-
- *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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