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Anne Daguerre – Middlesex University

Anne Daguerre is an Associate Professor in Work Employment and Welfare at Middlesex University, London and an alumna of the Woodrow Wilson Center. A specialist in welfare reform, her current research makes comparative study of the US and the UK.

Read articles by Anne Daguerre.

Tom Gerald Daly

Dr Tom Gerald Daly is Director of the Democratic Decay Resource (DEM-DEC) and an academic and consultant on democracy, human rights, and public law.

Read articles by Tom Gerald Daly.

Logan Dancey 80x108Logan Dancey – Wesleyan University

Logan Dancey is an Assistant Professor of Government at Wesleyan University. His work primarily focuses on the United States Congress and public opinion.

Read articles by Logan Dancey.

 

Jesse Daniels 80x108Jessie Daniels – City University of New York (CUNY)

Jesse Daniels is Professor of Public Health, Sociology and Critical Psychology, at Hunter College, CUNY School of Public Health and The Graduate Center, CUNY. An internationally recognized expert on Internet manifestations of racism, Daniels is the author of two books about race and various forms of media, White Lies (Routledge, 1997) and Cyber Racism (Rowman & Littlefield, 2009), as well as dozens of peer-reviewed journal articles. She writes for, maintains and is co-founder of Racism Review, a scholarly blog.

Read articles by Jessie Daniels.

Caroline Danielson 80x108Caroline Danielson – Public Policy Institute of California

Caroline Danielson is a senior fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California. Her research focuses on multiple dimensions of the social safety net, including its role in mitigating poverty, program access and enrollment, and the integration and governance of programs.

Read articles by Caroline Danielson.

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.

Read articles by Jon Danielsson.

 

Sébastien Darchen – University of Queensland, Australia

Dr. Sébastien Darchen is a Lecturer in Planning at the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Queensland, Australia. He studies the political economy of the built environment with a focus on the strategies of urban stakeholders involved in the provision of the built environment (Developers, City Planners, etc.) His main research area is the urban regeneration of city centres and inner-city suburbs (Canada, U.S, France and Australia). He also analyzes creative economy policies and their effects on the localisation of creative economy firms (e.g., video game companies). His current research is on the factors influencing the emergence of electronica music scenes in cities.

Read articles by Sébastien Darchen.

Rolda Darlington 80x108Rolda Darlington – University of Florida

Rolda Darlington is a PhD student at the University of Florida. Her research interests include minority and gender politics, Congressional studies, American institutions, civic education and participation, and Democratic Representation.

Read articles by Rolda Darlington.

Nicole DarnallNicole Darnall – Arizona State University

Nicole Darnall is Professor at Arizona State University, and Associate Director of the Center for Organization Research & Design. She is a leading scholar in nonregulatory governance and sustainable enterprise, operating at this nexus of management and public policy. Email: ndarnall@asu.edu

Read articles by Nicole Darnall.

joshua-darr-80x108Joshua Darr – Louisiana State University

Joshua Darr is an assistant professor in the Manship School of Mass Communication and the Department of Political Science at Louisiana State University.. His research focuses on American politics and political communication.

Read articles by Joshua Darr.

Frederico Ferreira da Silva – University of Lausanne

Frederico Ferreira da Silva is a Senior SNSF Research at the University of Lausanne. He received a Ph.D. in Political and Social Sciences from the European University Institute. His research focuses on elections, public opinion and voting behavior. His 2021 bookLeaders Without Partisans: dealignment, media change and the personalization of politics, examines the changing impact of party leader evaluations on voting behavior in parliamentary elections. [frederico.silva@unil.ch]

Read articles by Frederico Ferreira da Silva.

 

Nikhil Datta – LSE Growth Commission

Nikhil Datta is a researcher in the labour section of LSE’s Growth Commission. His main research areas are the share of income earned by those at the bottom of the earnings distribution, and the effects of minimum wages. He is also involved in assessing the impacts of free trade agreements, and looking into the effects of Brexit and possible policy responses.

Read articles by Nikhil Datta.

Courtenay Daum 80x108Courtenay W. Daum – Colorado State University

Courtenay W. Daum is an Associate Professor in the Political Science Department at Colorado State University.  Her research interests include organized interest mobilization and litigation before the U.S. Supreme Court, feminist and intersectional legal theory, and women’s representation in state legislatures and Congress.

Read articles by Courtenay Daum.

Tiffany Davenport 80x108Tiffany Davenport – United States Naval Academy

Tiffany Davenport is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, MD.  Her research interests span the subfields of American Politics, Political Behavior, and Political Methodology.  Her recent research examines the ways in which government policies and programs affect civic engagement and the effect of priming social norms on political participation.

Read articles by Tiffany Davenport.

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Maxine David –  Leiden University

Dr Maxine David is Lecturer in European Politics at Leiden University. She is a Foreign Policy analyst, specialising in Russian foreign policy relations with the EU and USA. Recent publications include a book chapter on “US-Russia relations in Obama’s second term”. Open access online publications include “Learning from Crisis: The Challenge for the Euro-Atlantic States” in The Riga Conference Papers 2015: Towards Reassurance and Solidarity in the Euro-Atlantic Community (2015) and various articles for The Conversation, to which Maxine is a regular contributor. She is currently working on a co-authored article about modernity and post-modernity in the European Union. Maxine is also Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Contemporary European Studies (JCER).

Read articles by Maxine David.

Cathy-Davidson-Photo1Cathy N. Davidson – CUNY

Cathy N. Davidson is director of the Futures Initiative and a distinguished professor in the Ph.D. Program in English at the Graduate Center, CUNY. She is a renowned scholar of cultural history and technology, including the history of the book, the history of industrialism and postindustrialism, digital humanities, and the impact of new technologies on culture, cognition, learning, and the workplace. Her current work focuses on trust, data, new collaborative methods of living and learning, and the ways we can change higher education for a better future. In 2011, President Obama appointed her to the National Council on the Humanities.

Read articles by Cathy N. Davidson.

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Mark-Davidson-80x108Mark Davidson- Clark University

Mark Davidson is an Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Geography at Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts. He holds a BA (Hons) and PhD in Geography from King’s College London. His research interests cover the areas of gentrification, urban policy and metropolitan development. He has published extensively in journals such asEnvironment and Planning A, Ethics, Place and Environment, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers and Urban Studies and recently completed (with Deborah Martin) an edited collection titledUrban Politics: Critical Approaches (Sage).

Read articles by Mark Davidson.

Andrew L. B. Davies – New York State Office of Indigent Legal Services

Andrew L. B. Davies is the Director of Research in the New York State Office of Indigent Legal Services. He is responsible for pursuing research and data collection to monitor, study, and make efforts to improve the quality of defense services in that state.

Read articles by Andrew L. B. Davies.

Philip John Davies – De Montfort University

Philip John Davies is a Professor Emeritus of American Studies, De Montfort University, a Distinguished Fellow, Rothermere American Institute, University of Oxford and the Former Director, Eccles Centre for American Studies, The British Library. He is Co-Chair of the American Politics Group of the Political Studies Association.

Read articles by Philip John Davies.

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William Davies  – Goldsmiths, University of London

William Davies is a Senior Lecturer at Goldsmiths, University of London, where he is leading the development of a new PPE Degree. His book, The Limits of Neoliberalism: Authority, Sovereignty & The Logic of Competition, is available in the Theory Culture & Society series at Sage. To buy it for the reduced price of £29.75, visit the Sage websiteand use discount code UK14SM08.

Read articles by William Davies.

Alberto Davila 80x108Alberto Dávila – University of Texas-Pan American

Alberto Dávila is Professor of Economics, V.F. “Doc” and Gertrude M. Neuhaus Chair for Entrepreneurship, and the Chair of the Department of Economics and Finance at the University of Texas – Pan American.  His research focuses on Hispanic labor-market outcomes, entrepreneurship, and the economics of the U.S.-Mexico border.  In addition to publishing journal articles on these themes, he has a co-authored book (with Marie T. Mora), Hispanic Entrepreneurs in the 2000s: An Economic Profile and Policy Implications (Stanford University Press, 2013), and two co-edited volumes (The Economic Status of the Hispanic Population, Information Age Publishing, 2013), and Labor Market Issues along the U.S.-Mexico Border, University of Arizona Press, 2009).

Read articles by Alberto Dávila.

Belinda Davis 80x108Belinda C. Davis – Louisiana State University

Dr. Belinda Creel Davis specializes in public policy. Much of her research uses welfare policy in the American states as a vehicle for examining theories of public policy. Current research projects include welfare migration, electoral competition, and Medicaid implementation.

Read articles by Belinda C. Davis.

Jaclyn Davis 80x108Jaclyn Davis – Harvard University

Jaclyn Davis is a Research Assistant with the Program in Criminal Justice Policy and Management (PCJ) at Harvard Kennedy School (HKS). She is currently managing the New York Reentry Study, directed by Bruce Western, a research project interviewing men and their families in New York City throughout their first year after release from incarceration. 

Read articles by Jaclyn Davis.

Mike Davis 80x108Mike Davis – University of California, Riverside

Mike Davis is the author of more than 20 books and more than 100 book chapters and essays in the scholarly and elite popular press. His scholarly interest span urban studies, the built environment, economic history and social movements. Perhaps his best know book, City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles was named a best book in urban politics by the American Political Science Association and won the Isaac Deutscher Award from the London School of Economics and has been translated into eight languages

Read interviews with Mike Davis.

Nicholas T. Davis – Texas A&M University

Nicholas T. Davis is an assistant research scientist at the Public Policy Research Institute at Texas A&M University. His research explores ideology, broadly, with emphases on party sorting and the structure of democratic attitudes, specifically.

Read articles by Nicholas T. Davis.

 

Steven Davis 80x108Steven J. DavisChicago Booth School of Business

Steven J. Davis is the William H. Abbott Professor of International Business and Economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and a visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution. His research interests include employment and wage behavior, worker mobility, job loss, labor market institutions, business dynamics, economic fluctuations, national economic performance, and public policy. He is a research associate with the NBER, advisor to the US Congressional Budget Office, a senior adviser to the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, senior academic fellow with the Asian Bureau of Finance and Economics Research and visiting scholar and consultant, respectively, with the Federal Reserve Banks of Atlanta and Chicago.

Read articles by Steven J. Davis.

Theodore Davis 80x108Theodore J. DavisUniversity of Delaware

Dr. Theodore J. Davis, Jr. is a Professor in the Department of Political Science and International Relations at the University of Delaware. His research and teaching interests include urban politics, politics of inequality and Africana Studies. His current research focus includes urban politics and community development (with a focus on inner city communities); educational achievement gap; the politics of race and socioeconomic inequality; and governance and poverty reduction in sub-Saharan Africa.

Read articles by Theodore J. Davis.

Marika Dawson 80x108Marika Dawkins – University of Texas Rio Grande Valley

Marika Dawkins is an assistant professor of criminal justice at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. She has published on both criminal and juvenile justice-related issues. Her research interests include juveniles, delinquency prevention, immigration, the US-Mexico border, and the decriminalization of illicit drugs. 

Read articles by Marika Dawkins.

Bern Dealy – US Food and Drug Administration

Dr. Dealy is an Economist with the US Food and Drug Administration in the Office of the Commissioner. His research interests include nonmarket valuation of health outcomes and risky health behaviors, as well as applied program analysis and benefit-cost analysis.

Read articles by Bern Dealy.

Joseph De Angelis Fig 1Joseph De Angelis – University of Idaho

Joseph De Angelis is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology & Anthropology at the University of Idaho.  He has also served as a policy director and an analyst for two police oversight agencies in the U.S.  His research has appeared in a variety of scholarly journals, including the Journal of Criminal Justice, Criminal Justice Review, Police Quarterly, Criminal Justice Policy Review, and Policing: An International Journal of Police Strategies and Management.

Read articles by Joseph De Angelis.

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Angus Deaton

Angus Deaton – Princeton University

Angus Deaton is the Dwight D. Eisenhower Professor of Economics and International Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and the Economics Department at Princeton University. His main current research areas are in health, wellbeing, and economic development.

Read articles by Angus Deaton.

Melissa Deckman 80x108Melissa Deckman – Washington College

Melissa Deckman is the Louis L. Goldstein Professor of Public Affairs at Washington College and chairs the board of PRRI, the Public Religion Research Institute. Her areas of specialty include religion, gender and conservative political movements in American politics. Her latest book, Tea Party Women: Mama Grizzlies, Grassroots Activists, and the Changing Face of the American Right, was published by NYU Press in 2016.

Read articles by Melissa Deckman.

J.W. Decker – North Carolina State University

J.W. Decker is a doctoral student at North Carolina State University, where he also serves as a doctoral fellow in the Municipal Research Lab and as assistant editor for the Journal of Public Affairs Education. His areas of interests include public budgeting, state governance, and education policy. 

Read articles by J.W. Decker. 

Devajyoti-Deka-80x108Devajyoti Deka– Rutgers University

Devajyoti Deka is the Assistant Director of Research at the Alan M. Voorhees Center, Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy in Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. He conducts research on social, economic, and environmental issues related to transportation.

Read articles by Devajyoti Deka.

Alexandra Delano 80x108Alexandra Délano – The New School

Alexandra Délano is Assistant Professor of Global Studies at the New School. She received her doctorate from the University of Oxford in International Relations. Her publications include Mexico and Its Diaspora in the United States: Policies of Emigration since 1848(Cambridge University Press, 2011) and articles in Political Geography, Politics and Society, International Migration Review, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, and Social Research.

Read articles by Alexandra Délano.

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Stefano DellaVigna 80x108Stefano DellaVigna – University of California, Berkeley

Stefano DellaVigna was educated at Harvard University, where he received his PhD in 2002, the same year he joined UC Berkeley as an assistant professor. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 2008. He is a recipient of an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship for the years 2008-2010 and has been Principal Investigator for an NSF grant.Professor DellaVigna is a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research. He is a 2008 recipient of UC Berkeley’s Campus-Wide Distinguished Teaching Award, as well as a 2004 Social Sciences Undergraduate Research Mentoring Award.

Read articles by Stefano DellaVigna.

Jennifer Delaney 80x108Jennifer A. Delaney – University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Jennifer A. Delaney is an assistant professor of higher education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is also past-chair of the Council for Public Policy in Higher Education with the Association for the Study of Higher Education.  Her research interests focus on higher education finance and public policy.

Read articles by Jennifer A. Delaney.

Jan Delhey – Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

Jan Delhey holds the Chair of Macrosociology at Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg (jan.delhey@ovgu.de). Building upon a strong background in quantitative comparative sociology, he engages in research on individual and collective quality-of-life, as well on sociological aspects of European integration and globalization. He has widely published on issues of trust, social cohesion, subjective well-being, inequality, and Europeanization in leading journals, including American Sociological Review, European Sociological Review, and Social Indicators Research.

Read articles by Jan Delhey.

Tabitha Dell'Angelo 80x108Tabitha Dell’Angelo The College of New Jersey

Dr. Tabitha Dell’Angelo is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Urban Education Program at The College of New Jersey. Her research interests include social justice in education, cultural identity development, stress tolerance, and coping strategies for teachers. She uses improvisational acting and Theater of the Oppressed to support teacher development and arts based approaches in her research.

Read articles by Tabitha Dell’Angelo.

Daniel DellaPosta 80x108Daniel DellaPosta – Cornell University

Daniel DellaPosta is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Sociology at Cornell University. His research interests include social networks, economic sociology, and political sociology. 

Read articles by Daniel DellaPosta.

 

Elizabeth C. Delmelle – University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Elizabeth C. Delmelle is an assistant professor in the Department of Geography and Earth Sciences at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Her research seeks to understand the patterns, processes, and driving factors of urban neighborhood change.

Read articles by Elizabeth C. Delmelle.

George Deltas 80x108George Deltas – University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

George Deltas is Professor of Economics and Associate Head in the Department of Economics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His research interests include industrial organization, political economy, and environmental economics.  

Read articles by George Deltas.

markus-demaryMarkus Demary – Cologne Institute for Economic Research

Markus Demary is senior economist in the research unit financial and real estate markets at the Cologne Institute for Economic Research (Institut der deutschen Wirtschaft Köln). He studied economics at the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn and he holds a doctoral degree from the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel. He is also a lecturer in Behavioural Finance at Ulm University.

Read articles by Markus Demary.

Matthew DeMichele – Research Triangle Institute

Matthew DeMichele is a Senior Research Sociologist at the Research Triangle Institute, where he conducts research on correctional population trends, risk prediction, criminal behavior, community corrections, terrorism/extremism, and program evaluation. He is currently leading research projects for federal and local governments, and for private foundations. DeMichele has several technical reports and policy briefs as well as publications appearing in Crime and DelinquencyTheoretical Criminology, and Criminology and Public Policy.

Read articles by Matthew DeMichele.

Stuart Deming 80x108Stuart H. Deming – DEMING PLLC

Stuart H. Deming is a principal with DEMING PLLC in Washington, D.C. A leading expert on anti-corruption law and a former prosecutor with the U.S. Department of Justice and SEC, he is the author of a book recently published by Oxford University Press: Anti-Bribery Laws in Common Law Jurisdictions.

Read articles by Stuart H. Deming.

Nicole Denier 80x108Nicole Denier McGill University

Nicole Denier is a PhD candidate in sociology and graduate trainee at the Centre on Population Dynamics at McGill University. For more information about her current research click here.

Read articles by Nicole Denier.

 

Kristine Denman 80x1081Kristine DenmanUniversity of New Mexico

Kristine Denman is the Director of the New Mexico Statistical Analysis Center. She has 20 years of experience in both research and evaluation. She has led numerous criminal justice related projects for various agency partners at the city, state and federal levels. She has particular interest in the evaluation of criminal justice initiatives and issues surrounding offender re-entry.

Read articles by Kristine Denman.

Diarmuid Denneny – University College London Hospitals

Diarmuid Denneny is a pre-doctoral fellow under the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (NIHR CLAHRC North Thames) fellowship scheme funded by Health Education England in North Central and East London (HEE NCEL). He has over 20 years clinical experience. He works as lead physiotherapist at the pain management centre at University College London Hospitals (UCLH) and is a qualified independent prescriber. He is particularly interested in non-pharmacological pain management and opioids, neuropathic pain, persistent pain and CCBT techniques in pain management. He is interested in the clinical application of research and is involved in education and research at QMUL and UCLH.

Read articles by Diarmuid Denneny.

Alan R. Dennis – Indiana University

Alan R. Dennis is professor of information systems and holds the John T. Chambers Chair of internet systems in the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University. He was named a fellow of the Association for Information Systems in 2012. His research focuses on team collaboration, fake news on social media, and information security.

Read articles by Alan R. Dennis.

Christopher Dennis 80x108Christopher Dennis – California State University, Long Beach

Christopher Dennis is a Professor in the Department of Political Science at California State University, Long Beach.  Dr. Dennis specializes in American politics, with particular emphasis on the role of political parties and state politics.

Read articles by Christopher Dennis.

 

Christopher Dennison 80x108Christopher R. Dennison – Bowling Green State University

Christopher R. Dennison is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology at Bowling Green State University. His research interests include life course criminology, social mobility, and the association between socioeconomic status and crime. Recent research examines the effects of economic problems on crime, and the consequences of criminal justice involvement on intergenerational mobility.

Read articles by Christopher R. Dennison.

Kate Derickson – University of Minnesota

Kate Derickson is an Associate Professor of Geography, Environment and Society at the University of Minnesota.  Her research interests include racialization, urban political economy, and community-based activism.  She has worked extensively with historically marginalized communities in Mississippi, Atlanta, and the Govan neighborhood of Glasgow, Scotland.  Her work has been published in academic journals, including the Annals of the Association of American Geographers and Progress in Human Geography.

Read articles by Kate Derickson.

Theologos Dergiades – University of Macedonia

Theologos Dergiades is an Assistant Professor of Applied Macrofinance and Information Demand at the Department of International and European Studies at the University of Macedonia. He received his Ph.D. in 2010 from the University of Macedonia in Economics. His research focuses on identifying and analysing statistical trends in order to make sense of economic policies.

Read articles by Theologos Dergiades.

Christopher DeSante 80x108Christopher D. DeSanteIndiana University

Christopher DeSante is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the Indiana University. His research is on race and racism in America, American political partisanship and political methodology.

Read articles by Christopher D. DeSante.

 

Michael Desch 80x108Michael Desch- University of Notre Dame

Michael Desch is Professor and Chair of the Department of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame.  He was the founding Director of the Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs and the first holder of the Robert M. Gates Chair in Intelligence and National Security Decision-Making at the George Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University from 2004 through 2008.

Read articles by Michael Desch.

Manasi Deshpande – University of Chicago

Manasi Deshpande is an assistant professor of economics at the Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics at the University of Chicago, a faculty research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research, and a visiting economist at the Social Security Administration. She received her PhD in economics from MIT in 2015. Her research focuses on the optimal design of social insurance and social safety net programs.

Read articles by Manasi Deshpande.

Lorenzo De Sio – LUISS Guido Carli University, Rome

Lorenzo De Sio is Professor of Political Science at the LUISS Guido Carli University, Rome, where he teaches several courses at all levels. He is the director of the CISE research centre (Centro Italiano Studi Elettorali), and of the Master’s Programme in Governo, Amministrazione e Politica (GAP).

Read articles by Lorenzo De Sio. 

Bruce Desmarais 80x108Bruce Desmarais – University of Massachusetts Amherst

Bruce Desmarais is an assistant professor in the Deptartment of Political Science, core faculty member in the Computational Social Science Institute, and Associate Director of the Institute for Social Science Research at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. In his research, he applies network theory and network analytic methodology to the study of complex political systems. 

Read articles by Bruce Desmarais.

Klaus Desmet – Southern Methodist University

Klaus Desmet is the Altshuler Professor of Cities, Regions and Globalization at Southern Methodist University, Research Fellow at CEPR and Research Associate at NBER. His research focuses on regional economics, economic growth, political economy and international trade. His work has appeared in journals such as the American Economic Review, the Journal of Political Economy, the Journal of Economic Theory and the Journal of Development Economics. In 2019 he was the co-recipient of the Robert E. Lucas Jr. Prize.

Read articles by Klaus Desmet.

Andrea Dessì – Istituto Affari Internazionali

Andrea Dessì is a Senior Fellow in the Mediterranean and Middle East programme at the Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI) and Scientific Director of the IAI Commentaries series. He is a former PhD student at LSE. He tweets @AndreaDess2

Read articles by Andrea Dessì.

Emanuel Deutschmann – European University Institute

Emanuel Deutschmann is a postdoctoral researcher at the European University Institute’s Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (emanuel.deutschmann@eui.eu). He works on social networks, transnational mobility and communication, regional integration, and globalization. His most recent article is “The Power of Contact: Europe as a Network of Transnational Attachment,” published at European Journal of Political Research.d.

Read articles by Emanuel Deutschmann.

Ruth Deyermond 80x108Ruth Deyermond – King’s College London

Ruth Deyermond is Lecturer in War Studies in the Department of War Studies, King’s College London. Her publications include Security and Sovereignty in the Former Soviet Union (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 2008), ‘The Republican challenge to Obama’s Russia policy’, Survival (October 2012), and ‘Assessing the Reset: successes and failures in the Obama administration’s Russia policy, 2009-2012’ European Security (December 2013).

Read articles by Ruth Deyermond.

Darin DeWitt ­- California State University Long Beach

Darin DeWitt is an assistant professor of political science at California State University Long Beach.

Read articles by Darin DeWitt.

 

Amrita Dhillon – King’s College London

Amrita Dhillon is a Professor of Economics in the Department of Political Economy. Her main field of research is political economy. 

Read articles by Amrita Dhillon.

 

Gaurav Dhillon – SnapLogic

Gaurav Dhillon is the chairman and CEO of SnapLogic, overseeing the company’s strategy, operations, financing, and partnerships. He is an experienced builder of technology companies that have a simpler, faster, and more cost-effective ways to integrate data and applications for improved decision-making and better business outcomes. As the co-founder and former CEO of Informatica, he guided it through a successful IPO and global expansion to become a market leader.

Read articles by Gaurav Dhillon.

Bruce Dickerson 80x108Bradley T. DickersonUniversity of Mississippi

Bradley T. Dickerson is currently a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Mississippi.  His research focuses on how contextual factors moderate the influence of political beliefs on opinion formation.  He also conducts research on the role of independent expenditures in congressional elections.  You can view more of his work at www.btdickerson.com.

Read articles by Bradley T. Dickerson.

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Mathew-Dickinson-80x108Mathew J. Dickinson – Middlebury College

Mathew J. Dickinson is professor of political science at Middlebury College. His blog on presidential power can be found at http://blogs.middlebury.edu/presidentialpower. He is author of Bitter Harvest: FDR, Presidential Power, and the Growth of the PresidentialBranch (1999), the co-editor of Guardian of the Presidency: The Legacy of Richard E. Neustadt, and has published numerous articles on the presidency, Congress and the executive branch. His current book manuscript, titled The President and the White House Staff: People, Positions and Processes, 1945-2012, examines the growth of presidential staff in the post–World War II era.

Read articles by Matthew J. Dickinson.

Adam Dickstein 80x108Michael Dickstein – New York University

Michael Dickstein is an Assistant Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics at the Stern School of Business at New York University. His research interests include health economics, industrial organization and econometrics.

Read articles by Michael Dickstein.

Timothy Diette 80x108Timothy M. Diette – Washington and Lee University

Timothy M. Diette Is an Associate Professor of Economics at the Williams School of Commerce, Economics, and Politics at Washington and Lee University. Professor Diette conducts research on a range of issues related to the development and maintenance of human capital. Examples of recent research includes summer learning loss, the influence of school composition on future life outcomes, the effect of immigrant students on native born students, and understanding access to rigorous courses within and across schools. 

Read articles by Timothy M. Diette.

Simon Dietz – LSE Geography and Environment

Simon Dietz is a professor of environmental policy at LSE’s Department of Geography and Environment and a co-editor of the Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists. He was co-director of LSE’s Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment from March 31 2011 until 31 August 2017. He worked at the UK Treasury, as an economic adviser on the ‘The Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change’. Simon holds a starred first class honours degree in environmental science from the University of East Anglia, and masters and PhD degrees from LSE, specialising in environmental policy and economics.

Read articles by Simon Dietz.

Janette Dill 80x108Janette DillUniversity of Akron

Janette Dill, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Akron. She researches job quality and career mobility in today’s economy, particularly for low- and middle-skill workers. Her current research focuses on the development of career ladders in health care organizations for low-level health care workers.

Read articles by Janette Dill.

Elias Dinas 80x108Elias Dinas – University of Nottingham

Elias Dinas is a lecturer in the social sciences at the University of Nottingham. His research interests primarily focus around political socialization and on the formation and crystallization of political attitudes and partisan identities.

Read articles by Elias Dinas.

 

Giovanna Di Mauro

Giovanna Di Mauro holds a Ph.D. in International Relations from the University of St Andrews. From 2015 to 2016, she was a Visiting Scholar at the Institute for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies of the George Washington University. Her research focuses on the political engagement of artists and activists. Giovanna is also interested in the use of the arts in peace-building.

Read articles by Giovanna Di Mauro.

Thomas A. DiPrete – Columbia University

Thomas A. DiPrete is Giddings Professor of Sociology, co-director of the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy (ISERP), co-director of the Center for the Study of Wealth and Inequality at Columbia University, and a faculty member of the Columbia Population Research Center. DiPrete’s research interests include social stratification, demography, education, economic sociology, and quantitative methodology.

Read articles by Thomas A. DiPrete.

Yanyi K. Djamba 80x108Yanyi K. Djamba – Auburn University at Montgomery

Yanyi K. Djamba is professor of Sociology at Auburn University at Montgomery. His current research focuses on gender and racial relations, migration, aging, and sexuality and health.

Read articles by Yanyi K. Djamba.

 

Simeon Djankov – LSE Financial Markets Group

Simeon Djankov is policy director of the Financial Markets Group at LSE and a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE). He was deputy prime minister and minister of finance of Bulgaria from 2009 to 2013. Prior to his cabinet appointment, Djankov was chief economist of the finance and private sector vice presidency of the World Bank. He is the founder of the World Bank’s Doing Business project. He is author of Inside the Euro Crisis: An Eyewitness Account (2014) and principal author of the World Development Report 2002. He is also co-editor of The Great Rebirth: Lessons from the Victory of Capitalism over Communism (2014).

Read articles by Simeon Djankov.

Alesha E. Doan – University of Kansas

Alesha E. Doan is an Associate Dean in the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences at the University of Kansas. She is a Professor in the School of Public Affairs & Administration and the Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies Department. Professor Doan’s interdisciplinary research program is situated at the intersections between gender, public policy and organizations, with a substantive focus on reproductive politics, sexual violence, and gender & the military.

Read articles by Alesha E. Doan.

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Long Doan 80x108Long Doan – Indiana University

Long Doan is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology at Indiana University. He is broadly interested in how emotions motivate behavior and maintain inequality. His current projects examine (1) the role of emotional attributions in explaining differences in heterosexuals’ willingness to grant formal rights and informal privileges to same-sex couples and (2) how emotions and power affect third-party interventions in conflict.

Read articles by Long Doan.

Austin Doctor 80x108Austin DoctorUniversity of Georgia

Austin Doctor is a graduate student at the University of Georgia, where he studies comparative politics and political methodology.

Read articles by Austin Doctor.

 

Lynda Dodd 80x108Lynda G. Dodd The City University of New York

Lynda G. Dodd is the Joseph H. Flom Professor of Legal Studies and Political Science at The City University of New York–City College, and is on Twitter at @CivilRightsProf. She is writing a book, Taming the Rights Revolution: The Supreme Court, Constitutional Torts, and the Elusive Quest for Accountability, examining the Supreme Court’s development of the legal framework for Section 1983 litigation.

Read articles by Lynda G. Dodd.

Mathias Doepke 80x108Matthias DoepkeNorthwestern University

Matthias Doepke is a Professor of Economics at Northwestern University, an NBER Research Associate, and a CEPR Research Fellow. He received a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Chicago in 2000. His research areas include economic growth and development, political economy, macroeconomics, and monetary economics.

Read articles by Matthias Doepke.

David Doherty 80x108David Doherty – Loyola University Chicago

David Doherty is an assistant professor of political science at Loyola University Chicago. His research addresses a variety of issues related to political attitudes and behavior.  

Read articles by David Doherty.

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Kathleen-Dolan-80x108Kathleen Dolan- University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

Kathleen Dolan is a Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Her research focuses on public opinion, elections, and voting behavior. Dolan is the author of Voting for Women: How the Public Evaluates Women Candidates and the forthcoming book When Does Gender Matter? Women Candidates and Gender Stereotypes in American Elections (Oxford University Press). Her work has also appeared in numerous peer-reviewed journals. She has served as co-editor of the journal Politics & Gender and as a member of the board of the American National Election Studies.

Read articles by Kathleen Dolan.

 

Paul Dolan – LSE Psychological and Behavioural Science

Paul Dolan is Professor of Behavioural Science at London School of Economics. You can read more of his work at www.pauldolan.co.uk.

Read articles by Paul Dolan.

 

Betsy Donald – Queen’s University

Betsy Donald is Professor in Geography and Planning at Queen’s University.

Read articles by Betsy Donald.

Chris Donnelly 80x108Christopher P. DonnellyUniversity of California, Davis

Christopher P. Donnelly is currently a fifth-year PhD Candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of California, Davis; he expects to receive his doctorate in June 2016.  His research is focused primarily on American representation, with a particular emphasis on the various shortcuts and decision rules that citizens might use to evaluate candidates for office or elected officials.  To learn more about Chris, please visitwww.christopherpdonnelly.com.

Read articles by Christopher P. Donnelly.

Todd Donovan – Western Washington University

Todd Donovan is Professor of Political Science at Western Washington University, with previous visiting appointments and fellowships in Australia and New Zealand. He has been involved with public opinion surveys in the US, UK, and other countries. His research examines the intersection of political behavior, representation and electoral institutions, as well as public opinion, direct democracy, and elections.

Read articles by Todd Donovan.

 

T Price Dooley 80x108T Price DooleyUniversity of Illinois Springfield

Dr. T Price Dooley is an Assistant Professor of Public Administration at the University of Illinois Springfield.  He is also Director of the Master’s Program in Public Administration at the University of Illinois Springfield.  His research areas include: Education, social justice, and human capital development.

Read articles by T Price Dooley.

James Douglas 80x108James W. DouglasUniversity of North Carolina at Charlotte

James W. Douglas is a professor in the Department of Political Science & Public Administration at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. His research interests include public budgeting and finance, judicial administration, and public administration more generally. His most recent publications have appeared in Public Administration Review and Policy Studies Journal.

Read articles by James W. Douglas.

Josh Douglas 80x108Joshua A. Douglas – University of Kentucky College of Law

Professor Joshua A. Douglas of the University of Kentucky College of Law is a leading election law expert, whose research focuses on the constitutional right to vote, election administration, judicial interaction with the election process, and post-election disputes.

Read articles by Joshua A. Douglas.

  

Suzanne Dovi 80x108Suzanne Dovi – University of Arizona

Suzanne Dovi is an Associate Professor of the School of Government and Public Policy at the University of Arizona. Her research interests include democratic theory, representation (especially the representation of historically disadvantaged groups), feminist theory and human rights. Her book, The Good Representative, explores how democratic citizens should evaluate those who hold and exercise power over vulnerable and marginalized groups.  She is currently working on a book entitled The Boundaries of Democratic Accountability.

Read articles by Suzanne Dovi.

Katie Dowbiggin photoKatie Dowbiggin – LSE Social Psychology

Katie Dowbiggin is a Vice President at Pine Street, Goldman Sachs’ leadership development organisation for partners and select managing directors. She completed her MA at the University of Cambridge and is a MSc Organisational and Social Psychology student at the LSE.

Read articles by Katie Dowbiggin.

Andrew Dowdle 80x108Andrew Dowdle – University of Arkansas

Andrew Dowdle is the outgoing editor of the American Review of Politics and the Vice-Chair of the Department of Political Science at the University of Arkansas. His research interests include campaign finance, behavioral patterns of political donors and the evolution of the U.S. presidential nomination process.

Read articles by Andrew Dowdle.

Rod Dowler – Industry Forum

Rod Dowler is one of the founders, and the chair and chief executive officer (CEO) of the Industry Forum, a London think tank that focuses on improving dialogue between public policy makers and business. A physicist by undergraduate training, he has spent many years working on the application of technology to business problems. He led KPMG’s European high technology practice and throughout his career has advised many major companies as well as governments and the European Commission. Having become aware of the size and urgency of the carbon emissions problem, he is keen to help to bring together policy-makers, companies and NGOs to find an effective way forward.

Read articles by Rod Dowler.

Taylor Downs

Taylor Downs is a Senior Atlantic Fellow for Social & Economic Equity, focusing on the securitization of national artificial intelligence policy and how it influences democratic participation in the regulation of technology. He received the first annual Harvard SECON Social Impact Award and the 2017 Antonio Pizzigati Prize for software development in the public interest. He was named to Forbes’ 30 under 30 list, is a 2012 Echoing Green Fellow, a 2014 Rainer Arnhold Fellow, and a 2015 PopTech Fellow. He is the founder and Head of Product at Open Function, an iPaaS company that serves the international development sector, driving efficiency at large international organizations like UNICEF, The Wildlife Conservation Society, and the International Rescue Committee, as well as leading social businesses and NGOs like MyAgro, Lwala Community Alliance, and LivelyHoods.

Read articles by Taylor Downs.

Kevin M. Drakulich – Northeastern University

Kevin Drakulich is an Associate Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Northeastern University. His recent work addresses three interrelated questions. The first question concerns social processes related to crime and its consequences across space—and in particular across neighborhoods and communities. A second line of research builds on the first by asking how people view crime, disorder, and social control processes within their community. Finally, a third line of research follows this line of thought beyond neighborhoods, examining how people view crime, control, and related policies more broadly, and how these views impact political behavior. Underlying all three of these lines of research are two overarching themes: race and racism, and interpersonal interactions and relationships.

Read articles by Kevin Drakulich.

Paul Draus 80x108Paul Draus – The University of Michigan-Dearborn

Paul Draus is Director of Public Administration, Director of Public Policy, and Associate Professor of Sociology at The University of Michigan-Dearborn.

Read articles by Paul Draus

 

Stephanie Drotos 80x108Stephanie Drotos – Eastern Gateway Community College

Dr. Stephanie Drotos recently completed a two-year fellowship funded by the State Department’s Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs. During her assignment in Kosovo, Dr. Drotos assisted with the development and implementation of Kosovo’s English Teacher Professional Development Program and provided support to KETNET, the Kosovo/a English Teachers’ Network. She has a PhD in Educational Leadership from the Ohio State University and has taught in public schools and colleges in the US and abroad for over 15 years. Her research interests include educational policy and international development. She is currently teaching Developmental English at Eastern Gateway Community College in Ohio.

Read articles by Stephanie Drotos.

James Druckman – Northwestern University

James N. Druckman is the Payson S. Wild professor of Political Science and a faculty fellow at the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University. He studies political communication and preference formation and is the co-principal investigator of Time-Sharing Experiments for the Social Sciences. More information can be found at: http://faculty.wcas.northwestern.edu/~jnd260/.

Read articles by James Druckman.

Richard Duckworth – U.S. Department of Agriculture

Richard Duckworth is a program analyst at the USDA. He graduated from Georgia Tech’s Master of City and Regional Planning program in 2017 and then completed the U.S. government’s Presidential Management Fellowship.

Read articles by Richard Duckworth.

John Dumbrell 80x108John Dumbrell – Durham University

John Dumbrell is Professor of Government in the School of Government and International Affairs at Durham University. His published work on transatlantic relations includes the twin studies, ‘A Special Relationship: Anglo-American Relations during the Cold War and After’ (2001), which won the University of Cambridge Donner book prize for 2002, and ‘A Special Relationship: Anglo-American Relations from the Cold War to Iraq’ (2006). His most recent books are ‘Rethinking the Vietnam War’ (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) and (as Editor), ‘Issues in American Politics: Polarized Politics in the Age of Obama’ (Routledge, 2013).

Read articles by John Dumbrell.

Constance Duncombe 80x108Constance Duncombe – Monash University

Constance Duncombe is a Lecturer in International Relations at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. Her research interests lie within critical and interdisciplinary engagements with contemporary world politics. She is particularly interested in the challenges associated with conceptualizing the political power of recognition and respect as it relates to interstate engagement and foreign policy. She has published work on these issues in International Affairs and the European Journal of International Relations.

Read articles by Constance Duncombe.

Patrick Dunleavy – LSE Government

Patrick Dunleavy is Centenary Research Professor at the Institute for Governance and Policy Analysis, University of Canberra; and Professor of Political Science at the LSE. He is also co-Director of the UK’s Democratic Audit (www.democraticaudit.com).

Read articles by Patrick Dunleavy.

Charles Dunst – LSE International Relations

Charles Dunst is an M.Sc. candidate in the LSE Department of International Relations, and a journalist who has written for The New York TimesThe AtlanticForeign Policy, and the Council on Foreign Relations, among other outlets. He was previously based in Cambodia. Twitter: @charlesdunst

Read articles by Charles Dunst.

Aaron Dusso 80x108Aaron Dusso – Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis

Aaron Dusso is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis and a core faculty member of Indiana University’s Center for Civic Literacy. His primary research is on the intersection of political psychology and citizen knowledge and engagement. He is currently finishing a book manuscript on the Big Five personality traits’ effect on citizens’ capacity to understand abstract notions like ideology; know basic facts about important political issues; ability to connect their personal policy preferences to the political party that best represents those interests; and likelihood of holding hypocritical policy preferences where they benefit from “submerged” or “hidden” welfare programs like home mortgage interest tax deductions, while opposing visible programs like food stamps.

Read articles by Aaron Dusso,

Grant Duwe – Minnesota Department of Corrections

Grant Duwe is the director of research and evaluation for the Minnesota Department of Corrections, where he evaluates correctional programs, develops risk assessment instruments, and forecasts the state’s prison population. His recent work has been published in Corrections: Policy, Practice and Research, Journal of Experimental Criminology, Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, Law and Human Behavior, and The Prison Journal.

Read articles by Grant Duwe.

Diana Dwyre – California State University

Diana Dwyre is a professor of Political Science at California State University, Chico. She was the 2009-2010 Fulbright Australian National University Distinguished Chair in American Political Science at Australian National University in Canberra, Australia, and the 1998 Steiger American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow. She has authored and co-authored two books and numerous articles and book chapters on political parties and campaign finance.

Read articles by Diana Dwyre.

Joshua Dyck 80x108Joshua J. Dyck – University of Massachusetts Lowell

Joshua J. Dyck is Associate Professor of Political Science and Co-Director of the Center for Public Opinion at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell. He studies American politics, with a focus on public opinion, voting behavior, and state politics. Much of his research is motivated by the interplay between public opinion and different social and institutional settings, examining the way that democratic citizens react to democratic environments and political institutions. 

Read articles by Joshua J. Dyck.

Asbjørn Dyrendal – Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Asbjørn Dyrendal is Professor in the History of Religion at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. He has published widely on conspiracy beliefs and new religious movements, including the recently co-authored The Invention of Satanism (Oxford UP, 2016), and the co-edited Handbook of Conspiracy Theory and Contemporary Religion (Brill 2018).

Read articles by Asbjørn Dyrendal.

Stephen Benedict Dyson – University of Connecticut

Stephen Benedict Dyson is an associate professor of political science at the University of Connecticut. His research interests are in political leadership and foreign policy analysis. He is the author of Otherworldly Politics: The International Relations of Star Trek, Game of Thrones, and Battlestar Galactica (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2015) and Leaders in Conflict: Bush and Rumsfeld in Iraq (Manchester University Press, 2014).

Read articles by Stephen Benedict Dyson.

frank-edwards-80x108Frank Edwards – University of Washington

Frank Edwards is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology at the University of Wisconsin. He studies the relationships between social policy and inequality, and is particularly interested in how and why places pursue different strategies for the surveillance and regulation of families and how institutional forces drive racial inequalities in state intervention.

Read articles by Frank Edwards.

Barry Eidlin 80x108Barry Eidlin – McGill University

Barry Eidlin is an assistant professor of sociology at McGill University and an affiliate of theScholars Strategy Network.

Read articles by Barry Eidlin.

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Katherine Levine Einstein 80x108Katherine Levine Einstein – Boston University

Katherine Levine Einstein is an assistant professor of Political Science at Boston University and a co-principal investigator of the Menino Survey of Mayors. Her research interests include urban politics and policy, racial and ethnic politics, and American public policy.

Read articles by Katherine Levine Einstein.

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Adam Eckerd 80x108Adam Eckerd – Virginia Tech

Adam Eckerd is assistant professor in the Center for Public Administration and Policy at Virginia Tech, where he conducts research on the complex relationship between government decisions and social outcomes, particularly with respect to environmental justice, public participation, and nonprofit organizations. He holds a doctorate from the John Glenn School of Public Affairs at The Ohio State University.

Read articles by Adam Eckerd.

Barry Edwards 80x108Barry Edwards – University of Central Florida

Barry Edwards is in the Department of Political Science at the University of Central Florida. His research interests include elections and legislative behavior, the U.S. presidency, adjudication and alternative dispute resolution, and state politics.

Read articles by Barry Edwards.

 

Michelle Egan 80x108Michelle Egan – American University

Michelle Egan is an Associate Professor at the School of International Service in the American University, Washington D.C and SIS Policy Scholar focusing on European political economy.

Read articles by Michelle Egan.

 

Peter Egger – ETH-Zürich

Peter Egger is professor of applied economics at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich (ETH-Zürich) and research fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). He holds a number of research positions in other institutions. His research focuses on applied and theoretical panel econometrics (time-invariant variables, long- and short-run estimates, spatial econometrics), applied and theoretical international and regional economics (outsourcing, multinational firms, trade volumes; economic integration, new economic geography), industrial organisation and multinational firms.

Read articles by Peter Egger.

Georgy Egorov – Northwestern University

Georgy Egorov joined the faculty of the Kellogg School of Management in 2009 after receiving his PhD in Economics from Harvard University. His research interests include political economy and economic theory. He is currently working on questions related to weak institutions and their dynamics, interaction between market and non-market actors in business environments, and social image considerations in strategic decisions. 

Read articles by Georgy Egorov.

Jon X. Eguia – Michigan State University

Jon X. Eguia is an Associate Professor of Economics at Michigan State University. He is interested in microeconomic theory and political economy, including topics such as political competition, elections, and redistricting.

Read articles by Jon X. Eguia.

 

rakibshotproper

Rakib Ehsan – Royal Holloway, University of London

Rakib Ehsan is a Doctoral Researcher at Royal Holloway, University of London, specialising in ethnic minority socio-political attitudes and behaviour in the UK. His PhD investigates the various inter-relationships between the ethnic composition of social networks, patterns of interethnic experiences, political-institutional and generalised social trust, and personal self-identification in regards to ethnicity, religion and nationality. He has had work published by Canadian independent think-tank MacKenzie Institute, British think-tank Bright Blue, and The Conversation. General research interests include ethnic minority voting behaviour and the social, economic, and political impact of racial discrimination.

Read articles by Rakib Ehsan.

Barry Eichengreen – University of California, Berkeley

Barry Eichengreen is the George C. Pardee and Helen N. Pardee professor of economics and professor of political science at the University of California, Berkeley, where he has taught since 1987. He is a CEPR research fellow, NBER research associate, fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the convener of the Bellagio Group of academics and economic officials. He tweets @B_Eichengreen.

Read articles by Barry Eichengreen. 

Liran Einav 80x108Liran Einav – Stanford University

Liran Einav is a Professor of Economics at Stanford University. His current research focuses on empirical work in insurance and credit markets, and his broader interests include industrial organization, micro-economic theory, applied econometrics.

Read articles by Liran Einav.

Kathleen EisenhardtKathleen Eisenhardt – Stanford University

Kathleen Eisenhardt is the Stanford W. Ascherman M.D. Professor and Co-Director of the Stanford Technology Ventures Program. Her recent book (with Don Sull) is Simple Rules: How to Survive in a Complex World. She is also co-author (with Shona Brown) ofCompeting on the Edge: Strategy as Structured Chaos (Harvard Business School Press), winner of the George R. Terry Book Award and an Amazon Top 10 Annual Business and Investing book. Professor Eisenhardt is also author of over 100 academic articles. She is a Distinguished Visiting Professor with Insead’s Entrepreneurship and Family Enterprise area.

Read articles by Kathleen Eisenhardt.

Todd Eisenstadt 80x108Todd EisenstadtAmerican University

Todd Eisenstadt, professor of government at American University, is the author of Politics, Identity, and Mexico’s Indigenous Rights Movements and Courting Democracy in Mexico: Party Strategies and Electoral Institutions.  He can be contacted at:eisensta@american.edu.

Read articles by Todd Eisenstadt.

Rob Eisinga – Radboud University

Rob Eisinga is a professor of quantitative research methods at Radboud University. His substantive interests concern the analysis of social and political change, including electoral and religious behavior, and the obesity epidemic. His current methodological interest is in the analysis of rank data and their null distribution in particular.

Read articles by Rob Eisinga.

Cheryl Ellenwood – Washington State University

Cheryl Ellenwood is a Scholarly Assistant Professor at Washington State University at the Center for Native American Research and Collaboration and the Institute for Research and Education to Advance Community Health.

Read articles by Cheryl Ellenwood.

 

Christina Ciocca Eller – Columbia University

Christina Ciocca Eller is a Paul F. Lazarsfeld fellow and doctoral candidate in Sociology at Columbia University. Her research analyzes social and economic inequality by examining how institutional, organizational, and cultural arrangements constrain individual outcomes. She will take up a position as an assistant professor of sociology and social studies at Harvard University in summer 2019.

Read articles by Christina Ciocca Eller.

Jill Ellingson – University of Kansas

Jill Ellingson is a professor of human resource management and Dana Anderson faculty fellow at the University of Kansas School of Business. She received her Ph.D. (1999) in human resources and industrial relations from the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota, and her BA (1994) in psychology with an emphasis in industrial/organisational psychology from the University of Minnesota.

Read articles by Jill Ellingson.

 

Michael Ellington – University of Liverpool

Michael Ellington is Lecturer in Finance at the University of Liverpool. 

 

Read articles by Michael Ellington.

Heather Elliott 80x108Heather Elliott – University of Alabama School of Law

Heather Elliott is a Professor of Law, at the University of Alabama School of Law. She is a former law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and to Judge Merrick B. Garland of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.  From 2003-2005, she was an appellate litigation associate at Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale & Dorr LLP in Washington, DC, where she wrote briefs to the United States Supreme Court, the California Supreme Court, and numerous federal and state intermediate appellate courts in cases involving constitutional law, bankruptcy, Indian law, administrative law, and environmental law. Professor Elliott’s scholarship has two focuses: the role of courts and agencies in a democratic society, and Alabama water law & policy. She recently received a United States Geological Survey grant to study the latter.

Read articles by Heather Elliott.

Jared Ellison 80x108Jared M. EllisonUniversity of Nebraska Omaha

Jared M. Ellison is a doctoral candidate in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Nebraska Omaha. His research interests include short-term incarceration, the criminal court system, and offender reentry. Jared has published in several scholarly journals, including Criminal Justice and Behavior, The Prison Journal, Journal of Criminal Justice, and Trauma, Violence, and Abuse.

Read articles by Jared M. Ellison.

David-Ellwood-80x108David Ellwood – University of Bologna

David Ellwood is an Associate Professor of International History at University of Bologna and Adjunct Professor in European-American Relations at Johns Hopkins University, SAIS Bologna Center. The fundamental theme of his research — the function of American power in contemporary European history — has shifted over the years to emphasize cultural power, particularly that of the American cinema industry. He was President of the International Association of Media and History 1999-2004 and a Fellow of the Rothermere America Institute, Oxford, in 2006.

Read articles by David Ellwood.

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Christian Emery 80x108Christian Emery – University of Plymouth

Christian Emery is a Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Plymouth. He completed his PhD at the University of Birmingham and was a Fellow in the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics between 2010 and 2013. He is the author of US Foreign Policy and the Iranian Revolution and several articles and book chapters on US foreign policy and US-Iranian relations.

Read articles by Christian Emery.

Ali Enami 80x108Ali Enami Tulane University

Ali Enami is a PhD student in Economics at Tulane University. His research interests include public economics, development economics and game theory.

Read articles by Ali Enami.

 

Omar G. Encarnación – Bard College

Omar G. Encarnación is Professor of Political Studies at Bard College, New York, where he teaches comparative politics and Iberian and Latin American studies. He is the author of Latin America’s Gay Rights Revolution, forthcoming from Oxford University Press.

Read articles by Omar G. Encarnación.  

Adam M. Enders – University of Louisville

Adam M. Enders is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Louisville.

Read articles by Adam M. Enders._

 

Ashley English – University of North Texas

Ashley English is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of North Texas. Her research focuses on gender and politics, interest groups and women’s organizations, and representation in the policymaking process. 

Read articles by Ashley English._

 

Blake Emidy – University of Montana

Blake Emidy is Assistant Professor at the University of Montana. His research looks at the organizational factors that contribute to employee motivation and well-being in the public sector, including the effects of budget cuts and downsizing. He also examines differences in employee perceptions of organizational justice at the intersection of gender, race, and sexual orientation.

Read articles by Blake Emidy.

Peter Enns 80x108Peter K. Enns – Cornell University

Peter Enns is Assistant Professor in the Department of Government at Cornell University. His research and teaching interests focus on public opinion, representation, and quantitative research methods. In particular, he is interested in whose policy preferences change, why, and whether government responds to these changes. He is also co-editor of the book, Who Gets Represented? (Sage, 2011).

Read articles by Peter K. Enns.

Ryan Enos 80x108Ryan Enos- Harvard University

Ryan D. Enos is an Assistant Professor of Government and Faculty Associate at the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard University.  He researches political psychology and political behavior with a focus on intergroup relations and political participation.  His work has recently appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of the United States of America and the Journal of Politics.

Read articles by Ryan Enos.

Derek Epp 80x108Derek A. Epp – University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill

Derek Epp is a Ph.D. candidate in American Politics at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. His research focuses on policy change, asking why some policies persist – remaining the status quo for decades – while others undergo frequent adjustments.

Read articles by Derek A. Epp.

Brad Epperly – University of South Carolina

Brad Epperly is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of South Carolina. His research focuses on the rule of law, especially judicial institutions.

Read articles by Brad Epperly.

 

Kate Epstein – Rutgers University-Camden

Kate Epstein is Associate Professor in the Department of History at Rutgers University-Camden and currently a member of the Institute for Advanced Study.

Read articles by Kate Epstein.

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Lee Epstein 80x108Lee Epstein – University of Southern California

Lee Epstein is the Provost Professor of Law and Political Science and the Rader Family Trustee Chair in Law at the University of Southern California. She is also now serving as a Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar, a Guggenheim Fellow, and a Lecturer in Law at the University Chicago. Professor Epstein is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Academy of Political and Social Science.

Read articles by Lee Epstein.

Aksel Erbahar – Erasmus University Rotterdam

Aksel Erbahar is an Assistant Professor at the Erasmus School of Economics of the University of Rotterdam. 

Read articles by Aksel Erbahar. 

 

Valerio Ercolani – Bank of Italy

Valerio Ercolani is an economist of the directorate general for economics, statistics and research at the Bank of Italy. He previously worked at Banco de Portugal’s economics and research department. He holds a degree in economics from University of Siena (Italy), a Master’s in economics from Tilburg University (Holland) and a PhD in economics from Bocconi University (Italy). His research focuses on fiscal policy, household finance, and demographics and has been published in various international journals.

Read articles by Valerio Ercolani.

Maryann Erigha 80x108Maryann Erigha – University of Memphis

Maryann Erigha is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Memphis. Her current research investigates the ways racial politics and mass media intertwine in global struggles for equality and social justice.

Read articles by Maryann Erigha.

 

Michael Eriksen 80x108Michael Eriksen – University of Cincinnati

Michael Eriksen is currently an Assistant Professor of Real Estate at the University of Cincinnati.  His research interests are in issues related to low-income housing markets. 

Read articles by Michael Eriksen.

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Robert-Erikson-80x108Robert S. Erikson- Columbia University

Robert S. Erikson is Professor of Political Science at Columbia University. He is co-author of The Timeline of Presidential Elections (University of Chicago Press), The Macro Polity(Cambridge University Press), and American Public Opinion (Pearson).

Read articles by Robert Erikson.

Cengiz Erisen – Binghamton University

Cengiz Erisen is a research associate in the Center on Democratic Performance at Binghamton University and an associate professor, Department of Political Science and International Relations at Yeditepe University. His current research interests include comparative political behavior, emotions, and populism. His most recent book is “Political Behavior and the Emotional Citizen: Participation and Reaction in Turkey”. 

Read articles by Cengiz Erisen.

Elif Erisen – Hacettepe University

Elif Erisen is an associate professor, Department of Political Science and Public Administration at Hacettepe University. Her research interests include public opinion, political discussion, and more recently, immigration.

Read articles by Elif Erisen.

 

jill esbenshade

Jill Esbenshade –  San Diego State University

Jill Esbenshade is Associate Professor of Sociology at San Diego State University.  Her research focuses on the areas of labor, immigration and race, with a specific focus on policies and working conditions.  She is the author of Monitoring Sweatshops: Workers, Consumers and the Global Apparel Industry (Temple), as well as numerous academic articles and policy reports.

Read articles by Jill Esbenshade.

 

Leandro Prados de la Escosura – Universidad Carlos III, Madrid / CEPR / LSE

Leandro Prados-de-la-Escosura, D. Phil. (Oxford) and Ph.D. (Complutense, Madrid) is Professor of Economic History at Universidad Carlos III, Madrid. He is also a Research Fellow at the CEPR, a Research Associate at CAGE, and Corresponding Fellow of Spain’s Royal Academy of History. During 2013-14 has been Leverhulme Visiting Professor at the LSE.

Read articles by Leandro Prados-de-la-Escosura.

Abel Escribà-Folch – Universitat Pompeu Fabra

Abel Escribà-Folch is an Associate Professor at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra’s Department of Political and Social Sciences and a Senior Research Associate at the Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals. His research interests include comparative authoritarianism, democratization, and democracy promotion.

Read articles by Abel Escribà-Folch.

Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha – University of North Texas

Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, is Department Chair and Professor of Political Science at the University of North Texas  His research focuses on American political institutions, specifically the presidency and mass media, and public policy.  He is the author of nearly three dozen scholarly articles and two books, the most recent of which is Breaking through the Noise: Presidential Leadership, Public Opinion, and the News Media (Stanford University Press).

Read articles by Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha.

Mark Esposito – Hult International Business School 

Mark Esposito is a professor of business and economics at Hult International Business School and a faculty member at Harvard University since 2011. Mark is a fellow at the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge. He co-founded Nexus FrontierTech, an artificial intelligence firm, and works at the interface between business, technology and government.

 

Read articles by Mark Esposito.

Jurgen Essletzbichler 80x108Jurgen Essletzbichler – University College London

Jurgen Essletzbichler is a Senior Lecturer in Economic Geography in the Department of Geography at University College London. He has two main research interests: First, he applies evolutionary economic geography to explain metropolitan and regional economic evolution as industrial and technological branching processes. Second, he studies the causes and consequences of metropolitan wage and income inequality.

Read articles by Jurgen Essletzbichler.

Saul Estrin – LSE Department of Management

Saul Estrin is emeritus professor of managerial economics and strategy and the founding head of the Department of Management at LSE. His research has long focused on the micro-economics of comparative economic systems. His recent work has concentrated on international business strategy issues and entrepreneurship.

Read articles by Saul Estrin.

 

Kate Eugenis – University of Nevada Las Vegas

Kate Eugenis is an affiliated researcher with the Women’s Research Institute of Nevada at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. Her research focuses on elections and candidate emergence.

Read articles by Kate Eugenis.

 

Heather Evans 80x108Heather Evans – Sam Houston State University

Heather Evans is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Sam Houston State University. Her primary research interests are political participation and behavior, public opinion, competitive elections, media and politics, the status of women in the political science discipline, and political psychology. Her book, “Competitive Elections and Democracy in America: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly”, was just published by Routledge in November 2013.

Read articles by Heather Evans.

Laura E. Evans – University of Washington

Laura E. Evans is Associate Professor at the University of Washington’s Daniel J. Evans School of Public Policy and Governance.

Read articles by Laura E. Evans.

 

sized-mary-evansMary Evans – LSE Gender Institute

Mary Evans is LSE Centennial Professor at the Gender Institute. Prior to coming to the LSE as a Visiting Fellow she taught Women’s Studies and Sociology at the University of Kent. The primary focus of Professor Evans’ work is those narratives (be they fictional or otherwise) through which we construct our social identity. Professor Evans is particularly interested in the part that gender and class play in these narratives and the ways in which narratives of ourselves are a essential part of what we define as the modern.

Read articles by Mary Evans.

Sara Evans-Lacko 80x108Sara Evans-LackoLSE Personal Social Services Research Unit

Sara Evans-Lacko is an Associate Professorial Research Fellow at the LSE’s Personal Social Services Research Unit (PSSRU). She  is a mental health services researcher with a particular interest in the role of health services and social support in the prevention and treatment of mental illness. Her research focuses on developing innovative methods to improve access to and quality of mental health care for young people and cross-cultural applications of this in addition to the evaluation of public health interventions such as the Time to Change anti-stigma campaign which aim to improve important changes at the population level.

Read articles by Sara Evans-Lacko.

Simon-J-Evenett-80X108Simon J. Evenett – University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, and CEPR

Simon J. Evenett is Professor of International Trade and Economic Development at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, and co-director of the most established group of international trade researchers in Europe. He is a former non-resident senior fellow of the Brookings Institution, has served on the UK Competition Commission (a regulator!), and was a member of the Warwick Commission on the Future of the Multilateral Trading System.

Read articles by Simon J. Evenett.

Reid Ewing 80x108Reid Ewing – University of Utah

Reid Ewing is a Professor of City and Metropolitan Planning at the University of Utah, associate editor of theJ ournal of the American Planning Association, and columnist for Planning magazine, writing the bi-monthly column Research You Can Use. Earlier in his career, he was director of the Voorhees Transportation Center at Rutgers University, research professor at the National Center for Smart Growth, state representative from northwest Tucson, and analyst at the Congressional Budget Office.  

Read articles by Reid Ewing.

Ariel Ezrachi – University of Oxford

Ariel Ezrachi is the Slaughter and May Professor of Competition law at the University of Oxford, and the Director of the Oxford Centre for Competition Law and Policy.

Read articles by Ariel Ezrachi.

Craig Fagan  – Transparency International

Craig Fagan is Head of Policy for Transparency International. Craig joined TI from the Poverty Group of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) where he worked as Policy Research Analyst advising countries on issues such as civil society engagement, monitoring and evaluation and Millenium Development Goal-based initiatives. He has an undergraduate degree in International Studies/Spanish from the University of Richmond (Virginia) and a master’s in International Affairs/Development Economics from SAIS-Johns Hopkins University (Washington, DC).

Read articles by Craig Fagan.

E.J. Fagan – University of Texas at Austin

E.J. Fagan is a PhD student at the University of Texas at Austin. He studies agenda setting, political parties, Congress, think tanks, social policy and budgetary policy. In particular, he is interested in how legislatures process information and solve problems, and how capacity, ideology, and accountability impact problem-solving.

Read articles by E.J. Fagan.

Kevin Fahey – Swansea University

Kevin Fahey is a Lecturer in Politics in the Department of Political & Cultural Studies at Swansea University. He studies study political institutions and elite behavior, with specialization in subnational politics.

Read articles by Kevin Fahey.

 

Juraj Falath – Comenius University, Bratislava

Juraj Falath is a senior analyst at the National Bank of Slovakia and a visiting lecturer in economics at the Comenius University in Bratislava.

Read articles by Juraj Falath.

 

Maoyong Fan 80x108Maoyong Fan – Ball State University

Maoyong Fan, is an assistant professor of economics at Ball State University. His research interests include environmental economics, health economics and policy, labor economics, and development economics. His research in environmental economics focuses on both short- and long-term causal relationship between pollution and health.

Read articles by Maoyong Fan.

Henry Farber 80x108Henry S. Farber – Princeton University

Henry Farber is the Hughes-Rogers Professor of Economics and an Associate of the Industrial Relations Section at Princeton University. In addition to his faculty position at Princeton, Farber is a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and a Research Fellow of the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA). Farber’s current research interests include unemployment, liquidity constraints and labor supply, labor unions, worker mobility, wage dynamics, and analysis of the litigation process.

Read articles by Henry S. Farber.

Steven Farber – University of Toronto Scarborough

Steven Farber is a transportation geographer and spatial analyst. His research investigates the social and economic outcomes of transportation and land use decision making in urban areas.  He is currently working on projects related to the distributional aspects of transit accessibility, personal mobility, and participation in the activities of daily life.

Read articles by Steven Farber.

christina-farhart-1-80x108Christina E. Farhart University of Minnesota

Christina E. Farhart is Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Minnesota.

Read articles by Christina E. Farhart.

 

Christopher Fariss– University of Michigan

Christopher Fariss is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Michigan. He studies the politics of human rights, violence, and repression.

Read articles by Christopher Fariss.
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Daniel Faris 80x108Daniel Faris
Daniel Faris is a freelance journalist and a graduate of the Writers Institute at Susquehanna University. When he’s not blogging about politics on Only Slightly Biased, you can find his alter ego discussing progressive music at New Music Friday. He currently lives in Philadelphia.

Read articles by Daniel Faris.

 

Stephanie Farmer – Roosevelt University

Stephanie Farmer is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Roosevelt University. Her published research focuses on the financialization of urban infrastructure and the impact of public school reform on school facilities.

Read articles by Stephanie Farmer.

 

Kevin Farnsworth – University of York

Kevin Farnsworth is reader in international and comparative social policy at the University of York. His research interests include the political economy of welfare, welfare states and economic crisis and corporate welfare. He is author of Corporate Welfare versus social welfare (2012) and founder of corporate-welfare-watch. With Zoë Irving he is co-editor of the Journal of International and Comparative Social Policy. He tweets at @Dr_K_Farnsworth

Read articles by Kevin Farnsworth.

Chad Farrell 80x108Chad R. Farrell – University of Alaska Anchorage

Chad R. Farrell is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Alaska Anchorage. His research interests include Urban inequality, Residential segregation and diversity, Community and neighborhood change, and Social demography.

Read articles by Chad R. Farrell.

Benjamin Farrer – Knox College

Benjamin Farrer is Assistant Professor at the Environmental Studies Department, Knox College.

Read articles by Benjamin Farrer.

 

Barbara Fasolo – LSE Department of Management

Barbara Fasolo is an associate professor of behavioural science at LSE’s Department of Management. She is an expert on choice processes and choice architecture. She is the head of the Behavioural Research Lab and director of the Executive Master in Behavioural Science.

Read articles by Barbara Fasolo.

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Dagney Faulk 1 80x108Dagney Faulk – Ball State University

Dagney Faulk is Director of Research at the Center for Business and Economic Research at Ball State University.  Her research interests include state and local tax policy, regional economic development and transit. She has authored numerous Indiana-focused policy studies on a variety of topics including the regional distribution of state government taxes and expenditures, senior migration, local government reform, the impact of property tax caps and school district consolidation. She is co-author (with Michael Hicks) of the book Local Government Consolidation in the United States.

Read articles by Dagney Faulk.

Annie Faulkner – Butler University

Annie Faulkner is an undergraduate student at Butler University.

Read articles by Annie Faulkner.

Christine Fauvelle-Aymar 80x108Christine Fauvelle-Aymar – Université de Tours

Christine Fauvelle-Aymar is an Associate Professor at the Department of Economics, Université de Tours. Her research interests include economic analyses of elections, voter turnout and voting methods.

Read articles by Christine Fauvelle-Aymar.

 

Daniel Fay – The Florida State University

Dr. Daniel Fay is an Assistant Professor in the Askew School of Public Administration and Policy at The Florida State University. His research interests include organizational theory, diversity issues in public management, veterans’ policy, policy diffusion and higher education policy and management.

Read articles by Daniel Fay.

Steven Fazzari 80x108Steven M. Fazzari – Washington University in St. Louis

Steven Fazzari is a professor of economics at Washington University in St. Louis.  His research explores two main areas:  the link between macroeconomic activity and finance, particularly the financial determinants of investment spending, and the foundations of Keynesian macroeconomics.  His perspectives on the causes and consequences of the Great Recession, the macroeconomic effects of rising income inequality, financial instability, deficit reduction, and capital gains taxation have been highlighted in the national and international press.

Read articles by Steven M. Fazzari.

Christopher-Federico-80x108Christopher Federico – University of Minnesota, Twin Cities

Christopher Federico is an Associate Professor of Psychology and Political Science at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. His research interests focus on the organization of whites’ racial attitudes and the informational and motivational antecedents of attitude and belief-system structure.

Read articles by Christopher Federico.

Mary K. Feeney – Arizona State University

Mary K. Feeney is Associate Professor and Lincoln Professor of Public Affairs at Arizona State University. She is interested in public and nonprofit management, sector distinctions, and science and technology policy. She is currently working on research investigating technology use in local governments and mentoring in ST&E fields.

Read articles by Mary K. Feeney.

Ann M. Fefferman – University of California

Ann M. Fefferman, MA is a PhD candidate in Sociology at the University of California, Irvine. Her research interests focus broadly on gender, masculinities, reproductive health, the family, and inequalities. Currently, she is working on her dissertation, which investigates and compares masculinities in different stages of reproduction, with a focus on contraceptive management, pregnancy intentions, and abortion decision-making. In particular, she intends to further her studies in medical sociology. 

Read articles by Ann M. Fefferman.

sized-guillermo-felices62x86Guillermo Felices – London School of Economics

Guillermo Felices is a Visiting Fellow in the Institute of Global Affairs at the London School of Economics and Political Science. His research interests and contributions are in global financial issues, emerging markets, and monetary policy. He has over 15 years of experience in both the financial industry and policy making. Over the last ten years he has held senior roles in economic research and multi-asset strategy at global investment banks. In his latest role he was Head of Asset Allocation Research, Europe at Barclays. Guillermo also has extensive experience in policy making and academic research. He was a Senior Economist at the Bank of England (2002-2007) and holds a PhD in Economics with specialisation in macroeconomics and monetary policy from New York University. His work has been published in refereed journals and books and he featured regularly in the global financial media (FT, The Economist, WSJ, Bloomberg, CNBC). 

Read articles by Guillermo Felices.

Wenhui Feng – Tufts University

Wenhui Feng is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Public Health and Community Medicine at Tufts University. Her research investigates how state and local health departments shape policies and their effectiveness on individual health. She is primarily interested in policies that work towards the prevention of non-communicable diseases, with a focus on the feasibility and effectiveness of policies.

Read articles by Wenhui Feng.

Chris Ferguson 80x108Christopher J. Ferguson – Stetson University

Christopher J. Ferguson is associate professor and department chair of psychology at Stetson University. He has published numerous scientific articles on the topic of video games and mental health.

Read articles by Christopher J. Ferguson.

 

John-Paul Ferguson – McGill University

John-Paul Ferguson is an Assistant Professor of Organizational Behavior at McGill University’s Desautels Faculty of Management. He studies careers, labor unions, and segregation.

Read articles by John-Paul Ferguson.

 

rodrigo-fernandez-80x108Rodrigo Fernandez – KU Leuven

Rodrigo Fernandez is a postdoctoral researcher at the research group The Real Estate/Financial Complex at KU Leuven. Since 2011 he has been an associate researcher at SOMO, working on tax avoidance, tax havens and shadow banking. He has an interest in housing finance, financialization and offshore finance. 

Read articles by Rodrigo Fernandez.

Alexander Hertel-Fernandez 80x108Alexander Hertel-Fernandez – Harvard University

Alexander Hertel-Fernandez is a PhD candidate in government and social policy and a graduate fellow in inequality and social policy at Harvard. His research interests center on the interplay between organized interests, especially business, and public policy in the American political economy. His dissertation, “Corporate Interests and Conservative Mobilization Across the U.S. States, 1973 to 2013,” examines the rise of national business groups in state politics since the 1970s. Other projects examine tax policy in the United States and other rich democracies, and the politics of unemployment insurance. More information can be found on his website,www.hertelfernandez.com. His email is ahertel@fas.harvard.edu.

Read articles by Alexander Hertel-Fernandez,

Gisela Rodriguez Fernandez – Portland State University

Gisela Rodriguez Fernandez is from Bolivia and she is an adjunct professor at Portland State University. Her primary research focuses on race and ethnicity, social inequality, political economy, and social change both in Latin America and the United States.

Read articles by Gisela Rodriguez Fernandez.

Elena Ferrari – University of Insubria, Italy

Elena Ferrari is a full professor of Computer Science at the University of Insubria, Italy and scientific director of the K&SM Research Center. Her research activities are related to access control, privacy and trust. In 2009, she received the IEEE Computer Society’s Technical Achievement Award for “outstanding and innovative contributions to secure data management”. She received a Google Award in 2010, and an IBM Faculty Award in 2014. She is an IEEE fellow and an ACM Distinguished Scientist.

Read articles by Elena Ferrari.

Ignazio De Ferrari – LSE Government

Ignazio De Ferrari holds a PhD in Political Science from the London School of Economics. His research interests are electoral behavior and the study of differences in public opinion across individuals and countries in Latin America. His current research explores variations in electoral accountability, with an emphasis on Latin America. “The Successor Factor: Electoral Accountability in Presidential Democracies” is forthcoming in Comparative Political Studies.

Read articles by Ignazio De Ferrari.

Paul Ferraro 80x108Paul J. Ferraro – Georgia State University

Paul J. Ferraro is a Professor of Economics at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University. His research interests include the design and evaluation of environmental policy, with an emphasis on biodiversity and ecosystem protection, as well as experimental methods and behavioral economics.

Read articles by Paul J. Ferraro.

Ana Ferrer 80x108Ana Ferrer – University of Waterloo, Canada

Ana Ferrer is an associate professor at the University of Waterloo and associated researcher at the Canadian Labour and Skills Research Network (CLSRN) and the Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration (CReAM). She graduated from Boston University and her research career developed in Canada, and focused on immigration, education and family economics. Her work on the economics of education includes research on different aspects of the premium attached to immigrant credentials and to the skills brought by immigrants to Canada. More recently, her work has focused on the fertility of immigrants and its consequences for immigrant integration.

Read articles by Ana Ferrer.

Eric Fesselmeyer 80x108Eric Fesselmeyer National University of Singapore

Eric Fesselmeyer is a Senior Fellow with the Department of Economics, National University of Singapore. His current research focuses on the differences in white-black housing patterns in the United States and on the Singapore housing market. He has also written several papers on environmental economics.

Read articles by Eric Fesselmeyer.

Thiemo Fetzer – University of Warwick

Thiemo Fetzer is an Associate Professor in the Economics department at the University of Warwick. He is also affiliated with the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), Centre for Competitive Advantage in the Global Economy (CAGE) at University of Warwick, the Spatial Economics Research Centre (SERC) at London School of Economics and the Pearson Institute at University of Chicago.

Read articles by Thiemo Fetzer.

 

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James Feyrer – Dartmouth College

James Feyrer is an associate professor in the economics department at Dartmouth College, and a Faculty Research Fellow in the National Bureau of Economic Research. His research areas include economic growth, demographics, macroeconomics, and trade.

Read articles by James Feyrer.

Jan Fichtner – University of Amsterdam

Dr Jan Fichtner is postdoctoral researcher in the CORPNET project at the University of Amsterdam. He holds a Dr. phil. from the Institute for Political Science at Goethe-University Frankfurt (Germany). His research interests lie in the interdisciplinary field of International Political Economy, particularly Global Finance (concentration of corporate ownership and control, structural power, financialisation, hedge funds, offshore financial centers).

Read articles by Jan Fichtner.

Joshua Fidler—State University of New York, Brockport

Joshua Fidler is a graduate student in the Communications Department at the State University of New York, Brockport.

Read articles by Joshua Fidler.

 

Jeremy Fiel 80x108Jeremy Fiel – University of Wisconsin-Madison

Jeremy Fiel is a doctoral student in Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  His research focuses on school segregation, promoting healthy development and educational success among disadvantaged youth, and other aspects of educational stratification and mobility.   His recent work has been published in the American Sociological Review and the American Educational Research Journal.

Read articles by Jeremy Fiel.

Nichole Fifer 80x108Nichole Fifer – Washington & Jefferson College

Nichole Fifer is a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science at Washington & Jefferson College.

Read articles by Nichole Fifer.

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Alexandra Filindra 80x108Alexandra Filindra – University of Illinois at Chicago

Alexandra Filindra is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She studies the role of racial prejudice in public opinion preferences and public policy, immigration politics and policy and gun control politics in the United States.  Her work has appeared in Political Behavior, Policy Studies Journal, State Politics and Policy, Social Science Quarterly and other journals. 

Read articles by Alexandra Filindra.

Constantinos Filis – Panteion University

Dr. Constantinos Filis is Research Director of the Institute of International Relations at Panteion University.

Read articles by Constantinos Filis.

 

Morris P. Fiorina – Hoover Institution

Morris P. Fiorina is the Wendt Family Professor of Political Science and a Senior Fellow of the Hoover Institution. He received an undergraduate degree from Allegheny College and a PhD from the University of Rochester, and taught at Caltech and Harvard before joining Stanford in 1998. He has written widely on American politics, with special emphasis on the study of representation, public opinion and elections.

Read articles by Morris P. Fiorina.

Adam Fine – Arizona State University

Adam Fine is Assistant Professor in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Arizona State University.

Read articles by Adam Fine.

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Jeff Fine – Clemson University

Jeffrey A. Fine is associate professor of Political Science at Clemson University.

Read articles by Jeffrey A. Fine.

 

Leslie K. Finger – Harvard University

Leslie K. Finger is a lecturer on government and social studies at Harvard University. Her research focuses on interest group influence and the politics of education.

Read articles by Leslie K. Finger.

Pete Finn 80x108Peter Finn – Kingston University

Peter Finn is a lecturer in Politics and PhD candidate at Kingston University. His research is focused on conceptualising the ways that the US and the UK attempt to embed impunity for violations of international law into their national security operations. His main case study is US led detention operations during the Iraq War. His work has been published in Critical Studies on Terrorism, Open Democracy and The Conversation.

Read articles by Peter Finn.

Ryan Finnigan 80x108Ryan Finnigan – WZB Berlin Social Science Center

Ryan Finnigan is a postdoctoral fellow in WZB Berlin Social Science Center unit for Inequality and Social Policy. His research investigates how structural change (at the city-, regional-, and country-level) shapes inequalities in individual well-being and life chances.

Read articles by Ryan Finnigan.

Charles J. Finocchiaro – University of Oklahoma

Charles Finocchiaro is Associate Professor in the Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center and the Department of Political Science at the University of Oklahoma.  His research spans the field of American politics, with a particular focus on the development and organization of American political institutions and congressional elections. He is currently working on a book project and a series of papers that examine the transformation of the U.S. Congress during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His work appears in outlets including the American Journal of Political ScienceLegislative Studies Quarterly, and Political Research Quarterly.

Read articles by Charles J. Finocchiaro.

Alessandro di FioreAlessandro Di Fiore

Alessandro Di Fiore is Founder and CEO of the European Centre for Strategic Innovation (ECSI) and ECSI Consulting London.

Read articles by Alessandro di Fiore.

 

Ken FiremanKen Fireman – SAGE

Ken Fireman is managing editor for SAGE Business Researcher, which delivers deep dives on contemporary business issues to students and faculty twice a month. He was previously a senior editor for economics and politics at Bloomberg News and a White House correspondent, national political reporter and Moscow bureau chief for Newsday. @kfireman1

Read articles by Ken Fireman.

Jeanne Firth – LSE Geography and Environment

Jeanne Firth is a PhD candidate in Human Geography & Urban Studies in LSE’s Department of Geography and Environment. Before LSE, Jeanne served on the founding team of the Grow Dat Youth Farm in New Orleans, Louisiana and worked as the organisation’s first Assistant Director.

Read articles Jeanne Firth.

Scott W. Fischer

Scott W. Fischer, Ph.D., has taught American National Institutions at the undergraduate and graduate level and has twenty-five years of experience as a Congressional staffer.  His 1994 dissertation from the University of Virginia was entitled, “Confrontation versus Compromise:  The Role of the Minority Party in the House of Representatives under Divided Government.”

Read articles by Scott W. Fischer.

Paul J. Fisher – University of Arizona

Paul J. Fisher is a Doctoral Student in economics at the University of Arizona, Tucson. His primary research fields are environmental and urban economics, with broad interests in a variety of empirical microeconomic topics. His current research involves evaluating policies that influence traffic safety and land use/land taxation policy.

Read articles by Paul J. Fisher.

William Fisher 80x108William H. Fisher – University of Massachusetts Lowell

William H. Fisher is a professor in the School of Criminology & Justice Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell MA. Dr Fisher’s chief area of interest is the intersection of the mental health and criminal justice systems. He is also an adjunct professor of psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.

Read articles by William H. Fisher.

Jonathan Fisk 80x108Jonathan M. Fisk – Auburn University

Jonathan M. Fisk is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. His work focuses on state and local energy/environmental policy and local government management.

Read articles by Jonathan M. Fisk.

Joan Fitzgerald 80x108Joan Fitzgerald Northeastern University

Joan Fitzgerald is a Professor in the School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs at Northeastern University. Her research focuses on urban climate governance and the connections between urban sustainability and economic development and innovation. Her third book, Emerald Cities: Urban Sustainability and Economic Development (Oxford Univ. Press), examines how cities are creating economic development opportunities in several green sectors and discusses the state and national policy needed to support these efforts. Emerald Cities builds on her 2002 book, Economic Revitalization: Strategies and Cases for City and Suburb (Sage), which identifies strategies for incorporating sustainability and social justice goals into urban economic development planning. In 2012 she published a three-volume anthology, Cities and Sustainability.

Read articles by Joan Fitzgerald.

John Fitzgibbon – Boston College

John Fitzgibbon is adjunct faculty in Political Science in the Woods College of Advancing Studies at Boston College and was previously an Associate Professor of European Politics at Canterbury Christ Church University.

Read articles by John Fitzgibbon.

Caroline Fitzpatrick 80x108Caroline Fitzpatrick – Université Sainte-Anne, Canada

Caroline Fitzpatrick, is an assistant professor at Sainte-Anne’s University of Nova Scotia where she teaches psychology and statistics. She is also an affiliate researcher at Concordia University’s PERFORM Center and an appointed research fellow at the University of Johannesburg, in the department of childhood education. Her work addresses the childhood origins of education and health inequities and has the ultimate goal of informing social policies and public health initiatives aimed at improving child physical and mental health internationally.

Read articles by Caroline Fitzpatrick.

Katie Fitzpatrick 80x108Katie FitzpatrickSeattle University

Katie Fitzpatrick is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Seattle University. Her current work focuses on the effectiveness of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly the food stamp program; the causes and consequences of food insecurity; and, the use of mainstream and alternative financial institutions.

Read articles by Katie Fitzpatrick.

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Richard Flanagan 80x108Richard Flanagan – College of Staten Island, CUNY

Richard Flanagan is associate professor of political science with research interests in urban public policy and politics. He is the author of Mayors and the Challenge of Urban Leadership (2004) and co-author of Staten Island Politics: Conservative Bastion in a Liberal City (2012). His next books are, “The Fight for City Hall: The 2013 Mayoral Election and the Future of New York City,” which chronicles the state of the city at the end of the Bloomberg era, and Robert Wagner and the Rise of New York City’s Plebiscitary Mayoralty, which will be published in spring, 2014. He is principal investigator of the Staten Island Social Capital Community Benchmark Study, the first comprehensive study of social behavior in the borough using survey research techniques.

Read articles by Richard Flanagan.

Patrick Flavin 80x108Patrick Flavin – Baylor University

Patrick Flavin is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at Baylor University. His research and teaching interests include political inequality, the impact of politics and public policies on citizens’ quality of life, U.S. state politics, political behavior, and research methods.

Read articles by Patrick Flavin.

Marc Fleurbaey 80x108Marc Fleurbaey – Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University

Marc Fleurbaey is Robert E. Kuenne Professor in Economics and Humanistic Studies, Professor of Public Affairs and the University Center for Human Values. He has been an economist at INSEE (Paris), a professor of economics at the Universities of Cergy-Pontoise and Pau (France), and a research director at the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) in Paris. He has also been a Lachmann Fellow and a visiting professor at the London School of Economics, a research associate at the Center for Operations Research and Econometrics (CORE, Louvain-la-Neuve) and the Institute for Public Economics (IDEP, Marseilles), and a visiting researcher at Oxford. 

Read articles by Marc Fleurbaey.

Neil Fligstein 80x108Neil Fligstein – University of California, Berkeley

Neil Fligstein is the Class of 1939 Chancellor’s Professor in the department of sociology at the University of California at Berkeley. He is also the director of the Center for Culture, Organization, and Politics at the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment. He is the author of seven books including Euroclash: The EU, European Identity and the Future of Europe, which was published by Oxford University Press in 2009, The Architecture of Markets, which was published by Princeton University Press in 2001, and A Theory of Fields, which he co-authored with Doug McAdam, and which was published by Oxford University Press.

Read articles by Neil Fligstein.

matthew-flinders-80x108Matthew Flinders – University of Southampton

Matthew Flinders is Professor of Politics at the University of Sheffield and Director of the Sir Bernard Crick Centre for the Understanding of Politics.

Read articles by Matthew Flinders.

Chris Flinn 80x108Christopher Flinn – New York University

Christopher Flinn is a Professor in the Department of Economics at New York University and a Senior Research Fellow at Collegio Carlo Alberto.   

Read articles by Christopher Flinn.

Sarah FloodUniversity of Minnesota

Sarah Flood is Director of US Survey Projects at the Minnesota Population Center at the University of Minnesota, where she oversees projects funded by the National Institutes of Health to develop, support, and improve population data infrastructure. Her research is at the intersection of gender, work, family, life course, and time use. She has published work on the time use and well-being of parents, couples, and older adults.

Read articles by Sarah Flood.

Alejandro Flores – University of Chicago

Alejandro Flores is a Doctoral Candidate in the Department of Political Science, University of Chicago. His research agenda focuses on experiments in the study of political persuasion and attitude change, race, and identity.

Read articles by Alejandro Flores.

Alejandro Quiroz Flores – University of Essex

Alejandro Quiroz Flores is a Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) at the Department of Government in the University of Essex. His research focuses on political economy and natural disasters.

Read articles by Alejandro Quiroz Flores.

DJ Taylor 80x108D.J. FlynnNorthwestern University

D.J. Flynn is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Political Science at Northwestern University. His research focuses on public opinion, political psychology, representation, and quantitative methods.

Read articles by D.J Flynn.

Michael Flynn 80x108Michael Flynn – University of Alabama

Michael Flynn is currently a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Political Science at the University of Alabama. Beginning in the fall of 2014 he will be joining the Department of Political Science at Kansas State University as an assistant professor. His research focuses on the political and economic determinants of foreign economic and security policy.  His research also focuses on the influence of non-state actors and how they affect states’ policy choices, particularly with respect to human rights issues.

Read articles by Michael Flynn.

brian-fogarty-80x108Brian FogartyUniversity of Glasgow

Brian Fogarty is a Lecturer in Quantitative Social Sciences for the Q-Step programme at the University of Glasgow. His research focuses on studying the news media as a strategic actor in politics and as a political institution within the American political system.

Read articles by Brian Fogarty.

Marc Folch – University of Pennsylvania

Marc Folch is a PhD candidate in economics from the University of Pennsylvania. His research interests are macroeconomics, labour economics and the economics of education.

Read articles by Marc Folch.

michael-ford-80x108Michael R. FordUniversity of Wisconsin–Oshkosh

Michael R. Ford is assistant professor of public administration at the University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh. His research interests include public and nonprofit board governance, accountability, and school choice. He is a member of the Thomas B. Fordham and American Enterprise Institutes’ Emerging Education Policy Scholars class of 2015–16, and a 2016 ASPA Founders Fellow. Prior to joining academia Michael worked for many years on education policy in Wisconsin.

Read articles by Michael R. Ford.

Brian Forester 80x108Brian Forester – United States Military Academy

Brian Forester is an Army Major and instructor in the Department of Social Sciences at the U.S. Military Academy (USMA). He is a graduate of USMA and holds an M.A. in Political Science from Duke University. He has multiple overseas deployments, and his research interests include civil-military relations, public opinion, and quantitative methodology.

Read articles by Brian Forester.

Rebecca Forman – LSE Health

Rebecca Forman is a Health Policy Consultant at LSE Health.

Read articles by Rebecca Forman.

 

Claes Fornell – University of Michigan

Claes Fornell is the Donald C. Cook Distinguished Emeritus Professor at the Ross School of Business, University of Michigan. Dr. Fornell founded the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) – a monthly economic indicator of the quality of economic output. In addition to the ACSI, Dr. Fornell has founded several companies, including CFI Group, ForeSee Results, and ACSI Funds. He is the world’s leading authority on customer satisfaction, its measurement and analysis, and regularly appears in broadcast and print media.

Read articles by Claes Fornell.

Øystein Foros – NHH Norwegian School of Economics

Øystein Foros’ area of expertise is media economics, industrial organisation and network economics. He has published in e.g. Management Science, Economic Journal, RAND Journal of Economics and International Economic Review.

Read articles by Øystein Foros.

Anne Foss 80x108Ann W. FossUniversity of Texas at Arlington

Ann W. Foss is a doctoral candidate in the urban planning and public policy program at the University of Texas at Arlington. Her research focuses on the politics, narrative framing, and public participation surrounding climate change policy and action in the United States.

Read articles by Ann W. Foss.

Gerald Fosten – The African Institution

Gerald Fosten is a Research Associate at The African Institution. He completed his PhD in Political Science at Howard University in May 2016 and had previously received his BS and MPA degrees at the College of Public Service and Urban Studies (Institute of Government) at Fisk University and Tennessee State University, respectively. He has spent over 12 years traveling to urban communities studying government policies and inequality.

Read articles by Gerald Fosten.

Jason Foster 80x108Jason FosterAthabasca University

Jason Foster is Assistant Professor, Human Resources and Labour Relations at Athabasca University in Alberta, Canada. He has researched migrant labour in Canada for a number of years and is particularly interested in the interactions between unions and migrant workers. He is also interested in union renewal and revitalization in the 21st century. 

Read articles by Jason Foster.
Lucia Foster 80x108Lucia Foster – Center for Economic Studies, U.S. Census Bureau

Lucia Foster is the Chief of the Center for Economic Studies and the Chief Economist at the U.S. Census Bureau. Her research is focused on productivity dynamics and the reallocation of resources across businesses.

Read articles by Lucia Foster.

 

Nicole FosterUniversity of Texas at Arlington

Nicole Foster is adjunct Assistant Professor for the College of Architecture, Planning, and Public Administration at the University of Texas at Arlington. She researches the relationship between the built environment, aesthetics, and affect and its impact on collective efficacy and neighborhood vitality.

Read articles by Nicole Foster.

Vasiliki Fouka – Stanford University

Vasiliki Fouka is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Stanford University. She earned a PhD in Economics from Pompeu Fabra University. She studies group identity and ingroup-outgroup relations with a focus on immigrant assimilation. Her work is published or forthcoming in the American Political Science Review, the Review of Economic Studies and the Journal of Politics.

Read articles by Vasiliki Fouka.

Trevor Foulk – University of Maryland

Trevor Foulk is assistant professor of management and organisation at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business. He received his Ph.D. in organisational behaviour from the Warrington College of Business at the University of Florida, and his BBA from the University of Massachusetts. Dr. Foulk’s research interests include deviant workplace behaviours, workplace power dynamics, social perception, and interpersonal influence behaviours. His research has been published in leading academic journals, and he has contributed articles to a number of top news publications.

Read articles by Trevor Foulk._

Jane Fountain 80x108Jane Fountain – University of Massachusetts Amherst

Jane E. Fountain is Professor of Political Science and Public Policy and Adjunct Professor of Computer Science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Professor Fountain is the founder and Director of the National Center for Digital Government, based at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, which was established with support from the National Science Foundation to develop research and infrastructure for the emerging field information technology and governance. During the past decade, the National Center has sponsored research workshops, seminars, doctoral and post-doctoral fellowships and visiting faculty from throughout the world in addition to its active research programs. Professor Fountain is an elected fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration and a member and former chair of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on the Future of Government.

Read articles by Jane Fountain.

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Anthony Fowler 80x108Anthony Fowler University of Chicago
Anthony Fowler is an Assistant Professor in the Harris School of Public Policy Studies at the University of Chicago. He studies political representation, with particular interests in elections and participation. His work has recently appeared in the American Journal of Political Science, Quarterly Journal of Political Science, and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Read articles by Anthony Fowler.

Erika Franklin Fowler 80x108Erika Franklin Fowler – Wesleyan University

Erika Franklin Fowler is Associate Professor of Government at Wesleyan University where she directs the Wesleyan Media Project, which tracks and analyzes all political ads aired on broadcast television in real-time during elections. Fowler specializes in political communication – local media and campaign advertising in particular – and her work on local coverage of politics and policy has been published in political science, communication, law/policy, and medical journals. 

Read articles by Erika Franklin Fowler.

Linda Fowler – Dartmouth College
Linda L. Fowler is Professor of Government and Frank Reagan Chair in Policy Studies, Emerita, and teaches and conducts research at Dartmouth College.  Fowler received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2005 and published the resulting book, Watchdogs on the Hill: The Decline of Congressional Oversight of U.S. Foreign Relations, in 2015.  Fowler has authored two books on congressional candidates and numerous articles on American politics.

Read articles by Linda Fowler

 

Luke Fowler – Boise State University

Luke Fowler is an assistant professor of public administration at Boise State University. His research interests include environmental and energy policy, state and local government, public budgeting and finance, and administrative and policy theory.

Read articles by Luke Fowler.

Meredith Fowlie 80x108Meredith FowlieUniversity of California, Berkeley

Meredith Fowlie is an Associate Professor at the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of California, Berkeley. Much of her work investigates how market-based environmental regulation- and emissions trading programs in particular- are working in practice. She is also interested in the demand-side of energy markets and work that integrates methods and models from other disciplines into economic analysis of policy outcomes.

Read articles by Meredith Fowlie.

Ashley M. Fox – Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy

Ashley M. Fox is an Associate Professor of Public Administration and Policy at Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy. Her research focuses on comparative health politics of policy, inequality, and health and the effects of social policies on health outcomes. Her recent work explores variations in state safety-net generosity and the effects of administrative burden in safety-nets on program enrollment.

Read articles by Ashley M. Fox.

Lindsay Fox 80x108Lindsay Fox – Stanford University

Lindsay Fox is a doctoral candidate in the Economics of Education program and an Institute of Education Sciences fellow at Stanford University’s Center for Education Policy Analysis. Her research interests include teacher contributions to student learning, teacher labor markets, income inequality, and methods for causal inference. 

Read articles by Lindsay Fox.

Raymond Foxworth – First Nations Development Institute

Raymond Foxworth is Vice President of First Nations Development Institute, a national Native American controlled nonprofit and visiting scholar at the University of New Mexico.

Read articles by Raymond Foxworth.

 

kelly-frailing-80x108Kelly FrailingLoyola University New Orleans

Dr. Kelly Frailing is an Assistant Professor of Criminology and Justice at Loyola University New Orleans. Her two main research interests are offenders with mental illness and crime and disaster. She is most recently the co-author of Toward a Criminology of Disaster (in production with Palgrave Macmillan) as well as the co-author of the second edition of Fundamentals of Criminology: New Dimensions and the co-editor of the third edition of Crime and Criminal Justice in Disaster (both with Carolina Academic Press).

Read articles by Kelly Frailing.

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Gianni-De-Fraja-80x108Gianni De Fraja University of Nottingham 

Gianni De Fraja is Professor of Economics at the University of Nottingham, and part-time professor of Public Economics at the University of Rome “Tor Vergata”. He is a fellow of CEPR.  In his policy oriented papers he has studied theoretical aspects of competition among state owned and private firms, the regulation of utilities, and the design of health policies and of education policies.

Read articles by Gianni de Fraja.

Scott Frame 80x108Scott Frame – Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Scott Frame is a financial economist and senior policy adviser on the financial team in the research department of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. His major fields of study are financial institutions, credit markets, real estate, and public policy. 

Read articles by Scott Frame.

Peter Francia 80x108Peter L. Francia – East Carolina University

Peter L. Francia is a Professor of Political Science at East Carolina University. He is the author of the book, The Future of Organized Labor in American Politics (Columbia University Press), and numerous articles and book chapters on the influence of the labor movement in U.S. politics.

Read articles by Peter L. Francia.

Brigham Frandsen 80x108Brigham Frandsen – Brigham Young University

Dr Frandsen is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Brigham Young University. Dr Frandsen’s methodological research focuses on causal inference on distributional effects. He applies these methodologies to questions about the impact of labor market institutions and interventions on education and earnings outcomes. His health policy research deals with the consequences of fragmentation in the U.S. health care system. 

Read articles by Brigham Frandsen.

Lorenzo Frangi – University of Quebec, Montreal

Lorenzo Frangi is a professor of employment relations in the department of organisation and human resources, School of Management Sciences (ESG), at the University of Quebec, Montreal (UQAM).

 

Read articles by Lorenzo Frangi. 

Mark Franklin – European University Institute 

Mark Franklin was the inaugural Stein Rokkan Professor of Comparative Politics at the European University Institute (EUI) until his retirement in 2011. He remained for several years a Director of the European Union Democracy Observatory at the EUI’s Robert Schuman Center for Advanced Studies. He is still Professor Emeritus at Trinity College Connecticut.

Read articles by Mark Franklin.

William Franko – West Virginia University

William W. Franko is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at the John D. Rockefeller IV School of Policy and Politics at West Virginia University. His research examines the causes and consequences of political and economic inequality in the United States.

Read articles by William W. Franko.

Michael M. Franz – Bowdoin College

Michael M. Franz is a professor of Government and Legal Studies at Bowdoin College and co-director of the Wesleyan Media Project. His research focuses on interest groups and campaign finance.

Read articles  by Michael Franz.

Martina Fraschini – University of Lausanne

Martina Fraschini is a PhD candidate in economics with specialization in finance at the Swiss Finance Institute and at HEC Lausanne, University of Lausanne. Her research interests concern venture capital investments, CBDC and financial regulation.

Read articles by Martina Fraschini.

Benjamin Franta – Stanford University

Benjamin Franta is a PhD candidate in history at Stanford University, where he studies the history of climate change politics and fossil fuel companies. He has a separate PhD in applied physics from Harvard University and a JD from Stanford Law School.

Read articles by Benjamin Franta.

Paul Frazier – University of South Alabama

Dr. Paul Frazier holds a Doctorate in Education Leadership, a Masters in Educational Mid-Management, a Masters in Curriculum and Instruction and a Bachelor of Science degree from Texas Tech University. Dr. Frazier currently serves as the Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer at the University of South Alabama. He has taught as an adjunct instructor at Texas Tech University, teaching both undergraduate and graduate level education courses.  He served in public education for 24 years as the Executive Director of Student Administrative Services, a high school principal, middle school assistant principal, and alternative school assistant principal. He has also taught History and English on the high school and middle school levels, in addition to coaching several high school sports.

Read articles by Paul Frazier.

Matthew Freedman – University of California, Irvine

Matthew Freedman is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of California, Irvine. His primary research interests are in labor economics, public finance, and urban economics. His work has also addressed topics in environmental economics and the economics of crime. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Maryland-College Park.

Read articles by Matthew Freedman.

Melanie Freeze 80x108Melanie Freeze Carleton College

Melanie Freeze is a Research Associate in the Department of Political Science at Carleton College. Her research focuses on party identity and political behavior.

Read articles by Melanie Freeze.

Luisa Feline Freier 80x108Luisa Feline Freier – LSE Government

Luisa Feline Freier is a PhD candidate in the Department of Government at the LSE. Her research analyses the liberalization of immigration and asylum policies in Latin America and the impact of migration policy on south-south migration to Latin America. 

Read articles by Luisa Feline Freier.

Joshua Freilich – John Jay College

Joshua D. Freilich is a professor in the Criminal Justice Department and the Criminal Justice PhD program at John Jay College. His research has been funded by DHS and NIJ and focuses on the causes of and responses to bias crimes, terrorism, cyber-terrorism, and targeted mass violence; open-source research methods and measurement issues; and criminology theory, especially situational crime prevention.

Read articles by Joshua D. Freilich.

Carl Frey 80x108Carl Frey  Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford

Carl Benedikt Frey is James Martin Fellow, at the Oxford Martin Programme on the Impacts of Future Technology. His research interests include the transition of industrial nations to knowledge-driven economies, subsequent challenges in terms of economic growth and the efficiency of financial markets. In particular his focus is on regulatory implications of asymmetric information in financial markets; technology change and impacts on labour markets and income inequality; intellectual property rights, investment and economic growth. 

Read articles by Carl Frey.

Karen Frick 80x108Karen Trapenberg Frick – University of California, Berkeley

Dr. Karen Trapenberg Frick is Assistant Adjunct Professor in the Department of City and Regional Planning at UC Berkeley. She is Co-Director of the UC Transportation Center and Assistant Director of the UC Transportation Center on Economic Competitiveness in Transportation (UCCONNECT). Her research focuses on the politics and planning of transport infrastructure. Her related research which won a “Paper of the Year” award on Tea Party and property rights activists’ perspectives on planning and planners’ responses may be found at the Journal of the American Planning Association.

Read articles by Karen Trapenberg Frick.

Paul J. Frick– Louisiana State University

Paul J. Frick, PhD, is the Roy Crumpler Memorial Chair of the Department of Psychology at Louisiana State University and a professor at the Learning Sciences Institute of Australia at the Australian Catholic University. His research investigates the many interacting causal factors that can lead children and adolescents to have serious emotional and behavioral problems. His work uses this research to enhance the assessment and diagnosis of childhood psychopathology, and to design more effective interventions to prevent and treat such problems.

Read articles by Paul J. Frick.

Kim Fridkin 80x108Kim L. Fridkin – Arizona State University

Kim Fridkin is a Professor of Political Science at Arizona State University. Her current research interests are negative campaigning, women and politics, and senate elections. 

Read articles by Kim L. Fridkin.

Amanda Friesen 80x108Amanda FriesenIndiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis

Amanda Friesen joined the faculty at IUPUI as an Assistant Professor in Political Science and a Faculty Research Fellow with the Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture in 2012, after earning her Ph.D. at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Her research interests involve the areas of political psychology, political behavior, religion and politics, gender and politics, and behavior genetics. She has published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London-B, Political Behavior, International Journal of Public Opinion Research, Journal of Women, Politics & Policy, Politics & Religion, Social Science Quarterly, and PS: Political Science & Politics.

Read articles by Amanda Friesen.

Paul Friesen – University of Notre Dame

Paul Friesen is a PhD candidate in political science and a PhD Fellow at the Kellogg Institute for International Studies. Paul’s research centers on developing a more in-depth understanding of political behavior, party attachment, and electoral competition across African countries. 

Read articles by Paul Friesen.

_
kerimKerim Friedman – National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan

Kerim Friedman is an associate professor in the Department of Ethnic Relations and Cultures at National Dong Hwa University, where he teaches linguistic and visual anthropology. His research explores the relationship between language, ideology and political economy in Taiwan. He is a founding member of the group anthropology blog Savage Minds and a documentary filmmaker. His latest film is Please Don’t Beat Me, Sir!.

Read articles by Kerim Friedman.

paul-frijtersPaul Frijters – LSE Centre for Economic Performance

Paul Frijters is the newly arrived director of the Wellbeing Programme at LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance, taking over from Professor Richard Layard. Paul also heads the World Wellbeing Panel. He did his PhD on welfare and wellbeing in Russia, after a Masters in Econometrics. He has worked in a variety of roles on very different problems, such as urban-to-rural migration in China (where he headed a large international research program), corruption, applied econometrics, and wellbeing. He was voted ‘best economist under 40’ by the members of the Economic Society of Australia in 2009-2011. His works have been discussed in the New York Times, Washington Post, the BBC, etc.

Read articles by Paul Frijters.

Tobias Froese – ESCP Business School

Tobias Froese is a PhD candidate at ESCP Business School in Berlin.

Read articles by Tobias Froese.

 

Carola Frydman – Kellogg School of Management

Carola Frydman is an Associate Professor of Finance at the Kellogg School of Management. Her research focuses on American business history. Recent research projects examine the evolution of financial markets prior to the Great Depression, with special emphasis on the role of financial intermediaries for firm growth, and on financial crises. She has also studied the long-run trends in executive compensation, the market for managers, and corporate governance. Her work has been published at major academic journals, and featured in The Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and The Economist. Prior to joining Kellogg, Professor Frydman was an Assistant Professor of Finance at the MIT Sloan School of Management (2006-2011) and an Assistant Professor of Economics at Boston University (2011-2016). She holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University, and B.A. and M.A. degrees in Economics from Universidad de San Andres, Argentina. She is a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Read articles by Carola Frydman.

Matthew Fuhrmann 80x108Matthew Fuhrmann – Texas A&M University

Matthew Fuhrmann is an associate professor of political science and Ray A. Rothrock `77 Fellow at Texas A&M University. He is the author of Atomic Assistance: How “Atoms for Peace” Programs Cause Nuclear Insecurity (Cornell University Press, 2012. His research focuses on the politics of nuclear proliferation. 

Read articles by Matthew Fuhrmann.

Chris FullerUniversity of Southampton

Chris Fuller is Lecturer in Modern US History at the University of Southampton. He tweets @DrChrisFuller.

Read article by Chris Fuller.

Melonie_FullickMelonie Fullick – York University

Melonie Fullick is a PhD candidate at York University. The topic of her dissertation is Canadian post-secondary education policy and its effects on the institutional environment in universities.

Read articles by Melonie Fullick.

Sarah A. Fulton – Texas A&M University

Sarah A. Fulton is an associate professor of Political Science at Texas A&M University. She is an expert in women in politics, specializing in how voters respond to women candidates. Her work has won several “Best Paper” awards from a variety of national conferences and journal publishers.

Read articles by Sarah A. Fulton.

Carl Fulwiler 80x108Carl Fulwiler, MD – University of Massachusetts Medical School

Carl Fulwiler, MD is associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.  Dr. Fulwiler is a psychiatrist. In addition to clinical work with persons who have serious mental illnesses he has conducted research on justice involved adults affected by psychiatric disorders. He is director of the Center for Mental Health Services Research at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.

Read articles by Carl Fulwiler.

Thomas Furse – City University, London

Thomas Furse is a PhD candidate at City University, London, researching conservative and radical right discourses in US foreign policy from 2008-2020.

Read articles by Thomas Furse.

Delia Furtado 80x108Delia Furtado University of Connecticut

Delia Furtado is an associate professor of economics at the University of Connecticut. She is also a research fellow of the Centre for Research & Analysis of Migration (CReAM) and the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA). Her research interests are in immigration, family, and peer and network effects.

Read articles by Delia Furtado.

Andreas Fuster 80x108Andreas Fuster – Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Andreas Fuster is a Senior Economist in the Capital Markets Function at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, with main research interests in household and real estate finance, as well as behavioral and experimental economics. 

Read articles by Andreas Fuster.

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