CURRICULUM VITAE Christopher Wlezien CONTACT ......CURRICULUM VITAE (April, 2020) Christopher...
Transcript of CURRICULUM VITAE Christopher Wlezien CONTACT ......CURRICULUM VITAE (April, 2020) Christopher...
CURRICULUM VITAE
(April, 2020)
Christopher Wlezien
CONTACT INFORMATION:
The University of Texas at Austin
Department of Government
158 W 21st ST STOP A1800
Austin, TX 78712-1704
Phone: (within the US) 512-232-7236; (international) +001 512 232 7236
E-mail: [email protected]
Homepage: http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/government/faculty/cw26629
EDUCATION:
Ph.D. University of Iowa, 1989. Dissertation: The Political Economy of the Budgetary Process (Peverill Squire, supervisor) Comprehensive Examination, 1987.
Fields: American Politics, Comparative Politics, International Relations
B.A. Saint Xavier College, 1984.
Major: Political Science; Minors: Mathematics, Economics
PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS:
Hogg Professor of Government, University of Texas at Austin, 2013-
Professor of Political Science, Temple University, 2005-2013
Reader in Comparative Government, Oxford University, 2002-2005
Faculty Fellow, Nuffield College, 2001-2005
University Lecturer of Quantitative Methods and Comparative Politics, Oxford University, 2001-2002
Founding Director, Institute for the Study of Political Economy, University of Houston, 1997-2001
Director of Government Interns, Center for Public Policy, University of Houston, 1996-2001
Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Houston, 1995-2001
Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Houston, 1989-1995
Director of Political Studies, University of Iowa Social Science Institute, 1988-1989
Research and Teaching Fellow, Department of Political Science, University of Iowa, 1984-1988
AFFILIATED POSITIONS:
Visiting Scholar, University of Copenhagen, 2018
Visiting Fellow, Australian National University, 2017
Visiting Fellow, Academia Sinica, Taipei, 2016
Faculty Affiliate, Center for European Studies, University of Texas at Austin, 2014-
Visiting Professor, Universitat Mannheim, 2013-2014
Faculty Associate, Policy Agendas Project, University of Texas at Austin, 2013-
Research Associate, Center for the Study of Democratic Citizenship, McGill University, 2010-
Visiting Scholar, European University Institute, Spring, 2010
Hallsworth Visiting Professor, University of Manchester, 2009-2010
Visiting Scholar, Instituto Empresa University (Madrid), 2008-2015
Associate Member, Nuffield College (Oxford), 2008-2016
Professeur Invite’, Sciences Po (Paris), Autumn, 2007
Faculty Affiliate, Institute for Public Affairs, Temple University, 2006-2013
Research Associate, Centre for Research Methods in the Social Sciences, Oxford University, 2004-2005
Visiting Scholar, McGill University, Spring, 2004
Visiting Professor, Juan March Institute (Madrid), December, 2003
Visiting Scholar, Columbia University, 2003-2004
Faculty Affiliate, Institute for the Study of Democratic Government, Oxford University, 2001-2005
Research Associate, Institute for the Study of Political Economy, University of Houston, 2002-2008
EDITORIAL POSITIONS:
Founding Co-Editor, Journal of Elections, Public Opinion, and Parties, 2005-2011
Associate Editor, Public Opinion Quarterly, 2013-2014
Associate Editor, Research and Politics, 2013-
Co-Editor, “Poll-Reviews,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 2013-
Associate Editor, Parliamentary Affairs, 2012-
Co-Editor, “Poll-Reviews,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 2008-2012
Member, Founding Political Science Editorial Board, Oxford Bibliographies Online, 2010-2012
Category Editor, International Encyclopedia of Political Science, 2007-2011
Editorial Board member:
American Journal of Political Science, 2017-2018
Electoral Studies, 2000-
Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties, 2012-
Journal of European Public Policy, 2001-2014, 2019-
Journal of Political Marketing, 2001-2008
Open Political Science Journal, 2007-2015
Political Analysis, 2003-2008
Public Opinion Quarterly, 2007-2008
Social Science Quarterly, 1994-
Social Sciences, 2019-
FELLOWSHIPS, GRANTS, AND AWARDS (not including best paper and publication awards):
Conference Grant, Center for Enterprise and Policy Analytics, University of Texas at Austin, 2019-2020
Workshop Grant, Center for European Studies, University of Texas at Austin, 2019
Research Fellowship, College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin, 2018
Research Grant, National Science Foundation, 2017-2020
Research Fellowship, College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin, 2013
Recipient of the Temple University Faculty Research Award, 2012
Research Grant, Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), 2011-2015
Conference and Research Grant, Russell Sage Foundation, 2008, 2009
Research Grant, Institute for the Social Sciences, Cornell University, 2007
Research Seminar Fellowship, Institute for Public Affairs, Temple University, 2006, 2007, 2008
Research Grant, Economic and Social Research Council, UK, 2004-2005
Special University Leave, Oxford University, 2003-2004
Research Methods Grant, Economic and Social Research Council, UK, 2002-2007
Research Grant, Nuffield Foundation, UK, 2002-2003
Research Grant, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, UK, 2002-2003
Research Grant, National Science Foundation, 2001-2005
Research Grant, Institute for Social and Economic Research, Columbia University, 2000-2001
Research Grant, National Science Foundation, 1997-2000
Supplemental Research Grant, National Science Foundation, 1994-1995
Research Grant, National Science Foundation, 1993-1995
Limited Grant-in-Aid, University of Houston, 1992, 1993
Research Grant, Center for Public Policy, University of Houston, 1991
Research Initiation Grant (Summer Fellowship), University of Houston, 1990
Research Grant, Dirksen Congressional Research Center, 1988-1989, 1989-1990
University Fellowship, Graduate College, University of Iowa, 1987-1988
Research Grant, Collegiate Associations Council, University of Iowa, 1987
Summer Research Fellowship, Graduate College, University of Iowa, 1985-1988
RESEARCH:
AUTHORED BOOKS:
The Timeline of Presidential Elections: How Campaigns Do (and Do Not) Matter, with Robert S. Erikson.
University of Chicago Press, 2012. Named a top ten political book of 2012 by The New Yorker magazine.
Degrees of Democracy: Politics, Public Opinion and Policy, with Stuart Soroka. New York: Cambridge
University Press, 2010. The 2013 winner of the American Political Science Association’s Seymour Martin
Lipset award.
AUTHORED E-BOOK:
The 2012 Campaign and the Timeline of Presidential Elections, with Robert S. Erikson. University of
Chicago Press, 2014.
EDITED BOOKS:
The Routledge Handbook of Public Opinion and Voting Behavior, edited with Edward Fieldhouse, Justin
Fisher, Mark Franklin, Rachel Gibson, and Marta Cantijoch. London: Routledge, 2017.
The UK General Election of 2010, edited with Justin Fisher. London: Routledge, 2011.
Who Gets Represented? edited with Peter Enns. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2011.
Britain Votes, edited with Pippa Norris. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
The Future of Election Studies, edited with Mark N. Franklin. Oxford: Elsevier, 2002.
EDITED SPECIAL ISSUES (excluding those published while official journal editor):
Special issue on Advances in the Study of Democratic Responsiveness, edited with Peter Esaiasson.
Comparative Political Studies, vol. 50, 2017.
Special issue on Britain Votes, 2005, edited with Pippa Norris. Parliamentary Affairs, vol. 58, 2005.
Special issue on The Future of Election Studies, edited with Mark N. Franklin. Electoral Studies,
vol. 21, 2002.
Special issue on The Economy and Political Behavior, edited with Christopher J. Anderson. Political
Behavior, vol. 19, 1997.
REFEREED JOURNAL ARTICLES:
“Dictionaries, Supervised Learning, and Mass Media Coverage of Public Policy,” with Lindsay Dun and
Stuart Soroka. Political Communication, forthcoming. Paper presented at the Texas Methods Meeting,
Rice University, 2019.
“Elite Interactions and Voters’ Perceptions of Party Positions,” with James Adams and Simon Weschle.
American Journal of Political Science, forthcoming. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the
American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, 2016, and Washington, D.C., 2019.
“Freedom of the Press and Public Responsiveness,” with Dan Hiaeshutter-Rice and Stuart Soroka.
Perspectives on Politics, forthcoming. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the American
Political Science Association, Washington, DC, 2014, the Midwest Political Science Association,
Chicago, 2017, and the International Communications Association, Washington, DC, 2019.
“Election Forecasting: Too Far Out?” with Will Jennings and Michael Lewis-Beck. International
Journal of Forecasting, forthcoming. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the American
Political Science Association, Philadelphia, 2016, and San Francisco, 2017.
“Trends in Public Support for Welfare Spending: How the Economy Matters,” with Stuart Soroka.
British Journal of Political Science, forthcoming. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the
American Political Science Association, Chicago, 2013, and the Southern Political Science Association,
New Orleans, 2018.
“Social Welfare Policy Outputs and Governing Parties’ Left-Right Images: Do Voters Respond?”
with James Adams and Luca Bernardi. Journal of Politics, forthcoming. Paper presented at the Annual
Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 2017.
“Mass Media and Electoral Preferences during the 2016 US Presidential Race,” with Stuart Soroka.
Political Behavior, vol. 41, 2019. Also see the associated “Correction,” Political Behavior, vol. 41, 2019.
“Mass Media as a Source of Public Responsiveness to Policy,” with Fabian Neuner and Stuart Soroka.
International Journal of Press/Politics, vol. 24, 2019. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the
American Political Science Association, San Francisco, 2015, the Midwest Political Science Association,
Chicago, 2016, the Southern Political Science Association, New Orleans, 2017, and the Southwestern
Political Science Association, Austin, 2017.
“Tracking the Coverage of Public Policy in Mass Media,” with Stuart Soroka. Policy Studies Journal,
vol. 47, 2019. Paper presented at the workshop on Policy Feedback and Feed Forward, University of
Arizona, Tucson, 2017, the Annual Meetings of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago,
2018, the American Political Science Association, Boston, 2018, and the EPOP Group of the Political
Studies Association, Royal Holloway, University of London, 2018.
“Forecasting the 2018 Midterm Election with National Polls and District Information,” with Joseph
Bafumi and Robert S. Erikson. PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 51, 2018. Paper presented at the
Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Boston, 2018.
“Election Polling Errors across Time and Space,” with Will Jennings. Nature Human Behaviour,
vol. 2, 2018. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Public Opinion
Research, Denver, 2018. Also see the associated “Correction,” Nature Human Behavior, vol. 4, 2020.
“An Evaluation of 2016 Election Polls in the United States,” with Courtney Kennedy, Mark Blumenthal,
Scott Clement, Joshua Clinton, Claire Durand, Charles Franklin, Kyley McGeeney, Lee Miringoff,
Doug Rivers, Lydia Saad, and Evans Witt. Public Opinion Quarterly, vol. 82, 2018. Paper presented at
the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Public Opinion Research, New Orleans, 2017.
“Public Opinion and Policy Representation: On Conceptualization, Measurement, and Interpretation.”
Policy Studies Journal, vol. 45, 2017. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political
Science Association, Chicago, 2014, the Institute for Political Methodology, Taipei, 2016, and the
Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, Ann Arbor, 2016.
“A Cross-National Analysis of the Causes and Consequences of Economic News,” with Stuart Soroka and
Dominik Stecula. Social Science Quarterly, vol. 98, 2017. Paper presented at the Conference on the New
World of Comparative Political Communication, College Station, Texas, 2016.
“The ‘Timeline’ Method of Studying Electoral Dynamics,” with Will Jennings and Robert Erikson.
Electoral Studies, vol. 48, 2017. Paper presented at the Conference on Innovations in Comparative
Political Methodology at Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, 2015.
“Representative Systems and Policy Punctuations,” with EJ Fagan and Bryan Jones. Journal of European
Public Policy, vol. 24, 2017. Paper presented at the Conference on Political Budgeting across Europe,
College Station, Texas, 2015.
“When do the Rich Win?” with Alex Branham and Stuart Soroka. Political Science Quarterly, vol. 132,
2017. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Puerto Rico,
2016, the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 2016, and the Annual
Meeting of the American Association for Public Opinion Research, Austin, 2016.
“Policy (Mis)Representation and the Cost of Ruling: US Presidential Elections in Comparative Perspective.”
Comparative Political Studies, vol. 50, 2017. Paper presented at the Conference on Advances in the Study
of Democratic Responsiveness, Gothenburg, Sweden, 2014, and the Annual Meeting of the Southern
Political Science Association, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 2016.
“The Company You Keep: How Citizens infer Parties’ Positions on Europe from Governing Coalition
Arrangements,” with James Adams and Lawrence Ezrow. American Journal of Political Science, vol. 60,
2016. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Chicago,
2013, and the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 2015. Winner of the
Pi Sigma Alpha award for the best paper presented at the 2015 Meeting of the Midwest Political Science
Association.
“An Analysis of the Public’s Personal, National and EU Issue Priorities,” with Shaun Bevan and Will
Jennings. Journal of European Public Policy, vol. 23, 2016. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the
Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Group of the Political Studies Association, Edinburgh, 2014.
“The Timeline of Elections: A Comparative Perspective,” with Will Jennings. American Journal of
Political Science, vol. 60, 2016. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Elections, Public Opinion and
Parties subgroup of the Political Studies Association, Lancaster, UK, 2013, the Annual Meeting of the
Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 2014, and the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political
Science Association, New Orleans, 2015.
“The Majoritarian and Proportional Visions and Democratic Responsiveness,” with Stuart Soroka. Electoral
Studies, vol. 40, 2015. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science
Association, Victoria, British Columbia, 2012, the Annual Meeting of the Southwest Political Science
Association, San Antonio, 2014, and the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association,
New Orleans, 2015.
“Preferences, Problems and Representation,” with Will Jennings. Political Science Research and Methods,
vol. 3, 2015. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Group of the
Political Studies Association, Oxford, 2012, the Annual Meeting of the Comparative Agendas Project,
Antwerp, 2013, and the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, New Orleans, 2015.
“Electoral Systems and Opinion Representation,” with Stuart Soroka. Representation, vol. 51, 2015. Paper
presented at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Victoria, British Columbia,
2012, the Annual Meeting of the Southwest Political Science Association, San Antonio, 2014, and the
Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, New Orleans, 2015.
“The Myopic Voter? The Economy and US Presidential Elections,” Electoral Studies, vol. 39, 2015.
Presented at the Conference on Methodological Innovations in the Study of Elections in Europe and
Beyond, College Station, Texas, 2014.
“It’s (Change in) the (Future) Economy, Stupid: Economic Indicators, the Media and Public Opinion,” with
Stuart Soroka and Dominik Stecula. American Journal of Political Science, vol. 59, 2015. Presented at the
Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 2013; also presented at the Annual
Meeting of the American Association for Public Opinion Research, Boston, 2013. Also see the associated
“Erratum,” American Journal of Political Science, vol. 60, 2016.
“Polls and the Vote in Britain,” with Will Jennings, Stephen Fisher, Robert Ford, and Mark Pickup.
Political Studies, vol. 61, 2013.
“Political Institutions and the Opinion-Policy Link,” with Stuart Soroka. West European Politics,
vol. 35, 2012. Presented at the European Consortium for Political Research Joint Sessions of Workshops,
St. Gallen, Switzerland, 2011, the Annual Meeting of the Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Group
of the Political Studies Association, Exeter, UK, 2011, and the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political
Science Association, Chicago, 2012.
“Markets vs. Polls as Election Predictors: An Historical Assessment,” with Robert S. Erikson. Electoral
Studies, vol. 31, 2012. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Public Opinion
Research, Hollywood, Florida, 2009.
“Distinguishing between Most Important Issues and Problems?” with Will Jennings. Public Opinion
Quarterly, vol. 75, 2011. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Elections, Public Opinion, and Parties
Group of the Political Studies Association, Glasgow, 2009.
“Performance Pressure: Partisan Alignment and the Economic Vote,” with Mark Andreas Kayser.
European Journal of Political Research, vol. 50, 2011. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American
Political Science Association, Philadelphia, 2006. Winner of the European Politics and Society award
for the best paper presented at the 2006 Meeting of the American Political Science Association.
“From Polls to Votes to Seats: The 2010 British Election,” with Stephen Fisher, Robert Ford, Will Jennings
and Mark Pickup. Electoral Studies, vol. 30, 2011. Presented at the Conference on Methods and Models
for Election Forecasting in the UK, Manchester, 2010.
“Federalism and Public Responsiveness to Policy,” with Stuart Soroka. Publius, vol. 41, 2011. Presented
at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Toronto, 2009.
“Balancing, Generic Polls and Midterm Congressional Elections,” with Joseph Bafumi and Robert S.
Erikson. Journal of Politics, vol. 72, 2010. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Association
for Public Opinion Research, Anaheim, 2008.
“The Crystallization of Voter Preferences during the 2008 Presidential Election Campaign,” with Robert S.
Erikson and Costas Panagopoulos. Presidential Studies Quarterly, vol. 40, 2010.
“Center-Party Strength and Major-Party Polarization in Britain,” with Jack H. Nagel. British Journal of
Political Science, vol. 40, 2010.
“The Dynamics of Poll Performance during the 2008 Nomination Context,” with Michael Traugott.
Public Opinion Quarterly, vol. 73, 2009.
“A General Empirical Law of Public Budgets: A Comparative Analysis,” with Bryan Jones, Frank
Baumgartner, Christian Breunig, Stuart Soroka, Martial Foucault, Abel Francois, Christoffer Green-
Pedersen, Chris Koski, Peter John, Peter B. Mortensen, Frederic Varone, and Stefaan Walgrave.
American Journal of Political Science, vol. 53, 2009.
“On Filtering Longitudinal Public Opinion Data: Issues in Identification and Representation of True
Change,” with Mark Pickup. Electoral Studies, vol. 28, 2009. Presented at the Workshop on Producing
Better Measures by Combining Data Cross Temporally, Nuffield College, Oxford, 2007.
“Are Political Markets Really Superior to Polls as Election Predictors?” with Robert S. Erikson.
Public Opinion Quarterly, vol. 72, 2008. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the World Association
of Public Opinion Research, Cannes, 2005; also presented at the Annual Meetings of the American
Political Science Association, Chicago, 2005, the American Association for Public Opinion Research,
Montreal, 2006, and the Elections, and the Public Opinion, and Parties Group of the Political
Studies Association, Bristol, UK, 2007, as well as the First World Meeting of the Public Choice
Society, Amsterdam, 2007.
“On the Limits to Inequality in Representation,” with Stuart Soroka. PS: Political Science and Politics,
Vol. 41, 2008. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association,
Philadelphia, 2006; also presented at the Annual Meetings of the Elections, Public Opinion, and
Parties Group of the Political Studies Association, Nottingham, UK, 2006, and the Midwest
Political Science Association, Chicago, 2007.
“The Economy and the Presidential Vote: What Leading Indicators Reveal Well in Advance,”
with Robert S. Erikson. International Journal of Forecasting, vol. 24, 2008. Presented at the 27th
Annual International Symposium on Forecasting, New York, 2007.
“Does Political Information Matter? An Experimental Test Relating to Party Positions on Europe,”
with James Tilley. Political Studies, vol. 56, 2008. Presented at the Biannual Meeting of the
European Consortium of Political Research, Budapest, 2005. Winner of the Political Studies
Association’s Harrison Prize for the best paper published in the 2008 volume of Political Studies.
“Partisan Preferences, Electoral Prospects, and Economic Expectations,” with Matthew Ladner.
Comparative Political Studies, vol. 40, 2007. Presented at the Conference on Perceptions, Preferences
and Rationalization: Overcoming the Problem of Causal Inference in the Study of Political Behavior,
Nuffield College, Oxford, 2004.
“The Horse Race: What Polls Reveal as the Election Campaign Unfolds,” with Robert S. Erikson.
International Journal of Public Opinion Research, vol. 19, 2007. Presented at the Gallup Symposium
on the Science of Pre-Election Polling, Washington, D.C., May, 2002.
“Public Expenditure in the UK: How Measures Matter,” with Stuart Soroka and Iain McLean.
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A, vol. 169, 2006. Presented at the Annual Meeting
of the Political Studies Association, Aberdeen, 2002; also presented at the Conference on Budgetary
Policy Change, Oxford, 2002.
“On the Salience of Political Issues: The Problem with ‘Most Important Problem’.” Electoral Studies,
vol. 24, 2005. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association,
Chicago, 2001; also presented at the Annual Meetings of the Southwest Political Science Association,
New Orleans, 2002, and
“Opinion-Policy Dynamics: Public Preferences and Public Expenditure in the UK,” with Stuart
Soroka. British Journal of Political Science, vol. 35, 2005. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the
EPOP Group of the Political Studies Association, Salford, UK, 2002; also presented at the Annual
Meetings of the American Political Science Association, Boston, 2002, and the Midwest Political
Science Association, Chicago, 2003.
“Whether the Campaign Mattered and How.” Parliamentary Affairs, vol. 58, 2005.
“Opinion Representation and Policy Feedback: Canada in Comparative Perspective,” with Stuart
Soroka. Canadian Journal of Political Science, vol. 37, 2004. Presented at the Annual Meeting of
the Canadian Political Science Association, Halifax, 2003. Winner of the Canadian Political
Science Association’s John McMenemy Prize for the best paper published in the 2004 volume of
the Canadian Journal of Political Science.
“Likely (and Unlikely) Voters and the Assessment of Campaign Dynamics,” with Robert S. Erikson
and Costas Panagopoulos. Public Opinion Quarterly, vol. 68, 2004. Presented at the Meeting of
the World Association of Public Opinion Research, Prague, 2003.
“Public Expenditure in the English Regions: Measurement Problems and (Partial) Solutions,”
with Gavin Cameron and Iain McLean. Political Quarterly, vol. 75, 2004.
“Patterns of Representation: Dynamics of Public Preferences and Policy.” Journal of Politics,
vol. 66, 2004. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association,
Chicago, 1995; also presented at the Annual Meetings of the Southwest Political Science
Association, New Orleans, 1997, and the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 1998.
Winner of the Pi Sigma Alpha award for the best paper presented at the 1997 Meeting of the
Southwest Political Science Association.
“Measures and Models of Budgetary Policy,” with Stuart Soroka. Policy Studies Journal, vol. 31, 2003.
“Presidential Election Polls in 2000: A Study in Dynamics.” Presidential Studies Quarterly,
vol. 33, 2003. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association,
San Francisco, 2001.
“The Timeline of Presidential Election Campaigns,” with Robert S. Erikson. Journal of Politics,
vol. 64, 2002. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association,
Boston, 1998; also presented at the Annual Meetings of the Southwest Political Science
Association, San Antonio, 1999, and the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 2000.
“Reinventing Election Studies,” with Mark N. Franklin. Electoral Studies, vol. 21, 2002.
“Campaign Effects in Theory and Practice,” with Robert S. Erikson. American Politics Research,
vol. 29, 2001. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association,
Atlanta, 2000.
“Ideological Placements and Political Judgments of Government Institutions,” with Christopher
Carman. Public Opinion Quarterly, vol. 65, 2001. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the
Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 1999; also presented at the Annual Meeting of
the Southern Political Science Association, Savannah, 1999.
“After the Election: Our Forecast in Retrospect,” with Robert S. Erikson. American Politics
Research, vol. 29, 2001.
“An Essay on ‘Combined’ Time Series Processes.” Electoral Studies, vol. 19, 2000. Presented at
the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Boston, 1998; also presented
at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Savannah, 1999.
“Presidential Polls as a Time Series: The Case of 1996,” with Robert S. Erikson. Public Opinion
Quarterly, vol. 93, 1999. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Public
Opinion Research, St. Louis, 1998; also presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political
Science Association, Chicago, 1998.
“Social Groups and Political Judgments,” with Arthur H. Miller. Social Science Quarterly,
vol. 78, 1997. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association,
New York, 1994.
“The Responsive Public: Issue Salience, Policy Change, and Preferences for European
Unification,” with Mark Franklin. Journal of Theoretical Politics, vol. 9, 1997. Presented
at the Joint Sessions of the European Consortium for Political Research, Bern, Switzerland,
1997; also presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association,
Chicago, 1997.
“Economic Perceptions and Vote Choice: Disentangling the Endogeneity,” with Mark Franklin and
Daniel Twiggs. Political Behavior, vol. 19, 1997. Presented at the Conference on the Economy
and Political Behavior, Houston, 1995.
“Temporal Horizons and Presidential Election Forecasts,” with Robert S. Erikson. American
Politics Quarterly, vol. 24, 1996. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southwest Political
Science Association, Dallas, 1995; also presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest
Political Science Association, Chicago, 1995.
“Dynamics of Representation: The Case of U.S. Spending on Defense.” British Journal of
Political Science, vol. 26, 1996. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political
Science Association, Chicago, 1992; also presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest
Political Science Association, Chicago, 1992.
“The Contamination of Responses to Survey Items: Economic Perceptions and Political
Judgments,” with Nathaniel T. Wilcox. Political Analysis, vol. 5, 1996. Presented at the
Annual Meeting of the Public Choice Society, New Orleans, 1993.
“The President, Congress, and Appropriations.” American Politics Quarterly, vol. 24, 1996.
Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Public Choice Society, New Orleans, 1991.
“The Public as Thermostat: Dynamics of Preferences for Spending.” American Journal of
Political Science, vol. 39, 1995. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southwest Political
Science Association, San Antonio, 1994; also presented at the Annual Meeting of the
Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 1994. Winner of the Pi Sigma Alpha award
for the best paper presented at the 1994 Meeting of the Southwest Political Science Association.
“The Impact of Legal Constraints on Voter Registration, Turnout, and the Composition of
the American Electorate,” with Glenn Mitchell. Political Behavior, vol. 17, 1995. Presented
at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 1989; also
presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Atlanta, 1988.
“Attitudes toward Europe and Referendum Votes,” with Mark Franklin and Michael Marsh.
Electoral Studies, vol. 13, 1994.
“The Politics of Impoundments.” Political Research Quarterly, vol. 47, 1994. Presented at the
Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 1989.
“The Courts, Interest Groups, and Public Opinion about Abortion,” with Malcolm Goggin.
Political Behavior, vol. 15, 1993.
“Substitutability and the Politics of Macroeconomic Policy,” with Richard Jankowski.
Journal of Politics, vol. 55, 1993. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political
Science Association, Chicago, 1987; also presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest
Political Science Association, Chicago, 1987.
“The Social Group Dynamics of Partisan Evaluations,” with Arthur H. Miller. Electoral Studies,
vol. 12, 1993. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association,
Atlanta, 1989.
“The Political Economy of Supplemental Appropriations,” Legislative Studies Quarterly, vol. 18,
1993. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 1988.
“A Reference Group Theory of Partisan Coalitions,” with Arthur H. Miller and Anne Hildreth.
Journal of Politics, vol. 53, 1991. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science
Association, Chicago, 1988.
OTHER JOURNAL ARTICLES:
“Understanding Equation Balance in Time Series Regression,” with Peter Enns. The Political
Methodologist, 2017. Paper presented at the Texas Methods Conference, Houston, 2017.
“Leading Economic Indicators, the Polls, and the 2016 Presidential Vote,” with Robert S. Erikson.
PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 50, 2017. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern
Political Science Association, New Orleans, 2017.
“Forecasting the Presidential Vote with Leading Economic Indicators and the Polls,” with Robert S.
Erikson. PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 49, 2016. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the
American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, 2016.
“From Polls to Votes to Seats: Forecasting the 2015 British Election,” with Robert Ford, Will Jennings
and Mark Pickup. Electoral Studies, vol. 41, 2016. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American
Political Science Association, San Francisco, 2015.
“On Causality in the Study of Valence and Voting Behavior,” Political Science Research and Methods,
vol. 4, 2016.
“Forecasting the 2014 House Seat Division in Retrospect,” with Joseph Bafumi and Robert S. Erikson.
PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 48, 2015.
“National Polls, District Information, and House Seats: Forecasting the 2014 Midterm Election,” with
Joseph Bafumi and Robert S. Erikson. PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 47, 2014. Presented at
the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., 2014.
“Forecasting US Presidential Elections Using Economic and Non-Economic Fundamentals,” with Robert S.
Erikson. PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 47, 2014.
“Forecasting with Leading Economic Indicators and the Polls in 2012,” with Robert S. Erikson. PS: Political
Science and Politics, vol. 46, 2013.
“The Objective and Subjective Economy and the Presidential Vote,” with Robert S. Erikson. PS: Political
Science and Politics, vol. 45, 2012. Prepared for presentation at the Annual Meeting of the American
Political Science Association, New Orleans, 2012.
“Forecasting House Seats from Generic Congressional Polls: A Post-Mortem,” with Joseph Bafumi and
Robert S. Erikson.” PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 44, 2011.
“Forecasting House Seats from Generic Congressional Polls: The 2010 Midterm Election,” with Joseph
Bafumi and Robert S. Erikson.” PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 43, 2010. Presented at the
Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., 2010.
“The Economy and the Presidential Vote in 2008.” PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 42, 2009.
“Leading Economic Indicators, the Polls and the Presidential Vote,” with Robert S. Erikson. PS: Political
Science and Politics, vol. 41, 2008. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science
Association, Boston, 2008.
“Forecasting House Seats from Generic Congressional Polls,” with Joseph Bafumi and Robert S. Erikson.
Extension of Remarks, vol. 30, 2007. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Political
Science Association, Boston, 2006.
“Post-Election Reflections on our Pre-Election Predictions,” with Robert S. Erikson. PS: Political Science
and Politics, vol. 38, 2005. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Political Science
Association, Boston, 2004.
“The Fundamentals, the Polls, and the Presidential Vote.” PS: Political Science and Politics,
vol. 37, 2004. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association,
Chicago, 2004.
“Pre-Election Patterns: The Evolution of Voter Preferences,” with Robert S. Erikson. Public
Perspective, November/December, 2002.
“On Forecasting the Presidential Vote.” PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 34, 2001. Presented
at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Atlanta, 2000.
“Of Time and Presidential Election Forecasting,” with Robert S. Erikson. PS: Political Science and
Politics, vol. 29, 1996.
“Forecasting the Presidential Vote, 1992,” with Robert S. Erikson. The Political Methodologist,
summer, 1994.
“Judging by the Company Candidates Keep: What's a Democrat to Do?” with Anne Hildreth, Kevin
Leyden, and Arthur H. Miller. Public Opinion, July/August, 1988.
BOOK CHAPTERS:
“Dynamic Representation.” In Robert Rohrschneider and Jacques Thomassen (eds.), Oxford Handbook
of Political Representation in Liberal Democracies. Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming.
“Do Election Campaigns Matter? A Comparative Perspective and Overview,” with Alex Branham.
In Bernard Grofman, Elizabeth Suhay, and Alexander Trechsel (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Electoral
Persuasion. Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming.
“Not Getting Worse: Polling Accuracy.” In Phil Cowley and Robert Ford (eds.), Sex Lies and the
Ballot Box, Greatest Hits. Blackwell Publishing, 2019.
“Dynamics of (National) Electoral Preferences during the 2016 US Presidential Race,” with George Elliott
Morris. In Amnon Cavari, Richard Powell, and Kenneth Mayer (eds.), The 2016 Presidential Election: The
Causes and Consequences of an Electoral Earthquake. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2017.
Presented at the Conference on the US Elections of 2016: Domestic and International Aspects, Interdisciplinary
Center (IDC), Herzliya, Israel.
“The Thermostatic Model: Public Opinion, Policy, and Politics.” In Ed Fieldhouse, Justin Fisher, Marta
Cantijoch, Mark Franklin, Rachel Gibson, and Christopher Wlezien (eds), Routledge Handbook of Voting
Behavior and Public Opinion. London: Routledge, 2017.
“Opinion Polling and the Vote,” with Rob Ford, Will Jennings and Mark Pickup. In Kai Arzheimer, Jocelyn
Evans and Michael Lewis-Beck (eds.), Sage Handbook of Electoral Behavior. London: Sage Publications,
2017.
“Polls and Votes.” In Phil Cowley and Robert Ford (eds.), Sexier Lies and the Ballot Box. Blackwell
Publishing, 2016.
“A Public Opinion and American Democracy Retrospective.” In Steven Balla, Martin Lodge and Edward
Page (eds.), Oxford Handbook of the Classics of Public Policy and Public Administration. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2015.
“Electoral Accountability,” with Mark Franklin and Stuart Soroka. In Mark Bovens, Robert Goodin and
Thomas Schillemans (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Public Accountability. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2014.
“Election Campaigns.” In Lawrence Leduc, Richard Niemi, and Pippa Norris (eds.), Comparing Democracies
IV. London: Sage Publications, 2014.
“Public Reactions to the Economy and Economic Crisis in the UK,” with Stuart Soroka. In Larry Bartels
and Nancy Bermeo (eds.), Mass Politics in Tough Times: Opinion, Votes, and Protest in the Great
Recession. New York: Oxford University Press, 2014.
“Political Institutions and the Opinion-Policy Link,” with Stuart Soroka. In Christine Arnold and
Mark N. Franklin, eds. Assessing Political Representation in Europe. London: Routledge, 2013.
(Originally published in West European Politics, vol. 35, 2012.)
“Public Opinion and the Presidential Election.” In Janet Box-Steffensmeier and Steven Schier (eds.),
The American Elections of 2012. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield, 2013.
“Inequality in Policy Responsiveness?” with Stuart Soroka. In Peter Enns and Christopher Wlezien (eds.),
Who Gets Represented? New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2011.
“Group Opinions,” “Connecting Group Opinion to Policy Representation,” and “Final Thoughts on
Who Gets Represented,” with Peter Enns. In Enns and Wlezien (eds.), Who Gets Represented? New
York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2011.
“Election Campaigns.” In Lawrence Leduc, Richard Niemi, and Pippa Norris (eds.), Comparing
Democracies III. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications, 2010.
“Public Opinion and Public Policy,” with Stuart Soroka. In John C. Courtney and David E. Smith
(eds.), Oxford Handbook of Canadian Politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010.
“Forecasting House Seats from Generic Congressional Polls,” with Joseph Bafumi and Robert S. Erikson.
In Wendy Alvey and Fritz Scheuren (eds.), Elections and Exit Polling. New York: Wiley and Sons,
2008.
“The Relationship between Public Opinion and Policy,” with Stuart Soroka. In Russell J. Dalton
and Hans-Dieter Klingemann (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Political Behavior. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2007.
“Whether the Campaign Mattered and How.” In Pippa Norris and Christopher Wlezien (eds.),
Britain Votes. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. (Also published in Parliamentary Affairs,
vol. 58, 2005.)
“Reinventing Election Studies,” with Mark N. Franklin. In Franklin and Wlezien (eds.),
The Future of Election Studies. Oxford: Pergamon Press, 2002. (Originally published in
Electoral Studies, vol. 21, 2002.)
“Temporal Horizons and Presidential Election Forecasts,” with Robert S. Erikson. In James
Campbell and James Garand (eds.), Before the Vote: Forecasting American National Elections.
Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications, 2000. (Extended version of an article that originally
was published in the American Politics Quarterly, vol. 24, 1996.)
“The Public as Thermostat: Dynamics of Preferences for Spending.” In Pippa Norris (ed.),
Elections and Voting Behavior: New Challenges, New Perspectives. Aldershot, Hants: Ashgate/
Dartmouth Publishing, 1998. (Originally published in the American Journal of Political Science,
vol. 39, 1995.)
“Abortion Opinion and Policy in the American States,” with Malcolm Goggin. In Goggin (ed.),
Understanding the New Politics of Abortion. Newbury Park, Calif.: Sage Publications, 1993.
“Interest Groups and the Dynamics of Abortion Politics,” with Malcolm Goggin. In Donald Lutz
and Kent Tedin (eds.), Perspectives on American and Texas Politics. Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt,
1992. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, 1991.
“Voting and Elections.” In Mark Jones, William Earl Maxwell and Ernest Crain (eds.), Texas Politics
Today. Cengage Publishing, 9th edition, 1999; revised and extended for the 10th edition, 2001, the 11th
edition, 2003, the 12th edition, 2005, the 13th edition, 2007, the 14th edition, 2009, the 15th edition,
2011, the 16th edition, 2013, the 17th edition, 2015, and the 18th edition, 2017. Revised and extended
for the Texas edition of Steffen Schmidt, Mack Shelley, and Barbara Bardes’ American Government
and Politics Today, Cengage Publishing, 12th edition, 2005, the 13th edition, 2007, the 14th edition, 2009,
and the 15th edition, 2011.
“Political Parties.” In Mark Jones, William Earl Maxwell and Ernest Crain (eds.), Texas Politics
Today. Cengage Publishing, 17th edition, 2015, and the 18th edition, 2017.
ENCYCLOPEDIA ENTRIES:
“Issue Salience and Importance,” with Philip Moniz. In David Redlawsk (ed.), Oxford Research
Encyclopedia of Political Decision-Making. Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming.
“Public Opinion and Public Policy,” with Stuart Soroka. Oxford Research Encyclopedia in Politics, 2016.
DOI:10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.74.
“Public Opinion and Public Policy in Advanced Democracies.” Oxford Bibliographies Online.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011; 2016.
“Public Opinion Polls.” In Miodrag Lovric (ed.), International Encyclopedia of Statistical Science.
New York: Springer, 2011.
“Public Opinion.” In George Kurian, James E. Alt, Simone Chambers, Geoffrey Garrett, Margaret Levi,
and Paula McClain (eds.), International Encyclopedia of Political Science. Washington, D.C.: CQ
Press, 2010.
EDITORIAL INTRODUCTIONS:
“Editors’ Introduction – In Defense of Political Science,” with Marta Cantijoch, Edward Fieldhouse, Justin
Fisher, Mark Franklin, and Rachel Gibson. In Cantijoch, et al (eds.) The Routledge Handbook of Public
Opinion and Voting Behavior. London: Routledge, 2017.
“Advances in the Study of Democratic Responsiveness: An Introduction,” with Peter Esaiasson.
Comparative Political Studies, vol. 50, 2017.
“Editors’ Introduction—The UK General Election of 2010,” with Justin Fisher. In Fisher and Wlezien
(eds.), The UK General Election of 2010. London: Routledge, 2011. (Also published in the Journal of
Elections, Public Opinion and Parties, vol. 21, 2011.)
“Group Opinion and the Study of Representation,” with Peter Enns. In Enns and Wlezien (eds.), Who Gets
Represented? New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2011.
“Editors’ Introduction—The British General Election of 2005,” with Justin Fisher. Journal of Elections,
Public Opinion and Parties, vol. 16, issue 1, 2006.
“Introduction: The Third Blair Victory—How and Why?” with Pippa Norris. In Norris and Wlezien
(eds.), Britain Votes. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. (Also published in Parliamentary Affairs,
vol. 58, 2005.)
“Editors’ Note,” with Justin Fisher. Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties, vol. 15, issues
1 and 2, 2005, vol. 18, issues 1 and 4, 2008, vol. 20, issues 1 and 2, 2010, vol. 21, issue 4, 2011.
“The Future of Election Studies—An Introduction,” with Mark N. Franklin. In Franklin and Wlezien
(eds), The Future of Election Studies. Oxford: Pergamon Press, 2002. (Also published in Electoral
Studies, vol. 22, 2002.)
“The Economics of Politics in Comparative Perspective Revisited,” with Christopher J. Anderson.
Political Behavior, vol. 19, 1997.
PUBLISHED REPORTS AND OTHER PUBLICATIONS:
“US Midterms: Are the Republicans Set to Lose Full Control of Congress?” with Joseph Bafumi and
Robert S. Erikson. Sky News, October 31, 2018. https://news.sky.com/story/us-midterms-are-the-
republicans-set-to-lose-full-control-of-congress-11540862.
“Forecasting the 2018 Midterm Election Using National Polls and District Information,” with Joe Bafumi
and Robert S. Erikson. Sabato’s Crystal Ball – A Labor Day Status Report. Volume XVI, issue 35.
(An abstracted version of an article published in PS: Political Science and Politics, vol. 51, 2018.)
Series of blog posts on electoral preferences leading up to the 2017 UK Election, beginning April 24,
2017, and continuing through June 6, 2017, with Robert Ford, Mark Pickup and Will Jennings.
Polling Observatory. Https://sotonpolitics.org/tag/polling-observatory/
“When do Voters Decide? The Polls, the Fundamentals, and GE 2017,” with Will Jennings. 2017.
London School of Economics British Politics and Policy (LSEBPP) blog. http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/
politicsandpolicy/the-polls-the-fundamentals-and-ge2017/
An Evaluation of 2016 Election Polls in the United States, with Courtney Kennedy, Mark Blumenthal,
Scott Clement, Joshua Clinton, Claire Durand, Charles Franklin, Kyley McGeeney, Lee Miringoff,
Doug Rivers, Lydia Saad, and Evans Witt. 2017. American Association of Public Opinion Research.
http://www.aapor.org/Education-Resources/Reports/An-Evaluation-of-2016-Election-Polls-in-the-U-S.aspx.
(A truncated and revised version also has been published in Public Opinion Quarterly, vol. 82, 2018.)
“The Public May not be Getting the Policies they Want, but it’s Hard to Measure what they do Want.”
2017. London School of Economics American Politics and Policy (LSEAPP) blog. http://blogs.
lse.ac.uk/usappblog/.
“How to Read the Election Polls – and Keep your Sanity – in Two Easy Steps,” with Robert S. Erikson.
2016. The Monkey Cage. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2016/06/08/how-to-
read-the-election-polls-and-keep-your-sanity-in-two-easy-steps/.
Series of bi-weekly blog posts on electoral preferences leading up to the 2015 UK Election, beginning
May 7, 2014, and continuing through May 7, 2015, with Robert Ford, Mark Pickup and Will Jennings.
Manchester Policy Blogs: Polling Observatory. http://blog.policy.manchester.ac.uk/category/polling-
observatory/. Re-posted by the New Statesman at http://may2015.com/ and Huffington Post at
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/20/uk-election-forecast_n_6909170.html.
“Polls, Polls and Damn Statistics,” with Rob Ford, Will Jennings, and Mark Pickup. 2015. Significance,
January. A publication of the Royal Statistical Society and American Statistical Association. http://www.
statslife.org.uk/significance/politics/2016-polls-polls-and-damn-statistics.
“The Media and Public Opinion React to Changes in Economic Conditions, not the State of the Economy,”
with Stuart Soroka and Dominic Stecula. 2015. London School of Economics American Politics and Policy
(LSEAPP) blog. http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/2015/01/15/the-media-and-public-opinion-react-to-
changes-in-economic-conditions-not-the-state-of-the-economy-in-general/.
“Forecasting the 2014 Midterm Election,” with Joseph Bafumi and Robert S. Erikson. 2014. London School
of Economics American Politics and Policy (LSEAPP) blog. http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/2014/10/27/
national-polls-and-district-information-point-to-a-10-seat-gop-midterm-swing-in-the-house-to-244-seats/.
“Why Likely Voter Polls may be Misleading” with Robert S. Erikson. 2014. The Monkey Cage. http://
www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2014/09/24/why-likely-voter-polls-may-be-misleading/.
A sequence of blog posts on the 2014 Scottish Referendum, with Robert Ford, Mark Pickup and Will
Jennings. 2014. Manchester Policy Blogs: Polling Observatory. http://blog.policy.manchester.ac.uk/
category/polling-observatory/.
.
“How Economic and Noneconomic Fundamentals Influence Voter Preferences during US Presidential
Election Campaigns,” with Robert S. Erikson. 2014. London School of Economics American Politics
and Policy (LSEAPP) blog. http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/2014/04/21/early-campaign-economic-
perceptions-can-help-to-predict-the-national-verdict-on-election-day/.
“Support for Europe at a Time of Crisis,” with Mark N. Franklin. 2013. EUDO Spotlight 5:1-6.
(A publication of the European Union Democracy Observatory at the Robert Schuman Center
for Advanced Study, Florence, Italy.)
“Party Conventions do Matter,” with Robert S. Erikson. 2012. Transatlantic Voices, Deutsche Welle.
Http://www.dw.de/dw/article/0,,16183288,00.html.
“A Forecast of the 2010 House Election Outcome,” with Joseph Bafumi and Robert S. Erikson. 2010.
The Huffington Post. Http://www.pollster.com/.
“Uniform Swing, Proportional Swing and all that...,” with Robert Ford, Will Jennings, and Mark Pickup.
2010. Political Betting.com Http://www6.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2010/05/31/the-2010-
uns-proportional-swing-and-all-that%e2%80%a6/, 2010.
“Forecasting the 2010 UK Election,” with Robert Ford, Will Jennings, and Mark Pickup. 2010.
Politics Home. Http://www.politicshome.com/uk/the_poll_centre.html.
An Evaluation of the Methodology of the 2008 Pre-Election Primary Polls, with Michael Traugott,
Glenn Bolger, Darren W. Davis, Charles Franklin, Robert M. Groves, Paul J. Lavrakas, Mark S.
Mellman, Philip Meyer, Kristen Olson, and J. Ann Selzer. 2009. American Association of Public
Opinion Research. Http://www.aapor.org/uploads/AAPOR_Rept_FINAL-Rev-4-13-09.pdf.
“Degrees of Democracy: Public Opinion and Policy in Comparative Perspective,” with Stuart
Soroka. 2004. Center for Advanced Study in the Social Sciences, Working Paper #206. Madrid: Juan
March Institute. Http://www.march.es/ceacs/ingles/Publicaciones/working/working.asp?All=1.
A revised version of this report won the Pi Sigma Alpha award for the best paper presented at the
2007 Meeting of the Southwest Political Science Association.
Identifying the Flow of Domestic and European Expenditure into the English Regions, with Iain
McLean, principal author. 2003. A report for the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, United Kingdom.
Http://www.local.odpm.gov.uk/research/idenrprt.pdf.
“A Note on the Endogeneity of Ideological Placements of Government Institutions.” 2002. NES Technical
Reports. Ann Arbor: American National Election Studies (NES). Http://www.umich.edu/~nes/
resources/techrpts/techrpts.htm.
“Liberal-Conservative Evaluations of Social Groups.” 1998. NES Pilot Study Reports. Ann Arbor: NES.
Http://www.umich.edu/~nes/resources/papers/papers.htm.
“Ideological Evaluations of Government Institutions and Policy,” with Christopher Jan Carman. 1998.
NES Pilot Study Reports. Ann Arbor: NES. Http://www.umich.edu/~nes/resources/papers/papers.htm.
PAPERS UNDER REVIEW:
“Institutions, Parties, and the Timeline of Elections,” with Will Jennings.
“Measuring Public Preferences for Government Spending,” with Ann-Kristin Kölln.
“Detecting True Relationships in Time Series Data with Different Orders of Integration,” with Peter
Enns and Caroline Moehlecke.
RESEARCH IN PROGRESS (selected):
Information and Democracy: Public Policy in the News, with Stuart Soroka. Under contract at Cambridge
University Press.
“Party Identification and the (Subjective and Objective) Economic Vote,” with Connor Dye and Mark Kayser.
“What Explains Inter-Party Cooperation and Conflict?” with James Adams and Simon Weschle.
“Policy Feedback.”
BOOK REVIEWS:
Review of Uncivil Agreement: How Politics became Our Identity, by Lilliana Mason. International
Journal of Press/Politics, vol. 25, 2020.
Review of The Government-Citizen Disconnect, by Suzanne Mettler. Political Science Quarterly,
vol. 134, 2019.
Review of American Public Opinion, Advocacy, and Policy in Congress: What the Public Wants and
What it Gets, by Paul Burstein. Political Science Quarterly, vol. 130, 2015.
Review of Citizens, Context, and Choice, edited by Russell J. Dalton and Christopher J. Anderson.
Party Politics, vol. 19, 2013.
Review of The Message Matters: The Economy and Presidential Campaigns, by Lynn Vavreck.
Congress and the Presidency, vol. 37, 2010.
Review of Ten Thousand Democracies: Politics and Public Opinion in America's School Districts,
by Michael Berkman and Eric Plutzer. Political Studies Review, vol. 5, 2007.
Review of Why Budgets Matter: Budget Policy and American Politics, by Dennis S. Ippolito.
Political Science Quarterly, vol. 118, 2003-2004.
Review of By Popular Demand: Revitalizing Representative Democracy Through Deliberative
Elections, by John Gastil. American Political Science Review, vol. 96, 2002.
Review of The Election of 2000, by Gerald M. Pomper, et al. H-Net Reviews, 2001.
Review of Information and Elections, by R. Michael Alvarez. American Political Science
Review, vol. 93, 1999.
Review of Abortion Rates in the United States: The Influence of Opinion and Policy, by
Matthew E. Wetstein. Political Science Quarterly, vol. 112, 1997.
Review of Making Ends Meet: Congressional Budgeting in the Age of Deficits, by Daniel P.
Franklin. Journal of Politics, vol. 56, 1994.
Review of Inside Campaign Finance: Myths and Realities, by Frank J. Sorauf. Social Science
Quarterly, vol. 75, 1994.
ARCHIVED DATA SETS:
“Datasets on Polls and the Timeline of Elections,” with Will Jennings. Vote intention data from 30,916
polls for 271 parties in 351 elections in 45 countries between 1942 and 2017, and regularly updated.
https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/government/faculty/cw26629#datasets-on-polls-and-the-timeline-of-elections
“Policy Votes” database, with Christine Arnold and Mark Franklin. http://www.policyvotes.org/.
“The Timeline of Elections” dataset, with Will Jennings. All vote intention data used in “The Timeline
of Elections: A Comparative Perspective” American Journal of Political Science.
Https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/28856
“Degrees of Democracy Dataset,” with Stuart Soroka. Public opinion and budgetary data for Canada,
the United Kingdom, and the United States used in Degrees of Democracy: Politics, Public Opinion
and Policy, Cambridge University Press, 2010. Http://degreesofdemocracy.mcgill.ca/data.html.
“The Timeline of Presidential Election Campaigns—Trial-Heat Polls from 1944-2000,” with Robert S.
Erikson. Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR), University of Michigan,
Study Number 1304, 2004. Http://webapp.icpsr.umich.edu/cocoon/ICPSR-STUDY/01304.xml.
“Public Expenditure on Government Services in the UK, 1980-2000” with Stuart Soroka.
UK Data Archive, Study://www.data-archive.ac.uk/findingData/
snDescription.asp?sn=4980&key=wlezen&catg= Number 4980, 2004. Http xmlAll.
“Budgetary Policy and Public Preferences for Spending, 1972-1994,” ICPSR, University of
Michigan, 1996. Http://webapp.icpsr.umich.edu/cocoon/ICPSR-STUDY/01104.xml.
“Voter Registration and Election Laws in the United States, 1972-1992,” with Glenn Mitchell,
ICPSR, University of Michigan, 1995. Http://webapp.icpsr.umich.edu/cocoon/ICPSR-
STUDY/01102.xml.
“Economic Perceptions and Political Judgments: Some Experimental Data,” with Nathaniel T.
Wilcox, ICPSR, University of Michigan, 1994. Http://webapp.icpsr.umich.edu/cocoon/ICPSR-
STUDY/01103.xml.
CONFERENCE PARTICIPATION (other than paper presentations):
PROGRAM CHAIR:
Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Austin, Texas, 2019
Annual Meeting of the Elections, Public Opinion, and Parties (EPOP) group of the Political
Studies Association, Oxford, 2004 (chaired with Geoffrey Evans)
Annual Meeting of the Southwest Political Science Association, Corpus Christi, Texas, 1998
ORGANIZER:
Texas Methods Conference, Austin, Texas, 2020 (organized with Alison Craig, John Gerring, and
Stephen Jessee)
Workshop on the Consequences of Partisanship for Public Opinion, Austin, Texas, 2019
(organized with Zeynep Somer-Topcu).
Conference on Advances in the Study of Democratic Responsiveness, Gothenburg, Sweden, 2014
(organized with Peter Esaiasson).
Conference on Homogeneity and Heterogeneity in Public Opinion, Ithaca, 2008 (organized with
Peter Enns)
Conference on Perceptions, Preferences, and Rationalization: Overcoming the Problem of Causal
Inference in the Study of Political Behavior, Oxford, 2004 (organized with Geoffrey Evans)
Conference on Budgetary Policy Change: Measures and Models, Oxford, 2002 (organized with
Stuart Soroka)
Conference on the Design of Election Studies, Houston, 1999 (organized with Mark N. Franklin)
Conference on the Economy and Political Behavior, Houston, 1995 (organized with Christopher J.
Anderson)
DIVISION CHAIR:
American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, 2016
American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, 2006
Southwest Political Science Association, Houston, 1996
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANT:
American Political Science Association, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016
Midwest Political Science Association, 1998, 2012, 2013, 2014
Northeastern Political Science Association, 2004, 2006, 2008
Political Studies Association (EPOP), 2002, 2008, 2012
Southern Political Science Association, 2000, 2014, 2017, 2018
Southwest Political Science Association, 1999, 2002, 2005
PANEL CHAIR:
American Association for Public Opinion Research, 2011
American Political Science Association, 1994, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010,
2015, 2017
Midwest Political Science Association, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2016
Political Studies Association (EPOP), 2004, 2009, 2011, 2012
Public Choice Society, 1991
Southern Political Science Association, 2016, 2017
Southwest Political Science Association, 1992, 1994, 1995, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2014
DISCUSSANT:
American Association for Public Opinion Research, 2007
American Political Science Association, 1991, 1994, 1997, 2000, 2002, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009. 2010,
2013, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019
Midwest Political Science Association, 1990, 1993, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2007, 2014, 2015,
2016, 2017, 2019
Political Studies Association (EPOP), 2006
Southern Political Science Association, 2015
Southwest Political Science Association, 1994, 1997, 2000, 2002, 2007, 2008, 2014, 2017
INVITED PRESENTATIONS:
10 Downing Street, 92YTribeca, Aarhus University, Academia Sinica (Taipei), Advertising Research
Foundation (at Google), American Statistical Association (Houston), University of Amsterdam,
University of Antwerp, University of Arizona, Arizona State University, Australian National University,
University of Barcelona, Baylor University, University of California, Berkeley, University of California,
San Diego, Campus den Haag (Leiden University), Center for Political Studies (CPS) at the University of
Michigan, CIDE (Mexico City), CEVIPOF – Sciences Po (Paris), Columbia University, Comparative
Agendas Project (Antwerp), University of Copenhagen, Dartmouth College, ELECDEM (Istanbul),
University of Essex, European University Institute, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Gallup Organization,
George Washington University, Georgetown University, University of Gothenburg, Harvard University,
Hebrew University, Hertie School (Berlin), University of Houston, Humboldt University (Berlin), Indiana
University, Institute for Political Methodology (Taiwan), Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya (Israel),
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) at the University of Michigan,
University of Iowa, Juan March Institute (Madrid), Kennedy School, Koc University (Istanbul), University
of Leiden, University of Leuven, London School of Economics, Lund University, University of Manchester,
University of Mannheim, University of Maryland, McGill University, University of Melbourne, University
of Michigan, University of Minnesota, University of Montreal, University of Munich, National Centre for
Research Methods (UK), National Chengchi University (Taipei), National Press Club, National Taiwan
University, New York University, University of North Carolina, Northern Illinois University, Northwestern
University, University of Nottingham, Nuffield College, Oxford University, University of Pennsylvania,
Pennsylvania State University, University of Pittsburgh, Rice University, University of Rochester, Sciences
Po (Paris), Simon Fraser University, University of Southampton, Stanford University, SUNY at Stony Brook,
University of Surrey, University of Sydney, Temple University, University of Texas at Austin, University
of Texas at Dallas, Texas A&M University, University of Tokyo, University of Toronto, Trinity College
Dublin, Trinity College Hartford, University College London, University of Vienna
OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES:
Member, Committee on 2020 Election Polling, American Association for Public Opinion Research, 2019-
Member, Advisory Board, Election Compass (US), 2019-
Instructor, ICPSR Summer Program in Quantitative Methods of Social Research, Houston, 2019
Member, Advisory Board, Project on Social and Political Change in Britain, 2019-
Member, Conference Site Selection Committee, Southern Political Science Association, 2018-2019
Member, Advisory Board, Universal Scientific Education and Research Network, 2018-
Vice President, Southern Political Science Association, 2018-2019
Chair, Political Forecasting Group, American Political Science Association, 2017-2019
Member, Steering Committee, Texas Methods Group, 2017-
Member, Advisory Board, Global Public Opinions Project, 2017-
Member, Pi Sigma Alpha Award Committee, Southwest Political Science Association, 2017
Member, Review Panel, Research Foundation – Flanders, 2016-2017
Chair, Manning Dauer Committee, Southern Political Science Association, 2016-2017
Member, Committee on 2016 Election Polling, American Association for Public Opinion Research, 2016-2017
Vice Chair, Political Forecasting Group, American Political Science Association, 2015-2017
Instructor, Institute for Political Methodology, Taiwan, 2016
Member, Advisory Board, Election Compass (US), 2015-2016
Member, Pi Sigma Alpha Award Committee, Southwest Political Science Association, 2015-2016
Chair, Nominating Committee, Elections, Public Opinion and Voting Behavior section of APSA, 2014-2015
Member, Scientific Advisory Committee, Policy Priorities Barometer, 2014-
Member, Advisory Board, GovLis Project, 2014-
Instructor, Winter School on Comparative Electoral Analysis, University of Mannheim, 2014
Member, Innovators Award Committee, American Association for Public Opinion Research, 2013-2014
Academic Advisor, ResponsiveGov.eu, 2013-
Co-organizer, American Politics Speaker Series, University of Texas at Austin, 2013-
Member, Nominations Committee, Political Forecasting Group, American Political Science Association, 2013
Chair, Nominations Committee, Southwest Political Science Association, 2012-2013
Member, Advisory Board, Vote Compass, 2012
Instructor, ELECDEM Methods Training Session, Istanbul, 2012
Chair, Philip E. Converse Book Award Committee, American Political Science Association, 2011-2012
Chair, Best Paper by an Emerging Scholar, Midwest Political Science Association, 2011-2012
Member, Executive Council, Political Forecasting Group, American Political Science Association, 2011-2013
Contributor, Module 4 Questionnaire, Comparative Study of Electoral Systems (CSES), 2011-2016
Member, Best Graduate Student Paper Committee, American Association for Public Opinion Research, 2011
Advisor, American National Election Studies, 2010-2011
Member, Nominations Committee, Midwest Political Science Association, 2010-2011
Chair, Pi Sigma Alpha Award Committee, Midwest Political Science Association, 2010-2011
Member, Advisory Board, Open Pollster Disclosure Project, Pollster.com, 2010-2011
Member, Editor Selection Committee, Social Science Quarterly, 2009-2010
Chair, Nominating Committee, Political Forecasting Group, American Political Science Association, 2009
Member, Harrison Prize Selection Committee, Political Studies Association, 2009-2010
Member, Advisory Board, British Election Study, 2008-2013
Member, AAPOR Ad Hoc Committee to Evaluate Pre-Election Polls, 2008-2009
Member, Nominations Committee, Southern Political Science Association, 2007-2008
Member, Executive Council, Political Forecasting Group, American Political Science Association, 2007-2009
Member, Editor Selection Committee, Public Opinion Quarterly, 2007-2008
Member, AAPOR Advisory Committee, 2007-2008
Elected Member, International Statistical Institute, 2006-
Member, Best Paper Selection Committee, Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior Section,
American Political Science Association, 2006-2007
Member, Fulbright Program Selection Committee, Institute of International Education, 2006-2010
Member, Organizing Committee, Political Forecasting Related Group, American Political Science
Association, 2006-2007
Organizer, Campaigns and Elections Speaker Series, Institute for Public Affairs, Temple University, 2005-2013
Member, Steering Committee, ESRC Spring School in Quantitative Methods for Social Research, 2005-
Member, Advisory Board, British Election Study, 2004-2005
President, Southwest Political Science Association, 2004-2005
Instructor, ESRC Spring School in Quantitative Methods for Social Research, February, 2004
Vice-Chair, Steering Committee, ESRC Spring School in Quantitative Methods for Social
Research, 2002-2005 (Acting Chair, 2002-2003)
Co-Convener, Political Science Seminar Series, Nuffield College, 2002-2005
External Examiner, Birkbeck College, 2002-2004
Convener, American Politics Seminar Series, University of Oxford, 2001-2002
Member, Site Selection Committee, Southwest Social Science Association, 2001-2003
Member, Award Committee for the Best Graduate Student Paper, Midwest Political Science
Association, 2001-2002
Member, Nominations Committee, Southwest Social Science Association, 1998-2001
Member, Executive Council, Southwest Political Science Association, 1998-1999
Member, Planning Committee, American National Election Study, 1997-1998
Vice President, Southwest Political Science Association, 1997-1998
Member, Resolutions Committee, Southwest Social Science Association, 1995-1998
Convener, Political Economy Speaker Series, University of Houston, 1992-2001
Referee for Acta Politica, American Journal of Political Science, American Journal of Sociology,
American Political Science Review, American Politics Research, American Sociological Review,
Annals of Applied Statistics, British Journal of Political Science, British Journal of Politics and
International Relations, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Canadian Journal of Political
Science, Cognitive Systems Research, Comparative European Politics, Comparative Political Studies,
Comparative Politics, Conflict Management and Peace Science, East European Politics, Societies, and
Culture, Economics and Politics, European Journal of Political Research, European Political Science
Review, European Union Politics, French Politics, German Politics, Government and Opposition,
International Journal of Educational Research, International Journal of Forecasting, International Journal
of Public Opinion Research, International Political Science Review, International Security, International
Studies Quarterly, Journal of Common Market Studies, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of
Elections, Public Opinion, and Parties, Journal of Energy Policy, Journal of European Public Policy,
Journal of Experimental Political Science, Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law, Journal of
International and Comparative Social Policy, Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Journal of
Political Ideologies, Journal of Political Marketing, Journal of Politics, Journal of Public Policy, Journal
of Theoretical Politics, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Legislative Studies Quarterly,
Nature, Open Communication Journal, Open Political Science Journal, Parliamentary Affairs, Party Politics,
Perspectives on Politics, Policy Sciences, Policy Studies Journal, Policy Studies Journal Yearbook,
Political Analysis, Political Behavior, Political Communication, Political Psychology, Political Research
Exchange, Political Research Quarterly, Political Science Quarterly, Political Science Research and
Methods, Political Studies, Political Studies Review, Politics and Policy, Polity, Presidential Studies
Quarterly, Public Budgeting and Finance, Public Choice, Public Opinion Quarterly, Publius, Quality and
Quantity, Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Regulation and Governance, Representation, Scandinavian
Political Studies, Social Science Quarterly, Socio-Economic Review, Sociological Quarterly, State and
Local Government Review, State Politics and Policy Quarterly, Statistics, Politics, and Policy, West
European Politics, World Politics, Agence Nationale de la Recherche, the Arts and Humanities Research
Council, Austrian Science Fund, the Brookings Institution, the British Academy, Danish Council for
Independent Research, the Economic and Social Research Council, European Research Council, Israel
Science Foundation, MacArthur Foundation, National Science Foundation, Netherlands Organization for
Scientific Research, Nuffield Foundation, Research Foundation – Flanders, Russell Sage Foundation,
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Strasbourg Institute for Advanced Study,
Swiss Science Foundation, Time-sharing Experiments for the Social Sciences, University of Paris, and
numerous university and commercial presses, including California, Cambridge, Chicago, Columbia,
Michigan, Oxford, Princeton, Stanford, and Yale.
DEPARTMENT, COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY SERVICE (selected since 2001):
Promotion and Tenure Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2019
Elected member, Executive Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2019-
Chair, Methods Search Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2017-2018
Elected member, Executive Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2014-2018
Search Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2017
Promotion and Tenure Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2017
Co-Chair, Search Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2015-2016
Promotion and Tenure Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2015
Search Committee (2), Department of Government, University of Texas, 2014-2015
Promotion and Tenure Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2014
Chair, Methods field, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2014-2018
Search Committee, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2013-2014
Chair, Committee on Research, Department of Government, University of Texas, 2013-2014
Search Committee, Department of Political Science, Temple University, 2011-2012
Lecture Coordinator, Department of Political Science, Temple University, 2011-2012
Chair, Tenure Committee, Department of Political Science, Temple University 2010-2011
Faculty Advisor, Pi Sigma Alpha, Delta Rho Chapter, Temple University, 2008-2009
Chair, Merit Committee, Department of Political Science, Temple University, 2007-2009
Chair, Tenure Committee, Department of Political Science, Temple University 2008-2009
Chair, Technology Committee, College of Liberal Arts, Temple University, 2008-2009
Founder and Organizer, Temple-Penn Consortium in Political Science Research Methods, 2007-2013
Chair, Department Chair Search Committee, Temple University, 2007
American Politics Field Coordinator, Department of Political Science, Temple University, 2006-2007
Technology Committee, College of Liberal Arts, Temple University, 2006-2009
Graduate Examiner, Department of Political Science, Temple University, 2006-2007, 2008-2009, 2009-2010
Personnel Committee, Department of Political Science, Temple University, 2006-2007
Chair, Search Committee, Department of Political Science, Temple University, 2005-2006
Merit Committee, Department of Political Science, Temple University, 2005-2009
Graduate Committee, Department of Political Science, Temple University, 2005-2006
International Scholarship Review Committee, Temple University, 2005-2006
Course Director, Comparative Government MPhil, Department of Politics, Oxford University, 2004-2005
Masters Examiner, Department of Politics, Oxford University, 2002-2003, 2004-2005
Post-Doctoral Fellow Selection Committee, Nuffield College, 2003-2004
Chair of Masters Examining, Department of Politics, Oxford University, 2002-2003
Technical Services Fellow, Nuffield College, 2002-2004
Studentship Selection Committee, Nuffield College, 2001-2002
MPhil Panel, Department of Politics, Oxford University, 2001-2005
Politics Group Representative to the Economics Group, Nuffield College, 2001-2003
Graduate Studies Committee, Department of Politics, Oxford University, 2001-2002, 2004-2005
COURSES TAUGHT:
American government and politics
American politics survey
American Society
Campaigns and elections
Comparative political behavior
Comparative methods
Political institutions
Politics and economics
Political representation
Presidency
Presidential Elections
Public opinion and public policy
Public policy
Research methods
Multivariate analysis
Formal analysis
Research design
Time series analysis
Time series cross section analysis
Hierarchical linear modeling
GRADUATE STUDENTS (in Political Science with Ph.D. in hand):
Brendan Apfeld, Alex Branham, Courtney Broscious, Christopher Carman, Bruce Carroll, Darren Davis,
Christopher Garner, John Hindera, Juan Carlos Huerta, Alex Hudson, Kathy Seizer Javian, Kristie Kelly,
Jung-Ki Kim, Jonathan Lewallen, Carol Lewis, Krystyna Litton, Kenneth Miller, Justin Murphy, Laura
Nielsen, Deborah Orth, German Peterson, Callie Rennison, Annelies Russell, Sondra Richards, Gary
Tschoepe, Herschel “Trey” Thomas, Michelle Whyman, Greg Wolf
MEDIA COVERAGE (selected):
Scientific American, Nature, New York Times, Washington Post, Financial Times, Wall Street Journal,
The Guardian, Times of London, The Independent, USA Today, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune,
Le Figaro, Houston Chronicle, Toronto Star, Boston Herald, Austin American-Statesman, Philadelphia
Inquirer, Dallas Morning News, Le Monde, Economist, Wired, National Journal, New Yorker, Time,
Mother Jones, The Atlantic, Business Week, Fortune, Chronicle of Higher Education, New York Review
of Books, The Week, Washington Monthly, The Weekly Standard, Macleans, Smithsonian, The Brookings
Review, Prospect, Washington Post National Weekly, The New Statesman, Congressional Quarterly,
ABC, BBC, CNN, NBC, MSNBC, CNBC, NPR, PBS, Sky, Associated Press, Reuters, Bloomberg, Voice
of America, Deutsche Welle, New Statesman, Al Jazeera, MonkeyCage.org, Vox, Pollster.com, Wonkblog,
Huffington Post, Gallup.com, FiveThirtyEight, Fiscal Times, PoliticsHome.com, RealClearPolitics.com,
Daily Beast, Salon.com, Slate.com, PollingReport.com, Politico, and BrendanNyhan.com.
PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS:
American Association for Public Opinion Research, American Political Science Association, British
Politics Group, Elections, Public Opinion, and Parties Sub-Group (PSA), International Statistical Institute,
Midwest Political Science Association, Political Methodology Society, Political Studies Association,
Southern Political Science Association, Southwest Social Science Association