We’ve listed publications for each member of our faculty below, with links to their websites in case you would like to know more. A particular theme is the relationship between politics and markets, including especially Elliot Posner’s new book on
The Origins of Europe’s New Stock Markets; his article on “Making Rules for Global Finance: Transatlantic Regulatory Cooperation at the Turn of the Millenium” in
International Organization; Kelly McMann’s article on “Market Reform as a Stimulus to Particularistic Politics” in
Comparative Political Studies, and Kathryn C. Lavelle’s piece on “The Business of Governments: Nationalism in the Context of Sovereign Wealth Funds and State-owned Enterprises” in the
Journal of International Affairs. Both Elliot and Kelly’s articles are early products of larger book projects.
Karen Beckwith is a leading scholar of issues of gender and participation in democratic politics, and you will see that she has been particularly productive in those fields. Another major theme of our faculty, as represented by Bob Binstock and myself, is the mix of issues relating to the policy and politics of aging, health care, social protections and the federal budget. Yet I am particularly excited about some of the work that we can’t quite list yet, such as Professor Lavelle’s project on how international organizations relate to the U.S. Congress, Justin Buchler’s book project on competitive elections, and Pete Moore’s on the war economy in Iraq. So the snapshot next year and in following years will give a different view. Which is as it should be – if our research were not a moving target, we would not be moving forward.
Joe White
September 2, 2009
KAREN BECKWITH
Political Women and American Democracy: Critical Perspectives on Women and Politics Research. With Christina Wolbrecht and Lisa Baldez, eds. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008).
“Between Participation and Representation: Political Women and Democracy in the United States.” In Wolbrecht, Beckwith, and Baldez, eds.
Ibid., pp. 181-198.
“Why Do Men Dominate Politics?” Symposium on Big, Unanswered Questions in Comparative Politics,
APSA-CP Newsletter, 19:1 (Winter 2008), pp. 15-16.
Honors and Awards:
National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend for work on
Mobilization after Loss?: Social Movements and the Effects of Losing (June-July 2009).
ROBERT H. BINSTOCK
Aging Nation: The Economics and Politics of Growing Older in America. With James H. Schulz. (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008), paperback edition, with new Preface).
“Older Voters and the 2008 Election.” The Gerontologist (in press).
“Social Dimensions of Anti-Aging Science and Medicine.” With Jennifer R. Fioshman. In Dale Dannefer and Chris Phillipson, eds.
International Handbook of Social Gerontology. (Sage Publications, in press).
“The Salience of Language in Probing Public Attitudes about Life Extension.” With Richard A. Settersten, Jr., Jennifer R. Fishman, Marcie A. Lambrix, and Michael A. Flatt.
American Journal of Bioethics. (In press).
“Can Threats to Social Insurance in the United States Be Repelled?” With James H. Schulz. In Leah Rogne, Carroll Estes, Brian R. Grossman, Brooke A. Hollister, and Erica Solway, eds.
Social Insurance and Social Justice: Social Security, Medicare and the Campaign Against Entitlements. (New York: Springer Publishing Company, 2009), pp. 197-215.
“Social Policy in Gerontology and Geriatrics Education.” In Marie A. Bernard and Harvey Sterns, eds.
Gerontological and Geriatric Education; 2008 Annual Review of Gerontology and Geriatrics. (New York: Springer Publishing Company, 2009), pp. 73-92.
“The Boomers in Politics: Impact and Consequences.” In Robert B. Hudson, ed.
Boomer Bust: Economic and Political Dynamics of the Graying Society,
Vol. I: Perspectives on the Boomers. (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2009), pp. 135-152.
“Bioethicist Revives Elder Healthcare Rationing.” Aging Today, 30:2 (2009), p. 4.
“Anti-Aging Science: The Emergence, Maintenance, and Enhancement of a Discipline. With Jennifer R. Fishman and Marcie Lambrix.
Journal of Aging Studies, 22:4 (2008), pp. 295-303.
“Gerontology: A Fragile Field.” Aging Today, 29:2 (2008), pp. 3-4.
“A Gerontocracy? The Politics of Aging.” With James H. Schulz.
In Agenda (March 2008), pp. 3 & 13-14.
Honors and Awards:
Ollie A. Randall Award for 2009 from the National Council on Aging for “singular and outstanding contributions toward advancing the cause of aging.”
JUSTIN BUCHLER
"Ideological Representation and Competitive Congressional Elections."
Electoral Studies, 28 (2009). Co-authored with Thomas Brunell.
"Teaching Quantitative Methodology to the Math-Averse." PS: Political Science & Politics, 42:3 (2009).
"Redistricting Reform Will Not Solve California's Budget Crisis” (rejoinder to: "Redistricting Reform Can Save California from Itself").
California Journal of Politics & Policy, 1 (2009).
Rejoinder to : “The Social Suboptimality of Competitive Elections: Comment."
Public Choice, 138 (2009).
Book Reviews:
Glenn R. Parker. Capitol Investments: The Marketability of Political Skills." In
Public Choice, 140 (2009).
Steven S. Smith. Party Influence in Congress." In Journal of Politics, 70 (2008).
KATHRYN C. LAVELLE
“Congress in the World: Benefits of the Congressional Fellowship Program for the Study of International Relations.”
Perspectives on Politics, 6:3 (September 2008), pp. 539-551.
“The Business of Governments: Nationalism in the Context of Sovereign Wealth Funds and State-owned Enterprises.”
Journal of International Affairs, 61:3 (issue on global finance, Fall/Winter 2008), pp. 131-147.
With Jessica Gerrity and Nancy Hardt. “The Interest Group-Staff Connection in Congress: Access and Influence in Member, Committee, and Leadership Offices.”
PS: Political Science and Politics (October 2008), pp. 913-917.
Honors and Awards:
Residential Fellow, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington DC, academic year 2008-09.
Grant-in-aid, Hagley Museum and Library; Center for the History of Business, Technology, and Society; Hagley, Delaware, Summer 2008.
KELLY M. MCMANN
“Market Reform as a Stimulus to Particularistic Politics.”
Comparative Political Studies, 42:7 (July 2009), pp. 971-994.
Honors and Awards:
Social Science Research Council Postdoctoral Research Fellowship, 2006-2008.
Glennan Fellowship for demonstrated excellence in both scholarship and teaching, Case Western Reserve University, 2008.
PETE W. MOORE
“Beyond Boom and Bust: External Rents, Durable Authoritarianism, and Institutional Adaptation in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. With Anne Peters.
Studies in Comparative International Development, 44:2 (2009).
Book Review:
Matthew Levitt. HAMAS Inside the Beltway. In Middle East Law and Governance, 1 (2009).
Honors and Awards:
Fulbright Fellow, United Arab Emirates, 2008-09.
ELLIOT A. POSNER
The Origins of Europe’s New Stock Markets. (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 2009).
“Making Rules for Global Finance: Transatlantic Regulatory Cooperation at the Turn of the Millennium.”
International Organization, 63:4 (October 2009 forthcoming).
LAURA Y. TARTAKOFF
"From Dictatorship to Democracy: Four Chilean Women's Memories."
Society, 45:4 (July 2008).
Book Reviews:
Irving Louis Horowitz. The Long Night of Dark Intent, A Half Century of Cuban Communism. In
Society, 46:4 (July 2009).
Katherine Hirschfeld. Health, Politics, and Revolution in Cuba Since 1898. In
Society, 46:2 (March 2009).
JOSEPH WHITE
“Paying for Performance in Primary Medical Care: Learning about and Learning from ‘Success’ and ‘Failure’ in England and California." With Ruth McDonald (lead author) and Theodore R. Marmor.
Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 34:5 (2009 forthcoming).
“Cost Control: The Public Isn’t the Problem.” With Jonathan Oberlander.
Health Affairs, 28:5 (2009 forthcoming).
“Gap and Parallel Insurance in Health Care Systems With Mandatory Contributions to a Single Funding Pool for Core Medical and Hospital Benefits for All Citizens in Any Given Geographic Area.”
Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 34:4 (2009), pp. 543-83.
“The United States: Risks for Americans and Lessons for Abroad.” In Theodore R. Marmor, Richard Freeman, and Kieke G. H. Okma, eds.,
Comparative Studies and the Politics of Modern Medical Care. (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009).
“Primary Care and Health Reform: Concepts, Confusions and Clarifications.” With Theodore R. Marmor. In Marmor, Freeman, and Okma, eds.
Ibid.
“The President’s Budget vs. Congressional Budgeting: Institutionalizing the Adversarial Presidency?” In James A. Thurber, ed.,
Rivals for Power: Presidential-Congressional Relation, 4th ed. (New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2009).
“Capacity and Authority: Comments on Governing Doctors and Health Care.”
Health Economics, Policy and Law, 4 (2009), pp. 367-382.
“The Obama Administration’s Options for Health Care Cost Control: Hope vs. Reality.” With Theodore R. Marmor and Jonathan Oberlander.
Annals of Internal Medicine, 150:7 (7 April 2009). Also
http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/0000605-200904070-00114v1.
“What Not to Ask of Budget Processes: Lessons from George W. Bush’s Years.”
Public Administration Review, 69:2 (March/April 2009), pp. 224-232.
“Time to Retire the Normal Retirement Age?” In Randall Eberts and Richard A. Hobbie eds.
Older and Out of Work: Jobs and Social Insurance for a Changing Economy (Kalamazoo, MI: The Upjohn Institute, 2008), pp. 183-204.
“Policy and Politics: A Commentary on the Conference on Social Insurance for Health Care: Economic, Legal, and Political Considerations.” In Colleen Flood, Mark Stabile, and Carolyn Tuohy, eds.
Exploring Social Insurance: Can a Dose of Europe Cure Canadian Health Care Finance? (Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2008), pp. 233 – 249.
“American Health Care in International Perspective.” In James A. Morone, Theodor J. Litman, and Leonard S. Robins ,eds.,
Health Politics and Policy, 4th ed. (Florence, KY: Cengage Delmar Learning, 2008), pp. 416-30.
Book Reviews:
Ezekiel J. Emanuel. Healthcare Guaranteed: a Simple, Secure Solution for America. In
The American Journal of Bioethics, 8:12 (December 2008), pp. 67-68.
Tom Daschle, with Scott S. Greenberger and Jeanne M. Lambrew. Critical: What We Can Do About the Health Care Crisis. In
Journal of Clinical Investigation, 118:9 (September 2008), p. 2991.
Timothy Stolzfus Jost. Health Care at Risk: A Critique of the Consumer-Driven Movement. In
Perspectives on Politics, 6:3 (June 2008), pp. 608-09.
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