with arguably its most Significant Other, i.e. the United States.

Read articles by Emmanuelle Blanc.

Harry Blaney 80x108Harry Blaney – Center for International Policy

Harry Blaney is a Senior Fellow at the Center for International Policy. He brings over thirty years of experience in international affairs to CIP and has held senior positions in the federal government, policy research, and non-profit organizations. His experience includes the White House, State Department, foreign affairs think tanks, and U.S. diplomatic posts abroad. His main focus has been on national security, including non-proliferation arms control, US-Europe relations, US-Russia, and global issues including energy, climate change, conflict zones, NATO, EU, and macro-strategic issues. 

Read articles by Harry Blaney.

Robert_BlantonRobert G Blanton – University of Alabama at Birmingham

Robert G Blanton is Professor at the Department of Government, University of Alabama at Birmingham.

Read articles by Robert G Blanton.

 

Kathleen Blee – University of Pittsburgh

Kathleen Blee is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of Pittsburgh.  She has written extensively about organized white supremacism, including Inside Organized Racism: Women in the Hate Movement and Women in the Klan: Racism and Gender in the 1920s, as well as methodological approaches and the politics and ethics of studying racist hate groups and strategies for combatting racial hate.

Read articles by Kathleen Blee.

Jeffrey Blevins – University of Cincinnati

Jeffrey Layne Blevins is Professor of Journalism at the University of Cincinnati. He has published in a variety of academic journals, including New Media and SocietyJournal of Mass Media Ethics, and Television & New Media. He serves as editor of the journal  Democratic Communiqué.

Read articles by Jeffrey Blevins.

 

Kristie R. Blevins – Eastern Kentucky University

Kristie R. Blevins is an associate professor in the School of Justice Studies at Eastern Kentucky University. Her research interests include burglary prevention, correctional rehabilitation, and school safety.

Read articles by Kristie R. Blevins.

 

Stefano Bloch – University of Arizona

Stefano Bloch is Assistant professor in the School of Geography, Development, and Environment at the University of Arizona. He is the author of Going All City: Struggle and Survival in LA’s Graffiti Subculture published by University of Chicago Press.

Read articles by Stefano Bloch.

Thomas Blomberg – Florida State University

Thomas G. Blomberg is dean and Sheldon L. Messinger Professor of Criminology and Executive Director of the Center for Criminology and Public Policy Research at Florida State University’s College of Criminology and Criminal Justice. His current research is focused upon risk and protective factors associated with elder financial fraud.

Read articles by Thomas Blomberg._

Bruce Bloningen 80x108Bruce Blonigen – University of Oregon

Bruce Blonigen is the Philip H. Knight Professor of Social Science in the Department of Economics at the University of Oregon.  He is also a Research Associate with the National Bureau of Economic Research.  His main research interests are the study of multinational firm behavior and international trade policies, but his work also spans issues in industrial organization, urban economics and international finance.

Read articles by Bruce Blonigen.

Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom 80x108Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom – Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom is Senior Lecturer (U.S. Associate Professor) at the Department of Political Science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, specializing in comparative political behavior and political psychology. Her research examines the role of religiosity, morality, and values in political behavior.

Read articles by Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom.

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Nicholas Bloom 80x108Nicholas Bloom – Stanford University, LSE Centre for Economic Performance

Nick Bloom is a Professor of Economics at Stanford University and a research associate in CEP’s productivity and innovation program. His research interests are investigating the causes and consequences of economic uncertainty. He also works on understanding differences in management and organizational practices across firms and countries. He previously worked as a research economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a policy advisor at HM Treasury and as a management consultant at McKinsey & Company.

Read articles by Nicholas Bloom.
Erik Blutinger 80x108Erik J. Blutinger – George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences

Erik J. Blutinger is an M.D. Candidate at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington, DC. He worked on the Senate version of the Affordable Care Act (HR 3590) for the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, chaired by Senator Tom Harkin (R-IA).

Read articles by Erik J. Blutinger.

Samuel Blyth

Samuel Blyth works in the UK Parliament. He holds a degree in American Studies from Keele University and a MLitt in International Security from the University of St. Andrews. He writes in a personal capacity.

Read articles by Samuel Blyth.

Daniela del Boca 80x108Daniela Del Boca – University of Turin

Daniela Del Boca is Professor of Economics at the University of Turin and Fellow of Collegio Carlo Alberto. 

Read articles by Daniela Del Boca.

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Leticia Bode 80x108Leticia Bode – Georgetown University

Leticia Bode is an assistant professor of Communication, Culture, & Technology at Georgetown University, with affiliate appointment in the Department of Government. Her research focuses on the intersection of politics, technology, and communication.

Read articles by Leticia Bode.

Fred Boehmke 80x108Frederick J. Boehmke University of Iowa

Frederick J. Boehmke is Professor of Political Science at the University of Iowa and Director of the Iowa Social Science Research Center. His research focuses on the effect of direct democracy on interest groups. His book, The Indirect Effect of Direct Legislation(Ohio State Press, 2005), examines the effect of direct democracy on interest groups.

Read articles by Frederick J. Boehmke.

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Michael Boehm 80x108Michael Boehm – University of Bonn

Michael Boehm is an assistant professor at the University of Bonn and an occasional research assistant in the LSE CEP’s labour markets programme.

Read articles by Michael Boehm,

 

Lyndsay N. Boggess 80x108Lyndsay N. Boggess – University of South Florida

Lyndsay N. Boggess is an Associate Professor in the Department of Criminology at the University of South Florida. Her research focuses on the community correlates of crime, with particular interest in how neighborhoods change over time, the housing market and gentrification, and racial/ethnic composition and immigration.

Read articles by Lyndsay N. Boggess.

Toby Bolsen 80x108Toby Bolsen – Georgia State University

Toby Bolsen is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Georgia State University. His research interests include the study of political behavior, public opinion, media and communications, experimental methods, and U.S. energy policy.

Read articles by Toby Bolsen.

Alex Bolton 80x108Alexander BoltonDuke University

Alexander Bolton is a Postdoctoral Associate at Duke University’s Social Science Research Institute.  His research interests include executive branch politics and policymaking in the United States.

Read articles by Alexander Bolton.

 

Luigi Bonatti 80x108Luigi Bonatti – University of Trento

Luigi Bonatti studied philosophy at the Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa (Italy). His interest in the philosophy of social sciences led him to continue his studies at Columbia University (USA), where he got a Ph.D. in economics under the supervision of Edmund Phelps. He is currently professor of economics at the University of Trento (Italy). The works that Bonatti has published in recent years relate to growth theory and sustainable development, open macroeconomics and international economics, rationality in the formation of expectations and in public choices.

Read articles by Luigi Bonatti.

Roberto Bonfatti – University of Nottingham

Roberto Bonfatti is an assistant professor at the University of Nottingham’s School of Economics. He holds a PhD in economics from LSE (2010), and BSc in Economics and Finance from Bocconi University. Roberto’s research lies at the intersection of international trade, political economy, and economic history. Among his topics of interest are the relation between trade and the rise and fall of colonial empires; trade and war; the economic legacy of empires, particularly in terms of the international specialisation of former colonies; and the political economy of the natural resource trade.

Read articles by Roberto Bonfatti.

Chris Bonneau 80x108Chris W. Bonneau – University of Pittsburgh

Chris W. Bonneau is associate professor of political science at the University of Pittsburgh. He primarily studies American politics with an emphasis on judicial politics and public law.

Read articles by Chris Bonneau.

 

Stephanie Bonnes – University of New Haven

Stephanie Bonnes is an Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of New Haven.  Her research broadly focuses on gender and race at the intersections of victimization, inequality, crime, and organizations. Her current project explores the experiences of women in the United States Military including, but not limited to, servicewomen’s experiences with sexual abuse.

Read articles by Stephanie Bonnes._

Norman-Bonney-80x108Norman Bonney – Edinburgh Napier University

Norman Bonney was previously a lecturer and researcher at Aberdeen University and The Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen. He was head of psychology and sociology at Edinburgh Napier University, where he is currently Emeritus Professor. His ‘Monarchy, religion and the state; civil religion in the UK, Canada, Australia and the Commonwealth’ will be published by Manchester University Press in December 2013. More details here. His publications are listed at www.normanbonney.blogspot.com

Read articles by Norman Bonney.

Miriam Boon – Universiteit van Amsterdam

Miriam Boon  a postdoctoral research fellow at Universiteit van Amsterdam. She studies how people react to exposure to dissimilar views in media.

Read articles by Miriam Boon.

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Jonathan Booth 80x108Jonathan Booth – LSE Department of Management

Jonathan Booth is a Lecturer in Employment Relations and Organisational Behaviour at the LSE’s Department of Management. His research interests include workplace aggression and victimization, appraisal and coping processes in the workplace, union membership and participation, dirty work, and prosocial behaviors (e.g., forgiveness and employee volunteering and giving).

Read articles by Jonathan Booth.

Porismita Borah Washington State University

Porismita Borah is an Assistant Professor in the Edward R. Murrow College of Communication, Washington State University. Porismita’s main areas of research interests are emerging communication technology in the context of politics and health. Porismita’s research has been published in many prestigious journals including Journal of Communication, Communication Research, Journal of Computer Mediated Communication and New Media and Society. To learn more about Porismita’s work, please visit her website.

Read articles by Porismita Borah.

Janet BorgersonCity, University of London

Janet Borgerson is a Visiting Fellow at Cass Business School, City, University of London. She works at the intersections of philosophy, business, and culture.

Read articles by Janet Borgerson.


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MaryAnne Borrelli 80x108MaryAnne Borrelli – Connecticut College

MaryAnne Borrelli is a professor of government at Connecticut College.  Her books and articles examine the construction of gender in the United States presidency, focusing on cabinet appointments and on the White House Office.  Her research has contributed to the George W. Bush and the Obama transitions, and she has served as an interviewer for the Presidential Oral History Program at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center.

Read articles by MaryAnne Borrelli.

Ron Boschma 80x108Ron Boschma – Lund University

Ron Boschma is Professor in Innovation Studies and director of the Centre for Innovation, Research and Competence in the Learning Economy (CIRCLE) at Lund University. He is also Professor in Regional Economics at Utrecht University. His scientific work concentrates on working out conceptually and empirically Evolutionary Economic Geography. Boschma has published in international journals on the spatial evolution of industries, the geography of innovation, proximity and innovation, the structure and evolution of spatial networks, regional diversification, and agglomeration externalities and regional growth.

Read articles by Ron Boschma.

Amanda BoskyUniversity of Texas at Austin

Amanda Bosky is a graduate student in the Department of Sociology and a NICHD Pre-Doctoral Trainee in the Population Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin.

Read articles by Amanda Bosky.

 

Tristan L. Botelho – Yale School of Management

Tristan L. Botelho is an assistant professor of organisational behaviour and a faculty affiliate of the program on entrepreneurship at the Yale School of Management. His research interests are careers, innovation, social evaluation, and strategy, primarily focusing on digital platforms and entrepreneurship. He received his Ph.D. from the MIT Sloan School of Management in 2017.

Read articles by Tristan L. Botelho.

Deborah Boucoyannis – University of Virginia 

Deborah Boucoyannis is Assistant Professor at the Woodrow Wilson Department of Politics at the University of Virginia. Previously she was Lecturer in Social Studies and Olin Predoctoral Fellow at Harvard University. Her PhD is from the University of Chicago. Her interests lie in the historical and theoretical foundations of liberalism. Her personal site is http://dboucoyannis.weebly.com/

Read articles by Deborah Boucoyannis.

Laurent Bouton 80x108Laurent Bouton – Georgetown University

Laurent Bouton is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Georgetown University, Associate Fellow at the European Center for Advanced Research in Economics and Statistics (ECARES), and Faculty Associate at the Institute for Economic Development (IED), Boston University. His main fields of interest are political economy, microeconomics, and public economics.

Read articles Laurent Bouton.

Shaun Bowler 80x108Shaun Bowler – University of California, Riverside

Shaun Bowler is Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Riverside. His research interests include comparative electoral systems and voting behavior. His work examines the relationship between institutional arrangements and voter choice in a variety of settings ranging from the Republic of Ireland to California’s initiative process.

Read articles by Shaun Bowler.

Ann O’M. Bowman 80x108Ann O’M. BowmanTexas A&M University

Ann O’M. Bowman is Professor and Hazel Davis and Robert Kennedy Endowed Chair in the Department of Public Service and Administration at the Bush School at Texas A&M University.  Her research interests center on state and local government institutions and policy.

Read articles by Ann O’M. Bowman.

 

Rachel Bowman – Arizona State University

Rachel Bowman is a doctoral student in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Arizona State University. Her research examines the legal, extralegal, professional, and organizational considerations that shape court actors’ use of discretion in handling criminal cases.

Read articles by Rachel Bowman.

 

Christopher Boyce

Christopher Boyce – University of Stirling

Dr Christopher Boyce is currently a Research Fellow at Stirling Management School at the University of Stirling. He also holds an Honarary position as a Research Associate in the School of Psychological Sciences at the University of Manchester.

Read articles by Christopher Boyce.

Monica Boyd 80x108Monica Boyd – University of Toronto

Monica Boyd holds the Canada Research Chair in Immigration, Inequality and Public Policy at the University of Toronto. She publishes in the areas of gender stratification, ethnic and racial stratification, immigration policy, the labor market integration of immigrants, and the social and economic integration of immigrant offspring.

Read articles by Monica Boyd.

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Christina L. BoydUniversity of Georgia

Christina L. Boyd is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Georgia and a lawyer.  Her research focuses on the empirical examination of judges and litigants in federal courts. Her scholarship has been published in journals such as American Journal of Political Science, Political Research Quarterly, and Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization and has been funded by the National Science Foundation.

Read articles by Christina L. Boyd.

Richard Boyd 80x108Richard Boyd – Georgetown University

Richard Boyd is Associate Professor of Government at Georgetown University. His research interests include the intellectual history of liberalism, civil society and pluralism, economic and sociological theory, the theory and practice of immigration and citizenship policies in the United States, and the ethical dimensions of the recent financial crisis.  He is author of Uncivil Society: The Perils of Pluralism and the Making of Modern Liberalism (Lexington/ Rowman & Littlefield, 2004) and editor (with Ewa Atanassow) of Tocqueville and the Frontiers of Democracy (Cambridge, 2013)

Read articles by Richard Boyd.

Brent D. Boyea – University of Texas at Arlington

Brent D. Boyea is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Texas at Arlington. His research examines how political and judicial institutions affect political behavior across the American states.

Read articles by Brent D. Boyea.

 

Robert Boyer – University of North Carolina- Charlotte

Robert Boyer is an Assistant Professor of Urban Planning in the Department of Geography & Earth Sciences at the University of North Carolina- Charlotte. His research focuses the importance of community and interpersonal relationships in sustainable urbanism. He loves riding his bicycle.

Read articles by Robert Boyer.

James D. Boys – Tufts University

Dr. James D. Boys is a Boston-based British expert on US politics and grand strategy. He is a Visiting Scholar at the Center for Strategic Studies at Tufts University’s Fletcher School, where he is continuing research into the Madman Theory in U.S. Grand Strategy.

Read articles by James D. Boys.

Travis Braidwood – Texas A&M University

Travis Braidwood is an assistant professor of political science at Texas A&M University–Kingsville. He studies Congress, voter behavior, public opinion, political psychology, political methodology, and direct democracy.

Read articles by Travis Braidwood.

 

Ben Bradford – University College London

Ben Bradford is Professor of Global City Policing in the Department of Security and Crime Science at University College London.

Read articles by Ben Bradford.

 

David Brady 80x108David Brady – WZB

David Brady is Director of the Inequality and Social Policy Research Unit at the Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB). His main fields of interest are poverty and inequality, in particular their causes, measurement and consequences. His book Rich Democracies, Poor People: How Politics Explain Poverty (Oxford University Press, 2009) analyzes how politics explain why poverty is so much higher in the US than in other affluent democracies.

Read articles by David Brady.

Lee Branstetter – Carnegie Mellon University

Lee Branstetter is professor of economics and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University’s Heinz College, a joint appointment with the social and decision sciences department. He is also a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and non-resident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. From 2011-2012, he served as the senior economist for international trade and investment for the President’s Council of Economic Advisors. He previously taught at Columbia University, and the University of California, Davis. He has served as a consultant to the OECD science and technology directorate, the advanced technology programme of the US Department of Commerce, and the World Bank. In recent years, Branstetter has been a research fellow of the Keio University Global Security Research Institute and a visiting fellow of the Research Institute of Economy, Trade, and Industry in Japan. He earned his Ph.D. in economics at Harvard in 1996.

Read articles by Lee Branstetter.

Hanna K. Brant – University of Missouri

Hanna K. Brant is a PhD student in the Department of Political Science at the University of Missouri. Her primary area of research is American politics, with an emphasis on Congress. She is currently interested in understanding how congressional staffers supplement congressional capacity to draft legislation and conduct oversight.

Read articles by Hanna K. Brant.

Regina Branton – University of North Texas

Regina Branton is an associate professor of political science at the University of North Texas. Her research examines the behavioral, electoral, and institutional implications of race and ethnicity.

Read articles by Regina Branton.

Sebastien Breau 80x108Sébastien BreauMcGill University

Sébastien Breau is an Associate Professor in the Department of Geography at McGill University. His research focuses on the spatial dimensions of inequality, labour market dynamics, international trade and regional development. He recently edited a book on new perspectives in regional development in Canada.

Read articles by Sébastien Breau.

Denise Brennan 80x108Denise Brennan – Georgetown University

Denise Brennan is Chair of the Department of Anthropology at Georgetown University. Her most recent book, Life Interrupted: Trafficking into Forced Labor in the United States follows the lives of survivors of trafficking to the United States. Prof. Brennan is also the author of What’s Love Got to Do with It? Transnational Desires and Sex Tourism in the Dominican Republic and is currently conducting field research for a new book on deportation, Shattering Families: Detention, Deportation and the Assault on Immigrants in the United States. 

Read articles by Denise Brennan.

Robert Brenneman 80x108Robert Brenneman – Saint Michael’s College

Robert Brenneman is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Saint Michael’s College in Colchester, Vermont and the author of Homies and Hermanos: God and the Gangs in Central America.

Read articles by Robert Brenneman.

 

Stefano Breschi 80x108Stefano Breschi – Bocconi University

Stefano Breschi is an Associate Professor of Industrial Economics at Bocconi University. His research interests include industrial dynamics, social networks, clusters and knowledge spillovers, economics of science, economics and the econometrics of patents. 

Read articles by Stefano Breschi.

Kim BridgesHarvard Graduate School of Education

Kim Bridges is a doctoral student in the Education Leadership program at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Her interests include urban school system leadership and governance to increase opportunity, achievement, and diversity in K-12 settings.

Read articles by Kim Bridges.

Chelsie L.M. Bright – Mills College

Chelsie Bright is a Visiting Assistant Professor in the Masters of Public Policy program at Mills College in Oakland, CA, and a Supervising Research Analyst at the Judicial Council of California. She received her Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Kansas and her research agenda focuses on the intersection between equity and policy.

Read articles by Chelsie L.M. Bright.

Lisa ten Brinke – LSE Dahrendorf Forum

Lisa ten Brinke is a Dahrendorf Research Associate based at the London School of Economics. She also provides research assistance to the UN Business and Human Security Initiative at LSE IDEAS.

Read articles by Lisa ten Brinke.

 

Forrest Briscoe 80x108Forrest Briscoe – Penn State

Forrest Briscoe is an associate professor of Management and Organizations. He conducts research in three areas: organizational change and corporate social responsibility (CSR); employment practices and careers; and professional organizations. 

Read articles by Forrest Briscoe.

Richard Brodsky 80x108Richard Brodsky – Demos & NYU Wagner

Richard Brodsky served 14 terms as a New York State Assemblyman, retiring in 2010.  He is currently a Senior Fellow at Demos, a progressive think tank in New York City, and a Senior Fellow at New York University’s Wagner School of Public Administration.  His years of public service focused on government reform, environmental protection and economic policy.  He is also a lawyer and a journalist.

Read articles by Richard Brodsky.

Lisa Broidy 80x108Lisa BroidyGriffith University

Lisa Broidy is an Associate Professor and Deputy Head of School (Research) at the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Griffith University. Her research interests include, developmental and life course criminology, gender and crime/female offending criminological theory, and crime policy evaluation specifically around domestic violence and offender re-entry. 

Read articles by Lisa Broidy.

Patricia Bromley – Stanford’s Graduate School of Education and the Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society

Patricia Bromley is an associate professor at Stanford’s Graduate School of Education and Co-Director of the Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society. She conducts research related to civil society, education, organisations and management, and globalisation.

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Yaron Brook 80x108Yaron Brook – Ayn Rand Institute

Yaron Brook is the executive director of the Ayn Rand Institute. He is a columnist at Forbes.com, and his articles have been featured in the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Investor’s Business Daily, and many other publications. He is a frequent guest on national radio and television programmes and is a co-author of Neoconservatism: An Obituary for an Idea and a contributing author to Winning the Unwinnable War: America’s Self-Crippled Response to Islamic Totalitarianism. Dr. Brook is co-author with ARI fellow Don Watkins of the national best-seller Free Market Revolution: How Ayn Rand’s Ideas Can End Big Government. A former finance professor, he speaks internationally on such topics as the causes of the financial crisis, the morality of capitalism, ending the growth of the state, and U.S. foreign policy.

Read articles by Yaron Brook. 

Erika Brooke 80x108Erika J. BrookeUniversity of Central Florida

Erika J. Brooke recently completed her doctorate in Public Affairs with a concentration in Criminal Justice at the University of Central Florida. She is currently an Instructor for the Department of Criminal Justice at the University of Central Florida and a Commissioned Officer in the U.S. Army Reserve. Her research interests include military service and crime, correctional policy and treatment, drug use and abuse, and veteran courts.

Read articles by Erika J. Brooke.

dominiqueDominique Brossard – University of Wisconsin-Madison

Dominique Brossard is a professor and chair of the Department of Life Sciences Communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Dr. Brossard’s research program concentrates on the intersection between science, media, and policy. A fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and a Board member of the International Network of Public Communication of Science and Technology, Brossard is an internationally known expert in public opinion dynamics related to controversial scientific issues.

Read articles by Dominique Brossard.

Chad P. Bown – Peterson Institute for International Economics

Chad P. Bown is Reginald Jones Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington and a Research Fellow at CEPR. 

Read articles by Chad P. Brown.

 

Chris Brown 80x108Chris Brown – LSE Department of International Relations 

Chris Brown is Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics. He writes on international political theory, human rights, and issues of global justice. He is the author most recently of Practical Judgement in International Political Theory(2010) and of International Relations Theory: New Normative Approaches (1992),Understanding International Relations (1997; 4th edition, 2009), Sovereignty, Rights and Justice (2002), the editor of Political Restructuring in Europe: Ethical Perspectives (1994), and has published numerous journal articles. He is also the coeditor, with Terry Nardin and N. J. Rengger, of International Relations in Political Thought: Texts from the Greeks to the First World War (2002). 

Read articles by Chris Brown.

Jeffrey Brown 80x108Jeffrey Brown – Florida State University

Jeff Brown is Professor and Department Chair in the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at Florida State University. His research explores the role of public transportation in contemporary cities; transportation finance; the interplay between the finance, planning, and use of transportation systems; the relationship between transportation and the built environment; and the history of planning.

Read articles by Jeffrey Brown.

Kayla Brown 80x108Kayla Brown – Sam Houston State University

Kayla Brown is a junior majoring in political science at Sam Houston State University. 

Read articles by Kayla Brown.

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Lathania Brown 80x108Lathania BrownThe Ohio State University

Lathania Brown is a doctoral candidate at the John Glenn College of Public Affairs at The Ohio State University. Her research explores the role that the private sector plays in addressing matters of the public good and the extent to which the public sector is able to drive sustainable economic growth. Her dissertation work explores the role of public policy in terms of helping to make local economies more resilient to rare events.

Read articles by Lathania Brown.

Martin D. Brown – Richmond, the American International University in London

Martin D. Brown is an Associate Professor of International History at Richmond, the American International University in London. He is co-editor of Slovakia in History(Cambridge University Press, 2011) and author of Dealing with Democrats. The British Foreign Office’s relations with the Czechoslovak émigrés in Great Britain, 1939-1945 (Peter Lang, 2006). His research focuses on European diplomatic history, Cold War historiography and British engagement with the Helsinki Final Act of 1975.

Read articles by Martin D. Brown.

 

R Khari Brown 80x108R. Khari Brown – Wayne State University

Khari Brown is Associate Professor of Sociology at Wayne State University and an Adjunct Research Scientist at the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan. His research interests include the sociology of religion, religion and social activism, and research methods.

Read articles by R. Khari Brown.

Ronald E. Brown – Wayne State University

Ronald E. Brown is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at Wayne State University.

Read articles by Ronald E. Brown.

 

stuart-brown-80x108Stuart Brown – LSE

Stuart Brown is a Research Associate at the London School of Economics and the Managing Editor of EUROPP – European Politics and Policy.

Read articles by Stuart Brown.

 

Japonica Brown-Saracino 80x108Japonica Brown-SaracinoBoston University

Japonica Brown-Saracino is Associate Professor of Sociology at Boston University.  She is the author of A Neighborhood That Never Changes, which won the Urban Affairs Association Best Book Award for 2010 – 2011, and editor of the Gentrification Debates.  Her articles on place and sexual identities have appeared in Social Problems, Qualitative Sociology, and American Journal of Sociology.  She is completing a book for the University of Chicago Press Fieldwork Encounters and Discoveries Series on LBQ identities and lives in four small US. cities.

Read articles by Japonica Brown-Saracino.
Susan-Brownill-80x108Sue Brownill- Oxford Brookes University

Sue Brownill is a Reader in Urban Policy and Governance at Oxford Brookes University. Her research and teaching interests focus on the interaction of communities with urban planning and regeneration. She is also the Postgraduate Research Tutor for the department with responsibilities for leading the PhD programme and co-ordinating and delivering doctoral research methods training. Sue combines her academic interests with involvement with community and housing groups. She has been a board member of Oxford Citizens Housing Association since 2003 and before moving to Oxford worked with community organisations in London’s Docklands.

Read articles by Sue Brownill.

Lisa A. Bryant – California State University, Fresno

Lisa A. Bryant is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at California State University, Fresno. Her research and teaching focus on American political behavior, campaigns and elections, election administration, and public policy. Her work has been published in outlets such as American Politics Research, Electoral Studies, and Political Behavior.

Read articles by Lisa A. Bryant.

Alex Bryson 80x108Alex Bryson – National Institute of Economic and Social Research and LSE CEP

Alex Bryson is a Research Director at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research in London and Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Performance at LSE. He is also a Beyster Research Fellow at Rutgers. He is on the editorial board of the NIESR Economic Review and was previously an editor of the British Journal of Industrial Relations. In 2005-2006 he was the Wertheim Fellow at the Harvard Law School and the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Read articles by Alex Bryson.

 

Jan Brueckner 80x108Jan K. Brueckner – University of California, Irvine

Jan K. Brueckner is Professor of Economics at the University of California, Irvine.

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Read articles by Jan K. Brueckner.

Cheryl Brumley – LSE Public Policy Group

Cheryl Brumley is Digital Editor of the Public Policy Group blogs.

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Read articles by Cheryl Brumley.

Lisa Brush 80x108Lisa D. Brush – University of Pittsburgh

Lisa D. Brush is Professor of Sociology and of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies at the University of Pittsburgh. Her first book was Gender and Governance (Rowman and Littlefield 2003), and her second book was Poverty, Battered Women, and Work in U.S. Public Policy (Oxford University Press 2011). Her current collaborations investigate preventing adolescent relationship abuse and teen dating violence by engaging high school and middle school boys in coached athletic programs to change masculinities.

Read articles by Lisa D. Brush.

erik brynjolfssonErik Brynjolfsson – MIT Sloan School of Management

Erik Brynjolfsson is the Schussel Family Professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management , Director of the MIT Center for Digital Business, Chair of the MIT Sloan Management Review , and the Editor of the Information Systems Network. His research and teaching focuses on how businesses can effectively use information technology (IT) in general and the Internet in particular.

Read articles by Erik Brynjolfsson.

Laura C. Bucci – Saint Joseph’s University

Laura C. Bucci is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Saint Joseph’s University. She studies the consequences of deunionization for political and economic voice in the American states.

Read articles by Laura C. Bucci.

 

Ceren Budak – University of Michigan

Ceren Budak is Assistant Professor of Information, School of Information and Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, College of Engineering at the University of Michigan. 

Read articles by Ceren Budak. 

 

Ralph Buehler 80x108Ralph Buehler – Virginia Tech

Ralph Buehler is an Associate Professor in Urban Affairs and Planning at Virginia Tech. Most of his research has an international comparative perspective, contrasting transport and land-use policies, transport systems, and travel behavior in Western Europe and North America.

Read articles by Ralph Buehler.

Dido-Buhari-GulmezDidem Buhari-Gulmez – Istanbul Kemerburgaz University

Didem Buhari-Gulmez is Lecturer in International Relations at Istanbul Kemerburgaz University and former Visiting Fellow at LSEE Research on South Eastern Europe, LSE European Institute.

Raed articles by Didem Buhari-Gulmez.

 

Charles S. Bullock III – University of Georgia

Charles S. Bullock, III, is the Richard B. Russell professor of political science and Josiah Meigs distinguished teaching professor at the University of Georgia. He is the author, coauthor, editor, or coeditor of more than 30 books and more than 250 articles. Among his books are Redistricting: The Most Political Activity in America, Georgia’s Three Governors Controversy and The Rise and Fall of the Voting Rights Act. He is the past president of the Georgia and Southern Political Science Associations. He has consulted extensively on redistricting and is a frequent source for domestic and foreign journalists. 

Read articles by Charles S. Bullock, III.

George Bulman 80x108George BulmanUniversity of California at Santa Cruz

George Bulman is an assistant professor of economics at the University of California at Santa Cruz. His research focuses on public economics, particularly the economics of education. He earned his Ph.D. at Stanford University after working as a budget analyst for the federal government and as a mathematics teacher with Teach For America.

Read articles by George Bulman.

Barry Burden 80x108Barry C. Burden – University of Wisconsin-Madison

Barry Burden is Professor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His research and teaching are based in American politics, with an emphasis on electoral politics and representation. He is author of Personal Roots of Representation (Princeton University Press, 2007), co-author of Why Americans Split Their Tickets: Campaigns, Competition, and Divided Government (University of Michigan Press, 2004), editor of Uncertainty in American Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2003) and co-editor with Charles Stewart III of a forthcoming volume, The Measure of American Elections.

Read articles by Barry C. Burden.

Mariya Burdina 80x108Mariya BurdinaUniversity of Central Oklahoma

Mariya Burdina is an assistant professor of Economics at the University of Central Oklahoma. She has conducted research on voting, economic education, and goal setting.

Read articles by Mariya Burdina.

 

Tsjalle van der Burg – University of Twente, Netherlands

Tsjalle van der Burg is an Assistant Professor in Economics at the University of Twente, Netherlands. He is the author of the book “Project Appraisal and Macroeconomic Policy” (1996, with a foreword by Kenneth F. Wallis). This book deals with the question of how to analyse the macroeconomic effects of (very) small projects.

Read articles by Tsjalle van der Burg.

Josh Burke – LSE Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment

Josh Burke is a policy fellow in the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, where he leads the policy analysis team on UK climate and energy policy. Prior to that, he was a senior research fellow at Policy Exchange, where he led the energy and environment department. Before this he worked as a Project Manager in an AiM-listed renewable energy project developer focussing on distributed generation. His professional experience also includes work in the public policy sphere at both Chatham House and The Overseas Development Institute. He has a BSc in Geography from the University of Nottingham, and an MSc in Environmental Technology from Imperial College London.

Read articles by Josh Burke.

Lauren Burke – LSE Atlantic Fellows Programme

Lauren Burke is an Atlantic Fellow for Social and Economic Equity at the LSE’s International Inequalities Institute. She works with the Labor Network for Sustainability. Previously, she was a worker organizer with UNITE HERE! for over a decade.

Read articles by Lauren Burke.

Richard Burke – University of Virginia

Richard Burke is a PhD Student in the Department of Politics at the University of Virginia. His research focuses on the causes and consequences of nationalization in both the U.S. Congress and various state legislatures. 

Read articles by Richard Burke.

 

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Brett Burkhardt Oregon State University

Brett C. Burkhardt is an Assistant Professor of Sociology in the School of Public Policy at Oregon State University. He is currently conducting research on the use of private prisons in the United States and has previously written on topics including felon voting rights policies, labor market consequences of felony convictions, and policing.

Read articles by Brett Burkhardt.

Craig M. Burnett – Hofstra University
Craig M. Burnett is assistant professor of political science at Hofstra University.  His research focuses on state and local politics, urban politics, direct democracy, and electoral institutions.  His recent publications have appeared in the Journal of PoliticsPolitical Communication, and Electoral Studies.

Read articles by Craig M. Burnett.


OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAWalter Dean Burnham
University of Texas at Austin

Walter Dean Burnham is Professor Emeritus at the Department of Government at the University of Texas at Austin. Professor Burnham is best known for his work on the dynamics of American politics (particularly electoral politics). His chief areas of concentration have been on the causes, characteristics and consequences of critical realignments in American history, and the modern-day decay of partisan linkages between rulers and ruled. Much of his recent work has also concentrated on the “turnout problem” and its relationship to other elements of change in American politics. Before coming to Texas in 1988, he was Ruth and Arthur Sloan Professor of Political Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Read articles by Walter Dean Burnham.

George W. Burruss – University of South Florida

George W. Burruss is an associate professor in the Department of Criminology at the University of South Florida and the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Crime & Justice. He graduated from the University of Missouri St. Louis with a Ph.D. in Criminology and Criminal Justice.

Read articles by George W. Burruss.

Sonia Bussu – Involve

Dr Sonia Bussu is a Researcher at Involve. She is passionate about increasing citizen voice in public policy and over the past few years she has been involved in several research projects on citizen participation in policy-making and coproduction of public services, collaborating with universities, practitioners and policy-makers in Italy and the UK and presenting her work at conferences around the world.

Read articles by Sonia Bussu.

Maria Cecilia Bustamante – University of Maryland

Maria Cecilia Bustamante is an Assistant Professor doing research on the interphase between industrial organisation and financial economics. M. Cecilia is currently affiliated with the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland (UMD) in the United States, and previously worked in the Department of Finance at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). She holds a PhD in Finance from the Swiss Finance Institute and was a Visiting Scholar at the University of California at Berkeley during her graduate studies. Prior to her academic career, Maria Cecilia also worked as a consultant in forensic finance in international arbitration procedures.

Read articles by Maria Cecilia Bustamante.

Kristin Butcher 80x108Kristin F. ButcherWellesley College

Kristin F. Butcher is the Marshall I. Goldman Professor of Economics at Wellesley College and Chair of the Department of Economics. She is a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.  Her research focuses on labor, migration, health, and education.

Read articles by Kristin F. Butcher.

Daniel Butler 80x108Daniel M. ButlerUniversity of Washington in Saint Louis

Daniel M. Butler is Associate Professor of Political Science, Director of the Laboratories of Democracy, and Weidenbaum Center research fellow at the University of Washington in Saint Louis.

Read articles by Daniel M. Butler.

 

Nicolette Butler – University of Manchester

Dr Nicolette Butler is a lecturer in the School of Law at the University of Manchester, and has previously researched the possibility of establishing an appeal mechanism in international investment arbitration.

Read articles by Nicolette Butler.

 

Daniel Byrd 80x108Daniel Byrd

Daniel Byrd holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and a doctoral degree in social psychology from the University of Washington.  Daniel has produced original research on race relations in America which was featured in many prominent news outlets including Huffington Post, The Nation, CNN and SalonDaniel currently lives in Los Angeles and works in public policy.

Read articles by Daniel Byrd.

Kaitland M. Byrd – Virginia Tech

Kaitland M. Byrd is a lecturer in sociology at Virginia Tech. Dr. Byrd’s work examines the interrelated aspects of food culture and movements, hunger and obesity, and social inequalities. Her current projects include an in-depth study of the influences on barbecue food culture, and the perceptions of and health behaviors related to the myth of the “freshman fifteen” on college campuses. 

Read articles by Kaitland M. Byrd.

W. Carson Byrd – University of Louisville

W. Carson Byrd is an associate professor of sociology at the University of Louisville. Dr. Byrd’s research centers on race and educational inequalities, interracial and intraracial relations and their influence on ideologies, as well as the connections among race, science, and knowledge production. These three areas intertwine under a broader research umbrella examining how educational institutions, particularly colleges and universities, can simultaneously operate as centers for social mobility and engines of inequality.

Read articles by W. Carson Byrd.

Michael Cacciatore 80x108Michael A. Cacciatore – University of Georgia

Michael A. Cacciatore is an assistant professor in the department of advertising and public relations at the University of Georgia.  

Read articles by Michael A. Cacciatore.

 

David Cadier 80x108David Cadier – LSE Department of International Relations and LSE IDEAS 

David Cadier is a Fellow in Diplomacy and International Strategy at LSE IDEAS and a teaching fellow in the International Relations Department at the LSE. David Cadier received his PhD from Sciences Po and was a visiting scholar at the Centre for Transatlantic Relations at SAIS Johns Hopkins University (2011), at the Prague Institute of International Relations (2010) and at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (2009). His research interests include, Central Europe, Foreign Policy Analysis, EU policies towards the East and transatlantic relations. 

Read articles by David Cadier.

Christine Cahill – Rutgers University

Christine Cahill is a lecturer in the Political Science department at Rutgers University.  Her work focuses on electoral institutions, including elections, policy positioning, and comparative campaign finance.   Her research appears in American Politics Research and Comparative Political Studies.

Read articles by Christine Cahill.

Bruce E. Cain – Stanford University

Bruce E. Cain is a professor of Political Science at Stanford University and director of the Bill Lane Center for the American West. His fields of interest include American politics, political regulation, democratic theory, and state and local government. He has written extensively on elections, legislative representation, California politics, redistricting, and political regulation.

Read articles by Bruce E. Cain.

Emily Cain – Miami University

Emily Cain is a BA/MA candidate at Miami University.

Read articles by Emily Cain.

 

felipe-valencia-cacedoFelipe Valencia Caicedo – Bonn University

Felipe Valencia Caicedo is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at Bonn University, where he is a member of the Institute for Macroeconomics and Econometrics and the Macrohistory Lab. Felipe obtained his Ph.D. in Economics cum laude from Universitat Pompeu Fabra in 2015 and visited the London School of Economics, through the European Doctoral Programme. He worked as a Consultant at the World Bank in Washington, DC, from 2008 to 2010. His primary research interests are in Development Economics, Economic History and Economic Growth, with an emphasis on Latin America.

Read articles by Felipe Valencia Caicedo.

Sydnee Caldwell – University of California Berkeley

Sydnee Caldwell is an assistant professor at the University of California Berkeley’s Haas School of Business and Department of Economics. Her research focuses on wage setting and competition in the labour market.

Read articles by Sydnee Caldwell.

 

Brian Calfano – University of Cincinnati

Brian Calfano is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Cincinnati. He conducts research on marginalized groups, political information use, religion and politics, and journalistic coverage of political events. Brian has 40 peer-reviewed journal articles to his credit, and is the co-author of God Talk: Experimenting with the Religious Causes of Public Opinion (Temple University Press, 2013), and A Matter of Discretion: The Political Behavior of Catholic Priests in the U.S. and Ireland (Rowman and Littlefield, 2017).

Read articles by Brian Calfano.

Lorenzo Caliendo 80x108Lorenzo Caliendo – Yale University

Lorenzo Caliendo is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Yale School of Management. He performs research on International trade. His research focuses on understanding what are the trade and welfare effects of international trade policy, on how firm’s organizational structure and productivity change when firms grow and as a consequence of foreign trade competition, and on what are the macroeconomics effects of international trade and growth. He is also an Assistant Professor of Economics at the Department of Economics of Yale University (by courtesy), a Faculty research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research, and a Research Staff of the Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics.

Read articles by Lorenzo Caliendo.

Maia Call 80x108Maia CallUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Maia Call is a PhD Student in the Department of Geography at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, as well as a pre-doctoral trainee at the Carolina Population Center. Her current research examines the relationship between environmental factors, social determinants, and rural livelihood decision-making in the developing world. Her research has been published in Environment and Planning A.

Read articles by Maia Call.

Timothy H. Callaghan – Texas A&M University

Timothy H. Callaghan is an Assistant Professor of health policy and politics in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Texas A&M University School of Public Health. His research focuses on how politics, policy, and place work together to influence health in America.

Read articles by Timothy H. Callaghan.

William A. Callahan – LSE International Relations

William A. Callahan is professor of international relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science. His most recent book is China Dreams: 20 Visions of the Future, and this article is taken from ‘The Politics of Walls: Barriers, Flows, and the Sublime’. Callahan is also a documentary filmmaker: his current project ‘Great Walls’ will be screened in London at the LSE Festival on March 2, 2019 and in Denver at the Association for Asian Studies annual conference on March 25, 2019.

Read articles by William A. Callahan.

Charles W. Calomiris – Columbia Business School

Charles W. Calomiris is Henry Kaufman professor of financial institutions at Columbia Business School, director of the Program for Financial Studies Initiative on finance and growth in emerging markets, and a professor at Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs. His research spans the areas of banking, corporate finance, financial history and monetary economics. He is a distinguished visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a member of the Shadow Open Market Committee and the Financial Economists Roundtable, and a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Read articles by Charles W. Calomiris.

Joan Calzada – University of Barcelona

Joan Calzada is associate professor of economics at the University of Barcelona. He holds an MSc in Economics from the University College of London and a PhD in Economics from the University of Barcelona. Moreover, he is the director of the MSc in Economics at the University of Barcelona. His research interests are the economic regulation of telecommunications, Internet and air transportation. Some of his recent papers study the liberalization of the telecommunication market, the universal service policies implemented in network industries and the prices of broadband services. His research has appeared in academic journals such as The Economic Journal, Marketing Science, International Journal of Industrial Organization, Journal of Regulatory Economics, Information Economics and Policy, and Telecommunications Policy. He has advised several bodies, including the European Commission, CMT, OSINERGMIN, and Senatel.

Read articles by Joan Calzada.

Rex Cammack 80x108Rex Cammack – University of Nebraska at Omaha

Rex Cammack is an Associate Professor in the department of Geography/Geology at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. His areas of interest include cartography and geographic information systems.

Read articles by Rex Cammack.

 

Bart Cammaerts – Department of Media and Communications at LSE

Bart Cammaerts is Professor of Politics and Communication in the Department of Media and Communications at LSE, where he also serves as Programme Director for the MSc Media and Communications. His current research focuses on the relationship between media, communication and resistance with particular emphasis on media strategies of activists, media representations of protest, alternative counter-cultures and broader issues relating to power, participation and public-ness.

Read articles by Bart Cammaerts.

Filipe Campante – Johns Hopkins University

Filipe Campante is Bloomberg Distinguished Associate Professor of International Economics at Johns Hopkins University and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). His work has been published in journals such as the American Economic Review and the Quarterly Journal of Economics. Born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, he holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University.

Read articles by Filipe R. Campante.

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James-Campbell-80x108James E. Campbell- University at Buffalo, SUNY

James E. Campbell is a UB Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the University at Buffalo, SUNY. His main research interests are on American macropolitics. He is the author of three university press books and more than 80 journal articles and book chapters. His most recent book is The American Campaign: U.S. Presidential Campaigns and the National Vote. He is currently working on a book about the polarization of American politics.

Read articles by James E. Campbell.

Walter Campbell 80x108Walter L. Campbell – Rutgers University

Walter L. Campbell, MS, is a PhD student at Rutgers School of Criminal Justice. He earned a master’s in criminology from the University of Pennsylvania. His research interests include geographic crime patterns and prevention, policing and homeland security issues, effective interagency collaboration, and program evaluation.

Read articles by Walter L. Campbell

Giorgio Canarella – University of Nevada Las Vegas

Giorgio Canarella currently works at the Center for Business and Economic Research (CBER), University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Giorgio does research in International Economics, Financial Economics and Econometrics. 

Read articles by Giorgio Canarella.

 

Jennifer Candipan – Harvard University

Jennifer Candipan is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Department of Sociology at Harvard University and a Postdoctoral Research Affiliate at the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. Jennifer’s research interests are in stratification, urban sociology, race/ethnicity, and the sociology of education, with specific interests in how social and spatial contexts like neighborhoods and schools produce racial/ethnic and economic inequalities.

Read articles by Jennifer Candipan._

Kayla S. Canelo – University of Texas at Arlington

Kayla S. Canelo is an assistant professor of political science at the University of Texas at Arlington. She studies American politics with a focus on judicial politics and public opinion. Her research has been published in the Journal of Politics, State Politics and Policy Quarterly, Presidential Studies Quarterly, and American Politics Research.

Read articles by Kayla S. Canelo.

Brandice Canes-Wrone 80x108Brandice Canes-Wrone – Princeton University

Brandice Canes-Wrone is the Donald E. Stokes Professor of Public and International Affairs and a Professor of Politics at Princeton University. Her current research focuses on the economic effects of electoral institutions, how the selection procedures for judges affect their decisions on the court, the impact of presidential campaigning on congressional elections, and presidential policy making.

Read articles by Brandice Canes-Wrone.

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Damon Cann – Utah State University
Damon Cann is assistant professor of political science at Utah State University where he specializes in American politics and quantitative methods. He is the author of Sharing the Wealth: Member Contributions and the Exchange Theory of Party Influence in the US House of Representatives.

Read articles by Damon Cann.

 

David Canon – University of Wisconsin-Madison

David T. Canon is a professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota in 1987 and previously taught at Duke University.  His teaching and research interests are in American political institutions, especially Congress. 

Read articles by David Canon.

Francisco Cantu 80x108Francisco Cantu – University of Houston

Francisco Cantu is Assistant Professor at the University of Houston.  His research interests are comparative politics, political economy, and quantitative methods.

Read articles by Francisco Cantu.

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Jason Cao 80x108Jason Cao – University of Minnesota

Jason Cao is an associate professor with the urban and regional planning program of the University of Minnesota’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs. His current research mainly focuses on land-use and transportation planning. He seeks to answer interrelated questions about how transportation investments influence urban development, how land-use patterns shape individuals’ behavior, and how land-use and transportation policies can be used to mitigate traffic congestion and improve our environment. He has been published in Environment and PlanningJournal of the American Planning AssociationTransportationTransportation Research, and others.

Read articles by Jason Cao.

Xiaoshu Cao – Shaanxi Normal University

Xiaoshu Cao is in the Center for Transport Geography and Spatial Planning, Shaanxi Normal University and in the Center for Urban and Regional Studies, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China.

Read articles by Xiaoshu Cao.

jane-caplan-80x108Jane CaplanSt Antony’s College, Oxford and Bryn Mawr College

Jane Caplan is Emeritus Fellow of St Antony’s College, Oxford, and Emeritus Marjorie Walter Goodhart Professor of European History at Bryn Mawr College. She is a leading historian of Nazi Germany and the history of the documentation of individual identity. Professor Caplan was involved in establishing one of Britain’s first university courses in women’s studies. She is also an editor of History Workshop Journal.

Read articles by Jane Caplan.

Joel Caplan 80x108Joel M. Caplan – Rutgers University

Joel M. Caplan is an Associate Professor at the Rutgers University School of Criminal Justice and deputy director of the Rutgers Center on Public Security. His research focuses on risk assessment, spatial analysis, and policing.

Read articles by Joel M. Caplan.

 

Ryan Carlin 80x108Ryan E. Carlin – Georgia State University

Ryan Carlin is an Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for Human Rights and Democracy at Georgia State University. His main research field is comparative political behavior, especially in Latin America. His other research interests include natural disaster politics, social preferences, rule of law, and political institutions.

Read articles by Ryan E. Carlin.

Juliet Carlisle 80x108Juliet Carlisle – University of Idaho

Juliet Carlisle is an Assistant Professor of political science at the University of Idaho. Her research substantively deals with political participation, public opinion, and political socialization. Her most current projects include a co-authored book manuscript, The Politics of Energy Crises, and work exploring public attitudes toward large-scale solar developments in the U.S., which is funded by a $2.7 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.

Read articles by Juliet Carlisle.

Deven Carlson 80x108Deven Carlson – University of Oklahoma

Deven Carlson is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Oklahoma.  His research analyzes the operations and effects of public policy, typically in the substantives areas of education and social policy.

Read articles by Deven Carlson.

 

Taylor N. Carlson – Washington University in St. Louis

Taylor Carlson is Assistant Professor in the Political Science Department at Washington University in St. Louis. She studies political communication, political psychology, and race/ethnicity in American Politics. Her research focuses on understanding the content and consequences of interpersonal political communication.

Read articles by Taylor Carlson.

Lara Carminati – University of Twente, Netherlands

Lara Carminati is Assistant Professor in the Change Management and Organisational Behaviour research group of the University of Twente, Netherlands. Her publications include “Behavioural economics and human decision making: Instances from the health care system”, Health Policy, 124, 659-664.

Read articles by Lara Carminati.

Dustin Caranahan 80x108Dustin Carnahan – Ohio State University

Dustin Carnahan is a PhD student in American Politics at the Ohio State University with a research emphasis in political psychology, political communications, public opinion, and political behavior. His dissertation research examines the role of information-processing goals in predicting patterns of exposure to political information, as well as how these goals may moderate the impact of information exposure on political attitudes.

Read articles by Dustin Carnahan.

Felipe Carozzi – LSE Geography and Environment

Felipe Carozzi is an Assistant Professor of Urban Economics & Economic Geography in the Department of Geography and Environment at the LSE.

Read articles by Felipe Carozzi.

 

Robert Carp 80x108Robert A. CarpUniversity of Houston

Robert A. Carp is a professor of Political Science at the University of Houston where he has served since 1969.  He is the author of fifty-one authored or co-authored peer-reviewed articles in the realms of judicial process, law and society, and judicial behavior.  Two of his most recent co-authored books include:  Politics and Judgment in Federal District Courts, University Press of Kansas, 1996; and Judicial Process in America, 10th edition, Congressional Quarterly Press, 2017.

Read articles by Robert A. Carp.

Daniel Carpenter – Harvard University

Daniel Carpenter is Allie S. Freed Professor of Government in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and Director of Social Sciences at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University.

Read articles by Daniel Carpenter.

 

Jered Carr 80x108Jered B. Carr – University of Missouri-Kansas City

Jered B. Carr is the Victor and Caroline Schutte/Missouri Professor of Urban Affairs and Director of the L.P. Cookingham Institute of Urban Affairs at the Henry W. Bloch School of Management at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. He is also Co-Editor and Managing Editor of the Urban Affairs Review, a leading academic journal of urban politics and policy. In August 2014, he will join the University of Illinois at Chicago as the chair of the Department of Public Administration. Carr’s research interests are in metropolitan governance, urban policy, and local government administration. He currently has several ongoing research programs focused on metropolitan governance, municipal services cooperation, civic and political engagement, and local governance institutions.

Read articles by Jered B. Carr.

Nathan T. Carrington – Syracuse University

Nathan T. Carrington is a PhD Candidate in political science at Syracuse University and a research associate at the Campbell Public Affairs Institute. His research focuses on law and courts, political psychology, and the freedom of expression in the United States. Find him on Twitter @NateCarrington.

Read articles by Nathan T. Carrington.

Susan Caroll 80x108Susan J. Carroll – Rutgers University 

Susan J. Carroll is Professor of Political Science and Women’s and Gender Studies at Rutgers University as well as Senior Scholar at the Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP) of the Eagleton Institute of Politics.

Read interviews with Susan J. Carroll.

 

Thomas Carsey 80x108Thomas M. CarseyUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Thomas M. Carsey is the Thomas J. Pearsall Distinguished Professor in the Department of Political Science and the Director of the Odum Institute for Research in Social Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His research interests center on electoral behavior, campaigns, political parties, public opinion, state politics, and legislative politics in the U.S, along with quantitative methods. His research has appeared in journals like the American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, and the Journal of Politics.

Read articles by Thomas M. Carsey.

Jamie Carson 80x108Jamie L. Carson – University of Georgia

Jamie Carson is the UGA Athletic Association Professor of Public and International Affairs II in the Department of Political Science at The University of Georgia. His primary research interests are in American politics and political institutions, with an emphasis on representation and strategic political behavior. Most of his current research focuses on congressional politics and elections, American political development, and separation of powers.

Read articles by Jamie L. Carson.

Bethany Carter – Tulane University

Bethany A. Carter is a PhD Student in the Political Science Department at Tulane University. She holds a BA in International Studies, Political Science, and German from Mount St. Mary’s University.

Read articles by Bethany A. Carter.

 

Carlos Carvalho 80x108Carlos Carvalho – Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro

Carlos Carvalho is an Associate Professor, Department of Economics at PUC-Rio and partner of Kyros Investments. He has published articles in such areas as Macroeconomics, Monetary Economics, Finance, and Macroeconomics and International Finance. He was an economist and senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from August 2007 to May 2011.

Read articles by Carlos Carvalho.

Andreu Casas – University of Amsterdam

Andreu Casas is a research fellow at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR), in the University of Amsterdam. His research interests encompass the areas of political communication, public policy processes, and computational social sciences.

Read articles by Andreu Casas. 

Jason CasellasUniversity of Houston

Professor Casellas specializes in American politics, with specific research and teaching interests in Latino politics, legislative politics, and state and local politics. He is the author of Latino Representation in State Houses and Congress (New York: Cambridge University Press.) He is the recipient of numerous fellowships and awards, including a Princeton Fellowship, an American Political Science Association Fellowship, a Ford Motor Company Fellowship, the Samuel DuBois Cook Postdoctoral Fellowship at Duke University, and a United States Studies Centre Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Sydney.

Read articles by Jason Casellas.

Francesco Caselli 80x108Francesco Caselli – LSE Economics

Francesco Caselli is the Norman Sosnow Professor of Economics at the LSE. He is director of the Macroeconomics Program at the Centre for Economic Performance (CEP), and a fellow of the British Academy. His research interests include economic development and political economy.

Read articles by Francesco Caselli.

erin-c-cassese-80x108Erin C. CasseseWest Virginia University

Erin C. Cassese is an Associate Professor of Political Science at West Virginia University.  Her research on gender and race in American Politics has appeared in Politics & Gender, Legislative Studies Quarterly, The Journal of Politics, Sex Roles, and PS: Political Science & Policy, among other peer-reviewed outlets.

Read articles by Erin C. Cassese.

Dan Cassion 80x108Dan Cassino – Fairleigh Dickinson University

Dan Cassino is a professor of Government and Politics at Fairleigh Dickinson University in Madison, New Jersey, who studies political psychology and polling.

Read articles by Dan Cassino.

 

David Castells QuintanaDavid Castells-Quintana – Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona

David Castells-Quintana is  visiting professor at the Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, and associated researcher of the AQR research group at the Universidad de Barcelona. Previously he was research assistant for the Grantham Research Institute of LSE. His research interests focus on development and urban economics.

Read articles by David Castells-Quintana.

Emilio Castilla 80x108Emilio J. Castilla – MIT Sloan School of Management

Emilio J. Castilla is an associate professor of management at the MIT Sloan School of Management (Behavioral and Policy Sciences Area), where he teaches courses in organizational behavior and strategic human resource management. He is a member of the Institute for Work and Employment Research at MIT; and also a research Fellow at the Wharton Financial Institutions Center and at the Center for Human Resources at the Wharton School. His research primarily focuses on the sociological aspects of work and employment. He is particularly interested in examining how social and organizational processes influence employment outcomes over time, and he tackles these questions by examining different empirical settings with unique longitudinal datasets, at both the individual and organizational level.

Read articles by Emilio J. Castilla.

Thomas Catlaw 80x108Thomas J. Catlaw – Arizona State University

Thomas J. Catlawis Associate Professor and Frank and June Sackton Chair in Public Administration in the School of Public Affairs at Arizona State University in Phoenix. He is the author of Fabricating the People: Politics and Administration in the Biopolitical State(University of Alabama Press, 2007) and Theories of Public Organization (with Robert Denhardt, Cengage, 2014).

Read articles by Thomas J. Catlaw.

Elizabeth Cauffman – University of California, Irvine

Elizabeth Cauffman is a Professor and Chancellor’s Fellow in the Department of Psychology and Social Behavior at the University of California, Irvine. Her research focuses on the development, assessment, and treatment of antisocial behavior and other types of risk problems in adolescence. She is particularly interested in applying research on normative and atypical development to issues with legal and social policy implications.

Read articles by Elizabeth Cauffman.

Stacy Cavanaugh

Stacy Cavanaugh, MSW, is an independent scholar in Denver, Colorado.

Read articles by Stacy Cavanaugh.

Amnon Cavari – Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya

Amnon Cavari is assistant professor at the Lauder School of Government, Diplomacy, and Strategy at the Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya, head of the American Public Opinion toward Israel (APOI) research lab, and co-chair of the Policy Agendas Project at IDC. Dr. Cavari is the author of The Party Politics of Presidential Rhetoric (Cambridge, 2017) and of several journal articles about the US presidency and public opinion.

Read articles by Amnon Cavari. 

Adam Cayton 80x108Adam Cayton – University of Colorado

In the fall of 2016, Adam Cayton will join the Department of Government at the University of West Florida as an assistant professor. His research focuses on representation, legislative institutions, and institutional change in the United States.

Read articles by Adam Cayton.

Erin Cech 80x108Erin A. Cech – University of Michigan

Erin A. Cech is assistant professor of sociology at the University of Michigan. Before coming to UM, she was faculty at Rice University and a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research at Stanford University.  Cech earned her Ph.D. in Sociology in 2011 from the University of California, San Diego. Her research examines cultural mechanisms of inequality reproduction–specifically, how inequality is reproduced through processes that are not overtly discriminatory or coercive, but rather those that are built into seemingly innocuous cultural beliefs and practices.

Read articles by Erin A. Cech.

Andrea Gomez Cervantes 80x108Andrea Gómez Cervantes – University of Kansas

Andrea is a doctoral sociology student at the University of Kansas. Her research interests focus on immigration, families, inequality, race and ethnicity, and globalization. Her investigations range from Latinas in higher education, transnational families, to the effects of skin color on immigrants’ social mobility. Her dissertation work focuses on effects of structural inequalities on mixed-status immigrant families (those with various legal statuses in the same family) in the Midwest.

Read articles by Andrea Gómez Cervantes.

Paolo CerviniPaolo Cervini – ECSI Consulting

Paolo Cervini is a Director at ECSI Consulting. He has 20 years in management consulting for multinational and national companies across Europe and the US on strategy and business transformation. His expertise is  in innovation, profitable growth, commercial excellence and organisational change.

Read articles by Paolo Cervini.

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Youngjoo Cha 80x108Youngjoo Cha – Indiana University

Youngjoo Cha is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Indiana University. Her research interests are in gender, labor markets, and inequality. Her current projects examine the effects of the rising “overwork” norm on many forms of gender inequalities, and explore how characteristics of the changing economic environment (e.g., increased job mobility and flexible work arrangements) affect labor market inequality between men and women.

Read articles by Youngjoo Cha.

Kusminder Chahal – Birmingham City University, UK

Kusminder Chahal is Senior Research Fellow at the School of Social Sciences at Birmingham City University. His research interests include race and racism, lived experience, hate crime, victim support and service responses and community-based engagement and research.

Read articles by Kusminder Chahal.

Amitav ChakravartiAmitav Chakravarti – LSE Management

Amitav Chakravarti is Professor of Marketing at LSE’s Department of Management. He was previously an Associate Professor at the Stern School of Business, New York University. He has also served on the faculties of MIT Sloan School of Management, Johnson School of Management, Cornell University, and University of California, Riverside. Prior to his PhD he worked with IMRB (Indian Market Research Bureau) in India. His research has been published in leading journals. He was awarded the inaugural Google-WPP Marketing Research Award, the Marketing Science Institute (MSI) Young Scholar Award (awarded by MSI to faculty members who are “likely leaders of the next generation of marketing academics”), and the ART (Advanced Research Techniques) Forum Best Paper Award.

Read articles by Amitav Chakravarti.

Aaron-Chalfin-80x108Aaron Chalfin – University of Cincinnati

Aaron Chalfin is an Assistant Professor in the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Cincinnati. His current research examines the effect of police on crime and the extent to which there is a relationship between crime and unauthorized immigration. His past research has considered both the cost and deterrent effect of capital punishment, the relationship between unemployment and crime and the degree to which DNA evidence can be used to solve residential burglaries.

Read articles by Aaron Chalfin.

Alyssa W. Chamberlain 80x108Alyssa W. Chamberlain – Arizona State University

Alyssa W. Chamberlain is an Assistant Professor in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Arizona State University. Her research examines neighborhood dynamics related to changes in social and demographic structure, housing, and inequality and the spatial distribution of crime.  She also examines issues related to prisoner reentry and corrections, including offender supervision, and neighborhood reintegration. 

Read articles by Alyssa W. Chamberlain.

Ali D. Chambers – Claflin University

Ali D. Chambers, PhD is an assistant professor of African American Studies at Claflin University in Orangeburg, SC. His work and research is concentrated on the historical and cultural impact of the Black Greek-letter Organization. Currently Dr. Chambers is completing his book, Finding Consciousness in the Black Fraternity.

Read articles by Ali D. Chambers.

Ha-Joon Chang – University of Cambridge

Dr Ha-Joon Chang has been teaching economics at the Faculty of Economics and the Development Studies programme at the University of Cambridge since 1990. Economics: The User’s Guide was published in April 2014, and Chang is also the author of Kicking Away the Ladder, Bad Samaritans: The Myth of Free Trade, and 23 Things They Don’t Tell You About Capitalism.

Read interview with Ha-Joon Chang.

Rong Chang – University of Houston

Rong Chang currently is a computer science master student at Khoury College of Computer Science, Northeastern University. She previously worked in University of Houston as a Research Assistant Professor at College of Education. She received her Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from Texas Tech University. Rong demonstrates methodological expertise with multi-wave, multi-informant data sets. 

Read articles by Rong Chang.

Joshua Chanin – San Diego State University

Joshua Chanin is an Associate Professor in the School of Public Affairs at San Diego State University. Dr. Chanin’s research interests lie at the intersection of law, criminal justice, and governance. Recent work has been published in Public Administration Review, Police Quarterly, and Criminal Justice Review.

Read articles by Joshua Chanin.

Elizabeth Charash – Brady: United Against Gun Violence

Elizabeth Charash is a Partnerships Project Manager with Brady: United Against Gun Violence, and a researcher on violence intervention in the US, Northern Ireland and South Africa.

Read articles by Elizabeth Charash.

 

Suzanne Charles 80x108Suzanne Lanyi Charles – Northeastern University

Suzanne Lanyi Charles is an Assistant Professor in the School of Architecture at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts. Dr. Charles’s scholarly interests include residential redevelopment and neighborhood change with a particular interest in the changing suburban landscape. Her current research examines physical, social, and economic changes in postwar suburban neighborhoods. Her research has received research grants from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Real Estate Academic Initiative at Harvard University.

Read articles by Suzanne Lanyi Charles.

Robert Chaskin 80x108Robert J. Chaskin – University of Chicago

Robert J. Chaskin is a Professor and the Deputy Dean for Strategic Initiatives at the School of Social Service Administration and is the Faculty Director of the University of Chicago Urban Network. His research interests include community organizing and development, community social organization, comprehensive community initiatives, youth development, associations and nonprofits, philanthropy and social change, social housing policy, knowledge utilization and evaluation, and cross-national research. 

Read articles by Robert J. Chaskin.

Sara Chatfield 80x108Sara Chatfield – Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Sara Chatfield is a Postdoctoral Associate in the Political Science Department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Read articles by Sara Chatfield.

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Daniel Chatman 80x108Daniel G. Chatman – University of California, Berkeley

Dan Chatman is on the faculty of city and regional planning at UC Berkeley. His research areas of interest include travel behavior and the built environment; residential and workplace location choice; and the connections between public transportation, immigration and the economic growth of cities.

Read articles by Daniel G. Chatman.

Linda M Chatters 80x108Linda M. Chatters – University of Michigan

Linda M. Chatters is a professor in the Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, School of Public Health and professor in the School of Social Work at the University of Michigan. She is a faculty associate with the Program for Research on Black Americans at the Institute for Social Research and the Center for Research on Ethnicity, Culture and Health. The focus of Dr. Chatters’ research is the study of adult development and aging in relation to the mental and physical health status and functioning of older persons in a variety of social contexts (i.e., the family, church, and community). She is also interested in religious involvement among African Americans and the independent effects of religious, personal, and social status factors on personal well-being.

Read articles by Linda M. Chatters.

Neil S. Chaturvedi – California State Polytechnic University

Neilan S. Chaturvedi is an assistant professor of political science at the California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. His research focuses on American institutions, race and ethnicity, and elections. His research has been published in Legislative Studies Quarterly, Social Science Quarterly, Politics, Groups and Identities, the Journal of Asian American Studies, and Politics and Religion.

Read articles by Neil S. Chaturvedi.

Anoshua Chaudhuri 80x108Anoshua Chaudhuri – San Francisco State University

Anoshua Chaudhuri is a Health Economist and an Associate Professor of Economics at San Francisco State University. Her research is in health, development and family economics with a focus on evaluating impacts of health policies and programs on communities and households with a special focus on children and elderly.

Read articles by Anoshua Chaudhuri,

Juan Pablo Chauvin – Harvard University

Juan Pablo Chauvin is a Research Associate at the Center for International Development at Harvard. His research focuses on cities and regions at different national income levels, with a focus on understanding the connections between labor markets, housing markets, and the industry composition of places.  In the past, he has been an Instructor and Teaching Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School and at Ecuadorian universities.  He has also been a consultant with the German Technical Cooperation Agency (GIZ), the World Bank, the OECD and the private sector; advising local, regional and national governments on economic development and diversification policies in South America, Asia, the MENA region and South East Europe.

Read articles by Juan Pablo Chauvin.

Mark Chaves 80x108Mark ChavesDuke University

Mark Chaves is Professor of Sociology, Religious Studies, and Divinity at Duke University. He directs the National Congregations Study, a wide-ranging survey of a nationally representative sample of religious congregations conducted in 1998, 2006, and 2012. Much of his research focuses on the social organization of religion. His most recent book isAmerican Religion: Contemporary Trends (Princeton University Press, 2011).

Read articles by Mark Chaves.

Leonidas Cheliotis – LSE Social Policy

Leonidas Cheliotis is Associate Professor in the Department of Social Policy at the London School of Economics and Director of LSE’s Mannheim Centre for Criminology.

Read articles by Leonidas Cheliotis.

 

Can Chen – Georgia State University

Can Chen is an associate professor in the Department of Public Management and Policy, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University. His core research agenda is developing and promoting innovative, efficient, and effective infrastructure financing to support critical infrastructure that is sustainable and resilient in its financing and funding, use, performance, and maintenance. His substantive research topic interests include infrastructure (transportation) finance and policy, disaster finance, fiscal transparency, and financial accounting. He can be reached via cchen64@gsu.edu

Read articles by Can Chen.

Gina Chen – University of Texas at Austin

Dr. Gina Chen is an Assistant Professor at the School of Journalism at the University of Texas at Austin. Chen is also the Assistant Director of the Center for Media Engagement at UT Austin. The granted-funded center conducts original research to help news organizations engage more meaningfully with the news audience.

Read articles by Gina Chen.

Haotian Chen – University of California, Irvine

Haotian Chen is a Ph.D. student in political science at the University of California, Irvine.

Read articles by Haotian Chen.

Xi Chen – Auburn University

Xi Chen is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. His research interests include research methods for public administrators, representative bureaucracy, state and environmental politics, and diversity and inclusion.

Read articles by Xi Chen.

Xiaofeng Chen – Auburn University

Xiaofeng Chen received her Ph.D. in 2021 from the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. Her research interests include local government management, immigration, and diversity and inclusion.

Read articles by Xiaofeng Chen.

Xiang Chen 80x108Xiang Chen – Arkansas Tech University

Xiang Chen is a newly appointed Assistant Professor in Emergency Management at Arkansas Tech University. His research interest is urban food access and socioeconomic correlates by employing innovative geospatial techniques, such as geovisualization, social media, and space-time modeling. His other research interest is emergency preparedness for natural disasters and terrorist attacks by assessing vulnerability of urban transport infrastructure and by deriving optimal placement of shelters.

Read articles by Xiang Chen.

Steven Chermak – Michigan State University

Steven Chermak is a professor in the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University.  He studies rare violent events, such as terrorism and school shootings. His research has been funded by DHS and NIJ, and recent publications have appeared in Terrorism and Political ViolenceCriminology & Public Policy, and Justice Quarterly.

Read articles by Steven Chermak.

Edward E Chervenak 80x108Edward E. Chervenak  – University of New Orleans

Dr. Edward E. Chervenak  is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science  and Director of the UNO Survey Research Center at the University of New Orleans. His research interests include American Politics, minority politics, political participation, and voting rights.

Read articles by Edward E. Chervenak.

Noelle-Chesley-80x108Noelle Chesley- University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Noelle Chesley is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in the United States. Her research focuses on the relevance of technological innovation for both work and family life. She has published in venues such as Journal of Marriage and FamilySociological FocusJournal of Family IssuesWork, Employment, & Society, and Information, Communication, & Society.

Read articles by Noelle Chesley.

Carla Chifos – University of Cincinnati

Dr. Carla Chifos is Associate Professor in the School of Planning at the University of Cincinnati in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.  Dr. Chifos has worked both professionally and academically in the areas of sustainable development, climate change, culturally and ecologically sensitive development, community development, and neighborhood revitalization.

Read articles by Carla Chifos.

clayton-chin-80x108Clayton Chin – The University of Melbourne

Dr. Clayton Chin is Lecturer in Political Theory in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne. His research focuses on the methodology of different traditions within political theory, particularly the relation between pragmatist political thought and the analytical and Continental approaches, and increasingly, issues related to multiculturalism and cultural diversity in contemporary liberal democracies.

Read articles by Clayton Chin.

Garikai Chimuka

Garikai Chimuka holds an MSc from Wageningen University, the Netherlands. He also holds a Master of Laws as well as a Bachelor of Laws from the University of London. He is a Zimbabwean with research interests in global politics, intersection of law and technology as well as sustainable development issues in the Global South. He can be contacted at garychimuka06@yahoo.com

Read articles by Garikai Chimuka.

Fang-Yi-Chiou-80x108Fang-Yi Chiou – Institute of Political Science, Academia Sinica (Taiwan)

Fang-Yi Chiou is an associate research fellow at the Institute of Political Science, Academia Sinica (Taiwan) and was the 2011 recipient of the Taiwanese National Science Council’s Distinguished Research Award. His research focuses on American presidency and the political economy of legislative institutions and politics in the U.S. Congress and Taiwanese legislature, specifically what causes legislative gridlock in these legislatures.

Read articles by Fang-Yi Chiou.

Mick Chisnall – University of Canberra

Mick Chisnall is research fellow and professional associate in the Institute for Governance and Policy Analysis, University of Canberra, where he also completed his doctorate on government IT policy disasters in 2018. This post draws on his recent article on digital slavery.

Read articles by Mick Chisnall.

christakisNicholas A. Christakis – Yale University

Nicholas A. Christakis is an American sociologist and physician known for his research on social networks and on the socioeconomic and biosocial determinants of behavior, health, and longevity. He is the Sol Goldman Family Professor of Social and Natural Science at Yale University. He directs the Human Nature Lab, and he is the Co-Director of the Yale Institute for Network Science.

Read interview with Nicholas A. Christakis.

Devin J. Christensen – University of North Carolina

Devin J. Christensen is a Ph.D. candidate in the Political Science Department at the University of North Carolina.

Read articles by Devin J. Christensen.

 

Dino Christenson 80x108Dino P. Christenson – Boston University

Dino P. Christenson is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Boston University and a Junior Faculty Fellow at the Hariri Institute for Computing & Computational Science & Engineering. Christenson studies American political behavior and quantitative methods with a focus on the context in which individuals and organizations receive and react to political information.

Read articles by Dino P. Christenson.

Klaudia Chmielowska – University of Oxford

Klaudia Chmielowska is a third-year undergraduate reading philosophy, politics and economics (PPE) at the University of Oxford, a British Alumni Society scholar, and an HSBC scholar. In previous projects, she has used quantitative methods and market research to produce a strategic analysis for a network of women micro-entrepreneurs in securing the financing they need to deliver clean energy products to households in rural Nigeria.

Read articles by Klaudia Chmielowska.

Gabe Chodorow-Reich 80x108Gabriel Chodorow-Reich – Harvard University

Gabriel Chodorow-Reich is an associate of the department of economics at Harvard, where he will begin as an assistant professor in 2014. His research focuses on macroeconomics, finance, and labor economics. He is currently the Julis-Rabinowitz Associate Research Scholar at Princeton University.

Read articles by Gabriel Chodorow-Reich.

Dennis Chong – University of Southern California

Dennis Chong is Professor of Political Science at the University of Southern California, and John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of Political Science (ret.) at Northwestern University. He studies American national politics and has published extensively on issues of decision-making, public opinion, political psychology, and collective action. His current research on the influence of information and framing in competitive democratic contexts has received several national awards, including the APSA’s Franklin L. Burdette/Pi Sigma Alpha Prize.

Read articles by Dennis Chong.

Christine Chow

Christine Chow has 23 years of experience in investment management, research and consulting. Her PhD thesis on responsible investment was short-listed for a United Nations award in Sweden for industry relevance and academic excellence. She is a member of the LSE’s Court of Governors, a member of the School’s Investment Committee, a board member of the International Corporate Governance Network (ICGN) and a member in the Data Governance Task Force of the UK All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on artificial intelligence. In 2019, she was named as one of Brummell Magazine’s Inspirational Women in the City of London. Christine graduated from LSE and the University of Melbourne. She completed executive education on financial engineering at Stanford University. She was an adjunct finance professor at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

Read articles by Christine Chow.

Yongwan Chun – University of Texas at Dallas

Yongwan Chun is an associate professor of Geospatial Information Sciences program at the University of Texas at Dallas. His research interests lie in spatial statistics and GIS focusing on urban and economic issues including population migration, commuting, and urban crime.

Read articles by Yongwan Chun.

Claudia Chwalisz 80x108Claudia Chwalisz – Policy Network

Claudia Chwalisz is a researcher at Policy Network and a Canadian expat in London. Her research interests include populism, EU reform, and the future of social democracy. She tweets @ClaudiaChwalisz.

Read articles by Claudia Chwalisz.

 

lorenzo-cicchi-80x108Lorenzo Cicchi – European University Institute, Italy

Lorenzo Cicchi is Coordinator of the Observatory on Political Parties and Representation at the European University Institute in Florence. His research focuses on political parties, elections and EU politics and institutions. He recently published Is Euro-Voting truly Supranational? National affiliation and political group membership in European Parliament (Pisa University Press, 2016).

Read articles by Lorenzo Cicchi.

Julie Cidell 80x108Julie Cidell – University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Julie Cidell is an associate professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where her work focuses on two main areas: the political economy of transportation, and green buildings and public policy. She has also worked as a transportation engineer in Boston and taught physical geography in northern and southern California.

Read articles by Julie Cidell.

Gokhan Ciflikli – LSE International Relations

Gokhan Ciflikli is a PhD candidate in LSE’s International Relations department. His academic interests revolve around exploring violent conflict dynamics, identifying the determinants of foreign policy decision-making, and quantifying gender issues in academia.

Read articles by Gokhan Ciflikli.

Beverly A. Cigler – Penn State

Beverly A. Cigler, Ph.D., is Penn State Distinguished Professor Emerita of Public Policy and Administration and a Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration. She specializes in state-local relations, fiscal issues, and emergency management. Publications include 175 articles/chapters and several co-authored several books. She has delivered 240+ presentations to governmental organizations and received the 2015 Whittington Award for Teaching Excellence by NASPAA, the Global Standard in Public Service Education.

Read articles by Beverly A. Cigler.

Sebnem Cilesiz 80x108Sebnem Cilesiz – University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Dr. Sebnem Cilesizis currently an assistant professor at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, and has previously been an assistant professor at the Ohio State University. She earned her PhD from the University of Florida in 2006. Recent publications include a study of Internet cafés as informal learning environments for adolescents published in the American Educational Research Journal and a study of the consequences of the prevalence of digital recorded lectures’ replacing classroom teaching in US colleges published in Higher Education.

Read articles by Sebnem Cilesiz.

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Anne Cizmar 80x108Anne Cizmar – Eastern Kentucky University

Anne Cizmar is an Associate Professor in the Department of Government at Eastern Kentucky University. Her teaching and research interests include the presidency, American political behavior, and campaigns and elections. Her work appears in Political Research Quarterly and Public Administration Quarterly, among other outlets.

Read articles by Anne Cizmar.

April Clark 80x108April K. Clark – Northern Illinois University

April K. Clark is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at Northern Illinois University. Dr. Clark is also a senior research associate at the Center for Governmental Studies and specializes in the development of political attitudes and behavior with a particular focus on group differences. She has published on a number of topics including social capital, interpersonal trust, political tolerance and democratic norm support.

Read articles by April K. Clark.

Jennifer-Clark-80x108Jennifer Hayes Clark – University of Houston

Jennifer Hayes Clark is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and a Research Associate at the Center for Public Policy at the University of Houston. Her primary areas of research interest include American political institutions, public policy, and quantitative research methodology.

Read articles by Jennifer Hayes Clark.

Jim Clark 80x108Jim Clark – The Florida Legislature, Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability

Dr. Jim Clark is a Senior Research Analyst at The Florida Legislature, Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability.  His research focuses primarily on criminal sentencing and court processes, juvenile delinquency, sex offender policy and the evaluation of criminal justice policies and programs. 

Read articles by Jim Clark.

Michael Clark– University of Missouri Kansas City

Michael Clark (Ph.D. University of California, Santa Barbara) is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science. More information about him can be found here.

Read articles by Michael Clark.

Serena Clark – UN Migration

Serena Clark is a consultant at UN Migration. She recently completed a postdoctoral research fellowship at Maynooth University. She holds a doctorate in global politics from Trinity College Dublin, where she was a Rotary Global Grant Scholar. Her research interests include migration, policy, global politics, and peacebuilding.

Read articles by Serena Clark. 

Tom Clark 80x108Tom Clark– Emory University

Tom Clark is Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Political Science at Emory University. His current research focuses on the development of learning about and construction of legal rules in appellate courts, as well as the political cleavages and conflicts in American law.

Read articles by Tom Clark.

Valerie Clark 80x108Valerie A. Clark – Minnesota Department of Corrections

Valerie A. Clark is a research analyst at the Minnesota Department of Corrections. In addition to corrections research, her work has focused on sentencing, victimization, and intimate partner violence. She holds a PhD in crime, law, and justice from the Pennsylvania State University.

Read articles by Valerie A. Clark.

William Clark 80x108William A.V. ClarkUniversity of California, Los Angeles

William A.V. Clark is a Professor with research interests in urban geography, spatial demography, and statistics. Professor Clark teaches courses in ethnicity, populations, and California.

Read articles by William A.V. Clark.

 

Harold Clarke – University of Texas at Dallas

Harold D. Clarke, Ph.D. Duke University is Ashbel Smith Professor, School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas, and Adjunct Professor, Department of Government, University of Essex.

Read articles by Harold Clarke.

 

Dewey Clayton – University of Louisville

Dewey Clayton is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Louisville. He earned his Ph.D. in political science from the University of Missouri-Columbia. His research and teaching interests include American politics (electoral politics, redistricting, civil rights law, and African American politics).  He has published articles in leading journals, such as the Journal of Black Studies, and the Black Scholar.  He is the author of African Americans and the Politics of Congressional Redistricting (2000), which examines the congressional redistricting process.  Additionally, he is the author of The Presidential Campaign of Barack Obama:  A Critical Analysis of a Racially Transcendent Strategy (2010), where he analyzes how the first African American was able to transcend race and win election to the highest office in the United States.

Read articles by Dewey Clayton.

Christopher Clearfield

Christopher Clearfield is a former derivatives trader and a licensed commercial pilot. He is the coauthor of Meltdown: Why Our Systems Fail and What We Can Do About It.

Read articles by Christopher Clearfield. 

 

Austin Clemens 80x108Austin ClemensWashington Center for Equitable Growth

Austin Clemens is a Data and Visualizations Manager at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth. His work has been published in Legislative Studies Quarterly, Business and Politics, and the ESPN magazine.

Read articles by Austin Clemens.

 

Jeffrey Clemens 80x108Jeffrey Clemens – University of California, San Diego

Jeffrey Clemens is an assistant professor in the department of economics at the University of California at San Diego (UCSD). He received his PhD in economics at Harvard University in 2011. Before moving to UCSD, Jeff spent one year as a postdoctoral fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. His recent research focuses primarily on topics in social insurance, with an emphasis on health care payment systems. Additional research interests include fiscal policy, state and local government finance, and drug control policy.

Read articles by Jeffrey Clemens.

Michael Clemens – Center for Global Development

Michael Clemens is an economist at the Center for Global Development at IZA Institute for the Study of Labor and author of “The Walls of Nations” forthcoming from Columbia University Press. He’s on Twitter at @m_clem.

Read articles by Michael Clemens.

 

Ben Clements – University of Leicester

Ben Clements is Associate Professor in the School of History, Politics and International Relations at the University of Leicester. The above draws upon research from his latest book, British Public Opinion on Foreign and Defence Policy: 1945-2017 (2018, Routledge).

Read articles by Ben Clements.

Jared Clemons – Duke University

Jared Clemons received his Ph.D. in political science from Duke University, where he studied race and political economy. He is an incoming postdoctoral research fellow at Princeton University’s Center for the Study of Democratic Politics. He is the author of “From ‘From Freedom Now!’ to ‘Black Lives Matter’: Retrieving King and Randolph to Theorize Contemporary White Antiracism,” published in Perspectives on Politics.

Read articles by Jared Clemons.

 

Cristine de Clercy 80x108Cristine de ClercyWestern University

Dr. Cristine de Clercy is a Co-Director of the Leadership and Democracy Lab, and Associate Professor in Political Science at Western University in London, Canada.  She specializes in studying Canadian politics, election law and political leadership.

Read articles by Cristine de Clercy.

Scott Clifford – University of Houston

Scott Clifford is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Houston. His research focuses on political psychology as well as survey and experimental design.

Read articles by Scott Clifford.

 

David Clingingsmith – Case Western Reserve University

David Clingingsmith is Associate Professor of Economics at Case Western Reserve University’s Weatherhead School of Management. He works in applied microeconomics. His main areas of interest are social economics and economic history. He uses a range of empirical methods from lab and field experiments to observational data to historical analysis. He completed his Ph.D. in economics at Harvard University in 2007. He also has an M.A. in anthropology from the University of Chicago.

Read articles by David Clingingsmith.

Josh Clinton 80x108Joshua Clinton – Vanderbilt University

Josh Clinton is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at VanderbiltUniversity. He uses statistical methods to better understand political processes and outcomes. He is interested in: the politics in the U.S. Congress, campaigns and elections, the testing of theories using statistical models, and the uses and abuses of statistical methods for understanding political phenomena.

Read articles by Joshua Clinton.

Ernestina Coast – LSE Department of International Development

Professor Ernestina Coast (@LSE_ID) is Professor of Health and International Development in the Department of International Development at LSE. She is the Principal Investigator of “Improving adolescent access to contraception and safe abortion in sub-Saharan Africa” and is the thematic lead for sexual and reproductive health on “Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence”. 

Read articles by Ernestina Coast.

Rosemary Coates – Reshoring Institute

Rosemary Coates is the executive director of the Reshoring Institute and the president of Blue Silk Consulting, a global supply chain consulting firm. She is a best-selling author of five books on global supply chain management including: 42 Rules for Sourcing and Manufacturing in China. Ms. Coates lives in Silicon Valley, California, and has worked with over 80 clients worldwide. She is also an expert witness for legal cases involving global supply chain matters. Twitter: @ReshoringTeam LinkedIn  Facebook

Read articles by Rosemary Coates. 

Michael Cobb 80x108Michael D. CobbNorth Carolina State University

Michael D. Cobb is an Associate Professor of Political Science in the School of International and Public Affairs (SPIA) at North Carolina State University. His current research interests include studying the antecedents and consequences of misinformation about politics, the effects of public deliberation about science policy, and public opinion about scandals, trade policies, race, and the use of military force abroad.

Read articles by Michael D. Cobb.

Joshua Cochran 80x108Joshua C. Cochran – University of South Florida

Joshua C. Cochran is Assistant Professor in Criminology at the University of South Florida, and studies punishment, sentencing, and theories of crime.  He was recently awarded the American Society of Criminology’s Division on Corrections and Sentencing Dissertation Award for his doctoral thesis focused on imprisonment and the implications of inmate social ties.  Cochran is the author, with Daniel P. Mears, of Prisoner Reentry in the Era of Mass Incarceration (Sage Publications).  You can follow him on Twitter:  @JoshuaCCochran.

Read articles by Joshua C. Cochran.

 

Daniel Cockayne 80x108aDaniel CockayneUniversity of Kentucky

Daniel Cockayne is a PhD candidate in the Department of Geography at the University of Kentucky. He conducts research on labor and work, through frameworks developed at the intersection of feminist, economic, and cultural geographies. His doctoral dissertation is a critical examination of entrepreneurial and digital media work in San Francisco, focused in particular on the dynamic relationships between embodiment, affect, desire, gender, sexuality, and economic production.

Read articles by Daniel Cockayne.

Iain Cockburn 80x108

Iain M. Cockburn – Boston University

Iain M. Cockburn is the Richard C. Shipley Professor of Management at the Strategy and Innovation Department in the School of Management at Boston University. His research interests include the economics of innovation, intellectual property, productivity measurement, industrial organization, and applied econometrics. 

Read articles by Iain M. Cockburn.

Alexandra G. Cockerham – Florida State University

Alexandra G. Cockerham is an Assistant Teaching Professor and the resident political scientist in the Interdisciplinary Social Science program at Florida State University. Her research interests center on executive power, with an eye toward the limitations that institutions impose on directly elected executives. She regularly teaches research methods and evidence based public policy but across all classes encourages her students to more critically consume social information, recognizing that the social world is more complex than the many sources that try to tell us how we should be thinking about something.

Read articles by Alexandra G. Cockerham.

Cristiano Codagnone – Milan State University

Cristiano Codagnone is an aggregate professor at at Milan State University (Department of Social and Political Sciences) and at the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC, Department of Communication Studies.) In Barcelona, he is the Director of the UOC spin-off research company Open Evidence SL and of the Research Group Applied Social Science and Behavioural Economics (ASSBE). He graduated in economics from Bocconi University, holds a Ph.D. in sociology from New York University, and was post-doctoral fellow at Utrecht University. In 2014 he was Visiting Senior Research Fellow at LSE’s Media and Communication Department. He has served at the United Nations (2003-2004) and at the European Union (2009-2011 and 2015-2016). Since 2012 he has designed and directed several experimental behavioural studies to test policy options on behalf of the European Commission in various domains (tobacco packaging, online gambling, car labelling, online marketing to children, transparency of online platforms). Starting in September 2017, still on behalf of the Commission, he will direct a behavioural study on non standard forms of work with respect to attitudes and awareness towards social protection and employment benefits.

Read articles by Cristiano Codagnone.

dan_cohen_bio_page_photo_300pxDan Cohen – Digital Public Library of America

Dan Cohen is the founding Executive Director of the Digital Public Library of America, which is bringing together the riches of America’s libraries, archives, and museums, and making them freely available to the world. Until 2013 he was a Professor of History in theDepartment of History and Art History at George Mason University and the Director of the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media. His personal research has been in digital humanities, broadly construed: the impact of new media and technology on all aspects of knowledge, from the nature of digitized resources to twenty-first century research techniques and software tools to the changing landscape of communication and publication.

Read articles by Dan Cohen.

Dan Cohen – Concordia University

Dan Cohen is a postdoctoral fellow at Concordia University. His research has focused on the marketization of schooling in the United States and Canada. His current project examines private tutoring markets in Toronto and Montreal. 

Read articles by Dan Cohen.

Italo Colantone – Bocconi University

Italo Colantone is an Associate Professor of economics at Bocconi University, Italy.

Read articles by Italo Colantone.

 

gregg-colburn-80x108Gregg Colburn – University of Minnesota

Gregg Colburn is a Ph.D. candidate in public policy at the Humphrey School at the University of Minnesota. The focus of his research is social policy, the welfare state, housing policy and homelessness. In his dissertation, Gregg is analyzing the use of markets in the delivery of welfare benefits.  

Read articles by Gregg Colburn.

Jack Collens 80x108Jack D. Collens – Siena College

Jack D. Collens is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Siena College in Loudonville, New York. His research examines the intersection of American political institutions (including parties and the media) and elections.

Read articles by Jack D. Collens.

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Loren Collingwood 80x108Loren Collingwood – University of California, Riverside

Loren Collingwood is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science at the University of California, Riverside. His research and teaching focuses specifically on campaigns and elections, political behavior, race and ethnicity, and quantitative methodology.

Read articles by Loren Collingwood.

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John Collins – International Drug Policy Unit, LSE US Centre

Dr John Collins is Executive Director of the International Drug Policy Unit and Fellow, of the LSE US Centre. He is also coordinator of the Expert Group on the Economics of Drug Policy.

Read articles by John Collins.

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Sheila-D-Collins-80x108Sheila D. Collins – William Paterson University

Sheila D. Collins is Professor of Political Science Emerita, William Paterson University and editor/author with Gertrude Schaffner Goldberg of When Government Helped: Learning from the Success and Failures of the New Deal. She is on the speakers’ bureau of the National New Deal Preservation Association and the board of the National Jobs for All Coalition, is a member of the Global Ecological Integrity Group and co-chairs two seminars at Columbia University.

Read articles by Sheila D. Collins.

Robert Colls 80x108Robert Colls – De Montfort University

Robert Colls is Professor of Cultural History at De Montfort University, Leicester. He was born in South Shields and educated at South Shields Grammar Technical School and the universities of Sussex and York. He has held fellowships at the universities of Oxford, Yale, and Dortmund, and with the Leverhulme Trust. His latest book, George Orwell: English Rebel, published in th UK in October, and will be available in the US in January 2014.

Read articles by Robert Colls.

Pietro Colombo – University of Insubria, Italy

Pietro Colombo is an assistant professor of Computer Science at the University of Insubria, Italy, where he works within the STRICT SociaLab of the Department of Theoretical and Applied Sciences. His most recent research activities are in the field of access control within NoSQL datastores, privacy aware data management, and data privacy within internet of things ecosystems, however he has also worked in the field of service availability and model driven engineering.

Read articles by Pietro Colombo.

Greg Colson 80x108Gregory Colson – University of Georgia

Gregory Colson is an Assistant Professor in the Agricultural and Applied Economics Department at The University of Georgia. His research interests include agricultural and environmental economics with a particular focus on survey and experimental methods.

Read articles by Gregory Colson.

Jennifer Comey 80x108Jennifer Comey – District of Columbia Office of the Deputy Mayor for Education

Jennifer Comey is a senior policy advisor at the DC Office of the Deputy Mayor for Education where she works on strategic planning coordinating the traditional and public charter schools. Her current projects include school assignment policies and boundaries, assessing the adequacy of local education funding, and identifying the optimal supply of public schools. Before joining the Deputy Mayor for Education’s Office, Comey was a senior research associate in the Metropolitan Housing and Communities Center at the Urban Institute.

Read articles by Jennifer Comey.

Simon Commander –  Altura Partners

Simon Commander is Managing Partner of Altura Partners (www.alturapartners.org) which provides strategic and economic policy advice to top level decision makers in governments and companies in emerging markets. He has previously held very senior positions at the World Bank in Washington DC and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD). He is also Visiting professor at IE Business School in Madrid. He holds an MA from Oxford University and a PhD from Cambridge University.

Read articles by Simon Commander.

MacKenzie F. Common – LSE Law

MacKenzie F. Common is a PhD student at LSE’s Department of Law. She holds a B.A. (Honours) in Political Science from the University of Guelph (Canada) where she graduated with Distinction in 2011. She earned her LLB (Graduate Entry) from City University in 2013 and her LLM from the University of Cambridge in 2015, where she was a blog editor on the Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law. MacKenzie has worked at the Conduct and Discipline Unit, a specialised unit in the United Nations Department of Field Support which handles criminal complaints against peacekeepers and civilian staff working on peacekeeping missions. While at the CDU, she drafted a handbook on investigation procedure and evidentiary standards to be disseminated to all of the peacekeeping missions around the world. In 2013, MacKenzie worked in the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY). MacKenzie also worked for the Nanaimo Crown Attorney’s Office in Nanaimo, British Columbia and the Law Society in London, England.

Read articles by MacKenzie F. Common.

Janice Compton 80x108Janice Compton – University of Manitoba

Janice Compton is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Manitoba. She is interested in the economics of the family and has published numerous articles on family migration and proximity.  

Read articles by Janice Compton.

 

Mallory E. Compton – Utrecht University

Mallory E. Compton is a postdoctoral researcher at Utrecht University School of Governance. Her main research interests are public policy and governance performance, with a focus on social insurance and economic insecurity. Recent publications include an article in The Journal of Politics and a forthcoming book with Oxford University Press titled Great Policy Successes.

Read articles by Mallory E. Compton.

Paola Conconi – Université Libre de Bruxelles

Paola Conconi is a Professor of Economics at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, a member of the European Center for Advanced Research in Economics and Statistics (ECARES), a Research Fellow at CEPR and CESifo, and an Associate of the LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance. 

Read articles by Paola Conconi.

Kimberly Conger – University of Cincinnati

Kimberly Conger is an assistant educator professor of political science at the University of Cincinnati.

Read articles by Kimberly H. Conger.

 

Meghan Condon featuredMeghan CondonDePaul University

Meghan Condon is Assistant Professor in the School of Public Service at DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois. Her research examines the effect of childhood inequality and disadvantage on democratic engagement. Her other research interests include experimental methods, education policy, political participation, and the relationship between income inequality and public opinion.

Read articles by Meghan Condon.

Timothy J. Conlan – George Mason University

Timothy J. Conlan is University Professor of Government and Public Policy at George Mason University.  He is the author most recently of Governing Under Stress: The Implementation of Obama’s Economic Stimulus Program (Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 2017).

Read articles by Timothy J. Conlan.

Deirdre Conlon – University of Leeds

Deirdre Conlon is associate professor in human geography, currently based at the University of Leeds, UK. Conlon’s recent work on detention and destitution economies investigates the ways marketization, valuation, and commodification impact immigration enforcement and migrant experience. In addition to an edited collection and several journal articles co-authored with Nancy Hiemstra, Deirdre has published in Annals of the American Association of Geographers (202220202014) and Progress in Human Geography (2018). Conlon is a member of international networks including the Justice, Arts and Migration Network (JAM). 

Read articles by Deirdre Conlon.

Thaddieus Connor 80x108Thaddieus W. Conner – New Mexico State University

Thaddieus W. Conner is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Government at New Mexico State University. His research focuses on collaborative public management, intergovernmental relations, and federal Indian policy in the United States. He has recently published articles in Public Administration Review, The American Review of Public Administration, and Public Administration on issues concerning tribal-local partnerships in the area of Indian education in public schools.

Read articles by Thaddieus W. Conner.

Jennifer M. Connolly – University of Miami

Jennifer M. Connolly is an Associate Professor of Political Science in the Department of Political Science at the University of Miami. Her research focuses on local government policy and management.

Read articles by Jennifer M. Connolly.

 

Laura Connolly – Michigan Technological University

Laura Connolly is an Assistant Professor of Economics in the College of Business at Michigan Technological University. Her research focuses on labor economics and the role of gender in the labor market.

Read articles by Laura Connolly.

 

Courtenay R. Conrad – University of California, Merced

Courtenay R. Conrad is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Merced.

Read articles by Courtenay R. Conrad.

 

Meredith Conroy 80x108Meredith Conroy  – California State University, San Bernardino

Meredith Conroy is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at California State University, San Bernadino. Her research interests include Political Communication, Political Psychology, Gender and Politics, The Presidency, and American Government.

Read articles by Meredith Conroy.

Davide Consoli – INGENIO 

Davide Consoli is a research fellow of the National Council of Scientific Research based at the institute INGENIO (CSIC-UPV) in Valencia. He is an economist by training (MA, PhD Economics – University of Manchester) with research interests at the intersection between economics of innovation and studies on technology policy. His research focuses on the analysis of the sources and the effects of innovation across various empirical contexts including retail banking, medicine, knowledge-intensive business services, and more recently environmental sustainability.

Read articles by Davide Consoli.

Lucian Gideon Conway, III – The University of Montana

Lucian Gideon Conway, III is a Professor of Psychology at The University of Montana. His primary research interests revolve around (1) how shared cultural beliefs emerge, persist, and have influence, and (2) the causes of complex (as opposed to simple) thinking and the subsequent consequences on decision-making in political and social arenas.  He is the author of over 60 articles, commentaries, and book chapters in these areas, and his work has been featured in major media outlets such as the Washington PostUSA TodayHuffington Post, Psychology Today, and BBC Radio.  Most recently, he is the author of the book Complex Simplicity: How Psychology Suggests Atheists Are Wrong About Christianity.

Read articles by Lucian Gideon Conway, III.

Moira Conway 80x108Moira ConwayWest Chester University

Moira Conway is currently in the Geography and Planning Department at West Chester University.   She completed her Ph.D. in Geography in the Earth and Environmental Sciences Department of the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.   She also holds an MSc from the London School of Economics.  Her research focuses on post-industrial cities and GIS methods.

Read articles by Moira Conway.

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Alison Cook 80x108Alison Cook – Utah State University

Alison Cook is an Associate Professor of Management in the Jon M. Huntsman School of Business at Utah State University. Her research focuses on gender and racial/ethnic diversity in the workplace. Her current focus is on the factors that shape promotion opportunities for women and racial/ethnic minorities for top leadership positions and the impact of women and minority leaders on organizational practice. Recently, her work has appeared in Strategic Management Journal, Business Strategy & the Environment, Work & Occupations and Human Resource Management.

Read articles by Alison Cook.

Christopher A. Cooper – Western Carolina University

Christopher A. Cooper is Robert Lee Madison Distinguished Professor and Department Head in the Department of Political Science and Public Affairs at Western Carolina University. His research focuses on state and local politics, North Carolina politics, southern politics and elections in the United States.

Read articles by Christopher Cooper.

Silvie Cooper – University College London

Silvie Cooper is a Teaching Fellow at the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (NIHR CLAHRC North Thames) Academy. She has a PhD in Health Sociology from the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa, where she also lectured and tutored while conducting her research. Before joining UCL, she completed a Research Fellowship at the University of Michigan, USA and was the Research Lead at a child health charity in London, UK. Her research interests include management of chronic pain, digital health, and patient education, using qualitative, mixed methods, and translational research approaches.

Read articles by Silvie Cooper.

Rosalyn Cooperman 80x108Rosalyn Cooperman – University of Mary Washington

Rosalyn Cooperman is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, VA.  Professor Cooperman’s research interests include American political parties, Congress, and organized interests.  Cooperman served as a Principal Investigator for the 2004 and 2012 Convention Delegate Studies, a survey of Democratic and Republican party elites.  Professor Cooperman’s current book project examines the role of women’s PACs in the recruitment and funding of women congressional candidates.

Read articles by Rosalyn Cooperman.

Alexander Coppock – Yale University

Alexander Coppock is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Yale University. He studies how individuals incorporate new political information and the reproducibility of social science research.

 

Read articles by Alexander Coppock.  

jack-corbett-80x108Jack Corbett – University of Southampton

Jack Corbett is Associate Professor of Politics at the University of Southampton.

Read articles by Jack Corbett.

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Sarah Cordes 80x108Sarah Cordes – New York University

Sarah Cordes is a fifth year doctoral student at New York University’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. Her research and teaching interests are in education and urban policy, housing, public finance, and applied statistics and econometrics.

Read articles by Sarah Cordes.

Francesco Corea

Francesco Corea is a complexity scientist, AI entrepreneur and tech investor, and he runs the blog Cyber Tales. Francesco is a strong supporter of an interdisciplinary research approach, and he wants to foster the interaction of different sciences in order to bring to light hidden connections. He is a former Anthemis Fellow, IPAM Fellow, and he got his PhD from LUISS University. His topics of interests are big data and AI, and he focuses on fintech, medtech, and energy verticals.

Read articles by Francesco Corea.

Caroline Corker

Caroline Corker is an independent scholar based out of Washington, D.C.

Read articles by Caroline Corker.

Lindsey Cormack – Stevens Institute of Technology

Lindsey Cormack is an assistant professor of Political Science and Director of the Diplomacy Lab at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey.  She recently authored the book, Congress and US Veterans: From the GI Bill to the VA Crisis which investigates the empirical differences between legislative efforts on behalf of veterans and lip service paid to veterans issues by members of the US Congress. She runs the digital database of all official Congress-to-constituent e-newsletters at www.dcinbox.com.

Read articles by Lindsey Cormack.

Álvaro J. Corral – College of Wooster

Álvaro J. Corral is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the College of Wooster. His recent co-authored an article about Latino voters in the 2016 election was recently published in Social Science Quarterly. His research interests are in immigration policy and Latino Politics.

Read articles by Álvaro J. Corral.

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Jeronimo-Cortina-80x108Jeronimo Cortina – University of Houston

Jeronimo Cortina is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and the Center for Mexican American Studies and a Research Associate at the Center for Public Policy at the University of Houston.  Dr. Cortina specializes on survey research, immigration, and quantitative methods.

Read articles by Jeronimo Cortina.

Andrea Maria Cosentino – Valentia Partners

Andrea Maria Cosentino is a senior executive at Valentia Partners, a London based fintech and banking strategic consultancy. He is also co-founder of Impact Foundry, a London-based Angel and VC specialising in impact and innovation across industries, with focus on FinTech. He is also a visiting lecturer at ESCP Europe Business School.

Read articles by Andrea Maria Cosentino.

Joan Costa-Font – LSE Health Policy

Joan Costa-Font is an associate professor (reader) at LSE’s Department of Health policy. He is an economist affiliated with CESIfo in Munich and IZA, Bonn. The core of his current research is on health economics.

Read articles by Joan Costa-Font.

 

pedro-da-costaPedro Nicolaci da Costa –  Peterson Institute for International Economics

Pedro Nicolaci da Costa joined the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) as editorial fellow in October 2015. He has been writing about economics and financial markets since 2001, first at Reuters and most recently at the Wall Street Journal. In 2010, he was a coauthor of the article “Club Fed: Ties That Bind at the Federal Reserve,” which helped spur the Fed to adopt a more open communications policy. His reporting in 2010 on the failure of some academic economists to disclose financial ties contributed to a new code of conduct adopted by the American Economic Association (PIIE adheres to a similar code of disclosure and data reproducibility adopted in 2014). His writing and research focuses on central banking, labour markets, inequality, and other macroeconomic issues.

Read articles by Pedro Nicolaci da Costa.

Carolyn Côté-Lussier 80x108Carolyn Côté-LussierUniversity of Ottawa
Dr Carolyn Côté-Lussier, assistant professor of Criminology at the University of Ottawa, carried out research for her PhD thesis at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Read articles by Carolyn Côté-Lussier.

 

Michael Cottakis – LSE

Michael Cottakis is a political scientist and President of the 1989 Generation Initiative at the LSE.

Read articles by Michael Cottakis.

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Elizabeth Cotton 80x108Elizabeth CottonMiddlesex University Business School

Elizabeth Cotton is a Senior Lecturer at Middlesex University Business School. Her academic background is in political philosophy and current writing includes precarious work and employment relations, activism and mental health at work. She is working on her new book, Surviving Work in Healthcare: Helpful stuff for people on the frontline  (Taylor & Francis 2017).

Read articles bu Elizabeth Cotton.

Marie Courtemanche 80x108Marie Courtemanche – Thiel College

Marie Courtemanche is Assistant Professor in the Political Science Department at Thiel College, Greenville PA, USA. Her research focuses on the effects of self-interest and group identity on public opinion and behavior, with a focus on immigration and social welfare.

Read articles by Marie Courtemanche.

Amanda Couture-Carron 80x108Amanda Couture-Carron University of Toronto

Amanda Couture-Carron is a doctoral student at the University of Toronto with an interest in immigrant integration, specifically in the post migration difficulties of migrants. With her colleagues, Amanda has published in the areas of battered immigrant women and second-generation young adult acculturation stress as well as on these groups’ perceptions and experiences of dating.

Read articles by Amanda Couture-Carron.

John Courtney 80x108John Courtney – University of Saskatchewan

John Courtney is Professor Emeritus of Political Studies and Senior Policy Fellow of the Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, Canada. A former President of the Canadian Political Science Association, he is the author or editor of ten books and numerous articles and chapters in books on elections, redistricting, leadership selection, and representational and electoral systems.  His two most recent books are Elections  (one of ten volumes in the Canadian Democratic Audit project) [UBC Press, 2004] and The Oxford Handbook of Canadian Politics [Oxford University Press, co-edited with David E. Smith, 2010].

Read articles by John Courtney.

Alexander Cowell 80x108Alexander Cowell RTI International

Dr. Alexander Cowell is a senior research economist at RTI International with expertise in the areas of mental health and substance abuse. He has considerable experience leading economic evaluations in the areas of mental illness, substance abuse, and criminal and juvenile justice. He currently plays a leading role in a national evaluation of a program to address screening and brief intervention for substance misuse. His publication record includes journals such as Addiction, Psychiatric Services, Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, Health Economics, Medical Care, Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency,Health Services Research, and The American Journal of Psychiatry.

Read articles by Alexander Cowell.

Michael Cox – LSE IDEAS

Professor Michael Cox is Director of LSE IDEAS and Professor of International Relations at LSE.

Read articles by Michael Cox.

Ben Coulson – University of Newcastle

Ben Coulson is a PhD student at the University of Newcastle, His research revolves around the problematization of the US foreign policy in its discursive construction of China.

Read articles  by Ben Coulson.

Charles Crabtree – University of Michigan

Charles Crabtree is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Michigan. His substantive research focuses on measuring and examining various aspects of repression and discrimination in comparative, American, and international politics.

Read articles by Charles Crabtree.

malcolm craigMalcolm Craig – University of Edinburgh

Malcolm Craig is a Post-doctoral Fellow at the University of Edinburgh.

Read articles by Malcolm Craig.

 

Erin Crandall – Acadia University

Erin Crandall is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Politics at Acadia University in Nova Scotia, Canada. Her research focuses on Canadian law, politics, and public policy, particularly in the areas of judicial appointments, constitutionalism, and election finance policy.

Read articles by Erin Crandall.

 

Sarah Craun 80x108Sarah W. Craun National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime, Federal Bureau of Investigation

Sarah W. Craun is the research coordinator for the National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime at the Federal Bureau of Investigation.  She received her Ph.D. from the University of California – Los Angeles.

Read articles by Sarah W. Craun.

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Matthew Cravens 80 x108Matthew Cravens – Dartmouth College

Matthew Cravens is a Visiting Assistant Professor, Postdoctoral Fellow, and Manager of the Policy Research Shop at the Nelson A. Rockefeller Center at Dartmouth College.  His research addresses voter turnout, including how voting habits are formed and maintained, public policy, and the relationships between policies and public opinion.

Read articles by Matthew Cravens.

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Sara Crawley 80x108Sara L. Crawley – University of South Florida

Sara L. Crawley is associate professor of Sociology at the University of South Florida and regularly teaches in the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies. Crawley’s research focuses on gendered performances of the body in everyday life, especially with regard to sexuality and sports. Co-authored with Lara Foley and Constance Shehan, Crawley’s first book, Gendering Bodies, explains how the social world shapes our physical bodies and how our bodies shape the social world.

Read articles by Sara L. Crawley.

Mac-Jane Crayton – Auburn University

Mac-Jane Crayton is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. Her research interests include energy policy, non-profit management, and diversity and inclusion.

Read articles by Mac-Jane Crayton.

Gareth Craze – Case Western Reserve University

Gareth Craze is a doctoral student in the department of organisational behaviour at Case Western Reserve University. A native of New Zealand, he received his Bachelors in management and employment relations and his Masters in management from the University of Auckland. Gareth’s research interests centre on the nexus between evolutionary theory, business philosophy and cognitive science, with his general focus being the exploration of avenues through which aspects of human biology can inform cognitive and affective aspects of organisational life, including ethical leadership.

Read articles by Gareth Craze.

Kevin Credit – Michigan State University

Kevin Credit is a fourth-year Ph.D. candidate in Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences at Michigan State University. Broadly, his research is interested in the relationship between urban planning interventions and sustainable economic development outcomes, with a primary focus on the impact of active transportation systems on new business activity. Kevin’s recent work has explored a range of topics in this area, including the impact of public transit construction on adjacent entrepreneurship, the relationship between built environment features and the sales performance of individual businesses, and inner city economic development. This work has appeared in scholarly journals such as Urban Studies, Environment and Planning – B, and Urban Affairs Review.

Read articles by Kevin Credit.

Riccardo Crescenzi – LSE

Riccardo Crescenzi is a professor of economic geography at LSE and is the current holder of a European Research Council (ERC) grant. He is an associate at the Centre for International Development, Harvard Kennedy School of Government, and is also affiliated with the European Institute, Centre for Economic Performance (CEP) and the Spatial Economics Research Centre (SERC) at LSE. He has been a Jean Monnet fellow at the European University Institute (EUI) and a visiting scholar at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Taubman Centre, Harvard University and at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). He has provided academic advice to, amongst others, the European Investment Bank (EIB), the European Parliament, the European Commission (DG Regional Policy), the Inter-American Investment Bank (IADB) and various national and regional governments.

Read articles by Riccardo Crescenzi.

Michael Crespin 80x108Michael H. Crespin – University of Texas at Dallas

Michael Crespin is currently an associate professor of Political Science at the University of Texas at Dallas. He will be joining the faculty at the University of Oklahoma as the associate director of the Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center in the fall of 2014. His research focuses on the U.S. Congress.

Read articles by Michael H. Crespin.

Robert E. Crew, Jr – Florida State University

Robert E. Crew, Jr. is Professor of Political Science and Director of the graduate Program in Applied American Politics at Florida State University. His research focuses on American social policy and American state and national politics and public management. He has several publications examining executive politics in the Social Science Journal, The Journal of State Government, State Politics and Policy Quarterly, and Political Psychology.   

Read articles by Robert E. Crew, Jr.

Anca Cristea 80x108Anca Cristea – University of Oregon

Anca Cristea is an assistant professor of Economics at the University of Oregon. Her research is in the area of international trade and transportation economics, with a focus on estimating the size and economic consequences of trade costs. She completed her Ph.D. degree in economics at Purdue University.

Read articles by Anca Cristea.    

Susannah Crockford- LSE Department of Anthropology

Susannah Crockford is a PhD candidate in the anthropology department at the London School of Economics. She spent almost 2 years living in Northern Arizona, studying religion and political economy. Her fieldwork centred on the small-town of Sedona and the rural area adjacent to the south rim of the Grand Canyon. Previously, she completed degrees at the University of Cambridge and the University of Amsterdam.

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David de la Croix 80x108David de la Croix – Université catholique de Louvain (Belgium)

David de la Croix is Professor of Economics at Université catholique de Louvain (Belgium). He has taught on a visiting basis at UCLA, Copenhagen, Aix-Marseille, Nanterre, Capetown, Sao Paulo and Rostock. He is the instigator and editor-in-chief of the Journal of Demographic Economics. His research interests cover demographic economics, human capital, conflict between generations, and growth. His choice of topics reveals that he is mostly interested in understanding households’ incentives and how they shape the future of our societies. 

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Thomas Crosbie – Royal Danish Defence College

Thomas Crosbie is an Assistant Professor at the Royal Danish Defence College. His research focuses on state policy, particularly the agency of military organizations in shaping their social and political environments.

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Victor D. Cruz-Aceves – Christian-Albrechts Universität zu Kiel

Victor D. Cruz-Aceves is a doctoral candidate in Political Science at Christian-AlbrechtsUniversität zu Kiel (Germany). His areas of expertise are morality policy, policy diffusion, US-American-, Mexican- & German politics.

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Thomas Cryer – UCL

Thomas Cryer is a first-year LAHP-funded PhD Candidate at UCL’s Institute of the Americas. Having received a BA(Hons) in History and an MPhil in US History at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, he is now embarking on a project investigating race, memory, and nationhood in late twentieth-century America through the lens of the life, scholarship, and activism of the historian John Hope Franklin.

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Francis Cullen 80x108Francis T. CullenUniversity of Cincinnati

Francis T. Cullen, is a Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus and Senior Research Associate at the University of Cincinnati’s School of Criminal Justice   His recent works include Challenging Criminological Theory:  The Legacy of Ruth Rosner Kornhauser,Criminological Theory:  Context and Consequences (6th ed.), and Environmental Corrections:  A New Paradigm for Supervising Offenders in the Community.  His current research focuses on the organization of criminological knowledge and on rehabilitation as a correctional policy.  He is a Past President of both the American Society of Criminology and the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences and received ASC’s Edwin H. Sutherland Award in 2010.

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Joseph Cullen 80x108Joseph Cullen – Washington University

Joseph Cullen is an Assistant Professor at Washington University in the Olin School of Business. He studies the interaction between government regulation, business decisions, and the environment. Previously he was the Morgan Blake Environmental Fellow at the Harvard University Center for the Environment.

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Pepper Culpepper 80x108Pepper D. Culpepper – European University Institute

Pepper D. Culpepper is Professor of Political Science at the European University Institute in Italy. His research focuses on the intersection between capitalism and democracy, both in politics and in public policy. He is the author Quiet Politics and Business Power(Cambridge University Press 2011), winner of the 2012 Stein Rokkan Prize for Comparative Social Science Research, and of Creating Cooperation (Cornell University Press, 2003).

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Michael Cummings – University of Arkansas

Michael Cummings is an assistant professor at the University of Arkansas Walton College of Business. He received his PhD in strategic management and entrepreneurship from the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management. Professor Cummings’ research interests include international entrepreneurship, social impact, and crowdfunding.

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Jeff Cummins – California State University, Fresno

Jeff Cummins is a Professor of Political Science and Interim Dean of the College of Social Sciences at Fresno State University. He is the co-author of California: The Politics of Diversity (Rowman & Littlefield) and author of Boom and Bust: The Politics of the California Budget (Institute of Governmental Studies). His research interests include state politics and policy, electoral accountability, and presidential policymaking.

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Phyllis Cummins 80x108Phyllis Cummins – Miami University, Ohio

Phyllis Cummins is the Assistant Director of Research and a Research Scholar at Scripps Gerontology Center, Miami University, Ohio. Dr. Cummins’ research focuses on strategies that will allow older adults to remain in the workforce at older ages. She recently co-authored a paper commissioned by the American Institutes for Research that used PIAAC data to analyze outcomes for older adults who participated in adult education and training.

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Gideon Cunningham – Wright State University

Gideon Cunningham is an M.A candidate at the School of Public and International Affairs at Wright State University. His research interests include political theory and its effects on public policy and economic inequality, comparative public policy, comparative foreign policy, cannabis policy and secessionist movements.

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james-cunningham-80x108James CunninghamRobert Gordon University, Aberdeen

Dr. James Cunningham is lecturer at the Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, Scotland.

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Celeste Vaughan Curington 80x108Celeste Vaughan Curington University of Massachusetts-Amherst

Celeste Vaughan Curington is a doctoral student in the Sociology Department at the University of Massachusetts- Amherst. Her research interests include race and ethnicity, labor migration, and qualitative and quantitative methods. She is currently exploring African gendered migration and subsequent entrance into care economies in Portugal. Her other projects center on U.S. multiracial identity formation and the locational attainment of interracial households in Los Angeles County. Her recent work on multiracial identity has appeared in the journals American Sociological Review and Sociology of Race and Ethnicity.

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Winifred Curran – DePaul University

Winifred Curran is an Associate Professor and Chair of Geography at DePaul University. Her research focuses on understanding the effects of gentrification on the urban landscape, looking at labor, policing, environmental gentrification and the gendering of urban policy. Her work has appeared in Urban Studies, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Environment and Planning A, Urban Geography and Local Environment. She is the author of Gender and Gentrification and co-editor (with Trina Hamilton) of Just Green Enough: Urban Development and Environmental Gentrification.

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Marian Currinder 80x108Marian Currinder – Georgetown University

Marian Currinder is a Senior Fellow at the Government Affairs Institute at Georgetown University. Her research interests include state of partisanship, party leadership, campaign finance and money and politics.

Read articles by Marian Currinder.

James M Curry – University of Utah

James M Curry is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Utah, and co-director of the Utah Chapter of the Scholars Strategy Network.

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Barry Cynamon 80x108Barry Z. Cynamon – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Barry Z. Cynamon is a visiting scholar at the Center for Household Financial Stability at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. His research focuses on the intersection between household finance, including balance sheet health and the distribution of income, and economic growth. Recent efforts supported by the Institute for New Economic Thinking have included contributions to the measurement of consumption across the US income distribution and alignment of the US national accounts to match household survey data. 

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Jon Danielsson

Jon Danielsson – LSE Systemic Risk Centre

Jon Danielsson is co-Director of the Systemic Risk Centre and Associate Professor of Finance at the London School of Economics.

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Joshua Darr 80x108Joshua Darr – University of Pennsylvania

Joshua Darr is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania. His research focuses on American politics and political communication.

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Scott Decker 80x108Scott H. Decker – Arizona State University

Scott Decker is Foundation Professor and Director of the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Arizona State University. His primary areas of research are in gangs, the offender’s perspective and crime control policy.

Read articles by Scott H. Decker.

Matteo Dian 80x108Matteo Dian – University of Bologna

Matteo Dian is an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of Bologna. He received his Ph.D. in political science from the Italian Institute of Human Sciences in Florence. He was a post – doctoral fellow at the Ca’s Foscari University in Venice, a visiting student at John’s Hopkins SAIS and a visiting graduate student at the European University Institute and at LSE IDEAS. He is author of The Evolution of the US-Japan Alliance, The Eagle and the Chrysanthemum (Oxford, Chandos Books, 2014) and editor of The Chinese Challenge to the Western Order (Trento, FBK Press, 2014).

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Tessa Ditonto 80x108Tessa Ditonto – Iowa State University

Tessa Ditonto is an assistant professor at Iowa State University. Her research interests include American politics, political behavior, political psychology, gender and politics, race/ethnicity and politics, and political science methodology. 

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Conor Dowling 80x108Conor Dowling –
University of Mississippi

Conor Dowling is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Mississippi. His research and teaching interests are in American Politics, where he studies both mass and elite political behavior with a substantive focus on issues of electoral competition, representation, and public policy, campaign finance law in particular.

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Paul A. DjupeDenison University

Paul A. Djupe, Denison University Political Science, is an affiliated scholar with PRRI and the series editor of Religious Engagement in Democratic Politics (Temple). He is the editor of Religion and Political Tolerance in America: Advances in the State of the Art (2015) and coauthor of God Talk: Experimenting with the Religious Causes of Public Opinion (2013). Further information about his work can be found at his website, religioninpublic.blog, and occasionally on Twitter.

Read articles by Paul A. Djupe.

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Denvil Duncan 80x108Denvil Duncan – Indiana University, Bloomington

Denvil is an Assistant Professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University – Bloomington.  His current research interests include personal income taxes and their effect on individual behavior, particularly labor supply and tax evasion. Some of his work in this area explores the impact of tax-induced behavioral responses on income inequality. He is also interested in international tax mimicry and the effect of tax policy on economic growth.

Read articles by Denvil Duncan.

kris-dunn-80x108Kris DunnUniversity of Leeds

Kris Dunn is a Lecturer in Comparative Politics and Political Psychology in the School of Politics and International Studies at the University of Leeds. His research focuses on representation, ideology, culture, and authoritarianism and seeks to increase our understanding of how individual (pre)dispositions and social and political environments interact to influence individual political attitudes, behaviors, beliefs, and identities.

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Isis Durrmeyer – Toulouse School of Economics

Isis Durrmeyer is an assistant professor of economics at the Toulouse School of Economics in France. Her work focuses on the evaluation of environmental policies in the automobile industry.

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Maraam Dwidar – University of Texas at Austin

Maraam A. Dwidar is a graduate student in the Department of Government at the University of Texas at Austin.

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