WORKING  PAPER  SITES  OF  POLITICAL  SCIENCE
International Relations

 
*Category placement is based on papers actually online rather than the author's research interests.
 
 
Kent Bolton
California State University.  Titles include
"Domestic Sources of Vitenam's Foreign Policy (In C. Thayer and Amer, Vietnam's Foreign Policy (Singapore: IEAS, 1999);  and
"Pas de Trois: The Synergism of Surprise, Threat, and Response Time and its Effects on U.S. Foreign-Policy Behavior."
 
Bear F. Braumoeller
Harvard University.   Titles include
"A Sober Second Look: Reassessing the Logic of Missile Defense";
"The Myth of American Isolationism";
"Toward a Truly Systemic Theory of International Politics: Resolving the Agent-Structure Debate";
"Russian Political Attitudes and Political Parties";
"Causal Complexity and the Study of Politics";
"Explaining Variance";
"The Methodology of Necessary Conditions";
"Introduction: Statistical Analysis in International Relations Research";  and
"Causes and Contexts: Bridging the Synoptic-Nomothetic Gap."
 
Kevin Clarke
University of Rochester.  Titles include 
"Nonparametric Model Discrimination in International Relations"; 
"Testing Nonnested Models of International Relations: Reevaluating Realism"; 
"The Two-Level Inference Problem and the Confirmation of Theories"; 
"The Effect of Priors on Approximate Bayes Factors from MCMC Output"; 
"Probabilistic Causality and Explanation in Political Science";  and 
"How the Techniques You Choose Affect the Answers You Get."
 
Mark Crescenzi
University of North Carolina.  Titles include
"Economic Interdependence and Conflict in World Politics";
"Democratic Survival, Peace and War in the International System";
"Economic Exit, Interdependence, and Conflict";
"Interdependence and Conflict: When Does Symmetry Matter?";
Data include
"Ripples from the Waves?: A Systemic, Time-series Analysis of Democracy, Democratization, and Interstate War";  and
"Time Remembered: A Dynamic Model of Interstate Interaction."
 
Brian Frederking
McKendree College.  Titles include
"From Enemy to Rival: Constructing the Camp David Accords";
"Security Communities, Collective Security, and the War in Kosovo";
"Representation, Careerism, and Term Limits: A Simulation";  and
"Metaphors, Freedom and Democracy: Teaching American Government."
 
Christopher Gelpi
Duke University.  Titles include
"Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick? Veterans in the Policy Making Elite and the American Use of Force"; 
"Attracting Trouble: Democracy, Leadership Tenure, and the Targeting of Militarized Challenges";
 "Winners or Losers? Democracies in International Crises"; 
"Alliances as Instruments of Intra-Allied Control";  and 
"Democracy, Trade and the Nature of the Liberal Peace."
 
Kristian Gleditsch
University of California.  Titles include
"Transnational Dimensions of Civil War";  and
"Regime type and commitment: Why democracies may be less reliable allies."
Lloyd Gruber
University of Chicago. Titles include
"Power Politics and the Institutionalization of International Relations " (2003);
"Rethinking the Rational Foundations of Supranational Governance: Lessons from the North American Free Trade Agreement" (1999);  and
"Rationalist Approaches to International Cooperation: A Call for Theoretical Reorientation" (1999).
Courtney Jung
New School University.
"Problems and prospects for democratic settlements- South Africa as a model for the Middle East and Northern Ireland".
 
Miles Kahler
University of California, San Diego.  Titles include
"Territoriality and Conflict in an Era of Globalization";
"Modeling Races To The Bottom";
"Information Networks and Global Politic";
"Global Governance Redefined" (2004);
"Private Capital, Central Banks, and International Monetary Governance" (2000);
"Economic Security in an Era of Globalization: Definition and Provision" (2003);
"Networks and Failed States: September 11 and The Long Twentieth Century" (2002);  and
"We Are All Europeans Now: U.S. Politics and Transatlantic Relations" (2003).
 
David Kang
Dartmouth College.  Titles include
"The avoidable crisis in North Korea: why is the U.S. afraid of engagement?";
"Corporate governance: Regent in Korea";
"The Impact of Enron on Corporate governance in Asia";
"Transaction Costs and Crony Capitalism in East Asia";
"Think Again: The Korean Crisis";
"Confronting Asiaís Challenge to International Relations Theory";
"International Relations Theory and the Second Korean war";
"South Korean and Taiwanese Development and the New Institutional Economics";  and
"Rethinking North Korea."
 
David Lake
University of California. Titles include
"Delegation Under Anarchy: States, International Organizations, and Principal-Agent Theory" (2003);
"The Incredible Shrinking State: Explaining the Territorial Size of Countries" (2002);
"The New Sovereignty in International Relations" (2002);
"Democracy, Federalism, and the Size of States" (2002);  and
"Political Decentralization and Civil War Settlements" (2002).
 
Jack Levy
Rutgers University.  Titles include
"Trading with the Enemy during Wartime: Theoretical Explanations and Historical Evidence" (2000);  and
"Politically Motivated Opposition to War: A Comparative Study of the United States in the Quasi-War and the War of 1812" (1999).
 
Quan Li
Penn State University.  Titles include
“Measure for Measure: Concept Operationalization and the Trade Interdependence-Conflict Debate”;
“The Effect of Security Alliances on the Exchange-Rate Regime Choices”;
“Reversal of Fortunes: Democracy, Property Rights and Foreign Direct Investment Inflows in Developing Countries”;
“Democracy and Dyadic Militarized Disputes: A Simultaneous Equations Model, 1950-1992”;
“The Dilemma of Financial Liberalization: State Autonomy and Societal Demands";
“Investing in the Peace: Economic Interdependence and International Conflict”;
"Institutional Rules of Regional Trade Blocs and Their Impact on International Trade" in R. Switky and B. Kerremans edited, The Political Consequences of Regional Trade Blocks, London: Ashgate, 2000;
"Investing in the Peace: Economic Interdependence and International Conflict";
"Testing Alternative Models of Capital Control Liberalization";  and
"US Foreign Exchange Interventions: Domestic Politics and International Factors," in Stuart Nagel edited, Handbook of Global International Policy, New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc., 2000.
 
Kurt Mills
Mount Holyoke College.   Titles include
"Using the Bush Doctrine As a Teaching Tool";
"Iraq and the Bush Doctrine";
"Refugee Return from Zaire to Rwanda: The Role of UNHCR";
"Neo-Humanitarianism: The Role of International Humanitarian Organizations in the Emerging Global Order";
"Refugees and Security in the Great Lakes Region of Africa";
"Cybernations: Identity, Self-Determination, Democracy, and the "Internet Effect" in the Emerging Information Order";
"Reflections on Fifty Years of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights";  and
"Sovereignty Eclipsed?: The Legitimacy of Humanitarian Access and Intervention."
 
Andrew Moravcsik
Princeton University.  Titles include
"The Paradox of US Human Rights Policy" (2005);
"Liberal Theory and the Politics of Security in Northeast Asia" (2004);
"Explaining the Paradox of American Human Rights Policy: Rights Culture or Pluralist Pressures?" (2003);
"Britain and the Creation of the United Nations Human Rights Regime: Liberal Theory Confronts the Historical Record" (2003);
"Liberal International Relations Theory: A Scientific Assessment" (2003);  and
"Why there is a Democratic Deficit in the EU: a Response to Majone and Moravcsik" (2006).
 
Will Moore
Florida State University.  Titles include
"Fear of Persecution: A Global Study of Forced Migration, 1952-1995";
"Refugee or Internally Displaced Person? To Where Should One Flee?";
"Citation versus Reputation: Assessing Political Science Journals";
"Dissent and Repression: Substitution Effects in Violent Political Conflict Behavior";
"Domestic-International Conflict Sequences";  and
"Evaluating Theory in Political Science."
 
John Odell
University of Southern California.  Titles include
"Problems in Negotiating Consensus in the World Trade Organization" (2001);
"Creating Data on International Negotiation Strategies, Alternatives, and Outcomes" (2001);
“The Negotiation Process and International Economic Organizations” (1999);
“Market Conditions and Government Economic Negotiations” (1998);  and
“A Working Paper on Military-Political Conditions and International Economic Negotiations.”
 
Fred Riggs
University of Hawaii.  Titles include
"Globalization and Democracy";
"Globalism, Diasporas and Area Studies";
"Price Indeterminacy in a Meta-Prismatic (capitalist) Context";
"Ethnic Diversity, Nationalism, and Constitutional Democracy";
"Turmoil among Nations, A Conceptual Essay: Ethnonationalism, Authoritarianism, Anarchy and Democracy";
"Transforming the House of Lords: Proposals for Democratization in a Global Context";
"Constitutional Choices: The Modern Dilemma";
"Coming to Terms with 'SOCIAL SCIENCE': A Conceptual Scenario";
"The Para-Modern Context of Ethnic Nationalism," in Of Fears and Foes, edited by Jose V. Ciprut (Westport: Praeger);
"The Malady of Modernity," in Asian Peace: Security and Governance in the Asia Pacific Region, ed., Majid Tehranian (London: I. B. Tauris, 1999);
"The Modernity of Ethnic Identity and Conflict";  and
"Public Administration in America: Why our Uniqueness is Exceptional and Important."
 
Peter Rosendorff
University of Southern California.  Titles include
"Free to Trade: Democracies, Autocracies and International Trade Negotiations";
"Choosing Democracy";
"The Optimal Design of International Institutions: Uncertainty and Escape";
"Replication, Realism, and Robustness: Analyzing Political Regimes and International Trade”;
"Stability and Rigidity: The Dispute Resolution Mechanism at the WTO";
"Separate Powers and the Political Economy of Resource Dissipation";
"Do Democracies Trade More Freely?";  and
"Democracy and the Supply of Transparency."
 
David Rousseau
University of Pennsylvania.  Scroll to the middle of the page.  Titles include
"Democratic Inhibitions: An Experimental Analysis of the Constraining Power of Democratic Norms and Structures";
"American and Japanese Perceptions of the Rise of China";
“Motivations for Choice: The Salience of Relative Gains in International Politics";
"Shared Identity and Threat Perception in International Relations";
"The Emergence of a Shared Identity: A Simulation";
“Women and Minorities: The Impact of War Time Mobilization on Political Rights";
“The Perception of Gains from Cooperation in International Relations: Comparing Japanese and American Responses";
“War, Mobilization, and Democratization: The Experience of Minority Groups”;
“The Evolution of International Conflict";  and
"Democratic Idealists or Pragmatic Realists?: Reassessing the Iroquois League."
 
Anne Sartori
Princeton University.  Scroll to the bottom of the page.   Titles include
 “An Estimator for Some Binary-Outcome Selection Models without Exclusion Restrictions”;
“Emprical-Quantitative Approaches to the Study of International Relations” in Cases, Numbers, Models: International Relations Research Methods, Detlef Sprinz and Yael Wolinsky, eds., forthcoming from the University of Michigan Press;  and
“Enduring Facts about Enduring Rivals.”
 
Branislav Slantchev
University of California.  Titles include
"A Theory of International Cooperation" (2003);
"Does Democracy Impede Economic Reforms? Evidence from Post-Communist Countries" (2001);
"The Principle of Convergence in Wartime Negotiations" (2002);  and
"Cabinet Accountability and Responsiveness in Proportional Representation Systems" (2001).
 
Alastair Smith
New York University.  Titles include
"The Impact of Leadership Turnover and Domestic Institutions on International Cooperation in a Noisy World" (2003);
"The Impact of Leadership Turnover on Relations Between States " (2002);
"Testing Theories of Strategic Choice: The Example of Crisis Escalation";
"An Institutional Explanation of the Democratic Peace"(1999);  and
Online book title includes
"The Logic of Political Survival" (2003)
.
 
Michael Tomz
Stanford University.  Titles include
"Democratic Default: Domestic Audiences and Compliance with International Agreements";
"How do Reputations Form? New and Seasoned Borrowers in International Capital Markets";
"Do International Agreements Make Reforms More Credible? The Impact of NAFTA on Mexican Stock Prices";  and
"The Morality of Secession."
Seth Tucker
Syracuse University.   Titles include
"Artificial Intelligence: Political Science Applications";
"Language Games: Designing a Dialogical Speech Act Method for modeling Strategic Interaction";
"The Canadian-American Free Trade Talks: Multi-Issue or Single-Issue Negotiation?";  and
"International Relations as Pedagogy: Contending Visions of the World as Drawn by Undergraduates."
A. Maurits van der Veen
University of Pennsylvania.  Titles include
"The Evolution of Cooperation with Composite Utilities: Transforming the Prisoner's Dilemma";
"Choosing Our Most Favoured Nations: The Impact of the Goals of Foreign Aid on Recipient Selection";
"Selecting the Recipients of Aid: A Two-Stage Sample-Selection Model";  and
"The Generosity Contest: Ideas and the Determinants of Foreign Aid."

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