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Kevin A. Clarke (Ph.D. Michigan , 2001)
Assistant Professor of Political Science
email, website
Political methodology, international relations, conflict processes, and philosophy of science. Current research develops classical, nonparametric, and Bayesian methods for discriminating between rival statistical models. Author of " Nonparametric Model Discrimination in International Relations," Journal of Conflict Resolution (2003), " Testing Nonnested Models of International Relations: Reevaluating Realism," American Journal of Political Science (2001) and " The Reverend and the Ravens," Political Analysis (2002). Teaches courses in political methodology and international relations.
John
Duggan
(Ph.D. Caltech, 1995)
Associate Professor of Political Science and Economics
email, website
Research: Positive Political
Theory, Social Choice Theory, and Game Theory. Professor Duggan has published articles
in Econometrica, Journal of Economic Theory, American Political Science Review, and Mathematical
Social Sciences.
His current work is on dynamic models of bargaining and elections,
multi-dimensional spatial models of political competition, informational
aspects of voting and elections, and incentives in social planning problems.
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Hein Goemans (Ph.D. Chicago, 1995)
Assistant Professor of Politcal Science
email, website
International relations, conflict. Current research includes two projects. The first extends the research in his first book on the causes of war termination and examines the role and incentives of leaders in international conflict initiation. The second explores when and why people become attached to specific pieces of territory which together constitute a “homeland” and the consequences of these attachments. His book War and Punishment was published by Princeton University Press (2000); other publications have appeared in the American Journal of Political Science and the Journal of Conflict Resolution. Currently teaches courses on international relations, with an emphasis on conflict, and international relations history.
G. Bingham Powell, Jr.
(Ph.D. Stanford, 1968)
Marie Curran Wilson and Joseph Chamberlain Wilson Professor of Political
Science
email, website
Research:
Comparative Politics, European Politics. Managing
Editor of the American Political Science Review (1991-95).
Co-author and co-editor of a leading undergraduate comparative politics
text, Comparative Politics Today, now in its 7th edition.
His book Contemporary Democracies: Participation, Stability and
Violence (Harvard, 1982) won the Woodrow Wilson Prize for best
book in political science in 1982. Recent articles have appeared
in World Politics and British Journal of Political
Science. His latest book, Elections as Instruments
of Democracy, was published by Yale University Press in August,
2000.
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Curtis S. Signorino (Ph.D.
Harvard, 1998)
Associate Professor of Political Science
email, website
Research: Statisical Methods, International Relations, and Positive Political Theory.
Professor Signorino's articles have appeared in the American Political Science Review,
International Studies Quarterly, Political Methodology, and
Journal of Conflict Resolution. He is currently developing statistical methods for
analyzing strategic interaction, especially models of international conflict (see his Statistics Out on a Limb Project).
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Randall W. Stone
(Ph.D. Harvard, 1993)
Associate Professor of Political Science
Director, Peter D. Watson Center for Conflict and Cooperation
email, website
Research: International
Relations, International Political Economy, and Russian and Eastern European Politics. Professor
Stone's first book Satellites and Commissars: Strategy and Conflict in the Politics of Soviet-Bloc
Trade was published by Princeton University Press. He is currently completing his second book, Lending Credibility: The International Monetary Fund
and the Post-Communist Transition.
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